from
Psyche Website
Coutumes de Toulouse manuscript (1295-97). Courtesy of the Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris/AKG
It is an instrument of political power, wielded with intent. In the late 1930s, Soviet show trials used every means to degrade anyone whom Stalin considered a potentially dangerous opponent.
National Socialism copied this practice whenever it put 'enemies of the people' on trial.
On the streets of Vienna
in 1938, officials forced Jews to kneel on the pavement and scrub
off anti-Nazi graffiti to the laughter of non-Jewish men, women and
children. During the Cultural Revolution in China, young activists
went out of their way to relentlessly humiliate senior functionaries
- a common practice that, to this day, hasn't been officially
reprimanded or rectified.
Compared with
totalitarian regimes of the 20th century, this belief
might seem justified.
Although construction of the road to decency began as early as around 1800, it was - and remains - paved with obstacles and exceptions.
Mass opposition to the politics of humiliation began from the early 19th century in Europe, as lower-class people increasingly objected to disrespectful treatment.
Servants, journeymen and factory workers alike used the language of honor and concepts of personal and social self-worth - previously monopolized by the nobility and upper-middle classes - to demand that they not be verbally and physically insulted by employers and overseers.
This social change was enabled and supported by a new type of honor that followed the invention of 'citizens' (rather than subjects) in democratizing societies.
Citizens who carried political rights and duties were also seen as possessing civic honor.
Traditionally, social honor had been stratified according to status and rank, but now civic honor pertained to each and every citizen, and this helped to raise their self-esteem and self-consciousness.
Consequently, humiliation, and other demonstrations of the alleged inferiority of others, was no longer considered a legitimate means by which to exert power over one's fellow citizens.
Historically then, humiliation could be felt - and objected to - only once the notion of equal citizenship and human dignity entered political discourse and practice.
As long as society subscribed to the notion that some individuals are fundamentally superior to others, people had a hard time feeling humiliated. They might feel treated unfairly, and rebel. But they wouldn't perceive such treatment as humiliating, per se.
Humiliation can be experienced only when the victims consider themselves on a par with the perpetrator - not in terms of actual power, but in terms of rights and dignity.
This explains the surge of libel suits in Europe during the 19th century:
Shaming was seen as a legitimate tool for enforcing social rules and moral standards, especially in the hands of legal authorities...
The evolution of the legal system in Western nations serves as both a gauge of, and an active participant in, these developments.
From the Middle Ages to the early 19th century, public shaming was used widely as a supplementary punishment for men and women sentenced for unlawful acts.
Local officials forced convicted criminals to stand on display in the pillory (a frame that trapped their head and arms), beat them in public and, in severe cases, branded them.
By making the public complicit in the sanction, for example by doing nothing to prevent people from insulting or throwing disgusting objects at the offender, the authorities sought to confirm and restate the moral order violated by the punished person.
In this early modern period, shaming wasn't seen as equivalent to the modern notion of humiliation, as spelled out in the subsequent era of emancipation, democratization and liberalization.
Whereas humiliation would come to be criticized for denying people's genuine dignity, shaming was seen as a legitimate tool for enforcing social rules and moral standards, especially in the hands of legal authorities.
Shame was aimed at trespassers in the hope that it would encourage them to refrain from further wrongdoings and thus merit social reintegration.
However, beginning around 1800, a crucial semantic and political shift took place in Europe.
Publicly administered shame sanctions were increasingly criticized by legal scholars and other intellectuals. Among the many arguments against such sanctions, human dignity stood out as the most principled, both in philosophical and political terms.
It also proved to be the most effective, finally convincing many European governments to abolish the pillory, public flogging and branding in the 1830s and '40s.
Those practices were now considered 'humiliating' because they violated basic civic rights of honor and dignity.
But the fact that courts abandoned public shaming didn't mean that such practices disappeared altogether.
In England, women who mistreated their husbands were forced to go on so-called skimmington rides in which they (and sometimes their husbands too) sat backwards on a donkey and were paraded around while neighbors and other village people mocked them.
Those whose sexual, social or political behavior was not in sync with popular conventions were often forced to participate in charivaris (a kind of mock parade), accompanied by the clanging of pots and pans and other forms of 'rough music' produced by onlookers.
The phenomenon of peers shaming peers has remained a staple during the modern period, even though authorities tried to crack down on practices that threatened their monopoly on the legitimate use of physical force.
Religious and ethnic backgrounds as well as sexual orientations have served as popular targets of humiliation...
In peacetime, too, shaming rituals have remained popular through the previous century and into this one.
Even though European legal systems have long since refrained from administering shame sanctions, state-controlled institutions such as schools, hospitals, the police and the military have openly and deliberately continued to use such strategies in order to achieve conformity and discourage seemingly dysfunctional attitudes.
Since the 1960s, liberalizing trends in Western societies have helped to bring such strategies to light and pressure institutions to abolish them.
But it took the British parliament until 1986 to pass a law forbidding corporal punishment in state-run schools; in independently run, so-called 'public schools' in the UK, it was permitted until a decade later.
Up to this very day, soldiers are subjected to cruel practices of personal debasement at the hands of their superiors and in front of their comrades.
Military discipline and esprit de corps prevent victims from complaining and asserting their human right to dignity; usually, only a few cases become known publicly and trigger outrage and indignation.
Even if formal institutions can, in the long run, be compelled to respect their members' dignity, unfortunately it has been a feature of public life over recent decades that individuals and social groups enjoy a greater freedom to behave 'indecently' and inflict harm on each other.
People often use this freedom to humiliate 'horizontally'...
Such humiliation is often no longer about shaming someone into a socially acceptable conduct.
Instead, it's about degrading others for what they are:
Religious and ethnic backgrounds as well as sexual orientations have served as popular targets of humiliation.
In recent years, social media has greatly expanded the opportunities for, and the effects of this kind of humiliation.
Individuals who find themselves on such lists of shame can hardly protect themselves.
Collectively, though, vulnerable groups have been fighting back.
Around 1800, this group of 'activists' was small but vocal.
At the same time, humiliation as a social practice performed by those who seek to strengthen and affirm their power over others has not disappeared.
It continues to be highly attractive to children, adolescents and adults who feel empowered by pushing others into the gutter.
To clamp down on those in society who seek to humiliate others thus entails depriving them of a complicit audience.
Educating and incentivizing citizens of all ages to refuse to consent to and, if possible, object to acts of deliberate humiliation is essential. Sensitivity to humiliation has clearly increased over the past decades, thanks to a growing commitment to human rights and dignity.
But 'decent societies' are still a work in progress, and can easily be dismantled if not backed by a popular consensus against humiliation.
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