Bringing medical humanities into public policy

In the summer of 2011 Natalie Banner undertook the first Wellcome Trust Medical History and Humanities fellowship at the Parliamentary Office of Science and Technology (POST), researching the issues around the UK’s ageing workforce. Here she reflects on her time spent in Westminster, what she learned and how the humanities, science and policy interact.

POST exists partly to provide independent analyses of scientific issues that may otherwise be out of reach to an audience unfamiliar with scientific methods and analysis of evidence. Few Parliamentarians have scientific training – indeed most university-educated Parliamentarians come from a humanities background. What benefits, then, could accrue from enlisting a humanities scholar among scientists?

I was interested to learn what this combination meant in a policy environment and what value an academic background in the humanities could have in the context of report writing for Parliamentarians. There was also a broader question at stake here about the relation between the sciences and humanities, and academia and policy.

My research at POST addressed issues concerning the ageing workforce in the UK. As we live longer, the age profile of the workforce is increasing and more people will face pressure to work later into life, for various reasons (predominantly financial). With recent debate over the reform of public sector pensions, which has been highly controversial, numerous policy-relevant questions arise across a broad range of fields. These range from how employers may adapt to the ageing demographic of their workforces; the influence of stereotypes about older workers (both positive and negative) on employment and training prospects; how individuals perceive retirement; what challenges or barriers they face to staying in work or finding new employment, and; how health status affects one’s capacity and willingness to work beyond retirement age.

One potentially explosive issue was that of proposed increases to the state pension age, raising women’s state pension age to equal that of men’s and increasing both to 66 by 2020. Whilst the economic argument in favour of extending working lives is, at the population level, very strong, it invokes a huge range of reactions from potentially affected individuals, despite evidence that the current generation approaching retirement age are likely to live longer and experience a longer retirement than their parents. The significant social inequalities that exist in health in later life are just one factor differentiating those who may be capable of working later into life from those who may not have this capacity.

While other policy issues researched at POST belong squarely in the domain of science and technology, the ageing workforce leant itself more to research from a humanities perspective. Essentially, this topic provided an excellent example of the myriad ways scientific understanding and advances, in this case in medicine and healthcare, ergonomics and occupational psychology, can impact on individuals in different ways that may not be visible at the level of policy. There are also widely differing discourses about the very concept of retirement, what it means to people (a deserved break at the end of a hard working life or being thrown on the scrap heap?) and how ageing and health are interconnected with personal attitudes towards retirement and drawing a pension. It is an emotive, personal and politically fraught concern which impacts individuals in very different ways, and it felt important when conducting the research to convey a coherent and ultimately humanistic narrative of the issues being addressed.

I could not bring knowledge expertise as such to research, but rather a more general set of skills that proved valuable in picking apart the complexity of the issue and pursuing important lines of questioning. For example, training in the humanities equips one for independent and open-ended research, critical thinking, and being comfortable with broadening out one’s scope of enquiry rather than being focused on problem solving within a particular area of expertise. This broad scope seemed essential for tackling an issue as expansive as ageing and employment.

Bioethics has led the way in demonstrating the utility of a philosophical perspective on important areas of medicine and health policy, particularly as technology advances into ethically challenging realms. For example, UK policy on reproductive rights has been greatly influenced by the input of moral philosophers Baroness Warnock and Jonathan Glover. The medical humanities are broader in scope, being a loose aggregation of disciplines explicitly geared towards applying historical, narrative and philosophical analysis to the practice of medicine and understanding the experience of illness and health. As I settled into my research at POST it was interesting to see a definite role for an understanding of ageing and health that went beyond biomedicine and population level statistics on disability and retirement due to ill health, reflecting, from within a policy context, precisely the purpose of the medical humanities.

During my time at POST, I attended sessions in the House of Commons and the Lords, as well as numerous All Party Parliamentary Group meetings on topics including intergenerational justice, the progress of the controversial Health and Social Care Bill, and the government’s intention to measure national wellbeing. I also interviewed a range of experts in various fields from academia, business, government departments, management, economics, gerontology and occupational psychology.

As an academic researcher with limited previous exposure to Parliamentary processes and policy discussions, the experience has broadened my engagement with the potential practical implications of my day-to-day research in the philosophy of psychiatry. This is not to instrumentalise such research by implying it has value only through its application to policy or practice, but rather to suggest that there is something to be said for opening up academic skills and expertise to policy audiences, keeping both the outputs of academic research and academics themselves connected to public life, and, indeed, to each other across disciplines.

There are therefore substantial reciprocal benefits of a scheme such as the Wellcome Trust’s POST fellowship scheme, particularly for early career researchers for whom such an opportunity offers not only an insight into the parliamentary and policy world but also the potential to reflect on one’s own research skills and expertise in a non-academic context. The realisation that the skills one acquires as an academic researcher have potential application beyond one’s own field of specialisation is a valuable one, that has certainly influenced the approach I take to my post-doctoral work and plans for my future career (and the imposition of strict deadlines for the publication of POSTnotes also enhances one’s time management skills with remarkable effectiveness!)

Dr Natalie Banner is a Wellcome Research Fellow at the Centre for the Humanities and Health, King’s College London.

The Wellcome Trust Medical History and Humanities fellowship is open to second or third year PhD students and first-year postdocs funded by the Wellcome Trust’s Medical History and Humanties schemes. Find out more on the Wellcome Trust website. This post first appeared on the Wellcome Trust’s blog.
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TED: brand spanking new ideas for better living through science!!!

