Algorithmic Culture by Martyn Coutts

The Milk Tea Alliance

The formation of the online protest movement the Milk Tea Alliance in 2020 was enabled by the algorithmic platform affordances of international social networks. Twitter’s hashtag search function and its trending topics allowed for the visibility and connection of activists across jurisdictions. When Chinese trolls jumped the Great Firewall and began attacking two Thai celebrities in 2020, the usual techniques of the ‘wumao’ (fifty-cent army) and ‘little pinks’ (female netizens), were employed. These groups proceeded to ‘flood the zone’ with antagonistic comments, creating a volatile and hostile environment for the celebrities and anyone posting on the same issue. Thai netizens saw the spike in traffic on their social media and joined the battle. When it inevitably descended into name-calling and nationalistic taunts, the Chinese troll army began to target what they thought was a weakness - insulting the Thai Government and the King. The young and savvy Thai netizens neutered these textual attacks with self-deprecating humour by agreeing with them about how corrupt their leaders were. The spread of this flame war to Taiwan and Hong Kong created solidarities across borders and was enabled due to Twitter’s international reach.

Algorithmic Cultures

In the early days of the development of the internet, there was a sense of collaboration and camaraderie. The open-source nature of the precursor to the internet – ARPANET, generated a culture where sharing and problem-solving were the key ethos.  (Lemonaki, 2020) This early conceptualisation of the internet – decentralised (in the way that packeted information is transferred), collaborative (across distances and jurisdictions) and leaderless (teams working on discrete units of problems) presents a solid model for communication and activation of social movements.

As the internet has slowly colonised our way of life, capitalism has, in turn, colonised the internet. Automating such a vast data network has been delegated to complex computational algorithms that control what we see and influence how we interact. (Striphas, 2015) Algorithmic culture thrives on speed, engagement and clicks, which should in theory be beneficial for social movement momentum. However, the goal of these algorithms is to continue to drive interaction as a means to an end. As Mike Watson suggests “Internet corporations don’t care what you do, so long as you give them data” (Watson, 2022, p. 13) and data capitalism only profits the large tech companies and their shareholders (Fisher, 2009). In this sort of environment, social media campaigns can burn bright and then dissipate as new trending stories enter people’s feeds.

In the case of this inciting incident for the Milk Tea Alliance most of the People’s Republic of China’s public saw none of the internet battle, due to internal control of their own network. The PRC’s internet is automatically filtered by blocking words, images or people, whilst trending topics that gain too much traction are shut down manually by technicians (An Mina & Wang, 2021). For some algorithmic cultures, state power is as important a controlling factor as the market.

How to enable decentralised, collaborative and leaderless movements through the online space remains a challenge for social movements, especially when this level of speed, distraction and control is built into the system algorithmically.

An Mina, X., & Wang, X. (2021). The Great Shopping Mall: The market nationalist logic of Chinese social media.  Retrieved from https://knightcolumbia.org/blog/the-great-shopping-mall-the-market-nationalist-logic-of-chinese-social-media

Fisher, M. (2009). Capitalist Realism: Is There No Alternative? Hampshire, UK: John Hunt Publishing.

Lemonaki, D. (2020). A Brief History of the Internet – Who Invented It, How it Works, and How it Became the Web We Use Today. Retrieved from https://www.freecodecamp.org/news/brief-history-of-the-internet/

Striphas, T. (2015). Algorithmic Culture. European Journal of Cultural Studies, 18(4-5), 395-412. doi:10.1177/1367549415577392

Watson, M. (2022). The Memeing of Mark Fisher: How the Frankfurt School Foresaw Capitalist Realism and What To Do About It. Hampshire, UK: John Hunt Publishing.

Framing Technologies in the Dramaturgies of Performance by Martyn Coutts

I recently had a conference paper published in a new edited volume by the Asian Dramaturgs Network. The book is entitled (Asian) Dramaturgs’ Network: Sensing, Complexity, Tracing and Doing and is for sale now from the ADN website - https://www.asiandramaturgs.com/publications/adn-book

The paper is taken from a panel at the ADN Conference held in Singapore in 2019 (https://www.centre42.sg/events/18607/adn-conference-2019-dramaturgy-and-the-human-condition/).

The paper is here - https://minerva-access.unimelb.edu.au/items/3c0e29f9-1cac-4655-a4fa-73a412f72435

Asian Cultural Research Hub by Martyn Coutts

I have been invited to be a member of the Asian Cultural Research Hub (ACRH) at University of Melbourne.

Asian Cultural Research Hub

Founded in 2023, spring-boarding from the Asian Cultural Research Network (2015–2019) and drawing on the co-convenors’ long-term involvement in the Inter-Asia Cultural Studies project, the ACRH aims to foster a local, national and international intellectual community for PhD students and Early Career Researchers working on Asia-related cultural studies research.

As part of its Global Priorities, the University of Melbourne aspires to become a hub of knowledge and research for the Asia Pacific region. The University aims to advance collaborations with scholarly communities in Asia to enhance our contributions to the cultural and intellectual life of our region.

