Mass Formation Deflation
The debate over “Mass Formation Psychosis” depoliticizes what should be understood as a confrontation between competing social models.
Google’s censorious behavior revealed more than just their subservience to Fauciism. It betrayed a growing disquiet among Americans with the contradictions in the unprecedented curbing of constitutional rights and liberties, the unabashed scapegoating of more than a third of the population of the West, sweeping digital censorship, and the rule of dubious government-appointed experts. The immediate popular interest in “Mass Formation Psychosis” demonstrates an increasing desire to understand why others are so willing to sacrifice their freedoms and civil rights in the face of a “deadly threat” which, for most, simply never materialized.
On power and anxiety
If power is the ability to assert one’s interests against others and
to subject them to one’s own will, then the twin promises of democracy
and civil society have done much to challenge its legitimacy. Such a
challenge necessitates new techniques of domination and control, and the
era of neoliberal capitalism—designed as a predominantly anti-working
class, anti-democratic enshrinement of global corporate capital
accumulation—has worked overtime to perfect such techniques. The most
productive of these is the generation of social anxiety on a massive
scale. German psychologist Rainer Mausfeld, in his eminent book, Anxiety and Power, identifies three discreet pillars of systematic anxiety production under the conditions of neoliberal rule:
- Anxiety through the comprehensive creation of the illusion of social overcomplexity and thus feelings of individual inadequacy.
- Anxiety through economic precarization.
- Anxiety through the ideology of meritocracy. This creates feelings of shame, or underachievement anxiety as the individual, after failing to recognize a particular aggressor, is forced to attribute that failure to himself. This leads to a spiral of anxiety that transforms the concrete fear of poverty into a diffuse or generic form of anxiety.
Mattias Desmet’s own original approach draws heavily from Mausfield’s theory of the neoliberal subject in a state of free-floating, or dislocated anxiety. For Desmet, Mass Formation can be defined by a lack of social bonds; the absence of meaning or sense in one’s life; free-floating anxiety over, and frustration and aggression towards no specific target.
Following this model, we can see how mass media’s production of panic and fear during the pandemic (such as with the now-debunked photos of caskets in Bergamo, Italy in March of 2020) provided our free-floating anxiety with a very concrete cause—the virus. Far from unsettling us, this substitution for something concrete functioned as a kind of meaning-providing technology for our previously absent sense of control. Furthermore, in participating in a united struggle against the virus, a new kind of social bond was created, relieving—at least for a time—our desperate sense of social atomization. Finally, our aggression towards an unspecific culprit was now replaced with a definable scapegoat—the unvaccinated, or “anti-vaxxers.”
If it is doing its job correctly, Mass Formation can create feelings of pleasure in an individual—displayed today as outright fantasies of murder and torture (take for instance Antifa’s calling for the detention and forced vaccination of citizens). Supporters of the narrative, in their role of shock troops for the state and capital, will have begun to dismiss talk of the protecting of civil liberties as “meaningless chatter” and consider the concept of freedom itself as nothing but a reactionary trope.
But here’s the rub—while the Mass Formation hypothesis correctly
identifies the social role and political utility of anxiety, it
completely deemphasizes power. As such, it depoliticizes the necessary
confrontation between our new biopolitical-totalitarianism and the old,
civil rights-based social order by obfuscating the relations of state
power and the people.
In order to achieve the desired shock effect, the concrete effects of an infection on human society must be made clear … Suffocation…is a primal fear for every human being…When [children] infect their parents and one of them dies in agony at home and they feel they are to blame because, for example, they forgot to wash their hands, it is the most terrible thing a child can ever experience.
This abominable declaration of war, purposefully targeting small children, makes it clear that the state is using tried-and-true tactics of anxiety propaganda to swear its subjects into an agenda of biopolitical surveillance capitalism.
The methodological framework of Mass Formation, while useful for identifying the mechanisms that lead to a kind of “mental gulag,” keeps the fundamental problem intact. It is undoubtedly good that people are becoming aware of the war that is being waged against them, the arrival of a new form of biopolitical-totalitarian entanglement of state and capital that sticks to nothing as it crushes the remnants of civil society. But it also means it is high time we identify and confront the enemy.
No comments:
Post a Comment