Obama’s Love Affair with “Waste Land”

R. B. Kitaj, "If Not, Not"

Some people have expressed surprise that 22-year-old Barack Obama’s recently-published love letters would mention the poetry of T. S Eliot, both because Eliot is a conservative and, well, what is Eliot doing in a love letter anyway? If you’re going to quote classic poems, why not John Donne or Walt Whitman (Bill Clinton’s choice) or D. H Lawrence (who I read voraciously at 20).

Judging by my own youthful love letters, however, it makes sense. Obama is using what he learned in his Columbia University humanities classes to figure out the big things in life, which include the state of the country, the meaning of life, and, yes, sex. Love letters to a kindred soul provide an opportunity.

Here’s the Obama passage that everyone is citing:

I haven’t read The Waste Land for a year, and I never did bother to check all the footnotes. But I will hazard these statements—Eliot contains the same ecstatic vision which runs from Münzer to Yeats. However, he retains a grounding in the social reality/order of his time. Facing what he perceives as a choice between ecstatic chaos and lifeless mechanistic order, he accedes to maintaining a separation of asexual purity and brutal sexual reality. And he wears a stoical face before this. Read his essay on Tradition and the Individual Talent, as well as Four Quartets, when he’s less concerned with depicting moribund Europe, to catch a sense of what I speak. Remember how I said there’s a certain kind of conservatism which I respect more than bourgeois liberalism—Eliot is of this type. Of course, the dichotomy he maintains is reactionary, but it’s due to a deep fatalism, not ignorance. (Counter him with Yeats or Pound, who, arising from the same milieu, opted to support Hitler and Mussolini.) And this fatalism is born out of the relation between fertility and death, which I touched on in my last letter—life feeds on itself. A fatalism I share with the western tradition at times. You seem surprised at Eliot’s irreconcilable ambivalence; don’t you share this ambivalence yourself, Alex?

I don’t entirely follow all the threads of this but what I get is that Obama, frustrated with his job and separated from his girlfriend, wants to throw himself passionately into things bigger than himself, both public and personal (i.e., sex). He therefore mentions figures that were looking for ecstatic experiences. Thomas Müntzer was a contemporary of Martin Luther, a 15th century Anabaptist preacher who was both looking for union with God and caught up in social movements. Meanwhile Yeats (for a while) and Pound got caught up in the romanticism of great man fascism, with its ringing put-down of anemic bourgeois liberalism.

But Obama, while he feels the tug, is also suspicious of passionate immersion, and one can see here already the caution that characterizes the president. He distances himself from Müntzer, Yeats and Pound and turns instead to the more “fatalistic” Eliot—an Eliot who would later describe himself as a classicist in literature, a royalist in politics, and an Anglican in religion.

Here’s how Adam Kirsch in a New York Times article explains the politics:

Mr. Obama speaks respectfully of Eliot’s “reactionary” stance, because he sees that “it’s due to a deep fatalism, not ignorance.” That is, Eliot, like so many of the greatest modern writers, thinks of liberalism as an inherently shallow creed, because of its inability to reckon with the largest things — death and the meaning of life. Since Hobbes, liberalism has been defined as a form of government designed to preserve us from violent death. But death, Eliot reminds us, can’t be avoided, and the trivial concerns of everyday life are just a distraction from that ultimate truth.

That’s the import of the mocking lines from the poem Mr. Obama cites, “Four Quartets”: “O dark dark dark. They all go into the dark,/The vacant interstellar spaces, the vacant into the vacant,/The captains, merchant bankers, eminent men of letters. …”

In explaining Obama’s attraction to Eliot, Kirsch may be thinking about how Obama, even while progressive, has been cool towards leftwing idealists (including, perhaps, his mother?):

It is rare for a politician to give the sense that he has genuinely encountered this kind of “fatalism,” or despair. After all, politics in a liberal democracy is all about the distribution of worldly rewards; to believe with Eliot that such rewards are essentially futile is to nullify the whole purpose of politics. Mr. Obama’s ability to recognize the poetic truth of Eliot’s conservatism, while still embracing the practical truth of liberalism, is what makes his letter not just a curiosity but also a hint at the complexity of his mature politics.

