Lesson on Statistical Evidence in Argumentation – Evaluating Survey Accuracy

 

 

Sampling & Evaluating Survey Accuracy

Posted by Keren Wang, 2024

*Before starting this lesson, make sure you have reviewed: Statistical Evidence: Survey and Opinion Polling

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Sampling Error and Polling Accuracy Case Study: 2016 U.S. Presidential Election

During the 2016 U.S. Presidential Election, many national polls predicted a victory for Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton. While Clinton won the popular vote by around 2.1%, Republican candidate Donald Trump won the Electoral College, securing the presidency. [1

Huffington Post 2016 Election Prediction

Image: Huffington Post’s 2016 US Presidential Election prediction updated on the eve of the election day.

The challenges pollsters faced with predicting the 2016 election shed light on a common problem with using statistics in arguments: numbers can give us a false sense of certainty. Stats are powerful—they carry authority and can seem “objective”—but they’re rarely as clear-cut as they appear. In reality, they often come with hidden biases and assumptions that may not capture the full picture. [2]

In 2016, pollsters and analysts leaned heavily on polling data to forecast the election outcome, treating the numbers almost like a science. But they didn’t account for factors like sampling errors, social desirability bias, and last-minute changes in voter sentiment, all of which skewed the predictions. The result? A widespread belief that one outcome was nearly certain—until it wasn’t.

This reliance on numbers to tell a definitive story shows how easy it is to be misled by the “authority” of stats. It’s a reminder that while statistical evidence can be persuasive, it’s not infallible. To use data responsibly in arguments, we need to present it with a little humility, recognizing its limitations and the need to pair it with other forms of analysis. Instead of seeing numbers as the whole truth, we should treat them as one piece of the puzzle, open to interpretation and discussion. [3]

Evaluating the Use of Polling Evidence in 2016 US Presidential Election

1. Non-Response Bias

 

Impact: Non-response bias occurs when certain demographics are less likely to respond to polls, which can skew results. In 2016, many polls underrepresented rural and working-class voters, groups that tended to favor Donald Trump. These groups were harder to reach and less likely to respond to traditional polling methods. [4]

 

Problematic Use in Argumentation: Analysts and commentators who used these poll results often overlooked or underestimated the impact of this underrepresentation. News networks frequently relied on results from similar polling agencies, creating a feedback loop that reinforced a constructed “reality” of Clinton’s expected victory. This effect was further amplified as media outlets fed off each other’s election news stories and headlines, creating a narrative that appeared authoritative but was actually based on incomplete data. This collective overconfidence in Clinton’s chances contributed to a misleading perception that didn’t reflect the complexities and variances among voter demographics.

2. Late Shifts in Voter Preferences

Impact: Many voters made up their minds close to Election Day, influenced by last-minute campaign events, media coverage, or debates. Polling, however, generally stops a few days before the election, often missing these late shifts. In 2016, a significant portion of undecided voters shifted toward Trump in the final days, which wasn’t captured in most polling. [5] The reasons for this shift are complex, but one contributing factor may have been social desirability bias—some Trump supporters may not have honestly disclosed their preferences to pollsters, fearing negative judgment from their friends and family members. As a result, these voters remained hidden within the undecided category, skewing polling data away from an accurate portrayal of support for Trump. [6]

Problematic Use in Argumentation: This late shift was largely invisible in the polling data, leading analysts to underestimate Trump’s chances. When using this data for argumentation, commentators tended to either overlook the intrinsic time constraint of surveying, or erroneously assume that the voters who were undecided would either not vote or distribute evenly across candidates. [7] This assumption failed to account for the unpredictability of undecided voters, ultimately leading to faulty conclusions.

3. Sampling Error

 

Impact: Sampling error, the statistical error that occurs when a poll’s sample does not perfectly represent the population, was especially impactful in closely divided states. In 2016, even minor errors in states like Michigan, Wisconsin, and Pennsylvania, where the polls showed narrow leads for Clinton, contributed to a misleading picture. The underestimated support for Trump in these states shifted the Electoral College outcome in his favor. [8]

Studies have found that that 2016 election polls across the board suffer from a range of sampling malpractices—often collectively referred to as “total survey error.” Reported margins of error typically capture only sampling variability and often ignore systemic sampling errors, such as uncertainty in defining the target population, particularly regarding who will likely to vote. An empirical analysis 2016 US presidential election cycles found that average survey error was around 3.5 percentage points—approximately double the margin implied by most reported margins of error. Polls were also predominately erred on the side of overestimating Clinton’s performance, which was partly due to similar types of unwarranted assumptions about voter demographics by major polling organizations. This shared “meta-bias” creates further compound inaccuracies, especially in close races as seen in 2016. [9]

Problematic Use in Argumentation: Polling margins of error are often presented as minor uncertainties, with little impact on the overall narrative. In 2016, this assumption was problematic because the race in key states was so close that even a small sampling error could, and did, shift the predicted outcome. The statistics carried an aura of scientific objectivity, which masked underlying biases and imperfect assumptions that remained tacit and hidden behind cold numbers. News media perpetuated this misconception by over-relying on the seemingly definitive value of these numerical data, interpreting polling results as if they offered predictable and accurate insights. [10] This contributed to overconfidence in Clinton’s prospects and led commentators to misjudge the actual electoral dynamics in crucial swing states.

 

The Problem of Sampling

Sampling is the process of selecting a subset of individuals from a larger population to make inferences about that population. Effective sampling ensures that survey findings are representative and reliable.

The goal of sampling is to accurately reflect the larger population’s characteristics by selecting a group that is both representative and adequately sized. This section of the reading covers three primary sampling methods used to create a sample that reflects the diversity and characteristics of the population being surveyed: simple random sampling, stratified random sampling, and clustered sampling:

Simple Random Samples

A simple random sample gives each member of the population an equal chance of being selected. This method involves a straightforward, single-step selection process.

Process

Researchers assign a number to each individual in the population and use a random number generator or a table of random numbers to select individuals.

Example

In a survey of university students’ media consumption habits, a researcher may use a list of all enrolled students, assign each a number, and then use a random number generator to pick students for the survey.

Benefits

This method helps prevent bias since each individual has an equal opportunity to be included. It’s often the most representative sampling method if done correctly.

Limitations

Simple random sampling can be challenging and time-consuming when dealing with large populations, as researchers need an accurate, complete list of all members.

Stratified Random Samples

Stratified random sampling involves dividing the population into subgroups (strata) based on relevant characteristics and then randomly selecting individuals within each stratum.

