Journalism as
Subversion
By Chris Hedges
March 23, 2015 "ICH"
- The assault of global capitalism is not
only an economic and political assault. It
is a cultural and historical assault. Global
capitalism seeks to erase our stories and
our histories. Its systems of mass
communication, which peddle a fake intimacy
with manufactured celebrities and a false
sense of belonging within a mercenary
consumer culture, shut out our voices, hopes
and dreams. Salacious gossip about the
elites and entertainers, lurid tales of
violence and inane trivia replace in
national discourse the actual and the real.
The goal is a vast historical amnesia.
The traditions, rituals
and struggles of the poor and workingmen and
workingwomen are replaced with the vapid
homogenization of mass culture. Life’s
complexities are reduced to simplistic
stereotypes. Common experiences center
around what we have been fed by television
and mass media. We become atomized and
alienated. Solidarity and empathy are
crushed. The cult of the self becomes
paramount. And once the cult of the self is
supreme we are captives to the corporate
monolith.
As the mass media, now
uniformly in the hands of large
corporations, turn news into the ridiculous
chronicling of pseudo-events and
pseudo-controversy we become ever more
invisible as individuals. Any reporting of
the truth—the truth about what the powerful
are doing to us and how we are struggling to
endure and retain our dignity and
self-respect—would fracture and divide a
global population that must be molded into
compliant consumers and obedient corporate
subjects. This has made journalism, real
journalism, subversive. And it has made
P. Sainath—who has spent more than two
decades making his way from rural Indian
village to rural Indian village to make sure
the voices of the country’s poor are heard,
recorded and honored—one of the most
subversive journalists on the subcontinent.
He doggedly documented the some 300,000
suicides of desperate Indian
farmers—happening for the last 19 years at
the rate of one every half hour—in his book
“Everybody
Loves a Good Drought: Stories From
India’s Poorest Districts.” And in December,
after leaving The Hindu newspaper, where he
was the rural affairs editor, he created the
People’s Archive of Rural India. He
works for no pay. He relies on a small army
of volunteers. He says his archive deals
with “the everyday lives of everyday
people.” And, because it is a platform for
mixed media, encompassing print, still
photographs, audio and film, as well as an
online research library, it is a model for
those who seek to tell the stories that
global capitalism attempts to blot out.
“Historically, libraries
and archive have been controlled by
governments and by states,” he said when we
met recently in Princeton, N.J., where he is
teaching at Princeton University for the
semester. “They have also been burned by
governments, states and regimes since before
the time of the
library of Alexandria. Secondly,
archives have been the sites of major state
censorship. You classify something you don’t
allow people to know. In medieval Europe and
elsewhere, people resisted being documented.
They didn’t want to be part of the archive.
They knew that recording and measuring their
assets were the first steps toward seizing
those assets for the ruling class. Hence,
the idea of the people’s archive that is not
controlled by states, governments or other
figures of authority. This is an archive
people can access, people can create, people
can build and authenticate. So the idea
became the people’s archive.”
“It’s not different from
what I’ve done for 35 years as a journalist,
especially my 22 years as a full-time
journalist in India countryside,” he said.
“The big difference is that a digital
platform allows me to do what I was doing
earlier but on an infinitely larger scale
and in collaboration with hundreds of other
journalists. This site has two biases. One
is labor, the work of people, how [the]
nation and society rest on the backs of
their labor. The second is languages.”
Sainath’s work is a race
against time. He laments that in the past 50
years nearly 220 Indian languages have died.
Only seven people in the Indian state of
Tripura, for example, now speak the Saimar
language. And it is not only languages that
are going extinct. The diverse styles of
weaving, the epic poems and tales told by
itinerant storytellers, the folk dances and
songs, the mythologies, the religious
traditions, local pottery styles and rural
trades such as that of
toddy tappers, who scamper up 50 palm
trees a day to drain the sap to make a
fermented liquor called toddy, are all
vanishing, leaving the world ever more
impoverished and dependent on mass-produced
products and mass-produced thought.
Sainath is determined to
archive all of India’s some 780 languages,
many of them thousands of years old, spoken
by 833 million rural Indians. He has amassed
8,000 black-and-white images of rural
Indians. And he has sent filmmakers into
villages to capture the deep humanity of the
poor as they struggle to endure in a world
that is increasingly hostile to their
existence. For example, the archive website
has a powerfully moving film about a
21-year-old dancer, Kali Veerapadran, titled
“Kali: The Dancer and His Dreams.”
Raised in grueling poverty in a fishing
village by his mother, the boy masters the
Indian classical dance form known as
Bharatanatyam and three ancient forms of
Tamil folk dance (one of them perhaps 2,000
years old), and he makes his way to the
country’s leading dance academy and finally
the academy’s professional classical dance
troupe. Online visitors can also
see and hear five girls at a tiny and
poorly equipped rural school sing, in
English, the potato song.
Potato, Potato
Oh, my dear Potato
I like the potato
You like the potato
We like the potato
Potato, Potato, Potato
The first credit in each
film on the site goes to the person whose
story is being told, the second to his or
her village or community and the third to
the director.
Sainath’s journal is not a
romantic vision of the rural poor. He
documents their darker side, the brutal
caste system and feudalism that they live
under, their bonded labor, their subjugation
of girls and women, their prejudices. These
conditions and practices, Sainath says,
should die, but what is good, what gives
people a sense of the sacred and a sense of
who they are as individuals, has to be
chronicled and protected.