You’re excused if you’ve forgotten that we’re talking about a love letter here, but I can testify that for me at this age—and for Obama too, apparently—getting caught up in big ideas and getting caught up in sex are all part of the same thing. It’s not incidental that The Waste Land is about a barren land of frustrated desire. Here’s how Columbia professor Sara Cole reads Obama’s references to fertility:

He is referring to the poem’s overarching principle, which Eliot had picked up in part from several famous anthropologists of his day, that life follows death, flowers bloom from dead land, after winter comes spring, after drought rain; out of these seasonal images, as Obama recognizes, we can generalize something about human experience: that the harshest, ugliest, most trying and most violent experiences generate beauty, accomplishment, and dignity.

Young Obama may be in the grip of his hormones, but he doesn’t want to reduce his desires to mere carnal encounters. By contrasting “ecstatic chaos” with “lifeless mechanistic order,” “asexual purity” with “brutal sexual reality,” he shows he wants his love life to be high and soaring. He wants his relationship to be more than that of the couple in the The Waste Land, the “young man carbuncular” and the typist, who engage in a sterile afternoon rendezvous.

It’s easy to make fun of this. Noreen Malone of New York Magazine calls the young Obama “dickish” and takes him apart with withering sarcasm:

It is a truth universally acknowledged that every young lady interested in literature goes through a phase where she finds terribly pretentious young men terribly attractive. She is so wowed by his deep knowledge of the Western canon — and more of a turn-on still, his ability to deconstruct it — that she ignores the fact that every discussion of the Great Existential Questions ends up being, basically, all about him and his superior philosophical mind and how he is on a higher plane than everyone else because he really thinks about this stuff, you know? When he asks for her opinion on literature, it is often done with a slightly patronizing whiff. Yet she hangs on his musings and his attentions. She treasures his missives — until some day, years in the future, she comes across the old correspondence she saves and is able to laugh at how silly and self-serious they both were in their youth.

I asked Julia if, when I would launch into epistolary monologues about Nietzsche’s life force and Antonio Gramsci’s organic intellectuals and Freud’s death wish and Karl Marx’s humanity stepping into its full potential and D. H. Lawrence’s copulating turtles, she was turned on and she replied, “Oh yeah.” Looking back, I tend to judge myself less harshly than Malone does, but maybe that is because I deal with students this age all the time. I like the fact that they haven’t yet become graduate specialists or work place pragmatists. They have discovered they have minds that can make sweeping connections and bodies that can make their own kinds of connections and they want to put them all to use.

Even if all of this is risible in retrospect, isn’t it nice to know that great books can get you laid? Maybe I’ll mention that in next semester’s syllabus.

A note on the artist: According to R. B. Kitaj, his painting If Not, Not bears “a certain allegiance to Eliot’s Waste Land.”

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A Villanelle for Graduating Seniors


Suzanne Marie Leclair, "Graduation"

During our commencement ceremonies this past Saturday, my creative writing colleague Karen Anderson was asked to read an appropriate poem. (Previous posts on Karen’s poetry have appeared here and here.) Karen chose a villanelle by Theodore Roethke and then, in a very nice touch, explained how the poem’s intricate form as well as its content captures the experience of going through college.

I have to say that I’ve always been puzzled by this enigmatic poem. Why does the poet wake to sleep rather than from sleep? Maybe there’s an allusion here to Wordsworth’s “our life is but a sleep and a forgetting” or (Shelley now) that we are trying to make sense of “this dream of life.” Or is the poet awaking to (as in becoming aware of) the sleep that will one day descend upon us? After all, there’s an allusion to Eliot’s “death’s grin from ear to ear,” followed by speculation about what “Great Nature” will do “to you and me.” Lightning will blast the tree and, more slowly, the worm will inch its way up the stairway of life. But whether he’s talking about life or death, Roethke appears to be calling on us to make the most of the time we have.

As I listened to the poem, I thought of how, in their four years, my students had become more attuned to their feelings and more sensitive to the blessed ground and that they have been learning by going where they had to go. All in all, it was a perfect poem for a momentous occasion on a gorgeous day. Here’s Karen’s intro and the poem:

By Karen Anderson, English, St. Mary’s College of MD

I have chosen to read Theodore Roethke’s poem “The Waking” because it is, in some sense, the crystallization of a St. Mary’s College of Maryland education. Roethke, in constraining himself to the Renaissance form of the villanelle, demonstrates his dedication to the difficulties of poetic craft and form, just as you have dedicated yourselves to the rigors of your disciplines.  And he uses the repetition of this form to speak to how a process of learning like the one you undertook here will extend beyond the moment of receiving your degree: the abandonment of fear, the necessary doubt, the joy in building knowledge, the gratitude for it that will sustain you for a lifetime of learning.  But beyond that, and most importantly, it is a poem that suggests what we share, students and professors and staff, children and parents, poets and presidents: both the need for the patient dedication to our pursuits and the miraculous way that endings, even one as momentous as this one today, are also always beginnings.