The field-defining success of the Inter-Asia Cultural Studies project since its launch in the late 1990s demonstrates that Cultural Studies approaches are proving appropriate, productive and exciting for scholars across Asia in tackling challenging questions of our time, including those around transforming identities, cultural creativity, digital life, social movements, and the intensifying mobilities of culture in globalisation.

Reflecting this, over the past decade, successive waves of PhD students and Early Career Researchers from countries across Asia have travelled to the School of Culture and Communication to pursue Cultural Studies-based research projects. As these numbers continue to swell, the ACRH serves as a strategic hub to activate these scholars’ collective commitment to Cultural Studies research on Asian topics.

Culture Industry by Martyn Coutts

Adorno and Horkheimer’s prescient 1945 article (Adorno & Horkheimer, 1945) predicts the almost complete takeover by the culture industry of life as we know it. Whilst recent democratic participation in culture should have given us more agency over our narratives, supercharged hyper-capitalism has left us in thrall to the mechanistic cultural hegemonies (Impiglia, 2020) of the big tech and entertainment conglomerates. The movements to create change in our world are being deadened by this deception.

What, if anything, lies beyond the culture industry as Adorno and Horkheimer have conceived it?

Hong Kong pop music artist and film actor Charmaine Fong (方皓玟) has had a lucrative cross-border career, for over 15 years. In December 2019, she released a song called ‘Human Words (人話)’. The song is an electro-pop song with a driving beat and lyrics sung in Cantonese and English. The music video uses a colourful ‘line-edging’ effect which outlines camera footage and references anime and neon (L.White, 2021). All the aesthetic and aural elements are designed to thrive on the platform of YouTube where it was released.  (Fong, 2019b)

Several elements set ‘Human Words (人話)’ apart from other videos on the platform. The imagery used in the music video depicts police brutality against pro-democracy protestors during the 2019 Hong Kong protests. This footage is intercut with press conferences given by HK Government officials over the same period. The first line of the chorus “Tell me what 7 you say” uses the Cantonese word for 7 which is a homophone for a curse word, so those that are bilingual would understand the lyric as “Tell me what the fuck you say”. Although Hong Kong Cantonese commonly uses these sorts of linguistic puns it is unheard of for a Cantopop star to swear in a song made for general release. The juxtaposition of these two situations reinforces the exasperation of the general population about the lack of empathy from those in government. (Fong, 2019a)

The activity of writing and releasing this track has had very large implications for Fong’s career. It has doomed her music and acting career in the PRC where she was a big star. She has been banned from playback on local Hong Kong radio stations (Chow, 2022). Her social media has filled up with ‘little pinks (小粉红)’ and ‘wumao (五毛党)’ keyboard warriors raining hateful comments on her social media. In addition, Fong could now be charged under the 2020 National Security Law which bans talk (or art) that advocates for the pro-democracy movement (People’s Republic of China, 2020).

Charmaine Fong’s motivations to release ‘Human Words (人話)’ go beyond the ‘cyclically recurrent and rigidly invariable’ (Adorno & Horkheimer, 1945, p. 3) cultural products described by Adorno and Horkheimer. Her music tapped into deep emotional frustration with the situation in Hong Kong and Fong used her platform to speak against the government narrative in what Manuel Castells describes as ‘counterpower’ - the attempt ’to reprogram the polity, the economy, the culture…’ (Castells, 2015, p. 17).

Adorno and Horkheimer leave little room for cultural activity beyond their conception of ‘The Culture Industry’. The example of Charmaine Fong’s ‘Human Words (人話)’ shows there is a possibility for an exception.

 

Adorno, T., & Horkheimer, M. (1945). The Culture Industry: Enlightenment as Mass Deception. In Dialectic of Enlightenment. Los Angeles.

Castells, M. (2015). Networks of Outrage and Hope, Social Movements in the Internet Age. Cambridge, UK: Polity Press.

Chow, V. (2022). Hong Kong’s RTHK Blacklists Pro-Democracy Musicians. Variety. Retrieved from https://variety.com/2022/music/asia/hong-kong-rthk-blacklists-musicians-1235164826/

Fong, C. 方. (2019a). Human Words 人話. YouTube: Strawberry Fields.

Fong, C. 方. (2019b). Human Words (人話). In Human Words - Police in Train Station 2019 (Ed.), (Vol. 1439 x 780). YouTube: Strawberry Fields.

Impiglia, C. (2020). Cultural Hegemony in the Age of Trump: Adorno, Horkheimer, and Gramsci. EuropeNow. Retrieved from https://www.europenowjournal.org/2020/04/27/cultural-hegemony-in-the-age-of-trump-adorno-horkheimer-and-gramsci/

L.White, C. (2021). Pixels, Police, and Batons: Hong Kong Cinema, Digital Media, the 2019 Protests, and Beyond. Film Quarterly, 74(3). Retrieved from https://filmquarterly.org/2021/03/17/pixels-police-and-batons-hong-kong-cinema-digital-media-the-2019-protests-and-beyond/

People’s Republic of China. (2020). Law  of   the  People’s  Republic of China  on  Safeguarding National  Security  in  the  Hong  Kong  Special Administrative Region. Hong Kong Retrieved from https://www.gld.gov.hk/egazette/pdf/20202444e/es220202444136.pdf

 

PhD candidature with scholarship at University of Melbourne by Martyn Coutts

I am very pleased to have been accepted into the PhD program at University of Melbourne with a full scholarship. My supervision team will be Professor Robert Hassan, Associate Professor Fran Martin and Dr Anissa Beta within the School of Media and Communications.

