[csaa-forum] Bolt and the Ideologues

Jason Jacobs j.jacobs at griffith.edu.au
Thu Dec 16 08:01:02 CST 2004


Dear All, 
I've very much enjoyed this discussion (despite my tendency towards 
idealism and sarcasm - apologies) and it occurs to me that the issues 
we've been talking about deserve a wider audience (as others have 
suggested). 
My former employer, the University of Warwick, set up a number of public 
debates ('The Warwick Debates' or something) in collaboration - if I 
remember rightly - with The Times and The Economist, where either two 
well-known figures or a panel clashed on a topical issue of the day. I'm 
not exactly suggesting that, but I think we could organise a travelling 
series of debates organised by the CSAA and hosted by interested 
universities across the country (and if we can do it in collaboration with 
a newspaper that would be great), along the lines of 'Academics and 
Journalism: Truth, Value and Funding'. I imagine a panel of 4-5 speakers 
at each. It would bring kudos to the hosting institution and would get 
these matters out in the open where they belong. 

Of course this may well be Xmas idealism gone wild. 


BTW: Frank Furedi (I know, I know - but for the few that may be 
interested!) has just written a related piece on academics and the media 
which can be found here: 

http://www.spiked-online.com/Articles/0000000CA818.htm


Jason

Dr Jason Jacobs
Senior Lecturer
School of Arts, Media and Culture
Griffith University
Nathan Campus
Queensland 4111
Australia
Phone: (07) 3875 5164
Fax: (07) 3875 7730





Danny Butt <db at dannybutt.net>
Sent by: csaa-forum-bounces at lists.cdu.edu.au
16/12/2004 02:27 AM
Please respond to CSAA discussion list
 
        To:     csaa-forum <csaa-forum at lists.cdu.edu.au>
        cc: 
        Subject:        Re: [csaa-forum] Bolt and the Ideologues


On 12/15/04 7:37 PM, "stephen crofts" <crofts5 at hotmail.com> wrote:

> I strongly agree with Christian McCrea about the importance of 
challenging
> Andrew Bolt, about his specious logic, and that we do best not to just
> demonise him.  For that is to play his anti-intellectual game.  \


I also think Graeme's piece is excellent, and a most appropriate response
from the Academy. However, I also think that neither Bolt nor his audience
will care about it, and I wonder whether, when we say "we won't stoop to
Bolt's level", we're actually saying, I would rather remain in the logic 
of
reasoned argument (that we in the academy invented :7) than the logic of
mediated populist politics that operates more or less independently of
anything Cultural Studies might do (I think for Bolt, Elspeth's work or CS
in general is just an example that is regularly substituted for some other
complaint in his columns).

I don't think my suggestions about questioning Bolt's credibility within 
the
language of the tabloid press are designed to make the academy look good.
Obviously Bolt's sex life (BTW, I don't think it matters whether Bolt is
*actually* any good in bed, any more than whether the Labor party could
*actually* run the economy), rich friends, or random acts of real or
invented hate do not contribute to a discussion about the role of the
academy. They are simply wedge issues that I think have the potential to
split his constituency and expose his contradictions *within the logic of
tabloid politics*, which is where this game is being played out.

So I'm suggesting a US Republican party style strategy where there are the
official responses from our esteemed CS figureheads (Graeme, Elspeth,
Catharine, etc.) that operate in what passes for public culture in the
press, and are appropriately above Bolt's rhetoric. This could be
supplemented by a collaborative and psuedonymous campaign (Australians
Against Dickheads, perhaps? Or the more think-tanky Centre for Truth in
Journalism?), one that recognises that there's no arguing with Bolt, he's
not going to meet us on our turf of rational debate, so we may as well use
our media skills to make him sorry he ever messed with a few hundred smart
and well-connected people who care more than he does. It's a perfect 
student
project for an informal graduate journalism class.

Or we can hope he goes away by himself.

x.d

--
http://www.dannybutt.net

#place: location, cultural politics, and social technologies:
http://www.place.net.nz

[ Lilith] laughed bitterly. "I suppose I could think of this as fieldwork 
-
but how the hell do I get out of the field ?" (Octavia E. Butler, _Dawn_)


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