The New Inquiry has a great piece asking if TED has jumped the shark:

So many of the TED talks take on the form of those famous patent medicine tonic cure-all pitches of previous centuries, as though they must convince you not through the content of what’s being said but through the hyper-engaging style of the delivery. Each new “big idea” to “inspire the world” and “change everything” pitched from the TED stage reminds me of the swamp root and snake oil liniment being sold from a wagon a hundred years past. As Mike Bulajewski pointed out in a Tweet, “TED’s ‘revolutionary ideas’ mask capitalism as usual, giving it a narrative of progress and change.”

TED attempts to present itself as fresh, cutting edge, and outside the box but often fails to deliver. It’s become the Urban Outfitters of the ideas world, finding “cool” concepts suitable for being packaged and sold to the masses, thereby extinguishing the “cool” in the process.

At TED, “everyone is Steve Jobs” and every idea is treated like an iPad. The conferences have come to resemble religious meetings and the TED talks techno-spiritual sermons, pushing an evangelical, cultish attitude toward “the new ideas that will change the world.” Everything becomes “magical” and “inspirational.” In just the top-ten most-viewed TED talks, we get the messages of “inspiration,” “astonishment,” “insight,” “mathmagic” and the “thrilling potential of SixthSense technology”! The ideas most popular are those that pander to a metaphysical, magical portrayal of the role of technology in the world.

There are consequences to having this style of discourse dominate how technology’s role in society is understood. Where are the voices critical of corporatism? Where is there space to reach larger publics without having to take on the role of a salesperson, preacher, or self-help guru? Academics, for instance, have largely surrendered the ground of mainstream conversations about technology to business folks in the TED atmosphere.

I love TED talks, I love how they’re free, accessible, and have brought interesting ideas to millions of people. But this article makes some valid points that really needed to be made.

TED is a really interesting part of the Zeitgeist. It’s an expression of a culture which emerged in the 1990s, which has huge confidence and optimism in the power of social science and technology to improve the world instantly. It’s very much the Malcolm Gladwell view of the world, as expressed in books like The Tipping Point or Blink. It turns ideas into business pitches, and says, if you can’t express your idea in ten minutes, and make it sound shiny and new, your idea is not worth expressing.

I’m all for making ideas accessible, but what this basically means is we’re drowning in non-fiction social science books that are really ten minute TED talks pretending to be books. Careful academic work has been replaced by the over-hyped business pitch.

And TED has contributed to our culture’s chronic, deluded optimism in social science and tech. One example is Jane McGonigal’s TED talk: ‘Gaming can make a better world‘. This is a classic example of TED’s religious optimism in tech. McGonigal makes some nice points, but she seriously thinks gaming is going to solve our major global problems like climate change – and her optimism for this is based on one climate change game she devised. I’m sorry, but she’s still living in a 90s bubble of delusion. Gaming is not going to stop climate change.

TED talks often show a deep faith in measurements, data and statistics. The arch example is Hans Gosling’s talk on statistics, which is very entertaining, but for the TED audience it’s statistics-as-religious experience. It taps into their positivist faith in science: all we need to do is measure stuff, put it on a graph, observe the trends, then use this data to create a better world. We can even use such measurements to enhance global well-being (another popular TED talk is Nic Marks from the UK’s new economics foundation on well-being measurements).

Martin Seligman’s talk on Positive Psychology, again, is another example of TED’s deluded optimism in social science, and of how academic psychology has got drunk on the TED Kool-Aid (and the $$$ that roll in after a TED talk). We can make the entire world more spiritually flourishing, thanks to the magic of science! We just measure it, find the tech that improves the data, then roll it out – and guess what folks, we already got our first seed funding. Woo-hoo!

We face some really serious problems: mass unemployment, an unjust economic system, a global population heading for nine billion, and a planet struggling to support us. But if you can’t get your idea into a neat ten minute business pitch with the word ‘new’ in it, that makes the audience feel good about themselves, then sorry pal, get off the stage. I just invented a new machine that can solve depression and do your ironing! How about that folks!!!

How to Write about Love with Montaigne

Michel de Montaigne

After the romantic excesses of February 14 last week, Dr Emily Butterworth of King’s College London, offers some Renaissance advice on how to write about love, inspired by Michel de Montaigne’s essay, ‘On Some Lines of Virgil’ (1588-1592).

A frank meditation on contemporary attitudes to sex and his own reading practices, Montaigne’s essay focuses on erotic poetry by Virgil, Lucretius and Ovid as examples and counter-examples of effective writing. Poetry is most powerful when it suggests, Montaigne believes, and not when it tells. While the writing that Montaigne condemns is more explicit and even pornographic than most run-of-the-mill Valentine messages, his plea for a suggestive, allusive, half-hidden kind of style might still be a useful corrective to the straightforward declarations that circulate every year. In this passage Montaigne condemns Ovid for excessive explicitness:

But there are certain other things that we hide in order to reveal them. Listen to this poet speaking more openly:

Et nudam pressi corpus ad usque meum. [And I pressed her, naked, against my body]

It feels like he’s gelding me! The poet who reveals everything is cloying and distasteful. The timid poet makes us imagine more, perhaps, than he meant. There’s treason in this kind of modesty, above all in those poets who open such a royal road to the imagination. Both the act and its description should feel like theft.

Some things are hidden in order to draw more attention to them: Montaigne’s examples include holy relics and women’s breasts. It’s a gesture that is familiar from art of the period, too. Titian’s Venus of Urbino’s modest gesture draws attention all the more to her nakedness. In the background, two women search through a chest (perhaps the cloak that one of them is holding is to cover the goddess?), echo the theme of hidden pleasures and locked-away treasure.

