Pantucci at Prospect: the glitter and the gold

hip-hop .. rap .. socially networked revolution .. funky imagery and slang .. fanzine .. videos and songs .. how cool it is to be a mujahedin .. other non-traditional means .. dial-in conference calls .. how much fun it is to be fighting against the “kuffar” .. Facebook messages .. “‘Sup dawg. Bring yourself over here” to “M-town.”

… are also the specifics that al-Shabaab is using to recruit the attention of those who more or less idly surf YouTube and run across one of their videos…

The glitter is the gold.

In this case, I mean, the cool is the recruitment.

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Update:

Of course, if the rap itself is uncool as rap, that’s not so cool after all…

Daveed Gartenstein-Ross @DaveedGR tweets: “Seriously, John Walker Lindh is a better rapper than Omar Hammami: http://bit.ly/ifoafQ” — and Adam Serwer @AdamSerwer: “The lyrics to Omar Hammami’s rap don’t do it justice. Dude just has absolutely no rhythm whatsoever.”

Dawg.

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  1. J. Scott:

    Hi Charles, "Culture is recruitment" is very interesting; albeit I ‘m coming at culture from a business perspective.
    *
    The "glitter" is normalizing the jihadi message; conveyed in a way more meaningful and relevant to a Western audience?

  2. Charles Cameron:

    Yup.  Except that our words normalizing, meaningful and relevant are all a bit bland as descriptors of what’s going on here — the raps, the videos, the sounds of guns firing in the background of phone calls, the occasional “dawgs” and the snippets of Arabic are there to excite, to be hip, to make jihad seem from a distance — from Somalia to Minnesota, say, or Alabama — to be where the action is, where the cool guys go.
    .
    So guerrilla warfare with Al-Shabaab is advertised a bit like a big-game hunting safari in Africa — for kids who don’t own Lear jets and aren’t about to stay in palatial hotels…  It’s revenge, adventure and benediction all rolled into one – and it has to be made to seem pretty damn glamorous and / or definitively transcendent, because death, torture or a decade or two in prison are the likely endpoints of this particular narrative. 

  3. J. Scott:

    Of the many troubling aspects of this post is the almost fluid contextual malleability of the jihad MC’s potential audience; using sounds, symbols, and cadences familiar to "glitter" their way toward the "gold" of flesh and blood subjects–and doing so in such a manner that those duped actually anticipate the kool-aid. The idea is brilliant, but maddening…

  4. Charles Cameron:

    Jarret Brachman’s latest piece, The World of Holy Warcraft: How al Qaeda is using online game theory to recruit the masses, is a terrific illustration of my point  that "the cool is the recruitment".
    .
    Kudos to Brachman and Levine, too, for noting the gamification parallel with Stormfront.

  5. J. Scott:

    Hi Charles, Great link! For sometime I’ve been hearing consultants talk-up "gamification" as an analogous new method of education—-until today, I’ve been dubious. I’m still not sure about the utility, but these forums are establishing patterns, making ideology/planning accessible to anyone with an internet connection and some spare time. Gamification appears to be a potential gateway "drug" in establishing a "community of like-minded people—and they only need a few true believers to wreak havoc. Hiding in plain sight on the internet. Excellent post!

  6. Charles Cameron:

    As I said in a comment on Brachman’s piece, Scott:

    You might also want to talk to Amy Jo Kim about gamification and online community. 
    .
    She’s written about gamification and presented on it at the Game Developers Conference — and also wrote one of the earliest books on online community, Community Building on the Web (pub’d 2000).
    .
    She’d be ahead of the curve.

  7. onparkstreet:

    I recall Pantucci’s blog from the Kings of War blog. Fascinating.
    .
    As a teenager and young adult, I was vaguely aware of the "free Khalistan" movement of the 80s and western diaspora support for the Tamil Tigers.
    .
    One of the biggest online arguments I ever witnessed in a comments section was at Sepia Mutiny, I believe, and the commenters were arguing against the sunflower imagery in MIA’s music? You know, she of "Paper Planes" and Slumdog Millionaire? Now she’s definitely not lame musically, and her imagery and vocals did essentially romanticize the political violence, I think.
    .
    At any rate, almost any ideological movement seeks to use an aesthetic to recruit and to shape the surrounding culture. If there is rap music about a difficult subject, maybe that difficult subject becomes banal and the unthinkable, well, thinkable.
    .
    The other day I watched a PBS travel show and they visited Spain. I noted the artwork in the "ETA" cafes they showed was surprisingly good and the aesthetic effects very pleasing.
    .
    People pay attention to this stuff because it stimulates good feelings about something that may initally repulse.
    .
    Interesting post and comments.
    .
    – Madhu
    .
    (My mother told me about an instance – I don’t remember it – where she dragged me out of a meeting where someone was going on and on about "jat pride" and I guess he wen’t overboard and started talking junk. She didn’t like it. It’s one thing to be proud of certain customs, it’s another to start talking in terms of violence. I’d mentioned the "jat sikh" gangs of Vancouver around here before….)

  8. onparkstreet:

    M.I.A. was born in Britain but moved to Sri Lanka when she was 6 months old so that her father, an engineer and a leader in the Tamil separatist movement, could help fight for an independent Tamil homeland. Her childhood took her across northern Sri Lanka, wracked by insurgency, to India and back to Britain, where her mother and siblings settled into a public housing project outside London. Her father remained in Sri Lanka. She now calls New York home.Sri Lankans who have seen her videos say they interpret some parts as showing support for the Tigers, or at the very least glorifying their cause. But for those not familiar with the conflict, they might come across as generic third-world scenes.“I kind of want to leave it ambiguous for my fans,” she said in the PBS interview, referring to the lyrics of her song “Paper Planes,” which was nominated for record of the year at the Grammys but did not win.
    .
    http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/11/world/asia/11mia.html
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    Here you go Charles – an article about MIA from 2009.
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    – Madhu

  9. Raff:

    Hi Charles,
    .
    Thanks for the big-up! You’ve hit the nail on the head with the importance of "jihadi cool" – it seems a real dilemma to figure out how to counter this. Maybe Daveed’s comments about how bad the rap is are the best ways to dilute its potential power.
    .
    For those interested, this report from Demos in the UK touches upon some of these themes:  http://demos.co.uk/files/Edge_of_Violence_-_web.pdf?1271346195
    .
    cheers!
    .
    Raff