Making is… Making?

My estwhile col­league, the excel­lent David Gauntlett, has posted a new video about the work towards his next book Making is Connecting:

The video argues that certain forms of digital/​social media practise offer the hope of personal and communal redemp­tion. When we publish stuff or make things online or get together with others in a common cause online to do prac­tical things, then the value of that activity goes beyond the intrinsic value of whatever artefact is produced: we’re con­necting with other people and increasing our social capital. We’re making ourselves happier as a con­sequence and estab­lishing or rein­for­cing com­munities that might do social good. Becoming a member of wiki­pedia or getting together with others to do some guerilla gardening are new oppor­tun­ities that help us get over the cultural, spir­itual and social slump that con­sti­tuted C20th mass media. That era is char­ac­ter­ised as one of con­sump­tion rather than creation, the renewed promise of the C21st through the magic of digital.

I love all this and a big part of me would like to leave this post here. But then I’d have to rename this blog twopointhappyc­lappy. This is terribly unfair, I know, given that Gauntlett’s book is only half-​​finished. but meh.

My main issue is that I’m tempted to say ‘so what?’

So what if some people become more happy, pro­ductive, social as a con­sequence of this? That’s all lovely but there’s no chal­lenge to power in any of this. There’s no real change to the world. The man­darins at Whitehall aren’t going to be shaking in their boots. I imagine the scene:

Bernard (rushes in breath­less): Sir Humphrey!?

Sir Humphrey (for it is he): Yes, Bernard (arches a brow)

Bernard: It’s the internet people, sir. They’re making things!

Sir Hunphrey: What’s this? Barricades across the Mall? Million man marches into Parliament Square?

Bernard: No, sir. It’s some­thing dif­ferent.. It’s…

Sir Humphrey (exas­per­ated): Spit it out, Bernard.

Bernard: They’re making com­munity gardens on disused land and infographics about motorway jams.

Sir Humphrey (sighs): Oh, Bernard. Why on earth do you think we spent all that money on data.gov.uk?

Getting people involved in creative com­munity and personal projects is clearly a good thing. I have no argument with that. I agree that this change will probably make things better. And happier. But I want more better. An intel­li­gent net­worked commons has the oppor­tunity to make gov­ern­ment, par­lia­ment, business and inter­na­tional affairs work dif­fer­ently: to be more account­able, change­able and responsive; to empower people to do as much as they can, and find other people so they can do more; possibly wreak radical change to the whole system*. I feel a little short-​​changed by Gauntlett’s account, in short. I think our expect­a­tions can and ought to be higher.

picture credit: Kelly Sue

*(I remain vague on this — sorry)

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