Globalisation
and Media: Making Feminist Sense
by Susanna George
This paper was
presented during the “Women and Globalisation” event organised by the
Women’s Movement Caucus of India during the World Social Forum in Mumbai,
India in January 2004.
I have been asked
to examine Globalisation and Media in ways that will help us make connections
between these two phenomena and how these affect women’s lives. I am
glad that this conversation is happening in the context of the World
Social Forum, because I strongly believe in this confluence of ideas
and ideals, and see it as one of the best spaces for looking at the
convergence of issues that appear at first glance disconnected.
I am even gladder
that we are a gathering of feminists and activist women, since women
are some of the best at finding connections between seemingly disparate
issues. We do this out of necessity and for our physical and emotional
survival, because for all of us in our different spheres of life, we
often have to point out to those around us the insidious and entrenched
nature of patriarchy in every institution and facet of our societies
and lives.
The same is true
of work in media, information and communications. Feminists working
in this field have long had to point out sexist, racist, elitist and
homophobic manifestations within news and reportage that are purportedly
balanced and neutral. As media and communications structures and systems
become increasingly corporatised and globalised, we take on the challenge
of scrutinising their inter-linkages, and trying to show up, in sharp
relief, the face of our common enemies—patriarchy, corporate hegemonies,
ascendant rightwing ideological regimes, and the U.S. empire in its
fullest meaning.
In order to do this,
we need to do the following:
Firstly, we need
to explore new frontiers in Media that take into account its rapidly
evolving state. When we speak of Media, we can no longer speak of newspapers,
television and radio alone. The links between media corporations and
new technologies such as the Internet and the IT industry need to be
fully understood. We also need to see the connection in the ways that
corporate media works hand in glove with the state, and corporate and
military regimes, not just to provide the infrastructure for normalising
and rationalising these powers, but also, in so doing, strengthening
its own power.
Secondly, we need
to look for the Devil in the Details. Today, if we want to find out
what is really happening in the world, we have to look in every page
of a newspaper. The connections are in the business pages, the special
pages on the IT industry, in the advertisements, in the sports and health
pages, and perhaps most pertinently, in the culture and lifestyle supplements.
We need to read into the meaning behind the messages because otherwise,
we will miss the inter-linkages that are both potent and dangerous.
Globalised Media
as a Weapon of Mass Deception
We all place high value on truth-telling in our societies yet today,
we have some of the most profound forms of lying taking place through
the mouths of our governments, through the astigmatic minds of our politicians
and religious leaders, through almost all corporately owned newspapers,
television and radio stations, through advertising, through the fashion
and cosmetic industries.
Some people will
readily acknowledge that they are being lied to, and that they are being
told, whether subtly or crudely, to uphold certain viewpoints of the
state of the world, specific consumption patterns, and certain lifestyles
and beliefs about ourselves and others. Even so, the resistance to such
lying and manipulation of facts is shockingly low, given the most dramatic
impact that it has on all other aspects of our anti-globalisation and
anti-imperialist struggles.
Advertisers spend
billions of dollars in research to examine the subtleties of human consumption
patterns, while sexist imagery and cultural symbols are a goldmine of
copy for advertisers. Women, teenagers, gays and lesbians, and even
pre-adolescent have been turned into markets for “niche advertising.”
The heightening of a sense of inadequacy, fear and want in post-colonial
societies is a vital part of creating markets for a wide range of products.
Even the so-called natural health food and herbal products industries
get a tremendous boost from the paranoia and complete confusion created
by the health columns of newspapers and magazines. So also with the
cosmetics, slimming and beauty industries that thrive on the aggravation
of the sense of sexual and physical inadequacy in both women and men.
There are countless examples, sadly, of how we appear to have little
resistance to the forces that seek to turn us into mindless consumers.
Women in particular, but not exclusively, have subjected themselves
to the most gruesome and painful forms of beautifying, evidence of the
extent of our falling for their lies.
The horrors of last
year’s war in Iraq were delivered to our homes in video-game-style detail.
“Embedded Journalism” reached new heights as cameras were placed on
the noses of fighter planes, and we could follow the path of the bomb
as it careened toward the hideous maiming, burning and death it would
inflict. The media coverage was a crucial part of the “Shock and Awe”
campaign of Bush in Iraq. It is no wonder that the three major global
media channels that covered the war, CNN, BBC and the Fox Network, were
owned by transnational media corporations representing the interests
of the Allied forces.
