The Prime Minister may be finding petro-politics difficult to negotiate at the moment, but there’s one bright spot: at least the luvvies now hate him.
Alison Croggon’s letter contains the sort of logical fallacies that First Year Philosophy students are taught to avoid. It is entirely irrelevant that Henson is “a highly distinguished artist” or that he has been photographing “young” models for “more than 15 years.” But the real value of the letter for Rudd is in the signatories, which include 2020 summiteers, and most especially Cate Blanchett.
The Sydney Morning Herald’s architecture critic Elizabeth Farrelly weighing in to hysterically and bizarrely declare “the Henson witch-hunt may yet become Labor’s ‘children overboard’ affair” won’t hurt, either.
When you’ve got a politician on one side and artists on another, it’s a rolled-gold certainty popular sentiment will back the politician. For Kevin Rudd, who has been copping it for visiting Cate Blanchett’s new baby and hanging out with Hugh Jackman, the letter is the perfect reinforcement of his credentials as a man of suburban Australia.
But if Rudd had done his research, he’d have realised that politicians cannot have a sustainable long-term relationship with the artistic community.
Paul Keating tried it. In fact he became King of the Luvvies, and in doing so ended up so closely associated with them that it fed directly into his image as hopelessly out of touch with most Australians. Tony Blair tried it with Cool Britannia, but Iraq and his relationship with Dubya put an end to whatever semblance of respect he has with British arty types. And Democrats in the US have slowly come to realise that the endorsement of a bunch of Hollywood stars isn’t worth much more than getting the stamp of approval from Osama Bin Laden.
Politicians are in the business of being elected, which means taking mainstream positions on just about everything. Sooner or later, this ensures artists, whose job description is or should be challenging mainstream views, must part ways with any political leader they think somehow reflects their views. There’s also, to indulge in stereotypes for a moment (they save time, as The Onion notes), a default disconnect between artists, who tend to be progressives and therefore ALP or Green supporters, and most Labor politicians, who have risen through the union movement or through MPs’ offices — neither of which have much to do with artistic endeavours or are encouraging of artistic temperaments.
The Croggon letter calls on Peter Garrett, Australian politics’ most famous ex-artist, to “stand up for artists” in his capacity as Arts Minister. Garrett may not be quite the best person to make this request of, since he will know better than most of his colleagues what the “artistic community” is actually like. Crikey is aware of more than one rumour that Garrett can’t stand many of the arts stakeholders in his portfolio. And in any event, Garrett is now a politician, a reality that a few of his erstwhile fans on the left have had difficulty accepting.
The glitz and glamour of film stars might lend some cool-by-association to an ueber-wonk like Kevin Rudd, but it is entirely unhelpful politically, and bound to come to grief. That it did so so quickly is probably good for the Prime Minister.
As for celebrity this highly instructive history of propaganda in USA politics on YouTube in 6 parts at part 3 re founder of PR industry Edward Bernays nephew of Freud. At http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wsSOmSnomnY&feature=related
Seems associating with celebrities has been a manipulative tactic for over 90 years now in Big Politics. In 1924 President Coolidge was seen as cold and unpopular. Bernays set up a celebrity gathering. Presto.
“The English language becomes ugly and inaccurate because our thoughts are foolish, but the slovenliness of our language makes it easier for us to have foolish thoughts.” George Orwell.
Rolled gold” has been recently misused by politicians (Keating and Howard both I think) and its lazy to repeat their bad habits. Shouldn’t that be ‘solid gold’ indicating the certainty is unalloyed as opposed cheap junk jewellry sold to rubes that has real gold rolled around a baser metal. A small point maybe but Crikey makes a lot of our need to be more critical and less accepting of spin. quantum leap used as a huge leap rather than the smallest possible sh*ts me too.
Garbage, Bernard; dressed up in cool, world-wise cynical journo clothes, but garbage all the same. All Rudd had to do was suggest that although Henson is a well-known and respected artist, you can’t have one rule on what images are acceptable for the arts community, and another for the rest. He could have gone on from there to complain about sexualization of children in the media and advertising (far more likely a source of gratification for the pervert community), and come out looking reasonable and balanced. The arts crowd would still not have liked it, but it would at least have looked pragmatic, instead of vicious and divisive. All he achieved by attacking Henson head-on was to make himself look more like the bottom-feeding Howard. Maybe that’s what he wants. Maybe it’s what Bernard wants. It’s certainly not what I want.
Bernard, there’s a bigger problem with the letter, by my count there are ~65 other Creative stream attendees that didn’t sign. On second thoughts maybe we should hope our PM isn’t influenced by Rhys Muldoon or Claudia Karvan, but what about Professor David Throsby or John Polson? Couldn’t get them to sign? Also “…Mr Hensons…work… diminished and corrupted…” I can hear the cash registers now. One suspects that was the motive all along. Has someone got one of those free publicity calculator thingos people like Max Markson always quote?
As per my report Julie Gale piece above, on brute politics of Orkopoulos ALP sent down for 9+ years. There was always going to be a backlash against that result in the sentencing, and the arts have been, as they say in the classics, positioned by the right wring (!) Big Media pretty much to perfection to take the heat for that disgusting/criminal/revolting (!) abuse of power by Ork. The convergence of luvvies for the writers festival just made the timing even more inauspicious for them (auspicious for Devine/Telegraph), being somewhat Labor in tendencies. Rudd was getting ahead of the curve ball as soon as front page Telegraph hit the printing machine. The arts community do need some real politik spinners to help them out really. They could have declined Rudd’s knee jerk “revolting” comment, offered to give him tuition on the history of art (must say I’m learning alot too in the debate) and reveal superior power insights by equally condemn ostensibly unconnected Orkopoulos criminality for what it is. If they wanted to really twist the knife they could have suggested Rudd would do better to just face up to the long history of an MP “rock spider” in his own party and get to work on how best to deal with that legacy, as per former ALP MP Paul OGrady, ex NSW admin cee call out on Stateline NSW last Friday against dodgy secret lives leading to abuse and lies.