The Waking

By Theodore Roethke

I wake to sleep, and take my waking slow.
I feel my fate in what I cannot fear.
I learn by going where I have to go.

We think by feeling. What is there to know?
I hear my being dance from ear to ear.
I wake to sleep, and take my waking slow.

Of those so close beside me, which are you?
God bless the Ground!   I shall walk softly there,
And learn by going where I have to go.

Light takes the Tree; but who can tell us how?
The lowly worm climbs up a winding stair;
I wake to sleep, and take my waking slow.

Great Nature has another thing to do
To you and me; so take the lively air,
And, lovely, learn by going where to go.

This shaking keeps me steady. I should know.
What falls away is always. And is near.
I wake to sleep, and take my waking slow.
I learn by going where I have to go.

 

Note on the artwork: The painting can be found at fineartamerica.com/featured/graduation-suzanne-marie-leclair.html.

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A Bulimic Sees Herself in Milton’s Satan


Gustave Dore, Satan in "Paradise Lost"

I handed in my final grades yesterday and, as always at this time of year, am simultaneously discouraged and exhilarated. (I’m also really, really tired.) The discouragement comes from thinking about all the teaching opportunities I missed. The exhilaration comes from the breakthroughs I witnessed. In the upcoming weeks, you’ll be hearing about some of the latter, including (today) the connections that one student uncovered between her bulimia nervosa and her attraction to Milton’s Satan. The essay she wrote, which she has generously allowed me to cite, gave her insight into both.

From the beginning, Maria (not her real name) found herself reveling in the antagonist of Paradise Lost. This in itself is not unusual. A number of students are “of the devil’s party” (Blake), in large part because Milton’s finger-wagging God reminds them of their parents and teachers. How can anyone who is young not cheer for the rebel?

Maria discovered that she was attracted to more than Satan’s rebellion, however. Above all, she realized that both she and Satan have perfectionist streaks.

Seeing oneself as unworthy and not good enough is a key aspect of bulimia and of anorexia as well. The pressure one puts on oneself (say, to have a perfect body, even though bulimics are often of average weight) is so intense that one rebels and engages in binge eating. After all, if one is fat, the pressure should go away.

Only the binger is then filled with such self loathing that she (it’s usually a she) proceeds to vomit it all up. There can be serious repercussions from doing this, such as getting to the point where nothing will stay down or where the digestive juices start to eat away at the lining of the throat.

At the chronological start of the poem, Satan may be as close to perfection as anyone can get–he is the archangel, after all–but he begins to see himself as not enough, as not God. Here’s how he puts it in Book IV:

[L]ifted up so high
I disdained subjection, and thought one step higher
Would set me highest, and in a moment quit
The debt immense of endless gratitude . . .

Satan experiences mood swings that Maria could relate to. On the one hand, he pushes himself relentlessly to achieve his ends, subjecting himself to an arduous trek through Chaos and Night and using all his wiles to tempt Eve, even though it requires him to take material shape (abhorrent to angels). His striving has a kind of grandeur that the bulimic recognizes and admires. Maria found “awe-inspiring” such passages as,

[H]e above the rest
In shape and gesture proudly eminent
Stood like a tower; his form had yet not lost
All her original brightness

And

Unterrified, and like a comet burned
That fires the length of Ophiuchus huge [the constellation Serpens]
In the arctic sky, and from his horrid hair
Shakes pestilence and war.

Even to himself, however, it is clear that he is engaging in self-destructive behavior, and he experiences moments of doubt. After all, he is wrestling with God and must know, deep down, that he is going to lose. Nevertheless, Maria said that, while she recognized Satan’s behavior to be corrupt and self-defeating, she couldn’t help but be drawn to it. In fact, she was captivated by how “Satan has been totally consumed by his quest for power,” as expressed in the line,

For only in destroying I find ease
To my relentless thoughts.

Maria powerfully wrote,

Perhaps the Satanic sentiment I most personally relate to is Satan’s stubborn resolve that “To reign is worth ambition though in Hell:/Better to reign in Hell, than to serve in Heav’n.” Satan would rather have a warped attainment of “perfection” than relinquish his absolute control and accept his true nature, shortcomings and all, something with which I identify. As selfish and depraved as my eating disorder, my own personal hell, is, in my mind I “reign” over it and find solace in the control with which it provides me, despite its innate detriment.

