Popular Culture Review Vol. 19, No. 2, Summer 2008 | Page 43

The (Not So) Good Old Days 39 STRUCTURAL INEQUALITY: LIBERAL DISCOURSE In discussions of both racism and lesbian and gay issues, the liberalism inherent in the structure of the old style, while allowing for relatively civil dialogue, appeared to impede counter-normative understandings of related forms of inequality. Liberalism focuses on the individual and, correspondingly, tends to define oppression not as the struggle of one class to dominate another, but the struggle of individuals to achieve privacy, independence, and understanding. It is rooted in the belief that all individuals are essentially the same at the core, and that this core is rational and well meaning. Therefore oppression would be the result of perceiving others to be inherently different, and could be undone by education and dialogue. The focus on individuals rather than classes means inequality becomes naturalized, and only the most overt instances of oppression are recognized. Struggle against inequality is represented as an individual endeavor, through the modification of individual lives, not the social environment that produced them. Liberalism’s strengths are its emphasis on equality for individuals, on the right to live freely, and on rational debate rather than violence as a way of resolving conflict. Liberalism goes much farther than many political and cultural systems in protecting civil rights, yet it doesn’t go far enough in ensuring current freedoms, and often impedes the possibility of creating greater freedom in the future by misdiagnosing the causes of inequality. Liberal accounts of inequality dominate the TV talk show world. Because liberalism minimizes the role social structures play in inequality, the tolerance it requires is one that cannot explain competing positions, other than to say, isn’t it wonderful that we all can agree to disagree? Donal Carbaugh argues that the discourse of old-style shows like Donahue draws on a particular rhetorical pattern that assumes everyone has a right to speak, as long as their speech is individualized, referring only to their own experience, without offering an opinion on anyone else’s (30). While the talk show may appear at first to be an open forum, Carbaugh sees its dialogue as being fairly restricted. This is because the worldview which the talk show endorses is one which fails to distinguish “nonjudgmental and tolerant” speech from “respectful” speech, which asserts respect for persons and their right to speak, then criticizes their opinions. The liberal version of tolerance implies that one should respect all opinions, as a way of respecting the people who voice them, with the result that “substantive issues therefore were not resolved, but avoided” (38). Differences of opinion are viewed as being inherently irreconcilable, because no mechanism is recognized with which differences could be evaluated. What begins, then, as a very public demonstration of the public’s right to openly debate important social issues, ends up being an empty ritual, an anti-conversation, where points of view can be articulated but don’t quite interact. The liberal norms of public speech on old-style shows like Donahue also require that speech be individualized. The basis for the right to speak is individual experience, rather than experience as a member of a class or cultural group, or one’s beliefs about groups or social structures. Any kind of theorizing