Titian's Venus of Urbino, 1538

Here’s a checklist for next year’s declarations, and indeed for declarations of love at any time, inspired by Montaigne:

  1. Concealment and disguise are a game, and in fact a form of revelation: sexual desire is a thing best revealed through concealment
  2. Discretion is more compelling than plain speaking, and more effective
  3. Avoid castrating your reader with excessive frankness: you don’t want to extinguish his desire
  4. Lead your reader on; seduce him; make him betray himself
  5. Be prepared to risk yourself and betray your own desire

 

Well-being Inc.

It’s struck me more than once what an industry well-being is becoming. There’s the politics and economics of well-being, of course, and all the funding that think-tanks and academics can access there. There’s the life-coaching industry, which seems to be getting bigger and bigger. And then there’s the well-being retail industry – the massage therapists, the spa-owners, the holistic holiday retreats, the pamperers, the juicers, the astrologers, the homeopaths and huggers.

On that subject, I came across an interesting article in my favourite publication, ‘Stylist magazine’ (OK, I picked it up on the Tube). Stylist advertised one of its own events at a Mayfair hotel in March. For £45, you can learn how to be a ‘wellness entrepreneur‘: ‘Whatever your wellness business idea, whether it’s yogalates or a new skincare range so natural you can spread it on toast, let Stylist kickstart your vision’. An accompanying article explained the rise of Wellness Inc:

While the wellness revolution has been gaining ground for the last decade, it was the global recession that really kick-started the trend [Stylist magazine likes the word ‘kickstart’] for female-led wellness business: 2008 saw a dramatic 121% rise in bookings for holistic holidays, which was thought to be a response to the credit crunch. Over half a million people in the UK now regularly practise yoga. Wellness is big business, and it’s women who are reaping the rewards.

It may be a billion-pound industry in the UK, but globally Well-being Inc is worth at least a trillion-dollars, according to Paul Zane Pilzer, author of The Wellness Revolution: How to make a FORTUNE in the next TRILLION DOLLAR INDUSTRY. Paul tells us excitedly that, as more and more people become richer, they will spend a greater proportion of their wealth on wellness. Which means more $$$ for wellness entrepreneurs like him.

The New York Times likewise recently predicted a wellness boom:

At a health innovation and investment conference in California earlier this month, there was a lot of energy and excitement about the emerging health and wellness industry. The wellness movement, as it’s called, is seen as both a social phenomenon and a big investment opportunity. At one panel, Nancy Turett, an executive at Edelman, the big PR firm, said the company’s public opinion polling showed that health and wellness was now like “green,” meaning both a personal and social issue in America.

The business case, of course, is that an aging population, new Internet-era technology, and changing attitudes and reimbursement policies will increasingly focus on preventive health and wellness. New technology — low-cost computing, sensors, the Web and genetics — will play a crucial role in the transition.

Check out one example of this ‘new technology of wellness’: a CBT app called Buddy, now being rolled out across the NHS and beyond. I think we’re going to see a lot more of this sort of app / self-monitoring tech in Well-being Inc.

Buddy from sidekick studios on Vimeo.

Of course, we might not actually be getting richer in western economies, so the wellness industry could be hit (then again, we may need a lot of massages to get through the next decade of austerity). But not to worry – the biggest boom for Well-Being Inc., I suspect, will come from the BRIC economies, as they shift from break-neck capitalism to having some surplus cash and time which they can spend on well-being. A report from Ernst & Young, for example, predicted India’s wellness industry will grow annually by 30-35%.

The report classifies the wellness industry into seven core segments within different products and services, such as allopathy, alternative therapies, beauty, counselling, fitness and slimming, nutrition and rejuvenation. “Given the favourable demand and supply dynamics, wellness presents strong business potential,” said Farokh Balsara, partner for advisory services with Ernst and Young.

Unsurprising, then, that those smart people at The School of Life are going global, and launching franchise operations in South Korea, Brazil, Turkey, the USA, and elsewhere. The UK, and particularly Alain de Botton, has pioneered ‘philosophy as well-being techniques’, and now it’s taking that product to all those BRIC consumers searching for inner peace. Clever. That De Botton is a proper entrepreneur – I don’t mean that cynically, I admire it. It is not easy to make money from philosophy, and he has worked out how to do it.

The challenge, I guess, for ‘well-being entrepreneurs’ is how to balance market-savvy with authenticity, integrity, and a respect for quality. As Well-being Inc. becomes a boom market, the ‘experts’ who rise to the top will probably be the ones who shout the loudest and market themselves the slickest – like Martin Seligman in psychology, or Tim Ferriss and Anthony Robbins in self-help. What started off as an alternative to the rat-race becomes just another rat-race, with the obsessive self-promoters coming out on top.

Well-being Inc is trying to present something new, but within the framework of the old consumer capitalist system. So much self-help, as I recently wrote, is a religion for capitalists: an attempt to re-package religious and philosophical ideas and techniques within a hyper-capitalist framework, without ever challenging the tenets of capitalism. In fact, a lot of self-help actively promotes the connection between spiritual fulfilment, personal wealth and career advancement – the adverts for the weekend courses for Landmark coaching or Anthony Robbins, for example, often show people who say that after one course they were instantly promoted at their corporation. In place of the Platonic ascent to God, there is the capitalist ascent to senior manager.

I think there’s an inherent tension and contradiction there. It reminds me of the old argument between Socrates and Protagoras – both of them philosophers, both of them ‘life-coaches’, but Socrates gave his advice away for free, while Protagoras expected payment. As soon as you turn wisdom into a product, Socrates warns, you will attract shysters who will hype their wares and tell their audience whatever they want to hear, rather than what they need to hear.

Very true Socrates. But then you had the luxury of living in a prosperous small community supported by a large economy of slaves. How are the rest of us supposed to make a living?