Process

Researchers identify categories (e.g., age, gender, ethnicity), divide the population accordingly, and randomly sample individuals from each category. This ensures each subgroup is adequately represented.

Example

If a study examines the impact of social media on mental health among high school students, researchers might stratify the sample by grade level (e.g., freshman, sophomore) and then randomly select students within each grade level to participate.

Benefits

This method increases precision by ensuring the sample reflects key population characteristics, making it valuable for ensuring representation across specific groups.

Limitations

Stratified sampling requires additional time and resources to divide the population and select individuals within each subgroup. It assumes that researchers know which subgroups are relevant to the study.

Clustered Samples

Clustered sampling selects groups (clusters) rather than individual members, which is useful for large, widely distributed populations or when a complete list of members is impractical.

Process

Researchers divide the population into naturally occurring clusters, such as geographical locations, and then randomly select clusters. Within each cluster, they may survey all members or randomly choose individuals.

Example

In a survey on internet access across a large city, researchers might select certain neighborhoods as clusters and then survey individuals within those neighborhoods.

Benefits

Cluster sampling saves time and reduces travel costs, especially for geographically dispersed populations. It’s often more practical and economical for large-scale studies.

Limitations

Clustered sampling can lead to sampling bias if clusters are not representative of the overall population and is generally less precise than other methods due to potential similarities within clusters.

Obtaining Samples

Random sampling ensures that each member of the population has a known, non-zero chance of being selected, minimizing bias and improving the representativeness of the sample. Here’s how the process works in the three sampling methods discussed earlier:

1. Simple Random Sampling

Researchers create a list of every individual in the population and assign a sequential number to each. Using a table of random numbers or software, they randomly select numbers corresponding to individuals.

  • Population Members: Imagine 100 individuals in a line, represented as gray dots labeled from 1 to 100 as shown below.
  •  Random Sample Selection: 15 individuals (most commonly selected via computer-generated random numbers) are highlighted in blue among the gray dots, showing how a simple random sample is chosen without any grouping or structure.

This method works best with smaller, manageable populations where researchers have full access to an accurate population list. [11]

Simple Random Sampling

2. Stratified Random Sampling

This method typically involves dividing the population into distinct groups or strata based on relevant characteristics (such as age, income, education level). Within each stratum, a simple random sample is then conducted.

By sampling within each group, researchers can control for potential influences that specific characteristics might have on the survey’s findings, thereby increasing the sample’s representativeness. [12]

Stratified Random Sampling

3. Clustered Sampling

When it is impractical to list every individual in a large population, researchers divide the population into clusters, often based on geographic or organizational divisions.

They randomly select entire clusters and survey individuals within those selected clusters. This can involve surveying everyone in each cluster or using random sampling within clusters for larger groups. [13]

Clustered Sampling

Evaluating Survey Accuracy

This section explores three critical factors for assessing survey accuracy: Sample Size, Margin of Error, and Confidence Level. Understanding these elements helps researchers determine the reliability of their survey results and interpret findings with appropriate caution.

1. Sample Size

Definition: The number of individuals or units chosen to represent the population in the survey.

Importance: Larger samples generally provide more accurate data. The relationship between sample size and accuracy follows the law of diminishing returns, meaning that after a certain point, increases in sample size result in only minor improvements in accuracy.

Key Concept: Sampling Error decreases as sample size increases. However, the increase in precision grows smaller as the sample size becomes very large.

Example: Imagine researchers want to understand coffee preferences across a city with 100,000 residents. They conduct a survey to find out what percentage of residents prefer iced coffee over hot coffee:

  • The researchers initially surveyed 100 residents and found that 60% prefer iced coffee. However, with only 100 people surveyed out of 100,000, this small sample has a higher margin of error, potentially making the results less representative of the entire population.
  • To get a more precise estimate, they increase the sample size to 1,000 people, which lowers the margin of error. As the sample size grows, the accuracy of the result improves, giving a clearer picture of the true percentage of residents who prefer iced coffee.

2. Margin of Error

Definition: The range within which the true population parameter is expected to fall, considering sampling variability.

Role in Surveys: The margin of error shows the possible deviation between the survey’s results and the actual population values.

Calculation: It’s derived from the standard error and sample size, reflecting how representative the sample is of the population.

Example : In the same coffee preferences survey scenario:

  • With the 100-person survey, they might have a margin of error of ±10% (at 95% confidence level), meaning the true preference for iced coffee could be anywhere between 50% and 70%.
  • With the 1,000-person survey, the margin of error decreases to ±3% (at 95% confidence level), so they can now be more confident that the true preference is between 57% and 63%.
  • With a 2,000-person survey, the margin of error further goes down to ±2% (at 95% confidence level).

3. Confidence Level

Definition: The degree of certainty that the population parameter lies within the margin of error.

Common Confidence Levels: 95% confidence is standard, meaning if the survey were repeated multiple times, 95% of the results would fall within the margin of error.

Confidence Interval: This is the range constructed around the survey result to indicate where the true population parameter is likely to be, given the confidence level.

Example: In the coffee preferences survey scenario:

  • 95% Confidence Level (C.L.): The researchers can be 95% confident that the true percentage of iced coffee preference lies within their calculated margin of error (±3%).
  • 99% C.L.: If they want to be even more certain, they could use a 99% confidence level, increasing the margin of error to ±4% for the 1,000-person survey.
  • To maintain the same margin of error at a 99% confidence level, a larger sample size would be required, such as 2,000 people to achieve a ±3% margin of error.

Sample Size and Margin of Error Chart

Chart: The chart above illustrates the relationship between sample size and margin of error across different confidence levels (95% and 99%).

As sample size increases, the margin of error decreases, making the survey more precise. Higher confidence levels (e.g., 99%) result in a larger margin of error, meaning we can be more confident in the results but within a wider range. The diminishing effect of increasing sample size shows that the margin of error decreases rapidly with smaller samples but flattens out at higher sample sizes.

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Further Reading

1. Courtney Kennedy et. al., An Evaluation of the 2016 Election Polls in the United States, Public Opinion Quarterly, Volume 82, Issue 1, Spring 2018.

2. Joshua J. Bon, Timothy Ballard, Bernard Baffour, Polling Bias and Undecided Voter Allocations: US Presidential Elections, 2004-2016, Journal of the Royal Statistical Society Series A: Statistics in Society, Volume 182, Issue 2, February 2019, Pages 467-493.

