Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
THE INEVITABILITY OF THE ALIENATION OF COMMUNICATION IN THE ERA OF GLOBALISATION Tatiana Leshchenko Lomonosov Moscow State University, Leninskie Gory, Moscow, 119991, Russian Federation [email protected] Irina Sokolova Russian State Social University, Wilhelm Pick str., 4, Moscow, 129226, Russian Federation [email protected] Liubov Teplova Lomonosov Moscow State University, Leninskie Gory, Moscow, 119991, Russian Federation [email protected] ABSTRACT The paper analyses the problems of the global transformation of communication processes associated with the pervasive influence of the various communication systems on the economy, politics, culture and social system as a whole. The superfluity of such influence has given birth to a phenomenon of “the alienation of communication”, which is regarded as an objective entity of social reality. The authors adduce a typology of the alienation of communication occurring in a variety of communicative situations at any level of the social structure. This typology is primarily based on the specificity of the “clash” of individual and social in determining the meaning of communication: the original sense and the following reading of this meaning; the intention and the degree of the twisting of the meaning due to the mismatch of social needs, interests and values of the subjects of communication; the impact of this clash on the nature of social interaction. It is specified that in the social and cultural diversity context the processes of social adaptation, socialisation and resocialisation become of paramount importance for sustainable development of society. However, omnipresent phenomenon of the alienation of communication inhibits these processes significantly. Mass media contribute to an effect of the fractal proliferation of alienation that leads to its transformation into an indispensable attribute of the information society. The authors come to a conclusion that the reality of alienated meanings inevitably comes into existence and becomes the bellicose element of social environment, which explains a necessity of scientific conceptualisation of the phenomenon. The approaches to the study of the alienation of communication are suggested. Keywords: Alienation of Communication, Fractal, Reality of Alienated Meanings 1. INTRODUCTION: GLOBAL TRANSFORMATION OF COMMUNICATION PROCESSES AND ALIENATION Substantial growth in the amount of communication, the complexity of their structure and their increasing influence on all social processes and relationships are obvious facts. However, despite the variety of its real manifestations social communication is a well-defined integrity. Being social and cultural system by its nature, social communication is a dynamic entity which is constantly changing immanently and has an ability to form its own “destiny”. This self-determination was called by Pitirim Sorokin “the principle sui generis which predetermines the disclosure of immanent potentialities of the system” (Sorokin, 2006, p. 815). It is important to clarify that the authors understand the system of social communication as the totality of communication inherent in the modern human society at the interpersonal, group, and societal levels. Of course, here we refer to a conscious communicative interaction, exchange of meanings and values, and not to the information and communication infrastructure. Even more important is the aspect relating to the term “social”, which is taken as the general characteristics of communication in the sense mentioned above. This is not a special case or an approach used by many authors to refer to communication in the field of social work with those in need. So, following our line of reasoning, the social communication problems arising in the course of continuous human activity are the problems of the system itself. This does not mean that we exclude from the research the impact of the environment on the system. The environment can impact the system of social communication in a variety of ways but the latter will react only due to the built-in ability to digest the impact (be it a requirement or an offer) irrespective of the type of interaction whether it is a cooperation or a conflict. In a globalising world, the communication system meets all the challenges of globalisation and becomes an interface of both globalisation and glocalisation as its antipode, only modifying the shape. Mass communication is nowadays the most broad and obvious phenomenon of social communication, which has drawn attention not only of humanities and social sciences but also of technologies, especially in the context of the information society (Carey, Adam, 2008; Curran, Fenton, Freedman, 2016; Orlova, Osipova, Sokolova, 2014). The problem is that the studies of the phenomenon of the mass media are focused on answering the question “How do the mass media and communication affect the person and society?” This question was answered by Niklas Luhmann (Luhmann, 2000). Meanwhile, more significant is the question “Why?”. We will find a lot of attempts to explain the latter by means of an answer to more specific questions: “Who?” and “What is the purpose?”