Last month, MTV News’ web site went missÂing. Or at least almost all of it did, includÂing an archive of stoÂries going back to 1997. To some of us, and espeÂcialÂly to those of us old enough to have grown up watchÂing MTV on actuÂal teleÂviÂsion, that won’t sound like an espeÂcialÂly long time. But if you rememÂber the hit sinÂgles of that year — “BareÂly BreathÂing,” “Semi-Charmed Life,” “MMMÂBop,” the Princess Diana-memoÂriÂalÂizÂing “CanÂdle in the Wind” — you’ll start to feel a bit more hisÂtorÂiÂcal disÂtance. And if you conÂsidÂer all that’s hapÂpened in not just music but enterÂtainÂment in genÂerÂal over the past 27 years, covÂerÂage of that periÂod of great change in popÂuÂlar culÂture and techÂnolÂoÂgy will seem invaluÂable.
It will thus come as a relief to hear that, despite ParaÂmount GlobÂal’s corÂpoÂrate deciÂsion to purge MTV News’ online conÂtent (as well as that of ComÂeÂdy CenÂtral, TVLand and CMT), much of the site has been resÂurÂrectÂed on the InterÂnet Archive, which now offers “a searchÂable index of 460,575 web pages preÂviÂousÂly pubÂlished at mtv.com/news.”
So reports VariÂety’s Todd SpanÂgler, notÂing that the conÂtent “is not the full comÂpleÂment of what was pubÂlished over the span of more than two decades. In addiÂtion, some images in the archived pages of MTV News on the serÂvice are unavailÂable. But the new colÂlecÂtion at least ensures, for the time being, that much of MTV News’ artiÂcles remain accesÂsiÂble in some form.”
MTV News itself shut down in May of last year. It had begun in 1987 as a segÂment called “This Week in Rock” anchored by a print jourÂnalÂist named Kurt Loder. “I was workÂing at Rolling Stone and everyÂbody that wrote about rock music, as it was called at the time, had a very down point of view about MTV,” Loder recalls in an interÂview with that magÂaÂzine. But choosÂing to throw himÂself into this new form of infoÂtainÂment gave him the chance to get to know the likes of MadonÂna, Prince, and NirÂvana (the death of whose singer Kurt Cobain became one of his career-definÂing stoÂries). “You could just fly off anyÂwhere you wantÂed and do all this stuff,” Loder says. “It was a great time. I’m not sure it’ll ever be back, but someÂthing else will.” WhatÂevÂer it is, may the InterÂnet Archive be here to preÂserve it.
Based in Seoul, ColÂin Marshall writes and broadÂcasts on cities, lanÂguage, and culÂture. His projects include the SubÂstack newsletÂterBooks on Cities and the book The StateÂless City: a Walk through 21st-CenÂtuÂry Los AngeÂles. FolÂlow him on TwitÂter at @colinmarshall or on FaceÂbook.
When did you last send someÂone a phoÂto? That quesÂtion may sound odd, owing to the sheer comÂmonÂness of the act in quesÂtion; in the twenÂty-twenÂties, we take phoÂtographs and share them worldÂwide withÂout givÂing it a secÂond thought. But in the nineÂteen-thirÂties, almost everyÂone who sent a phoÂto did so through the mail, if they did it at all. Not that there weren’t more effiÂcient means of transÂmisÂsion, at least to proÂfesÂsionÂals in the cutÂting-edge newsÂpaÂper indusÂtry: as draÂmaÂtized in the short 1937 docÂuÂmenÂtary above, the visuÂal accomÂpaÂniÂment to a sufÂfiÂcientÂly imporÂtant scoop could also be sent in mere minÂutes through the mirÂaÂcle of wire.
“TravÂelÂing almost as fast as the teleÂphone stoÂry, wired phoÂtos now go across the conÂtiÂnent with the speed of light,” declares the narÂraÂtor in breathÂless newsÂreel-announcÂer style. “It’s not a matÂter of sendÂing the whole picÂture at once, but of sepÂaÂratÂing the picÂture into fine lines, sendÂing those lines over a wire, and assemÂbling them at the othÂer end.”
IllusÂtratÂing this process is a clever mechanÂiÂcal prop involvÂing two spinÂdles on a hand crank, and a length of rope printÂed with the image of a car that unwinds from one spinÂdle onto the othÂer. To ensure the viewÂer’s comÂplete underÂstandÂing, aniÂmatÂed diaÂgrams also reveal the inner workÂings of the actuÂal scanÂning, sendÂing, and receivÂing appaÂraÂtus.
This process may now seem imposÂsiÂbly cumÂberÂsome, but at the time it repÂreÂsentÂed a leap forÂward for mass visuÂal media. In the decades after the SecÂond World War, the same basic prinÂciÂple — that of disÂasÂsemÂbling an image into lines at one point in order to reassemÂble it at anothÂer — would be employed in the homes and offices of ordiÂnary AmerÂiÂcans by devices such as the teleÂviÂsion set and fax machine. We know, as the viewÂers of 1937 didÂn’t, just how those anaÂlog techÂnoloÂgies would change the charÂacÂter of life and work in the twenÂtiÂeth cenÂtuÂry. As for what their digÂiÂtal descenÂdants will do to the twenÂty-first cenÂtuÂry, as they conÂtinÂue to break down all exisÂtence into not lines but bits, we’ve only just begun to find out.
Based in Seoul, ColÂin Marshall writes and broadÂcasts on cities, lanÂguage, and culÂture. His projects include the SubÂstack newsletÂterBooks on Cities, the book The StateÂless City: a Walk through 21st-CenÂtuÂry Los AngeÂles and the video series The City in CinÂeÂma. FolÂlow him on TwitÂter at @colinmarshall or on FaceÂbook.
