The Mercilessness of Digital Media

For Al Jazeera, I wrote about the suicide of Amanda Todd, a teenager who was bullied and stalked online before committing suicide last week:

Digital memory spares no mercy. For teenagers like Amanda Todd, one regrettable decision can transform one’s life – or end it. The combination of digital media that can be cached and copied and monopoly platforms like Facebook that confine diverse social contacts into a single space has made self-reinvention almost impossible. It would be wrong to say that “the internet” killed Amanda Todd. But she died battling a version of herself that she sought desperately to escape. Her online identity was determined by others, without accountability, without remorse.

The bullying of Amanda Todd shows how online and offline behaviour are interwoven, how face-to-face cruelty slips into online performance. On the internet, the victim’s own memory of events is not the one that endures. Instead, the story is written by the tormentors, their ownership of the narrative itself a form of torment.

Read the full article here.

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Academic Paywalls Codify Elitism

I have returned from the Registan conference on  Social Trends and Stability in Central Asia, where I spoke on a roundtable panel about human rights in Uzbekistan with Jim Bigus from the State Department, Steve Swerdlow from Human Rights Watch, and Sanjar Umarov from the Uzbek dissident group Sunshine Uzbekistan. The conference was great and hopefully Registan will be holding another one in the future. In the meantime, you can check out the Registan website for Central Asia news and analysis.

Now I’m catching up to the response to my latest article for Al Jazeera about academia, which like my first one, appears to have struck a chord with frustrated researchers around the world. This one concerns the academic paywall system, which requires non-academics to pay exorbitant fees to access scholarly materials. My own work goes for $183.00, a fee that serves to keep the public from reading it. An excerpt:

Since I receive no money from the sale of my work, I have no idea whether anyone purchased it. I suspect not, as the reason for the high price has nothing to do with making money. JSTOR, for example, makes only 0.35 per cent of its profits from individual article sales. The high price is designed to maintain the barrier between academia and the outside world. Paywalls codify and commodify tacit elitism.

In academia, publishing is a strategic enterprise. It is less about the production of knowledge than where that knowledge will be held (or withheld) and what effect that has on the author’s career. New professors are awarded tenure based on their publication output, but not on the impact of their research on the world – perhaps because, due to paywalls, it is usually minimal.

“Publish or perish” has long been an academic maxim. In the digital economy, “publish and perish” may be a more apt summation. What academics gain in professional security, they lose in public relevance, a sad fate for those who want their research appreciated and understood.

Read the full article here.

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My thoughts on freedom of speech

For Al Jazeera, I examine recent controversies over freedom of speech:

The battle lines of free speech are often drawn over the banal. One strategy of those who seek to minimise the argument of the offended party is to scoff at what inspired it. Only a restaurant, only a movie, only a cartoon – why the outrage, they ask.

But such conflicts are rarely about the object in question. They are about the participants and their culture, their ideologies and their faith. They are about sanction and censure, about whose dignity can withstand whose degradation.

Freedom of speech is protected by law, but guided by emotion. We should not mistake legal sanction for personal approval, but we should also not mistake personal disapproval for a rejection of free speech. In free societies, people have the right to say hateful things. And those offended have the right to oppose and condemn them.

Read the full article here.

In other news, I will be presenting at the Registan conference in Arlington October 4-5. This is a fantastic conference with a great line-up of social scientists studying Central Asia as well as experts from the policy and human rights communities. Registration is still open and I encourage readers in the DC area to attend. I will be a panelist at a roundtable about human rights in Uzbekistan.

Then I’m off to New York October 11 to give a talk at Columbia University with my academic BFF Katy Pearce. Our talk is called “Not Talking about a Revolution: The Internet in Post-Soviet Authoritarian States”. Katy is going to give an overview of digital media trends in the region while I’m going to give case studies from Uzbekistan, Azerbaijan, Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan. It’s open to the public, so come and watch!

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Why the phrase ‘The Muslim world’ is misleading

In my latest Al Jazeera column, I take on the misguided use of the phrase ‘the Muslim world’ to describe the very small number of Muslims participating in violent action against the West:

It is time to retire the phrase “the Muslim world” from the Western media. Using the phrase in the manner above disregards not only history and politics, but accurate reporting of contemporary events. The protests that took place around the world ranged in scale and intensity, in the participants’ willingness to use violence, and in their rationales. The majority of the “Muslim world” did not participate in these protests, nor did all of the Muslims who protested the video advocate the bloodshed that took place in Libya.

