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Robert M. Young Online Writings
THE DENSE MEDIUM: TELEVISION AS TECHNOLOGY
by Robert M. Young
The future - including the very existence - of civilization depends on
getting right the relations between expertise and democracy. Television is the most
pervasive and powerful medium for presenting issues in the public domain. Put these two
assertions together and the attraction of a TV series on the social relations of science,
technology and medicine - broadly conceived - is irresistible. So when the opportunity
presented itself I grabbed it, then loved it, then hated it, and then went into a black
depression which is why I found it so hard to write about it. This is my first attempt -
three years after the series ended.
Please allow the word science to stand for all areas in
which people get power by virtue of having expert knowledge, including social science,
management science, and all sorts of quantification. Science, then, is impinging on our
lives in increasingly direct and intimate ways. Some are obvious - chips, computers, word
processors; new recording and reproduction technologies - compact disc, video recorders
and cameras; in vitro fertilisation, genetic engineering, monoclonal antibodies,
gene transplants. Some are in the pipeline - the transformation of the electrical,
electronic, chemical and pharmaceutical industries; direct broadcasting by satellite,
direct translation from voice to print. Some are less obvious - greater control over work
in factory, office and home by close observation and monitoring, giving rise to increased
pacing, surveillance and control; direct behavioural control of deviance and parolees by a
combination of electrical and chemical implants for transmission and receiving of
instructions.
I could go on at length and one could ask if all this is
qualitatively different from earlier epochs of scientific progress in the scientific
revolution of the 17th century, the industrial revolution of the 19th, or the development
of automation in the 20th. I say yes, because it is so subtle, direct and (eventually)
cheap, and will transform, what it means to be a person in education, work, play and
culture. It also has profound implications for the nature and location of employment,
since cheap and efficient communications will greatly diminish the need for clerical work
as well as for bringing people together in office aggregations.
The problem, of course, is that there is no public access to the
process of origination of new scientific developments. They come, usually as a surprise,
from three highly secret pipelines. Much scientific research is secret because of
careerist competitiveness among academic scientists. Ask yourself who was the second person
to discover/invent any important process, theory or thing. Industrial research is secret
so as to steal a march on the competition. Military research constitutes over half of the
Research and Development budget in Britain and is legally protected - classified.
Worse than all this, nobody seems to mind. Existing coverage of
science in all media is almost exclusively of the gee whiz variety. It
explains, celebrates and entertains. On the whole, it does not question and rarely gets up
the pipeline so that there can be public debate about the direction of scientific
progress. We get told only when it's Tomorrows World or when
things are on the Horizon. It is true that there are scandals, e.g., over
thalidomide, Dalkon Shield (intra-uterine device), Bhopal, powdered milk, but these are
rarely discovered by the media (asbestos is a notable exception - twice exposed by TV
researchers). It is therefore almost impossible to mobilize public opinion and conduct a
public debate when new developments are at a stage when the questions are open. By the
time we hear about them they have been highly capitalized and/or have gone wrong. For
example, the automated factory and office were sets of products for sale before they
became matters for debate on the part of the people whose jobs were affected. The same can
be said for electronic news gathering and the new technologies of print journalism. Ditto
nuclear weapons and nuclear energy. Even when new developments are widely reported, and
when the public - at least in principle - has access to them before they are deployed,
there is a strange reluctance on the part of the public to take them up. Think, for
example, of how long we were told about the research of Steptoe and Edwards on in vitro fertilization, before there was any serious public discussion of the implications of this
work.
I have spelled all this out before saying more about my own television
experience in order to drive home the rationale of a series whose raison detre was to contribute to an atmosphere in which it could be felt by ordinary people that they
should hold views on such matters. I can't think of anything more important to do, though
lots of things are arguably as important.
I had been thinking about these matters for a long time, and had even
been doing research for several years on how television treats science, when I was rung up
one day and asked if I wanted to comment on a new series being developed for Channel 4.
The producer was a very nice man, open to new ideas and, to make a long story short, I
soon found myself the chief consultant on what was planned as an on-going series of
monthly hour-long documentaries on science in society. It was a very exciting time
- having ideas, building up a team, basking in the enthusiasm of the programme controller,
Channel 4 and the people we were working with as consultants and contributors.
So why am I so miserable about it? What went wrong? I want first to say
that a lot less went wrong than some suppose. That is, we made eleven programmes: I am
proud of three, quite pleased with three more, not ashamed of three, and only think two
were duds. Not bad for a TV series, I am told. We also had consistent - though not
uncritical - praise in left circles, though we were predictably panned by the right. I
also felt deeply fulfilled by some of the work and learned more and more quickly than I
had in a long time.