Today, Globalised
Media is turning into a Weapon of Mass Deception—an instrument to deceive
and lie to hundreds of millions in one go.
As media institutions
are merged into transnational media and IT industry players, megalomaniacal
corporations are created, their sole interest being to amass the greatest
number of consumers at the lowest cost, thereby posting the largest
profit. A one-size-fits-all formula has become the trend in the creation
of cultural content in the so-called “entertainment” industry.
Perhaps the most
insidious of deceptions is the overwhelming sense of “choice” and “freedom”
that people experience today in the age of 100-channel cable TV stations
and the multifarious possibilities and options on the Internet. When
scrutinised for content in terms of diversity of opinion, ideals, values,
cultures, and the voices of those at the margins of society, one will
soon realise that it is one of limited choice. A pre-selection has already
taken place to meet the expectations of advertisers, the state, global
markets and the status quo.
In this age of the
Empire, those of us who stand in opposition to Empire building and all
forms of fascist and fundamentalist expansion need to understand the
intricate relationship of globalised media and information and communications
structures and systems to the state, the military and to projects of
global hegemony and fascism by both state and non-state actors. For
these reasons, we need to stay vigilant of the trends of large media
and IT corporations such as AOL Time Warner, Microsoft, Viacom/CBS/MTV,
and reckon with them into our struggle against giant corporations.
As I have said in
the previous World Social Forum, global media is to corporate capitalism
what missionaries were to the colonial enterprise—it creates the sensibility,
cultural posturing and values base necessary for a full-scale expansion
and capture of markets. We fight against giant pharmaceutical, biochemical
and agricultural companies for poisoning our water and air, for homogenising
order, and for turning our ways of life into one big marketplace. Is
not the slow poisoning and homogenisation of our thoughts, desires and
values through media and the attendant creation of consumerist desires
not something we should wage a similar war against?
The Devil in
the Details
The reminder of the well-known poet Rimbaud that the devil is in
the details has always helped me when trying to understand the ways
in which various forces, global and local, interact with each other.
Political mongering takes place where we cannot see all of the actors,
nor all of the stakes, but we need to stay cognisant of the fact that
behind every event and story are multiple and complex actors, stakes
and possible results.
In the same way,
if we start looking for where these colossal media and IT corporations
are today, we will find them in places that would not have occurred
to us to search. In the United Nations, for example. When Ted Turner,
once owner of CNN, made a pledge of US$1 billion over ten years to the
United Nations, he won untold favours in the eyes of the Clinton administration
and the UN.
IT corporations
such as Cisco Systems, through their foundations, have made inroads
within the UN, appropriating language of gender empowerment. In partnership
with the United Nations Women’s Development Fund (UNIFEM), Cisco Systems
and Cisco Foundation have been working on women’s training programmes
for job creation in the IT sector, allegedly to promote gender equality.
But on closer examination, one sees that these women are trained in
the use of specific patented products, essentially meaning that the
women are being primed to become technicians of Cisco products, and
not necessarily as workers with broader-based skills and knowledge that
can be applied outside Cisco Systems.
While glancing through
a report that will be launched during this World Social Forum entitled
“Threatened Existence: A Feminist Analysis of the Genocide in Gujarat,”
I was amazed to note in one of the annexes the large contributions of
U.S.-based IT corporations such as Cisco, Sun, Oracle, HP and AOL Time
Warner to a U.S.-based organisation called the Indian Development and
Relief Fund (IDRF), widely believed to be linked to the Hindutva forces
in India. The book refers to IDRF as one of the top five grantees of
Cisco Foundation in 1999, having received US$70,000, ostensibly for
its development and relief activities. While the authors did note that
these U.S. foundations have been “unsuspecting” in their gift giving,
one need only speculate on the returns in favour that such a gift in
the name of “corporate social responsibility” would accrue in terms
of political leverage.
New digital and
satellite-based technologies play a critical role in the expansion of
financial, trade and market regimes, providing the technology, infrastructure
and sheer speed of operation. They have also changed the face of warfare
dramatically, making computer and IT savvy a part of every soldier’s
training. The precision digital technology that was used in the Iraq
war made the American GI a communications specialist more than a machine-gun
or hand-grenade wielder. Today, there is an eerie quality in the surveillance
measures that are using devices that we know to be communication tools
such as the Internet, hand phone and other such devices that support
“connectivity.”