. The actual problem lies in the fact that there is practically absent the more correct formulation of the question “What is going on with the whole communication system and how does this affect its functioning?”. What Luhmann has called the reality of the mass media, is currently becoming “the reality of alienated meanings” (Leshchenko, 2015), evident in the media discourse (Matheson, 2005, pp. 18-19). But not only there. Opportunities of Internet communication were first considered by users as a way to individualise their own information space. Social networks have also emerged as a vain attempt to create an alternative to an alienated media discourse. Today, social media discourse with its often anonymous nicknames, informal vocabulary, lots of empty discussions and meaningless cross fires is also becoming a variant of “the field of alienation”. There arises a number of specific communication effects: “the absence of presence”, “ignoring behavior” and others. All these are faces of “the alienation of communication” 1 . The meaning of communication is losing sense and the first place is being taken by the form. Following the paradigm of visual sociology (Sztompka, 2007) it is logical to assume that Instagram appeared as a result of the growing visualisation of the communication processes. We consider it to be the result of the growing alienation. The man is not physically able to maintain meaningful communication to the extent that he is offered today by the society. 1 It is necessary to make the terminological specification. According to Hegel’s doctrine the authors understand the concept as a process. It follows that now the concept of “the alienation of communication” proposed by the authors is in the process of clarifying and determining its content. Single and universal moments of the alienation of communication investigated by the authors are at the stage of forming definitive judgment. The concept of “the alienation of communication” is not yet complete. It exists as an idea, which is the unity of the concept and reality. The alienation of communication is estrangement from communication as understood by Marx. This is a form of being under contemporary conditions. Therefore, it is natural for the man to simplify communication, to turn it into objects and to release it into the world, where the images created by man no longer belong to him. For the selfhood it has much more significant consequences than materialised labor. Why do we pay so much attention to the phenomenon of the alienation of communication? First, communication is central to the process of association, alongside with the perception and interaction. Second, the alienation acquires a total character thanks to the rise of the “network society” (Castells, 2015) and network communication. And third, the alienation of communication becomes the dominant type of social relations. 2. THE ALIENATION OF COMMUNICATION AS AN OBJECTIVE PHENOMENON OF SOCIAL REALITY Social communication is a part of the social world, its backbone element due to which the social life is continually reproducing itself. In this sense, the concepts of “communication” and “social communication” are identical. Communication is the only way to reproduce society. Hence, social communication is a universal, objectively existing phenomenon, i.e. a social fact. The very fact which can be seen as a thing (Durkheim, 1962, pp. 51-55). And as a result of its sociality it can also be seen as a universal phenomenon of the “movement of meanings in social time and social space” (Sokolov, 2002, pp.30-32). If we turn to the understanding of the original meaning as an absolute transcendent selfhood in a philosophical interpretation suggested by Alexey Losev, the thing is the embodiment of this selfhood, but “one and the same thing requires or involves an infinite number of its various interpretations” (Losev, 2008, p. 75). Communication, taken as a thing, is a grip of an absolute meaning-sense, which in fact occurs in the form of a continuous movement of verbalised meanings. “What comes first: the specified objectified sense, original meaning, or the meaning given by consciousness in the communication process (including autocommunication)?”. This question is removed with the help of dialectics. One does not exist without another one; the thing in existence cannot be understood without its antipode. It is therefore possible to assume that there is a unity of an absolute internal meaning and an external one, demonstrated through endless interpretations. Here lies an understanding of alienation as becoming of meaning. A deeper problem is in a correspondence of the senses attributed to the objects of reality which become the objects of communication through their verbalisation (naming). The higher is the degree of correspondence of the senses to the objects the lower is their alienation potential when they later undergo multiple interpretations and eventually acquire the quality of autonomous discourse, understood as “the meaning field” of social communication. According to a well-known five elements communication scheme (sender – encoding – message – decoding – recipient) the point where twisted meaning (whether intentionally or unintentionally) occurs in the social space can