Making the parallels helped Maria get objective distance from her illness, which could prove to be an essential step to successfully dealing with it. Here’s how she ended her essay:

Through reading Paradise Lost, I have linked many of my feelings concerning my eating disorder with the complexities revealed through Milton’s character of Satan.  By associating my personal quest for power with Satan’s, I have come to gain greater insight into the dynamics of my own thought process.  I am drawn to Satan because his quest for power shares similarities with my own, and, as unconventional as it is, I relate to Satan because I feel as though I can empathize with his struggle for power.

Both Satan and I are willing to commit destructive, negative acts because we are willing to accept the negative consequences in order to achieve the sought after power.  Still, the severe harm caused by such actions is evident. Though I acknowledge my attraction to Satan, reading Paradise Lost and witnessing Satan’s total consumption by his [drive for] control spurs an awareness in me of the irony that, by seeking out absolute power, one actually loses the control one seeks and in turn yields the power to an overwhelming, harmful obsession.

In a conversation I had with Maria, I told her that the next logical step for the essay may also be the next step for herself: to look at the love that Milton’s God promises. God’s love is infinite, and true heroism is acknowledging, as Satan never does, that one is worthy to be loved in spite of the imperfections that one perceives in oneself. Milton’s Adam and Eve come to understand this, which is why they, not Satan, are the real heroes of Paradise Lost. They are the ones who have the humility to turn back to God.

It’s not easy to abandon Satan’s narcissistic drama, however. Even his self loathing can be intoxicating. After all, it gets our adrenaline pumping and puffs up our desperate bid to be “set highest.” The heroic battle that awaits Maria is turning her back on all that. I know that you are rooting as hard for her as I am.

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The Rape of John Lauber’s Locks

What with stories of a young Mitt Romney and a young Barack Obama emerging last week, I have found myself reliving my adolescent years. Apparently Romney, at 18, emulated Jack in Lord of the Flies as he led a gang of boys to cut off the hair of a fellow student at Cranbrook. Meanwhile Obama, at 22, wrote reflections on T. S. Eliot Wasteland in letters to a girlfriend.

Guess which one of the two I identified with the most. Only in my love letters to Julia, it was “Prufrock” and “The Hollow Men.”

Before this post is done, I’ll get Alexander Pope’s Rape of the Lock into the discussion as well. Obama and Eliot, however, will have to wait for later in the week as I focus today on the Romney incident.

In case you missed the story, here is the Post’s account:

Mitt Romney returned from a three-week spring break in 1965 to resume his studies as a high school senior at the prestigious Cranbrook School. Back on the handsome campus, studded with Tudor brick buildings and manicured fields, he spotted something he thought did not belong at a school where the boys wore ties and carried briefcases.John Lauber, a soft-spoken new student one year behind Romney, was perpetually teased for his nonconformity and presumed homosexuality. Now he was walking around the all-boys school with bleached-blond hair that draped over one eye, and Romney wasn’t having it.

“He can’t look like that. That’s wrong. Just look at him!” an incensed Romney told Matthew Friedemann, his close friend in the Stevens Hall dorm, according to Friedemann’s recollection. Mitt, the teenage son of Michigan Gov. George Romney, kept complaining about Lauber’s look, Friedemann recalled.

A few days later, Friedemann entered Stevens Hall off the school’s collegiate quad to find Romney marching out of his own room ahead of a prep school posse shouting about their plan to cut Lauber’s hair. Friedemann followed them to a nearby room where they came upon Lauber, tackled him and pinned him to the ground. As Lauber, his eyes filling with tears, screamed for help, Romney repeatedly clipped his hair with a pair of scissors.

The story hit me in the gut because, having been a small and bookish student myself in my adolescent years (my sixth grade teacher once called me a sissy), I identified with Lauber. I too was the target of bullies in seventh grade and of hazing in ninth. But as I reflect on what Romney did, it doesn’t sound like he was a Jack, who as I recall is supremely self-assured. Nor does it sound, as some have argued, that Romney suffered from an empathy gap or that he was homophoboic—at least not any more homophobic than most adolescent boys.

