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Tying Down a
Cultural Giant
Neil Hrab
There’s an amusing
scene in Gulliver’s Travels where the protagonist
awakens from a nap and has his first encounter with the
tiny people of Lilliput. “I attempted to rise,” Gulliver
recalls, “but was not able to stir for, as I happened to
be on my back, I found my arms and legs were strongly
fastened on each side to the ground…I likewise felt
several slender ligatures across my body, from my
armpits to my thighs.” A sleeping giant, the
Lilliputians discover, is surprisingly easy to tie down.
This
fictional scene is being replicated in real-life, with
the United States as the target. Since 1998, a group of
governments representing nearly 60 countries has met
annually to devise ways to tie down the giant known as
American popular culture. The group is known as the
International Network on Cultural Policy (INCP). Its
members feel that American popular culture represents an
existential threat to their own identity. As Kim
Campbell, a former Canadian prime minister put it,
“images of
America are so [globally] pervasive…that it is almost as
if instead of the world immigrating to America, America
has immigrated to the world, allowing people to aspire
to be Americans even in their distant cultures.”
INCP’s members hope that by the end of 2004, they can
finish fashioning the “thread” they’ll use to bind down
the United States. The thread takes the form of a
proposed global treaty on cultural goods, backed by the
United Nations Educational, Social and Cultural
Organization (UNESCO). If the treaty should pass,
cultural goods will be made exempt from future free
trade talks. Bureaucrats who happen to believe their
fellow citizens consume too many American movies, for
example, will be able to impose various forms of screen
quotas to reduce consumer access to Hollywood’s
forbidden fruit. Stripped of its ability to raise the
matter during trade negotiations, Washington will find
it difficult to overturn this protectionism.
Anxiety about
American cultural reach is hardly new. For many of INCP
members from the developing world, denouncing Western
cultural exports in general – and American cultural
exports in particular – as a source of cultural
“pollution” is an old hat. Take the example of
China
(which belongs to INCP). Paul G. Pickowicz, a historian
at the University of California, San Diego, has
documented how, over the past 100 years, Chinese
“political and intellectual elites” of various
ideological stripes (Communist, nationalist, socialist,
etc.) have routinely “sought to mobilize (and
manipulate) ordinary people by issuing grave and
sometimes hysterical warnings about the dangers of alien
cultural contamination.” Ironically, those warnings have
often come in the form of heavy-handed propaganda films
made with technology that originated in the West.
Nor is a suspicion
towards American culture exactly new for the Western
countries involved with INCP. Take France for example,
INCP’s call to take up arms against global cultural
“homogenization” (a code word for “Americanization”)
sounds like a better-camouflaged version of the
hostility towards American popular culture that has long
exercised France’s America-phobes. Beneath the surface
of INCP’s talk of the need to protect “cultural
diversity” in an era of “globalization” and the
“increased mobility of people, economic liberalization,
new communication technologies and industry
consolidation” is a fear of America’s cultural power.
INCP gives the French a chance to package old wine into
new wineskins, as it were.
In the mid-1990s, for
example, during a trade tussle between France and
America over cultural issues, French producer Marin
Karmitz said that “sound and pictures have always been
used for propaganda, and the real battle at the moment
is over who is going to be allowed to control the
world’s images, and so sell a certain lifestyle, a
certain culture, certain products, certain ideas.”
The tone of Karmitz’s
rhetoric is not so different from that thrown around by
some of INCP’s most ardent supporters. In early 2003,
Sheila Copps, Canada’s former Minister of Heritage,
portrayed INCP’s work as nothing less than the defence
of “the right of creators and thinkers to express
themselves freely, as well as the right of states to
establish their own cultural policies.” To give into
demands for freer trade in cultural products would be
“tantamount to putting our soul on the auction block.”
(Actually, it could just be a way to create new
opportunities for artists everywhere to expose new
audiences to their creations – but let that pass for
now.)
