Archive for the ‘Culture Wars’ Category

Web3 Boom Is Bringing American Culture Wars to the Tech Industry – Business Insider

If you've spent any time online over the past year or so, you've probably been unable to escape the hype around cryptocurrencies, NFTs, and so-called Web3 in general. Celebs like Reese Witherspoon and Gwyneth Paltrow have gotten on the bandwagon, and El Salvador recently became the first country to make bitcoin legal tender.

Equally unavoidable is the backlash. NFT projects from the likes of Lindsay Lohan and the estate of Stan Lee have been met with ridicule and vitriol. Word that Kickstarter planned to pivot its crowdfunding platform to be backed by the blockchain was received by many on social media with disappointment or even disgust.

Web3 fans believe that cryptocurrencies and NFTs are the harbingers of a movement in tech that can decentralize finance and commerce, putting more power into the hands of users and disrupting the likes of Google and Facebook. Skeptics believe the benefits of Web3 are unproven or unrealistic, as cryptocurrency scams run rampant and blockchains damage the environment through their power consumption.

Now tech-industry insiders say the debate over cryptocurrencies is coming home, as developers increasingly take sides on Web3. Twitter is full of anecdotal evidence of developers quitting when their employers embrace crypto, even as execs at companies like Amazon and Facebook take new jobs in the industry. Even leaders like Elon Musk and Jack Dorsey vocal fans of bitcoin and crypto got pushback after suggesting Web3 is overhyped.

Importantly, insiders say, this growing rift has as much to do with politics as it does with technology, with interest in or skepticism of cryptocurrency taken as a statement of values that can pit a developer against their peers.

That's a real bigger-picture risk, some insiders say.

The more polarized the discussion becomes, and the more people who identify strongly with the pro- or anti-crypto camps, the harder it is to have an honest dialogue in the industry about the promise of the technology and to reckon with the harms of the rising tide of crypto scams and other bad behavior on the blockchain.

Some worry that this divide could be disastrous for tech in the long haul. If the Web3 movement shuns even mild or well-reasoned skepticism, insiders say, the dangers will only get bigger, scaling with its growth. And they say that, conversely, if Web3 skeptics aren't willing to assess the technology on its own merits in good faith, the industry could risk throwing the proverbial baby out with the bathwater.

"If it's going to be bad, then we need to know what it is so we can play defense," said Kelsey Hightower, a principal engineer at Google. "If it's going to be good, then we need to know how it works so we can actually get in on the action or play off it. But we can't have either of those options from a place of ignorance."

Fierce debates are common in the tech industry, where developers will endlessly argue the merits of Mac versus PC, or Android versus iPhone, or even whether to put a tab or a space after each new line of code.

The thing that sets the crypto debate apart is that cryptocurrency itself is an increasingly political issue in ways that don't break cleanly along party lines. Hillary Clinton, the former Democratic presidential nominee and secretary of state, has described what she sees as the dangers of bitcoin, while Republican Sen. Cynthia Lummis crossed the aisle to work with Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden to propose new tax rules around cryptocurrency.

Some in tech worry that this is bringing the intense polarization that saturates American politics into the heart of the software industry, making it difficult to hold any sort of good-faith discussion on the matter.

"It's so polarizing," said Tracy King, a software engineer at the startup Xplor. King said that adding ".eth" to her Twitter display name, signifying her support of the ethereum blockchain, solicited a surprising amount of blowback. "I've experienced people who I thought were friends start name-calling and block me for being a 'Web3 shill,'" she said.

Kelly Vaughn, a prominent software developer and cofounder of the gift-card startup Govalo, experienced a similar fallout after tweeting about an interest in learning more about Web3. "I know I have a large audience and with that always brings individuals with strong opinions on either side of the fence, but I definitely wasn't expecting the backlash right out the gate," Vaughn said.

"I feel like everything gets so politicized here," Anne Griffin, a product manager at the travel-booking website Priceline, told Insider. "It's putting people at a disadvantage to get in a technology that is going to change the world, like very early on."

On the other side, even optimistic skeptics of cryptocurrency are hesitant to voice anything like dissent, some insiders say. Liz Fong-Jones, a developer well known for her employee activism at Google, said she worried about losing potential clients or future investors by being critical of crypto.

"The instant you mention anything that is negative about cryptocurrency, there are going to immediately be people who nitpick what you have to say," Fong-Jones told Insider. "I wouldn't necessarily characterize the behavior as overtly harassing so much as it's sucking up the oxygen in the room."

Anil Dash, the CEO of the collaborative coding platform Glitch, said that if the pro-crypto camp doesn't take seriously the concerns about environmental damage, scams, hoaxes, and other dangers and risks that have come alongside the Web3 boom, it'll be that much harder to bridge the divide.

"The Web3 community has not had that moment of realizing they had empowered not just scammers and grifters but people that were going to twist this technology for really evil use," Dash said. "For all the good that it's done, there's been so much harm. And so I think there's anxiety and grief and residual culpability about that."