3. Wright, Fred A., and Alec A. Wright. “How surprising was Trump’s victory? Evaluations of the 2016 US presidential election and a new poll aggregation model.” Electoral Studies 54 (2018): 81-89.

4. Battersby, Mark. “The Rhetoric of Numbers: Statistical Inference as Argumentation.” (2003).

5. Hoeken, Hans. “Anecdotal, statistical, and causal evidence: Their perceived and actual persuasiveness.” Argumentation 15 (2001): 425-437.

6. Giri, Vetti, and M. U. Paily. “Effect of scientific argumentation on the development of critical thinking.” Science & Education 29, no. 3 (2020): 673-690.

7. Gibson, James L., and Joseph L. Sutherland. “Keeping your mouth shut: Spiraling self-censorship in the United States.” Political Science Quarterly 138, no. 3 (2023): 361-376.

8. Roeh, Itzhak, and Saul Feldman. “The rhetoric of numbers in front-page journalism: how numbers contribute to the melodramatic in the popular press.” Text-Interdisciplinary Journal for the Study of Discourse 4, no. 4 (1984): 347-368.

9. Ziliak, Stephen T., and Ron Wasserstein. “One Thing About… the Rhetoric of Statistics.” CHANCE 36, no. 4 (2023): 55-56.

NCA 2020 Virtual Convention Presentation: Logographic Inventions of Violent Rituals

title slide

 

The ritual taking of things that are of human value, including the ritual killing of humans, has been continuously practiced for as long as human civilization itself has existed. In my presentation for the upcoming virtual 2020 National Communication Association’s Annual Convention, I will highlight key findings from one of my ongoing historical archival projects, focusing on the rhetoric of human sacrifice as represented in Early Bronze Age China oracle bone scripts (c.1250 BC – 1046 BC). It will be delivered at the virtual paper session, “GPS: Changing Routes in Rhetoric’s History” sponsored by the American Society for the History of Rhetoric on November 1st, 2020.

Sacrificial mass grave at Anyang site (c. 1100 BC)
Mass grave of sacrificial victims at Anyang Yin-Shang archaeological site (c. 1100 BC)

In this presentation, I will visually highlight and analyze a broad collection of examples of oracle bone inscriptions on ritual human sacrifice from the mid to late-Shang period. The purpose of this presentation is to provide better understanding on the logographic invention and legitimation of violent state practices during Early Bronze Age China. Specifically, my archival investigation found that Shang rulers framed human sacrifice as prayers to the Shang high deity, Shang-Di, to deliver their people from major calamity. State sacrificial ceremonies involving the killing of humans appear to be restricted, as least in writing, to exceptional occasions of severe food shortage and the aftermath of a major military conflict. Hundreds and sometimes thousands of war captives and/or slaves are said to be executed during these apotropaic ceremonies via means of decapitation, burning and/or bloodletting.

 Although people in modern society seldom consider ritual sacrifice (especially those that involve the slaughter of humans for ritual purposes) as an ongoing practice, it nonetheless remains an organizing element of contemporary institutions of governance. Capital punishment, for instance, is one of the oldest forms of human ritual sacrifice that is continuously practiced to the present day.

modern forms of human sacrifice

René Girard observed in his Religion and Ritual, “sacrifice is the most critical and fundamental rites…all systems that give structure to human society have been generated from it: language, kinship system, taboos, codes of etiquette, patterns of exchanged, rites, and civil instructions.” American social psychologist Erich Fromm further noted, in The Anatomy of Human Destructiveness, that not only does the religious phenomenon of sacrifice still exist in modern society, but modernity has in many ways amplified the scope, intensity and destructiveness of ritual human sacrifice.

modernity has in many ways amplified intensity of human sacrifice
Modernity has in many ways amplified intensity of human sacrifice

One of earliest, and most well-documented examples of institutionalized, large-scale human sacrifice regime is found in oracle bone scripts unearthed from mid to late-Shang period (c.1250 BC – 1046 BC) archaeological sites in China. Written artifacts excavated from late-Shang archaeological sites were predominantly in the form of oracle bone script. These writings were used specifically during state divination ceremonies where the Shang ruler, both acting as a king and as a high priest, would carve scripts concerning matters of state importance (such as military affairs, prayers for bountiful harvest, and matters concerning sacrificial offerings) onto specially prepared tortoise carapaces and bovine bones.

oracle bone script on tortoise carapace
Oracle bone script on a tortoise carapace used during state divination ceremony (c. 1250 BC)

Oracle bone script is among the earliest known fully developed Chinese writing systems. Despite its age, the oracle bone script is nonetheless a highly developed iconographic form of writing, which is partially mutually intelligible with contemporary Chinese characters, and shares similar syntactical framework with classical written Chinese. Thus, despite its ancient origin, the oracle script is accessible to modern day readers, perhaps due to the fact that it is, like contemporary Chinese, a purely logographic medium that transmits meaning without relying on phonetic representation, and therefore has remained relatively static across millennia.

logographic evolution of the elephant glyph
Logographic evolution of the elephant glyph

A sizable portion of the oracle bones uncovered in Shang archaeological sites contain inscriptions, known as oracle bone scripts, specifically concerning ritual human sacrifices performed by the Shang ruling class. These written records are also corroborated by the discovery of numerous mass-graves of human sacrifice victims in these sites.

Shang bronze script
Shang bronze script, c. 1100 BC

According to official historical records compiled during the Zhou dynasty (1046 BC–256 BC), Shang was the second Chinese dynasty preceded by the quasi-legendary Xia dynasty (c.2070 BC –1600 BC). However, as there are no conclusive archaeological records proving the existence of the Xia dynasty, Shang is the earliest confirmed Chinese dynasty in that the earliest written records were dated to this era. Written artifacts excavated from Shang archaeological sites were predominantly in the form of oracle bone script. These writings were used specifically during state divination ceremonies where the Shang ruler, both acting as a king and as a high priest, would carve scripts concerning matters of state importance (such as military affairs, prayers for bountiful harvest, and matters concerning sacrificial offerings) onto specially prepared tortoise carapaces and cow bones. The Shang king (Di) would then prod the oracle bones with a red-hot bronze rod, which would cause the bones to crack under the intense heat, indicating that the singular supreme deity of the Shang people, Shang-Di (上帝, lit.: “supreme high Lord”) had answered the questions inscribed on the bones, and the cracks left on the bones were supposedly Shang-Di’s divine answers. Only the Shang king could interpret these and announce them to his people as divine mandates.