By reducing a complex set of causes and conflicts to the rage of an amorphous mass, the Western media reinforce the very stereotype of a united, violent “Muslim world” that both the makers of the anti-Islam video and the Islamist instigators of the violence perpetuate.

Read the full article here.

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A Heated Reaction to the Ramil Safarov Case

I have received a lot of emails and comments from Azerbaijanis critical of my Al Jazeera article on Ramil Safarov, The axe murderer who became a Facebook hero. Most of them were from Azerbaijanis saying that Safarov should be considered a hero, because he was provoked to murder by an Armenian who insulted Azerbaijan, because he had a tragic childhood in Nagorno-Karabakh, and because his murder of the Armenian officer was an apt reprisal for Armenian war crimes.  I agree with them that Safarov is a tragic case, but the tragedy lies not only in what he and his family endured, but in the public celebration of his heinous and violent actions, which has only perpetuated the tragedy.

In my article, I said that the majority of Azerbaijanis support Safarov, and I stand by that claim. But there are many Azerbaijanis who do not support him, and they are engaging in a lively debate on Facebook about the meaning and repercussions of Safarov’s release. Emin Milli, an activist and writer who has long used the internet to critique the Aliev regime, argues that the support for Safarov is not as great as I and others writing in the international media have portrayed it. “We do not know what people really think about Safarov, we do not have live, open public debates on TV channels where people could vote on this question via sms, there are no surveys, no proofs, but only government’s ubiquitous propaganda,” he points out.

While I maintain that available evidence indicates that support for Safarov is widespread, Milli’s article raises important points: first, that in a country that allows no dissent, those who challenge the state narrative of Safarov would be unlikely to speak out; second, that when prominent Azerbaijani writers condemned the celebration of Safarov on Facebook, hundreds of Azerbaijanis agreed with them. In particular, Milli cited the critical posts of Khadija Ismayil and Jamal Ali. In a brief conversation I had with the three of them, Ismayil agreed with Milli that most Azerbaijanis did not buy the government’s hero narrative, while Ali thought they did.

On Facebook, Ali wrote a post that resonated with a large number of Azerbaijanis. I think it is because he approaches the case with empathy but recognition that Safarov’s crime was reprehensible. He calls on Safarov to reject his hero status:

“I’d like to believe that Ramil Seferov regrets what he has done. He should have changed a lot in 8 years, especially in jail. I believe he did.

“I say, he must refuse the flat, money and rank which was given to him by president. and he should say to people clearly that ‘killing a sleeping Armenian is not heroism, I’m not a hero. I just could not control myself and made the biggest mistake of my life’. People are in his side and he will not be jailed again anyway.

“He has to understand the social responsibility on himself and stay away from political games and inhumane ‘hero’ status.”

One of the worst things about the (predictably) heated reaction to my article is that some have taken it as license to proclaim that Azerbaijanis, as a people, have some sort of primordial bloodlust. This is cheap and lazy rhetoric. (It is also cheap and lazy when applied to Armenians.) In the week since I wrote this article, it has become clear that the Azerbaijanis who embrace Safarov do so for a variety of reasons. Some do it out of government loyalty. Some believe that the murder was just revenge. But overwhelmingly, they argue that Safarov is a man who suffered, like millions of others, in a conflict that the world has forgotten. Proclaiming him a hero, Safarov’s supporters portray him as a victim.

What is happening in Azerbaijan is not unique. Every country in the world has embraced figures who are murderous or radical, and every country has had a significant swath of the population embrace beliefs that seem bigoted or unstable. The problem when this happens in a place like Azerbaijan is that most people know so little about Azerbaijan that they take it to represent an ingrained pattern of behavior, instead of a reaction shaped by history and political culture. (Counter to Milli, I argue that Safarov is a case of the government capitalizing on public sentiment, and then using it to their advantage, rather than imposing a position from above.)

