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6 - Strenuous disengagement and cynical chic solidarity

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 November 2009

Nina Eliasoph
Affiliation:
University of Wisconsin, Madison
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Summary

The private people were not the only group at the country-western clubs. Another group usually sat together, went on outings together, and generally formed a subgroup at the clubs. Considering how continuously this second group of friends made morbid, despairing political jokes, and how much detailed political knowledge they exchanged, and how strong and bitter their opinions were, I was puzzled that they managed not to get involved in doing something about the problems that they so attentively, lovingly catalogued. Clearly, these Buffalo members did engage in political debate, in a potential context of the informal public sphere, but the point of their conversation was always to convince each other that they were smart enough to know that they could not do anything about the problems.

The point of including this comparison case is to show a range of methods for creating politically disengaged public conversation. Making such a strong effort to convince oneself and one's friends of citizens' powerlessness is a way of taking a political position, but it is one that closes off avenues for involvement that go beyond expressions of vehement disengagement. Thus, in the “cycle of political evaporation,” such bitter cynicism enters the potential contexts of the public sphere, but only in order to neuter feelings of political engagement, to keep politics at bay. Ironically, this group, that talked about politics more than any group I encountered, was also the most actively distant from politics.

Type
Chapter
Information
Avoiding Politics
How Americans Produce Apathy in Everyday Life
, pp. 154 - 164
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1998

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