“We are not there to adore
the final product,” he said. “We show you
the labor process. Our potter is not someone
sitting in the showroom talking to you. Our
potter is a person down in the ditches after
the rain digging for clay, on this hands and
knees. You see him complaining about running
out of clay as the real estate guys take
over the area. You see we are running out of
clay. We want you to respect that labor. In
India labor is invisible. A lot is done by
women. I shot a photo exhibition across 10
years called
‘Visible Work, Invisible Women,’ from 10
different states. It’s the only photo
exhibition in India that’s been seen by over
700,000 people. Because I take it to the
villages where it was shot. On the website
we’ve digitized the entire exhibition. Each
panel is two and a half minutes. You can
watch a video and read the original text and
the statistics. You can see the original
photos in higher resolution. If you watch
the video, ... you will have me guiding you
on a tour around the panel. You won’t see
me. You’ll hear my voice. So you’ve got
video, audio, text and still photo
integrated. It’s as close to the real
exhibition as you can get online.”
There are photos on the
site of men on bicycles transporting 450
pounds of bamboo stalks.
“It’s beyond me how he
mounted them on the bike,” Sainath said of
one bamboo carrier. “But if you read the
story, you’ll see how he’s done it. He has
strengthened the cycle with bamboo. He has
bamboo horizontal bars and bamboo vertical
bars and he is supporting the big bamboos on
them.”
Sainath said that as the
press has become steadily corporatized those
who seek to tell the story of workers and
laborers have been pushed out.
“There were 512 accredited
journalists covering fashion week in Mumbai
and six journalists covering
farm suicides, the world’s worst farm
suicides ever,” he said. “And [the suicides]
are still going on. It’s partly because the
media are not interested, but it is also
because of the corporatization of the media.
There used to be 50 or 60 big [publishing]
houses in India that had media connections
at state level or regional levels.
Nationally, now there are 10 big houses and
only three that matter in the mega-money
league.”
“The ultimate crime you
commit in a colony is to steal a people’s
history,” he said. “There is a very lovely
African saying, ‘If lions were historians,
the tales of the jungle would not always
favor the hunter.’ The victor writes
history. Two-thirds of India lives in rural
[areas], and I was the only rural editor in
the subcontinent. And when I stepped down
[last year], that was the end of that post.”
“Corporatization has
changed what journalism is about in a very
basic way,” he said. “Journalism is about
communication. It is about information. It
is about connecting to your society. It is
about a society having a conversation with
itself. From this richness, they’ve reduced
journalism, as has happened in the United
States. It [journalism] is one more revenue
stream for a corporation that has 100 other
revenue streams. There are no media
monopolies in the old sense. Today’s media
monopolies are small branches of much larger
conglomerates. Where they were once giant
monopolies in themselves, they are now
deeply embedded in other corporations
through interlocking directorships.
Murray Kempton [critically] said the job
of the editorial writer is to go down into
the valley after the battle is over and
shoot the wounded. This is what mainstream
journalism is doing now. Look at this
catchphrase about talking truth to power. As
if power is so innocent. Poor things, if we
tell them the truth they’ll mend their ways?
I say talk the truth about power to the
masses who are in the thrall of the power.”
“We know what’s happening
in Iraq,” he said. “We know what’s happening
in Afghanistan. You think power doesn’t
know? We know who enabled the creation of an
ISIS, who’s the default partner. We know who
wants help from Iran on how to deal with
ISIS and Iraq. I don’t believe in the
innocence of power.”
“If you cover farm
suicides, if you stay with the story and
want to tell the story, you are called an
activist,” he said. “[But] if you sit
polishing your stool with the seat of your
trousers in the newsroom for 30 years
churning yard upon yard of news from
corporate press releases—why, then, you are
a professional. You will even be highly
regarded, a respected professional, because
the corporations respect you. The great
journalists in history are never
professional in that sense. The best
journalism has always come from dissidents.
Journalism is also an art of dissent. How
many establishment journalists do we
remember a year after they are dead? Look at
the anti-establishment journalists. Look at
Thomas Paine or
John Reed. ‘Ten Days that Shook the
World’ will be read a thousand years after
all the New York Times best-sellers by the
New York Times journalists are in the
shredder. The great journalists are all
dissidents. They spoke the truth against
power and about power. The journalism of
dissent is the richest journalism we have.
And the Third World and ex-colonial
countries have far richer traditions than
Europe. In the colonies, journalism was the
child of the freedom struggle.”
“Raja Ram Mohan Roy
founded the first Indian-owned newspaper,”
said Sainath, who is the grandson of
V.V. Giri (1894-1980), the onetime
Indian National Congress leader and
president of India. “From day one in 1816
the newspaper fought for remarriage, against
female infanticide and for the right to
education. Indian journalism made no
apologies for having a perspective, for
having something to say, and not trying to
couch it in ‘on the one hand, on the other
hand’ evasion. Journalism was a debate
within society, a conversation with a nation
and a radical tool of social change. Why
else did a Gandhi or an
Ambedkar establish four or five
newspapers? For fun? They lost money on all
of them. This journalism has a moral
authority. But it is considered as lacking
objectivity in American journalism schools.
My values are rooted in the journalism of
the freedom struggle, which was not just to
throw out the British but also to create
something that you could call a good
society. All the freedom fighters going to
jail were also journalists. That’s the
journalism I identify with.”
Chris Hedges spent
nearly two decades as a foreign
correspondent in Central America, the Middle
East, Africa and the Balkans. He has
reported from more than 50 countries and has
worked for The Christian Science Monitor,
National Public Radio, The Dallas Morning
News and The New York Times, for which he
was a foreign correspondent for 15 years.