We need to stay
alert to the multiplicity of sites of resistance in relation to the
struggle against corporate globalisation. Even as we look for the devil
in the details, however, it is vital that we do not slip into a binary
understanding of the world. Everything cannot be simplified or essentialised
as Good or Evil. There are many nuances in every situation, and we need
to be able to respond to new situations with all of our feminist courage,
wisdom and heart.
Feminists know,
more than most, the multiplicity of intersecting realities, and we have
always sought to look at the way in which the different forces of power
interact with each other to reincarnate another head of the hydra we
call Patriarchy. We have to apply this same rigour in the case of globalised
media and ICT system and structures.
Mounting a Broad-based
Resistance
I made a list last year of things that we need to do in order to strengthen
a broad, non-sectarian resistance that can draw in more people into
the struggle against an unjust, violent and oppressive system. I present
the list again as it remains relevant today:
1. We need to keep
our minds open to being challenged, and to be willing to give up our
familiar analytical lenses and known platforms for advocacy and action.
This is the challenge of Porte Alegre, and now Mumbai, to feminists
around the world—the demand that we stay aware of the multiplicity of
the platforms of struggle for change. We can no longer speak of sexist
portrayal in the media without taking on the ways in which media misrepresents
the most dispossessed and marginalised in society to maintain the moral,
social and cultural authority of dominant classes. All of us from various
social movements need to be aware of the struggles of other social movements,
their analyses and sites of resistance, and be willing to give support
to struggles that have not been our traditional spaces.
2. Communication
activists have long struggled to make visible the ways in which neo-liberal
globalisation is built on the backbone of globalised and corporatised
media, information and communications systems. Working shoulder to shoulder
are community radio and other community-based media and communications
activists that seek to preserve, if not expand, what little space exists
for non-commercial and community based alternatives. It is time that
the different social movements recognise the importance of these different
sites of struggle and support these efforts.
3. While the onslaught
of global commercialised media systems has been reshaping the landscape
of national, local and alternative media, this is by no means a finished
project. There are many groups, including feminist and cultural activist
groups using various media and communication tools to create, revitalise,
energise and renew cultural expression and folk communication without
recreating the ‘noble savage’ nor romanticising the tribal nor essentialising
the past.
4. We need to recognise
to the important demands made by indigenous peoples and marginalised
communities for greater cultural diversity, autonomy and access and
control over cultural resources. More often than not, poor, marginalised
and indigenous communities are absent in programming equations since
they do not form a powerful consumer bloc and have little purchasing
power. Observe the trend of television programming and how it is geared
toward audiences that have the greatest consumptive power (including
children of the middle and upper middle classes for whom the cartoons
are created).
5. There is a need
for a more vocal and visible force monitoring the movements of large
multinational media conglomerates such as AOL Time Warner, Disney, Sony
and NewsCorp that already command vast shares of the media and communications
market. We should also be alert to their impact on smaller regional,
national and local media. We need to update our critique and resistance
to media monopolies since they are antithetical to democratic discourse.
Resistance needs to come from strengthening the minds of our young and
old alike so that they can discern through various levels of media savvy.
6. A reality that
feminists have had to contend with around the question of sexually exploitative
imagery of women in the media is that sometimes, those who protest the
impact of globalised media systems and the overwhelming influx of cultural
content from the West tend to be the most rabid nationalistic, jingoistic
or religious fundamentalists. We need to resist knee-jerk reactions
and most of all, resist at all levels any unholy alliance with right-wing
forces that take up positions that seem progressive on some issues,
but are completely conservative around others, including women’s reproductive
rights and the rights of sexual minorities. Our responses to globalised
media and communications need to be far more nuanced and deliberate.
Susanna George
is the executive director of Isis International-Manila.
Also in this
issue:
IT in India: Social Revolution or Approaching
Implosion?
When Technology, Media and Globalisation Conspire:
Old Threats, New Prospects
False and Real Differences:Alternative and Mainstream
Media in Latin America
Choices We (Must) Make For Ourselves: Women and
Transnational Media
Media and ICT Systems, Globalisation, Militarism
and Fundamentalisms
Knowledge Economy: Does It Come with a Knowledge
Society?
Recalling the Past, Looking to the Future
Common Agenda, Different Methods: Women’s Use of
ICTs in Conflict Situations
WILMA: Making a Difference
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