The Power Elite
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The Power Elite is an influential book written by the sociologist, C. Wright Mills, in 1956. In it Mills called attention to the interwoven interests of the leaders of the military, corporate, and political elements of society and suggested that the ordinary citizen was a relatively powerless subject of manipulation by those entities.
The structural basis of The Power Elite was that, following World War II, the United States was the leading country in military and economic terms.
The book is something of a counterpart of Mills' 1951 work, White Collar, which examined the growing role of middle managers in American society. While White Collar characterized middle managers as agents of the elite, The Power Elite did not differentiate them from the rest of the non-elite in society.[citation needed]
Contents |
[edit] The Book
[edit] Chapter 1: The Higher Circles
- This chapter provides a description of the power elite and the mechanism through which it acquires and exercises its power on a national level.
- He describes the contemporary means of power as the hierarchies of state, military and the big corporate institutions. Other, previously decisive institutions such as family and religion are pushed aside in the contemporary United States. They adapt to contemporary life, which in turn is set and determined by the new means of power.
- Wealth, power, and popularity, in this system, attach to the positions that individuals occupy, and not to the individuals themselves.
- The power elite of the US, which never faced competition due to the absence of feudal structures (aristocracy and religion), monopolize power from the get-go.
- It becomes a caste within the upper classes, and makes all decisions that have important consequences.
- It is not a group of rulers whose every decision is correct and every consequence of such decisions is as expected.
- It is limited by the means of power, the techniques of power, and the means of communication. However, their limitations are much less compared to previous ruling classes, due to the expansion and centralization in the means of power.
- To study the unity of the US power elite, one should investigate:
- the psychology of the elite in their respective environments (their psychological similarities)
- the interrelations between the military, economical, and political institutions they are part of (the social intermingling of the means of power)
- the co-operation between the means of power (i.e. the military, big corporations, and state)
- The main theses of the book, as set by Mills, are:
- Historical circumstances has led to the rise of power elite,
- They now make key decisions,
- The enlargement and centralization of means of power increased the potency of the consequencs of their decisions,
- The power elite is much more unified and powerful than the "mass society" (Chapter 13), which is fragmented and impotent.
[edit] Chapter 11: The Theory of Balance
- In this chapter, Mills describes and critiques the theory of balance that constitutes an important element of contemporary US ideology regarding economy and government.
- According to the theory of balance, the state and the economy are kept in balance by competing interests. In economy, this was translated from the economic theory that stated that there was no authoritarian center to the sovereign economic system. In politics, this was translated from the theory that the division of political powers would balance the powers and leave no space to despotism.
- Mills identifies a number of flaws with this theory:
- Balance of power implies equality of power. However, one's power balance means for another a power imbalance.
- The doctrine of the harmony of interests / balance of power makes dissidence appear to be the source of chaos and disturbance.
- The prime focus of the theory is the Congress, however its members are members of the upper classes and cannot actually be the representatives of the interests of the lower classes of the society. Furthermore, the power in congress comes with seniority, hence congress people will have to stay in the Congress as long as possible, which makes it impossible for them to become dissidents. In the mean time, the seniors manipulate and determine what will happen in the Congress. And the major issues of the electorate usually cannot find space in political campaigns, the congress itself, or even the congressional committees. If they come up, they are structured so that discussion is limited to certain viewpoints and the issue will be stalemated. It is not the political power of the Congress, or that of key Congressmen, that has expanded and centralized. [Q: Then where?]
- The founding fathers' idea of a checks-and-balances-state is grounded in their belief in the US middle class as the stabilizer and the pivot of the class balance in the US. In contemporary US economy, however, the small entrepreneurs that once consisted the economy are replaced by a handful of centralized corporations. Moreover, the middle class has come to be dependent on the state and replaced by a new middle class (white-collar employees), whose jobs cannot provide them with tools (political freedom and economic security) to be independent, that is yet another part of the impotent mass society. Labour unions themselves became institutions that choose leaders and send them to corporate positions once those leaders become established.
- The 'checks-and-balances' system is outdated and inapplicable to contemporary US political and economical life.
- It assumes that the different balances that keep the society in equilibrium requires them to be independent of each other. However, none of them (labour, business, state, military and so on) are independent of each other any longer, and hence, they cannot be seen as elements of a balancing system.
- Major interests do not compete with each other, but instead co-operate to promote several interests as they coincide.
- The lobbies that are supposed to be checks-and-balances are now part of the state.
[edit] Chapter 12: The Power Elite
- The American power elite has gone through 4 stages, and is in a fifth stage as of Mills' writing.
- From the Revolution through the administration of John Adams: as military, state and corporate entities were more or less united, power elite was able to move from one role to another.
- During the early nineteenth cc: the power elite became a number of top groups, each of which loosely constructed and loosely overlapping.
- From 1886 until the World War I: corporations acquired the rights of a person and received the initiative to govern (from the state).
- The New Deal, from WWI till the end of WWII: competing (and balanced) centers of power within the power elite form in political and economic areas; corporate chiefs enter the political sphere.
- Since the World War 2:
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- American democracy is now only a formality; State and Corporate entities became hardly distinguishable; democracy is being dominated by the corporate chiefs.
- As the focus of the power elite “shifted their attention from domestic to international affairs” (read: from colonizing the Americas to colonizing all of it), warlords became very influential in US politics; State and Military became hardly distinguishable.
- The economy is now both a war economy and a private corporate economy. Not the politicians but the warlords and the corporate chiefs decide about military actions.
- The phrase “Power Elite” captures the simplicity of other theorists:
- Marx, with his overemphasis on the capitalist as the only holder of power
- Liberals, who see the politician as the head of the system
- Those, who view warlords as the dictators of the system.
