We feature each week Nicholas Reid's reviews and comments on new and recent books
“THE LUCKY CULTURE-
and The Rise of an Australian Ruling Class” by Nick Cater (Harper Collins,
$NZ34:99)
I have to
begin my review of Nick Cater’s The Lucky
Culture with a statement that might immediately alienate a number of
readers. English-born Nick Cater is a well-known Australian journalist and
commentator, whose main homes have been the Sydney Daily Telegraph and the Murdoch-owned The Australian, of which he is currently senior editor.
Middle-class readers of the Sydney
Morning Herald shun these publications in the same way that middle-class
readers of the Guardian in England
shun the Daily Mail. They are
regarded as vulgar, populist and right-wing. Therefore there might be at least
some readers of this blog who, sight-unseen, will already have made their mind
up about Cater and his book. No worthwhile insights can possibly come from a
man who works for such publications.
But, even if I disagree with some
of his analysis, I’m prepared to give Cater a commodity which he often
celebrates as one of the great Australian (and New Zealand) virtues – a “fair
go”.
The Lucky Culture has a title which consciously echoes Donald
Horne’s famous 50-year-old polemic about Australia, The Lucky Country. Cater begins by telling how, when he first
stepped on Australian soil as a young man arriving from class-ridden England,
he rejoiced to find a genuinely egalitarian society. There may have been wealth
and poverty in Australia, but there was a strong sense of classlessness, of
opportunity for all, and of contempt for people who gave themselves airs.
But it is Cater’s contention that
this egalitarianism has been whittled away over the last half-century, and the
book is an attempt to explain why. Cater’s basic contention is that university
graduates (in Academe, in the media, as pressure-groups in political parties
etc.) now constitute a commentariat or chattering class with values quite
different from those of the mass of Australians. While these values pose as
humanitarian, they are fundamentally a form of snobbery. So, in Cater’s
reading, Australia is now divided into little Aussie battlers on the one hand;
and on the other middle-class types, who sneer down upon the battlers from the
better suburbs, while claiming to have impeccably moral credentials.
As he notes, when Horne wrote The Lucky Country in the early 1960s,
relatively few Australians had tertiary education. But
“today…. higher education is becoming ubiquitous. In 1939, only fifteen
out of every 1000 school-leavers progressed to university; now the figure is
closer to 250, and the Labor party would increase that to 400 if it could. It
is time to take stock…. Quietly, and with little recognition, the higher
education revolution has changed Australian culture, for better or for worse. A
cohort of tertiary-educated middle-class professionals think, act and live
differently from their forebears and their contemporaries who have not been
exposed to higher learning. Why shouldn’t they? This, after all, is what they were
promised. They were assured that they would emerge as people with knowledge and
distinction, with clearer, educated minds better equipped to deal with the
challenges of a complex world. The graduate class has become a new class,
insulated and isolated from the world of the educationally deprived. They are
inclined to live in different suburbs, shop and socialise in different places,
listen to different radio stations, read different newspapers and websites, and
adopt a different set of manners from the class we might call middle Australia.”
(pp.24-25). Thus “for the first time in
Australian history, snobbery has been legitimised, bringing with it the
institutionalisation of contempt and the disparagement of difference. The new
class elevates its own status by devaluing that of others.” (p.28)
For two chapters (2 and 3), Cater
discusses those values which he believes made Australia great – scientific and
technological ingenuity, generating both wealth and equality. There was a great
faith in scientific achievement which (his subtext implies) is disparaged by
current Australian historians. He sees the growing Green movement as at least
in part an irrational fear of technology, and he narrates their successful
opposition to new hydro-electric dams in Tasmania as the first victory of an
elite conservationism against the common good. After all, he says, because of
Green influence and opposition, there has been no growth in stored-water
capacity for Australian cities in the last thirty years, despite the growth in
population. All this he links to recent droughts and water-rationing in
Queensland. Over-zealous conservationists have thought sentimentally about the
wilderness, while ignoring the real needs of the population.
After taking a swipe (Chapter 4)
at the growth in the teaching of impractical and theoretical subjects at new
Australian universities, with their anti-technology bias, Cater moves on
(Chapter 5) to pungent comment on the moralistic nature of new political
movements and their tendency to excoriate the habits, manners and values of the
non-tertiary-educated lower orders. “New
political movements are as intolerant as the old” he says (p.94), and notes
that while ‘progressivists’ are likely to be atheist or agnostic, they close
together on the same unexamined assumptions, as if clinging to a religious
faith, on matters such as history, anthropology and the environment.
