Cult of individuality…Abbas Moosvi


Think of success in the contemporary age and a few words come to mind: initiative, influence, innovation, inspiration, individuality. Other than the fact that they sound similar, there is a particular common thread running through each that of the self as both the starting and end point of all endeavours. In a world so interconnected, with trade dependencies, labour migrations, sociocultural overlaps, religious communitarianism, intergovernmental bodies, and the interwebs at large, how has it come to pass that the common interest is nowhere to be seen or heard of particularly in media and academia?

In order to understand the current moment, it is important to begin with the philosopher that has perhaps had the most influence on the world since the time of his writing: Friedrich Nietzsche. Two particular ideas that he was a virulent proponent of were a) the will to power, and b) perspectivism. The central message of the first was that the vast majority of people are fundamentally weak, submissive, and largely invisible as far as societal decision-making is concerned. For Nietzsche, the antidote to this was what he called the will to power a relentless war that is waged on these petulant traits/proclivities at a personal level with the objective of rising above the herd and imposing oneself on the world. Becoming an bermensch (translated as Superman) was the ultimate objective of this newfound quest a higher order being that was unanswerable to any force, institution, or outmoded cultural remnants but had graduated to becoming the captain of his own ship. Alongside this, Nietzsche promoted an ideology of subjectivity that is perhaps most accurately captured by his quote: You have your way, I have mine. As for the right way, the correct way, or the only way, it does not exist. This has to do with the idea that there is no inherent, objective meaning or value to anything due to biases, delusions, tribal pressures, etc. that all cloud a human beings judgment at any given point. The conclusion he points to here is that all grand moral and political projects are empty pastimes a mere refuge for lower order beings suffering from a sense of generalized resentment for having failed to achieve anything substantive in their lives.

While Nietzsche claimed to be an apolitical figure, his ideas quickly proliferated across the domains of media, academia, and politics. The most obvious manifestation of this was the Nazi regime under the messianic leadership of Adolf Hitler, which drew its ideological inspiration directly from the philosopher to squash trade unions, ban all books associated with collectivist aspiration, and brutally annihilate millions of Jews in concentration camps. Within philosophy, Ayn Rand also heavily influenced by Nietzsche popularised the maxim of pursuing ones self-interests as the highest moral ideal. In a related vein, the existentialists rejected all notions of external purpose/meaning instead arguing for an inward journey to the recesses of the psyche to discover ones true nature. Albert Camus famously categorised all worldly affairs and pursuits as absurd claiming that The struggle itself towards the heights is enough to fill a mans heart; one must imagine Sisyphus happy. Here again, the picture painted is of a solitary individual striving to make something of themselves for its own sake similar to the manner in which videogames might be played to win even when there are no prizes at stake. Within economics, Friedrich Hayek propped up as a leading voice within the Austrian school, positing that any and all government intervention in the economy is destined for failure due to poor information and that the free market ought to be the only determinant of how resources are distributed in countries. Behind a mask of individual liberty, the ultimate effect of Hayeks ideas was neoliberalism: an ideology that subsumes the state apparatus under big capital, essentially forfeiting democracy to a privileged elite class which behaves akin to the old aristocracies. Last but not least came postmodernism, a school of thought that emphasised lived experiences over empiricism and metanarratives arguing that power is not just embedded in institutional/structural arrangements but equally operates at the micro level in interpersonal engagements. The byproduct of this was a movement away from political explanations for societal pathologies and a reversion to moral/ethical one-upmanship contests at an individual level.

Each of the aforementioned currents may be seen as Nietzsches various children. The irony is that while they all pay an inordinate amount of lip-service to ideas of personal freedom and autonomy, they simultaneously function as incredible ideological tools to preserve the status quo and insulate the overarching system of capitalism from any institutional critique or political challenges. As pointed out by Daniel Tutt, a kind of accelerationism is observed: whereby the working class begins to shift attention away from the fact that it is being economically exploited and instead perceives members of its own communities as competition, leading to widespread atomization and societal fragmentation on the one hand but enhanced levels of participation in the prevailing order on the other. This is sold as empowerment flooding vulnerable populations with Malcolm Xs ghetto hustlers: The ghetto hustler has no religion, no concept of morality, no civic responsibility, no fear nothing. To survive, he is out there constantly preying upon others, probing for any human weakness like a ferret. The ghetto hustler is forever frustrated, restless, and anxious for some action. As individual liberty reigns supreme as the overarching hegemonic ideology, 60% of the US workforce lives paycheck to paycheck. So much for freedom.

At an aggregate level, a certain culture of narcissism has prevailed: hyper-fixation on the self and tunnel-vision for getting ahead and a heros journey narrative to constantly fuel the fire. Collective interests and structural considerations have been all but sidelined replaced by a cutthroat, dog-eat-dog modality that ensures labor productivity and ultimately only serves the interests of the ruling elite. It is no wonder the likes of Donald Trump have emerged as revolutionary figureheads that promise to change things despite the fact that they failed (or deliberately avoided) to do so in previous terms. This is because regardless of value systems, ideological proclivities, or policy priorities, they offer the illusion of strong personalities that represent Nietzsches bermensch: with supporters vicariously living the experience through them.

Courtesy The Express Tribune