The Global Village and Its Others

M. Stekl
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Abstract

This paper opens a dialogue between Marshall McLuhan and Squid Game, the hit 2021 Netflix series. I argue that Squid Game both exposes and reproduces the repressed libidinal economy that underwrites media studies’ understandings of political economy and of the global circulation of media. Many media theorists after McLuhan have extended his “global village” thesis, according to which globalization has birthed a nascent universal consciousness. What are we to make, then, of McLuhan’s affirmation that “it is no longer possible to adopt the aloof and dissociated role of the literate Westerner” when, roughly six decades later, “we” in the West are witnessing a decidedly “aloof and dissociated” VIP audience spectate, alongside us, the suffering of South Korean subalterns (4)? My paper critically questions McLuhan’s “global village” by reflecting on the contradictions inherent in Squid Game’s anti-capitalist desire to expose the suffering of subaltern masses for the pleasure of bourgeois voyeurs, given that the show’s own audience is composed of many such Western bourgeois voyeurs. If “we,” like “Gganbu” in Squid Game, seek pleasure and above all fun as we consume the violent objectification of the Other, perhaps the “global village” is not so peaceful after all. After considering how the show may be read both through and against McLuhan’s analysis of violent “retribalization” in “our” (post)modern electric age, I conclude that the political economy of the global village runs on a hidden structure of desire that only produces an elite few (VIPs) as full human subjects by brutally reducing subaltern masses to objects. It is this libidinal economy that Squid Game forcefully brings into view, so forcefully that its own mass appeal may feed the violent desires of Netflix audiences rather than vanquish them. The question, ultimately, will be: can subaltern media(lity) speak?
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地球村及其他国家
本文开启了马歇尔·麦克卢汉与2021年Netflix热播剧《鱿鱼游戏》之间的对话。我认为《鱿鱼游戏》揭露并再现了被压抑的力比多经济,这种经济支撑着媒体研究对政治经济和媒体全球流通的理解。在麦克卢汉之后,许多媒体理论家扩展了他的“地球村”理论,根据这一理论,全球化催生了一种新生的普遍意识。那么,当大约六十年后,“我们”在西方目睹了一群绝对“冷漠和游离”的VIP观众,与我们并肩观看韩国庶民的苦难时,麦克卢汉断言“不再可能采取冷漠和游离的有文化的西方人角色”,我们该如何理解呢?我的论文对麦克卢汉的“地球村”提出了批判性的质疑,反思了《乌贼游戏》反资本主义的内在矛盾,即为了资产阶级偷窥者的快乐而揭露下层大众的痛苦,因为这部剧的观众是由许多这样的西方资产阶级偷窥者组成的。如果“我们”像《鱿鱼游戏》中的“干布”一样,在消费暴力物化他者的过程中寻求快乐,尤其是乐趣,也许“地球村”根本就不那么和平。在考虑如何通过或反对麦克卢汉对“我们的”(后)现代电子时代暴力“再化”的分析来解读这场展览之后,我得出结论,地球村的政治经济运行在一个隐藏的欲望结构上,通过残酷地将下层大众降低为客体,只产生少数精英(vip)作为完整的人类主体。《Squid Game》强势地将这种性欲经济带入人们的视野,以至于它自身的大众吸引力可能会满足Netflix观众的暴力欲望,而不是征服他们。最终的问题将是:次等媒体(媒介)能说话吗?
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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