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Web3 Boom Is Bringing American Culture Wars to the Tech Industry - Business Insider

Through compassion we can transform the current culture war – The Fulcrum

Campt, a dialogue specialist, and Mahaley, an anti-racism organizer, are principals at The Dialogue Company.

America is immersed in a culture war that is a new manifestation of its age-old problem with race. School board meetings across America have devolved into ugly protests about critical race theory. The strategy to rebrand CRT was created, organized and executed intentionally as a political wedge issue. Right-wing operative Christopher Rufo publicly admitted: We have decodified the term and will recodify it to annex the entire range of cultural constructions that are unpopular with Americans.

CRT, like all wedge issues, is forcing the public into binary thinking, further polarizing the right against the left. Anti-racism allies on the left have made things worse by belittling the arguments, defending CRT and ultimately adding to the already dangerous polarization of our country. Instead of this divisive debate, what is needed is a nuanced dialogue grounded in compassion, one that can surface legitimate concerns on both sides.

One key claim of the anti-CRT operatives is that some K-12 educators are required to teach children that all white people and America itself are irredeemably racist. Most people, unless they are among the most hyper-woke activists, bristle at this assertion. Why? Because America learned during the civil rights movement that being racist was wrong so wrong that, today, even the Ku Klux Klan denies that it is a racist organization; now, its members describe themselves as simply pro-white. Even those on the left who agree that racism in America was and is an acute problem feel uneasy about burdening their children with debilitating white privilege guilt.

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Amidst the maylay, this anxiety is being funneled into local and state elections. Activists on the right hope to build more momentum toward the U.S. House and Senate elections in 2022. As we saw in Virginias gubernatorial race, using CRT as a weaponized wedge issue works. So instead of fighting harder, adding to the dangerous polarization, we suggest people who consider themselves anti-racist shift the focus and instead ask: What should we teach our children about race and racism?

This question is actually a very useful conversation for Americans to have. This will require some very different behaviors, particularly by people on the left who claim to deplore all matters of violence. In fact, people on the left (and anyone who is tired of endless divisive culture wars) need to embody non-violence in their communication style and end these bitter and divisive debates.

How do they do that?

In addition to diffusing the CRT argument, engaging in ways that allow opposing sides to talk openly and candidly (ideally in small groups) about their fears, hopes and values will lead to better curriculum choices. School boards and superintendents need to create settings where people can actually talk to each other instead of just managing the circus of public comments at meetings. Public officials and non-educational civic organizations need to plan public engagement events for dialogue. We need many groups including churches inviting people to dialogues not about CRT but to answer the question What should we teach children about race?

We can expect to see political operatives on the right continuing to focus on critical race theory as a wedge issue in a culture war. Anyone who considers themselves opposed to racism can use compassion to transform this culture war and create a long-overdue dialogue about how people on all sides collaborate toward America's promise of equality.

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Through compassion we can transform the current culture war - The Fulcrum

The year the culture wars colonised sport – Spiked

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In 2021, the culture wars thoroughly colonised all of our favourite sports.

Nowhere was this clearer than in football. The peoples game was rife with woke politics this year, as it was last year. Players are still taking the knee before each game, more than 18 months after the murder of George Floyd and the Black Lives Matter protests, which first inspired all the knee-taking. The kneeling still frequently features as a highlight alongside shots and saves on Match of the Day, in case we hadnt got the message yet.

Not everyone buys into the idea that footballs primary purpose is to promote the Black Lives Matter movement not least those who watch football, many of whom have grown tired of all the virtue-signalling. This was made abundantly clear when England fans booed the taking of the knee in the run-up to Euro 2020. Some fans carried on the booing at the tournament itself.

The woke were not happy about this. For BBC football pundit Gary Lineker, the boo boys were part of the reason why players [were] taking the knee. And the Euros then provided a perfect opportunity for fans to be told, over and over again, that they were a bunch of awful racists.

At the Euros, the England team mounted their best run at a major tournament since 1966. But for many commentators, the culture war, not the pitch, was where the action was. After Englands devastating loss on penalties to Italy in the final, a handful of racist tweets were held up as proof that Englands oikish football fans were dyed-in-the-wool scum, in need of re-education.

The summer of sport that followed provided plenty more podiums for woke posturing. At the Tokyo Olympics in July and August, the trans issue muscled its way into view. New Zealand weightlifter Laurel Hubbard, who was born male, was allowed to compete against biological women despite having some quite obvious advantages.

Predictably, much of the media championed Hubbard as a heroic trans trailblazer. When critics questioned whether it was really so progressive to allow a biological male to take the space of a qualified female athlete, much of the press leapt to Hubbards defence.

The BBC went as far as to publish a 3,000-word article about this reluctant history-maker, charting Hubbards road to Tokyo. Following a predictable backlash to the article, BBC Sports social-media team then threatened to report naysayers to the police for spreading hate. In the end, Hubbard performed poorly.