primarily be misinterpretation at the stage of decoding and further reflection on the message. In objective reality any subject of communication may be both the initiator of the information movement and the recipient (often there is a transformation, sometimes instant, of the recipient into the initiator), and the interpreter, who connects to the communication process at any stage in an open and unpredictable manner. He can perform both a function of enhancing the effectiveness, adequacy of understanding of the original meaning and a function of noise or barrier. And in some cases he can perform a function of intentional twisting of the meaning at the very beginning of the message construction. Social and cultural processes such as formation of value systems, spatial-temporal processing of the meaning field, dynamics of social structure include a wide range of problems of social communication at interpersonal, group and mass communication levels. Meaning making transformation in the form of widely spread interpretations, “simulacra” (Baudrillard, 1995; Deleuze, 1990, p. 46) becomes a communicative conduct activator for subjects of communication (both the initiators-senders and primarily passive recipients), and affects the functioning and internal integration of the elements of the system of social communication which means it affects the strength of its impact on the social environment by which it is generated. The environment counteracts and in the context of information society this counteraction turns into the alienation of communication as the process, as a formed system, and in fact as the opposite to understanding. Total misunderstanding is at the very heart of uncontrolled social process from migration to terrorism. This is exactly the communication misunderstanding, not always due to insufficient knowledge or culture, but mostly due to the reluctance to understand. Meanings are a product of human consciousness, and through communication they can become consensual and universal. In the mental layer of culture they are “pressed together” into a set of a priori values, archetypes, behavioral patterns, phraseological units and so on (Kotsyubinskaya, Teplova, 2014) . They manifest themselves to individuals in the process of socialisation, as collective consciousness, objectively existing system of values and norms to be absorbed. This “meaningful matter” is alienated in the process of social relations development. As noted by Jurgen Habermas, “in the forms of communication through which we reach an understanding with one another about something in the world and about ourselves, we encounter a transcending power” (Habermas, 2003, p. 10). Does this mean that the alienation of communication is inherent in the very nature of communication? In fact, we can analyse the message (a letter, an online post, a book, a picture, etc.) as a form of thought which has been turned into an object and then alienated. And it is alienated intentionally and voluntarily. But the recipient is dependent. And in the era of globalisation, people are increasingly becoming the recipients (and your computer constantly reminds you of this through contextual advertising). So, the alienation of communication is objectively conditioned by two main factors: the nature of communication and the dependent position of subjects who are deprived of the right to initiate communication, which leads to antagonistic contradiction-unity of communication and alienation, in which the latter is growing due to the increase in global communication. 3. WAYS TO COGNISE THE ALIENATION OF COMMUNICATION 3.1. A tentative typology of the alienation of communication Discussion on the typology of the alienation of communication requires some prior clarification, first of all, with regard to the approaches to the typology construction. In one approach, the typology is based on some theoretical positions. This involves creating an ideal model of the object under consideration, which is approached as a system with certain structural levels and structure forming connections between them. In addition, generalised attributes of an object set are selected and a principle of description of this set is determined. This approach to the typology is a method of cognising which operates with an idealised type as an abstract construction. In our case this idealised type is a type of the alienation of communication. Taken as an eternal ideal essence this type precedes communication, exists in its depth and appears as its prototype. Following this line which roots back to Plato and Aristotle, the prototype of communication is the alienation of meaning, as the need in the movement of the meaning initiated by a subject: personal, social, or substantial one. By sphere of consciousness, such as that described by Mamardashvili and Piatigorsky (Mamardashvily, Piatigorskii, 2011). Any variability here is the becoming, the intermediate stage, imperfection of the meaning. Methodologically the type of the alienation of communication allows one to reconstruct the most significant characteristics of the elements of the social communication system under consideration. In this case attribution of the alienation of communication as the dominating type