Roberge Mediation 1983
Roberge Mediation 1983
Roberge Mediation 1983
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India International Centre Quarterly
Mediation
Gaston Roberge
A
**FTER seeing Richard Attenborough's film Gandhi, spectators who
were unfamiliar with either India or Gandhi, were prompted to ask:
"Is the film true? Did things really happen that way?" These spec
tators knew, of course, that the Gandhi-film is not Gandhi, that a
movie purporting to describe a given reality is only a medium, thanks
to which that reality can be grasped to an extent. The medium is not
the thing, it is between the thing and the spectator. The medium
mediates, that is clear. What is perhaps not so obvious is that the
medium is not natural. The Gandhi-film, to use the same example,
does not lead to reality, but to a reality: Attenborough's Gandhi. Thus,
in this case the medium's mediation consists in at once veiling
Gandhi, and revealing a certain Gandhi. In this double action the
media fabricate what is held as reality in a society.
131
World Reality
Gandhi
Spectator
Spectator's
Gandhi
GANDHI
Publicity Leaflet for
Attenborough's Gandhi
The Media fabricate what is
held as reality in a society.
Thus, the phrase media awareness means at one and the same
time an awareness of or about the media, and an awareness derived
from or formed by the media. Contemporary man owes to the media
most of what he is aware of today. His awareness is a media aware
ness. Example: Some months ago occurred the War of the Falkland
Islands. It is likely that most people of the world know about that war.
Their awareness of that odd and anachronistic event is a media
awareness, a production of the media—a mediation. And since the
media are varied, people throughout the world have different types of
awareness of the war, according to the media that nurtured them.
not? The answer to this question is that the media are not a bundle of
things, but a complex network of institutions. The media are no
passive mirrors. They are living parts of the living social organism.
The media, somewhat like glands in the body, secrete the issues that
are deemed useful or necessary for the organism from the point of
view of these persons, within or without that social organism who
have the power to decide on such matters.
II
Given these premises, the idea of using the media to bring about
social change takes on added urgency. But the project calls for a
whole set of qualities and attitudes that are not often found amongst
administrators, planners, politicians and even successful social
workers. These qualities called for are compassion and patience, the
respect of men and women, non-violence in the implementation of
projects, honesty in assessing the cause of socio-economic problems;
and above all, humility —or if you wish, the simple absence of arro
gance. The change agent, is not concerned with problems, but with
people. You don't handle people as you do problems. You don't handle
people at all. You relate with them, and you do so through media. You
do not use media: you relate through media.
It would seem to follow from what I have written, thus far in this
paper, that there is little scope for intervention in the field of media.
And yet, there must be intervention and there must be change. The
quality of that intervention and of that change will depend largely on
the media sense of the intervenant. It should be clear that as long as
the media appear as instruments capable of boosting the power of
self-styled or duly appointed change agents, we are heading in the
wrong direction. The right direction first implies that the media be
acknowledged as a focus of interpersonal relationships, which
determine the very quality of social life.