Kleenex tissues and the meaning of ‘epiphylogenesis’

Sipping water or blowing your nose it’s hard not to realise the extent to which our emotions are sustained by commercial products.  Kleenex tissues, in a campaign masterminded by J. Walter Thompson, claim to make possible “the cleansing of the soul”. As they explain, “Emotional releases help ease the load.  Laugh out loud, sing from the top of your lungs or have a good cry. When people let go, they feel relieved.  We all carry a lot of emotional weight inside us.  Its high time to let it out™”

In a similar vein, Cool Ridge bottled water urges its drinkers to “Express yourself and keep things flowing”.  “It is”, they maintain, “good to get things out of your system.  Drinking plenty of water is part of it.  Letting your emotions out is important too.  It is much better than bottling them up.  We are a straight talking Aussie water so telling it like it is comes naturally.”

As is often the case, the ideas of advertisers and PR men are in advance of the latest thinking of historians.  Historians of emotions have not been good at thinking about the relationship between changing patterns of feeling and concomitant changes in material culture.  We still lack detailed studies of how changes in the world of goods might make possible changes in the affective world of the psyche, although certain theorists have begun to explore this relationship.

Philosopher of technology Bernard Stiegler

The French philosopher, Bernard Stiegler has recently argued that humanity is distinguished from animal life by its reliance upon technology.  Echoing earlier claims by Julian Huxley and Louis Mumford, Steigler insists that changes in material organisation bring about changes in the organisation of consciousness and experience.  Such changes mark the development of a new stage in evolution – that of ‘epiphylogenesis’ – in which humans overcome their genetic heritage and develop new ways of being through technological innovation.

If the claims of Kleenex, Cool Ridge and Stiegler are correct then it does suggest that emotions are in the last analysis, historical.  Their inception and expression is not simply a matter of triggering preordained biological affect circuits laid down in the evolutionary past, rather their existence and communication is dependent upon a network of objects  – tissues, bottles, yoghurts etc. – that extend far beyond the human nervous system.  It is a vision of affective life which firmly locates the history of emotions back within the field of social and economic history.

The disruptive technology of internet dating

[This should probably have gone in last week’s Shame Week…but seeing as it’s Valentine’s Day, here is a post I wrote two years ago about my experience internet dating.]

The phrase ‘disruptive technologies’ usually refers to the way new inventions can completely transform, disrupt and even destroy traditional markets. But it applies not just to markets, but also to communities, conventions, traditions, and traditional ways of feeling, behaving, interacting, and even making love.

Take, for example, the invention of the pill, or the Combined Oral Contraceptive Pill, which was first synthesized from Mexican yams (no, really) in the 1930s, then introduced for married women in the US in 1965 (although not introduced for unmarried women until 1972). Think how incredibly disruptive that new technology was for traditional ways of interacting. Think of the role the humble Mexican yam played in the Sexual Revolution, in free love, in feminism, in the rise of single-occupancy apartments and the decline of the nuclear family.

Perhaps the most disruptive technology is the internet, which has in a few years utterly changed how we communicate, share information, shop, travel, think and love. Since the invention of the Net, human culture has become far faster. It has given us a new word, ‘viral’, to describe the sudden exponential take-up of new ideas, words, technologies and practices.

The speed of disruption was brought to my mind when I went to see The Social Network, which is about Facebook. That’s interesting in itself. They’re already making a movie about Facebook, before it’s even gone public. History is speeding up. The beginning of the film takes us back in time to the origins of Facebook, way back in 2003. The reason Facebook succeeded, the film explained to me, is that its technology isn’t entirely disruptive. In many ways, it ‘fits’ with our evolutionary nature, which is used to living in a small tribe of 100-300 people. Facebook gives us an online version of this tribe, but it rationalizes it, streamlines it, makes it more efficient. It draws on the basic human desire to share information with the tribe, through fireside gossip, songs, music – but it allows the tribe to stretch across space, so that friends who live abroad are still connected to the tribe.

But it also disrupts and transforms ancient social patterns. Where before, our tribal self-presentation (and therefore our status) would have been relatively fixed, in the online tribe, the way we present ourselves is infinitely malleable. That’s the fun of Facebook. It’s a fluid, non-hierarchical tribe, where everyone can present themselves as the Big Chief.

The new virtual tribe brings new anxieties with it. How well do we know the members of our tribe? How much information do we share with them? How real are the ties and bonds of the tribe? Would the members of the tribe take care of us when we fall sick? Everyone has friends who tend to spill their emotional problems onto their status update…is it appropriate? Does the tribe care?

As of last month [ie October 2010], I signed up to another disruptive technology: online dating. Yes, I joined Guardian Soulmates. Kill me now. But it’s actually been quite fun. Compulsive even – although like Facebook there’s an initial burst of enthusiasm that quite rapidly leads to digital ennui.

Like Facebook, users of Soulmates have a profile page, which is their persona, their advertisment, their shop front, where they tell the market why they should go on a date with them: ‘I’m cheeky’, ‘I’m a great cook’, ‘I love to travel’, ‘I study at the LSE’, ‘I’m a successful lawyer’ – it’s funny what people think are their chief selling points. People often list their favourite TV shows. Again, interesting how our taste in TV has become one of our main cultural signifiers. Are you more an HBO or a UK Gold sort of person?

You also write what you want in return – women often seem to want someone to curl up with next to a fire…once again, the old tribal patterns emerge. People also post photos of themselves looking soulful, climbing up Kilimanjaro, running a marathon, surrounded by adoring friends, cradling an enormous cocktail. Pick me…I’m a drunk! One person posted six photos, all of her at other people’s weddings, several with her as the bridesmaid. Want to get married much?

