Ministry of Delay in England: A satirical concept as a critique of bureaucracy
Introduction: The Phenomenon of the "Ministry of Delay"
In the context of British political satire and public discourse on bureaucracy, the concept of the "Ministry of Delay" (Ministry of Delay, Circumlocution Office) is not an official state institution. It is a collective satirical concept, a critical construct, first vividly embodied in the literature of Charles Dickens and updated in the 20th-21st centuries to describe systemic shortcomings of the state apparatus characterized by excessive complexity, inflexibility, dehumanization, and prioritization of procedure over result. Its analysis allows for the study of the evolution of criticism of bureaucracy in the British socio-cultural context.
1. Literary Prototype: "The Circumlocution Office" by Charles Dickens
The classic and most influential embodiment of the idea is "The Circumlocution Office" in Charles Dickens' novel "Little Dorrit" (1855-1857). This is not a ministry, but a satirical image of the entire British bureaucracy.
The characteristics of the Office, given by Dickens, have become canonical:
The principle of "How not to do it." The main goal is not to solve the problem of the citizen, but to find a way to avoid it, entangling the applicant in endless referrals, documents, and consultations.
The culture of procedure and form. Content is lost behind endless protocols, forms, and hierarchical consultations.
Family and secrecy. Dickens emphasizes that the Office is flooded with incompetent relatives of aristocratic families (the Barnacle family), which is a criticism of the patronage system.
Impeachment and omnipresence. "The most important management in the country" that "entangled its tentacles in all state affairs."
Dickens created this image under the impression of the Crimean War (1853-1856), the failure of which exposed the monstrous inefficiency and corruption in the supply of the army. His Office of Circumlocution was ...
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