of communication interaction makes it in theory a representative of the entire set of these interactions. The typology of the alienation of communication is an abstract structural typology, which, above all, allows us to analyse the relationship of alienation between communication elements. This approach is not intended to be an exhaustive mapping of the system of the social communication, as a theoretical typology can contain comparative and historical, generative or other criteria, but it has, according to the authors, the most relevant potential for the study of processes of the alienation of communication. In another approach, the typology is based on an empirical position. At its core is the ascent from the concrete to the abstract through the generalisation, systematisation and data interpretation. The empirical typology of the alienation of communication makes it possible to examine the indicators, functions, and connections between elements of the social communication systems as objects of reality, to compare them, to describe and classify them typologically and by this to verify the above methodological assumption. Probably it is not for the first time that researchers ask whether it is possible to create an integral typology in general and the integral typology of the alienation of communication in particular. On the one hand, a type of the alienation of communication is a sort of a structure of communication being, it is an abstraction. On the other hand it is an empirically observable kind of communication. The approach to communication as an event leading to the coexistence, allows the authors to take as a principal criterion for the typology the nature of the “clash” of individual and social in determining the meaning of communication: the original sense and the following reading of this meaning; the intention and the degree of the twisting of the meaning due to the mismatch of social and communication needs, interests and values of the subjects of communication; the impact of this clash on the nature of social interaction. “The twisting of the meaning” can be a short name for this criterion. To put this construct into a multidimensional social space, it is necessary to determine the set of essential features of the alienation of communication that identify a particular character of social communication relations as conditioned by the type of the alienation of communication. Two phenomena that have already been studied in science can serve as illustrative examples: the “new generation gap” (Weiss, Schneider, 2014) and the Internet addiction (Varlamova, Goncharova, Sokolova, 2015). The above mentioned gap is associated by its authors with the very fact that “digital natives often neither see nor hear their elders because, from a communications standpoint, digital immigrants and digital natives are literally “not in the same room” (Weiss, Schneider, 2014). In the second case, Internet addiction is directly related to a negative transformation of social ties up to their rupture (see Appendix). Both phenomena, on closer examination, may be interdependent. It is important for us to fix them as markers of the alienation of communication which gradually becomes the primary cause of rejection and exclusion of any other. Increasing social estrangement manifests itself today at all levels of the social structure and in all spheres of reality. Among the growing trends there are divorce, alienation of parents and children, teenage suicide, involvement in virtual relationships, alienation of otherness, of “the other”, of “the unlike”, i.e., the so-called “HIV carriers” in the post-Soviet countries (Leshchenko, 2016), international conflicts, migration flows, information warfare and many other social facts. All these social and cultural processes are largely due to a variety of social estrangement, such as the alienation of communication. Consequently, all this can be considered as its markers. The features and then the types of the alienation of communication can be classified on various criteria. Here are some of them. Following the aforesaid authors’ criterion of “the twisting of the meaning” it is necessary to identify the degree of misunderstanding between the subjects of communication and its critical level, the achievement of which leads to social change. When dealing with any communicative interaction whether at an interpersonal, group or mass level, the authors find it important to pay attention to its character. What it is: an imitation, a dialogue or direction? The degree of understanding is, of course, influenced by an attempt to control communication (in the sense of its (not) adequate understanding), and therefore, the meaning and the nature of its movement. The lack of control and regulation has the same effect. The “meaninglessness of communication” is one of the types of its alienation. It may also be conditioned by imitation. “Purposeful twisting of the meaning of communication” is another type. It can be formed in the process of a dialogue, when the original focus on the achievement of mutual understanding is undergoing a transformation into a conflict. It is evident that features of both types can be observed at all levels of the social structure. The