“Paradoxically, almost all progressive thinkers would imagine themselves
as liberal and open-minded, tolerant of diversity and receptive to rational
debate. The lack of self-awareness among the enforcers of correctness can be
startling; the truths they set out to protect seem self-evident to them and
they are dumbfounded that they should be challenged. The allure of
righteousness, however, is a powerful force. They would be unlikely to consider
themselves puritans, yet in their disdain for other people’s values and their
presumption of a greater purity, they display pious disregard for the choices
of their fellow citizens. They become vigilantes against vulgarity, policing
public morality with the zeal of the late nineteenth century wowsers intent on
turning Australia into a mirthless and monotonous place.” (p.113)
It is then the turn (Chapter 6)
of Australian intellectuals’ well-established habit of looking down on
suburbanites, beginning in the 1960s with Robin Boyd whingeing about dull
suburban architecture; or Allan Ashbolt complaining that Australians were
unadventurous in their politics; or the young North Shore grammar-school boy Barry
Humphries inventing his original version of Edna Everidge (before she became a
fantasy figure detached from any recognizable reality) as a smirk at the
pretensions to gentility of the lower orders.
“Do-gooders assume the mantle of dragonslayers, putting oppressors to
the sword to liberate their victims. Yet the obsession with suburban
architecture and lifestyles suggests an altogether more ignoble instinct: a
search for markers of taste and refinement to buttress the middle-class right
to rule. In short, while the causes of aesthetic beauty and environmentalism
serve as cloaks of righteousness, much of the suburban sneer comes closer to
old-fashioned class snobbery: criticism which starts with inanimate objects
then passes seamlessly to criticisms of the animated masses and their inappropriate
lifestyle.” (p.127)
For three chapters (7,8 and 9)
Cater turns to the political scene, focusing mainly on the recent history of
the Australian Labor Party (ALP). As he correctly notes, up to the 1960s and
especially under the long-term leadership of Arthur Calwell, the ALP was
virulently anti-intellectual and genuinely representative of Australian
workers. But since the accession of Gough Whitlam as leader, the ALP has
increasingly been under the control of middle-class university graduates whose
outlook is quite distinct from that of its original constituency.
“The challenge of finding an acceptable place for the intellectuals in
the socialist movement is not peculiar to Australia, although the relatively
late attachment of intellectuals to the ALP, as a bolt-on upgrade as opposed to
a factory fit, ensured that the relationship would be particularly uneasy. Karl
Marx had wrestled with the paradox of a proletarian party led by an
intellectual elite: you could take the intellectual out of the bourgeoisie, but
you could never remove the bourgeois from the intellectual.” (p.141)
As Cater tells it, the result of
this new leadership has meant that many of Labor’s traditional supporters have
tramped over to the (conservative) Liberal Party. And, on many core values
(such as the establishment of a republic) ALP leadership is often nonplussed to
find that it does not have the support of the very people it once deemed
indispensible.
You can tell what Cater is going
to say about the media (Chapter 10) when he introduces his remarks thus:
“The media class and the political class were cut from the same cloth:
people more interested in ideas than things, who were fascinated with the
abstract rather than the concrete. They were graduates who had chosen to work
in the creative sector, as distinct from the wealth-creating sector.”
(p.198)
In a chapter on universities
(Chapter 11) Cater argues that the expansion of Australia’s university network
(there are now 32 registered universities in Australia) has led to a
pressure-cooker system which has downgraded teaching professionalism, led to a
debasement in the quality of degrees, encouraged the introduction of nonsense
courses and subjects, and made education a ticket to the middle classes rather
the introduction to professions that serve the community.
Only in the last chapter does
Cater tentatively address the changed ethnic nature of Australia in the last
half-century. Correctly he notes that the old (pre-Gough Whitlam) ALP was once
the most ardent supporter of the defunct White Australia Policy, seeing it as a
means of protecting jobs from cheap imported (Asian) labour.
“The stated aim of the [White Australia Policy] was to maintain ‘a predominantly homogenous population’, and it had
succeeded; of the 10.5 million people in Australia in 1961, 99.6 per cent were
of European descent, and under the nationality rules that prevailed, 95 per
cent were considered British subjects. If the entire non-indigenous,
non-European population of Australia – men, women and children – had assembled
in the Sidney Cricket Ground, there would have been empty seats.” (p.250)
Now, as Cater tells it, the
opening of Australia’s borders to non-European immigrants has led to a
flourishing Human Rights industry; the perception (buttressed by disputes over
asylum-seekers) that Australia is a “soft touch” for illegal immigrants; and
the tendency of the chattering classes to appeal to “international opinion”,
over and above the laws of the sovereign state. when determining policy about
state security and the policing of borders. All these things Cater deplores.
Cater closes by quoting a
nineteenth century document, in which an English immigrant rejoiced at the
opportunities Australia offered for self-improvement, untrammelled by the type
of petty regulation which Cater sees as now flourishing in Australia.
I think in giving this summary of
The Lucky Culture I have given Nick
Cater his “fair go” with the minimum of commentary on my own part.
I can say the obvious at once.
This is a polemic, not a scholarly sociological study. It does have end-notes
and references, authenticating the quotations Cater deploys, and it is written
with considerable style by somebody who knows Australia well. But its main
purpose is the expression of a point of view, in which purpose it is no better
nor worse than polemics that have come from all quarters of the political
compass. (In this respect, I would immediately compare it with the equally
opinionated, but left-wing, polemics of New Zealander Chris Trotter’s No Left Turn). This being the case,
readers will warm to The Lucky Culture
only to the extent that they already agree with the positions Cater adopts. My
summary should allow you to judge whether you see it as common sense or as
intemperate rant.
