Draft for discussion only, thank you.

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Laws of Motion for Political Manipulation of Public Memory Working Paper, September 2007 Cameron M. Weber New School for Social Research cameron_weber@hotmail.com cameroneconomics.com Draft for discussion only, thank you. The concepts presented in this paper are motivated by the Globalization and the Politics of Memory seminar conducted by Elzbieta Matynia as part of the New School for Social Research s Krakow Program, July 2007. The mathematical model is based on an idea presented by Ana Blanco during the seminar. The author wishes to thank both as well as the other participants in the seminar.

Laws of Motion for Political Manipulation of Public Memory - Working Paper I. Introduction This paper presents an analogical model describing the theory that manipulation of national memory for political purposes creates a thinning of the public memory, reducing the diversity and depth of the public memory and creating a more shallow, less diverse and rich, national consciousness. For example, totalitarian regimes will rewrite history in an attempt to legitimize unjust and violent rises to power. Over time official history replaces the memories of those suppressed by the regime and of the stories of those who actually lived through the event. The diversity of thought and memory as it relates to a national consciousness, to the sense of being of peoples, is reduced by this political manipulation of history. Political manipulation can take many forms; from the controlling of media, to the way history is documented in scholarly work and in the subject matter of textbooks used in the education of the youth, to the creation of public holidays and works of art, and the building of and content contained in national monuments and museums. The suppression and denial of countervailing or alternative views 1 of history are lost over time creating a more shallow national consciousness through the loss of the depth of public memory. II. The Analogical Model of Public Memory The analogical model is used to present ideas conceptually; in this case a mathematical model is used to show graphically how the depth of public memory thins over time with political manipulation. The greater the degree of the political manipulation of history, the more rapid the decline in the depth of public memory. 1 Alternative views of history can be from minority groups be they political, ethnic, or religious, or from anyone excluded from political power, not necessarily from a minority group. 2

Depth of Public Memory = e nt (1) Where n is equal to the degree of political manipulation of history, and where n = 0 means there is no political manipulation and the public memory remains normal and ideal. 2 The greater n, the greater the degree of political manipulation. (n ). And where t = time. Illustration 1 Illustration I. shows that when n = 0 (there is no political manipulation of history), the Depth of Public Memory remains at its normal and ideal state, which is 1, throughout time. When the level of manipulation is greater than 0, 2 We are using the term normal and ideal to represent unmanipulated history. This concept is borrowed from classical political economy, see the normal and ideal conditions of the economic system (Kurz 1990, p. 35, emphasis in the original). 3

for example at a level a which is greater than 0, we see that the Depth of Public Memory decreases over time from its normal and ideal state. Then when the degree of manipulation is even larger, some level b, which is greater than the level a, we see that the Depth of Public Memory decreases, thins-out, even more rapidly. III. Conclusion Political systems in a nation are the result of that nation s unique history, culture and political economy. Where there are politics it is perhaps inevitable that there will be political manipulation of history. Philosophers have been aware of, and have addressed, this notion for millennia. For example, Aristotle wrote in Nichomachean Ethics of the ideal life as an ethical or virtuous one and Adam Smith argued for a limited role for government in society for a Society of Perfect Liberty in Wealth of Nations. The concept of the thinning-out of a people s sense of being through the political manipulation of history perhaps reinforces these philosophical precepts. It can also be noted that globalization 3 may provide a countervailing tendency against political manipulation of history because goods and ideas trade in a more decentralized manner, meaning that government is less able to control people s day-to-day lives. 3 It is commonly understood that we are in the second era of globalization, the first being the liberalization of trade and political systems in the 19 th century. Globalization is defined in many ways but the most basic way to define globalization is that goods and cultures are transmitted across space more freely than in prior periods. Globalization can be technology driven, in our current period not least by the improvements in communication (i.e., the internet) and transportation (i.e., container shipping and larger ships) technologies. This concept of technology as the driving force of a historical period in human development is found in Karl Marx s concept of Historical Materialism, where, In short, at the bottom of the base is technology, which in turn constitutes or determines [what follows is the what Marx calls the Superstructure, note added by author] modes of production, which in turn determines relations of production, or institutions of law and property, which finally determines ideas, religious values, art, etc. (Rothbard, p. 373). This can be formalized: T n S n T n 1 S n 1 Where Technology in period n determines the Superstructure in period n, with period n + 1 representing a new Technology and a new Superstructure (the latter in the this case, it is proposed, being Globalization). 4

References Aristotle. 2004 [c. 335 BC]. Nichomachean Ethics. New York: Barnes and Noble. Kurz, Heinz D. 1990. Capital, Distribution and Effective Demand: Studies in the Classical Approach to Economic Theory. Cambridge, UK: Polity Press. Marx, Karl. 1955 [1847]. Poverty of Philosophy. Moscow: Progress Publishers. Rothbard, Murray N. 1995. Classical Economics; An Austrian Perspective on the History of Economic Thought, Vol. II. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar Smith, Adam. 1994 [1776]. An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations. New York: Modern Library Edition. 5