The conÂcept of proÂpaÂganÂda has a great deal of powÂer to fasÂciÂnate. So does the very word proÂpaÂganÂda, which to most of us today sounds faintÂly exotÂic, as if it referred mainÂly to pheÂnomÂeÂna from disÂtant places and times. But in truth, can any one of us here in the twenÂty-first cenÂtuÂry go a day withÂout being subÂjectÂed to the thing itself? Watch the video above, in which The Paint ExplainÂer lays out 51 difÂferÂent proÂpaÂganÂda techÂniques in 11 minÂutes, and you’ll more than likeÂly recÂogÂnize many of the insidÂiÂousÂly effecÂtive rhetorÂiÂcal tricks labeled thereÂin from your recent everyÂday life.
You won’t be surÂprised to hear that these manÂiÂfest most clearÂly in the media, both offline and on. The list begins with “agenÂda setÂting,” the “abilÂiÂty of the news to influÂence the imporÂtance placed on cerÂtain topÂics by pubÂlic opinÂion, just by covÂerÂing them freÂquentÂly and promiÂnentÂly.”
ScatÂtered throughÂout the news, or throughÂout your social-media feed, adverÂtiseÂments bring out the “beauÂtiÂful peoÂple,” which “sugÂgests that if peoÂple buy a prodÂuct or folÂlow a cerÂtain ideÂolÂoÂgy, they, too will be hapÂpy or sucÂcessÂful” – or, in its basest forms, operÂates through “clasÂsiÂcal conÂdiÂtionÂing,” in which “a natÂurÂal stimÂuÂlus is assoÂciÂatÂed with a neuÂtral stimÂuÂlus enough times to creÂate the same response by using just the neuÂtral one.”
In the even more shameÂless realm of polÂiÂtics, the comÂmon “plain folk” stratÂeÂgy “attempts to conÂvince the audiÂence that the proÂpaÂganÂdisÂt’s posiÂtions reflect the comÂmon sense of the peoÂple.” When “an indiÂvidÂual uses mass media to creÂate an ideÂalÂized and heroÂic pubÂlic image, often through unquesÂtionÂing flatÂtery and praise,” a powÂerÂful “cult of perÂsonÂalÂiÂty” can arise. And in proÂpaÂganÂda for everyÂthing from presÂiÂdenÂtial canÂdiÂdates to fast-food chains, you’ll hear and read no end of “glitÂterÂing genÂerÂalÂiÂties,” or “emoÂtionÂalÂly appealÂing words that are applied to a prodÂuct idea, but present no conÂcrete arguÂment or analyÂsis.” You can find many of these strateÂgies explained at WikipediÂa’s list of proÂpaÂganÂda techÂniques, or this list from the UniÂverÂsiÂty of VirÂginia of “proÂpaÂganÂda techÂniques to recÂogÂnize” — and not just when the “othÂer side” uses them.
Based in Seoul, ColÂin Marshall writes and broadÂcasts on cities, lanÂguage, and culÂture. His projects include the SubÂstack newsletÂterBooks on Cities, the book The StateÂless City: a Walk through 21st-CenÂtuÂry Los AngeÂles and the video series The City in CinÂeÂma. FolÂlow him on TwitÂter at @colinmarshall or on FaceÂbook.
Those who love the work of FedÂeriÂco FelliÂni must envy anyÂone who sees La Dolce Vita for the first time. But today such a viewÂer, howÂevÂer overÂwhelmed by the lavÂish cinÂeÂmatÂic feast laid before his eyes, will wonÂder if givÂing the intruÂsive tabloid phoÂtogÂraÂphÂer friend of MarÂcelÂlo MasÂtroianÂni’s proÂtagÂoÂnist the name “PaparazÂzo” isn’t a bit on the nose. Unlike La Dolce Vita’s first audiÂences in 1960, we’ve been hearÂing about real-life paparazzi throughÂout most all of our lives, and thus may not realÂize that the word itself origÂiÂnalÂly derives from Fellini’s masÂterÂpiece. Each time we refer to the paparazzi, we pay tribÂute to PaparazÂzo.
In the video essay above, Evan Puschak (betÂter known as the NerdÂwriter) traces the oriÂgins of paparazzi: not just the word, but the often bothÂerÂsome proÂfesÂsionÂals denotÂed by the word. The stoÂry begins with the dicÂtaÂtor BenÂiÂto MusÂsoliÂni, an “avid movie fan and fanÂboy of film stars” who wrote “more than 100 fawnÂing letÂters to AmerÂiÂcan actress AniÂta Page, includÂing sevÂerÂal marÂriage proÂposÂals.” KnowÂing full well “the emoÂtionÂal powÂer of cinÂeÂma as a tool for proÂpaÂganÂda and buildÂing culÂturÂal presÂtige,” MusÂsoliÂni comÂmisÂsioned the conÂstrucÂtion of Rome’s CinecitÂtĂ , the largest film-stuÂdio comÂplex in Europe when it opened in 1937 — six years before his fall from powÂer.
DurÂing the SecÂond World War, CinecitÂtĂ became a vast refugee camp. When peaceÂtime returned, with “the stuÂdio space being used and MusÂsolinÂi’s thumb removed, a new wave of filmÂmakÂers took to the streets of Rome to make movies about real life in postÂwar Italy.” Thus began the age of ItalÂian NeoÂreÂalÂism, which brought forth such now-clasÂsic picÂtures as RoberÂto Rossellini’s Rome, Open City and VitÂtoÂrio De Sica’s BicyÂcle Thieves. In the nineÂteen-fifties, major AmerÂiÂcan proÂducÂtions startÂed comÂing to Rome: Quo Vadis, Roman HolÂiÂday, Ben-Hur, CleopaÂtra. (It was this era, sureÂly, that inspired an eleven-year-old named MarÂtin ScorsÂese to stoÂryÂboard a Roman epic of his own.) All of this creÂatÂed an era known as “HolÂlyÂwood on the Tiber.”