Di, the title of Shang ruler
The “Di” glyph, title of the Shang ruler

A sizable portion of the oracle bones uncovered in Shang archaeological sites contain inscriptions, known as oracle bone scripts, specifically concerning ritual human sacrifices performed by the Shang ruling class. These written records are also corroborated by the discovery of numerous mass-graves of human sacrifice victims in these sites. In most Shang sacrificial rituals, only animals, and valuable chattels (such as bronze wares) would be used as offerings. There were only two exceptional circumstances where human sacrifices were made: xunzang 殉葬 and renji 人祭.  Xunzang 殉葬  (lit. “suicide burial”) refers to the practice in which personal slaves and servants of Shang king, upon the death or their master, were expected to “volunteer” themselves to be buried alive as a form of “honor suicide.”  While the practice of “honor suicide” upon the master’s death has lingered throughout Chinese history, the second type of human sacrifice, renji 人祭 (lit. “human sacrifice”) is practiced only during the Shang dynasty period, and also the most massive in scale in terms of number of people killed in a typical  renji ceremony. The demographic pattern of Shang sacrificial victims is also quite interesting. Sacrificial burial victims (or supposedly “pious volunteers”) were mostly personal slaves (i.e. house servants), and therefore, in sacrificial burial archaeological sites in China, an even mix of male and female human remains could be found. Renji victims, on the other hand, appear to be predominantly male. Unlike sacrificial burial or xunzang, the people sacrificed for renji were not personal slaves, but mostly prisoners of war and field slaves (keep in mind that Shang field slaves were typically captured from distant lands outside the Shang domain).

Oracle bone fragments from Heji documenting human sacrifice
Oracle bone fragments from Heji documenting human sacrifice

Specifically, studies found that Shang dynasty human sacrifice functioned as prayers to Shang-Di to deliver the Shang people from major calamity. This type of sacrifice involving the killing of humans would only take place during periods of severe food shortage, usually due to drought or war.  

Heji 1079

Hundreds or even thousands of captive slaves might be executed during a ritual sacrifice ceremony by means of mass burial after decapitation and/or bloodletting (see Heji fragment 32035 below). The corpses of the victims, along with their severed heads, were buried in mass sacrificial pits or collectively incinerated, to placate what they thought was an angry Shang-Di. Oracle bone inscriptions refer to such sacrificial human blood as qiu (氿, “torrent”), but the precise method for extracting the sacrificial blood remains unknown.

Heji 32035

The largest human sacrifice event was attributed to Shang king Wu Ding (1250–1192 BC), as seen in Heiji fragment 1027-1 below, where more than one thousand slaves and war captives and offerings were allegedly slaughtered during a single divination ceremony.

The largest recorded human sacrifice
One of the largest human sacrifice event in oracle bone records, attributed to king Wu Ding (1250–1192 BC)

The dichotomization of celebratory and solemn sacrificial rituals also applies to religious practices by the ruling class in the mid to late Shang period. There were instances of total oblation rituals which involved the taking of human life as offerings to Shang Di. There were also instances of substitutive sacrifices which involved burning and destruction of ceremonial vessels and food items as offerings. It is important to note that oblative and substitutive forms of sacrifice differ only not only in terms of their lethality but also in terms of the occasion they were performed. Whereas substitutive rituals were performed typically during calendrical festival occasions to honor the spirit of dead ancestors,  oblative human sacrifices were practiced as non-calendrical responses to war and natural calamity.  The latter form of sacrifice invariably involved the ritual suspension of nomos (pre-existing formal and customary social protections) pertaining to the taboo of taking human lives. The ritual divination practice in this sense functions as a legitimation rhetorical device, reframing cruel acts of mass violence by the Shang rulers as “necessary” and “justified” performance of a supra-human mandate.

Selection of ritual killings from oracle bone records

These two modes of Shang period sacrifice rituals represent the adaptive strategic framing of sacrifice as the “appropriate” symbolic response for different communal exigencies.  The underlying exigence for substitutive sacrifice serves similar ends as all calendrical feasts of religious and traditional nature; that is, to seek to inculcate commonly held values and norms of behavior via predetermined activities revolving around collective food preparation and consumption, thereby automatically implying, via repetition, a collective sense well-being and continuity with the past.

 

Announcing Upcoming Book: “Legal and Rhetorical Foundations of Economic Globalization: An Atlas of Ritual Sacrifice in Late-Capitalism” (in press with Routledge)

(November 2nd, 2018)

I am very pleased to announce my new book contract with Routledge | Taylor & Francis Group for the publication of my academic monograph: Keren Wang, Legal and Rhetorical Foundations of Economic Globalization: An Atlas of Ritual Sacrifice in Late-Capitalism. Routledge intends to publish this book in both hardback and digital formats, and the hardback version is expected to be in print by the end of next year.

This book was developed from my doctoral dissertation, “Three Studies of Ritual Sacrifice in Late Capitalism.” I would like to extend my special thanks to Stephen H. Browne, my dissertation supervisor, and to members of my dissertation advising committee: Larry Catá Backer, Kirt H. Wilson, and Jeremy David Engels. This project would not have been possible without their guidance and mentorship. I would like to also express my gratitude to members of the Department of Communication Arts and Sciences at Penn State University, for their generous continuous support of my Ph.D study and related postdoctoral research.

My forthcoming book examines the rhetoric of political and economic sacrifice under neoliberalism, both within the U.S. and at a global level. While the book contains philosophical and theoretical ideas that would be useful to teach in both advanced undergraduate and graduate courses,  it also delineates a rhetorical theory of sacrifice as a way to address both the general question of the relationship between rhetoric and political community (what Kenneth Burke might frame as the dialectic between identification and division), and the specific issue concerning biopolitics (or who is “made to live and prosper,” at the expense of whom) under late capitalism. The book also contributes to the study of the connection between the theological and the political, as exemplified by Burke in rhetorical studies, in relation to a broad set of discussions revolving round economic globalization.