As some were celebrated with no regard for their talent, one incredibly talented sportswoman was celebrated for quitting the competition prematurely. US gymnast Simone Biles, the greatest gymnast of all time, pulled out of a number of Olympic events citing mental-health reasons. She suffered an unfortunate bout of the twisties that is, feeling a disconnect between her mind and her body.

Her temporary loss of nerve was tragic, for herself and the US gymnastics team. But for the media, quitting made Biles a hero. She was showered with praise for being open about her weaknesses and for putting her wellbeing above her sport. She was even named Time magazines athlete of the year. In 2021, it seems, you could win without even taking part.

A few unfortunate sportsmen found themselves on the wrong side of the culture wars this year, however. And for this, they were shown no mercy. That some of them were hauled over the coals for things they said while they were teenagers showed just how much the harsh world of cancel culture has been imported into the world of sport.

Just think of poor Ollie Robinson, the England cricketer who was suspended from the international game because of offensive tweets he wrote when he was a teenager. Or Marc Bola, the Middlesborough footballer charged by the FA for aggravated misconduct, over an allegedly bigoted tweet he sent when he was a wise, old 14.

That even the genteel sport of cricket was overcome by identity politics this year showed how deep the rot now goes. What began with former Yorkshire cricketer Azeem Rafiqs shocking allegations of racism at his old club soon descended into unseemly cancellation campaigns.

Cricketing legend Michael Vaughan was dropped as a commentator by the BBC and BT Sport because of an allegation, made by Rafiq, that he made a racist comment over 10 years ago an allegation he vehemently denies. Rafiq himself was then brought down when anti-Semitic comments he made years ago were unearthed.

There was just too much identity politicking in sport this year. Too much right-on crusading. Too much cancel culture. And it came at the cost of the sport itself, which at times felt almost secondary to the woke propaganda.

But sporting greatness is not dead yet. England has a competitive and driven national team heading into the World Cup next year. Then theres tennis prodigy Emma Raducanu, about to take her next steps. Despite a valiant attempt by woke commentators to claim the mixed-race players fairytale win at the US Open as one in the eye of racist Britain, her stunning achievement cancelled out the noise.

So lets kick the culture wars into touch in 2022, and get back to enjoying the sport.

Paddy Hannam is editorial assistant at spiked. Follow him on Twitter: @paddyhannam.

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The year the culture wars colonised sport - Spiked

Donald Trump Jr. tells young conservatives that following Jesus’ command to ‘turn the other cheek’ has ‘gotten us nothing’ – Baptist News Global

Donald Trump Jr., one of the nations foremost apologists for the win-at-all-costs politics of his father, told an evangelical Christian crowd Dec. 19 that theyve spent half a century turning the other cheek as Jesus taught and it hasnt worked out for them.

Trump Jr.s speech at the Turning Point USA gathering in Phoenix first was reported by Relevant magazine under the headline Biblical Scholar Donald Trump Jr. Tells Young Conservatives that Following the Bible Has Gotten Us Nothing. Then it was reported by Peter Wehner of The Atlantic under the headline, The Gospel of Donald Trump Jr.

While none of the Trump family has strong ties to any church or has demonstrated any pattern of church attendance, Trump Jr. acknowledged in his otherwise incendiary speech that he knew he would ruffle some feathers by speaking ill of the teachings of Jesus. Exactly how he believes conservative Republicans have turned the other cheek in Americas culture wars was not clear.

The Turning Point USA website explains its strategy: We play offense with a sense of urgency to win Americas culture wars.

The nonprofit organization was founded by Charlie Kirk, a firebrand conservative who previously was close to Jerry Falwell Jr. and Liberty University. He and Falwell Jr. created the Falkirk Center for Faith and Liberty, an advocacy and education group housed at Liberty University from 2019 until early 2021, when the university declined to renew its contract with Kirk and quietly changed the name of the center.

Kirk and Turning Point USA focus their attention on high school and college issues, seeking to engage young conservatives in the culture wars through issues such as fighting wokeness and leftist crazy and indoctrination. The organization maintains a School Board Watchlist on its website where students and parents are encouraged to report schools and teachers that promote Critical Race Theory and other leftist ideologies.

Turning Point USA lists three things it believes: The United States of America is the greatest country in the history of the world. The U.S. Constitution is the most exceptional political document ever written. Capitalism is the most moral and proven economic system ever discovered.

Trump Jr.s Dec. 19 speech was given at the groups America Fest 2021, where he spoke alongside keynoters including U.S. Rep. Madison Cawthorn, U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, U.S. Rep. Lauren Boebert, U.S. Rep. Jim Jordan, U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz, U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, and Fox News personality Tucker Carlson. The events website includes an endorsement from Rudy Giuliani. All these personalities have been at the forefront of promoting Donald Trumps big lie that he won the 2020 presidential election despite zero factual evidence to that effect.