For a few years, says Puschak, “the Via VeneÂto was the coolest place in the world.” Yet “while the glitÂterati cavortÂed in chic bars and clubs, thouÂsands of othÂers strugÂgled to find their place in the postÂwar econÂoÂmy.” Some turned to tourist phoÂtogÂraÂphy, and “soon found they could make even more monÂey snapÂping phoÂtos of celebriÂties.” It was the most notoÂriÂous of these, the “Volpe di via VeneÂto” Tazio SecÂchiaroli, to whom FelliÂni reached out askÂing for stoÂries he could include in the film that would become La Dolce Vita. The newÂly chrisÂtened paparazzi were soon seen as the only ones who could bring “the gods of our culÂture down to the messy earth.” These six decades latÂer, of course, celebriÂties do it to themÂselves, social media havÂing turned each of us — famous or othÂerÂwise — into our own PaparazÂzo.
Based in Seoul, ColÂin MarÂshall writes and broadÂcasts on cities, lanÂguage, and culÂture. His projects include the SubÂstack newsletÂterBooks on Cities, the book The StateÂless City: a Walk through 21st-CenÂtuÂry Los AngeÂles and the video series The City in CinÂeÂma. FolÂlow him on TwitÂter at @colinmarshall, on FaceÂbook, or on InstaÂgram.
Before it set itself on fire, HBO’s Game of Thrones resÂonatÂed deeply with conÂtemÂpoÂrary moralÂiÂty, becomÂing the most meme-worÂthy of shows, for good or ill, online. Few scenes in the show’s run — perÂhaps not even the Red WedÂding or the nauÂseÂatÂing finale — elicitÂed as much gut-levÂel reacÂtion as CerÂsei Lannister’s naked walk of shame in the SeaÂson 5 finale, a scene all the more resÂoÂnant as it hapÂpened to be based on real events.
In 1483, one of King Edward IV’s many misÂtressÂes, Jane Shore, was marched through London’s streets by his brothÂer Richard III, “while crowds of peoÂple watched, yelling and shamÂing her. She wasn’t totalÂly naked,” notes MenÂtal Floss, “but by the stanÂdards of the day, she might as well have been,” wearÂing nothÂing but a kirÂtle, a “thin shift of linen meant to be worn only as an underÂgarÂment.”
What are the stanÂdards of our day? And what is the punÂishÂment for vioÂlatÂing them? Sarah Brand seemed to be askÂing these quesÂtions when she postÂed “Red Dress,” a music video showÂcasÂing her less than stelÂlar singing talÂents inside Oxford’s North Gate Church. In less than a month, the video has garÂnered well over half a milÂlion views, “impresÂsive for a musiÂcian with hardÂly any social media footÂprint or fan base,” Kate Fowler writes at Newsweek.
“It takes only a few secÂonds,” Fowler genÂerÂousÂly remarks, “to realÂize that Brand may not have the voice of an angel.” Or, as one clever comÂmenter put it, “She is actuÂalÂly hitÂting all the notes… only of othÂer songs. And at ranÂdom.” Is she ludiÂcrousÂly un-self-aware, an heiress with deluÂsions of grandeur, a sad casuÂalÂty of celebriÂty culÂture, forcÂing herÂself into a role that doesn’t fit? Or does she know exactÂly what she’s doing…
The judgÂments of medieval mobs have nothÂing on the interÂnet, Brand sugÂgests. “Red Dress” presents what she calls “a cinÂeÂmatÂic, holisÂtic porÂtrayÂal of judgÂment,” one that includes interÂnet shamÂing in its calÂcuÂlaÂtions. GivÂen the amount of online ranÂcor and ridicule her video proÂvoked, it “did what it set out to do,” she tells the BBC. And givÂen that Brand is curÂrentÂly comÂpletÂing a master’s degree in sociÂolÂoÂgy at Oxford UniÂverÂsiÂty, many wonÂder if the project is a sociÂoÂlogÂiÂcal experÂiÂment for credÂit. She isn’t sayÂing.
Jane Shore’s walk endÂed with years locked in prison. Brand offered herÂself up for the scorn and hatred of the mobs. No one is pointÂing a pike at her back. She paid for the privÂiÂlege of havÂing peoÂple laugh at her, and she’s espeÂcialÂly enjoyÂing “some very, very witÂty comÂments” (like those above). She’s also very much aware that she is “no proÂfesÂsionÂal singer.”
The style in which I sing the song was imporÂtant because it reflectÂed the stoÂry. The vocals don’t seem to quite fit, they seem out of place and they make peoÂple uncomÂfortÂable… and the video is this outÂsider doing things difÂferÂentÂly and causÂing disÂcomÂfort and elicÂitÂing all this judgeÂment.
All of this is volÂunÂtary perÂforÂmance art, in a sense, though Brand has shown preÂviÂous aspiÂraÂtions on social media to become a singer, and perÂhaps faced simÂiÂlar ridicule involÂunÂtarÂiÂly. “Part of what this project deals with,” she says, is judgÂment “overÂall as a cenÂtral theme.” She credÂits herÂself as the direcÂtor, proÂducÂer, choreÂoÂgÂraÂphÂer, and ediÂtor and made every creÂative deciÂsion, to the bemuseÂment of the actors, crew, and stuÂdio musiÂcians. Yet choosÂing to endure the gauntÂlet does not make the gauntÂlet less real, she sugÂgests.