The profiles are often hilarious. One person recorded a voice message in which they spent five minutes simply listing their favourite rock bands in a monotone. ‘Black Sabbath, Iron Maiden, Def Leppard, Queens of the Stone Age’ etc etc. Another person, French, assured visitors to her profile page that she would be their ‘mother, sister, daughter, whore’.

Typos abound: one dater says they don’t want to be ‘partonized’, another says the fact she speaks three languages is ‘intimating’ for many men. Yes, I know, I’m a pedant – and I’m sure the boys’ profiles are just as misspeltt.

I’d actually tried internet dating before, a couple of years ago, but hadn’t had much luck, mainly because I kept on correcting people’s typos. This time, I decided to take a more Machiavellian approach. I noticed there was a ‘popular board’, which listed the top 20 men and the top 20 women on the site, rated according to the speed at which others added them as favourites or sent them messages. So I simply added hundreds of women as favourites (around 200 or so in an hour). About half of them added me as well (reciprocity), and presto, by the end of the day I was right up the popular board. My uncle, a journalist at the Guardian, emailed me bemusedly to tell me my Soulmates photo was on the homepage of the Guardian main-site. Finally, I was among the Olympians! Gatsby, you didn’t need to throw all those parties: you just need to maximise your search engine optimisation.

Suddenly way more people were sending me emails asking to meet up. The number one girl on the female popular board sent me an email, asking me to write to her. Being on the ‘popular board’ had given me what they call ‘social proof’. I had just made the football team, and suddenly the head cheerleader is making eyes at me. We’re herd animals, status animals, but unlike other animals, we can fake being alpha.

The slightly dark side to this manipulation was that I got lots of emails from some of the people I’d added as favourites, excited that I appeared to like them, and interpreting it as significant. These people were then sometimes hurt if I didn’t reply to their email. So I then felt I had to reply to all their emails. I ended up being an agony aunt to women all over the world, firing out tens of emails a day to lonely Bridget Joneses…‘Hey, don’t worry, I’m sure things will turn around, plenty more fish in the sea, just stay positive OK?’

I found the site strangely compulsive. The journalist (or voyeur) in me had to find out who was the person behind the profile page. It was like an advent calendar, where you keep opening the little windows, without ever quite getting to Christmas.  The dates I’ve been on have hardly ever been boring. The word I would use is…weird. There’s a lot of baggage out there. The technology may be cool and efficient, but you’re still dealing with the slow messiness of the human heart.

You hear a lot of sad stories – a woman who gave up her dream of being a dancer because the doctors said she had a back problem and it would leave her paralysed. Ten years later, she found out they were wrong, but by then life had passed her by. Another girl, who was number one on the popular board, told me she had run as an MP. I expected her to be a scary alpha female, but in fact she turned out to be…a witch. I don’t mean an unpleasant woman, I mean a proper, cauldron-stirring, Wicca-worshipping witch. ‘You wouldn’t believe the amount of discrimination we face’, she told me.

Sometimes it all feels a bit too mechanical, a bit too efficient, which is why the title is so genius: ‘Guardian Soulmates’ – as if destiny and the soul can play a role in such a rationalized market. People who’ve met on it, and got married, have to invent stories to enhance the illusion of destiny: ‘His was the very first profile I looked at’ – so they can hold on to the belief that this was MEANT TO BE, and not simply the random accident of an internet algorithm.

After a month, you’re weary, you’ve been on too many dates, you’ve gorged yourself on too much random personal information, you’ve opened too many windows into strangers’ lives, you can’t remember people’s names, you cant remember anything about your date, cant tell if you liked them or not, but it doesn’t matter, because 100 new people have joined, and you promise yourself, just one more window, just one more spin of the wheel, maybe this time, maybe this is the One.

Roman Krznaric on overcoming our addiction to love

This week, we’re going to do some posts on love, to consider and carry ourselves through Valentine’s Day. Our first post is a short talk by Roman Krznaric.

Roman was our speaker at the London Philosophy Club last week (and an excellent speaker at that). He’s an interesting figure in both the contemporary history of emotions and in the flourishing practical philosophy movement. He was a sociologist at Cambridge, and then left academia in his twenties to work with Theodore Zeldin, author of the classic Intimate History of Humanity. Krznaric worked on Zeldin’s ‘feast of strangers‘ project in Oxford, which aims to initiate conversations among strangers at specially-arranged dinners, to enhance empathy, self-reflection, and more examined lives. We’re actually aiming to start up something similar at the London Philosophy Club next month.

In 2008, Krznaric became a founding member of the School of Life, the philosophy school / shop in London which has been a rallying point for practical philosophers including Mark Vernon, Robert Rowland Smith and Alain De Botton. There are so many ‘practical philosophers’ these days that their work can seem similar to the casual observer, but in fact they’re quite distinct. Mark Vernon, for example, is particularly interested in issues of religion, spirituality and atheism, as one might expect from someone who once trained as a priest. Roman Krznaric is the most historically-minded of the School of Life faculty – his new book, The Wonderbox, is fashioned as a curiosity cabinet exploring the archeology of our emotional attitudes through objects, artefacts, moments. A sort of Pitt Rivers of the emotions. He tells me his next project may be a traveling ‘museum of empathy’, which will tell the history of empathy through curious objects.

In this talk, Krznaric explores the Greeks’ taxonomy of love into six types. He suggests we foolishly demand today that one person fulfil all six types of love, and that this is to set our expectations hopelessly high.

Shameless

When did you last feel shame? Today? Yesterday? Last week? Last year? In my case, I reckon the answer is 1983.

