harry poptimer and the tides of snobbery
Jul. 18th, 2007 12:15 pmi read this us blogger cz
a. he is grebt at getting to the nub of wonk-pol debate crisply and amusingly (not unlike
freakytigger)
b. his spelling is TERRIBLE (not unlike
barnetape
his comments threads (on say race issues, or health policy, or iraq) are generally between 5-25 comments long. This time the sub opened the hatch WHILE STILL SUBMERGED...
a. he is grebt at getting to the nub of wonk-pol debate crisply and amusingly (not unlike
b. his spelling is TERRIBLE (not unlike
his comments threads (on say race issues, or health policy, or iraq) are generally between 5-25 comments long. This time the sub opened the hatch WHILE STILL SUBMERGED...
no subject
Date: 2007-07-19 08:49 am (UTC)It kind of goes:
PERSON WHO ENJOYS SOMETHING POPULAR: I find this [popular thing] a rich and valuable experience and I like talking about it.
CRITIC: this popular thing is not as good as another, unpopular thing. It is bad and its predominance is obscuring the better thing.
PWESP: Dude I hate it when you elitist guys don't take popular stuff seriously, it can be rich and valuable
C: the problem is not that it's popular it's that it's rubbish
PWESP: Says who? You're establishing yourself as a cultural elite and keeping me and The Ordinary People down.
C: Shut up! Everywhere I turn people are talking about [popular thing]! It's on the telly and the radio and every conversation in the pub and the charts and everywhere. It's YOU who's keeping ME down (oh and by the way you should know better).
The argument never gets back to being a conversation about [popular thing] or even about the criticism of [popular thing]. It becomes this struggle for the (apparent) moral high-ground of The Oppressed and it sucks mightily. There are many points above where the conversation could be kept about the thing, or the criticism, or both, but no-one can leave an accusation of OPPRESSOR unanswered.
bopkids
no subject
Date: 2007-07-19 09:10 am (UTC)cf the 70s dynamic of the politics of victimhood, identity politics ect ect -- i think this totally battened on 60s pop culture's actually quite strange mix of "they have the guns but WE HAVE THE NUMBERS" (we = the people!) and "sumfn is happnin, but you don't know what it is, DO YOU, MR JONES?" (appeal to shared secret knowledge)
*ok this is a bit of an exaggeration -- wagnerism was a pioneer element in modernism, and it had a whole layer of play-the-victim, viz its anti-semitism
no subject
Date: 2007-07-19 09:15 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-07-20 09:15 am (UTC)Also popcrit inherited from the 60s counterculture forebears the language of political struggle. Part of the deal is apparent unreason can be justified by the difficulties of underdogness.
Notes again due to 0 time available, sorry.
bopkids