Update: Jana Perkovic weighs in at Guerilla Semiotics. Well worth the read.
Update 2: The Guardian's Noises Off rounds up the brouhaha.
Update 3: And now Ben Eltham in Crikey.
Update 4: Ray Gill in the Age. Also, see the postscript below.
Update 5: Cameron Woodhead restores some balance in the Age.
*
The launch of an independent news organisation is a major event in Australia, where the fiercest debates about our media circle around the fact that we have the highest concentration of media ownership in the western world, with Rupert Murdoch's News Ltd owning 70 per cent of Australian newspaper circulation. And the interest in The Global Mail, which launched today, is surely intensified by the recent headlines about Gina Rinehart's aggressive bids for Fairfax, which raises the real fear that three major broadsheet newspapers - The Age, The Sydney Morning Herald and The Financial Review - will be reduced to mouthpieces for the interests of the mining industry. The philanthropically funded Global Mail is an ambitious, nay, quixotic enterprise, and one we all wish well. Go read it, minions.
However, its first article on the arts - Now everyone is really a critic - caused a minor storm this morning among the theatregoers, bloggers, critics and journalists who hang around twitter. Stephen Crittenden, the arts, culture and religion correspondent, writes a feature tagged "Out, damned mainstream review! Bloggers are rising up to tell Sydney
theatre lovers what they really think of the latest plays, with no
punches pulled."
Well, one blogger, anyway: it's not really about theatre blogs in general, so much as a profile of Jane Simmons, head of drama at Sydney’s Anglican St Andrew’s Cathedral School, who runs a provocative blog (hitherto unknown to me) called Shit On Your Play. Until now, it has been anonymous, notable for its title, its hating on Benedict Andrews, and Simmons's mission statement: "No more pandering to the wank of theatre without it being called exactly what it is."
No one is arguing that Simmons doesn't have every right to think and blog whatever she likes about theatre, in Sydney or anywhere else. What's baffling is why this blog - with some extra comments from Kevin Jackson and a nameless former print critic - has been uncritically chosen to represent the theatre blogging culture in Australia, in the introductory arts feature on a high profile new media site.
If the feature is supposed to be about theatre blogs as a whole, it's a woeful misrepresentation: blogging is much more interesting, diverse, porous (and long-lived) than is represented here. (For a thoughtful look at new media and theatre, check out Robert Reid's comments here, and then buy his Platform Paper, Hello World!, from Currency House). It seems like an enormous missed opportunity to explore the pros and cons, the challenges and problems, of current blogging and critical culture. Because it's not as if there aren't things to talk about or criticise.
Most depressingly of all, Simmons's profiling seems to be the occasion for a bit of arts-bashing in the finest traditions of Australian anti-intellectualism. For example, here's Simmons's take on all of German literature, as admiringly quoted by Crittenden: "German surrealist literature … well, perhaps all German literature
actually, can often be categorised as reflecting a people who understand
that everything turns to shit. This being the case, Gross und Klein fulfilled its objective." Take that, Goethe! And Botho Strauss, you bad "surrealist"!
It's a puzzling opener for a magazine-style outlet that claims to offer "perspective and information outside the clamour". Rather, it's an all-too-familiar approach to arts reporting: controversy-led, polarising, reductive and blandly conservative.
Ah well. Let's hope for better.
A postscript: I've resisted pointing out that Shit on Your Play had, up to the publication of the Global Mail article, (after this flash of notoriety, who knows what will happen?), gained as many hits - or maybe pageloads - in its entire life as TN averages in a month, because saying so lays me open to the kind of attacks that claim I wrote this because my nose has been put out of joint. But put it this way: the West End Whingers began to attract wider notice in the press because they were so popular. If SOYP were a similar popular phenomenon, the attention paid would not be puzzling at all, and there would be a different sort of argument.
* Thanks to Laura Parker for the header.
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