248 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
248 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
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CULTURE AS CIRCUS
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Radical politics saw revolution as festival, a break with the existing state
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of things in which all would recognise and act on their desires. The notion
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of festival returned in the 1980s politics of social containment. The decade
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was punctuated by a series of administratively-organised events, such as the
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Garden Festivals. These purported to offer a community the chance to "find
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itself" by re-orienting around the promise of a new enterprising self-image.
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The prime example of this strategy as a remedy for social unrest was the
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Liverpool Garden Festival. The promise that the developed festival site would
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be a base for the city's regeneration was unfulfilled, but that became clear
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only after attention shifted elsewhere.
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Glasgow's administration was eager to attract that attention. The city had
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long been controlled by the Labour Party, who modernised the city by
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decanting people to peripheral public housing schemes and driving motorways
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through the city central area (see "The Material Community" in H&N no.2).
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This having visibly failed, the administration then embraced such 1980s
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innovations as the new-logotype, mission-statement programme by which
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bureaucracies simulate enterprising service to "their" local client
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communities.
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Whereas market theorists see enterprise in the transactions of sovereign
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producers and consumers, this programme sees it in the actions of charismatic
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administrative bureaucrats.
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Such groups seek to maximise the resources under their control, and therefore
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grasped an opportunity to operate the Garden Festival franchise for a year.
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Limited publicity about the failings of the Liverpool event had little effect
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on the Glasgow Garden Festival in 1988. Nor did revelations of the
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public/private land deals which accompanied the development of the Glasgow
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site have any real impact. The significant encounters in such a festival do
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not involve the public but are between the private and public institutions
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(District Council and Scottish Development Agency). The Garden Festival's
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containment within a particular arena meant that it would be approached on
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its own terms or not at all. Without ground for an opposition to develop, the
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event was left to the public relations boosters.
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The Garden Festival idea proposes that an urban post-industrial wasteland can
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be restored to usefulness by a programme of land clearance, building and
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strategic placing of transplanted shrubbery. Before the Glasgow Garden
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Festival had taken place, plans were already under way for a more audacious
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transplantation exercise: the 1990 European City of Culture designation.
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The "City of Culture" concept offers a near blank sheet, allowing the
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administrators to make their dreams a reality. A blow on the trumpet and the
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walls can be brought tumbling down: A city-wide, year-long festival! The
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brightest flowers money can buy (Sinatra, Pavarotti, Bolshoi)! A true Culture
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City: at its core, an exhibition re-presenting (and hence sanitising) the
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city's history to its citizens; around the centre, a events programme to
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gladden listings magazine readers; and spreading out to the periphery, a
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programme of "community events". And right in the middle of the year,
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Glasgow's Big Day: typical of those sentimental, big gesture extravaganzas
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loved by the Liberal-Left since Live Aid. All in all, the organisers excelled
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themselves.
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An opposition began to coalesce early. Some artists and writers implicity
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boycotted the Year of Culture, recognising that participation involved
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accepting the administrators as mediators of taste. More publicly the
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"Workers City" book (published in 1988) defended Glasgow as "the working
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class city par excellence" whose "true voice and experience" was being
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ignored. Under normal circumstances, that would have been that. But the Year
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of Culture package began to come apart.
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Management of any modern public space demands discreet policing of behavioral
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norms specified for each group of users. For example, a shopping mall
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designates delivery areas, staff areas, and "public" meeting places which are
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really private space patrolled by security men. Infringement of the norms,
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whether by swearing, scuffling unemployed youth or by shop workers in
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dispute, immediately brings expulsion to the outside.
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The Garden Festival conformed to that model. But by extending the Culture
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City festival site across the whole city, the administrators lost managerial
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control. Without it, points of conflict began to appear. The grafting of the
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festival apparatus onto existing local service hierarchies generated the
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year's most significant conflict, the "Elsbeth King Affair". That then
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nourished a dispute over the control of public land, which raised questions
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of the limitations on democratic administrative fiat and produced simulacra
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of accountability mechanisms (public meetings, referenda, public opinion
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polls). And the year ended with the city's council leader, Baillie Pat Lally,
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demonstrating his ability to make decisions with only the semblance of
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democratic checks and balances (the mural affair).
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What interest can there be in such a list of scandals hardly mentioned in
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national newspapers, let alone internationally? Does it represent only parish
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pump politicking? A closer look at the main features of these affairs may
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demonstrate how competing sets of values can throw a system into confusion.