The explanation that rings truest to me is that of Edmund White in a New Yorker piece. White, who attended Cranbrook seven years after Romney, believes that insecurity was at play. In White’s account Romney, who feared being marginalized himself, turned on someone else who was on the periphery in an effort to fit in. Here’s what White has to say:

Romney was not a good student nor was he athletic; he was the manager of one of the school teams, a sort of default position for boys who wanted to be athletic and cool and popular—a water boy, in essence. He was considered a class clown, always up to rather cruel pranks. I can picture his situation, though it’s only speculation on my part (I’ve never known any of his friends, though one of his older brothers was a classmate). On the one hand he had an embarrassingly famous father, the governor of Michigan, whom he idolized as the youngest child. On the other he was the sole Mormon, a member of what was definitely seen as a creepy, stigmatized cult in that world of bland Episcopalian Wasps (we had Episcopalian services at chapel three mornings a week). When his father was president of American Motors, he lived at home and was a day student, an envied status. When his father was elected governor and moved to the state capital of Lansing, he became a boarder. Suddenly he was surrounded by other Cranbrook students and the strict “masters,” 24/7. He no longer had the constant support of his tight-knit family. Now he had to win approval from the other boys.

No wonder he became a daring and even violent prankster. He who worried about his own marginal status couldn’t bear the presence of an unapologetic sissy like Lauber, with his long bleached hair (the Mormons, then as now, have insisted on a neat, traditional, conservative appearance, especially in their young missionary men whom they send out all over the world). In scorning and shearing a sissy student and leading a gang of five other boys in this “prank,” Romney may have felt popular and in the right for the first time. According to one of Romney’s repentant accomplices, Lauber was terrified, weeping and begging for help.

Does this have implications for the Romney who is running for president of the United States? For me, it puts a disturbing slant on his attempts to rally the resentful middle class to his side by saying that he doesn’t care about the poor. (This is a version of Ronald Reagan scapegoating black welfare queens.) It puts a disturbing slant on his accusations that Barack Obama, who looks like no previous president, “doesn’t understand America.” It puts a disturbing slant on his willingness to say anything and take any position to convince the people with the power (which, as far as the Republican primaries have been concerned, are the rightwing conservatives) that he belongs in their club. (Of course, because he is a Mormon and a one-time moderate governor, some of them will never truly accept him—but that won’t keep him from trying.) If we see Romney as someone who strives too hard to please and who will attack others to win favor, we now have another story that confirms that pattern.

I can feel sorry for Romney when I think of him in these terms. But of course, I feel even more sorry for those who pay the price for his insecurities. If Romney is our next president and adopts anything close to a Paul Ryan budget that seeks to balance the budget by reducing funds to Medicaid, the food stamp program, and the child tax credit, then it won’t only be Lauber who will have experienced Romney’s cuts.

On to Rape of the Lock, a literary reference that I owe to the New Republic’s Timothy Noah. The Baron who cuts Belinda’s hair in what today we would call an act of sexual harassment is (as I read the poem) provoked by the way that she flaunts her invulnerability to his manly charms. He is a rake who defines himself by his many conquests and therefore feels his manhood threatened by Belinda’s rejection. In revenge for his humiliation, he humiliates her by cutting one of her two curls.

Belinda sees her hair as part of her essential identity, just as Lauber undoubtedly saw his as a means of expressing his sense of separateness. Envy is involved in both attacks–someone who seems as self-assured as Belinda or Lauber is an implicit judgment upon those who are insecure. One thinks one will feel better by dragging them down. Otherwise, all the efforts that have gone into building up one’s reputation, all one has done to fit in, are meaningless.

Human beings are strange animals. The problem arises when their strangeness causes them to damage others.

Posted in Golding (William), Pope (Alexander) | Tagged , , , , , | 2 Comments

They Are All Gone into the World of Light


Pietro Perugino, "Ascension" (1510)

Spiritual Sunday

This coming Thursday Christians celebrate the moment when Jesus, after having spent time with his disciples following the Resurrection, ascended into heaven. This is a prelude to Pentecost, when the Holy Spirit, the  ”advocate with the Father” that Jesus promised his followers, descended upon them, causing them to discover the god within.

One of the best Ascension poems I know is that of the 17th century Welsh mystic Henry Vaughan, who laments that, while others (including his recently departed brother) have ascended, he is still on earth.  As is often the case with Vaughan, crystalline imagery contends with “dull and hoary” complaints. (See my post on “The World.”) The dead, he says, are like stars that glow and glitter above “some gloomy grove,” trying to penetrate Vaughan’s “cloudy breast” and ignite his “cold love.” Vaughan laments that, when he tries to look past the dust of death, he has trouble imagining the shining mysteries. It is like looking at a bird’s nest and trying to imagine the fledgling bird that has flown. (“But what fair well or grove he sings in now/That is to him unknown.”)

