This is the time of the year when some
of us like to “take stock” – so I have been looking at the 180-odd blogposts of
2014, trying to identify patterns, high-points and…. deficiencies.
There were many more thematic postings
than in previous years – this time last year, for example, I began a series of ten
posts on Romanian culture which occupied the early weeks of 2014 and became the
basis for my first E-book. The blog then
moved on to a series of reflections about political and professional power, drawing
particularly on the writings of such diverse individuals as Anthony Jay, Peter
Mair, Christopher Lasch and Dennis Healey which, coincidentally but
symbolically, presaged the death in March of one of Britain’s most iconic
politicians, Tony Benn. The forty subsequent posts on the Scottish referendum
debate (collected in an E-book
– The Independence Argument) were, in a sense, “variations on a
theme”.
After some musings about the absence
of “European writing, I had moved back by June to knaw on my “change the world”
bone – which made me think that it is perhaps time now to make a new E-book from
the draft Guide for the
Perplexed paper with which I have been playing around for more than a decade.
This might help properly launch the new Mapping the common ground website which
has been lying dormant after I explored its possible name and purpose in
several posts in the summer.
Clearly I seem to have reached an
impasse with that paper - first drafted in 2001 – and I’m beginning to suspect
that one reason is the tension between the “rationality” model - with which I
was imbued by my education - and the richness of other prisms which have been
attracting me in my effort to make sense of the world. It is not an accident
that the sub-title of that new website refers to multiple perspectives!
Most
radicals take a “mechanical” view of the world (Gareth Morgan’s Images of
Organisation
is still the best read on the metaphors we use) – they assume, that is, that societies
and systems can and should be diagnosed and “fixed”. Political parties have
operated on this pre(o)mise for most of the past century. For more than a
couple of decades, however, a lot of serious thinkers have been questioning the
simplistic nature of social interventions driven by this principle – pointing
to the lessons from chaos science and systems theory….. Picking up on this
theme, one of July’s posts featured an energetic old
activist called Grace Lee Boggs who argued that
protests these days need a new model -
I think it’s really important that we get rid of the
idea that protest will create change. The idea of protest organizing, as
summarized by [community organizer] Saul Alinsky, is that if we put enough
pressure on the government, it will do things to help people.
We don’t realize that that kind of organizing worked
only when the government was very strong, when the West ruled the world,
relatively speaking.
But with globalization and the weakening of the
nation-state, that kind of organizing doesn’t work.
We need to do what I call visionary organizing.
Recognize that in every crisis, people do not respond like a school of fish.
Some people become immobilized. Some people become very angry, some commit
suicide, and other people begin to find solutions.
And visionary organizers look at those people,
recognize them and encourage them, and they become leaders of the future.
This took me back to one of the seminal books for me -
Robert Quinn’s Change the World, produced in 1996 and an
excellent antidote for those who are still fixated on the expert model of
change imagining it can be achieved by “telling”, “forcing” or by
participation. Quinn (a neglected thinker) exposes the last for what it
normally is - a form of manipulation – and effectively encourages us, through
examples, to have more faith in people.
Normal blog service was resumed after the Scottish referendum result in late September with
a long post - Some Notes
on a crisis – on a reading list which, with a couple of exceptions, shows
the extent to which the mechanistic model still dominates the debate about the
crisis.
The
year ended, however, on a fairy-tale note – with the incredible victory of
modest Klaus Iohannis in the Romanian Presidential elections.
But
one important conclusion from this initial overview of the year’s posts seems
to be that I can and should continue with the thematic approach to posts – using
this year’s posts on “changing the world” as a basis rather than the essay on
guiding the perplexed. But with a strong dash of the post-modern material on “frame analysis” etc a list
of which can be found in the post on Stories We Tell.
I haven't been offering as many paintings on my posts - for which my apologies. I will try harder.....
This is one of my favourite Bulgarian aquarellists - Grigor Naidenov - and I have just discovered it in a small cache of stuff bundled with some old calendars of Bulgarian art which I brought down from the crowded Bucharest flat.......