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The "Elsbeth King Affair" was rooted in disputes within Glasgow District
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Council's Museums and Art Galleries Department, disputes about job gradings
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and about the importance attached to the city's "social history" museums. Ms.
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King, the curator of the Peoples' Palace and her deputy Michael Donnelly had
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a long-standing committment to these museums, one which was bound to come
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into conflict with the twee concoction of "The Words and the Stones" (later
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renamed Glasgow's Glasgow), a Year of Culture exhibition proposed from
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outwith the department.
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King was an early critic of that exhibition (now acknowledged as a disaster),
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especially as it would divert resources from the Peoples' Palace. However, a
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dispute over job grading had been simmering for some time and the
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damage-limitation negotiations on rescuing "Glasgow's Glasgow" merged into
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that grading bargaining. King wrote to her boss, Julian Spalding: "The least
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I require in return is a recognition of departmental status for social
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history, my immediate appointment as keeper and Michael Donnelly's
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appointment as depute keeper." These negotiations failed, Glasgow's Glasgow
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flopped, and, in a move widely interpreted as Spalding's revenge, a new
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senior post later went instead to a former deputy, Mark O'Neill.
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Administrative rationality requires a belief that "we're all in it together".
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King had contravened that assumption by trading-off terms for rescuing
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Glasgow's Glasgow. That indicated a threat to "proper" managerial control.
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Any hierarchy, faced with a "problem" individual who combines expertise with
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positional authority, has the imperative that these should be split, even, if
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need be, at the expense of dispensing with that individual altogether. From a
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bureaucratic viewpoint the Spalding-King dispute required the filling of the
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vacant post in charge of Social History. Only then could normal business be
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resumed.
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But a feeling that King had been shabbily treated led to hundreds of protest
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letters on the pages of the Glasgow Herald, notably the Letter of the 63
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(local and national cultural celebrities). The debate was conducted within
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"socialism". To one side, New Realist Labourism from the
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corporatist-modernists whose desire to be enterprising brings a gullibility
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prone to exploitation by passing visionary hucksters (as noted in H&N6). On
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the other side, an alliance formed. Sentimentalists of politics (keepers of
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sacred names) and of ways of life (curatorial taxidermists), both regarding
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New Realist Labourism as betrayal, came together with people who reject
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Labourism and instead uphold "the tradition of working-class people refusing
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to be passive and mute, cowed victims of the political bureaucracy". Workers
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City became the focal point for that opposition, on a common ground seeing
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Labourism as betrayal of the working class rather than as the project of a
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bureaucratic-administrative class.
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The extent to which opposition involved taking one side in a dispute within
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the bureaucracy was the campaign's strength and weakness. Much of the
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opposition mapped friend-foe relations onto competing parts of the
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administration. At worst, this was crude nationalism: Spalding-King-O'Neill;
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English-Scots-Irish; Bad-Good-Bad. Straight-talking, ex-socialist columnists
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could stand aside from the opposition by declaring that support for
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individuals' career aspirations had never been part of socialism.
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The bureaucracy over-reacted to the opposition with ferocity. Opponents were
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denounced as "well-heeled authors and critics who refuse to dirty their
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hands", mere "saloon-bar Stalinists" - in sum, "an embarrassment to this city
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and all of its cultural workforce". In the grand tradition, class positions
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and interests were erased and redrawn by the bureaucracy, which again
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proclaimed itself the universal class.
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However the Festivals Unit's glorification of the "cultural workforce" opened
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cultural issues which would subvert their own specialist positions. As David
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Kemp commented: "Is it now the fact that a city with a 'cultural workforce'
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can now ignore its own 'culture' <20> and that a safe, packaged, bland,
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internationally-acceptable 'culture' will be provided for us by the 'cultural
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workforce' who now travel the world searching for art and theatre in ever
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more far-flung and exotic locations?"
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Lally, presumably seeing himself in the tradition of municipal "good works",
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was out of his depth, following his experts' advice. They'd bring the best,
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no doubt, and International Culture fits that bill. In the socialist
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twilight, public and private sponsorship look, feel and taste the same.
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Labour once claimed to be a better distributor of bread, but will now settle
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for circuses. The Year of Culture showed the shape of things to come, as can
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be seen from the recent advertisement of permanent top jobs for the city's
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"cultural workers" (as salaries of <20>35,000-<2D>45,000).
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The Left's long-term failure to aspire to anything other than the cultural
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status quo leaves no doubt that bringing Pavarotti, the Bolshoi and Sinatra
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to the city was enough. And the mass self-celebration of the Big Day or of
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the candle procession (organised by specialists from the one-time alterative
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society) reinforce belief in a democracy of opportunity enabled by the
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experts. Perplexity and frustration result when others don't share those
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sentimental values.