scope of this article does not allow the authors to give a detailed picture, so we define only reference points that can be markers of the alienation of communication: communication deficit – communication gap – deviant behavior – anomie – social passivity; unreliability of communication – disbelief – rejection – abruption – aggression; redundancy of communication – communication stereotyping – communication addiction – transformation of mass consciousness – transformation of values. These reference points are not always in a rigid linear sequence, a “tree” (fractal) structure is also possible. These series will be further refined through specific empirical studies. The authors argue that finally they may be reduced to two main types of the alienation of communication: the meaninglessness of communication and purposeful twisting of the meaning of communication. 3.2. The approaches to the study of the alienation of communication Global communication system generated by an absolute sociogenic need is inherently able to undergo any changes dictated by its self-sufficiency and development. The reality, with new people coming into the world time and again, reproduces this need incessantly, but the formed communication system satisfies this need in a different way. The reality of signs is replaced with the reality of alienated meanings. The emergence of this “reality” is a consequence of a pervasive, and in a sense, infinite phenomenon of the alienation of communication that has become the dominant type of social estrangement and has acquired the quality of autotelia. The world of alienated meanings is in opposition to a community of interacting people, forcing them to adapt to its own laws and dictating them its rules. This secondary world, which is in fact simulated, is rapidly gaining superiority. The trends in the transformation of the alienation mentioned by the authors address the issue of the very foundations of the human existence and are embodied into the alienation between the state and society and into the alienation between the individual and the society. The latter is a direct consequence of a failed socialisation, resocialisation, acculturation, which are deformed due to the alienation of communication. There is almost a direct indication of the relationship of alienation and social communication in the dichotomy of “anti and pro-social communication” (Kinney, Porhola, 2009). It is obvious, that the study of the phenomenon of the alienation of communication requires a multidisciplinary approach. The inseparability of the essence and existence of the alienation of communication requires, first and foremost, a harmonious connection of philosophical and sociological foundation in a scientific comprehension of its subject field. In a search of a compromise or grounds for integration likely paradigmatic areas for this might be: the philosophy of communication, social philosophy; theoretical or historical sociology. George Gurvich insisted that philosophy and sociology should not be confused, as it leads to the dissolution of them in each other. According to him these subjects are in relationships of dialectical complementarity and implication, and only dialectics allows for a systematic approach to studying “total social phenomena” (Gurvich, 2001, pp. 288-289). After George Gurvich and Alexander Zinoviev (Zinoviev, 2002; 2006) the authors support this position on the heuristic capacity of dialectics in cognition of the alienation of communication. Further deployment of the multidisciplinary subject field of research into the alienation of communication includes the following aspects of the phenomenon: a) origin, essence and manifestations forms of the alienation in the social communication system; b) regularities of formation and development of this synthetic phenomenon, its impact on the social structure, the individual and public consciousness; c) updating, clarifying, designing general and special categories and concepts in the process of reflection on this phenomenon; d) features of structuring and functioning of an alienated communication environment as an actual and virtual reality; e) humanitarian expertise and social forecasting. A possible explanatory model of this subject field can be “a fractal of the alienation of communication”. Its topological qualities are a twisted meaning and a modified character of the movement of meanings. In the information society these qualities are easily reproduced in all branches of the self-similar figure, because the traditional media and new media contribute to multiple reproduction of twisted meanings. Structuring communication chaos a fractal of the alienation of communication seems a protective mechanism of alienation, and its concrete manifestation. And at the same time it is a mechanism for systematic changes of social communication. The fractal of the alienation of communication is a special case of the fractal of communication, the basis of which is the meaning making. It is the fractal of communication that allows for tracing the movements of unit of meaning from the consciousness of the individual through the totality of social relations to public consciousness, and finding out how the system of social communication works. Through the fractal approach any problem in this area is classified as characteristic, aspect, intermediate or final result of the functioning of this self-reproducing system. 