"The Revolution Will Not Be Funded"

in #history7 years ago (edited)

This post draws its title from the great activist anthology 'The Revolution Will Not Be Funded: Beyond the Non-Profit Industrial Complex.'

Nonprofits disrupt radical social change by institutionalizing and bureaucratizing grass-roots movements. Perpetually subsuming cultural production under a capitalist system, art and history are co-opted by the elites – all the while maintaining the philanthropic and self-expressive pretensions of white liberalism. The nonprofit-industrial complex was born of white saviorism and virtue signaling.

What is public history? Supposedly performing a public service by making history useful and accessible. But does that make the world better for everyone or just those there to receive the fruits of our labor – those permitted entry or made to feel welcome? We have long emphasized immediacy, a process of bringing cutting-edge scholarship and new information to the fore for the so-called masses – laypeople. We have emphasized making academic research engaging and accessible.

With all of this focus on the public historian's contribution to the “greater good,” we have lost sight of the power of community – work performed by those not traditionally labeled professionals or practitioners. The original role of art and history as a catalyst for social change, as a medium through which to divine collective memory and meaning, has been appropriated by the so-called "culture sector."

True public history is grassroots history-making that engages community needs. A community’s engagement with its own history is more constructive and dialogue-based. It can be collaborative, cooperative, and interdisciplinary. But the integration of bottom-up initiatives into the mainstream has deconstructed their initial purpose. Given default top-down arrangements, funders and middleman nonprofit organizations dip into resources best allocated directly to local community leaders and their constituents.

The best so-called professional (i.e., credentialized) public historians can do is offer their services, funding, tools, platforms and power to community-based initiatives. We must cease insisting on taking on leadership positions that undermine the notion of service-based work, and cease taking credit and spotlight away from the communities who perform the majority of the labor on such projects. We tend to believe that formal education legitimizes the authority of public historians to tell other people’s histories. “Shared authority” or supporting grassroots projects (note: different from “originating” them) is often an afterthought – a performance of charity and wokeness tacked on at the end of an agenda or planning process.

Who is funding the work? Who has the means – the time and money – to originate such projects? Who gets to control the work, the narrative, and our cultural landscape? It is all based on the stratification of position, rooted in economic, social, cultural and political privilege. Too often, funding, resources, structure and bodies are diverted to service and instruct white practitioners in the ways of socially-conscious art, history, service and dialogue. As we waste time and money on improving their inherently flawed institutions, why are there so few avenues for acknowledging, prioritizing, and championing the work of poor people of color? Rather than asking us to correct/supplement a broken system, why can't we identify ways of supporting independent, community-based, POC-led/driven projects – using waning institutional privilege to amplify the (re)emerging power of grassroots activisms?

'The Revolution Will Not Be Funded: Beyond the Non-Profit Industrial Complex,' INCITE!

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So is there any community-based nonprofit that can claim to retain community-based values? Or is the basic structure flawed? And if so, is there an alternative, effective model to support?

Indeed! These are the questions I hope to explore more in-depth.

This is a thought-provoking post @gvgktang! You raise many valid questions that more public historians should consider. The systemic privilege and hegemony within the field need to be dealt with to better serve the interests of and to elevate the work of marginalized populations. I especially appreciate your comments on shared authority. Thanks so much for your insight!

Thank you for reading!

I too appreciate the questions asked and reading about some of the shortcomings that are raised but I find myself more confused at the end of the post than at the beginning. I

think that if not providing any suggestions or ideas for solutions, the questions need to be more fleshed out and the whys of each problem raised could each be an exploration because they are clearly complex and require more explanation for us readers to really gain any understanding. Just my 2 cents...

I still often find myself thinking, "these institutions and the capitalism that fuel them are so ingrained in our society that I don't know how to work outside of them." Thank you for linking to that anthology. Seems like it'll help me think more critically about that.

Totally! Thanks for reading!

Money is power and power in money, but...
It all comes down to science, and science is corrupted. There would be no problems anywhere and anytime if science started saying no to military and economics. Humanity isnt at risk by you and me, or by the bankers but by those who are intelligent and smart enough and yet, not humane enough.
Thank you for sharing this post. I enjoyed reading it.

@gvgktang, I'm so glad that you wrote this (and so succinctly!) and also that you brought attention to the anthology, which I hadn't seen before. I agree with the solutions that you set out here and I think this is a conversation that we need to be having all the time. So, thanks.

Thanks for this (and thanks for your email)! You should make a post from your reflections.

Garbage in - garbage out.

True story.

That wasn't a compliment. Take your head out of your ass.