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@gueardianreflection-blog
In societies where modern conditions of production prevail, all life presents as an immense accumulation of spectacles. Everything that was directly lived has moved away into a representation."
Guy Debord was a self-proclaimed leader of the Situationist International, Guy Debord was certainly responsible for the longevity and high profile of Situationist ideas.
A spectacle is something impressive presented for view. Usually thought of in terms of a "show" or a lavish display. Debord used the term to suggest that modern society is dominated by the inauthentic display or representation of life experiences as opposed to authentic social relationships. The most obvious example of this is the power of the media and the commodification of things such as news. CNN, for example, is successful because it is able to play into people's fascination with the spectacle, rather than the actual.
The Society of the Spectacle maps out some aspects of the 21st century directly: not least, so-called celebrity culture and its portrayal of lives whose freedom and dazzle suggest almost the opposite of life as most of us actually live it. Try this: "As specialists of apparent life, stars serve as superficial objects that people can identify with in order to compensate for the fragmented productive specialisations that they actually live." The book's take on the driving-out of meaning from politics is also pretty much beyond question, as are its warnings about "purely spectacular rebellion" and the fact that at some unspecified point in the recent(ish) past, "dissatisfaction itself became a commodity" (so throw away that Che Guevara T-shirt, and quick).
But there are also very modern phenomena that fit its view of the world: when Debord writes about how "behind the masks of total choice, different forms of the same alienation confront each other", I now think of social media, and the white noise of most online life.
Guy Debord predicted our distracted society The Society of the Spectacle offered in 1967 an eerily accurate portrait of our image-saturated, mediated times by John Harris