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‘Lecture’/Class Notes

Spring English


Navigating a Post-Truth World: Charles Sykes

  • “What did you give us?” Benjamin Franklin: “A republic, if you can keep it.”
  • Do we really believe in warnings of the end of the republic?
  • We are not immune to history.
  • Most Americans are not sure they have faith in democracy.
  • Historically, Constitutional democracies/republics are not the norm.
    • Tribalism, authoritarianism, oligarchy, monarchy, tyranny were the default settings of human culture.
  • Liberal democracy is the antidote and the answer.
    • Needs the rule of law, checks and balances, respect for the minority.
    • Responsible citizenship.
  • Crisis with democracy stems from a crisis of citizenship.
    • More than a third of Americans cannot name a single right in the First Amendment.
  • Being a citizen, though, is more than just knowledge.
    • A respect for truth; truth is the oxygen of democracy.
    • Democracy requires a functioning maketplace of ideas; the truth is knowable and we live in a shared reality.
    • The glue of democracy is trust in one another.
  • Politicians who lie and rely on propaganda are not new; what is new is a citizenry that hears lies, knows they may be lies, and don’t care.
  • If we don’t have a shared reality, politics becomes about brute force and there is no discourse.
  • The first casualty of win-or-lose politics is truth.
  • Prior, we did have guardrails in politics, but they limited the impact of the most reckless voices in our politics.
  • Now, we are awash in conspiracies, doctored videos, lies, propaganda, sometimes from the highest areas of American life.
    • What do we do about this?
  • Fake news is completely fabricated news: lying works.
    • Generates clicks, ratings, votes.
    • Lying can be a very profitable business model.
  • George Orwell wrote extensively about the relationship between truth and democracy.
  • Gary Kasparov: the point of propaganda is not just to mislead, but to attack your critical sensibilities in an effort to annihlate truth.
    • Make you question who you believe and what truth is.
  • When no-one know what is true or real, people look towards the state.
  • Truth is essential to our politics these days.
  • Everything is possible and nothing is true: the public gets to a point where they will believe the worst, regardless of if they are being lied to.
  • In a silo, a fake story is impossible to refute: alternative reality silos are safe spaces in which they are protected from information that challenges their premises.
  • We deligitmize much of the fact-based media and destroy immunity to hoaxes.
  • It is not fair to completely blame the media; tweaking human nature is difficult.
  • A lot of us assume that humans use their minds to determine what is true.
    • If you understand the tribal nature of human beings, you will understand people strengthen their bond to their tribe.
    • A hyperpartisan that hears information about their party or candidate will get dopamine, meaning it is addictive.
    • If humans want to believe something, they only need one piece of information.
  • In a world where we ar eone click/swipe away from having all of our biases confirmed.
  • We are paying a tremendous price for our failure to educate young people in media literacy and civics.

The Politics of Fiction: Elif Shafak

  • Strasbourg, France - born to Turkish parents.
  • Raised as a single child by a single mother.
  • Two different kinds of womanhood: mother and grandmother.
    • Spirituality, education, rationality
  • If you want to destroy something, all you need to do is surround it in thick walls.
  • We are born into a certain cultural circle.
    • If we have no conneciton with other worlds, we will dwindle inside our cultural circle.
  • It’s not healthy for a human being to spend too long in front of their own reflections.
  • We form clusters based on similarity and produce stereotypes about other clusters of people.
  • Storytelling can allow us to transcend these walls.
  • Writing fiction - less of an autobiographical manifestation as it is a transcending.
  • “Representative foreigner” - each person seen as a representative of their nation.
  • Imagination - the only suitcase you can keep; stories keeps one centered.
  • In the face of death and destruction, differences evaporate.
  • If you manage not to be frightened by the gap between the mind and the tongue, it can be stimulating.
  • Stories lose their magic when a story is seen as more than a story.
  • Many want to see a manifestation of identity in stories; the world of identity politics affects the way stories are circulated.
  • Non-Western authros feel identity politics the most; writers are seen as representatives of their background.
  • Freedom of imagination is in danger by idnetity politics - multicultural literature, all non-Western literature is lumped together.
  • Multicultural writers are expected to tell “real stories”; function is attributed to fiction.
  • Fiction - “just a story”; the language of fiction is not the language of daily politics.
  • Identity politics divides us; fiction connects.
  • Stories cut across boundaries.
  • “Knowledge that takes you not beyond yourself is far worse than ignorance.”
  • Problem is not knowledge; it is knowledge beyond ourselves.
  • Fiction is both local and universal.
  • Imaginative literature not necessarily about writing what we “know”, but instead writing what we can “feel”.