Presentation at 2018 PSU Social Thought Conference – “Three studies of ritual sacrifice in late-capitalism”

This presentation highlights a few key excerpts from my doctoral dissertation research:

“The ritual taking of things that are of human value, including the ritual killing of humans, has been continuously practiced for as long as human civilization itself has existed. Sacrifices in the form of state-organized rituals have been observed in many societies throughout history. Existing scholarship also observed an interdependent relationship between ritual sacrifice and the maintenance of political power in a broad set of historical cases, ranging from Shang dynasty China in 10th century BCE to the witch-hunts in early modern Europe. Sacrificial rituals of the past should not be considered fundamentally divorced from our modern world: whereas the formal elements of sacrifice of the past may no longer be recognizable, their substantive political functions do remain, with rhetorical overtones that carry into the politics of the present time. The goal for this project is to give due consideration to the politics of sacrificial rites across a broad set of political-theological traditions, hopefully paving the way to a new unifying understanding of sacrificial rhetorics. This research goal revolves around two primary research tasks that are intimately connected. The first is to provide a working interpretative framework for understanding the politics of ritual sacrifice – one that not only accommodates multidisciplinary, intersectional knowledge of ritual practices, but that can also be usefully employed in the integrated analysis of sacrificial rituals as political rhetoric under divergent historical and societal contexts.  The second conducts a series of case studies that cuts across the wide variability of ritual public takings in late-capitalism.”

“It is important to note that ritual sacrifices were far more than simply acts of religious devotion.  Historical evidence suggests ritual sacrifices were performed as crisis management devices. Large scale human sacrifices in Shang dynasty China and pre-Columbian Mesoamerica would only take place during periods of severe food shortage, usually caused by war or crop failure. In the mid-sixteenth century, King Ixtlilxochitl of the Aztec Empire (also known as the Triple Alliance) introduced a highly institutionalized form of ritual warfare, known as the ‘Flower War’ (Nahuatl: xōchiyāōyōtl), for the purpose of calendrical population control during periods of famine.”

 

“Ancient Greece devised the specialized sacrificial forms of Holokaustos  (total oblation) and Pharmakos (scapegoat) as “appropriate responses” to major catastrophes.”

 

“Although people in modern society seldom consider ritual sacrifice (especially those that involve the slaughter of humans for ritual purposes) as an ongoing practice, it nonetheless remains an organizing element of contemporary institutions of governance. Capital punishment, for instance, is one of the oldest forms of human ritual sacrifice that is continuously practiced to the present day.”

 

“The causal relationship between desire and violence has been widely discussed in early Enlightenment political philosophy – most notably by Thomas Hobbes in Leviathan, where he famously attributed the “King’s violence” to the fundamental and insatiable human desire for power and riches. With the rise of social psychology throughout the twentieth century, theories of human sacrifice began to expand beyond the evolutionary framework. The most influential theoretical contribution on the social psychology of sacrifice can be attributed to Sigmund Freud’s writings in Totem and Taboo, where he grounded ritualistic killings of other human beings as a manifestation of the intrinsic destructive impulse of the human ego. For Freud, human sacrifice, though it may seem like an exceptionally savage type of practice, is in fact a form of collective manifestation of basic human neuroses and insecurities. American social psychologist Erich Fromm observed that not only does the religious phenomenon of sacrifice still exists in modern society, but modernity has in many ways amplified the scope, intensity and destructiveness of ritual human sacrifice.  As modern forms of the ritual of sacrifice are disguised behind a thin veil of contemporary mythic justification frameworks, often spelled out in the language of economic, legal, and scientific rationalities, it is helpful to first examine scholarship on historical forms of ritual human sacrifice, so that we may distill an intersectional body of analytical vocabularies for our readings into of present movements. René Girard also considered the subject of human sacrifice along similar psychological lines, arguing that all sacred rituals are externalizations of violent human tendencies. In this regard, Girard points to our mimetic desire – desiring of what others have that we lack – as the source of human violence.”

“Works by Giorgio Agamben constituted the most significant twenty-first-century revival in the study of ritual sacrifice as political discourse. In his Potentialities: Collected Essays in Philosophy (1999), Agamben defined the concept of the homo sacer (sacred or accursed man) not as a historical particularity or person, as a metaphor for the rhetorical moment which the sovereign declares its power over ‘bare life’ (or life always ready to be disposed).  It is a moment where the ‘experience of history’ appropriates the ‘experience of language,’ as Agamben suggested, where the collective past is “saved” by “being transformed into something that never was.” The messianic logic also assumes radically different temporality than historical revisionist narratives –   it does not merely seek to reshape historical experience of the audience, but to claim the end of their history. The concept of kleto became a major subject of research in Agamben’s 2005 book The Time that Remains: A Commentary on the Letter to the Romans. In The Time that Remains, Agamben identified the messianic rhetoric in the letters of Apostle Paul served to construct a political theology that asserts itself as the end-of-history (and therefore end of political potentialities), by dividing the population along the binary of eternal salvation vs. damnation. Agamben contended that the political implication of Apostle Paul’s messianic rhetoric is not trivial – it was deployed as a discursive device for both the perpetual segregation and disenfranchisement of a population.”

 

“The ‘political geography’ form of rhetorical analysis provides an important methodological context for this dissertation project. Partially drawing from what Deleuze and Guattari calls ‘nomadic thought’ as the main critical approach for this ‘geographical’ intervention. However, the mapping attempt outlined in this dissertation differs from Deleuze’s neo-Kantian framework. The ‘nomadic’ position outlined in the works of Deleuze demand an epistemologically indifferent gaze that is radically detached from the ‘striated territories’ of political discourse on the ground. The ‘nomadic thought as outlined in their works assumes an undifferentiated plane of analysis that is extra-political and extra-territorial, thereby allowing the nomadic critic to ‘smoothly’ navigate among networks of knowledge-spaces. Deleuze’s nomad playfully assumes a detached neutrality and comfortable indifference towards territorial statehood and political spaces. In contrast, the critical position for this project would better be compared to that of a ‘fugitive.’ More specifically, a fugitive remains in a state constant exile – always stateless yet remain apprehensively watchful for subtle traces of political power.”

“No cartographer can hope to obtain the ‘God’s eye view’ removed from the limits of language and symbolic representations, and perfectly transcribes topographical and topological features ‘the way they are.’  In addition to identifying relevant features pertinent to the specific theme of the integrative rhetorical analysis, the interpretation and translation of these features are also fundamental challenges for mapping. The unique research topic tasked for this atlas project also adds an additional layer of challenge. The emergence of global capitalism accompanies the proliferation of its totalizing epistemic ‘fog-of-war’ – one that shrouds multitudes of political and historical vicissitudes of everyday life without completely clearing them.  Disparities in political variations and economic conditions remain visible at the local level, but these locally embedded tensions would have reduced visibility when examined from afar.  When political expressions are ‘taken hostage’ by the all-encompassing economic logic of neoliberalism, it is increasingly difficult locate a stable vantage point to render nuanced understanding of neoliberal discourse.”

