The pendulum swing of nuance
Our media environment is suffering a crisis of nuance: either we are missing it entirely or we are steeped in it to the point where we’ve lost the plot.
I’ve been trying to figure out why I’ve been bothered by this profile of Elizabeth Holmes in The New York Times. I think it’s because it’s an example of a pattern I’ve seen elsewhere in contemporary media (from mainstream press to social media).
- Step 1: Someone says or does something that is broadly perceived as wrong or offensive, and we pile on our reproach and cancel them or their ideas. Example: The recent protests and canceling of a speaker at Stanford Law School.
- Step 2: There is a growing recognition amongst some that maybe we’ve gone too far by reducing people to two-dimensional villains or reducing ideas to dubious conspiracy theories. Perhaps the truth might be more complicated, and needs to be revisited. Example: The revisiting of the COVID lab-leak theory, after it was roundly considered conspiratorial.
- Step 3: There’s an overcorrection in the effort to reintroduce the nuance that was originally missing. The absence of nuance is followed by the oversaturation of nuance. Everything becomes relative. Example: This podcast about JK Rowling attempts to redeem the author’s image by introducing new storylines and nuance. But this added complexity only creates a convenient relativism that shortchanges the truth.
- Step 4: The truth is lost in this sea of content, and we lose collective anchor points about a shared reality. Example: This profile of Holmes is a project in character rehabilitation to the point where we’ve partially lost sight of why she’s going to jail for 11 years. She’s not Elizabeth anymore, she’s actually Liz (with a higher voice).
Our media environment is suffering a crisis of nuance: either we are missing it entirely or we are steeped in it to the point where we’ve lost the plot.