WITH
REFERENCE TO THE POLITICAL SITUATION IN ZIMBABWE EXAMINE THE UTILITY OF
HABERMAS’ NOTIONS OF COLONIZATION OF LIFE-WORLD AND COMMUNICATIVE ACTION.
Habermas’ notions of communicative action and the
colonization of the life-world have proved to be important concepts in the
understanding of political domination and people’s dedicated attempt for
emancipation in the modern world. Habermas’ communicative action is basically a
situation where (in his own words) “the actions of the agents involved are
coordinated not through egocentric calculations of success but through acts of
reaching understanding”. In
communicative action participants are “not primarily oriented to their own
success, they pursue their individual goals under the condition that they can harmonize
their plans of action on the basis of common situation definitions” (Habermas,
1988). The colonization of the life-world involves (in Habermas’ terminology)
the encroachment of ‘systems’ into the domain of "more or less diffuse,
always unproblematic, background convictions" (Habermas 1988, p. 70) that
guide us in communicative action? Patsy Healey refers to "the life-world
of personal existence; the daily, weekly and yearly going about and getting on
in the life of personal experience" (Habermas, 1997)
.
The idea is more or less the same with Weber’s critique of the dominance of instrumental
rationality in modern society. This paper commences with a critique of
Habermas’ notions of life-world and the theory of communicative action followed
by attempts to contextualize the concepts in Zimbabwe’s political terrain.
Since there is no clear distinction between the ruling party and the state (at
least before the unity government), the terms ‘ZANU PF’ and the ‘state’ are
used interchangeably in this paper.
Habermas’ notions of public sphere and communicative action have
been subject to various criticisms based on several inherent flaws in its
foundations. The first point of contention according to Keller (1979) is that
he does not discuss the normative character of communication media in democracy
or suggest how a progressive media politics could evolve. Part of the problem ,
he says, is that Habermas' notion of the public sphere was grounded
historically in the era of print media which, as McLuhan and Gouldner (1979)
have argued, fostered modes of argumentation characterized by linear
rationality, objectivity, and consensus. (Keller, 1997) Since
writing is his medium of choice and print media is his privileged site of
intervention, its plausible that Habermas downplays broadcasting and other
communication media, the Internet and new spheres of public debate, and various
alternative public spheres in part because according to Keller he does not
participate in these media and arenas himself and partly because, as I am
suggesting, the categorical distinctions in his theory denigrate these domains
in contrast to the realms of communicative action and the life-world. But these
blind spots and conceptual limitations truncate Habermas' discussions of
democracy and undermine his obvious intention of fostering democratization
himself. The second contention is that Habermas theory is informed by classical
bourgeois public sphere which excluded the voices of the poor masses hence his
concepts are still flawed towards middle class public sphere and communicative
action. The voices of women, minority groups and the poor masses are not given
adequeate theoretical grounding.
In Zimbabwe ZANU PF has been on record interfering with
communicative action through in Habermas terminology the colonization of the
life-world. One of the major areas in which ZANU PF has manipulated to that
effect is the media. For Habermas, the function of the media have thus been
transformed from facilitating rational discourse and debate within the public
sphere into shaping, constructing, and limiting public discourse to those
themes validated and approved by media corporations. Hence, the interconnection
between a sphere of public debate and individual participation has been
fractured and transmuted into that of a realm of political information and
spectacle, in which citizen-consumers ingest and absorb passively entertainment
and information. "Citizens" thus become spectators of media
presentations and discourse which mold public opinion, reducing consumer/citizens
to objects of news, information, and public affairs. In Habermas' words:
"Inasmuch as the mass media today strip away the literary husks from the
kind of bourgeois self-interpretation and utilize them as marketable forms for
the public services provided in a culture of consumers, the original meaning is
reversed (Habermas, 1989a: 171). The state in Zimbabwe has dominated public
media by monopolizing state run media such as ZBC TV, The Herald and all radio
stations while at the same time upsetting the operations of independent media. This has been achieved through various means
including legislation and implicit acts of violence such as the bombing of the
Daily News offices as well as continuous arrest, intimidations and persecution
of journalists. At the base of all this is an attempt to paralyze the public
sphere and the colonization of the life-world. The only voice that is permitted
officially is the voice of ZANU PF while all contenting voices are suppressed. The
enactment of AIPA was a benchmark in ZANU PF attempts to control the life-world.
It gave the state the power to ‘legally’ silence divergent voices through
conspicuous privacy protection clauses and the necessity for accreditation for
all foreign journalists. Massive propaganda was also used to continuously
bombard the public with ZANU PF pronunciamento and views so as to shape public
perception and opinion. Thus as Habermas
would expect ZANU PF used the media as agents of manipulation and social
control through the media's power to directly and consistently manipulate the
public.