My provisional title is Creative Solidarities – An analysis of how digital media artworks inspired pro-democracy movements in the Asia-Pacific 2019 - 2021.

Masters of Arts (Arts Management) completion by Martyn Coutts

After a summer flex-semester of writing I was pleased to have reached the completion of my Masters project at RMIT. Although it was a coursework Masters, I completed a significant thesis component which was the equivalent of 1/3 of the overall degree. The thesis topic Hong Kong Imaginary: Cultural Policy and Identity in the city-state. covered the entirety of both the British colonial period and the current PRC period as well.

City 2.0: Grassroots input and creativity need to be embedded in government policy approaches to post-disaster recovery. by Martyn Coutts

Natural disasters create a ‘radical rupture’ (Brejzek & Falkenberg 2014, p. 23), a ‘state of exception’ (Vallance 2015, p. 456) or a ‘temporary autonomous zone’ (Poulton 2016) where we can see the world anew and potentially put the ‘public back into public space’ (Wesener 2017, p. 168). Whilst arts and culture can’t substitute for the basic needs of communities in the recovery phase (Loveridge 2018), they can provide a series of context-specific responses that draw communities together who are experiencing the disruption of a disaster. (Huss et al. 2016, p. 284).

Two crises illuminate the important role that arts and culture play in creating community resilience and aiding trauma recovery; the Christchurch earthquakes of 2010/2011 and the Tohoku Earthquake also in 2011. In both of these cases, vulnerable regions dealing with the great hardships of disasters were aided by a spontaneous and community-driven outpouring of creative activity. These movements should be supported by a government’s cultural policy programs so that a grassroots approach to the post-disaster period can be implemented. This will ensure that the local recovery effort addresses the specific needs of the affected community and that creative practice continues its role in generating greater social cohesion.

Arts and culture in the post-disaster phase

The arts and culture have ‘evolutionary utility’ (Camic 2008, p. 289). They give people a sense of belonging, allowing them to create meaning and develop physical proficiency with important life tasks. (Bidwell 2014, p. 5) Engagement with arts and culture can reforge an individual’s worldview that had been destroyed by a traumatic event. This can lead to a stronger sense of resilience and community reformation. (Huss et al. 2016, p. 286) There are also powerful meaning in cultural rituals, which create an ‘extraordinary space’ that link the past, through the present into the future. (Miichi 2016, p. 158)

Data gathered from other post-disaster zones has shown many benefits to the role of arts and culture in the recovery phase. After the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake near San Francisco, without the guidance of government, local communities came together in support networks on the streets to create urban artworks, run art classes and other community activities. This had long-lasting effects, through closer community relationships and larger participation in neighbourhood groups. (Woods 2016, p. 91) Cultural practitioners in Haiti after the 2010 earthquake used performance and street art as creative place-making. This is especially important in a time when there is a great deal of destruction as it can enable a connection from the destroyed past into a possible new future. (Puleo 2014, p. 577) In New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina in 2005, with the re-establishment forms of music such as jazz and R&B, there has been a greater acknowledgement of the value of arts and culture in economic and tourism recovery. (Amore 2016, p. 4)

Christchurch Earthquakes 2010/2011

New Zealand lies on a major fault line where the Indo-Australian and Pacific tectonic plates meet. Earthquakes are a regular part of life in the country and significant seismic activity has long impacted settlements across the North and South Island. A 7.1 magnitude earthquake struck the Canterbury region on September 4th 2010. Although a major seismic event, no fatalities were recorded, however, the continuing aftershocks led to a weakening of building structures. On February 22nd 2011, a magnitude 6.3 earthquake struck the CBD and eastern suburbs of Christchurch, causing widespread damage and 168 fatalities. During the initial emergency response to the disaster, the Central Business District (CBD) was designated as a ‘red-zone’ (Wesener 2015, p. 407) where the public was banned from entering for safety purposes. 80 per cent of the building stock in the CBD would have to be demolished (Amore 2016, p. 8), this led to significant disruption to residents, businesses and infrastructure. In many suburbs throughout the city, basic services such as power, water and sewerage were affected as underground pipes and cables were severed. (Brand & Nicholson 2016, p. 161) 