- Instead, the phrase “Power Elite” forces us to consider the union of the military, economic, and state power.
- He defends his critique of power elite as such:
- They may be honorable people. However, honor is not universal. The question is not whether they are honorable or not. The key question is what their honor codes are. And of course, their honor codes will be those that support their own interests.
- They do not, and cannot adapt to the necessities of their jobs as they rise in stature. They (i.e. no one) do not have such flexibility. They have certain personal and business interests and [whatever this really means] “to ask a man suddenly to divest himself of these interests and sensibilities is almost like asking a man to become a woman.” (p. 258)
- Like codes of honor, patriotism and its principles vary greatly. These too are rooted in one's personal history.
- One cannot argue that they are doing their duties. In fact, they are the ones who are determining what those very duties are.
- Even though the power elite itself as a ruling force is constant, the individuals who constitute it and occupy positions in the dominant hierarchies of the state, the economy, and the military is not. Even though these individuals know each other, there is not unified policy / ideology that ties them together or in one position.
- The inner core of the power elite consists of those who interchange commanding roles in various dominant hierarchies (the “big three”) and the corporate lawyer and the financial banker, who play the role of the unifier between the big three.
- The constant involvement of the nation in wars (and the making of crises as permanent and total) makes it possible for the power elite to use national security as a pretext for secrecy of intentions and in planning and execution.
[edit] Chapter 13: The Mass Society
- The public (of the public opinion) is the essence of 18th century theory of democracy. This is a fairy tale: it is not even close to what the US system of power works – the issues that determine our fate is neither discussed nor determined by the public.
- However, contemporary systems are transforming the communities of public into mass societies.
- Differences between (criteria for determining whether it is) a public and a mass:
- the ratio of givers and takers of opinion.
- possibility of answering back an opinion without the fear of reprisal.
- the opportunity for people to act out their opinions collectively.
- the penetration of institutional authority into the public.
- In terms of scale, the restricted size of the public (by education, sex, age, and property [race]) turned into an enlarged mass with the only qualification of citizenship and age. [Q: Nostalgic about the good-ol' days of blatant sexism and slavery?]
- In terms of organization, there has been a shift from private communities to the mass party as the major unit of organization. And there is a widening gap between the leaders and the members of these mass parties. The members get lost in the crowd and the participating members become the leader's tools of manipulation.
- With the expansion of the means of mass persuasion (also known as “mass deception”), the public of the public opinion became the target of intense efforts of control, manipulation, and intimidation. Opinion-making (through mass media and compulsory education) therefore became an accepted technique of getting and holding on to power. They now guide our very experiences, construct our standards and sense of reality, wants, needs, identity, and self. Hence they destroy any expectation of reasonable exchange of opinion.
- The creation of a pseudo-world by the mass media is made possible by the structure of the society which enables people to choose only that which is of the same opinion as they are. The remote possibility of debate and discussion, let alone action, disappears as the experience of the public turns into that of the mass: narrower and limited to their routine and structural (out-of-their-own-control) environment from which they cannot escape.
- or in his own words in The Power Elite,"In a public, as we may understand the term, (1) virtually as many people express opinions as receive them, (2) Public communications are so organised that there is a chance immediately and effectively to answer back any opinion expressed in public. Opinion formed by such discussion (3) readily finds an outlet in effective action, even against – if necessary – the prevailing system of authority. And (4) authoritative institutions do not penetrate the public, which is thus more or less autonomous in its operations.-In a mass, (1) far fewer people express opinions than receive them; for the community of publics becomes an abstract collection of individuals who receive impressions from the mass media. (2) The communications that prevail are so organised that it is difficult or impossible for the individual to answer back immediately or with any effect. (3) The realisation of opinion in action is controlled by authorities who organise and control the channels of such action. (4) The mass has no autonomy from institutions; on the contrary, agents of authorised institutions penetrate this mass, reducing any autonomy it may have in the formation of opinion by discussion".
[edit] Chapter 14: The Conservative Mood
- This might be one of the weakest parts of the argument Mills proposes.
- The conservative theories that seek to legitimize the power elite's actions are faulty.
- The conservative defends irrational traditionalism against human reason and denies people's right to self-control and self-determination.
- Even though conservatives push for a certain traditionalism, the very people at the top of the hierarchy lack such ideologies useful for public consumption -their only cultural heritage is that of getting and holding on to money. They do not have any ideology.
- Simultaneously, because the US lacks the feudal stage, these conservative theorists also lack pre-capitalist figures (aristocracy, peasant, petty bourgeoisie etc.) to hold on to and to promote as models of their theories. They lack pre-industrial elements who might subscribe to these traditionalist ideas: the power elite itself abhor conservatism.
- American liberalism has been made painless for the power elite. It went a moral and intellectual decline in the last half century. Political rhetoric became monolithic, divergent liberal positions came to be employed in the same homogeneous liberal terms.
[edit] Chapter 15: The Higher Immorality
- Especially following the second half of the eighteenth century, the US power elite has been getting increasingly immoral, irresponsible, ignorant, stupid (in terms of not valuing reason as one's key characteristic in life), and mindless in its quest for wealth and power.
- The higher immorality is a systematic, institutionalized feature of the US power elite, and the general acceptance of this immorality is an essential feature of the mass society.
- The mass society itself is also left without any moral standards to hold on to, or even rise against. While fear, uncertainty, and doubt is spread through military and economic crisis, “as individuals they are defenseless; as groups, they are politically indifferent.” Even though most relate (and wrongfully so) power with knowledge and ability, some have given in to the immorality embodied in accomplishment.
[edit] See also
- Power Elite
- Military-industrial complex
- Elite
- Sociological imagination
- The Sociological Imagination
- New Left
- Social alienation