Now, there may be many reasons why I have felt no shame for the last twenty-nine years. It could be that I am a saint, or a sociopath; that I never do anything shameful or am pathologically unable to recognise it when I do. It could be that I am misidentifying my emotions. Maybe on occasions when I think I am feeling embarrassment, or regret, or guilt, or anger at myself, in fact I am feeling shame. But I doubt it.

Looking back over a week of posts about shame on this blog, in which shame has been analysed philosophically, politically, aesthetically, and sexually, I am all the more convinced that it’s just not a feeling I have in my repertoire. I understand the logic of shame as a kind of unseen substance invoked in connection with publicly acknowledged moral failures. And I might quite frequently and sincerely state that I am ashamed of myself for falling short of some personal or professional ideal. But,as I hinted in my questions to the philosophers of shame on Monday none of this involves me feeling anything much at all, let alone a clear and distinct emotion. In other words, I don’t share their belief that the primary meaning of ‘I am ashamed’ is ‘I am currently feeling the emotion of shame’.

According to the authors of In Defense of Shame, shame is primarily the name of an emotional episode in which a shamed individual has clear physical symptoms such as blushing, averting their eyes, and covering their face, while believing themselves to have fallen short of some dearly held ideal. Does that regularly happen to you? As I say, for me I think the last time was in 1983, on an occasion when my mother discovered that I had been lying to her, and I recall a deep sense of upset, a burning red face, and an inability to look her in the eye. These days, if I find myself feeling ashamed, it tends to be in private, not to involve blushing, nor averting my eyes, nor feeling physically churned up in any way (unlike, say, when I find myself enraged or grief-stricken).

As with any interesting emotion word, ‘shame’ is ambiguous and multivalent. I certainly seem to mean something slightly different by ‘shame’ than do the authors of In Defense of Shame, and no doubt my concept of shame differs from that of Plato, of modern political theorists, and of Steve McQueen too. Looking at the history of the English word ‘shame’, its ancestors in Old English and Germanic languages include terms with connotations of disgrace and infamy, which in turn were used to translate at least two different Latin terms, pudor (modesty, bashfulness) and rubor (blush, disgrace). The OED‘s primary definition of the modern English term treats shame as a ‘painful emotion’ arising from something either dishonouring or offensive to modesty or decency. The association between nudity and shame fits into the category of offences to modesty, and can be traced all the way back to the Garden of Eden when Adam and Eve, originally quite unashamed by their nudity, like happy naturists, are suddenly stricken by bourgeois shame after eating from the tree of knowledge of good and evil.

This semantic and etymological history also holds some clues, I think, about the origin of my sense that shame either is not an emotion at all, or is one that I have never experienced as an adult. There are two points here. First, I think that somehow I have ended up with a pre-modern sense of shame. I think of shame not as a feeling but as an invisible moral quality that attaches to actions and people – something more like indecency, immodesty, or dishonour – none of which is an emotion. I find it easier to imagine asking someone, in moral outrage, ‘Have you no shame?’ than ‘Do you not feel shame?’. Easier to imagine, but still pretty implausible. Because even if shame is some kind of feeling or emotion, it seems to be one that arises as part of a thought-world that I simply don’t inhabit – one in which a person can be dishonoured, or their modesty offended. These are alien concepts to me.

Finally, then, this is an instance when the history of emotions can help us to understand our own mental lives. In her Natalie Zemon Davies lectures, recently published as Emotions in History: Lost and Found, Ute Frevert explores the moralised, ritualised and hierarchical emotional systems bound up with codes of chivalry and honour in early-modern Europe. Her book includes wonderfully vivid accounts of how civilised men, even up to the end of the nineteenth century, would seek to settle offences to their own and their family’s honour, by ‘calling out’ the adversary who had shamed them, seeking satisfaction in a duel. Frevert goes on to explore the practice, observable up to the present, and evident in recent atrocities in both Europe and Africa, of the shaming of enemies by the sexual violation of their women. The message of history seems to be that the emotion of shame is deeply connected with honour and violence, especially sexual violence. We should expect societies with strong moral codes of honour connected to female sexual integrity to be particularly shame-filled. Tabloid newspapers, unlike my daily life, provide just such a context.

But let’s end Shame Week on a note of bathos rather than real tragedy. Frevert finds a modern counterpart of the duelling ethos in the infamous behaviour of Zinédine Zidane in the World Cup Final of 2006. Zidane, the French captain, was sent off, during his final professional match, for an apparently inexplicable act of violence against one of his Italian opponents, Marco Materazzi.

France went on to lose the match. Zidane, one might imagine, would have experienced great pangs of shame arising from the defeat of his nation as a result of this impetuous unprofessional conduct. Writing for the Guardian at the time, Richard Williams described Zidane’s exit as a ‘walk of shame‘.

But, in fact, it turned out, Zidane saw his actions as quite the opposite. Materazzi had apparently called Zidane’s sister a whore. From Zidane’s point of view doing nothing would have been the shameful option. Sexual innuendo directed against the family’s honour had to be avenged. In the nineteenth century it might have been pistols at dawn. In the world of twenty-first century football it was a swift headbutt to the chest.

Nice movie, shame about the interviews

In our fourth post in Shame Week, Dr Katherine Angel of Warwick University’s Centre for the History of Medicine considers Steve McQueen’s new film, Shame. She argues that McQueen’s recent interviews characterising the work as ‘a film about sex addiction’ crudely medicalises and pathologises what is in fact a  subtle and nuanced cinematic exploration of desire and suffering.