Within a few weeks of the shock of the 2011 earthquake, artists and other creative practitioners began a spontaneous artistic and community response to the disruption in the inner city. These works, which were participatory, public and site-responsive came to be known as ‘The Transitional City”. (Bennett, Boidi & Boles 2012) Groups such as Gap Filler, Life in Vacant Spaces, The Social, Rekindle and Greening the Rubble placed artistic interventions into the collapsed, demolished or cleared building lots. These artists and thinkers created projects such as the Dance-o-Mat – an outdoor coin-operated dancefloor space, The Pallet Pavilion – a temporary performance and meeting space made from wooden pallets and various guerrilla urban-gardening projects. (Oliver 2014) Urban artworks such as graffiti, large scale murals, paste-ups and yarnbombing also became commonplace amongst the rubble. (Woods 2016) There were also artist-run spaces like Room Four, Dogpark and ABC gallery, that were started in ad-hoc spaces such as garages. (Oliver 2014) This creative outpouring reconnected residents with the ruptured CBD (Loveridge 2018) and was amplified through festivals such as FESTA (Festival of Transitional Architecture) SCAPE Biennale, LUXCITY and the large scale telling of Canterbury Tales which happened throughout the core of the disrupted city. (Oliver 2014)

These actions were a series of autonomous responses to the many challenges of the disaster – a loss of public space, the psychological shock of losing the centre of the city, as well as the personal toll the quakes had on people’s psyche (Woods 2016, p. 9). It has been this unique creativity that has drawn the attention of the worldwide media (Wesener 2017, p. 167) placing Christchurch as a model for other societies recovering from disasters. It has successfully drawn the community together, enabling healing from the trauma of the earthquakes (Weesjes 2015).

Beyond the ‘Transitional City’, it is worth noting the response from the existing cultural organisations in the city. Arts companies were greatly impacted by the earthquakes with almost all of the nationally funded companies either losing their office, rehearsal or presentation spaces due to damage. Some organisations such as Christchurch Art Gallery and The Physics Room adapted programs to appear in offsite programs such as hoardings on temporary cyclone fencing or shipping container galleries (Oliver 2014). The heritage performance venues and companies such as the Theatre Royal, Christchurch Symphony Orchestra, Christchurch Arts Centre and The Court Theatre were all shut down due to damage to their theatres. Some of them moved to other areas of the city, whilst some had to wait out the repairs. (Loveridge 2018, p. 278) The disruption to these organisations has meant their approach to art-making has had to change. Some have adapted quickly, whilst others with more bureaucratic structures and expensive modes of production have been slower to respond to the crisis. (Antara, Finsterwalder & Shone 2011, p. 72)

From a government policy perspective, the sense of urgency to support these organisations was evident, but the balance in supporting an ecology of cultural practitioners in the city was difficult (Oliver 2014). Creative New Zealand (CNZ), the national body for the arts, funded the heritage companies with a focus on supporting relocations to other buildings or restoration works. The Court Theatre and Christchurch Symphony Orchestra (CSO) received the largest outlays of funding in the post-earthquake period, meanwhile, the organisations that made up ‘the transitional city’ projects received uneven support. (Loveridge 2018, p. 280)

At the city level the Christchurch City Council, created the Transitional Projects Fund with quick response grants that were focused on public and participatory projects which enlivened the CBD. (Wesener 2015, p. 412) The Council was more supportive than the national government’s Canterbury Earthquake Recovery Authority (CERA) which did not take a consultative approach to the recovery. The Council’s original Draft Central City Plan was developed from a consultation process that included 100,000 suggestions from citizens. However, it was sidelined for a document known as The Blueprint, which had no community buy-in and was a top-down design by CERA. (Brand & Nicholson 2016, p. 165) Although there were overwhelming creative and community energies that were present in the city, none of this was present in The Blueprint.

Arts and culture, which had overwhelmingly contributed to a new vision for Christchurch, had been dismissed in the urban planning document. The proposed ‘cultural precinct’ was designed to hold three large organisations – the CSO, the Court Theatre and the Music Centre. (Oliver 2014) Yet, almost ten years on, there has been no building on the site of the cultural precinct (Gates 2019), meanwhile, The Transitional City and its projects continue. The differences between the ‘bottom-up’ grassroots creativity and the ‘top-down’ technocratic approach have been a key tension throughout the rebuild phase. As Brand and Nicholson state: The transitional city projects have provided a powerful reminder that the urban form of any city is only a vehicle for the life and interaction of its citizens. (Brand & Nicholson 2016, p. 174)

Tohoku Earthquake, Tsunami and Nuclear Disaster (2011)

The ‘triple disaster’ (Kaneko 2019, p. 106; Woo 2019, p. 55) of the Tohoku earthquake, tsunami and nuclear disaster on the east coast of Japan in 2011 led to widespread devastation of the natural environment and the built urban infrastructure. In scenes that played out on international television nightly, the impact of these events has been multi-faceted and the challenges faced by society have been manifold. Across the Tohoku region, 15,894 people were killed and 500,000 people were left homeless. (Japan 2016) The three most affected prefectures of the Tohoku region were Iwate, Miyagi and Fukushima at the northern end of Honshu island, facing towards the epicentre of the main quake and tsunami.