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The King affair was a catalyst. Its overspill into Donnelly's sacking for
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speaking to the press (something not entirely unknown to the Festival
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administrators), reversed the polarity of the workforce issue. A temporary
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workforce of carpetbaggers was supported against permanent workers; appeals
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against unfair dismissal were dismissed by tribunals of Labour councillors
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sitting in the bosses' chairs.
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The proposed long-term lease of the Fleshers Haugh public land on Glasgow
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Green was an associated issue. Its proximity to the Peoples' Palace itself
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and the historic associations of the public land on the Green meant that the
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heritage issue now transcended the tawdry representations of the Glasgow's
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Glasgow exhibition and the relabelling of streets bearing plantation-owners'
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names as the Merchant City. Reacting to a surge of opposition (in contrast to
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the disregard of the Garden Festival land deals), the administration conjured
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up the democratic ghost. They organised public meetings to simulate a
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consultation to legitimise their dealings. That failed, so they turned to
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surveys and local newspaper referenda - still hoping to impose their will.
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Deployment of these devices delegitimised the administration to an extent
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that their plans had to be shelved.
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The closing months of the Year of Culture were no better for the
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administration. The solid and lasting achievement of the Year was to be the
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new Concert Hall. Again, Lally was on the defensive, overreacting even to
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criticism of the hall's acoustics. But his greater achievement was to
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demonstrate the fallacy of all theories of democratic accountability by
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rejecting Ian MacCullough's foyer painting (commissioned by the overlapping
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Strathclyde Regional Council bureaucracy) at the Hall's opening ceremony.
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This again gave rise to set-piece protest concerning "the artist's right to
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self-expression" while omitting debate on the whole commission / patronage
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system. But gusts of the usual modern art philistinism came from the Press,
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which, as usual was incapable of perceiving real issues. In another time and
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place, the Sunday Times plainspeakers could be expected to have congratulated
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Stalin on his attack on Shostakovich.
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Most of Scotland's Press shares the administration's mix of distaste and
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sentimentality. The media sought "balance" on the issues by turning to
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academics who could discuss the extent of the benefit of economic
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"trickle-down" from increased tourism, etc.
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The opposition was neither a mass campaign nor a campaign by elite experts,
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but something in between. So the Press increasingly mentioned dissenters
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(usually named as Workers City) but it almost had a samisztat presence. As
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indicated by some contributions to the second Workers' City book, "The
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Reckoning", there was a reluctance to delegate speech to spokespeople to
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"represent" general grievance. Some prominent opponents refused to speak to
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the press, but others misjudged and allowed themselves to be situated around
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a habitual pub corner table.
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After years of cribbing press releases, journalists were no doubt resentful
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that a few former colleagues were writing "sour grapes" articles which began
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to be borne out as the year ended, and were even semi-legitimised (in their
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eyes) by a tv documentary. The Press confusion was evident in the Sunday
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Times publishing a weak pastiche of a Workers' City meeting, which merely
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demonstrated the perpetrator's ignorance of those he would parody.
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Even the Press's snide sniping was forced onto the defensive: "<22> the high
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profile enjoyed by Workers City was more than a matter of influential
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friends, it was also a reflection of the way the group gave expression to an
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unfocussed sense of unease in a much wider swathe of the city." (Scotland on
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Sunday, 23/12/90)
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Overall, the Year of Culture was remarkable for the extent to which
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opposition almost accidentally formed around a core campaign which probably
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expected to be peripheral to the whole affair, and the way in which this
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opposition was forced onto the agenda. But the issues were not
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straightforward, and their momentum was provided as much by the interplay of
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interests within the restructuring bureaucracy.
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Alex Richards
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Further Reading:
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"WORKERS CITY: The real Glasgow Stands Up" (1988) and "The Reckoning: Public
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Loss, Private Gain" (1990) both edited by Farquhar McLay (published by
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Clydeside Press, 37 High St, Glasgow)
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"Glasgow Keelie" newssheet (PO Box 239, Glasgow G3 6RA)
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"GLASGOW 1990: The TRUE Story Behind the Hype" by David Kemp (Famedram
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Publishers, Gartocharn, Dumbarton)
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abelling of st<73>r<w<>A`7e@`Me<4D><1C> <02>`:<3A>
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From Here & Now 11 1991 - No copyright
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