But, having said that, I have never had a series of experiences
remotely approaching those three years for sheer human duplicity. People - especially
higher-ups - would look you in the face and say the opposite of the truth with utter
sincerity. I heard a person say on the record that he had had many conversations
with the producer and me in the planning phases of the series and had written to us at
length and with great sadness when it had to be terminated. This from a man I had met only
once, and only to shake hands at a sidewalk cafe; I never conversed with him or got such a
letter. I also worked closely with a person who lies like other people breathe. I could go
on at great length about sheer dishonour and mendacity. I think it is interesting and
important, but it adds nothing to the sorts of insights that are common in reflections on
TV and film (see, for example, John Boorman's Money into Light and Stephen Bach's The Final Cut). I sometimes think that making promises and
commitments is a way some people have of trying - in an experimental way - to
find out what they think. If economic, ideological and career forces line up in a way that
does not support that path forward, they have no sense of betrayal. Such shifts and
revisions are part of the given reality in the culture industries, just as
they are in other forms of highly political business. That doesn't make it less awful,
though.
It is even more troubling when such things happen in one's own team.
Here, I think, three factors are illuminating. First: the ambient climate of patronage.
Channel 4 was a compromise between a grand vision from the Annan Report and the pressures
from traditional ways of making television. Lord Annan pointed out that the comfortable
consensus of British broadcast culture had been stretched in the late 1960s and early 70s
.- Vietnam, May 68 - until it broke up. He conceived of an open Broadcasting
Authority to accommodate the voices which were not being heard. Channel 4 was brought into
reality with a dimmed version of this vision. It was to be a publisher (their
term), not an originator, of programmes. All very well until you ask about the editors'
role. It became more and more active, interventionist, and finally censoring. Then there
arose the sort of self-censorship that is common in BBC 1 and 2 and ITV 1. By the time one
is a producer or director senior enough to be in charge of the budget of an hour-long
documentary, self-censorship is in most cases another word for one's skills, abilities and
vision. (These financial pressures are very palpable realities. I once said I
needed a couple of days to think about something, and was told at the end of the second
day how many thousands of pounds had been spent paying the salaries of people on standby.)
Our series was commissioned in the days of a Labour government and
presented as part of a bid for renewal of a franchise - to be very innovative, a flagship
of ITV science broadcasting, radical. I recall a senior IBA executive saying that the
scientists had had it their own way for too long and that it was about time that a
questioning and critical series was done. But by the time we were on the air, comments
from BBC and Horizon people and senior scientists were regularly being relayed
to us from Channel 4 via our boss. The coldest of winds blew straight away. At renewal
time we were assessed by a new editor whose last job had been as speechwriter for
Mrs Thatcher. He wanted programmes on wealth creation and the vital
importance of technology. We didn't have a chance. We started out as an avowedly
radical series, but this was firmly denied at the end. Indeed, when another series which
survived by bowdlerization tried to say what our original brief was, their self-censoring
producer dropped the item in consultation with our Channel 4 editor. Climates change; ours
changed from a sunny welcome to being frozen out, with history neatly rewritten by the
senior commissioning people. At the outset we were told that our series would
balance the others on television. Next we were told that there should be
balance within our series. Finally, we were told that there had to be
balance within each programme.
A much more distressing aspect was the effect of the division of labour
and careerism in television. We were extremely careful in picking people and set out to
work as collectively as possible. But the norms were just too strong. All the TV
professionals were thinking of how their work - film by film - would look on their
curriculum vitae. This meant that researchers were almost inevitably loyal to the
directors, while the directors were either jetting in with this project as part of a
series of tightly-scheduled commitments, or they were rather more junior and worried about
getting their next job.
There was no way we could forge a team with a coherent point of view.
We tried to have regular meetings, but we managed this only in the early days. After
filming began people were - quite properly - away researching, filming or editing. The
directors who weren't on our staff couldn't see why they should turn up for a series of
meetings about matters which only threatened their position as auteurs.
Again and again the perspectives and imperatives of television
professionalism won out over the groping and uncertain effort to find a new way of
thinking about science. We were neither celebrating or debunking. We wanted to do critique
- to examine the assumptions, concepts, frameworks, connections - the articulations and
forces at work at a number of levels. This was usually seen as too complicated or
un-visual. Where are the pictures? often put us in our place. The process of
finding a way to do critique on television was thereby frustrated. We never evolved a
language for our project, although we set out to do so in a most serious way (I have a
number of tapes of our deliberations which I still find inspiring). Most of the
consultants felt badly treated, though there were some notable and noble exceptions among
the directors.
So we were never a team. To spell out who was what and at what stage
would be libellous, but here are some roles. Of the directors, one was mad, two famous
(therefore with clout), two muddled, one liberal (not to be radicalized), one trendy (main
chance), one authentic (but a seeker), one good (but rather too intellectual), one keeping
his job. Of the researchers we had I know what I'm doing and I go where
the power is; one authentic but patchy; one authentic but arrogant; one authentic
but not up to it.
All of this was occurring in the midst of shifting power relations
between the television companies and Channel 4, and between Channel 4 and the government.
Inside our own unit there were shifting power relations and shifting alliances between
producers and producer-directors, researchers, consultants and me. My contract said I had
all sorts of powers which I couldn't exercise. When I tried I came up against
incomprehension, people's concern for their jobs and careers, and higher-ups who simply
said different things to different people and reverted to the norms of the established
hierarchies in the pinch. This meant that the people with radical perspectives on science
were in most cases relegated to the role of resource in films made by
directors and researchers. This was Horizons way, with science
relatively unquestioned at a deep level, and when questioned, done as a scandal. Not
critique.
