[csaa-forum] FREEDOM!
Esther Milne
EMilne at groupwise.swin.edu.au
Wed Oct 13 13:14:49 CST 2004
did anyone else find it extremely ironic & cultstuddingly apposite that
on Monday's show the judges were urging Austrayans 'to have their voice
heard' , 'to make their vote count' and 'not to be apathetic' etc?
it really was a spectacular exploration of participatory democracy!
incidentally, if you want to get the full Idol experience in terms of
consumption, class and politics - you ahve to check out the webboards:
http://au.messages.yahoo.com/australianidol/
cheers,
Esther
(go chanel).
Dr Esther Milne
Media and Communications
Swinburne University of Technology
John Street
Hawthorn VIC 3122
AUSTRALIA
>>> charles.fairchild at arts.usyd.edu.au 13/10/2004 1:10:25 pm >>>
I'm particularly interested in this discussion on Australian politics
because I'm not Australian, but have moved here with my Aussie partner
for the long term, so last weekend was my first experience of my new
political culture. What amazed me was the clear lessons the Republican
Party in my home country of the US of A have been givning the Liberals.
And I am amazed at the tropes and themes Howard and his cronies have
been using and adapting to Australian politics. If you criticize
consumerism or capitalism you are simply beyond the pale in the US. So
when people pop up and appear on the defensive about houses or
furniture
and their suspected connections to political ideology, I get a bit
confused. Did I miss something? Did someone actually say 'you can't
have
a nice house'? 'you can't shop at Freedom'? 'you can't get a plasma
TV'?
Did someone actually say 'you must sit in a small unit without
air-conditioning with furniture from St. Vinnie's, no car, no tv and
read only critical theory all day? I thought the point of studying
consumerism from a critical perspective was precisely to understand
what
it is exactly that people get out of it, all the pleasure of buying new
things and angst about affordability and sustainability. To me it is
the
kinds of economic relationships that result from specific models of
consumerism that I can't get away from. There is a clear political
connection in the States between 'faulty consumer' (i.e poor person)
and
'faulty citizen.' And it comes out in places I would not have
suspected.
For example, when I taught Australian Idol last week in my popular
music
class all of this stuff about class and consumerism and politics came
pouring out without me having to bring it up at all. Last week, a
student went on a rant about how betrayed she felt when she found out,
supposedly, that Guy Sebastian was planning to vote Liberal. I have no
conclusions about any of this, but it seems to me that the connection
between citiizeship and consumerism is unavoidable in our practice.
And can you believe that Ricky Lee is gone?!
Charles Fairchild
Department of Music
University of Sydney
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