The basic thesis of the book is that social media has empowered the public, and that the public is using its newfound power to attack - but not to replace - the dominant institutions of society. Citing examples from the Arab Spring revolutions to the Indignado protests of Spain to Occupy Wall Street and the Tea Party, Gurri pegs 2011 as the year where the new paradigm of viral, explosive discontent first asserted itself.I am more impressed by the eternal dissatisfaction of so many people, which breaks out again and again through history. But maybe our recent storms are at least in part technological.
Importantly, Gurri defines the "public" in a weird, idiosyncratic way. . . Gurri defines the public as the set of people who are interested enough in a particular issue to pay attention and get involved. Thus, the public is actually a different set of people in each situation. . . .
Social media, Gurri asserts, has both empowered and emboldened the public, freeing it from the control of centralized, hierarchical push-media. The age of Walter Cronkite has given way to the age of the Twitter mob and the Facebook protest organizer. But the newly empowered public, he argues, has not focused on building things up, but on breaking them down. The public's goal is negation - denunciation of respected leaders, derailment of political programs, overthrow of parties or governments, discrediting of institutions, etc.
Gurri worries that this constant anti-everything attitude will descend into "nihilism", and that weakened institutions will be trapped in an eternal stalemate with an eternally raging public. The events of the 2010s have certainly conformed to this description. And the book, the first edition of which was released in 2014, looks especially prophetic when viewed from the vantage point of 2019. All the trends Gurri describes have only intensified.
The usefulness of this book is in drawing parallels between a bunch of things that might seem unrelated (and as a former CIA analyst, that's Gurri's specialty). If the many explosions of anger and activism since 2011 were fundamentally about specific issues - the Tea Party about taxes, the Women's March about sexism - then you might expect the anger to recede as the issues get successfully addressed. But if Gurri is right, these things are fundamentally about a technology - social media - and the way it changes power relations between the public and elites, then we can expect today's explosions of anger to be followed by others tomorrow, and then others the day after tomorrow, and on and on and on.
Thursday, April 4, 2019
The Revolt of the Public
Noah Smith reviews "The Revolt of the Public and the Crisis of Authority in the New Millennium," by Martin Gurri:
I am more impressed by the eternal dissatisfaction of so many people, which breaks out again and again through history. But maybe our recent storms are at least in part technological.
ReplyDeleteThe common elements in historical dissatisfcation are poverty, inequity, and oppression. (Potentially among others.)
The degree of dissatisfaction created by these elements can vary or be mitigated by circumstance, but ultimately people are miserable when life is hard and unjust.