In the aftermath of the disaster, creative and community projects began to emerge all along the coast. Some of these projects were kickstarted by locals wanting to reassert themselves through ‘cultural self-narration’ (Wiesinger 2018, p. 7). Many community-focused ‘start-ups’ were led by creative professionals from the major cities, commuting to take part in the rebuild or relocating to live in the affected prefectures. (Klien 2016, p. 40) Organisations such as 3.11 Arts Action, Art Support Tohoku and Arts Aid Tohoku were created throughout this period and were an inter-relation of locals and outsiders. These types of actions have led to a vibrant and successful rebuilding phase that has been grassroots, place-responsive and culturally-led. (Woo 2019, p. 56)

In Iwate Prefecture where 6000 people died and 88,000 were displaced. Within 5 days of the disaster, a major Tokyo based gallery 3331 Arts Chiyoda held a meeting to understand what the role of artists might be within the disaster zone (Woo 2019, p. 59). The WAWA project was created as a multi-form social project that engaged architects, artists and designers to work on the issues of the Iwate community such as temporary house design and other functional aspects of life. Artists also worked with locals to create documentation through photography, video and sculpture of the devastation to preserve or memorialise the townships. (Figueroa 2016, p. 62) Folk performing arts that include kenbai (sword dances) toramai (tiger dances) and shishiodori (lion and deer dances) were also revived. These forms are centuries old and were performed in local townships by the 1000 performing arts groups in the prefecture before 2011. (Miichi 2016, p. 143) Scholar Ken Miichi suggests that these ritual focused forms ‘draw communities together and cultivate communal solidarity.’ (Miichi 2016, p. 142)

 In Miyagi prefecture, the worst-hit city was Ishinomaki, with 3000 dead and 10,000 more moved out of the city due to uninhabitable structures and infrastructural loss. (Mano & Noda 2020, p. 175) Out of this tragedy and chaos was formed one of the most responsive and collaborative organisations to be created in the post-Tohoku disaster period. Ishinomaki 2.0 was formed by about 10 core members who were a mixture of people from the town and people from Tokyo and other urban centres. The mix of skill bases and local knowledge has enabled an agile organisation which has been responsible for starting a bar, a hostel, a community IT hub, food stalls, a community newspaper and a flea market. There have also been events such as ‘Stand Up Week’ with concerts, film nights and sub-cultural excursions. (Klien 2016, p. 45) Beyond Ishinomaki 2.0, creative activities such as a contemporary art gallery and an arts festival formed. (Mano & Noda 2020, p. 177) In the years following the initial ‘response’ phase there began to be buy-in from NGO’s, town authorities and national business (like Yahoo or banks)– the main street of Itopia-dori housed 20 shopfront spaces for community focused-project. (Mano & Noda 2020, p. 179)

South of Miyagi in Fukushima Prefecture, a nuclear explosion and fallout occurred at the Daiichi nuclear power plant, due to the damaging effects of both the earthquake and tsunami. An exclusion zone was established to limit the exposure to radiation in the area, this led to the displacement of locals, closure of businesses and stigma from outsiders. (Wiesinger 2018) These particularities have not enabled the sort of socially-engaged practices that have been the focus of the creative recovery activity in Iwate and Miyagi. Instead, photography, theatre and manga artists have been independently creating work about the nuclear disaster. Historically, the Japanese people have created work to move them through such difficult periods, woodblock prints from the 1850s show a community dealing with the Great Onsai earthquake of 1855. After the Kanto earthquake and tsunami of 1923, ‘modern drama’ was born and after the atomic bomb strikes in world war 2, underground theatre and butoh were formed. (Poulton 2016)  It should not be understated the deep generational consciousness of these disasters, especially the nuclear connection between World War Two and Fukushima. (Figueroa 2016, p. 59) The healing power of art and culture in the case of Fukushima has not just been centred on the prefecture but, has been about a national attempt at understanding the trauma of the event.

The role of government in the response to these disasters has been complicated, the initial rescue phase of the disaster was deemed by the public to be badly handled, with lack of information and cover-ups about the severity of the nuclear disaster at Fukushima (Figueroa 2016, p. 59). However, some of the later government initiatives related to the relief of the Tohoku region were focused on ‘arts-driven resiliency’. (Garavaglia 2019, p. 41) These efforts connected non-profit organisations (NPOs), local organisations and government agencies to promote arts and culture in supporting social connection during the survival and recovery phases. (Mano & Noda 2020)

The Tohoku triple disaster had wide-ranging impacts on the coastline of the region, disrupting lives and infrastructure. In the immediate aftermath, creative projects and organisations were formed, bringing together multi-disciplinary teams to inject cultural life back into the devastated areas. These projects had a positive outcome on social cohesion, sense of identity and mental wellbeing of those citizens who remained in the towns and cities hit by the Tohoku disaster.