To this crowd, Trump Jr. stirred up a roll call of conservative grievances against liberals and leftists and big government and other key institutions he said are hostile to conservatives.

Weve turned the other cheek, and I understand, sort of, the biblical reference I understand the mentality but its gotten us nothing. OK? Its gotten us nothing while weve ceded ground in every major institution in our country.

And although Charlie Kirk, the Trumps and conservative evangelicals in general frequently launch campaigns to boycott or silence people and ideas they oppose, Trump Jr. warned instead about the threat of leftists canceling them.

If we get together, they cannot cancel us all. OK? They wont, he said. And this will be contrary to a lot of our beliefs because Id love not to have to participate in cancel culture. Id love that it didnt exist. But as long as it does, folks, we better be playing the same game. OK? Weve been playing T-ball for half a century while theyre playing hardball and cheating. Right? Weve turned the other cheek, and I understand, sort of, the biblical reference I understand the mentality but its gotten us nothing. OK? Its gotten us nothing while weve ceded ground in every major institution in our country.

Wehner in his Atlantic article explained: Throughout his speech, Don Jr. painted a scenario in which Trump supporters Americans living in red America are under relentless attack from a wicked and brutal enemy. He portrayed it as an existential battle between good and evil. One side must prevail; the other must be crushed. This in turn justifies any necessary means to win. And the former presidents son has a message for the tens of millions of evangelicals who form the energized base of the GOP: the Scriptures are essentially a manual for suckers. The teachings of Jesus have gotten us nothing. Its worse than that, really; the ethic of Jesus has gotten in the way of successfully prosecuting the culture wars against the left. If the ethic of Jesus encourages sensibilities that might cause people in politics to act a little less brutally, a bit more civilly, with a touch more grace? Then it needs to go.

In his report for Relevant, Senior Editor Tyler Huckabee wrote that Trump Jr. is more correct than he probably knows here. Christianity is a poor device for gaining worldly influence. Nearly every page of the Gospels has stories of Jesus refusing earthly power and exhorting his followers to do the same. The most cursory reading of Scripture would leave anyone with the sense that this is not a manual for getting stuff.

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Donald Trump Jr. tells young conservatives that following Jesus' command to 'turn the other cheek' has 'gotten us nothing' - Baptist News Global

The war on culture: How conservatives and progressives joined forces to crush art – Salon

Reciting what was even by 1990 a familiar litany, a Princeton professor, in a book called "The Death of Literature," accused advanced writers of the past 200 years of wanting nothing to do with bourgeois industrialized society except to attack it:

Generations of authors have lived out the poet's role that Wordsworth created, in life and poem, withdrawing from industrialized society and rejecting its materialist values. Sometimes they took up their stance on the left, like Blake and Shelley, sometimes on the right like Yeats and Pound, but always, like Joyce's Stephen Dedalus, they refused to bow non serviam to the bourgeois family, religion, nation, and language that they felt cast nets over their souls.

To the writer of those words, the apparent triumph of bourgeois (capitalist) democracy over fascist and communist rivals signaled what was soon to be called "the end of history." By opting out, advanced writers had succeeded only in marginalizing themselves. Their marginalization had little to do with rejecting bourgeois democracy, however. Rather, bourgeois democracy had marginalized them for failing to measure up economically. The same fate has befallen classical music, absent any explicit rejection of bourgeois democracy, though other face-saving excuses have been invented. On the other hand, marginalization has not befallen the most successful visual artists (whatever their politics), whose work can garner exorbitant prices and therefore respect for the vocation.

Donald Trump did not insist he was a billionaire just to satisfy his own ego. He knew that status would increase his authority and popularity. Despite their anti-establishment pose, the people who rallied around him align themselves with wealth, power and whiteness. They delighted in seeing Trump flaunt his wealth and use his office to increase it, emoluments clause be damned. Their view of American greatness is just a somewhat Dorian Gray-style portrait of the official view. The objects of their resentment are the people they see as threatening their position in the pecking order. That's the way resentment (or ressentiment) often works not upward, as Nietzsche says, but downward.

Nor are Trump supporters against big government. They simply demand a government that will keep their inferiors where they belong. They favor giving the military, the police and the agencies that spy on us whatever they want, while starving social programs. The media adopt their labeling of this repressive agenda as "small" or "limited" government. But who was it who launched the campaign against "big government"? None other than government itself in the person of Ronald Reagan, who also launched the campaign against "government bureaucrats," the term of art reserved for those in government who persist in taking their responsibility to the public seriously. The old Cold War slogan still holds: "Better dead than red" (communist or socialist). Sooner death than government of the people, by the people and for the people.

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If government were serious about alleviating the problem Trump supporters pose, of course, it would stop its lying and secrecy, and the aggression and conspiracy theories they inevitably spawn, and pursue policies that benefit the majority.

