User:Luisa Moura/thematic/trimester III/Work V2

From XPUB & Lens-Based wiki

ARTS & CRAFTS AND THE IDEOLOGY OF SELF-EMPOWERMENT

Personal growth and creative drive are essential ingredients of an emergent participatory society, in which bottom up decision, community interests, do-it-yourself mentality and integrity of action come to substitute the decaying welfare state. People are stimulated to embrace entrepreneurship, flexibility of work, schedule and income; to look after each other and prepare their own future. Everyone should try to do what is best at, adapting to market fluctuations and finding his own personal way within it.


The power of the individual is depicted as immense in this moment; now that any government has to assume its incapacity to actually protect the citizen and its social rights. The articles on communitarian initiatives, picturesque markets, creative one-man businesses abound in the media and in political discourse; together with reality shows and documentaries on the decay of the welfare system like the 'Tokkies' in the Netherlands or 'Benefits Street' in UK. The message is clear, we should all believe in our own super power and, despite the fact that we are paying for a welfare state, we might not get it, so we should find a way to go around it.


Arts & crafts are deeply related with the feeling of manual pleasure and authenticity, rooted in personal skill and creative capacity. It is ideologically associated with the contemporary increase in individualistic drive, even though it has historically and in essence a collectivity charge. Arts & Crafts are supposed to gather different expertise at the service of a community, based on need, functionality and Excellency of standards. Which meaning does it have to speak about Arts & Crafts nowadays without its socioeconomic purpose? Do Arts and Crafts have any meaning in a global market and individual-based logic?

News from Nowhere, in CHAPTER XVII: HOW THE CHANGE CAME

"Therefore, though they knew that the only reasonable aim for those who would better the world was a condition of equality; in their impatience and despair they managed to convince themselves that if they could by hook or by crook get the machinery of production and the management of property so altered that the ‘lower classes’ (so the horrible word ran) might have their slavery somewhat ameliorated, they would be ready to fit into this machinery, and would use it for bettering their condition still more and still more, until at last the result would be a practical equality (they were very fond of using the word ‘practical’), because ‘the rich’ would be forced to pay so much for keeping ‘the poor’ in a tolerable condition that the condition of riches would become no longer valuable and would gradually die out. Do you follow me?” (…) “Well, since you follow me, you will see that as a theory this was not altogether unreasonable; but ‘practically,’ it turned out a failure.”