The shame rained down on Shore was part misogÂyÂny, part pent-up rage over injusÂtice directÂed at a hatÂed betÂter. When anyÂone can preÂtend (or preÂtend to preÂtend) to be a celebriÂty with a few hunÂdred bucks for cinÂeÂmatogÂraÂphy and audio proÂducÂtion, the boundÂaries between our “betÂters” and ourÂselves get fuzzy. When young women are expectÂed to become brands, to live up to celebriÂty levÂels of online polÂish for social recogÂniÂtion, self-expresÂsion, or employÂment, the lines between choice and comÂpulÂsion blur. With whom do we idenÂtiÂfy in scenes of pubÂlic shamÂing?
Brand is coy in her sumÂmaÂtion. “JudgÂmenÂtal behavÂior does hurt the world,” she says, “and that is what I’m tryÂing to bring to light with this project.” Judge for yourÂself in the video above and the … interÂestÂing… lyrics to “Red Dress” below.
Came to church to praise all love SitÂting, comÂing for someÂone else It didn’t stew well for me But I said it was a lover’s deed
Didn’t trust my own feels Let someÂone else behind my wheel Said it was love driÂving me But the only one who should steer is me
Cuz what they saw
They see me in a red dress HopÂping on the devÂil fest ThinkÂing of lust As they judge in disÂgust What are you doing here?
They see me in a red dress HopÂping on the devÂil fest ThinkÂing of lust As I judge in disÂgust What am I doing here?
LetÂtin’ someÂone else steer
I saw a love, preÂcious and fine Thought I should do anyÂthing for time Time to change the hearts and minds Of peoÂple not like me in break or stride
Shouldn’t be me, tryÂing to change Thought I’d be someÂthing if I remained It just ain’t me singing of sins WatchÂing excluÂsion getÂting its wins
Cuz what they saw
They see me in a red dress HopÂping on the devÂil fest ThinkÂing of lust As they judge in disÂgust What are you doing here?
They see me in a red dress HopÂping on the devÂil fest ThinkÂing of lust As I judge in disÂgust What am I doing here?
LetÂtin’ someÂone else steer
Came to church To praise love ComÂing for SomeÂone else
But all the eyes JudgÂing in disÂguise They don’t see me Just the lies
They see me in a red dress No difÂferÂent from the rest StartÂing to trust As they join in a rush What are we doing here?
They see me in a red dress No difÂferÂent from the rest StartÂing to trust As I lose my disÂgust What am I doing here?
In NovemÂber 1965, after some hondling between the Carnegie CorÂpoÂraÂtion and the Ford FounÂdaÂtion, a senior execÂuÂtive from Carnegie called forÂmer presÂiÂdent of MIT James KilÂlian with an inviÂtaÂtion. Would KilÂlian be interÂestÂed in assemÂbling a comÂmisÂsion to study eduÂcaÂtionÂal teleÂviÂsion with an eye toward strengthÂenÂing the AmerÂiÂcan sysÂtem of learnÂing on screen, and could he start right away? KilÂlian jumped; a comÂmisÂsion was formed; and two years, eight meetÂings, 225 interÂviews, and 92 site visÂits latÂer, the Carnegie Commission’s report comes out, a bill gets writÂten, the bill becomes law, and PresÂiÂdent JohnÂson is signÂing the 1967 PubÂlic TeleÂviÂsion Act to creÂate pubÂlic teleÂviÂsion and radio.
At the signÂing cerÂeÂmoÂny, JohnÂson said, “Today, we rededÂiÂcate a part of the airÂwaves – which belong to all the peoÂple – and we dedÂiÂcate them for the enlightÂenÂment of all the peoÂple. We must conÂsidÂer,” he said, “new ways to build a great netÂwork for knowlÂedge – not just a broadÂcast sysÂtem, but one that employs every means of sendÂing and storÂing inforÂmaÂtion that the indiÂvidÂual can use.”
Heady stuff. But it gets even betÂter:
Think of the lives that this would change:
The stuÂdent in a small colÂlege could tap the resources of a great uniÂverÂsiÂty. […]
The counÂtry docÂtor getÂting help from a disÂtant labÂoÂraÂtoÂry or a teachÂing hosÂpiÂtal;
A scholÂar in Atlanta might draw instantÂly on a library in New York;
A famous teacher could reach with ideas and inspiÂraÂtions into some far-off classÂroom, so that no child need be neglectÂed.
EvenÂtuÂalÂly, I think this elecÂtronÂic knowlÂedge bank could be as valuÂable as the FedÂerÂal Reserve Bank.
And such a sysÂtem could involve othÂer nations, too – it could involve them in a partÂnerÂship to share knowlÂedge and to thus enrich all mankind.
A wild and visionÂary idea? Not at all. Yesterday’s strangest dreams are today’s headÂlines and change is getÂting swifter every moment.
I have already asked my advisÂers to begin to explore the posÂsiÂbilÂiÂty of a netÂwork for knowlÂedge – and then to draw up a sugÂgestÂed blueÂprint for it.
The sysÂtem he was signÂing into law, JohnÂson said, “will be free, and it will be indeÂpenÂdent – and it will belong to all of our peoÂple.”
A new netÂwork for knowlÂedge.
ImagÂine.
