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Nous sommes tous Charlie: the value of satire

By Stuart Rees - posted Wednesday, 14 January 2015


In the wake of the murders of staff from the French satirical magazine, Charlie Hebdo, it's imperative to re-assert the indispensable function of a humour which contributes so much to civility in societies. Sydney Morning Herald cartoonist Sally Wilcox made the same point when she wrote, 'I believe satire is where sanity is found.'

Over the centuries, at least in countries expressing humanist values and striving to become democratic, critics, including cartoonists, encouraged political and religious leaders to become less thin skinned about their societies' sacred cows. Civility and humanism developed side by side.

In the 18th century, the Anglo Irish essayist and author Jonathan Swift, in the 20th century the American journalist H.L.Mencken, and in pre-war Germany the poet-playwright Bertolt Brecht contributed to such civility. Swift mocked the authoritarian rule of the English over Ireland and debunked those who appeared to be blindly devoted to certain beliefs. Mencken exposed those who thought they had discovered religious, commercial and political truth. Such truths, he said, were indistinguishable from a headache. Brecht challenged Nazism and authoritarianism in all its forms. In a poem, which sounds like a tribute to the achievements of all satirists, Brecht wrote 'On The Critical Attitude',

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And states can be demolished by it.

Cartoonists and caricaturists, from Hogarth and Gillray through Low and Searle to Larson and Leunig, have consistently criticised and deflated pomposity and championed tolerance and humanity.

Satire acts as an antidote to authoritarianism, to bigotry and as a non-violent challenge to claims made for a myriad of 'isms' which nurture dogma and cannot tolerate doubt. The targets of satire are usually powerful individuals who are either unaware of the absurdity of the claims they make – the emperor has no clothes - or appear not to care about the human costs of their so called leadership.

Such leaders' one dimensional mindsets nurture extremism. Of course, not all the proponents of extremisms resort to killing those who challenge them, but for centuries, the violence that accompanies defence of a particular form of power, religious or otherwise, has been expressed in the rack, the lash, the scaffold, the stake, the bomb and the gun.

At the end of last week 2000 citizens of Baga Nigeria were slaughtered by Muslim militants Boko Haram and a blogger in Saudi Arabia was lashed, with the promise of more to come, for questioning features of Islam and the attitudes of certain religious leaders. Such brutality can't simply be named and condemned. It raises a key question about intolerance towards anyone who refuses to accept the precepts of powerful institutions, in this case particular types of Islam but it could be forms of Judaism, Christianity, Hinduism, Scientology, free market dogma, the Tea Party, Marxism or the claims of the flat earth society.

By all means avoid the cultural insensitivity which implies that all western democratic values should be adopted elsewhere. Remember also the significant achievements of Islamic culture in art, medicine, poetry and architecture and recall too that countries which are breeding terrorism – such as Saudi Arabia and Qatar – are some of the closest allies of the West.

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But if diversity of views, tolerance of differences and freedom of speech are key features of universal human rights – to which almost all countries say they adhere – we should be able to question why certain deities are fit for satire and others are not. I shudder a little when commentators who condemn cartoons in Charlie Hebdo seem unaware that their own cultural thin skins might have been interpreted by extremists as a cue to embark on violent revenge.

The other side of such violence is a massive illiteracy about non-violence. The murderers of the Parisian satirists perhaps knew nothing about freedom of expression in art, film, music, dance, dress, social or political commentary. The idea that such forms of creativity contribute to physical and mental health must have eluded them. In common with suicide bombers and other killers, they must have preferred death to life, violence to laughter.

Extremists, including the Parisian murderers, cannot harbour doubt about their religious, political or moral views. In common with members of al-Qaeda, Boko Haram or ISIS, they apparently believed only in their dogma and in themselves. They would have been puzzled by Bertolt Brecht's constant reminders that the understanding derived from satire can become a crucial means of individual and collective empowerment. In his poem 'In Praise of Doubt,' he wrote:

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About the Author

Stuart Rees is Professor Emeritus of the University of Sydney and Founder of the Sydney Peace Foundation. He is the former Director of the Sydney Peace Foundation (1998-2011) and of the Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies (1988-2008), and a Professor of Social Work (1978-2000) at the University of Sydney.

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