“Extending from recent rhetorical works in areas of political geography and ideological assemblage, this project would suggest employing a ‘rhetorical atlas’ approach for its critical analysis. The thematic focus of this mapping effort rests on the discrete and simultaneous tracing of the discursive contours of sacrifice different local settings. Its aim is to collectively offer a small cross-section glimpse into the multiformity of mythical-ritual practices in the maintenance of neoliberalism governance. The atlas provides a good middle ground that allows for balanced display of both scope and detail, collectively presenting separately mapped localities of a larger region.”

“A total of three well-documented bodies of text have been selected as the main objects-of-analysis for this section.

  1. Kelo v. New London, 545 U.S. 469 (2005) – S. Supreme Court landmark decision permitting the use of eminent domain by local governments to seize residential properties for private redevelopment. Justice John Paul Stevens wrote the court’s majority opinion. [i]
  2. “Complaint to the UK National Contact Point under the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises,” filed by British NGO Survival International on December 2008, in response to the Niyamgiri indigenous land mining project controversy.
  3. Collection of speeches made by Dr. H. F. Verwoerd (1901 – 1966) – Professor of Sociology and Social Work at University of Stellenbosch, 6th Prime Minister of South Africa, and perhaps most famously remembered as the “Architect of Apartheid.”

Given that neoliberalism ‘speaks’ at both global and local levels, this project needs to look for ways to examine the rhetoric of sacrifice in diverse global settings without excessive sacrifices on attentions to local details. Thus, a total of five case studies present a realistic middle ground allowing a degree of diversity of examples without sacrificing attention to each individual text.  Second, all three textual objects are formally-organized bodies of speech and/or text produced for public context. For each object of analysis, its operation is confined within the prescribed political and legal parameters, and its textual production revolves around a prescribed set of ritual performances and sequential procedures. Third, the selected texts collectively offer a small but diverse and representative slice of those formal expressions commonly produced by key state and non-state actors in the contemporary global system. Lastly, each of the selected textual objects reveals a subtle yet representative aspect of the multifaceted ways neoliberal politics appropriate and deploy the rhetoric of sacrifice for its productive ends.”

“After surveying the surface topography of the case, the rhetorical analysis proceeds into the ritual and ideological “substrate” of the given rhetorical moment. This substrate analysis involves focused yet historically deep excavation of tacitly embedded belief structures that maintain and legitimize ritual sacrifice.  The third stage goes beyond surface text and their immediate contexts, and moves toward tracing those tacit political and economic fault lines that run beneath the rhetoric of sacrifice. This involves locating their divergent boundaries, fractures and potential points of rupture. At this stage the cartographer can no longer solely rely on her bare eyes and senses from a fixed vantage point. To further survey the sub-textual structures which lay underneath the written and spoken text, the cartographer is tasked with moving freely across the terrain, thus bringing a wide range of instruments and references to trace previously unmapped details. The textual and contextual layers of the text-object will be re-interrogated with the help of divergent vocabularies from past practices of ritual sacrifice.  The final stage concludes the textual analysis by bringing the multi-layered mapping from the previous three stages back into the thematic discussion of global neoliberal discourse.”

“The concept of human violence can be extremely broad, context driven, and self-contradictory. It is nonetheless sufficient to say that violent acts, when deployed as organized symbolic practices, necessarily involve transaction between actors, or groups of actors. Violent transactions not only often entail the use of force and/or power, both threatened and actual, between social actors, but also involve the transfer of wealth and resources among human groups. Ritual cannibalism, which was prevalent in prehistoric societies, not only involved consumption of human flesh for nutritional gains, but also the taking of resources which the cannibalized victim possessed.The defining element for ritual sacrifice is not the act of taking per se, but the legitimation process of violent takings through ritual suspension of nomos (pre-existing formal and customary social protections). The rhetoric of ritual functions as an audience-adaptation framework, via symbolic processes of consubstantiality and liminality. The ritual framing of human sacrifice thereby effectively conceals the violent and transgressive nature of the act, and transforms the violent transaction into a necessity and/or public good.”

“Collective ideas, even in the form of ‘religious superstitions,’ do not simply emerge from thin air ad libitum; rather, they both inflect upon and reflect a given society’s political and economic conditions. In theology, ecclesia (ἐκκλησία, ministry) is used to describe local ministries as well as in broader sense all members of a faith organized under a common religious institution. Here I would like to borrow the theological term ecclesia precisely because a full-fledged constitutional society functions similarly to religious institutions – both require the interdependent presence of formal doctrines and practicing believers. Indeed, organized religious communities and secular rule-of-law societies are organized around similar operating principles. Their proper functioning is dependent on two conditions: The first is the good faith of the commons – that personal ego and habits are restrained under a self-referencing set of collective core values and beliefs. The second condition is the ritual repetition – that those shared core values are maintained via enforcement of laws that reflect the material condition and pressing needs of the community. The authority of both the ecclesiastical body and the constitutional state are bound by their laws precisely because the laws themselves reflect the set of basic principles that the authority organizes itself upon. This interconnectedness between collective belief, collectively observed rituals, and collective legal consciousness in fact has been succinctly echoed in Rousseau’s writings in defense of classical republicanism, where Rousseau used the metaphor of ‘general will’ in describing the sovereignty as an belief community.”

 

“Ritual sacrifice, both ancient and contemporary, encompasses a complex set of social phenomena involving the mythic justification and ritualization of collective act of taking.  While the ritual acts of taking are organized differently to respond to a broad range of exigences, audience and constraints that might arise, the substantive nature of the act remains the same. It invariably involves some collective acts of seizure, transfer and/or destruction of things of both symbolic and real human significance, including the capture, confinement, mutilation and slaughter of human body. By defining ritual as a ‘collective’ social action, it does not imply that the actual performance of taking must be carried out by multiple agents. Rather, it refers to the collective identification of the act as a ‘reenactment of a prior event. …Ritual takings in the post-WWII political worldview share a number overlapping justification frames. This dissertation has so far identified five common frames, or doctrines, of ritual sacrifice that are broadly observed in its case studies. These common frames may be explicitly stated or tacitly assumed, but they tend to broadly reflect the hegemonic market-driven governmentality. These five doctrines together form the rhetorical foundation for public ritual sacrifice in late-capitalism. They define the ‘appropriate and proper’ occasions for suspending pre-existing rule of law and rights protections, to allow otherwise transgressive social transactions that are previous prohibited.”