The opening shot of Shame is of its protagonist, Brandon, lying on a bed. We see him from above, from about ceiling-height. He is still, pale, and glassy-eyed. The scene is a little longer than is comfortable, and invites us to wonder if this body we are looking at is a corpse. But no – the man moves, and climbs out of bed. As the next couple of days unfold, we are given a picture of a New York office worker in his mid-thirties, whose routine is peppered with pornography, masturbation, the chasing of casual encounters, and visits from prostitutes.

Michael Fassbender, and the cinematography, are remarkable. Together they reveal two Brandons, embodied in startlingly different ways. One is a deadened, absent figure – McQueen sometimes blurs his face; he is still, heavy, and grey. In these scenes he recedes, and almost vanishes. The other is a compelling and poised figure, drawing the desire of others towards him. Fassbender accomplishes this not so much through words, but rather by conveying the sense of an altogether different energy coursing through him – an energy searching for something to want and have, a need to be wanted, and an openness otherwise unavailable to him.

Brandon’s younger sister Cissy comes to stay, and her presence – needy, voluble, dramatic – provokes a simmering rage in him that is unnerving to her and the audience. The tensions between the two are triangulated by the flirtation between Cissy and Brandon’s boss. An opening of light into Brandon’s muffled life is provided by a date with a colleague, but he is unable to become physically aroused when in bed with her. After a row with Cissy, Brandon spends a night in bars and clubs, pursuing a series of sexual encounters.

This sequence is one of the most powerful in the film. It includes an uncomfortable scene when he talks in an increasingly explicit way with a woman at a bar – flirting isn’t quite the right word – eventually reaching his hand under her skirt. He then provokes her boyfriend by relaying the details of their conversation. It’s a scene with complex layers: He is exciting the woman, but also knowingly disturbing her. He isn’t exactly pursuing her, but rather displaying himself to himself. He is humiliating the boyfriend, but perhaps attempting to humiliate himself too. He is observing himself with bitter recognition, testing his own capacity for provocation, and inviting the anger and disgust of others. The scene ends with an exquisitely ambivalent grimace of triumph and self-knowledge on his face. We then see him with two prostitutes. Against the lush and dark soundtrack by Harry Escott, Brandon’s absorption in the physical abandon is intensely moving – we sense the release, both physical and emotional, that he finds there – but Fassbender and McQueen resist any easy resolution: the scene culminates with him looking out at us, his face a dizzying mix of abandon and distress.

Shame has a light touch. It does not give us a heavy-handed backstory, and is both empathetic and unwavering. It lets complex characters and situations emerge, allowing ambiguity throughout, and especially so at the end. It is, in other words, subtle and complex – something that contrasts somewhat with the Steve McQueen’s gloss on his own film in interviews.

The film, he says, is about sex addiction – analogous to alcohol or drug addiction, but less recognised than these. The film was made in New York, he says, partly because of difficulties finding interviewees to discuss sex addiction in the UK; in the US, doctors and patients abounded. A model of sex addiction analogous to alcohol addiction, with similar 12-step programmes, has been around longer in the States than in the UK, and is a lay model that circulates increasingly widely. But sex addiction is not an uncontested category. It is not listed as such in the current DSM, the manual of the American Psychiatric Association, although individuals can be and are categorized under Sexual Disorder Not Otherwise Specified. In the controversial process to revise DSM for its fifth edition due in 2013, Hypersexual Disorder is being discussed for inclusion. The criteria include excessive time consumed by sexual urges, and planning and engaging in sexual behaviour; repetitive engaging in sexual behaviour as a response to dysphoric mood states, or to stressful life events; repetitive engaging in behaviour while disregarding risks to self and others – all with the proviso that the behaviour must cause significant personal distress or impairment in functioning. (The International Classification of Disease is less loquacious than the DSM on this and other matters; but it includes Excessive Sexual Drive as a category, specified as satyriasis in men and nymphomania in women – preserving an older sexological language that the DSM’s nomenclature has sought to replace.)

Proponents of the disorder suggest that there is a significant clinical need for it, with many individuals seeking treatment – regardless of diagnosis – in psychotherapy and 12-step programmes. Moreover, they emphasise, those manifesting compulsive and high-volume sexual behaviour are at higher risk of acquiring and disseminating sexually transmitted diseases, as well as suffering the destructive impact on relationships and marriages. The public health implications of sexual appetite, of impulse control, and of internet pornography are key figures in concern about compulsive or addictive sexual behaviours.

This terminology of sexual addiction, hypersexuality, or sexual compulsivity is controversial, with debates abounding over a pathologisation of sexuality and the norms of sexual behaviour embedded within them. This is, as ever, a question of language – and McQueen’s insistence on sex addiction as the theme of the film is a strangely blunt tool to describe his work. Shame is a remarkable portrait of suffering – suffering that primarily manifests in, and is temporarily resolved through, though never entirely dislodged by, intense sexual activity. It ‘s about how suffering can be expressed; about the limited outlets for experience and suffering that Brandon allows himself. It’s about exquisite pain, and it’s testament to both McQueen and Fassbender that when we watch this portrait, we feel it too.

McQueen has also said that people struggle to understand the idea of a film about sex that is not sexy; that does not aim to excite or titillate. Here again, his own glossing of his work is a surprising contrast to it. To insist that Shame is not at some level erotic is to underplay how it brings to life both the intense pull and satisfaction of sex, and its shadow – its capacity to stand in for other kinds of pleasures, longings and disappointments, to obscure and muffle other feelings. The film both shows us how compelling the fulfilment of sexual desire can be, and shows us how desire, more widely understood, can get distributed within a person. Brandon doesn’t really want anything; at a restaurant, he is indifferent to his choices. His life feels anonymous, his apartment bland, inexpressive of anything he might want or love. And yet it is only within sexual desire that his desire in general can come alive.