Fifty years latÂer, totalÂly (seemÂingÂly) unreÂlatÂed, then MIT presÂiÂdent Charles Vest went on to speak of someÂthing else, someÂthing that became MIT Open CourseÂware. TogethÂer with new founÂdaÂtions – this time the Hewlett FounÂdaÂtion and the MelÂlon FounÂdaÂtion led the way – Vest enviÂsioned “a tranÂscenÂdent, accesÂsiÂble, empowÂerÂing, dynamÂic, comÂmuÂnalÂly conÂstructÂed frameÂwork of open mateÂriÂals and platÂforms on which much of highÂer eduÂcaÂtion worldÂwide can be conÂstructÂed or enhanced:”
A meta-uniÂverÂsiÂty that will enable, not replace, resÂiÂdenÂtial camÂpusÂes, that will bring cost effiÂcienÂcies to instiÂtuÂtions through the shared develÂopÂment of eduÂcaÂtionÂal mateÂriÂals. That will be adapÂtive, not preÂscripÂtive. It will serve teachÂers and learnÂers in both strucÂtured and inforÂmal conÂtexts. It will speed the propÂaÂgaÂtion of high-qualÂiÂty eduÂcaÂtion and scholÂarÂship. It will build bridges across culÂtures and politÂiÂcal boundÂaries. And it will be parÂticÂuÂlarÂly imporÂtant to the develÂopÂing world.
Today, in our time of severe truth decay, our great episÂtemic criÂsis, it might be time again to enviÂsion anothÂer interÂvenÂtion, forÂmaÂtive and transÂforÂmaÂtionÂal as the estabÂlishÂment of pubÂlic broadÂcastÂing, imagÂiÂnaÂtive and darÂing as the launch of open courseÂware and the open eduÂcaÂtion moveÂment. Indeed, someÂthing as breathÂtakÂing as the events above, and their own vital forÂbear over a cenÂtuÂry ago – the foundÂing of a netÂwork of pubÂlic libraries across AmerÂiÂca and othÂer parts of the world (which also hapÂpened with Andrew Carnegie’s finanÂcial supÂport).
The origÂiÂnal EnlightÂenÂment brought us Newton’s physics, Rousseau’s politÂiÂcal phiÂlosÂoÂphy, Linnaeus’s taxÂonomies, Montesquieu’s laws, the DecÂlaÂraÂtion of IndeÂpenÂdence, the DecÂlaÂraÂtion of the Rights of Man – it was the Age of ReaÂson. Its founders – as we notÂed in [Parts 1 and II on] Open CulÂture – comÂprised between themÂselves what became known as the great RepubÂlic of LetÂters. They were all men, though; and they all were white; while they had access to their own means and to the mean of media proÂducÂtion, and they delivÂered new sysÂtems of thinkÂing much of the modÂern world is based on today, their cirÂcles were limÂitÂed; their imagÂiÂnaÂtions were not our imagÂiÂnaÂtions.
Today we have a chance to do more – to take advanÂtage of the culÂtures and comÂmuÂniÂties that have arisen in the cenÂturies and from the strugÂgles since that time, to launch a new EnlightÂenÂment, and to realÂize perÂhaps in boldÂer and more secure ways this new netÂwork for knowlÂedge. Video, more than text now, has takÂen over the interÂnet; video is a new key to our netÂworked world. The comÂpaÂny CisÂco SysÂtems – which makes many of the devices that conÂnect us – deploys a foreÂcastÂing tool it calls the VisuÂal NetÂworkÂing Index (VNI). The latÂest VNI tells us that there were 3.4 bilÂlion InterÂnet users on the planÂet in 2017, almost half of the planet’s curÂrent popÂuÂlaÂtion of 7.7 bilÂlion peoÂple. By 2022, there will be 4.8 bilÂlion InterÂnet users: 60 perÂcent of the planÂet, and more peoÂple in the world will be conÂnectÂed to the InterÂnet than not. By 2022, more than 28 bilÂlion “devices and conÂnecÂtions” will be online. And – here’s the kickÂer – video will make up 82 perÂcent of globÂal InterÂnet trafÂfic. Video is domÂiÂnant already. DurÂing peak evening hours in the AmerÂiÂcÂas, NetÂflix can account for as much as 40 perÂcent of downÂstream InterÂnet trafÂfic, and NetÂflix – NetÂflix alone – conÂstiÂtutes 15 perÂcent of InterÂnet trafÂfic worldÂwide. All this foreÂcastÂing was comÂpletÂed before the panÂdemÂic; before 125 milÂlion casÂes of CoroÂna virus; before 3 milÂlion deaths worldÂwide; before the exploÂsion of Zoom.
We are livÂing in a video age. What will be our next media interÂvenÂtion? How do knowlÂedge instiÂtuÂtions secure their deservedÂly cenÂtral place in search and on the web? We need to look over our rights vis-Ă -vis the govÂernÂment and the giant comÂpaÂnies that increasÂingÂly conÂtrol our InterÂnet; we need to look at the growÂing powÂer we have to conÂtribute to access to knowlÂedge and share our wealth espeÂcialÂly in the online ComÂmons; we need to make sure that the pubÂlic record, espeÂcialÂly video (and espeÂcialÂly video of all the lies and crimes, and of all the outÂraÂgeous falseÂhoods leadÂers cirÂcuÂlate about COVID) is all archived and preÂserved. We need to strengthÂen how much of the netÂwork we own and conÂtrol.
What’s imporÂtant is that we have begun to reach toward the point where there is equiÂty in the leadÂerÂship of our knowlÂedge instiÂtuÂtions. No longer are white men and only white men in charge of the Library of ConÂgress, for examÂple, or the SmithÂsonÂian InstiÂtuÂtion, or, and thus by extenÂsion, of our new EnlightÂenÂment. New and diverse study and action groups are being formed specifÂiÂcalÂly to address our inforÂmaÂtion disÂorÂder. But many more of our leadÂing knowlÂedge instiÂtuÂtions – and, critÂiÂcalÂly, founÂdaÂtions and fundÂing agenÂcies again – need to lead this work. This is a 20th-anniverÂsary year for MIT Open CourseÂWare, for Wikipedia, and for CreÂative ComÂmons; indeed, MIT OCW starts to celÂeÂbrate its birthÂday this month. Many othÂer like-mindÂed proÂgresÂsive instiÂtuÂtions and their supÂportÂers are on the move. That netÂwork for knowlÂedge is comÂing again: this time, our new EnlightÂenÂment moment will belong to all of us.
