Dark Imaginings: That more and more novelists and screen-writers are reaching for the deadly virus plot-line reveals an alarming shift in the zeitgeist. Slowly but unmistakably, the mood of the world’s artists is darkening. Few now are willing to embrace the heroic hopefulness of a Tolkien. Indeed, the twenty-first century fixation with extinction-level pandemics points to an artistic community tormented by murderous despair.
NEW TO SOHO on Sky Television is the latest “Deep State”
thriller, Condor. In brief, the plot
revolves around a genocidal conspiracy involving a rapacious firm of military
contractors* and rogue elements within the CIA. Their goal? To release a deadly
virus with which they hope to wipe out vast swathes of the population of the
Middle East. The second episode opens with the infamous quotation attributed to
Joseph Stalin:
Death solves all problems: no man, no problem.
That more and more novelists and screen-writers are reaching
for the deadly virus plot-line reveals an alarming shift in the zeitgeist. Slowly but unmistakably, the
mood of the world’s artists is darkening. Few now are willing to embrace the
heroic hopefulness of a Tolkien. Indeed, the twenty-first century fixation with
extinction-level pandemics points to an artistic community tormented by murderous
despair.
It is the privilege of artists to think the unthinkable and
imagine the unimaginable. Which is exactly what so many of them are doing in
response to the deepening crisis of anthropogenic global warming. Human nature
being the raw material out of which they fashion their artworks, it is not
difficult to understand their growing pessimism. With every passing year, and
every disregarded warning from climate science experts, it becomes clearer and
clearer to them that the human species is not going to make it. Unsurprisingly,
their imaginative powers are being turned to the subject of how best to rescue
the planet’s other life forms.
The German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche long ago
recognised the dangers of turning the human imagination towards extreme
solutions. His forebodings are best expressed in two, oft-quoted aphorisms: “Have
a care when fighting dragons, lest ye become a dragon yourself.” And: “Stare
not too long into the abyss, lest the abyss stare back into you.”
The risk of so many artists concluding that the only
solution to Climate Change is to rid the planet of its most dangerous species,
is that the most talented among them possess the creative power to make it
sound like a good idea. Life has a terrible habit of imitating art.
The other great hazard associated with releasing the
terrifying idea of eliminationism into the intellectual bloodstream of the
non-artistic community is that the idea of deliberately destroying billions of
innocent human-beings will become normalised. In no time at all, the
unthinkable will become thinkable. People in a position to make awful things
happen will begin to ask themselves: “Why not?”
The writers behind Condor
have yet to move beyond the genocidal notion of drying up the sea of the Middle-Eastern
peoples in which the Jihadist fishes swim. A reprehensible enough idea in
itself but falling well short of the historically unprecedented crime of
eliminating 95 percent of the human species. Even so, the Condor series points to the awful probability of eliminationist
thinking taking hold in the minds of Deep State actors already quite capable of
ordering drone strikes on wedding feasts; deploying chemical weapons against
designated enemies of the state; and hacking up the sovereign’s critics with a
bone saw.
Would that the world’s artists were willing to latch on to
the much more optimistic Fixing-Climate-Change scenario elaborated by Counterpunch contributor, Steve
Hendricks. https://www.counterpunch.org/2018/12/07/what-if-we-just-buy-off-big-fossil-fuel-a-novel-plan-to-mitigate-the-climate-calamity/
His eminently practical plan of simply paying the fossil fuel industry to keep
their product safely in the ground; and then giving them the job of
transitioning humankind to a sustainable green future; is proof of what we
human-beings are capable of conceptualising when we shun the darkness and choose
instead to keep our eyes firmly fixed upon the light.
*These private sector
bad guys all work for “White Sands” – an insider joke aimed at those already
familiar with the notorious exploits of the all-too-real military contractor,
Blackwater, during the Iraq War. Black Water – White Sands. Geddit?
This essay was
originally posted on The Daily Blog
of 11 December 2018.
2 comments:
All about reducing the population of the Middle East.
The subject matter gets darker, the body count grows, the boundaries of descency plummet. That's the trajectory of what passes for visual entertainment in today's media. Hollywood is obsessed with super heroes who use extreme powers to commit violence against more violent opponents.
Violence on steroids. A virtual Colosseum, digitally enhanced.
The really disturbing thing is that nobody stops to question the bodycount, the casualisation. Yes we all love the story of goodies beating baddies in a morality tale, but we dont question the means. Which plays nicely into the hands of an industry that competes by upping the ante to sell sell sell.
Does it soften us up to the unthinkable? Does it inure us to dubious means that create "collateral"? I don't know. What I do know is that the line where fantasy meats reality is getting blurred.
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