Milli has proposed a public debate on the Safarov case, one which would include representatives of the Azerbaijani and Armenian governments, and has encouraged the international media to convene and cover it. This is a good idea – both to highlight the diversity of views, but also to encourage discussion in an area of the world dominated by propaganda, rumor and rhetoric. As Milli writes, “[The Safarov case] is very complicated story with many facets, context and details which cannot be ignored. It is not just about one man killing another man. It is much more than that.

“It is about frozen and forgotten conflict by the world, it is about authoritarian games, and it is about tragedy of two nations.”

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The homecoming of Ramil Safarov

For Al Jazeera, I write about the strange, sad case of Ramil Safarov, the Azerbaijani officer who murdered an Armenian officer at a NATO camp in Hungary in 2004, was sentenced to prison in 2006, and was extradited last week to Azerbaijan, where he was given a hero’s welcome. He has developed an enormous internet fan base, aided by Azerbaijan’s policies on open access. An excerpt:

Unlike most authoritarian states, Azerbaijan does not censor the internet. An open internet has proven valuable for Azerbaijani officials, as it allows them to monitor citizens and publicise the punishment of dissenters in the online forums they frequent, deterring sympathisers from further activism. The Safarov case shows that the open internet is also a useful venue for the spread of nationalism rooted in bigotry, vengeance and pain.

Tens of thousands of Azerbaijanis have declared their support for Safarov online. His Facebook page has over 49,000 fans. Supporters praise him in poetry, thanking God and the Aliyev regime for his return….

Advocates of an open internet have long hoped that openness will augur democratic reform. But an open internet is of little benefit to activists living in a state that punishes them for using it. It is also of little consolation when the state is adept at capitalising on public agony. The online embrace of Safarov reflects the heartache of Azerbaijan’s history as well as the ways digital media can strengthen dictatorship. The people spread the cause and the government reaps the glory.

When you cover a conflict like this, you inevitably make some people angry. I want to be clear I have nothing but respect for the Azerbaijani nation, people and culture. I am saddened that Azerbaijan has endured so much tragedy. Unfortunately, the reception of Safarov hints at more tragedy to come.

Read the full article: The axe murderer who became a Facebook hero

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Our Response to the American Anthropological Association

The same week my article The Closing of American Academia appeared in Al Jazeera, three other anthropologists published works criticizing labor conditions in the discipline. The American Anthropological Association responded with a blog post dividing our articles into “two camps”: one with “a negative future on academia in general and the success of students pursuing a career in academia” (ahem) and one with “a positive outlook on the field of anthropology” that nonetheless recognizes that “adjunct positions are challenging” . You don’t say.

The nice thing about our failing system of higher education is that it brings people together. The authors of the other articles — Eliza Jane Darling, Ryan Anderson and Jason Antrosio – and I were surprised to hear we were in “two camps” since our views are similar. We decided to co-author a response to the AAA, which has been posted on the anthropology blog Savage Minds:

We are gratified that the American Anthropological Association has taken note of our critical commentary on the vagaries of the academic career, and we thank fellow blogger Joslyn O. for publicizing our work on the Association website. However, we would like to clear up a few misconceptions.

The AAA post suggests we represent two “camps,” but we share only one: a commitment to ending precarious intellectual labour. We protest the transformation of our profession into a swelling Hooverville congregated on the margins of universities whose dwindling tenured citizenry is bankrolled by our low-wage, low-benefit, low-security, low-respect work…

Read the full post here. I encourage you to leave your comments on the Savage Minds blog and contribute to the ongoing discussion about anthropology, academia, and the AAA.

Update: Anthropologist Amy Todd posted a link to her article on academic labor in a comment on an earlier post. I’m adding a link here because everyone should read it. She has written a succinct and thoughtful commentary on how the “culture” of academia works to make contingent faculty complicit in the system.

Challenges to Organizing Academic LaborAnthropology News, April 2012

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What does celebrity activism accomplish?