Challenges for cultural policy in the post-disaster landscape

These cases studies highlight the way in which the public begins the recovery phase through autonomous creative projects, based on the needs of their respective communities. This is accompanied by an outpouring of goodwill and social connection in the communities affected. Further research would need to be conducted to understand why art and culture emerges so strongly from crises in this manner. Christchurch art writer Andrew Wood suggests that art:“is used to being shunted to the margins of mainstream society, which means it is fragile and suffered badly in the quake, but it is also resilient, entrepreneurial and adaptive, being one of the first things to spring back to kickstart the healing.” (Woods 2016, p. 64)

As the recovery and rebuild continues, tensions begin to form between the community and government agencies. How the rebuild process is handled by governments will determine the type of community that is created and the degree to which a community recovers from the trauma of the crisis. In Christchurch, a divergence formed between the local and national governments on the focus of the rebuild. The national government chose an economic and employment narrative over a focus on creative placemaking and social cohesion. The strongly democratic ‘transitional’ movement was left to the wayside as CERA ‘downsized the stakeholder base’ and sidelined community advisory groups on the Blueprint. (Amore, Hall & Jenkins 2017, p. 619) Criticisms of the Blueprint document stated that it was designed for tourists rather than locals (Kensinger 2019, p. 84) and that market forces were determining the rebuild of the city centre. (Amore, Hall & Jenkins 2017, p. 619) CERA and the national government were perceived to be riding off the back of the ‘transitional’ rebranding of the city, but then cynically denied it any input in the Blueprint document. This was a lost opportunity to radically rethink urban planning, which would make the city ‘messier’ and ‘more alive’ (Brejzek & Falkenberg 2014, p. 25).

The undermining of the creative energy that arises from disasters can be the result of neoliberalist agendas. In Christchurch, the top-down decision-making process was triggered by a market-led rebuilding agenda with (Amore, Hall & Jenkins 2017) the Blueprint process serving the wants of local developers over the needs of the community of Christchurch. (Kensinger 2019, p. 88) This sidelining of community engagement frameworks led to a distrust in government and the rebuild process, which in turn, led to a lack of ownership and a rejection of the grassroots, cultural framework which had been proven so successful in bringing the city together. (Vallance 2015, p. 458)

In Tohoku, members of what Richard Florida termed the ‘Creative Class’ (Florida 2002) poured into the region, to assist during the recovery and rebuild process. These individuals were rejecting their capitalist lives that were present in the city, instead, they sought out ‘post-growth incentives’ such as a flexible work/life balance. (Klien 2016, p. 50) These creatives found a ‘space of experimentation …an open town brimming with creativity’ (Klien 2016, p. 58) and many saw these townships as their second homes, some even staying on after the rebuild phase was winding down. This led to greater opportunities for local young people, an injection of talent into the workforce and open communication amongst residents. The lessons that can be learnt through these examples are; that it is not only preferable for a post-disaster society to feel ownership over the rebuild, but it can lead to concrete advancements in overcoming trauma through social cohesion.

Another proven way to engender social cohesion is through supporting cultural diversity (Huss et al. 2016, p. 285) As Woo eloquently states concerning Tohoku: ‘The relations established through collaborative creativity are thus believed to thrive while establishing a more positive, egalitarian, democratic and non-hierarchical model of society.’ (Woo 2019, p. 56)

It has also been said that disasters uncover the hidden power dynamics in a city. (Woods 2016, p. 257) Colonial or hegemonic structures can reassert themselves in the face of new social movements forming. (Figueroa 2016, p. 59) In Christchurch, new possibilities were arising from the ‘transitional’ movement, a multi-ethnic and multi-generational conversation around how the city could remake itself from its stereotype as being ‘more English than England’. (Woods 2016, p. 54) The critique from the establishment was that the rebuild projects were ’messy’ and  ‘shanty-style’ in their aesthetic and limited in their longevity. (Wesener 2015, p. 417) There were also tensions surrounding Maori input into rebuild projects (although enshrined in national law). The local Iwi, Ngai Tahu was shut out from serious input. (Kensinger 2019, p. 189) Also, the one ‘anchor project’ in the rebuild that Ngai Tahu had been consulted on – Te Puna Ahurea Cultural Centre still has not been built, 10 years on from the earthquakes. In terms of social cohesion, this is a lost opportunity to create unity in the city, as the areas beyond the CBD that were the most affected by earthquake damage were the Eastern suburbs, which are home to majority Maori and Pasifika peoples. (Kensinger 2019, p. 64) Comparisons with the almost immediate campaign to repair the colonial era Christchurch cathedral illuminates the inability for local leaders to let go of ‘leftover colonial edifices’ (Brejzek & Falkenberg 2014, p. 23)  and possibly chart a new and diverse course for the city.

