JAMES WYNESS
  • Home
    • Arcadian Meadows
    • Spazio di Hausdorff >
      • drookitarlùp
      • batlahatli
    • The Jed Project
    • Archive
    • fouter and swick
    • sound art
  • about
  • News
  • Blog
  • Contact

Consumer

28/9/2023

0 Comments

 
Picture
0 Comments

Veteran

28/9/2023

0 Comments

 
Picture
0 Comments

Land Management, Scottish Borders

25/9/2023

0 Comments

 
Facing the Carter Bar
Paul Nash, The Menin Road
Picture
Picture
0 Comments

New Rural Perspectives (1)

25/9/2023

0 Comments

 
Picture
0 Comments

The Auld Yins

25/9/2023

0 Comments

 
Picture
Picture
0 Comments

Seasonal Interior

25/9/2023

1 Comment

 
Picture
1 Comment

Mother Oak

25/9/2023

0 Comments

 
Picture
0 Comments

We Come in Peace

25/9/2023

0 Comments

 
Picture
0 Comments

Lanton Hill

25/9/2023

0 Comments

 
Picture
0 Comments

Local Democracy

3/9/2023

0 Comments

 
Picture


​I live in a small town. Here's how things work in my small town. Old people who have lived in the town for decades get together and pack out all the groups who decide upon and implement important local decisions. They then make decisions that suit them, based on their values, experience, biases and so forth. At least eighty percent on average of these decision makers are men. Young women from the community, that is, women who live, work, raise children in the town, are largely ignored. Most of the decision makers went to school together at the same time. They are cohorts of each other. An increasing proportion come from outside the town, mostly from England. They are often relatively affluent, retired professionals or professionals who still have some skin in the game. But I can't blame retired or semi-retired people for wanting to make things better, even if I don't want to be helped across the road. I would imagine that there's a blend of wanting to put something back into the world, socialising with your cohorts and possibly seeing oneself as a kind of elder, someone whom the community respects, nods to in the street and talks about respectfully. 

Then we have elected representatives from 'The Council' who frequently come in over the top and tell these groups what they can and cannot have. There would appear to be very little in the way of questioning, demanding or even holding these officials to account, which is what I would expect from a democratic balance of power between community and 'public servant'.  

They therefore slow things down or block things. By things I mean progressive ideas around local democracy, the arts, creative placemaking, cultural development or any events and proposals that might get in the way of their agendas, personal or collective, how they believe the town is or should be. The inertia and blocking are often be done unwittingly, though this doesn't lessen the blow. These behaviours are akin to a habit, more specifically a habitus (Pierre Bourdieu), the norms, values, attitudes, and behaviours of a particular social group or social class. 

I read a lot about this kind of thing. I would consider myself to be an anarchist with a small 'a'. In practical terms this means that in small communities like mine I want to see horizontal structures of governance as opposed to top-down models. To be fair to people I don't believe the movers and shakers in my small town realise that they don't actually live in a democracy so how on earth should I expect that they'd be able to avoid blindly replicating the structures they see in 'big' government and swallowing the prevailing right wing media narratives? It's all the more problematic in that I've observed excellent practice elsewhere, in fact not far at all from where I live. This came about because of a very few individuals with a shared vision which developed into a complex and nuanced approach to placemaking.

Living as I do in a socially conservative town, probably at the extreme end of the scale, I can't expect to easily find people who believe in social progress at the grass roots level of community development and who are prepared to take action. It doesn't help that I've just finished The Dawn of Everything: A New History of Humanity by David Graeber and David Wengrow. The book covers a lot of ground but the main thrust is that for thousands upon thousands of years human communities have experimented with social organisation, adopting this, rejecting that, going back and fore or moving on to something new. The idea that we are somehow at the end point of a qualitative evolutionary trajectory with respect to democracy, equality, representative decision making and so forth is not backed up by the archeological and anthropological evidence.

I  remain hopeful.
​
0 Comments

    Author

    Composer, guitarist and sound artist, multi-media artist, environmental investigations.

    Categories

    All
    Acoustic Guitar
    Collage
    Concrete Poetry
    Fallow
    Guitars
    Jed Project
    Morocco
    Moving Image
    Music
    Performance
    Photography
    Sound
    Visual Art
    Walking
    Writing

    Archives

    April 2025
    March 2025
    February 2025
    January 2025
    December 2024
    November 2024
    October 2024
    September 2024
    August 2024
    July 2024
    June 2024
    May 2024
    April 2024
    March 2024
    February 2024
    January 2024
    December 2023
    November 2023
    October 2023
    September 2023

    RSS Feed

Proudly powered by Weebly
  • Home
    • Arcadian Meadows
    • Spazio di Hausdorff >
      • drookitarlùp
      • batlahatli
    • The Jed Project
    • Archive
    • fouter and swick
    • sound art
  • about
  • News
  • Blog
  • Contact