As already noted one of the means through which ZANU PF used
to colonize the life-world is through the manipulation of the legal system
through the enactment of repressive laws and making sure the interpretation of
the law generally achieve its partisan objectives. AIPA was meant to curb the
emancipator wings of the media while POSA was meant to directly reduce the
public’s potential for meaningful organizations through public participation
and collective action the very basis of the theory of communicative action. This
action by ZANU PF can also be understood within the context of Habermas notion
of Legitimation crises which according to Ritzer (2006) is the systems of ideas
generated by the political system, and theoretically any other system to
support the existence of that system. They are designed to mystify the
political system to make unclear exactly what is happening and it seems ZANU PF
did this pretty well by creating an ideology based on British and American and
western enemies legitimating its attack on local divergent voices as puppets of
the west hence political dissidents.
Also within the realm of the law is the contentious issue of
constitution making which has played a central role in Zimbabwean politics. Habermas
provides a theoretical basis for a view of law making that emphasizes
widespread public participation, sharing of information wit the public,
reaching consensus through public dialogue rather than exercise of power,
avoiding privileging of experts and bureaucrats, and replacing the model of the
technical expert with one of the reflective consultant (Argyris and Schön 1974).
In this view, the legitimacy of democracy depends not only on constitutional
processes of enacting laws, but also on "the discursive quality of the
full processes of deliberation leading up to such a result," as Stephen
White (1995, p.12) puts it. John Dryzek notes that Habermas prompts the policy
analyst to work on conditions of political interaction and design of
institutions rather than merely the content of policy proposals, and
Habermasian ideal institutions rule out “authority based on anything other than
a good argument” (1995, pp. 108-110). This Habermas terms juridification as
opposed to jurisdiction. In this view, the legitimacy of democracy depends not
only on constitutional processes of enacting laws, but also on "the
discursive quality of the full processes of deliberation leading up to such a
result". This is an area of current serious debate in Zimbabwe since so
much has been said about the lack of popular participation in the constitution
making process which has been trusted in the hands of bureaucrats in the name
of parliamentarians and a couple of civic society members. This Habermas
correctly sees as a compromise of pure communicative action.
The state in Zimbabwe has also sought to control the public
sphere and communicative action as well as effect the colonization of the life-world
through what can be seen as a reign of terror. This involves the use of secret
intelligence to spy on people, the use of the military and police to disable
all forms of popular discourse formation and organization as well as violence
against political opponents and other divergent voices. We can also include in
this category election fraud as the highest form of efforts to derail
communicative action. Habermas sees public political participation in the form
of voting as one of the most and often plausible forms of communicative action
(one of the few that doesn’t use language) but even in this area ZANU PF has
tried to interfere through violent electioneering and rigging. People’s choices
are literally eroded and what is left is the will of the powerful being imposed
on the masses. The educational system has also seen several changes meant to
indoctrinate young people towards accepting the efficacy and legitimacy of ZANU
PF as the rulers of Zimbabwe. State run National Service institutions were
created and became places of intensive indoctrination with ZANU PF chimurenga
ideology and for some time these were made mandatory for anyone wishing to join
the civil service.
It is important at this juncture to note that Habermas
theory of communicative action has strong elements and opportunities for the
redefinition of the public sphere and emancipation. One can say with Keller
that there are better opportunities for a more participatory communicative
action now than ever before through the internet and satellite television and
radio systems which are not all under the control of the state and large
corporates. Habermas does not see people as passive recipients of state
propaganda and repressive acts but he sees the potential for spheres of
political contestations. This view is very apparent in Zimbabwe where as a sign
of defiance most people have resorted to satellite television so as to gain a contrasting
view of political and social reality to that of state propaganda in local state
media.
There has also been an emergence of numerous internet forums
and discussions about the Zimbabwean political situation such as Kubatana.org
while even social networks such as Facebook have become sites of political discourse.
Online news agents have been working hard to portray the true picture of the
Zimbabwean situation without state interference while other projects such as
Kubatana and SWA Radio went as far as creating a sms platform where subscribers
will receive constant updates on state repressive actions on the mobile phones
for free. Private radio stations such as Studio 7 have also provided a platform
for divergent views and voices to reach the common people hence acting as a
counter to state propaganda. Millions of people decided to leave the country as
asylum seekers in neibouring countries and abroad where they organize
themselves and engage in debates and contestation about political events in
Zimbabwe. Some people have also shown their disapproval to the current
political establishment through none participation in voting while it seems the
final nail in this sort of communicative action was delivered by voting for the
MDC in the last election.
Thus communicative action and the colonization of
life-worlds if taken beyond their its limited conceptualization by Habermas can
provide a plausible reference point for the analysis if democracy and popular
political participation especially in Zimbabwe. As noted in this paper the
state has instituted several attempts to colonise the life-worlds of the people
through repressive laws, media control and propaganda, reign of terror and
other means while the public reenacted the public sphere and communicative
action through internet public discussions, satellite television and other
channels. Thus despite its flaws Habermas concepts have good utility in the
understanding of Zimbabwean politics.
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