It’s easy
for me to say where I think Cater goes wrong.
I believe he underestimates the
existence of identifiable class barriers in Australia in the days he chooses to
recall as blissfully egalitarian. Yes, there was a cheerful culture of Aussie
larrikinism up to the 1960s, but there was already a huge distance in culture
and outlook between, say, the Sydney factory worker and both the professional
classes and the heirs of the squattocracy. Australia already had bitter and
sometimes strongly-contested tribal dividing lines (ALP – Liberal/Country
Party; Catholic-Protestant; Laborite-Commo; ALP – DLP etc.). Cater may have a
point in noting that governments and opinion-makers now are more distant from,
and less responsive to, the opinions of the majority. But this doesn’t entirely
justify the golden nostalgic glow he gives to the past. Perhaps he also fails
to acknowledge that new forms of production mean much of the old industrial
base is not there anymore. What he sees as the emergence of a new ruling elite
could have as much to do with IT as with university degrees.
More
obviously (and as Cater himself is aware), the past he laments was determinedly
mono-cultural. Only in the last chapter does Cater even address the issue of
race and ethnicity. Cater is quick to remind us that it was the old Liberal
government of Robert Menzies – and not the ALP – that began the process of
making tertiary education more readily available. He fails to note that it was
also the 1950s Liberal government which began the process of making Australia
less British. It was in the 1950s that considerable numbers of Italians, Greeks
and Germans immigrated. One also notes how speedily Cater jumps over matters
concerning Aborigines, preferring to tell us about the abuses of the Human
Rights process rather than about the abuses that process was intended to amend.
On one specific point, I would
also say Cater is dead wrong. Notoriously, an Australian referendum on
establishing a republic and abolishing the monarchy failed to get a majority
for a republic. Cater takes this as evidence that real Aussie working people
love the Queen and reject the republicanism that fancy-pants intellectuals were
trying to sell. This is nonsense. Notoriously, the referendum was conducted under
the Liberal government of John Howard, which presented voters with a model of a
republic (a president chosen by parliament, rather than popularly elected) which
few people – even republicans – wanted.
Yet, having
said all this, I still find myself sympathising with some of Cater’s positions.
Like him, I do indeed detect a culture – in New Zealand as much as in Australia
– of middle-class liberalism, which purports to support humanitarian causes but
which is often coded sneering at the middle-class liberals’ social inferiors.
(I detect it strongly in the work of at least one New Zealand novelist). In New
Zealand as in Australia, there is the phenomenon of liberal intellectuals not
asking themselves honestly how wealth is generated in a society; and how
humanitarian and conservationist and social-engineering schemes can be paid for
without a flourishing productive base. Hand in hand with this, there is
denigration of honest work, trades and skills – which has led to the phenomenon
of kids wanting to do (perfectly useless) degrees in liberal arts instead of
taking apprenticeships. I am painfully familiar, as Cater is, with
social-engineers’ overuse of the words “inappropriate” and “unacceptable” to
skew arguments on any social or moral issue. Much of Cater’s analysis of the
current intellectual bases of the ALP rings as true of New Zealand as of
Australia, as do his comments on ALP in-fighting. (Wasn’t it a West Coast
Labour MP who accused New Zealand’s Labour Party leadership of having been
taken over by “a gaggle of gays” who no longer represented the party’s
traditional base?). With sorrow rather than anger, I would also endorse many of
his comments on the nature of tertiary education as now offered. To put it as
simply as possible, a Bachelors or Masters degree earned in a New Zealand (or
Australian) university in 2013 simply isn’t worth as much, in terms of real
academic achievement, as a Bachelors or Masters degree earned in the 1960s and
1970s and earlier.
More than
anything, though, I sympathised with Cater’s criticisms of Aussie
intellectuals’ habit of beating themselves up over the short-comings of their
own country, without seriously considering the actually-existing alternatives
available elsewhere. In New Zealand, the template for this would still be poor
old Bill Pearson’s over-praised, and essentially somewhat hysterical, essay
“Fretful Sleepers”. Despite its scoring some palpable hits, “Fretful Sleepers”
strikes me as belonging to this genre – a hasty over-reaction to the mood of
New Zealand at the time of Sid Holland’s rough handling of the 1951 waterfront
dispute, which ends up as a great piece of self-flagellation, accusing New
Zealanders of being crypto-fascists. And how the readers of Landfall loved it! After all, here was
the ideal opportunity to look down on those uncouth, rugby-playing,
tea-drinking, monarchy-loving, Woman’s
Weekly-reading, commercial-radio-station-listening, non-university-educated
masses who had never heard of Stravinsky or James Joyce. Here, gentle reader,
was a chance for us to look
down on them. Cater detects
the same mood in current post-modernist Australian museum displays which
ridicule suburban implements (rotary-hoist clotheslines etc.) while exalting
the grand achievements of the Aborigines.
I think he
has a point. Ostensible social critique becomes real social snobbery.
But then he
is writing a polemic and we don’t have to believe everything he says.
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