Unknown, perhaps, but at least Vaughan can catch glimpses. Angels send bright dreams that allow us to peep into glory. It is as though we are tombs in which a star is confined. If we could only fully acknowledge her (Vaughan genders the soul female) “she’ll shine through all the sphere.”

The last stanza has Vaughan begging God to disperse the mists that “blot and fill my perspective.” Either that or allow the poet to ascend, like Christ, so that he may see God face to face.

Ascension Hymn

By Henry Vaughan

They are all gone into the world of light!
And I alone sit ling’ring here;
Their very memory is fair and bright,
And my sad thoughts doth clear.

It glows and glitters in my cloudy breast,
Like stars upon some gloomy grove,
Or those faint beams in which this hill is drest,
After the sun’s remove.

I see them walking in an air of glory,
Whose light doth trample on my days:
My days, which are at best but dull and hoary,
Mere glimmering and decays.

O holy Hope! and high Humility,
High as the heavens above!
These are your walks, and you have show’d them me
To kindle my cold love.

Dear, beauteous Death! the jewel of the just,
Shining nowhere, but in the dark;
What mysteries do lie beyond thy dust
Could man outlook that mark!

He that hath found some fledg’d bird’s nest, may know
At first sight, if the bird be flown;
But what fair well or grove he sings in now,
That is to him unknown.

And yet as angels in some brighter dreams
Call to the soul, when man doth sleep:
So some strange thoughts transcend our wonted themes
And into glory peep.

If a star were confin’d into a tomb,
Her captive flames must needs burn there;
But when the hand that lock’d her up, gives room,
She’ll shine through all the sphere.

O Father of eternal life, and all
Created glories under thee!
Resume thy spirit from this world of thrall
Into true liberty.

Either disperse these mists, which blot and fill
My perspective still as they pass,
Or else remove me hence unto that hill,
Where I shall need no glass.

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Sendak and Children’s Interior Worlds

Sendak illus. in Ruth Krauss's "A Very Special House"

Saturday – Something Light

A year ago I dropped “Sports Saturday” from this blog because I needed the extra time on Friday afternoons to work on my book How Beowulf Can Save America, currently in the last stages. I also didn’t have time to watch sports, a deprivation made slightly easier given the injury to my football hero Peyton Manning.

Now that I’ve completed the book, I am restarting the Saturday posts again only I will expand them to include other light subjects, not just sports. Today I write to honor the children’s books of Maurice Sendak, who died this past week.

My first Sendak book was actually authored by Ruth Krauss. A Very Special House was a child’s delight as all normal house rules are suspended:

There’s a bed that’s very special
and a shelf that’s very special
and the chairs are very special
–but it’s not to take a seat–
and the doors are very special
and the walls are very special and
and a table very special where to put your feet feet feet

I reveled in Sendak’s drawings of the main character bouncing on the bed, sleeping on the shelf, climbing on the chairs, swinging on the doors (which are suspended from the ceiling by chains), drawing on the walls, and using the table as a foot stool. His wide smile captures the sheer delight at having a house that is as big as his imagination and with which he can do anything he wants. Krauss’s fantasy has certain affinities with Dr. Seussian home-wrecking Cat in the Hat, a child’s alter ego.

When Sendak started writing his own books, they were often darker—there’s not quite the lighthearted exuberance of A Very Special House in Where the Wild Things Are, Outside Over There, and In the Night Kitchen–but they share this sense that children need a world they can call their own. In a fine New Republic article entitled “Remembering Maurice Sendak, Who Brought Loneliness to Children’s Literature,” Ellen Handler Spitz writes,

Sendak knew from within the profound sense in which every child, from time to time, perceives himself or herself to be alone—an outsider—and feels the need to retreat into some private space, some nook or secret hiding place. Sendak’s books are themselves such places; they can so function even when being read aloud by an adult. Sendak’s supreme gift, as visual artist as well as author, was to discover pictorial as well as verbal and narrative means to portray the existential separateness of childhood.

Because of Sendak, we are far more attuned to the inner life of children than we would otherwise have been. What a gift he gave us!

