SMOKERS’ CORNER: LOSING THE PLOT
The West’s ’legacy media’ and cultural products might be suffering from what is often called ‘institutional inertia.’ Recently, they have been using old conceptual understandings of a world that is fast being changed by new realities. According to the American sociologist William F. Ogburn, this condition occurs when “mental models” fail to adjust to rapid shifts in the material and geopolitical reality.
In the context of the 21st century, this inertia is particularly visible in Western media’s refusal to acknowledge the erosion of long-standing hegemonic narratives, especially those concerning American power, the state of Israel, the emergence of assertive ‘middle powers’, and the reshaping of nations such as Pakistan.
The response of Western media and cultural products to the sudden waning of the traditional Israeli victimhood narrative provides a primary example of institutional inertia. For decades, Western media and Hollywood operated within a framework and paradigm that instinctively cast Israel as a vulnerable democratic outpost in the Middle East, surrounded by hostile players that are hell-bent on wiping out Israel.
According to the Palestinian-Turkish academic Ahmet Alioglu, this narrative was reinforced by an “institutional editorial logic” that humanised Israeli suffering while rendering Palestinian people as either invisible or viewed only through the lens of terrorism.
As global power shifts and narratives evolve, Western legacy media remains trapped in outdated frameworks. Its inability to recalibrate reveals deeper institutional inertia that risks rendering it irrelevant
As global power shifts and narratives evolve, Western legacy media remains trapped in outdated frameworks. Its inability to recalibrate reveals deeper institutional inertia that risks rendering it irrelevant
But things in this regard are shifting.........
