What I was trying to do with The Century of the Self was to look at how people in positions of power, not just politics, managed the rise of the individual self,” Curtis tells i.
“We’re very simple, irrational robots and we can be managed by the machines and by behavioural psychology.”
In order to adapt, “politics shifted and switched to a sort of consumerist model”, the BAFTA-winning filmmaker adds.
Curtis believes that this shift turned politicians from leaders into mere managers. In the documentary, this is highlighted by Bill Clinton’s election and Tony Blair’s reliance on focus groups.
“They became diminished creatures and in a way you can trace a lot of the – not just distrust – but dislike of politicians back to that switch to them becoming managers, because they had no vision to offer us.”
What have we learned from Trump and Brexit?
Curtis believes the liberal response to the recent political earthquakes is telling.
“The people who voted for Trump and Brexit, in their terms, were completely rational,” he says. “They were marginalised and really fed up – they were given a very big button that said ‘fuck off’ and they pressed it… they believed in something.
“We have been cosseted in this managed system of politics so much that when someone comes along and makes a rational decision from their point of view, we just don’t understand it.”
https://inews.co.uk/culture/film/adam-curtis-politics-99953