Bourgeois democracy divides us into winners and losers. It loves winners and despises losers. Its apologists loathe Trump for making this unseemly fact so obvious, among other reasons. Taking the wisdom of the system as a given, critics find their own reasons to fault the arts it discriminates against, just as the poor and the struggling have always been made to bear the blame for their difficulties.

Like traditionalistssuch as Alvin Kernan, the Princeton professor quoted above,many cultural progressives have embraced a standard of redemptive art. It's not the canon of Western civilization so much as works that can be seen as deriving from or on the side of the oppressed, who are untainted by history. For these commentators, the well-publicized "failure" of 20th-century modernist works to rival popular culture in terms of audience appeal exposed not a particular sterility and moral deficiency, as traditionalists claim (see, for example, Alexander Solzhenitsyn's speech "The Relentless Cult of Novelty and How It Wrecked the Century," published in the New York Times Book Review in 1993), but the emptiness of high art's claim to superiority, whatever its period.(Once upon a time, the U.S., as leader of the "free world," officially favored avant-garde experimentation to show our superiority to the communist world and its ideological straitjacketing of art.) Just another way oppression has been rationalized. In the culture wars of our day lies the promise of a brighter tomorrow.

Progressives have made an ambitious, concerted effort to deflate the idea of artistic masterpieces and artistic genius as inherently reactionary (at least regarding the established canon) and to identify popular culture with progressive politics. By stigmatizing high art and idealizing popular taste, they claim to be striking a blow for true democracy and not just pandering, as advertisers, politicians and the media do as a matter of course. They are the advocates of laissez-faire in culture.

The idea that to criticize popular taste is anti-democratic is the premise of Andrew Ross' enormously influential "No Respect: Intellectuals and Popular Culture," published in 1989. Ross' claim that 20th-century American intellectuals had no respect for popular culture is false, but he is unconcerned with their praise of particular works or artists, perhaps seeing it as expropriation or incipient canon creation. What he actually objects to is their presumption in making judgments at all. They may not have spared "elitist" high culture, either, but then, high culture deserved it for its pretensions. Ross views popular culture as the direct expression of popular taste and thus above criticism.

For him, the only authorities worth attending to about popular culture are French intellectuals (Michel Foucault, Jacques Derrida, Jacques Lacan and so on) and their followers. The fact that these authorities do not address the general public, unlike the intellectuals Ross pillories, does not raise his democratic hackles. Why bother engaging the public when you can just co-opt it?

Ross cherry-picks examples to associate a critical stance toward popular culture with sexual and political conformity while celebrating rock, punk, camp, pop, porn and romance novels as liberating and transgressive. Though Ross mocks the idea of the heroic dissenter he associates with "vanguardist" critics of popular culture, he presents Andy Warhol as a culture hero, exemplary because he identified himself with popular culture.

"When others are giving up democracy, or defining [high] culture as its antithesis ... there must be loyalty to both," British social critic and novelist Raymond Williams said in the 1950s. Democracy and culture are still often seen as antithetical, but culture is now likelier to be considered the more dispensable of the two or at least, supposedly democratic popular culture is viewed as the aesthetic equal, and the moral or political superior, of "elitist" high culture.

Given this shift, traditionalists have been anxious to reassert the superiority of high culture to popular culture, or at least to those examples of popular culture they find morally or politically repugnant. They charge modernist art not only with fostering the spiritual climate for Hitler and Stalin but also with allowing popular culture to run amok and become debased.

When people refer to the failure of 20th-century modernist art to reach a large audience, what they mean is that it didn't find an audience large enough to counter the pop-culture audience. But who isn't part of the pop audience, at least some of the time? The art of earlier centuries is spared that devastating comparison. The names of its creators can still be counted on to evoke an awe that carries with it an illusion of bygone social unity. Thus, Solzhenitsyn invoked Racine, Murillo, Raphael, Bach, Beethoven and Schubert as the "spiritual foundation" of their times, though their work was known to far fewer people in their own times than in subsequent centuries.

In the academy, high culture's star has fallen (broadly speaking) as that of popular culture has risen. Once a good deal of popular music became identified with political protest, starting in the 1960s, popular culture was in a position to eclipse high culture in prestige. The fact that for much of the 20th century, pop culture was regarded as inferior to high culture also added to its luster a sort innocence by disassociation. Its economic superiority clinched the matter. If a work of art is only or mainly a political document or source of moral inspiration, then the larger the audience it reaches to inspire or enlighten, the greater the work and the artist. Popularity by itself tells us nothing about how people respond to a work and whether or not they understand it as "political" but some cultural progressives have accepted it as the supreme standard. Down with cultural hierarchy and up with economic hierarchy.