 

“The first common doctrine is the total depravity of an economically accursed condition. This common doctrine involves a two-fold anathema, formally delivered by the acting authority against the accursed party to be sacrificed. First is the identification of a certain pre-existing condition that is always-already-depraved.  That is, certain general conditions (i.e. blighted inner-city neighborhoods) already bound by totalizing presumptions that these conditions would always, and without exception, totally deprave the collective economic outlook of the community. The second anathema is the explicit naming of the party the accursed condition is being inflicted upon (i.e. condemning the blighted city neighborhoods for regulatory seizure). In the case where the economically accursed condition is declared as ‘totally depraved’ by institutions of authority, such declaration often triggers the mandatory seizure of valuable resources as necessary means to deliver the commons from economic doom… …Ritual sacrifice is deployed as the automatic and ‘appropriate’ response a certain pre-existing condition that is considered to be accursed by institutions of authority. Interestingly, it is observed that under the governmentality of late-liberalism, the accursed is often a certain pre-existing condition rather than the offering itself. This kind of ‘pre-existing condition’ is assumed to be a totally abomination; that is, a taboo that mandates ritual sacrifice to protect a certain totemic good that must be preserved.  An accursed condition may exist in the literal form of the ‘pre-existing condition clause’ in many for-profit health insurance contracts, for example. The rhetorical assumption is that it is not the patient him or herself that is the accursed. Rather, the curse is directed at certain conditions that are defined by the insurance company. It is assumed, typically without any material evidence, that the self-generated list of  ‘pre-existing medical conditions’ are taboos for the industry, as they total abominations the economic profitability of corporate stakeholders. Furthermore, the ‘economic profitability’ is assumed to be so sacred that it does not seem proper to wait for material evidence to emerge in order to drop insurance coverage. Rather, the discovery of pre-existing conditions automatically triggers instant and negotiable denial from coverage.”

“The second common doctrine, unconditional election of modified offerings, frames the parameters of the offering being elected for ritual sacrifice. It also provides the modus operandi of their election. In all three case studies, the sacrificial victims were elected via entirely impersonal grounds (unconditional election). Furthermore, human sacrifices in these cases did not directly involve the total oblation (killing) of the victim. Instead, they demanded modified offerings in the form of economic resources and access to these resources.  In the case of Apartheid South Africa, the unconditional permanent surrender of resources and access was generally applied via no reason other than one’s assigned genetic category. This seemingly arbitrary election of the sacrificial victim rhetorically conceals the human agent behind the violent transaction.”

“…[T]he psychological conditions driving 20th century warfare were comparable to that of ancient child sacrifice as practiced in Canaan at the time of Carthage. The main conceptual difference between ancient and modern child sacrifices (war) merely in the name of the sacrificial cult, and the election process for sacrificial offerings. In short, same destructiveness, different idolatries.  Rhetorical theology, in this case, is more appropriate frame to examine many of the regularized, tacit articulations of the politics of sacrifice. Rituals are known for their liminal role in regulating and normalizing traumatic human experiences via symbolically concealing the violence. Even after WWII, the potential destructiveness of the nation-state idolatry did not subside, but further intensified.  Elaborate and all-encompassing rites and infrastructure of nuclear deterrence and mutually assured destruction emerged in the Cold War era, transforming the human civilization itself as the always-ready offering for automated total annihilation. The global nuclear deterrence regime persisted even after the end of Cold War. The possession of nuclear weapon systems, and the ability to kills hundreds-of-millions of people within hours, are still recognized as ultimate signs of national prestige.”

“Under the sacrificial regime of Cold War era nuclear deterrence, the election for its sacrificial offering is unconditional, total (as applied to the general population), and oblative (killing humans is the ritual’s core objective), and final (as it cannot be repeated in the foreseeable future, either due to human extinction or long-term radioactive fallout). This doctrine of unconditional mutual homicide, paradoxically, has been peculiarly comforting to those who believe it. It is not difficult to find reasonably sober and knowledgeable people professing full faith in the necessity of mutual homicide to protect peace and national security. However, there is an intrinsic contradiction within the ‘economy’ of the oblative sacrificial rite of the nuclear state… While the state-centric orthodoxy maintains its institutional presence globally, it is been gradually displaced by an emergent market-centric governmentality.  The rise of neoliberalism can be understood as a post-WWII reformation movement within the political theology of modernity. The rite of the late-capitalist transnational governmentality displaces the state with economic growth as the new telos of the political. Human lives were no longer simply assumed as means to preserve the integrity of the idolized Westphalian state. Rather, both the state apparatus and its population have become means to serve the ends of economic growth…. Within this emergent ‘grow-or-die’ economic worldview, a person is simply more ‘profitable’ living than dead. As growth in late-capitalism is largely driven by overconsumption and structural debt, the distinction between economically productive and unproductive members of society is blurred. Under this kind of economic regime, value is generated not only from labor-productivity, but also from consumption and direct extraction (from commodified bodies). A chronically ill and disabled patient may have limited labor value potential, but can be extremely ‘profitable’ for the pharmaceutical and healthcare industries. Within an increasingly privatized prison-industrial complex, even deviance and criminality can function as factors of value-extraction.”

“At surface, given the high economic cost of oblative human sacrifice, ritual sacrifice in late-capitalism may tend to appear less deadly than those ‘patriotic’ ritual killings of two world wars.  However, it is important to remember that this seemingly ‘life-affirming’ consequence of neoliberalism is merely incidental to the working its value-creation mechanism.  It is nonetheless concerning to witness an emergent system in which a chronically ill or incarcerated individual could generate more corporate revenue than a healthy, productive individual could.  As observed in the previous three case studies, rather than total oblation, modified offerings were elected to be sacrificed for the promise of economic growth. Negative power (or power of taking) was exercised not onto human life itself, but onto one’s economic capacity and access to economic resources. Not only an individual is seen as a factor of labor production, but his everyday transactions and biometric data are all potential sources for revenue. Economic resources, personal transactions, biometrics, right-of-access and other socio, political and economic rights protections are the new modified human offerings always-ready-to-be-taken… A notable exception to the aforementioned ‘more profitable alive than dead’ rule is the military-industrial complex. War and conflict remains a multi-billion dollar industry in the 21st century. Conservative estimates of the global arms trade in 2015 fell around $100 billion USD. Yet the ‘war economy’ is constrained by the fact that conflict destabilizes economic growth.”

 

“The third common doctrine, limited realization of predestined growth, serves to bridge the apparent gap between the promised blessing of neoliberal sacrifices and their actual fulfillment. In all three case studies, the “goodness” of the involved policy measures became an unfalsifiable doctrine of faith rather a materially justified fact. The universal benefit of economic growth was reframed by institutions of power as a matter of predestination, and are not subject to “second-guessing.” The doctrine of limited realization of the ideal thus became the rhetorical response by public authorities in the case studies to address constraints that arise from the unfulfilled promises of neoliberalism.”