Added note – As I searched for internet articles on Sendak, I found an interesting 1996 New Republic article by Jed Perl on Sendak’s fascination with the obscure Herman Melville novel Pierre. Learning about this Melville connection gave me a new insight into Sendak’s character Pierre (of his small book “Nutshell” series) who refuses to care, even when a lion is about to eat him: Sendak’s Pierre is Bartleby the Scrivener, who “would prefer not to.” Yes, kids have their Bartleby/Pierre moments just like the rest of us.

Previous Sendak posts

Honoring Our Inner Wild Rumpus

Sendak and Dr. Seuss to the Rescue

Posted in Sendak (Maurice) | Tagged , | 1 Comment

Listen to the Music that Is All around You

Nyqvist, Hallgren in "As It Is in Heaven"

Film Friday

Every once in a while I see a film that makes the world seem so resonant and filled with meaning that I find myself moving through a haze for a day or two afterwards. Often the films that have this effect are about hearts opening, grace descending, a wasteland being regenerated. Such a film is As It Is in Heaven, a 2005 Oscar-nominated Swedish film that I watched last week through Netflix’s live streaming. Be warned that there are spoilers in the following essay.

The film is about a violinist/conductor, Daniel Daréus, who is bullied as a child so that his single mother, whom he adores, moves them to another town. Then, as an adolescent, he loses her when she is run down by a car. These traumatic events, which we see as flashbacks in the opening minutes of the film, haunt his musical career, turning him into a brilliant but driven conductor who is in demand all over the world. His career is suddenly cut short, however, when he has a heart attack and must retire while still relatively young.

He returns, for reasons that he does not understand, to the small town where he was bullied. He buys the old school building and plans simply to “listen.” Unexpectedly, he finds himself conducting the church choir and sets out to achieve a dream where all the members will be so open to the music that is around and within them that they won’t need sheet music. He tries various unconventional techniques, some of them involving trust-building exercises, and manages to frighten one choir member and the repressed minister.

The members of the choir, however, find themselves opening up in new and powerful ways. One woman, who is in an abusive marriage, finds such strength through a solo that Daniel writes specially for her that she leaves her husband. An overweight man stands up to a fellow choir member who has long been deriding him. Another man confesses his hidden love for a woman after decades of silence. The wife of the preacher—he is one of those inwardly tormented types that are always showing up in Bergman movies—seeks to inject love back into their marriage although in this she is unsuccessful.

Daniel must also learn to open up—he realizes that he has returned to the town to confront his unresolved sadness over his mother—and he finds love, both in the angelic Lena and in the community as a whole. His heart problems have not gone away, however, and in the end, when his choir is set to perform in a singing competition in Austria, he has a fatal heart attack and the choir, not knowing where he is, must go on without him.

Panicked at first, they begin singing individual notes—each member channeling his or her own voice—and the harmony that emerges proves so powerful that all the other choirs in the hall find themselves joining in so that it is no longer a competition (the world of competitive music is what ground Daniel down) but a spontaneous liberation of the music. A vision that Daniel describes earlier in the film—how once, when he was directing, the concert hall lost power so that for 59 seconds the  orchestra  performed together in the darkness as a single being—comes to pass.

Dying in a bathroom, Daniel hears the music through the intercom and is carried back to the moment when his mother found him in a wheat field after he had been beaten by the bullies. He dies peacefully.

We also see this wheat field, waving in the wind and towering over the child’s head, in the opening scene. Daniel is practicing his violin and his music, clipped to wheat stalks, sways before him. This startling image also ties into the broader theme, that there is a force blowing through the universe that we can access if we open ourselves to it. In the film, the townspeople are able to use music to work through their angers, their petty jealousies, their repressed loves, their dysfunctional relationships.  By the end, they are harmonizing “Amazing Grace” and “Down by the Riverside” and the battered woman is singing, “I want to feel that I have lived my life.”

It was only after I had watched the film that I realized that it is structured upon Jesus’s story. Seen through this lens, Daniel is Jesus, the pastor is the Sadducees, and the wife beater (who at one point beats Daniel up so that he lies in the water in a crucified position) is the Romans. In the choir, there is a Peter (the pushy promoter), a Judas (a woman spying for the pastor), a “best beloved” (the angelic Lena), and a Mary Magdalene figure (Gabrielle). There is a scene where Daniel is nursed back to health by three women (the Pieta), and one could say that  at the end the film merges the Ascension and Pentecost: the Holy Spirit descends upon the choir as Daniel dies (or, as he sees it, ascends to his mother). Indeed, the rich field of wheat that opens and closes the film is the seed that fell on fertile ground.