In his influential study "Highbrow/Lowbrow: the Emergence of Cultural Hierarchy in America," historian Lawrence Levine argued that until the second half of the 19th century art in America was regarded rightly, in his view as no different from any other form of entertainment and subject to the same measures of success. Then the arbiters of culture stepped in, expropriated art from the people and sacralized it. I don't believe Americans ever embraced art as Levine says we did, or were later cowed by the arbiters of culture. To me, those claims contradict each other.

Pop culture has become accepted as genuine popular expression rather than as potentially exploitive. That view that offers something for everyone: the exploiters, who always said they were here to give the public what it wants; the celebrators of pop, who can cozy up to success and celebrity while feeling virtuous about it; and the elitists, who can take masochistic pleasure in having their low opinion of popular taste confirmed. In this context, it has become taboo to view the public as vulnerable to manipulation. You see, elitists fed us that patronizing line simply to mask their attempts to cow us into buying the mystique of Art.

When I began this essay, early in my late-life awakening to economic matters (a strange admission for someone who made his living working for business publications), cultural progressives' credulity about the market just made me uneasy. Now, it floors me: To demystify Art with a capital A, progressives embraced the mystification of the Market with a capital M.

Popular culture is considered democratic because of its superior salability. It meets the market's most important test: people will pay for it on a mass scale. The marketers of popular culture go all out, while promoting the idea that their efforts have little effect: We are all sovereign individuals, and far too sophisticated to fall for crude manipulation! We agree, of course just as we tend to buy into the flattery of demagogues and so does anyone with an interest in disparaging high culture, especially in its more vulnerable 20th-century manifestations.

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How many of us, enjoying feeling part of the crowd or wanting to share something with others or simply out of curiosity, read books or watch movies and TV shows just because they're popular? Who doesn't? We are social, imitative animals, after all. We are only too easily led, always questioning why we should not be like the other animals instead of being "fated to wide-eyed responsibility in life," as D.H. Lawrence put it in his poem "Man and Bat." Herd animals who follow the crowd: That's what the social order prefers us to be, and what pop culture conditions us to be.

Unlike pop culture, high culture has been insulated from the market, judged not by salability but by "aesthetic" qualities dreamed up by high culture's "priests." The "people" have had no say in the matter. Aristocratic in origin, high culture accommodated itself to the rise of the middle class while remaining elitist and complicit in inequality. Did two centuries' worth of anti-bourgeois artists rid us of sexism, racism and inequality? QED. It must be admitted that the belief in art's sovereign and transforming power, evident in both romanticism and modernism, encouraged millennial hopes that have now been transferred to pop culture.

Cultural progressives such as Levine view the market as the great leveler, working to democratize culture, but never to control it or to reinforce hierarchy. Only the "arbiters of culture," the "culture guardians," have that insidious power. However flawed our democracy may be otherwise, popular culture is understood to be perfectly democratic. So those progressives, who preach against viewing culture in isolation from its social context can celebrate the ascendancy of pop culture even as they deplore the surrounding political and economic climate. For them, high culture, despite its marginality, reinforces the power structure, whereas pop culture by any standard, a pillar of the global economy is vital, subversive, transgressive, even revolutionary.

In this worldview, to venerate elite artists is idolatry, but to worship popular artists is good for the soul. To conflate artistic and human worth is wrong except when art is sanctified by popular success.

For some, artistic greatness is inseparable from financial success, as well as from political correctness. For example, Alex Ross has blamed classical music itself for the precarious position it has long occupied. When, with Richard Wagner, orchestral and operatic music began to consider itself superior, universal and difficult, Ross explained in a 1996 New Yorker essay, "it stumbled badly in the new democratic marketplace." If classical music hadn't "overstepped the mark and turned megalomaniacal," presumably it would have prospered, as pop music has done.

It doesn't matter that Ross'explanation makes no sense. Did the supposed megalomania of classical music only begin with Wagner? In what sense was he a universalist? And wasn't classical music's self-ascribed reputation as superior, universal and difficult aid its popularity, at one time? Don't those descriptions and that marketing strategy apply today, to the nth degree, to the treatment of pop culture both inside and outside the academy? The aesthetic criteria that were supposedly invented to support high culture's claim to superiority have not been scrapped. They have been repurposed and pressed into service on behalf of pop culture.

In any case, once we accept the premise that democracy and the marketplace are equivalent, we're sunk. We're left with no choice but to fault classical music, for example, for failing to prosper economically. High culture is now in the same position of presumed moral inferiority that poor people have always endured within bourgeois democracy.

Cultural works that succeed in "the new democratic marketplace" by making a ton of money are literally understood to be good for us. They are not led astray by the artist's delusions of grandeur, alienating a virtuous, right-thinking public. They are modest in their intentions, like the (truly Wagnerian) novels of Ayn Rand. The cultural consumer, unlike the consumer of other products or the political consumer exercises sound judgment and is not swayed manipulation. She is the rational actor of classical economics, as imagined for instance by Adam Smith.