When the ideas that matÂter most to us – libÂerÂals, democÂrats, proÂgresÂsives, repubÂliÂcans, all in the origÂiÂnal sense of the words – were first put forÂward in sociÂety in order to change sociÂety, they were advanced foreÂmost in print. The new rules, new defÂiÂnÂiÂtions, and new codÂiÂcils of human and civÂil rights that underÂgird many of the freeÂdoms we valÂue today had as their heart text and its main delivÂery mechÂaÂnism, the printÂing press.
The encyclopedia’s entire approach to colÂlectÂing and preÂsentÂing knowlÂedge was radÂiÂcal. The artiÂcles preÂsentÂed truths – some heretiÂcal, some blasÂpheÂmous – that astonÂished conÂtemÂpoÂrary readÂers. And its innoÂvÂaÂtive approach to the verÂiÂfiÂcaÂtion its own conÂtent, to provÂing what could be proved, which was realÂly its nuclear core, rocked the WestÂern world.
No propoÂsiÂtion can be acceptÂed as divine revÂeÂlaÂtion if it conÂtraÂdicts what is known to us, either by immeÂdiÂate intuÂition, as in the case of self-eviÂdent propoÂsiÂtions, or by obviÂous deducÂtions of reaÂson, as in demonÂstraÂtions. It would be ridicuÂlous to give prefÂerÂence to such revÂeÂlaÂtions, because the eviÂdence that causÂes us to adopt them canÂnot surÂpass the cerÂtainÂty of our intuÂitive or demonÂstraÂtive knowlÂedge…
ClerÂics and kings, needÂless to say, were not fans. ArtiÂcles on reliÂgion, phiÂlosÂoÂphy, and polÂiÂtics and sociÂety chalÂlenged the govÂernÂment and the church even as the cenÂsors watched. Direct swipes at the monarÂchy and the church appeared even where you might not expect – in artiÂcles on CONSCIENCE, LIBERTÉ DE; CROISADES; FANATISME; TOLÉRANCE; etc. The entry for FORTUNE spotÂlightÂed the gross inequalÂiÂties of wealth already eviÂdent in 18th-cenÂtuÂry Europe. And a zingÂing conÂdemÂnaÂtion of slavÂery in the artiÂcle on the SLAVE TRADE made few friends among any who had a hand anyÂwhere in the busiÂness.
Slave trade is the purÂchase of Negroes made by EuroÂpeans on the coasts of Africa, who then employ these unforÂtuÂnate men as slaves in their colonies. This purÂchase of Negroes to reduce them into slavÂery […] vioÂlates all reliÂgion, morals, natÂurÂal law, and human rights.
We have tried as much as posÂsiÂble to avoid this inconÂveÂnience by citÂing directÂly, in the body of the artiÂcles, the authors on whose eviÂdence we have relied and by quotÂing their own text when it is necÂesÂsary.
We have everyÂwhere comÂpared opinÂions, weighed reaÂsons, and proÂposed means of doubtÂing or of escapÂing from doubt; at times we have even setÂtled conÂtestÂed matÂters.… Facts are citÂed, experÂiÂments comÂpared, and methÂods elabÂoÂratÂed … in order to excite genius to open unknown routes, and to advance onward to new disÂcovÂerÂies, using the place where great men have endÂed their careers as the first step.
What this meant in pracÂtice was revÂoÂluÂtionÂary. There would be no acceptÂed truths but for those that could be proven and citÂed. Fact-based verÂsus faith- and belief-based: the start and spark of the EnlightÂenÂment. One of Diderot’s biogÂraÂphers explains that approxÂiÂmateÂly 23,000 artiÂcles had at least one cross-refÂerÂence to anothÂer artiÂcle in one of the encyclopedia’s 28 volÂumes. “The total numÂber of links – some artiÂcles had five or six – reached almost 62,000.” And all while retainÂing a sly sense of humor. The artiÂcle on CANNIBALS endÂed with “the misÂchieÂvous cross-refÂerÂence,” as anothÂer hisÂtoÂriÂan would latÂer describe it: “See Eucharist, ComÂmuÂnion, Altar, etc.”
That comÂmitÂment to refÂerÂence citaÂtion conÂtinÂues in the Enlightenment’s most imporÂtant sucÂcesÂsor project – Wikipedia, foundÂed by JimÂmy Wales and colÂleagues 20 years ago this year. It’s the founÂdaÂtion of what today’s Wikipedia terms verÂiÂfiÂaÂbilÂiÂty, and in many key ways it’s the founÂdaÂtion for truth in knowlÂedge and sociÂety today:
“VerÂiÂfiÂaÂbilÂiÂty” … mean[s] that mateÂrÂiÂal added to Wikipedia must have been pubÂlished preÂviÂousÂly by a reliÂable source. EdiÂtors may not add their own views to artiÂcles simÂply because they believe them to be corÂrect, and may not remove sources’ views from artiÂcles simÂply because they disÂagree with them.
[V]erifiability is a necÂesÂsary conÂdiÂtion (a minÂiÂmum requireÂment) for the incluÂsion of mateÂrÂiÂal, though it is not a sufÂfiÂcient conÂdiÂtion (it may not be enough).
In 1999, free-softÂware activist Richard M. StallÂman called for this uniÂverÂsal online encyÂcloÂpeÂdia covÂerÂing all areas of knowlÂedge, along with a comÂplete library of instrucÂtionÂal coursÂes – and, equalÂly imporÂtant, a moveÂment to develÂop it, “much as the Free SoftÂware MoveÂment gave us the free operÂatÂing sysÂtem GNU/Linux.” That call (reproÂduced in full as the appenÂdix in my book) is credÂitÂed by Wikipedia as the oriÂgins of the work that is now the largest knowlÂedge resource in hisÂtoÂry.