4. CONSLUSION Taking into account the substantial negative impact of the alienation of communication on the social structure of the information society, the authors believe the research into formation processes of alienated meanings to be an important preventive measure for a well-timed reduction of large-scale social problems, such as the destruction of public, national or cultural identity, uncontrolled migration, social aggression. This will help avoid the devastating effects and make the social changes which are inevitable in the era of globalisation less disruptive. 5. BIBLIOGRAPHY 1. Anti and Pro-Social Communication: Theories, Methods, and Applications. T. A. Kinney, M. Porhola. (2009). New York: Peter Lang Publishing Inc. 2. Baudrillard, J. (1995). Simulacra and Simulation. The Body, In Theory: Histories of Cultural Materialism (First Edition). MI: University of Michigan Press. 3. Carey, J. W., Adam, G. S. (Foreword). (2008). Communication as Culture, Revised Edition: Essays on Media and Society (Second Edition). New York: Routledge. 4. Castells, M. (2015). Networks of Outrage and Hope: Social Movements in the Internet Age (Second Edition). Cambridge: Polity. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. Curran, J., Fenton, N., Freedman, D. (2016). Misunderstanding the Internet: Communication and Society (Second Edition). New York: Routledge. Deleuze, G. (1990). The Logic of Sense (Revised ed. Edition). New York: Columbia University Press. Durkheim, E. (1962). The Rules of Sociological Method. New York: The Free Press of Glencoe. Gurvich, G. D. (2001). Dialectics and Sociology. Krasnodar: Kuban State University. Habermas, J. (2003). The Future of Human Nature (First Edition). Cambridge: Polity. Kotsyubinskaya, L., Teplova, L. (2014). The Cognitive Structure of the Language Unit (Based on Studies of English Phraseological Units). Bulletin of the Pushkin Leningrad State University. Series Philology, Issue 7, № 1, pp. 38–47. St. Petersburg: Pushkin Leningrad State University. Leshchenko, T. (2016). Fluctuations of Alienation in Media Representations of the Concept of “Health”. Health of the Russian Society in the XXI Century: the Sociological, Psychological and Medical Aspects. Book of Proceedings of X Sorokin Reading, pp. 15-17. Moscow: Lomonosov State University. Retrieved 12.04.2016 from http://www.socio.msu.ru/documents/science/Sorokinskie_sbornik_% _2016.pdf. Leshchenko, T. (2015). The Philosophy and Sociology of the Alienation of Communication. Education and Society Journal, 5 (94), pp. 117–119. Orel: The Academy of Pedagogical and Social Sciences. Losev, A. (2008). The Thing and the Name. The Quintessence. Moscow: Abyshko’s Publishing House. Luhmann, N. (2000). The Reality of the Mass Media: Cultural Memory in the Present. Cambridge: Stanford University Press. Mamardashvily, M., Piatigorskii, A. (2011). Symbol and Consciousness. Moscow: Azbuka: Azbuka-Atticus. Marx, K. (2010). Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844 and other early philosophical works. Moscow: Academic project. Matheson, D. (2005). Media Discourses: Analysing Media Texts (First Edition). England: Open University Press; New York: Two Penn Plaza. Orlova, I., Osipova, E., Sokolova I. (2014). The Sociology of Mass Communication. Moscow: Academy. Sokolov, A. (2002). The General Theory of Social Communication. St. Petersburg: Mikhailov’s Publishing House. Sorokin, P. (2006). Social and Cultural Dynamics. Moscow: Astrel. Sztompka, P. (2007). Visual Sociology: Photography as a Research Method. Moscow: Logos. Varlamova, S., Goncharova, E., Sokolova, I. (2015). Internet Addiction of Youth in Megacities: Criteria and Typology. The Monitoring of Public Opinion: Economic and Social Changes Journal, 2 (125), pp. 165-182. Moscow: Russian Public Opinion Research Centre (VCIOM). Weiss, R., Schneider, J. P. (2014). Closer Together, Further Apart: The Effect of Technology and the Internet on Parenting, Work, and Relationships. Arizona: Gentle Path Press. Retrieved 25.05.2016 from http://www.gentlepath.com Zinoviev, A. (2006). The Factor of Comprehension. Moscow: Algorithm: Eksmo. Zinoviev, A. (2002). The Logical Sociology. Moscow: Socium. APPENDIX 0.6 0.1 0.4 2.7 96.2 No Internet addiction Low Internet addiction Heavy Internet addiction Total Internet addiction Medium Internet addiction Figure 3. The Breakdown of Different Types of Internet Addiction Among Youth in the Megacities Worldwide (% of total respondents) (Varlamova, Goncharova, Sokolova, 2015) Total Internet addiction 16.7 83.3 Heavy Internet addiction Medium Internet addiction Low Internet addiction 81.3 18 20 9.3 6.3 23.3 15.6 20 No Internet addiction 12.5 33.7 60 100 Considerably fewer friends in real life Slightly fewer friends in real life About the same number of friends on the Internet and in real life Slightly more friends in real life Considerably more friends in real life Figure 5. The Correlation of the Number of Friends in Real Life and on the Internet Among Youth in Megacities (% of respondents in each group) (Ibid)