Wednesday, December 10, 2014

Authoritarianism is Also a Popular Culture

Cuba: Authoritarianism is Also a Popular Culture
December 9, 2014
Yenisel Rodríguez Pérez

HAVANA TIMES – Authoritarianism encompasses everything from the most
banal daily practice to the government measure with the most profound
impact on society. Our social experiences in Cuba are saturated with the
authoritarian culture we all complain about.

The oppression that characterizes the Cuban regime is operative in the
break-up of family ties, disrespect towards consumers, the fear of
defending legitimate rights, individualism, the systematic violation of
people's privacy and a long list of etcetera's.

Over the last 50 years, for instance, Cuban educators have had no other
indicator with which to guide their pedagogical efforts other than
insipid indoctrination and the stereotyped status of sacrosanct authority.

How have the parents of students responded?

They have become accomplices to the injustices they face, ignoring the
needs and opinions of their children and establishing an affectionate
proximity to the authoritarian teachers, ultimately validating the
inequalities experienced in Cuban classrooms on a daily basis.

We also have a notion of "roughing it" that confounds work with slavery
and makes people avoid contemplative experiences, regarding these as
mere laziness, turning the impulse to avoid knowledge about ourselves
into a kind of urgent survival need.

Then there is the endless cycle of consumption: that impulse to collect,
or the longing to collect objects (household appliances, for the most
part), in the hopes of putting out the anguish that is coextensive with
human existence. This way, we not only end up living under an
authoritarian regime, we also end up being a part of it, its most solid
pillar.

Being anti-authoritarian, being an opponent or critic of the Cuban
regime requires daily practices that are outside – or at least try to
fall outside – the domain of violence, the subtle political complicity
with power and ignorance of who we are.

Anything else is gross hypocrisy, double standards and daily opportunism.

Source: Cuba: Authoritarianism is Also a Popular Culture - Havana
Times.org - http://www.havanatimes.org/?p=107808

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