The  old show was frequently highly reactionary but it also did better  than  most shows when it came to challenging establishment, bourgeois  ideology  and/or imperialist assumptions.
This division is the 'ethos'. Frequently reactionary but with a proportionately greater tendency to buck this trend.
The hero of the show is a white male with a professional title, a line   in Edwardian clothing (which retains a formality despite veering between   scruffy, dandified, bohemian, etc.) and who travels around in a symbol   of the British state. The odd Jacobite aside, his companions are  usually  thoroughly respectable types.
So, even when he takes a moral line against exploitation, it can seem   like the civilized Englishman taking it upon himself to explain ethics   to the barbarians.
However, while it may be possible to characterise this as an "overall or   originating ethos" (as a poster at Gallibase put it) it's one that has   also been challenged from within.
At the start of the classic series, the Doctor is adamant that he cannot   and must not intervene in history... including the religious practices   of the Aztecs, a people destroyed by imperialism.
Then again, in that very same story, we also get a dose of condescension   towards the Aztecs, portraying them as generally backward (i.e.  "Autloc  is the extraordinary man here!") and suggesting that their  religious  practices will shock Cortés into attacking them. 'The  Crusade' attempts a  very sincere portrayal of Arabs as human beings...  but also includes  orientalist stereotypes.
When the first Doctor intervenes in the future history of aliens, etc.,   he very often takes a stance that seems very anti-imperialist, i.e. in   'The Sensorites'. But, again, in that same story, the aliens are   presented as encoded Asian stereotypes, and the human infiltrators are   driven mad by their exposure to an inscrutable alien culture... which is   pure colonialist self-pity.
But you also have to consider that, in the kind of fiction from which Who   springs, the scientist figure, the lone inventor, was an ambiguous and   untrustworthy figure who could not always be relied upon to toe the   line. In Wells’ The Time Machine, the Time Traveller (clearly a   forerunner of the Doctor) is explaining time travel to a group of   friends when one of them imagines jumping forward in time to collect   massive interest on a long-term investment… “…to arrive in a society run   on strictly communistic lines perhaps?” suggests the Time Traveller.
All the same, the Doctor often assumes the right to intervene, which can   seem imperialistic… but, having said that, the Doctor’s right to   intervene does itself become the subject of some uncertainty within the   show itself, several times. The Doctor has to justify himself to the   Time Lords, firstly by claiming that power must be used to help those in   need (and this in a story that forecloses on an imperialistic   interpretation of that remark by being a forthright condemnation of   imperialism), then by claiming during his second trial that he usually   waits for a request for help from a local authority figure!
Times change and there was a shift in political discourse between the eras of the old and new shows.
Of course, political discourse was shifting - drastically - even during the run of the original series.
In ’63, before what we call “the sixties” got going, the show embraces   the ethos of the post-war liberal consensus filtered through the tropes   of the fiction which it draws upon. As the decade progresses, we get   more attempts to engage with increasing social radicalism… getting more   forthrightly radical as they go along, i.e. from the ambivalence of the   anti-authority/pro(ish)-colonial ‘Macra Terror’ (there's a valid  reading  of this story that sees the Doctor as defending colonialism…  though I’d  point out that there’s no reason to assume that the Macra  are the  aboriginal inhabitants of the Colony… and that they also assume   metaphorical valences that don’t really seem to include race) to the   all-out assault on imperialism in ‘The War Games’… though, again, we see   the divided ethos in the way even that story collapses into a weak   reformism when the Doctor calls in the Time Lords and sends the humans   back to their real wars.
The reactionary backlash is seen less than one might expect in the   Pertwee era, possibly because of the left/liberal politics of Barry   Letts… though he and Dicks inherit a framework in which the Doctor has   become an adjunct to the military establishment. They cope with this by   making the Doctor an infuriating maverick ecology-buff who scoffs at  the  Brigadier and assorted government types. Of course, the third  Doctor is  also very bourgeois in surface appearance. But he’s as likely  to claim  friendship with Mao (who, aside from his real odious  historical  character, was the emblem of a sizeable chunk of the  European radical  left at the time) as he is to claim friendship with  Tubby Rowlands.
The show tends to trail behind the times a bit. There’s a time lag. So   anti-Vietnam protests only faintly show up in the form of the Doctor’s   peace sign in ‘Frontier in Space’. And the crescendo of strike action   and union power of the early seventies only shows up in ‘The Sun Makers’   in ’77.