Although INCP is
mainly run by Western states (Canada and France are
especially active), it’s interesting to note the
similarities between INCP’s hostility towards American
cultural exports, and some strains of thought found in
Islamic fundamentalism. In the 1940s, a school of
thought known as “Islamic economics” came to life in
India. Its supporters, according to University of
Southern California
at Los Angeles Professor Timur Kuran, were intellectuals
“striving to justify why [Muslims] should have cultural
autonomy and even their own state,” instead of joining
in the building of a secular Indian state.
As Prof. Kuran puts
it, to the intellectuals’ horror, “secularism was
turning Muslims into pseudo-Muslims with mindsets and
lifestyles indistinguishable from those of Westerners.”
The intellectuals’ one hope was to show Muslims that
“Islamic and Western values [were] incompatible.” They
did so by creating a school of economic thought built on
selective quotations from the Koran. These quotes
purportedly demonstrate how “certain universal economic
practices” (such as charging interest on loans) are
un-Islamic. Muslims who accept “Islamic economics” must
reject “assimilating into the emerging global culture
whose core elements have a Western pedigree.”
By making certain
otherwise rational economic choices appear to be
“possibly sinful” (in Prof. Kuran’s words), Islamic
economics tries to inspire guilty feelings in Muslims
who accept its propositions. They may try to expunge
this guilt by “compensat[ing] for their moral failings
through greater outward piety.”
INCP’s backers also
seek to inspire guilty feelings in consumers who absorb,
in their view, far more American cultural goods than is
probably good for them. Kim Dalton and Catherine Griff,
two Australian cultural policy experts who back INCP,
noted in a late 2003 article that “Australia is a net
importer of cultural goods and services…In feature film
over the last decade, Australian film has never taken
more than ten per cent of the box office; the other
ninety per cent overwhelmingly goes to American films.”
The article goes on to warn that “the culture of one
nation is not interchangeable with that of another” and
that Australian culture “is not something that can be
created elsewhere or by non-Australians.”
The implication here
is that when Australian consumers watch American films,
they are shortchanging their own culture. Australians
may sincerely believe that because they share so many
links with Americans – political, historical,
linguistic, etc. – that Australians can watch American
films without injuring their Australian identity. They
may find the beliefs about , say, individualism, or
justice or other ideas embedded in American films very
compatible with their own personal values. Or they may
simply think that American films are entertaining
diversions.
But this is
apparently a big mistake. Why? Because, to repeat, “the
culture of one national is not interchangeable with that
of another.” Australians need to watch those U.S.
television shows and motion pictures with a more wary
eye. They need to realize that those products cannot
truly speak to them in the same way that “real”
Australian cultural goods, made by “real” Australians
speak to them.
The above example
makes the parallels between INCP’s talk of “cultural
diversity” and the doctrines of “Islamic economics”
become clearer. “Western” economics posits that lenders
can charge interest to borrowers. A portion of the Koran
forbids this practice, making charging interest
un-Islamic. Even if it is an economically rational act,
Muslims are better off not charging interest, to avoid
shortchanging their group’s traditions and their holy
book. And Muslims had better not think about mindlessly
aping any of Western economics’ other postulates about
universally rational economic behavior. After all, one
religious group’s economic system is not interchangeable
with another.
“Islamic economics,”
as Prof. Kuran points out, is not really about economics
at all. It’s about trying to shape the behavior of
individual Muslims in a way that serves the interests of
fundamentalist leaders. Similarly, INCP is not really
about “cultural diversity,” either. It’s about turning
so-called “ministers of culture” into powerful agents
who can use import quotas and other trade restrictions
to mould the behavior of individual consumers in ways
that serves the kultur-crats’ interests. INCP is a sham
and a fraud. The sooner the United States declares it
will oppose INCP’s proposed global cultural
protectionist treaty, the better off the entire world
will be.
Neil Hrab is the
Warren T. Brookes Fellow at the Competitive Enterprise
Institute [www.cei.org]
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