Whose Narrative is it Anyway?
*This article first appeared in http://www.iol.co.za/capetimes/opinion/whose-narrative-is-it-anyway-9852504
(Cape Times and iol)
The Political discourse both in South Africa, and indeed
globally has over the past 3 decades, become increasingly plural in nature with
a growing sense among most that everything is relative and that my truth is not
necessarily your truth and vice versa.
This is significantly different from the cold-war era or the
during the Apartheid years when political and economic discourse was decidedly
more binary and revolved around two great narratives of either the West or the
East, either for Apartheid or against Apartheid.
After the cold- war ended, the world`s leading philosophers
such as Francis Fukuyama argued that the advent of Western liberal democracy
may signal the endpoint of humanity's sociocultural evolution and the final
form of human government.
Since then, Western liberal democracy has indeed been on the
ascent and the world`s “democracies” have broadly modelled their political
economies on the western conception of a liberal democratic state.
Despite the myriad of ongoing political struggles against
what many believed was a system that preferred and indeed promoted elite
control of the political and economic spheres at the expense of working people,
governments and elites unquestioningly bought into and sold the idea of western
liberal democracy as being the only option. Or as Margaret Thatcher so famously
declared: “There Is No Alternative” (TINA).
This historical moment of conquest for the western liberal
tradition would unfortunately come up against its own limitations when the Arab
Spring first erupted on the scene and led to a growing movement of protest and
rejection of the status quo. The Arab
Spring was followed by uprisings throughout Europe, most notably Spain,
Portugal, Italy and Greece and eventually spread to the United States and the
United Kingdom as the Occupy Movements spontaneously erupted. These protests
quickly spread across the globe as major protests erupted In Ukraine, Turkey,
Brazil, Mexico, Chile and Canada.
Mohammed Bamyeh, a Jordanian Scholar at the University of
Pittsburgh who has written extensively on the Social Movements and the Arab
Spring, is quoted in a new publication, Southern Resistance in Critical
Perspective, as suggesting that these global acts of resistance to the status
quo share at least six features. These are; Opposition to the capture of the
system by special interests and particularly the collusion of financial and
political power; Frustration that the interests of “ordinary” people are no
longer represented; suspicion of political parties, formal organisations and
leaders; insistence that alternatives do exist and that opposition to the
status quo is possible; an intention to represent the people rather than a
specific class or disadvantaged group; and demands that “exhibit an enticing
vagueness, making resistance both less focussed but also more accessible to
people with a wide range of interests”.
Suffice to say then, that the enthusiasm of western scholars
after the fall of the Berlin Wall, has proven to be misplaced and the backlash
from “ordinary people” has been profound.
In South Africa, a similar pattern has emerged, with a
growing discontent and a “rebellion of the poor” bubbling under the surface and most recently
culminating in extensive cross cultural and class protests erupting in response
to an increasing glut of information highlighting and exposing the systemic rot
that is an integral part of state craft.
What has been unique about the South African experience is
arguably, the extent to which the mainstream media, together with the
mainstream political parties and formations, which include the private sector
funded NGO`s who have attempted to lead the protests and narratives around the
anti-corruption protests, and academics, have maintained a very narrow focus on
finding solutions that are firmly entrenched in the western liberal democratic
paradigm.
Within the hundreds of thousands of gigabytes of political
and economic commentary on the challenges facing South Africa, very few, if
any, of the well promoted mainstream thought leaders have dared to venture
beyond the received wisdom of the western liberal paradigm.
Of course the challenge of making sense of the many
disparate narratives has not been made any easier by the deliberate
introduction of “fake news” and quasi-legitimate concepts such as Radical
Economic Transformation and White Monopoly Capital. And yet, this is precisely
the challenge for South Africa today. We have to answer the question clearly as
to Whose Narrative is it anyway?
The South African political discourse is by any definition
dominated by mainstream liberal thinkers, who even when positing a claimed
“radical” theory, are nonetheless knowingly or inadvertently presenting
solutions which are steeped in the very constructs that have arguably brought
us and the world to the point of vehemently questioning the status quo.
One example of this is a recent conversation I had with an
esteemed PhD who proposed the problem as one of either a preference for the
Markets or a preference for the State. On face value this is a fair
problematic, but on further inspection one realises that the question is deeply
rooted in a paradigm which does not allow broader plurality of thought to
penetrate the possible solution.
Allow me to explain. The central difficulty with the way in
which the problem is presented suggests and consequently confine the discussion
to the binary (either/or) posed and which in my opinion created a false
dichotomy between the state and the market while consequently excluding other
elements of society (such as “ordinary citizens”) as agents of change. Such
approaches which are steeped in Western constructs of binaries cannot take us
to a solution as the very intellectual underpinnings of a Eurocentric worldview
preclude other considerations.
Instead we need holistic non binary approaches which values
and incorporates various agents into constructing power and social discourse.
After all, the world is currently facing the biggest challenge to western
liberal democracy and its elite collusions and mass exclusions since the fall
of the Berlin Wall.
But who decides what is western and what is not, he retorted.
In order to answer that question we should first acknowledge
that a decolonised mind is not an extension of western epistemology, but indeed
holds a unique and at times diametrically opposed world view.
In order to decolonise, or rather to find a new more
inclusive path, we have to accept that Africa and many other colonised parts of
the world suffered an epistemicide (a deliberate erasure of our indigenous ways
of knowing), all the more so that our
world view now seems completely alien to us and our epistemology and
metaphysics of a holistic non-binary conception of the world is considered
backward and irrelevant to modern capitalism.
But far from irrelevant, even western science and more
broadly philosophy itself has come to realise that its absolutism has failed to
produce just outcomes in the world and the broad popular rejection of the
status quo has made this point abundantly clear.
And this is how we know who will decide. It will and must be
based on just outcomes and more specifically on the will of people.
This is one of the fundamental differences between the
western individualistically competitive Darwinian view of the world, in which
only the fittest will survive, and the African conception of a decolonised
holistic and non-binary communal approach.
In the Western outlook, there is always a binary zero sum
conception, where one`s gain is another`s loss, compared to a holistic non
binary and communal conception where; "I am because you are".
The South African embrace of the western liberal democratic
form of state has not only led to a growing inequality which mirrors and indeed
stands out as a particularly extreme example of the outcomes of western liberal
political economy, it has also hobbled our ability to call upon our indigenous
ways of being in order to find a just inclusive alternative.
As long as we ignore
the paradigm under which we operate and through which our thought leaders pose
the problem, we face the risk of our society eventually imploding under the
sheer weight of the inequality it engenders.
So in contrast to the Western
Paradigm that suggests we need Grand and Glorious Leaders; perhaps we need less
glorious leaders and more inclusive processes.
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