To just jump back a tad, I think it’s important to remember that the   left was incomparably more influential in the mainstream during most of   the original run than it is now. Thatcher and the rise of  neoliberalism,  together with the fall of what was called communism,  dealt an enormous  blow to left-wing politics in the late 80s and early  90s. The left is  only really beginning to rally now. For most of the  classic series,  there was a rough ‘social democratic’ consensus in the  country that  progress was tied to social liberalization and a certain  governmental  role in investment and in curbing the power of business.  Even the  pre-Thatcher Tories accepted a form of this argument. However…  and this  is the key point… what we might call ‘social democracy’ was  never really  all the great on race and imperialism. A lot of Labourist  thinkers  assumed the inherent progressiveness of the spread of Western  (white)  civilisation. Liberalism was no better; often it was worse.  Even  Bertrand Russell was terrible on what used to be called ‘coloured   people’ and colonization.
So, if the show evinced a divided progressive ethos (which I think it   did) then that could be said to have stemmed from the divided, rising   and declining social democratic consensus of the society that produced   it. (As such, we’d expect it to be frequently reactionary, because   social democracy was frequently reactionary on all sorts of issues from   unions to race.)
The new show, of course, is a product of the wretched age of New Labour,   of the rightward-shifted mainstream left behind by Thatcher, and   neoliberalism triumphant… and yet, it produces episodes that are clearly   ripostes to, say, ‘humanitarian interventions’… and even manages to   correct its own lapses, with ‘Turn Left’ readable as a riposte to ‘The   Unquiet Dead’ on the issue of asylum seekers, and ‘Planet of the Ood’   deliberately revisiting a moral lapse on the part of the Doctor   regarding slavery and, in the process, becoming a parable about   commodified workers that supports violent revolution!
So why the unusual degree of ‘bucking the trend’? Even up to recently,   this was still happening (though less often and less reliably). So why?
I think its partly to do with the show’s roots. Take Wells, for example.   He was a socialist, by his own definition. By the standards of his  time  he was a radical progressive. His templates for speculative  fiction – The Time Machine and War of the Worlds  – are,  respectively, an allegory about class exploitation and a   through-the-looking-glass parable about imperialism. And yet, he was (by   our standards) a racist and a eugenicist (see what I was saying before   about ‘social democracy’ being terrible on issues like race).
So, a divided ethos in embryo?
I think the subjective factor becomes important. Robert Holmes seems to   have been an instinctive radical, at least in his writing - which is   interesting given that his life shares some similarities with that of   Orwell (i.e. Orwell was a policeman in Burma, Holmes was in Burma with   the Army and then was in the police). RTD is also given to quite strong   liberal/lefty critique in his writing... though he also seems  influenced  by the culturalism of, say, Dawkins and Hitchens and  frequently flirts  with a view of people that is pessimistic to the  point of being  reactionary. This is the left in the age of  neoliberalism and the 'war  on terror'.
These two figures in themselves - both apparently given to lacing their   writing with liberal/left critiques but one working in the age of 60s   counter-culture, a strong left, union power, etc.; the other working in   the age of neoliberal triumph - may account for the different tone of   the same 'divided ethos' in the classic and new series': the former   leaning towards the left, the latter leaning towards the right.
Moffat, in my opinion, is a de facto reactionary by virtue (if we   can use that word) of his sheer political disinterest and complacency,   by his ironical raiding of political history for icons and motifs and   nothing more. That could be why the show is now getting more and more   reactionary, despite the fact that we are now moving - slowly and   hesitatingly - into an exciting time of growing struggle.
 
 
 
I'm working my way through your blog very spasmodically and in completely the wrong order. It's been like travelling in time and space. There's some quite interesting stuff here, I'd say.
ReplyDeleteOne quick question - where do you stand on 'Beast Below'? Wasn't that a quite politically engaged episode from Moffat. (Apologies if you've covered this somewhere else and I just haven't got to it yet.)
Thanks for reading at all!
DeleteOne caveat: my views shift a lot, so some of the older stuff may not exactly reflect my current opinion. Writing this blog has been a learning experience, above all else.
I wrote about 'Beast Below' here: http://shabogangraffiti.blogspot.co.uk/2011/07/beasts-of-england.html