John Young on Fri, 25 Feb 2011 17:05:03 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> John Naughton (The Observer/ Guardian ): WikiLeaks books roundup ? reviews: Domscheit-Be rg and Leigh & Harding |
http://www.spiked-online.com/index.php/site/reviewofbooks_article/10229/ Wikileaks vs the world: you couldn?t make it up! Wikileaks: Inside Julian Assange?s War on Secrecy presents itself as a serious book penned by real Guardian journalists... but it is surely the greatest spoof ever written about the self-obsessed media. by Brendan O?Neill This book is the finest spoof you will ever read. It is a laugh-out-loud parody of the self-importance of Wikileaks and the journalists who have been sucked into its orbit. Wittily and brilliantly, however, it is presented as if it was actually authored by two Guardian journalists! ?By David Leigh and Luke Harding? it says on the front cover, in order to give it a feel of being real, of being a true account of the Wikileaks phenomenon. But of course, as any reader with any nous will know, it?s just not possible for fully grown men to behave in the fashion documented in this tome, for hacks to refer to themselves as Jason Bourne-style pursuers of truth and to compare Julian Assange to Mother Teresa. No, this is stinging satire, and all the better for being so spookily accurate. [Lots more aptly amusing ridicule elided] ... This was really a jumped-up version of press-release journalism, where hacks received and devoured info rather than going out and finding it. Best of all, ?Leigh? and ?Harding? report that Nick Davies, one of the ?best-known investigative journalists?, has denounced much of modern journalism as ?churnalism?? and then they have him and others literally churning through discs in search of sexy stories! It?s brutally funny. Churnalism is when journalists are ?reduced to passive processors of whatever material comes their way?, says Davies. Er, hello??? Side-splitting. Sometimes, the best way to deal with a weird political story is by parodying its protagonists. These two authors have done a brilliant job of that. Wikileaks is really a story of an incoherent American elite effectively farting its own secrets into the public arena, where they were then lapped up by hackers who are the close cousins of David Icke in their conspiratorial outlook and by hacks who no longer know how to find ?the truth? and so they wait for it to land in their laps, scribbled on a napkin, like a modern-day version of the all-knowing Dead Sea Scrolls. By dressing up this rather sad and sordid shebang as a James Bond-esque escapade involving brave spectral whizzkids and fearless journalists with macchiatos in one hand and cop-outsmarting mobile phones in the other, ?Leigh? and ?Harding? brilliantly ridicule the life out of the Wikileaks myth and nonsense. Buy this book if you like a laugh. 9/10. # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mail.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org