Become a Member
Life

From rock stars to group dynamics

In his latest Jewniversity column, David Edmonds examines the work of Michael Billig

February 25, 2020 16:44
Michael Billig
3 min read

Hedgehogs, it seems to me, are more likely to become famous than foxes.

The philosopher Isaiah Berlin divided thinkers into two broad types. There were the hedgehogs — who know one big thing — and foxes who know lots of things. Hedgehog academics — who come up with one bold original idea — often become famous. Fox academics struggle to achieve the same prominence, even when they deserve it.

Michael Billig is a fox who should be far better known. A social scientist polymath, he’s written on a dizzying array of topics: Freud and the unconscious, language and rhetoric, discrimination, fascism, nationalism, academic prose, the royal family, laughter (writing that book was miserable, he says), even rock and roll Jews (writing that book was “a pleasure”). Why so many topics? “I have a low threshold of boredom”.

He began his studies as an undergraduate at Bristol University, studying psychology and philosophy. He found the psychology tedious until midway through his degree Bristol appointed a charismatic new professor, a Polish-born Jew and Holocaust survivor, Henri Tajfel. Tajfel became Britain’s greatest social psychologist and Billig played a pivotal role in the design of his most famous experiment, the Minimal Group Paradigm.

To get more from Life, click here to sign up for our free Life newsletter.