McQueen’s work as an artist is complex and resonant, but his statements about his film are disappointing. This makes me think that he is either not fully cognizant of the beauty and complexity of his creation, or adopting a particular language – a medical language – through which compassion can be channeled, and through which discomforts about portrayals of both suffering and sexuality can be managed, in order to negotiate the press circus and to render the film more palatable.

A similar point can be made about the handling of ideas of gender in the film – of which McQueen has been silent. It is interesting that Brandon’s rage is so intensely provoked by witnessing his sister’s desire for sex, but also desire for connection, love, and support. In a restaurant on a date, the woman he is with does know her desire, and is unafraid to open up the questions about love and relationships that Brandon is so closed to; and yet when she starts to express a wine preference, the male waiter cuts her off, and she defers. Women’s desire is the silent partner – tantalisingly glimpsed – to Brandon’s suffering in the film.

McQueen also deftly raises questions of gender in the interactions between Brandon and his boss David, in which we see the calibration of masculinity at work in relation to conquests of women. In a bar, David pursues a woman who is instead drawn to Brandon’s quiet and elusive charm. The next day, not knowing – but suspecting – that Brandon and the woman in question did seduce one another, David suggests another outing. They agree on a location, and Dave says ‘And I’ll ruin your night’ – a powerful flicker of threat surging into a mundane office moment. It is that night that he meets Cissy, with whom he has sex in Brandon’s apartment. Here we see the aggressive negotiations of gender identity and power that can give desire and conquest its energy.

What is avoided in the film, but obtrusive in its reviews, however, is the question of the gendered nature of ideas about appropriate sexual behaviour. One review tells us that there is ‘a long tracking scene in which Brandon, driven from his apartment by his sister’s slutty behaviour, jogs furiously for several blocks through Manhattan, trying to run his anger out of his system.’ Another claims that Cissy ‘throws herself at any passing male as a kind of mirror pathology’. This is fascinating: Brandon is a sex addict, but his sister’s behaviour is ‘slutty.’ And these assessments are curious because all we see is Cissy spend one night with David, against the background of Brandon’s far more intense level of sexual activity. The availability, that is, of a far more judgemental language about sexual behaviour in women creeps into the critical response to the film.

How we read casual sex, then, is evidently gendered. A film about ‘sex addiction’ in women would no doubt look and feel very different. And so how we read Shame, the film, and shame, the feeling, should perhaps also be filtered through gender, because the coverage of Shame can be read as an instance of the need to wield shame against others. Shame is a beautiful and subtle film, and ways of talking about it reveal the narrative difficulties of describing sex, suffering, and desire. So go and see it – just don’t trust anything you read about it.

Dr Angel’s book, Unmastered: A Book On Desire, Most Difficult to Tell, is published later this year by Allen Lane.

Is shame a prison, or a useful moral and political force?

Overcoming conventions of shame to celebrate alternate lifestyles

Rebecca Kingston is Associate Professor of political science at the University of Toronto, and the editor of Bringing the Passions Back In: The Emotions in Political Philosophy (2008). She recently visited the Centre to give one of our lunch-time seminars, and spoke about her new book, Public Passion: Re-thinking the Grounds for Political Justice. This is our third post for #shameweek.

There is a clear ambiguity or disjuncture in how themes of shame circulate politically and culturally in liberal democracies. On the one hand, there is a theory and political dynamic that suggests that contemporary liberal democracy defines itself through the overcoming of shame in all quarters.

Many progressive political movements –civil rights, feminism, LBGT- have seen their task as not only one of assuring equal rights to their constituencies, but in overcoming long traditions of stigmatization and shaming that appeared to ground and justify the denial of equality. Along this line we can see many reasons to endorse Avishai Margalit’s resonating account of the ‘decent society’ as one that avoids the humiliation of any of its members.  It is this sensitivity that fueled popular disgust of the treatment of the Abu Ghraib prisoners by American soldiers.

Yet, it would also appear that in the very process of defending and appealing to the central values of liberal democracy, there is an ongoing dynamic of shame and shaming that continue to occur.  Stripping of knighthoods aside, recently done, it would appear, on the grounds of a lack of financial and administrative competency, parliamentary oppositions thrive on the attack that those in power threaten to undermine the very standards of decency in welfare terms or otherwise, on which the postwar settlement was based.  The media also often succeeds on a logic of demonstrating the inability of those in positions of power and influence to live up to basic rules of ethics or competency.

It could be suggested that this second reliance on shame is central to the working and indeed the self-understanding of liberal democratic citizens and is indispensable to the enforcement of public and governmental responsibility. Shame with regard to practices of the past helps to fuel our broad sense of history and progress and relative confidence in liberal democratic society.

Pointing the finger at the shameful practices of others

On a more popular level, the spiraling rounds of reality television revealing filthy households, and ill-behaved children among other vices, also appear to thrive on pointing the fingers at the deficiencies of others to make us smug while simultaneously and somewhat paradoxically gnawing at our insecurities and urging us on to manage our households, children, etc. better.

How does one come to terms with this apparent contradiction between experiences of shame that are clearly debilitating and those that seem to flourish in our era?  It would seem ill-advised to advocate the banning of all invocations of shame in the public sphere, as suggested by Martha Nussbaum (who claims that all instances of shaming can be traced back to a primitive manifestation, thereby carrying the potential to be harnessed to very destructive ends), if only for the reason that they appear to be irrepressible and indeed part of the very complex emotional mix (or ‘public passion’) that constitutes us as liberal democratic citizens.

The mystery of shame in this context is how an emotion that would appear to challenge norms of equality at its very core, not only thrives, but circulates so as to sustain a regime defined by those same norms.