As the Samoan playwright Victor Rodger wrote in his play ‘Aftershocks: Struggle and Dust in C-Town’; “…Crackers getting their panties in a bunch about a cathedral when some people still can’t shit in their own houses?” (Mazer et al. 2013, p. 72)

Whilst these creative forces were sidelined in Christchurch, the Tohoku example also reveals another challenge – the co-opting of arts and culture into nationalist rhetoric. Naomi Klein in her book Shock Doctrine suggests that ‘disaster capitalism’ can provide governments with an ability to further their aims at the expense of the people affected (Klein 2007). The magnitude of the 2011 Japanese disasters meant this was truly a national tragedy, that extended beyond the scale of the Tohoku coastline. The death toll, the destruction of the landscape and the damage to infrastructure captured global media attention. In meeting this extraordinary challenge, the creative and collectivist response by certain sectors of the Japanese society suggested a new vision for the country – democratic, creative and caring. (Woo 2019, p. 67). Ironically, it was this positive mobilisation that enabled the central government to co-opt this solidarity into a cultural nationalist message. Wartime rhetoric was referenced through their messaging to citizens (Wiesinger 2018, p. 122; Woo 2019, p. 57), with jingoistic sloganeering and evocation of Japanese cultural stereotypes of passivity, yet perseverance under hardship.  (Dinitto 2014, p. 343) Artists and creatives doing the work of social inclusion found themselves instrumentalised in this nationalist agenda or silenced when trying to make a critique of government policy in regards to the disaster. (Geilhorn 2016, p. 177)

Governmental cultural policy in the post-disaster timeframe needs an enlightened viewpoint to safeguard its vulnerable citizenry from over-reach.

 Conclusion

Arts and culture have served a role as an ‘evolutionary utility’ in the history of humanity. It plays a crucial function in social cohesion, a holder of knowledge and as a creative placemaker. The research shows that after a natural disaster, creative practitioners begin working within days of the disasters, building projects that are grassroots, site-specific and situation-responsive. These interventions are powerful and needed in the disrupted space of the post-disaster timeframe.

The chaos of disasters challenge governments to make large logistical decisions quickly, and there is an obvious priority for basic needs to be met. The questions for government and their policy objectives lie in where to place their limited resources. Supporting grassroots cultural actors to respond to a crisis will enable a more responsive, rebuilding phase - they are agile and can engender a sense of community ownership over the process. The challenge for governments is to not weaponise cultural policy in the service of nationalist, capitalist or hegemonic agendas.

Arts and culture can play a powerful role in the post-disaster period. It can support trauma recovery, it can remind us of what is essential in our lives and help to tell stories that make sense of the fractured world around us. Whilst government can’t do all of the work on their own, they can act as a connection point between all the various stakeholders and approaches of the post-disaster landscape. Catalysing grassroots creativity will allow the community to forge a new sense of place, to create a ‘Transitional City’ or a ‘City 2.0’. It will mean the difference ‘between bouncing back’ and ‘bouncing forward’. (Vallance 2015, p. 456)

 

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Artists as Cultural Ambassadors by Martyn Coutts

Australian Cultural Policy Background

There have been just two national cultural policy frameworks that have been developed in Australia since Federation in 1901. The first was the Creative Nation policy created during the Keating government in 1994. The second was Creative Australia in 2013, delivered by Arts Minister Simon Crean during the Gillard government. Both of these documents were delivered by the previous two Labor party governments (Rosler 2015) and were both delivered during major pivots towards the Asia-Pacific. Although Australia’s relationship with Asia has changed significantly over the past 25 years (Carroll 2014) our knowledge of Asian cultural life is low(Carroll 2014). No tertiary institution currently offers core teaching of Asian performing arts practice(Carroll 2014) and there has been a general fall in funding to touring performing arts to Asia from Australia - from 50% to 20% (Carroll 2014). A counter to this data is the question made towards the buzz phrase ‘Asia-literacy’ asking ‘who defines the ‘Asia’ of Asia-literacy and who is excluded from the process’? (Rosler 2015). There appears to be a weakness in the writing on this topic regarding the specifics of Australia’s ‘Asia-literacy’. Beyond the statistics above there is no more detail, which undercuts the general argument for greater policy focus on this area. If there was more detailed research into the role of Asia-literacy and how the impacts of that greater acceptance of plurality manifest in Australian society, then it could be the basis for inclusion in a future cultural policy white paper. What does the current lag in cultural policy mean for our sense of our country? If the ‘arts and culture really are ‘the shortcut to understanding who we are’’ (Rosler 2015), then ‘Does the fact that Australia has no foreign cultural policy indicate that the Australian Government in unsure what Australian culture is?’ (Keys-Statham 2013)

Australian Culture Diplomacy

In trying to unravel these questions, there is not only the issue of domestic cultural policy and how that impacts creators and audiences within Australia, but it has the potential to also affect Australia’s interests and values throughout the region. There has been an understanding within government that ‘cultural diplomacy is generally valued for its capacity to manage international relations to further the national interest’ (Rosler 2015) and that it can ‘broaden and strengthen Australia’s relationships in Asia, both formally and informally’ (Keys-Statham 2013). There is broad agreement that the body that is tasked with handling Australia’s cultural diplomacy, the AICC (Australia International Cultural Council) needs a refresh (Keys-Statham 2013, Carroll 2014, Rosler 2015). It is a ‘relatively small section of the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade’ (DFAT) (Keys-Statham 2013) and it needs to be ‘re-vamped’ (Keys-Statham 2013). However there is disagreement in whether or not DFAT is a good partner for this type of cultural diplomacy with some suggestion that there is a ‘clear alignment of the work’ (Rosler 2015) and the counter argument that DFAT’s main function is to ‘support the political and economic interests of the country’ (Carroll 2014). Generally there seems to be a need for a new model of cultural diplomacy (Carroll 2014) that is not just a tool for image projection (Rosler 2015) but is a ‘logical extension of Australia’s nascent cultural confidence in the region’ (Keys-Statham 2013). Despite the lack of a cultural diplomacy body, ‘cultural exchanges and collaborations are nonetheless proceeding’. (Keys-Statham 2013) There is one organisation that has worked in this space for almost 30 years, linking Australian artists, arts managers and organisations with the Asia-Pacific. That organisation is Asialink Arts.