The free encyÂcloÂpeÂdia will proÂvide an alterÂnaÂtive to the restrictÂed ones that media corÂpoÂraÂtions will write.
StallÂman pubÂlished a list of what that the encyÂcloÂpeÂdia would need to do, what sort of freeÂdoms it would need to give to the pubÂlic, and how it could get startÂed.
An encyÂcloÂpeÂdia locatÂed everyÂwhere.
An encyÂcloÂpeÂdia open to anyone—but, most promisÂingÂly, to teachÂers and stuÂdents.
An encyÂcloÂpeÂdia built of small steps.
An encyÂcloÂpeÂdia built on the long view: “If it takes twenÂty years to comÂplete the free encyÂcloÂpeÂdia, that will be but an instant in the hisÂtoÂry of litÂerÂaÂture and civÂiÂlizaÂtion.”
An encyÂcloÂpeÂdia conÂtainÂing one or more artiÂcles for any topÂic you would expect to find in anothÂer encyÂcloÂpeÂdia – “for examÂple, bird watchÂers might evenÂtuÂalÂly conÂtribute an artiÂcle on each species of bird, along with picÂtures and recordÂings of its calls” – and “coursÂes for all acaÂdÂeÂmÂic subÂjects.”
1999, and it sounds familÂiar. Wikipedia, of course, is one of the world’s most popÂuÂlar webÂsites (the world’s most popÂuÂlar nonÂcomÂmerÂcial one) now and an irreÂplaceÂable source of verÂiÂfiÂable inforÂmaÂtion – open to any and all. Its processÂes are transÂparÂent, and thanks to hackÂers affilÂiÂatÂed with the project, you now can watch and lisÂten to its edits live online:
ComÂmuÂniÂties that work with Wikipedia are likeÂly to benÂeÂfit from this comÂmitÂment to citaÂtion, and new colÂlabÂoÂraÂtions that take effect around it are likeÂly to benÂeÂfit sociÂety. The InterÂnet Archive is workÂing with Wikipedia now, digÂiÂtizÂing books so that links to sources in Wikipedia link all the way through to the books themÂselves – and renÂder images and text on the citÂed pages. The refÂerÂence link to a biogÂraÂphy by TayÂlor Branch at the botÂtom of a Wikipedia artiÂcle on MarÂtin Luther King, Jr., for examÂple, now hotlinks to the readÂable book online at Archive.org. That work is essenÂtial. “Only the use of footÂnotes and the research techÂniques assoÂciÂatÂed with them” – as PrinceÂton hisÂtoÂriÂan AnthoÂny Grafton writes – “makes it posÂsiÂble to resist the efforts of modÂern govÂernÂments, tyranÂniÂcal and demoÂcÂraÂtÂic alike, to conÂceal the comÂproÂmisÂes they have made, the deaths they have caused, the torÂtures they or their allies have inflictÂed.… Only the use of footÂnotes enables hisÂtoÂriÂans to make their texts not monoÂlogues but conÂverÂsaÂtions, in which modÂern scholÂars, their preÂdeÂcesÂsors, and their subÂjects all take part.”
Can we take verÂiÂfiÂaÂbilÂiÂty furÂther now, espeÂcialÂly as our episÂtemic criÂsis deepÂens? Can we improve citaÂtion for the mediÂum that’s beginÂning to overÂtake us all, which is video? Can we make resources on the web – also a new thing – verÂiÂfiÂable? What is a citaÂtion like in a … podÂcast?
EdiÂtor’s Note: This month, MIT Open Learning’s Peter B. KaufÂman has pubÂlished The New EnlightÂenÂment and the Fight to Free KnowlÂedge, a book that takes a hisÂtorÂiÂcal look at the powÂerÂful forces that have purÂposeÂly cripÂpled our efforts to share knowlÂedge wideÂly and freely. His new work also maps out what we can do about it. In the comÂing days, Peter will be makÂing his book availÂable through Open CulÂture by pubÂlishÂing three short essays along with links to corÂreÂspondÂing secÂtions of his book. Today, you can find his short essay “The MonÂsterÂverse” below, and meanÂwhile read/download the first chapÂter of his book here. You can purÂchase the entire book online.
The MonÂsterÂverse – what exactÂly is it? Like Sauron and his minÂions from MorÂdor in The Lord of the Rings, like Sheev PalÂpaÂtine and the armies of the GalacÂtic empire from Star Wars, like Lord VoldeÂmort and his henchÂmen the Death Eaters in HarÂry PotÂter, it’s the colÂlecÂtive force of evil, one that strives to shut down human progress, freeÂdom, jusÂtice, the spread of knowlÂedge –the disÂsemÂiÂnaÂtion of (let us just say it) open culÂture. It’s the subÂject of the first chapÂter of my book, The New EnlightÂenÂment and the Fight to Free KnowlÂedge – and its incarÂnaÂtions have been with us for thouÂsands of years.