This belief in a democratic marketplace belongs with belief in a self-regulating market, as an illusion by which our economic system maintains itself. But Andrew Ross' argument does make sense, in one specific way. It expresses the widely shared feeling that high culture had it coming for having offered itself as a substitute religion, a "royal highroad of transcendence," in novelist Walker Percy's phrase. In that light, the use of Wagner as example made perfect sense. The true substitute religion is popular culture.

Alvin Kernan, whose description of the adversarial literature of the last two centuries I quoted at the outset, believed that artists in bourgeois industrialized societies no longer had any business dabbling in social criticism. An artist fortunate enough to live in such a society had an obligation to support the system, or at least to refrain from questioning it, because bourgeois democracy represented the best of all possible worlds, and was to be protected and nourished at all costs. To criticize the system, in that view, was to invite the commissars and the concentration camps. Critics are dupes, fellow travelers of Hitler and Stalin, totalitarians in spirit, nihilists. (Kernan was a decorated veteran of World War II who wrote extensively about his war experiences.)

The Marxist historian E.J. Hobsbawm, in his 1994 history of the "short" 20th century, "The Age of Extremes," tried to have it both ways. On the one hand, he derided the idea that aesthetic quality was a myth and that sales figures were the only valid measure of a work of art. On the other hand, he treated aesthetic factors as negligible compared to political considerations. Hobsbawm's own artistic preferences all had political underpinnings, and he was sarcastic or obtuse toward artists who lacked the right political associations.

Many progressive critics, also in the name of democracy, similarly want to discourage artists from expressing views or attitudes contrary to their own. They believe an artist's democratic duty is to please the virtuous, right-thinking public, for which he or she will be duly and amply rewarded. Aesthetic distinctions unsupported by box-office success are a political inconvenience, an obstacle to be gotten around. Artists and works popular in their own time are the frontrunners in the immortality sweepstakes, and the more popular they are, the better their chances. So we can never disqualify Jackie Collins or Britney Spears or the Marvel movies, for instance, on suspect aesthetic grounds.

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Shakespeare scholar Gary Taylor used the Jackie Collins example in his book "Cultural Selection: Why Some Achievements Survive the Test of Time and Others Don't" to emphasize the "obvious but embarrassing truth ... that we don't know what the future will consider important." However, because "cultural selection," in Taylor's view, requires the stimulus to memory that contemporary popularity can provide, we lessen the chance of being wrong in our judgments by going along with the crowd.

Taylor discusses the popularity of the movie "Casablanca" upon first release, citing its box-office success, its three Oscars, and the 21-week run of its theme song, "As Time Goes By," on the Hit Parade as evidence of "how people did respond before their 'parents' told them how they should respond," in other words, before the movie became a "classic." To heighten the contrast between the first response and later ones mediated by authorities ("parents"), and therefore compromised, Taylor in effect minimizes contemporary conditioning factors publicity, advertising, reviews, word-of-mouth, sociability, World War II. The possibility that "Casablanca," despite its continued popularity the strength of its stimulus to memory, in Taylor's termsmay be inferior to less popular movies is not considered.

Is judgment determined solely by enduring popularity, so that it's futile to criticize "Gone With the Wind," say, on the grounds that it falsifies history in a way that has proven harmful as did its popular predecessor, D.W. Griffith's "Birth of a Nation"? That's not to suggest that political considerations should entirely determine our judgments about art, only that the criteria for such judgments are always dynamic and conditioned by multiple overlapping factors.

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Most of the people in the original audience for "Casablanca" still understood movies as marketable commodities, disposable goods. But a great many people who have watched "Casablanca" within the last 50 years or so grew up with the idea that movies are an art form the modern art form, in fact, and a beacon in a dark time. What Racine, Murillo, Raphael, Bach, Beethoven and Schubert were to their times, according to Solzhenitsyn a spiritual foundation the movies, a popular and collaborative art, have become since.

What accounts for that change in public perception and what part has it played in the lasting reputation of "Casablanca"? Taylor doesn't say, but although he is comfortable crediting the survival of works of art to the wisdom of the contemporary public, to the workings of godlike technology and to those who make or keep these works available to the public, he is disinclined to acknowledge the role of criticism. Critics, after all, are those who presume to make aesthetic distinctions regardless of popularity, or even in defiance of it.

Taylor, clearly thinking in terms of a mass audience, describes Stravinsky's "Rite of Spring," one of the composer's best-known works and a landmark of modernism, as unpopular. He cites it as an example of art that is too complex for most people, a complexity made possible, and therefore (in his view) inevitable, by the increased capabilities of music notation and performance. According to him, "Rite of Spring" was created for and can only be enjoyed by a small group of connoisseurs, although Stravinsky himself wanted to reach as large an audience as did Tchaikovsky, Taylor's example of a popular classical composer.

