Arts & International Affairs: Vol. 3, No. 2, Summer/Autumn 2018 | Page 32

CRITICAL REFLECTIONS ON MUSIC AND HUMANITARIAN NARRATIVES that would be hypothetically freed from the weight of “ideologies,” while taking the place of the welfare state. Political projects of collective emancipation and social justice were replaced by ironic objectives of individual salvation and personal benefit. In 1985, Valérie Lagrange asserted on French public TV: “if out of 10 million people, 50,000 are saved, if I was one of those 50,000, I would be very happy to be one of them.” 8 In this dystopian worldview, politics is reduced to the number of people buying and listening to a song, as Geldof repeated without embarrassment: “if you have everybody in Germany listening to this song, thinking about it, everybody in the UK, and everybody in France, you got a lot of people, and that’s political”. Figure 3. Reflections on Music and Propaganda. Städtische Galerie im Lenbachhaus und Kunstbau München. Photo: Simone Gaensheimer Humanitarian musical “dispositifs” maintain the illusion that citizens can “do” something to change the world through the simulacrum of dominant media sources: donors become consumers of the poverty of others, transformed into benevolent bearers of charity through the consumerist exploitation of moralistic and consensual musical works. What kind of alternative to these narratives can we suggest? Among others, re-politicising humanitarian action and social struggles wherever they take place, focusing on a multidimensional concept of social justice which encompasses at least economic redistribution, cultural recognition, and political representation (Fraser 2008:404). Additionally, supporting and listening to political actors, musicians, and artists from countries historically concerned by humanitarian action: polemical voices which consider vulnerable others as excluded subjects of a political community, where “the excluded is a conflictual actor, an actor who includes himself as a supplementary political subject, carrying a right 8 Valérie Lagrange on French TV Antenne 2 news, July 15, 1985 (http://www.ina.fr/video/ CAB86011680). 29