In 1536, which is when the book begins, it found its embodÂiÂment in Jacobus LatoÂmus, who overÂsaw the triÂal and exeÂcuÂtion – by stranÂgling and burnÂing at the stake – of a transÂlaÂtor and a priest named William TynÂdale. LatoÂmus, who himÂself was overÂseen by Thomas More, who himÂself was overÂseen by HenÂry VIII (with Pope Clement VII in a supÂportÂing role), choreÂoÂgraphed Tyndale’s forÂmal degraÂdaÂtion, such that a couÂple dozen aposÂtolic inquisiÂtors and theÂoloÂgians, uniÂverÂsiÂty recÂtors and facÂulÂty, lawyers and privy counÂcilors – “heresy-hunters,” as his biogÂraÂphÂer calls them – led him out of his prison cell in pubÂlic and in his priestÂly raiÂment to a high platÂform outÂdoors where oils of anointÂment were scraped symÂbolÂiÂcalÂly from his hands, the bread and wine of the Eucharist sitÂuÂatÂed next to him and then just as quickÂly removed, and then his vestÂments “cerÂeÂmoÂniÂalÂly stripped away,” so that he would find himÂself, and all would see him as, no longer a priest. Death came next. This scholÂar and polyÂmath to whom, it is now known, we owe as much as we owe William ShakeÂspeare for our lanÂguage, this lone man sought and slain by church and king and holy Roman emperÂor – his iniÂtial stranÂgling did not go well, so that when he was subÂseÂquentÂly lit on fire, and the flames first lapped at his feet and up his legs, lashed tight to the stake, he came to, and, while burnÂing alive in front of the crowd of reliÂgious leadÂers and so-called jusÂtices (some sevÂenÂteen triÂal comÂmisÂsionÂers) who had so sumÂmarÂiÂly sent TynÂdale to his death and gathÂered to watch it, live, he cried out, less to the crowd, it would seem, than to AnothÂer: “Lord! Lord! Open the King of England’s eyes!”
What did TynÂdale do? He believed that the strucÂture of comÂmuÂniÂcaÂtion durÂing his time was broÂken and unfair, and with a core, unwaÂverÂing focus, he sought to make it so that the main body of knowlÂedge in his day could be accessed and then shared again by every man alive. He engaged in an unparÂalÂleled act of codÂing (not for nothÂing do we speak of comÂputÂer proÂgramÂming “lanÂguages”), workÂing through the Latin, Greek, Hebrew, and AraÂmaÂic of the Bible’s Old, then New, TesÂtaÂments to bring all of its good books – from GenÂeÂsis 1 to RevÂeÂlaÂtion 22—into EngÂlish for everyÂday readÂers. He is reportÂed to have said, in response to a quesÂtion from a priest who had chalÂlenged his work, a priest who read the Bible only in Latin: “I will cause a boy that driÂveth the plough shall know more of the ScripÂture than thou dost.” And he worked with the disÂtriÂbÂuÂtion techÂnoloÂgies of his time – the YouTubes, webÂsites, and TwitÂters back then – by conÂnectÂing perÂsonÂalÂly with book designÂers, paper supÂpliÂers, printÂers, boat capÂtains, and horseÂmen across sixÂteenth-cenÂtuÂry Europe to bring the knowlÂedge and the book that conÂtained it into the hands of the peoÂple.
It wasn’t easy. In Tyndale’s time, popes and kings had decreed, out of conÂcern for keepÂing their powÂer, that the Bible could exist and be read and disÂtribÂuted “only in the assemÂbly of Latin transÂlaÂtions” that had been comÂpletÂed by the monk Saint Jerome in approxÂiÂmateÂly 400 CE. The penalÂties for chalÂlengÂing the law were among the most severe imagÂinÂable, for such vioÂlaÂtions repÂreÂsentÂed a panoply of civÂil transÂgresÂsions and an entire comÂplexÂiÂty of hereÂsies. In takÂing on the church and the king – in his effort simÂply and soleÂly to transÂlate and then disÂtribÂute the Bible in EngÂlish – TynÂdale conÂfrontÂed “the greatÂest power[s] in the WestÂern world.” As he “was transÂlatÂing and printÂing his New TesÂtaÂment in Worms,” his leadÂing biogÂraÂphÂer reminds us, “a young man in NorÂwich was burned alive for the crime of ownÂing a piece of paper on which was writÂten the Lord’s Prayer in EngÂlish.” The Bible had been inacÂcesÂsiÂble in Latin for a thouÂsand years, this biogÂraÂphÂer writes, and “to transÂlate it for the peoÂple became heresy, punÂishÂable by a soliÂtary linÂgerÂing death as a heretic; or, as had hapÂpened to the Cathars in southÂern France, or the HusÂsites in Bohemia and LolÂlards in EngÂland, offiÂcial and bloody attempts to exterÂmiÂnate the species.”
YuckÂadoo, the MonÂsterÂverse, but very much still with us. The stranÂgleÂholds are real. And Tyndale’s sucÂcesÂsors in the fight to free knowlÂedge include many freeÂdom fightÂers and revÂoÂluÂtionÂarÂies – going up against the forces that seek to conÂstrain our growth as a sociÂety. Were TynÂdale alive today, he would wonÂder about the state of copyÂright law and its overÂreach; the perÂvaÂsive estate of surÂveilÂlance capÂiÂtalÂism; the sweepÂing powÂers of govÂernÂment to see and interÂfere in our comÂmuÂniÂcaÂtion. And he would wonÂder why the seemÂingÂly proÂgresÂsive forces on the side of freeÂdom today – uniÂverÂsiÂties, museÂums, libraries, archives – don’t fight more against inforÂmaÂtion oppresÂsion. TynÂdale would recÂogÂnize that the health panÂdemÂic, the ecoÂnomÂic criÂsis, the politÂiÂcal vioÂlence we face today, are all the result of an inforÂmaÂtion disÂorÂder, one that relies on squelchÂing knowlÂedge and proÂmotÂing the darkÂest forms of ignoÂrance for its sucÂcess. How we come to grips with that chalÂlenge is the numÂber-one quesÂtion for our time. DisÂcovÂerÂing new paths to defeatÂing it – overÂcomÂing the Dark Lords, destroyÂing the HorÂcruxÂes, finalÂly harÂnessÂing the Force – is the subÂject of the next two artiÂcles, and of the rest of the book.
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