Trolling feels like a new phenomenon. But it existed long before the internet
- Written by Robert Phiddian, Professor of English, Flinders University
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Trolling on the internet looks and feels like a new phenomenon. Abuse can rain down on a target instantly and from everywhere, in quantities never before seen. But as David Rudrum’s engaging book on the history of trolling[1] shows, the desire to hurt or distract another with words goes back a very long way. The internet is a powerful new medium, but ancient messages travel on it.
Review: Trolling before the Internet: An Offline History of Insult, Provocation, and Public Humiliation in the Literary Classics – David Rudrum (Bloomsbury)
The legendary first satirist Archilochus[2] is said to have wandered between the cities of pre-classical Greece, asking for food and accommodation. If a king was hospitable, the poet would sing a song of praise about his virtues. If he was turned away, Archilochus would go to the next place and sing a song so abusive of the spurning king that he is supposed to have actually killed at least one of his victims[3].
This is just-so story territory, somewhere in Greece in the first half of the seventh century BCE. Did anyone really die of shame because of Archilochus’s barbed words? I rather hope not, but the mythic power of the story rings down the ages. The Old English word for story was spell (hence gospel, which is OE gōd spel, good story). It only took on the sense of magic spell in the early Modern period.
Trolling aspires to the status of magic spell, hoping to silence an opponent through shame and ridicule, rather than cogent argument. Usually it is no more than noisy and irritating – but sometimes it takes flight, and a troll can change the world. It is likely to be vexatious, but if deployed in a just cause, it can sometimes be a good thing. As with anything that claims to be “just a joke”, context matters.
Sledging in Beowulf
Rudrum brings order to this melange of rhetoric, wit and malice with a handy working definition of trolling:
Trolling is to defame, insult, or humiliate an opponent in public, or else to make a public statement of views that are not sincerely held, but aim instead to cause controversy, or to be provocative and vexatious, sometimes with legal consequences.
This is a lumpy and inclusive definition, the best kind because it provides a way into the trolling text-acts rather than an endless (and to my mind arid) line-drawing between items that are either in or out.
Trolling is a human phenomenon. Like nearly everything in cultural theory, from tragedy to deconstruction, it is really a fuzzy category. Thus, Rudrum sensibly suggests no single ingredient of his definition is needed to label a text trolling, as long as enough of the others are apparent.
Even the most earnest teacher can afford to worry about the implications of Lady Bracknell’s[7] brutal sledge. And which of us can resist the furtive joy of witnessing a good bit of trolling, at least when it happens to someone else?
More seriously, Swift’s A Modest Proposal[8] and Zola’s J’Accuse[9] are justly defended as a satire and a polemic. They maliciously attack and belittle corrupt and complacent establishments in 18th century Ireland and 19th century France with potent moral justification. When power refuses to listen to truth, speaking insolence instead certainly feels good and can, when the circumstances so conspire, even do good.
‘The farting donkey at Rome’
But it is the image of the 16th century German theologian Martin Luther as troll that is most arresting. By trolling the Catholic church through the new medium of print, in German rather than the learned language of Latin, Luther drove on one of the greatest revolutions in European history[10], namely the Protestant reformation. He was profuse, abusive, and very scatological in his writings. The Ninety Five theses[11], which he pinned on the church door in Wittenberg, are an angry listicle of the problems attendant on turning a religion based in poverty and humility into a multinational business.
His reformation surged through Europe because people “got” the basic criticism, much as people “get” a joke. Others built the detailed theological architecture of Protestantism, but Luther went viral with a New Testament he translated in ten hot months and descriptions of the pope as “the Farting Donkey at Rome”.
There are two messages here for our present moment in the history of trolling.
One is that the message is most volatile when the medium is new and uncontrolled by established conventions. Flyting competitions and sledging in sport and politics are contained by understood rituals of rhetorical combat. “Because I want to do you slowly,” Paul Keating once said to John Hewson[12] across the despatch box in 1992, before going on to win the 1993 election.
It is when the rules of the game are fluid that big effects, for good and ill, can explode uncontrollably, leaving targets confused about how to respond, if at all. Should you just refuse to feed the trolls?
Donald Trump’s use of Twitter’s speed and ubiquity last decade to disrupt the mass-media conventions of politics is another trolling revolution[13], with consequences that are still playing out.
And this leads to the second message, the one we will always have with us even when we have worked out how to live with (anti-)social media. As Rudrum puts it:
Someone who trolls may be ‘just trolling’, but they’re not ‘just a troll’ if they can successfully portray themselves as trolling in a noble cause.
Recently I wrote[14] about why I did not think that the benefits of labelling satire online outweighed the costs. It’s impractical – people can avoid labels in bad faith. And it treats the public as helplessly in need of protection by a group (or even an algorithm) of guardians who protect us from making mistakes when presented with satire, irony, sarcasm, and the rest.
If an algorithm for trolling could be devised, I would briefly be tempted to turn it on. On reflection, I’d resist the mechanical fix. It probably wouldn’t work reliably anyway. If it did, however, that might one day be worse.
If the history of censorship is anything to go by, the definition of trolling will expand to include a lot that is better described as robust critique.
Zola was a great novelist who chronicled late 19th century French society in rich detail. In J'Accuse, by contrast, he deliberately and disruptively used newspapers to break the law. His brief and explosive foray into journalism exposed the cover-up of the corrupt military trial and imprisonment of Alfred Dreyfus[15], wrongly fitted up for treason because he was Jewish. We should, I think, be prepared to put up with a fair bit of malicious nonsense to avoid having this kind provocation silenced as “trolling” before it can reach the public.