Some progressives, like some traditionalists, have taken up the banner of "accessibility" in works of art, in opposition to modernist complexity or "difficulty." Some give this standard a further ideological twist, associating it with women artists, LGBTQ artists or artists of color, and thereby associating complexity with white heterosexual males. Implicit in Taylor's treatment of Stravinsky is the idea that although newfound freedom went to the heads of modernist artists (which was understandable), art should never be difficult to like or understand. It should seek the largest possible audience, rather than a limited one. But who is Taylor to say that "Rite of Spring," which he seems able to enjoy without being a professional musician or musicologist, is beyond the grasp of "most people"? And how does that statement square with his professed belief in popular taste?

To Lawrence Levine, the idea that we should approach works of art as individuals instead of as part of a group is an aspect of the divide-and-rule strategy crafted to serve elite interests. Levine is not interested in individual responses to art he cites none in "Highbrow/Lowbrow." When he refers approvingly to the American audience's involvement with art in the early 19th century, he refers to boisterous, often belligerent, occasionally violent and predominantly male crowd behavior, not unlike that associated with professional or college sports in our own time. That audience was quick to take offense if they thought their country or their dignity was being insulted, or they weren't getting what they'd paid for. Some confused plays with reality and wanted to intervene in the action. Others freely hissed, booed, cheered, stamped, applauded, threw things, ate, talked and expectorated their way through performances.

Levine interprets this conventional rowdiness as the American audience asserting its democratic fellowship with the audience for Shakespeare's plays and Italian operas in earlier times and places, and contrasts that to the "passivity" of later audiences cowed by the culture guardians. Where the culture guardians saw an uncivilized mob, he sees unspoiled aficionados. He is benevolently condescending and professorial, inviting us to share his delight in the early American audience's "wonderful" naivet and truculence. His vision of virtuous solidarity among ordinary Americans may owe more to Frank Capra than to Karl Marx, and his model of audience involvement with art seems as coercive to me as the model he deplores.

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Levine equates personal, private and largely silent audience involvement with passivity because he sees it as representing defeat in the struggle against the culture guardians. In his view, the more intense the private emotion, the more complete the audience capitulation. This becomes clear when he approvingly cites settlement house pioneer Jane Addams' criticism of the "passive" absorption of shopgirls in watching movies, though Addams criticizedtheir taste entirely on other grounds. (Because they should have been getting more fresh air and exercise.)

When Levine describes, as a crowning outrage, a 1914 Boston Symphony performance of Schnberg's "Five Pieces for Orchestra," it's a tossup whom he views with most impatience: the polite, unprotesting audience; conductor Karl Muck, who programmed the work from a sense of cultural duty; or with Schnberg, for perpetrating such an affront in the first place.

Levine's distrust of individuals is something he shares with the culture guardians he criticizes. They tried to dictate how we should receive art, how we should value it and which works and artists we should admire. As educators of the people, they were disinclined to allow individuals to decide for themselves. Levine distrusts individuals because they can be seduced into admiring art as above them, and into admiring works that perhaps manifest indifference to or contempt for "the people," or other incorrect messages. To respond to art as we have been conditioned to do divides us rather than unites us, and encourages unwarranted feelings of superiority. Levine, no less than the culture guardians, holds to an idea of the people that excludes himself. The upshot, once again, is that we cannot trust ourselves where art is concerned, but must seek expert guidance.

Who will be our new improved culture guardians? Professional historians, for one. Levine's democratic principles are further compromised by academic chauvinism. Despite what he says against professionalization and specialization and in favor of amateurs and lay practitioners, Levine was an academic historian asserting the claims of his discipline to the field of "expressive culture," to which amateurs like Dwight Macdonald (whom Levine views with tremendous condescension) once laid claim. Among the cultural institutions Levine subjects to critical scrutiny libraries, museums, concert halls, opera houses, public parks colleges and universities are conspicuous by their absence.

For Gary Taylor too, teacher knows best. "Cultural Selection" culminates in an attack on Richard Nixon, who Taylor believes we must learn to remember as evil for the sake of our moral and political health. What had seemed an exposition of politically correct aesthetics, uncomplicated by personal feeling, finally becomes a sermon. Because of what Taylor doesn't allow himself to say earlier, the result is self-contradiction. A writer who can't bring himself to breathe a word against Jackie Collins or "Casablanca," in deference to popular taste as measured by the marketplace, thinks it essential for a twice-elected American president to be understood as the epitome of evil. But why is the judgment of the ballot box more open to question than the judgment of the box office? Shouldn't he remind us again that we don't know who the future will consider great, and cannot presume to judge?

Perhaps Taylor, and other cultural progressives, imagines a kind of quid pro quo: I say nice things about Jackie Collins or, latterly, about Spider-Man and Taylor Swift to prove my belief in the people. They will vindicate my faith in them by repudiating the political right. It's a special plea for a form of moral reckoning, one that worship of the marketplace has made impossible.

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The war on culture: How conservatives and progressives joined forces to crush art - Salon