Those concerned I’m not doing anything with my PhD will be pleased to know my works comprise a third of Al Jazeera’s Justin Bieber and Kim Kardashian coverage. My latest, Does Celebrity Activism Matter?, takes on campaigns to raise “awareness” of atrocities:

Awareness is supposed to lead people to take action. But in American society, awareness is action. Entire careers are devised around making people aware of a person’s existence without that person doing anything besides existing. The Kardashian family is sustained by tabloids and reality TV, industries that thrived while nearly all other old media failed. Publicity is chastised as crass – publicity mongers, publicity whores – but it is arguably a more reliable investment than education or attempting to ascend an unsteady corporate ladder. Fame eliminates the barriers to success in a world of increasingly unequal opportunity. Having achieved fame, one can then establish why one merits it, which is why Kardashian business ventures derive from their celebrity, and did not proceed or produce it.

Read the full article here.

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Crisis in the Academy

My article on the employment crisis in higher education, The Closing of American Academia, has been shared over 10,000 times on Facebook and is still one of the highest trafficked articles on Al Jazeera. Yesterday I was a guest on HuffPost Live for the segment Higher Ed, Lower Wages, and tomorrow I’ll be doing a Twitter chat with the journal Hybrid Pedagogy, which you can join at #digped.

I have received hundreds of emails on this article. They came from adjuncts who feel exploited and abused. They came from graduate students terrified about their future. They came from parents – parents of undergraduates shocked by how their children’s professors are treated, and parents of adjuncts grateful that their plight was addressed. They came from tenured faculty, prominent intellectuals among them, who spoke of corruption within their own disciplines. They came from people outside higher education who see parallels in their own professions – in law, journalism, policy, and other fields that rely on unpaid or underpaid labor.

There is consensus that the employment crisis has reached critical mass. This consensus provides an opportunity for reform. In order for reform to happen, we need to continue discussing issues openly. One of the greatest obstacles in reforming academia is that contingent faculty are party to their own exploitation. Academics are reluctant to speak out for fear of jeopardizing their career prospects and livelihood, meager as both may be. But without an open discussion, nothing will change. Contingent faculty should know that people all over the world are on their side, including leaders in their own fields. They should demand for themselves the respect that universities have denied them.

A few salient links:

  • Savage Minds created a thread for adjuncts to “express your views about the wonderful (or not so wonderful) place known as adjunct-landia.”
  • Academe Blog addresses the “silent crisis” of higher education and argues that contingent labor is not sustainable: “If the position of the adjunct is untenable–and it is–so is the position of the institutions that rely on them. The contingent hires they have used so that they can build new buildings, expand programs, and explore technology just aren’t going to be there”.
  • Gratiaetnatura has some suggestions: “Adjuncts need to organize and call for an end to exploitative wages. They should demand higher stipends per course and at least the opportunity to consider health insurance plans through the university. Graduate schools should limit the number of students accepted to reflect the actual need for people with graduate degrees in a particular discipline.”
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The Conversation Continues

So, how is everyone enjoying the first day of school?

The Closing of American Academia is still burning up the internet. It has been republished on Alternet, ZNet and discussed on dozens of blogs and websites. It has inspired a national conversation on the plight of adjuncts and the role of privilege in higher education. I will have more to say on that topic in the future. But for now, some highlights:

  • Reddit has eight different threads on the article. This one, on True Reddit, has over 400 comments.
  • On Daily Kos, a theology PhD describes how he ended up on welfare within a year of his graduation.
  • Peter Enns breaks down the economics of adjunct labor.
  • Feminine Voices in Archaeology argues that adjuncthood is an assault on academic freedom: “I also want those in the protected tenured positions to wake up and fight back against what I see as an attack against higher education. Adjunct faculty do not have the same rights and securities as their tenured counterparts. We are not able to speak out against injustice. We are less able to pursue or publish research that might be considered controversial or political. We are virtually powerless.”
  • Savage Minds discusses the American Anthropological Association conference: “As far as I can tell, our annual conference is a regressive tax on some of the most financially vulnerable members of our discipline.”
  • At Less Than Zero Anthropology, an anthropologist discusses why she quit the game when she couldn’t pay to play.
  • Eric Garland writes on how I exposed the “the Ponzi scheme of academic jobs”
  • The American Anthropological Association rounds up a series of anthro adjunct horror stories and pretends that there are “two camps”.
  • Inside Higher Ed releases a comprehensive report on adjunct working conditions. Spoiler alert: they’re not good.
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