A good article from George Monbiot publish in "The
Guardian"
I really like his description of Hollywood as an
industry of such vital importance to the spreading of US way of life and culture
as a way to prepare the world to US imperialism.
"So perhaps we should not be surprised to
see, in that St Patrick's day parade and in so many other events over the past
60 years or more, people marching behind the mouse and the duck. It may be an
unconscious display of power, but it is a display of power none the less.
"Hollywood conquered the world," the American critic Michael Medved
told the Daily Telegraph last year, "long before America had conquered it
economically or militarily ... Its films were our advance legions." In the
40s, the Motion Picture Export Association used to call itself "the little
state department". One Hollywood producer described "the meshing of
Donald Duck and diplomacy" as "a Marshall Plan for ideas". The
United States, he announced, needed Hollywood more than it needed the H-bomb."
"One of the paradoxes of our times
is that, as western societies age, their culture is infantilised."
"Money chases youth, and culture chases
the money. Advertisers determine the content of television shows and newspaper
features, which in turn shape our cultural consciousness."
Of mice and money men
The sinister grip that Disney exerts on children's imaginations may finally
loosen
George Monbiot
Tuesday February 17, 2004
The Guardian
If Comcast's takeover of the Disney Corporation goes ahead, the world's biggest
media conglomeration will be built around one of humankind's most ancient
practices. Investing animals with human characteristics is something we've been
doing since we first applied charcoal to the walls of a cave. Ten thousand years
later, as the $500m we have just spent watching Finding Nemo suggests, we still
see ourselves as animals and animals as ourselves.
This suggests two things to me. The first is
that, however much we assert our independence from nature, our consciousness
remains in its thrall. Our minds were shaped when nothing was more real to us
than the fear of being eaten and the fear of not eating. Peter Jackson, in his
Lord of the Rings trilogy, deliberately exploits this primordial memory, by
exposing us to giant hyenas and mastodons: two of the palaeolithic animals with
which our minds evolved. Steven Spielberg's tyrannosaurs and velociraptors,
though they appeared more real, were less compelling. Could this be because,
pre-dating rather than predating us, they played no role in the development of
our evolutionary consciousness?
The second is that, though our engagement with
the world is supposed to have been governed by a detachment from the objects of
our curiosity ever since the Enlightenment, our tendency to project our minds
into animals, plants and inanimate objects is undiminished. Anthropomorphism is
an irredeemable human characteristic, and let he who has never sworn at his
computer be the first to deny it.
But while there is something very old about
Disney, there is, or was, something very new about it too. It welded commercial,
cultural and political power in a way the world had never seen. I remember being
struck in the 1980s by the conjunction of two images. One was a photograph of
the May day parades in Moscow, with rockets looming over the heads of the
marching soldiers. The other, taken six weeks earlier, was a photograph of a St
Patrick's day parade in New York, in which giant Goofys and Donald Ducks were
suspended above the marchers. The Soviet display was a conscious attempt to
project power, the New York parade merely a celebration of the symbols of
nationhood. But the St Patrick's day iconography seemed to me almost as sinister
as the May day manoeuvres, and for a while I couldn't understand why.
Was it simply that age-old prejudice against
the upstart nation that had helped to shove Britain back in its box? It is hard
for British people, even those who contest imperialism, to rid themselves of the
resentments of a toppled empire. But I think I had got over it by then. Was it
because Disney characters symbolised the crass and trivial aspects of American
culture? Which other country, after all, constructs its national image around
cartoon animals?
Well, just about all of them. Britain's lion
and unicorn are, if anything, more ridiculous than Disney's caricatures, for the
simple reason that they demand to be taken seriously. There is nothing as
risible as those innumerable servile states whose eagles or lions or dragons
proclaim the status of top predator. But in the ubiquity of the Disney
characters we encounter just the opposite: hegemony represented by an
infantilised mouse and an infantilised duck. Far from seeing this as ridiculous,
I find it deeply frightening.
It's not just because of what I have read about
Walt Disney and the corporation he founded. Today we know that the world's
favourite uncle was a wife-beating, child-grooming, union-busting employer of
Nazi war criminals, who denounced Hollywood dissidents to the House unamerican
affairs committee and made mendacious propaganda films such as Our Friend the
Atom. The corporation has repeatedly been exposed for contracting its toy- and
clothes-making work to atrocious sweatshops. In 1996, the year in which Disney's
chief executive, Michael Eisner, made $565m, the workers stitching Disney's
branded clothes in Haiti were earning as little as a dollar a day. In China
today, according to a new report by the US national labour committee, a factory
producing Disney toys enforces 130-hour weeks, with a day off every two months.
But my fear of the dominance of Disney's magic kingdom is about more than this.
One of the paradoxes of our times is that, as
western societies age, their culture is infantilised. Just as the number of
elderly people in America and Europe begins to tip the scales against the young,
youth culture is exalted as never before. And the youths we celebrate are
getting younger. There's a simple reason for this. It is easier to get
inexperienced people to part with their money (or to persuade their parents to
part with their money) than it is to deceive the elderly. Money chases youth,
and culture chases the money. Advertisers determine the content of television
shows and newspaper features, which in turn shape our cultural consciousness.
As Eric Schlosser has shown, it was Walt Disney
who "perfected the art of selling things to children". He developed a
vertically integrated business in which his TV programmes sold his films, and
his films sold his theme parks and toys. He was able to drum up fealties among
children that no other corporation had been able to summon. The Mickey Mouse
Club he established in 1930 helped to pioneer a new form of brand loyalty, and
to extract the names, addresses and preferences of its members. Only one company
- McDonald's - has captured children as effectively as Disney, and for the past
eight years McDonald's and Disney have enjoyed an exclusive global marketing
agreement. In both cases, a hard hegemonic will is exercised through the
commercialisation of "happiness" and "fun". Disney's
creation and domination of the youth market represents the definitive triumph of
the empire of commerce.
So perhaps we should not be surprised to see,
in that St Patrick's day parade and in so many other events over the past 60
years or more, people marching behind the mouse and the duck. It may be an
unconscious display of power, but it is a display of power none the less.
"Hollywood conquered the world," the American critic Michael Medved
told the Daily Telegraph last year, "long before America had conquered it
economically or militarily ... Its films were our advance legions." In the
40s, the Motion Picture Export Association used to call itself "the little
state department". One Hollywood producer described "the meshing of
Donald Duck and diplomacy" as "a Marshall Plan for ideas". The
United States, he announced, needed Hollywood more than it needed the H-bomb.
Walt Disney's characters are sinister because
they encourage us, like those marchers, to promote the hegemony of the
corporations even when we have no intention of doing so. He captured a deep
stream of human consciousness, branded it and, when we were too young to
understand the implications, sold it back to us. Comcast's hostile takeover bid
suggests that the power of his company to seize our imaginations is declining. A
giant media corporation may be about to become even bigger, but if the attack
means that Disney is losing its ability to shape the minds of the world's
children, this is something we should celebrate.
monbiot.com