Asialink Arts

Described as ‘Australia’s leading centre for the promotion of public understanding of the countries of Asia and of Australia’s role in the region’ (Rosler 2015) and ‘the nation’s main Asia-Australia arts program’ (Carroll 2014) Asialink Arts began in 1991 and has sent over 900 residents into Asia over that time. Beyond this large number of artist residencies there have also been short tours, workshops and seminars that have connected arts managers and specific country related exchanges such as the capacity building program Northern Territory/Nusa Tenggara Timur (NT/NTT) between Northern Territorians and Eastern Indonesia. (Carroll 2014) While there has been a strong increase in funding for Asialink Arts over the years by DFAT and Australia Council (Carroll 2014) there is also a fear that there is an existential threat to the organisation given its lack of ongoing core funding (Carroll 2014) and given the broad remit and responsibility of Asialink this places a lot of pressure on the staff of just 5 people. The arts outcomes of Asialink cannot be argued with, with an Asialink exhibition opening in Asia on average every 23 days (Carroll 2014) since 1991, Australian artists living in 25 countries in Asia for over 100,000 days (in total) and literally millions of unique visitors to exhibitions, performances and artist talks across the region. (Carroll 2014) The effects of this can be felt in arts managers creating new networks that would then result in new curatorial programs (Carroll 2014) and person-to-person links for artists that can be re-engaged on future projects in the region (Rosler 2015). There is a consensus amongst writers in this field that the artist exchange model has had a much larger effect in the cultural diplomacy area than it should have had. However, finding the data to back this up is difficult given that most of the findings are anecdotal or ephemeral. The question remains of how to measure the effect of the ad-hoc cultural diplomacy that has been carried out by artists and arts managers within creative exchange programs with Asia such as that carried out by Asialink Arts.

Artists as cultural ambassadors

Current cultural diplomacy thinking diminishes the role of cultural exchange (Rosler 2015) and it is generally valued for its capacity to manage international relations to further the national interest (Rosler 2015). We need to view cultural exchange not as ‘instrumentalised’ or ‘transactional’ (Rosler 2015) as it is in business or politics, but multimodal in its application and outcomes. The experience of creatives in the Asialink model goes beyond the creation of artworks and touring, there is an intensity of an artist residency in Asia, including the language and cultural differences (especially in relation to gender or sexuality), loneliness, isolation and the tension that arises from being asked to create work outside of the comfort zone of home. (Carroll 2014, Rosler 2015). The challenging situations in these creative exchanges led to a forging of cross cultural dialogues (Carroll 2014, Rosler 2015) and the benefits of these were listening, empathy, humility, flexibility and hospitality (Rosler 2015). These more organically developed bonds (Rosler 2015) were more likely to create strong active networks and there was the potential for a ‘healthy climate of Asia-literate and interculturally aware Australians’. (Rosler 2015) It can be found that through the Asialink model that a more ‘cosmopolitan’ (Rosler 2015) or ‘grass roots’ (Keys-Statham 2013) approach to cultural diplomacy has taken place, one where the acceptance of plurality and the relations with individuals enable peaceful international development (Rosler 2015). 

There appears to be a strong argument that a bold new national cultural policy will enable Australian artists, arts organisations and creative agencies to have clarity in how they fit within the nation’s cultural vision. Once this is in place then we can use our ‘unique cultural advantage’ (Keys-Statham 2013) in the global space (one that encompasses the world’s oldest culture and also one of the most vibrant multi-ethnic democracies) to engage our region. To assist in the telling of this story, there needs to be a re-fresh of a new Australian international cultural diplomacy body on the par with the British Council, Alliance Française or the 孔子学院 / Confucius Institute (Keys-Statham 2013). Finally, although the role of artist exchange models such as Asialink has not been tasked with cultural diplomacy, they have surprisingly filled a policy vacuum. The 900 Asialink artists living and working in countries across the Asia-Pacific since 1991 has led to layered networks across various sectors (Rosler 2015) and it would be advisable to build on this success when developing a new cultural diplomacy model for Australia.

Carroll, A. (2014). People and Partnership: An Australian Model for International Arts. Contemporary Asian Art and Exhibitions: Connectivities and World-making, ANU Press.

Keys-Statham, C. (2013). "Australia’s International Cultural Diplomacy." Australian Policy and History.

Rosler, B. (2015). "The case of Asialink’s arts residency program: towards a

critical cosmopolitan approach to cultural diplomacy, International Journal of Cultural Policy." International Journal of Cultural Policy 21(No.4 ): 463-477.