“Empirical observations shown above suggest a simple fact – that formal economic growth is increasingly outpacing real income on the ground. Did economic growth fail to materialize into tangible wealth? Yes and no. In practice, the sweeping material promises of growth-driven sacrifices do not fully realize except for a very limited class of financial asset owners, or the so-called ‘Top 1%.’ Only those very few who own the means of financial speculation are structurally ‘predestined’ to receive the blessings of the global economic system. Since the 1980s, this trend has been widely observed across in both developing and developed economies around the world. Other non-econometric human development has also remained stagnant or even worsened over the third-wave marketization period. The incarceration rate in the United States increased more than 400% from 1978 to 2010. Globally, both the number and relative intensity of armed conflicts have increased sharply since 2010. The amount of forcibly displaced populations worldwide also rose six-fold from 2000 to 2014.”

“…[A] fundamental rhetorical constraint for authorities in all three case studies is the disparity between the make-believe and lived reality in terms redeeming the material blessings of neoliberal sacrifice. Mythos legitimizes and reifies arguments that cannot be verified via lived experience. For metaphysical God-concepts that transcend human empirical domain, mythos may be the only device available in human language to narrativize the immaterial.[iv] When material justifications are wanting, mythical narratives may be employed to fill the gap of public imaginary. The mythical narrative in this case does not provide an alternative justification to the material knowledge-gap. Rather, it functions as means of evasion – ‘that is, avoidance of an unacceptable truth’ as deemed by the dominant power structure. Thus, in all three case studies examined so far, the public authority rhetorically transformed the empirically-grounded notion of economic growth into a self-justifying God-concept. This rhetorical transformation would not be possible without pre-existing, socially embedded idolization of ‘economic growth.’ Under the transnationally proliferated myth that economic growth is the predestined and singular route of the salvation for all political communities, the rhetoric of ‘limited realizations’ of those promised blessings is sufficient to function as the singular legitimation basis a wide range of ritual sacrifices.”

 

“The Fourth common doctrine can be summarized as irresistible takings by institutions of public authority. This common doctrine seeks to establish the irresistibility of ritual takings. This doctrine responds to the constraint of rhetorical contestation. That is, to manage and constrain the capacity of those discontents of the sacrifice ‘to criticize or uphold an argument, to defend themselves or to accuse.’  It defines the rhetorical boundaries contestability throughout the ritual taking process, and declares the infallibility of the acting authority to exercise its power of takings. In all three case studies, the irresistible takings doctrine is deployed via certain prescribed judicial, administrative and/or legislative processes.”

“…Ritual takings are presented as automatically triggered via the formal invocation of pubic authority. In the case of public taking, the formal innovation (i.e. property condemnation notice) functions as a signifier of the “publicness” of the act-of-taking. The instant audience recognition of the invocation is possible because the governing authority and its subjects are bound in a state of constitutional consubstantiality. The constitutional framework organizes the subjects under a unified political ecclesia (community sharing a common-faith), in which the totemic field of habitus (or consubstantiality) is provided, which automatically implies certain role expectations and power-relations.  Upon audience identification of the formal invocation, an otherwise violent act-of-taking is instantly transformed into a regulated public ritual… Subsidiary petition rituals are often put in place to make the “bitter pill” of public takings appear more equitable or even palatable. …[E]ven in a full-fledged liberal, constitutional society, the judiciary apparatus cannot entirely eliminate resistance against its rulings. In situation where ritual sacrifice is both materially damaging and normatively transgressive, it tends to invite a higher degree of public resentment.  Often, subsidiary petition structures only allow the negotiation of compensation, but do not permit public takings themselves to be contested. These subsidiary rituals function as pressure-release valves to counterbalance the oppressive nature of the irresistible takings doctrine. Apartheid legislations created separate (and much stricter) judicial process for reviewing petitions against forceful relocation of non-whites. Petition rituals thus often function within the rhetorical field constitutional consubstantiality, to allow a more ‘sustainable’ expansion of the laws of sacrifice. This in turn leads to the fifth common doctrine – the perseverance of the ritual.”

“The fifth common doctrine is the perseverance of the sacrificial ritual.  The rhetorical inventive process by the acting authorities in all three case studies share the motivation of rendering exceptional sacrifices permanent. Ritual is, by definition, symbolic act of preservation. Ritual preserves common values and norms of behavior via repetition and consubstantiality. Even destructive rituals, such as war and capital punishment, are formally conducted under the justification framework of preserving collective ideals. The normative structures of neoliberalism, too, reproduce its economic worldview via ritual inculcation of its core values and normative principles. Thus the post-WWII transnationally established norms of governance tend to gravitate towards a preference for the protection of private property, and free movements of goods, services, technology and financial assets. The transnational proliferation of neoliberal constitutionalism only accelerated since the end of the Cold War.”

“…Neoliberalism, however, should not be understood as simply a particular set of ideas and teachings. Neoliberalism is also a historical moment. It is the historical unfolding of the qualitative and quantitative changes, fractures and fissures of capitalist global economy in the late twentieth and twenty-first-century. Even the most foundational liberal ideals, such as the individual’s right to the quiet enjoyment of one’s own property, are readily disposable for the sake of its economic articulations. In all three rhetorical studies, the acting authorities employed the economic logos of neoliberalism to justify the sacrifice of the ideals are considered sacred under the neoliberal normative framework.”

“…[T]he judicial, administrative and legislative organs involved in the case studies not only served as agents of sacrifice, but also legislation of new laws of sacrifice that can be applied in future cases. The rhetoric of the ritual projects its power not only over present disputes, but also over future possibilities. These cases were all considered as exceptional ritual sacrifices in the sense that they significantly departed the pre-existing constitutional nomos. Furthermore, acting authorities in all three cases did not resort to the ‘state of emergency’ argument. The state of exception itself was formally permitted only momentary suspension of pre-existing legal protections. Yet the ritual sacrifices in the case studies were motivated not only by the act-of-taking present-at-hand, but also the perseverance of new sacrificial rituals to facilitate future takings. Ritual sacrifice in all three case studies not only preserved its ritual for future use, but also preserved their territorial separations, as well as the inequitable distribution of economic resources among their populations.”

(c) 2018 Keren Wang

 

 

(All art illustrations in presentation slides are available on public domain via Wikimedia Commons)