Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Mindless Anti-Medieval Mythography; Anti-Vaxers are not medieval - they are dangerously modern.

I am perpetually fascinated by the way that "medieval" is code for barbaric, backwards, savage, and the like. The phrase "get medieval" seems to have originated (or at least moved into widespread use) as a result of Pulp Fiction, in which Ving Rhames' character, after being freed by Bruce Willis' character, tells his rapist that he's going to "get medieval on [his] ass." From there, the phrase moved comfortably into mainstream use.

For example, here's a St. Louis football writer criticizing the Rams for not getting involved in Free Agency. He describes free agency as:
This was the NFL’s version of Black Friday, when roaming gangs of berserk shoppers invade department stores to dive on laptops, have MMA brawls over the trendiest toys, blitz the video-game aisle, and go medieval over the dwindling supply of flat-screen TVs.
I like to point out that the twentieth-century was, by far, the most brutal era for human-on-human violence in the history of our species. Medieval people tortured, but were not more inventive about torture than we are now, especially given the clever things we can do with modern tools and electricity. Medieval people were not more savage than the ancient Greeks and Romans (look up the real meaning of the word "decimate," or follow through on all the massacres in Thucydides). And yet, the myth persists. It's useful.

Here's an example that genuinely upset me. I am an anti-anti-vaxer. Which is to say I have critiqued the anti-vax movement for The Atlantic and CNN and I write about it on the blog. I am particularly interested in the ways in which the anti-vax movement reveals attitudes about disability, as well as more general questions of epistemological processing behind fear-based parenting. So I like this essay, "The Vaccine Battle Is Not Part of the Mommy Wars," because it's trying to push conversation about vaccines away from parenting philosophies and into the world of public health policy. But then I came upon this paragraph (emphasis mine):

We cannot place the blame for the anti-vaccination nonsense solely at the feet of “crunchy” or “natural” parents, though there are many in that community who delay or completely withhold vaccinations. Being a somewhat crunchy parent myself (natural birth, cloth diapers, exclusively breastfeeding, cosleeping, etc.), I encounter the sentiment “I feed my kids only organic and non-GMO foods, so I feel safe not vaccinating them” quite frequently. These parents seem to believe that several hundred years ago, before GMOs or pesticides existed, there were no communicable diseases. Other groups of parents, like ultra-religious Jews in Brooklyn, also withhold vaccinations, as well as some Christians. And then there are the former MTV stars like Jenny McCarthy and Kristin Cavallari, who have been public about their fears over vaccines causing everything from autism to asthma to allergies. This diverse group of parents has one thing in common: they are all putting us at risk for a return to the Middle Ages.
No. They're not.

Medieval people were, overall, relatively savvy about healthy given the context of the era. They didn't have germ theory. Neither did the Renaissance. Neither did the 17th century. Neither did antiquity.

Anti-vaxxers are rejecting an effective, well-tested, well-explained, set of preventative treatments. The knowledge is there for them, but in this rejection of science, they are deliberately rejecting the best available information.

This is not medieval. It's also not classical, baroque, renaissance, or furturistic.

It's dangerous. And very, very, modern.