Another - and helpful - way of saying what I have about the division of
labour, careers and power, is to say that television is a technology. It is a
medium and has its own density. With the printed word, you write it, it gets typed,
typeset, proof-read, printed. There are mediations, but if what you write is changed,
there has to be a negotiation, and if it comes back saying something different, it's
either bad typesetting or there is hell to pay. Television is nothing like this,
and the publishing analogy is very misleading. This is true in so many ways that it would
take a book I haven't the heart to write to convey it, even if I could get it straight in
my mind. But I'm still trying to figure out all the ways I was outmanoeuvred. The most
obvious is that there are a number of people with legitimate inputs who played no part in
our efforts to arrive at a shared approach. The two most obvious are the camera-person
(plus sound, sparks, production assistant, and other technical people - in a
series which was to be a critique of the technical-as-politics) and the editor.
Many fundamental matters get settled on the shoot. If it wasn't
researched, it doesn't get shot and if it's not shot, it's not in the can. If you
don't see all the rushes, you don't know what there is to make into the film. Once it's in
the can, the mystical world of the editing room takes over. It has its own rules, rituals
and protocols. If anyone has any illusions about neutrality, facts, or documentaries being
an objective form, they will soon lose them in the cutting room. All of the philosophy of
science is there to be learned very quickly indeed.
In the early days we were on the whole left in peace to edit our films,
but even so there is a long list of people who come in at different stages and have, as
I've said, legitimate inputs, sanctioned by custom, practice, prestige and the sheer
weight of their opinions. And one can't be everywhere all the time. Even if one acted in
good faith most of the time (they didn't) much would get shaped without the approach of
the series being there by the sheer momentum of the process.
It all makes for normalization, and it makes against innovative ways of
thinking. All of these people are experts and are in implicit and explicit ways -
intentionally or not - defending the very expertise we set out to scrutinize. They are
also experts in a highly competitive, freelance, expensive and technological medium.
I started out believing that television was the way toward the solution
and ended up seeing its apparent transparency as a very significant part of the problem.
In addition, I and a lot of people I care about and respect and to whom I gave my word,
were badly hurt, lied to, cheated, humiliated, betrayed and trashed. The moment of truth
for me was after I had taken my name off the series but left it on particular programmes,
a director simply excluded me and the other main consultant from something we had worked
on for three years. When I insisted that my name be removed from something, the final
stages of which I had not even seen, I was told that that would be too expensive - an
unjustifiable cost - and that I would have to pay £500 if I wanted it taken off. So much
for my good name. My pen is poised to spell out the errors of fact and interpretation and
the subversion of the original intention behind this film - and others. That is, I still
seem not to have learned my lesson.
We set out to question science and lost out to the professional
experts, trench by trench. Meanwhile, an urgent set of questions about nature, human
nature and the social process of innovation - the very stuff of the future (if any) -
continued to be begged.
I append a list of the films and the books published with the series.
And what happened to me? I went into psychotherapy for depression, and
into publishing in the hope of being able to bring these issues to a wider audience
without having them undermined by the very forces which I set out critically to examine.
FILMS
1. Im Not Ill, Im pregnant a look at the
new technologies of pregnancy.
2. Portraits of Newton a critical iconography of
Newton, showing how each age reconstructs him to suit their view of themselves.
3. A History of Nature based on a text from Lukács
nature as a societal category.
4. Funfare on the Taylorization of leisure, focusing
on the history of fairs, amusement parks and fun parks.
5. Behaving Ourselves on the ideological
determinants of ideas of human nature.
6. The Struggle for Health on the framework of
medical ideas in Zimbabwe.
7. A Question of Power on the public enquiry at
Sizewell on pressurized water reactors assessing the value of public enquiries.
8. The Gene Business on various aspects of
biotechnology including genetic engineering and the green revolution.
9. Stealing the Sun an attempt to outflank the
nuclear debate by stressing the virtues of various aspects of solar power.
10. The Nuclear State an attempt to explore
the gap between what we know and what we feel about nuclear weapons, using the technique
of co-operative enquiry.
11. The Box a look at the implications of cable for
serious documentary making in television.
BOOKS
The Gene Business: Who Should Control Biotechnology? by Edward
Yoxen, Pan, 1983, reissued by Free Association Books, 1986.
Against the State of Nuclear Terror by Joel Kovel, Pan, 1983,
reissued by Free Associations Books, 1986.
Science or Society? The Politics of the Work of Scientists by Mike
Hales, Pan, 1982, reissued by Free Association Books, 1986.
Out of Our Hands: What Technology Does to Pregnancy by Jill Rakusen and
Nick Davidson, Pan, 1982.
3065 words
Reprinted from Political Papers No. 13: Science and
Technology, 1986, pp. 3-5.
Copyright: The Author
Address for correspondence: 26 Freegrove Road, London N7 9RQ
robert@rmy1.demon.co.uk
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