Remembering Rachel Carson with Kaiulani Lee

  • Silent Spring was published in 1962; an alarming story of pesticides.
  • The chemistry industry hit back against Silent Spring.
  • Carson opened a ferocious debate.
  • Our technologies come with destructive effects.
  • Kaiulani Lee’s mission - bringing Rachel Carson to life. Performs a play, called “A Sense of Wonder”.
  • The backlash allowed for much more publicity than the book would have gotten.
  • Immersion into nature - what are the voices that you hear? What is the sense of wonder?
  • Carson was very poor, unbelievably poor; yet, she changed the course of history.
  • Carson was an aspiring writer that later fell in love with science; Carson worked for the wildlife service.
  • Biologist by day, writer at night; it is the study of science that makes the literary career possible.
  • Rachel Carson had already become one of the most recognized scientific writers before the publication of Silent Spring.
  • Science does not belong only to a few; we live in a world of science, and the aim of science is to discover the truth, as is literature.
  • Write as a merging of poeticism and science; science will discover the poetic qualities.
  • No one can write truthfully about the sea and leave off poetry.
  • Not a muckraking journalist as an observer and poet of the natural world. In her life, she changed.
  • Atomic energy horrified Carson.
  • Science promised the people of the 1940s chemicals to kill domestic pests.
  • Carson did not want to write Silent Spring but needed to; setting out to look for any information that may help.
  • Carson was alarmed by the indifference of many; citizens assumed that there was some guardian of these operations.
  • No publisher would publish an article for fear of retaliation from chemical advertisers; Carson decided to write a book.
  • Carson’s mother was dying and Roger needed Carson’s attention, but she decided to write the book. No one else would write the book - this was an urgent matter.
  • Only years as a government scientist gave Carson the knowledge to understand the severity of the use of chemicals.
  • The public was unknowingly being asked to take the risk - the public must make the choice, and they cannot make the choice if they do not have the information.
  • “A Fable for Tomorrow” - the future American town in which all the sounds of Spring have been silenced. The Silent Spring.
  • Silent Spring was a phenomenal success - the public was riveted; Silent Spring also became the target of political controversy.
  • Argument against Carson: we would return to the dark diseases, with vermin and diseases. Carson was accused of Communist sympathies, “mystical”, and being a “peace nut”. There is an initial irritation, but perhaps it will become amusing.
    • Interesting use of “science” and portraying Carson’s work as “mystic” and kooky.
  • The book incited a very small but rich portion of society; Carson became a publicity problem.
  • Rachel Carson, to the public, was calm and confident in her convictions.
  • Carson was also dying of cancer; every month is precious.
  • The nature of responsibility and of life. “To sin by silence when they should protest makes cowards out of men.” -Lincoln
  • One more trip into the public arena.
  • Silent Spring had awakened the public; President Kennedy set up a special panel to study pesticides, and their report vindicated Silent Spring’s thesis. Followed by Congressional hearings examining legislative action
  • A new consciousness was formed in our balance with nature.
  • Carson died in 1964.
  • Natural beauty has a necessary place in the development of any individual. Destroying natural beauty degrades some part of man. Earth is exceedingly beautiful; in it, we can find calmness and courage.
  • Mankind has tread into an artificial world; away from the realities of Earth. (Reminiscent of Shafak)
    • Intoxicated by his own power; experimenting with his destruction.
  • But, the more clearly we understand the realities, the less we will destroy it.