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Moral Maze

How should we understand ‘cancel culture’?

Moral Maze

BBC

Society & Culture, Religion & Spirituality

4.4623 Ratings

🗓️ 1 June 2023

⏱️ 57 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The gender-critical philosopher Kathleen Stock’s address to the Oxford Union this week has divided academics at the university. One group has signed a letter expressing concern that student opposition to her invite goes against free speech. A second group has written an open letter supporting the students and stating that revoking an invite is not the same as preventing someone from speaking.

This case is seen by many as an example of so-called ‘cancel culture’. ‘Cancel culture’ has become such a common term that it is not always easy to understand what precisely it means and what its implications are for society. Media organisations have always made judgements about who should and should not receive a platform. What some view as censorship, others see as curating their own experience of who and what they interact with.

Cancel culture on the left is often characterised as a form of secular puritanism denouncing the ‘sins’ of the age, while, as perceived on the right, it can have an overtly religious justification in the defence of so-called traditional liberal values. Those who view cancel culture as a threat to Western liberal democracy point to dramatic historic parallels: witch hunts, inquisitions, book banning. Others reflect that ostracization and social shunning have always existed as a form of accountability for an individual’s actions. Is there a difference between a person being accountable for their behaviour and being accountable for their ideas? If not, who decides what are ‘unacceptable’ ideas? Should we understand cancel culture as a deterioration of the public sphere, symptomatic of a growing illiberalism, or does it reflect the convulsions of a free society which is morally evolving into something better?

Transcript

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0:00.0

BBC Sounds, Music, Radio, podcasts.

0:05.0

Thanks very much. Good evening. Have you been cancelled yet?

0:08.3

Who knows, your rhetorical P45 might already be in the post.

0:12.2

A word you used, a belief you stated, a late-night tweet that returns to haunt you.

0:17.5

Some say it's the secular equivalent of the heresy hunters of the Inquisition, or point to an even

0:23.0

older tendency. The Athenians condemned unpopular citizens to exile by casting votes on broken

0:30.0

pieces of pottery, Ostraca. They were literally ostracized. Is that what we witnessed yesterday in

0:36.9

Oxford when the philosopher Kathleen Stock

0:39.3

appeared at an event at the Oxford Union? Her gender-critical views triggered protests,

0:44.8

her belief that trans women are not in any real sense women. Even the Prime Minister

0:49.5

weighed in to defend her right to speak. But perhaps we need to step away from

0:54.1

inflated classical illusions

0:56.1

and recognise that the very idea of cancelled culture is itself a culture war tactic

1:02.2

that's deployed by activists on the left and on the right,

1:06.3

a kind of self-imposed martyrdom, harvesting cliques, monetising dissent. After all, some of those who

1:12.9

claim to be victims of cancel culture end up with bigger media platforms in the end. Beneficaries

1:19.8

of amplification, we might say, rather than silenced martyrs. Cancel culture is such a contentious

1:26.7

idea that some people want to cancel it.

1:30.8

It's a myth, they say, propagated by those who wish to avoid accountability.

1:35.3

So what are we to make of this favoured term of headline writers?

1:39.3

Evidence of growing illiberalism, a sign of cultural disruption as old ideas are challenged by newer ones,

1:46.3

an invention of the culture wars. How should we understand cancel culture? Tonight's moral

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