But I interpret the film in this light, not to reduce it to an allegory (which makes it sound mechanical), but to help me understand why the film opened me up as it did. I knew, watching it, that grace had descended and only in retrospect realized that it invokes another story of amazing grace. The two stories build on each other.

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Why Can’t Mitt Fake Authenticity?

Brandauer in "Mephisto"

An interesting political debate has arisen about whether Mitt Romney’s penchant for making things up would make him a problematic president. Some think he is putting his soul in peril while others find his lying irrelevant and even, in the case of The Washington Post’s Richard Cohen, perversely admirable. I think the Faust story and specifically Klaus Mann’s novel Mephisto contribute something important to this debate.

First, those who see it as a problem. Romney’s opponents have been complaining for a while. “The guy will say anything,” Rudolph Giuliani said in the 2008 Republican primaries, and Mike Huckabee mused, “I don’t think Romney has a soul.” More recently, also picking up on the soul question, The Washington Post’s Matt Miller has invoked Picture of Dorian Gray:

Simply put, Obamacare has forced Romney to reveal how much 100-proof drivel he’ll swallow and spit out with a smile if that’s what it takes to get to the Oval Office. The man passed a great health reform in Massachusetts that inspired Obama’s and he pretends otherwise every day. I’m no purist about what it takes to win elections. But at some point the total denial of your record, your sincere views and your problem-solving instincts takes you into soul-destroying territory. If there were a health-care version of The Picture of Dorian Gray, Romney’s portrait offstage would be a hideous thing to behold.

Richard Cohen of The Washington Post, on the other hand, seems almost impressed, arguing that Romney uses lying the way a CEO wields a business plan. “I admire a smooth liar, and Romney is among the best,” he writes, and then, “what his career has given him is the businessman’s concept of self — that what he does is not who he is.”

Jon Chait of New York Magazine and Richard Yeselsen are less admiring but agree that concerns about Mitt Romney’s authenticity or soul are off the mark. The search for the real Mitt Romney is pointless, Chait says, because of course he is going to say whatever is necessary to get elected:

The point is that it’s just not useful to try to understand the link between a politician’s moral beliefs and his public conduct as a moral question. Politics is an art. Politicians present themselves to the public as they need to present themselves in order to obtain their goals. Romney has had to wildly reinvent his public persona because he had to win the approval of a liberal Massachusetts electorate in 2002 and then an extremely conservative Republican primary electorate in 2012, not due to any character defect.

Yeselsen, meanwhile compares him to an actor, and here is where the Klaus Mann novel proves useful. Yeselsen (quoted by Alec MacGillis) writes:

Whoever he is, the real Romney is mostly irrelevant. Romney, like all of us, performs the roles he must within the public institutions he inhabits and the different dramas which he plays a part in enacting.  There are reasons why he performs on the stages he does—he’ll never be any kind of liberal—but he doesn’t just play the same character every time. Each of those institutions will have a different set of observers with which the individual engages. The audience, venue and dramatic script shape and constrain our public performances.

But while Yeselsen doesn’t care whether Romney is authentic or not, he is concerned that Romney can’t play authenticity:

People are what they do, and part of what presidential candidates must do is project a fully integrated depth of being before multiple audiences. Romney’s political problem—his poor job performance as a professional politician—is that he has an almost poignant difficulty in managing to do that.We will probably never find out who the real Romney is, just like we haven’t found out who the real Obama or the real Lincoln is.

Okay, now to Mann’s 1936 novel, which is about an actor in Nazi Germany who has essentially sold his soul to be famous, turning his back on his former political convictions. Not surprisingly, then, he is very good at playing the devil in Goethe’s Faust.  He cannot, however, play a truly deep character, which is to say, he can’t play Hamlet. Or rather, he can play a version of Hamlet that impresses his Nazi audiences, but he knows deep down that this Hamlet is ultimately inauthentic.

As he’s about to play him, he imagines a former director, who acts as his conscience, looking on. Hendrik first addresses himself to the Hamlet role:

I’ve got to play you. If I fail at playing you, I’ll have failed everything. You’re my ordeal by fire; I’ve got to pass. My whole life, all the sins I’ve committed, my great betrayal, all my shame can only be vindicated by my art. But I’m an artist only if I can play Hamlet.”

And then he hears his old director saying,

You are not Hamlet, you don’t have the nobility that only suffering and experience can give. You are merely the monkey of power, a clown to entertain murderers.

And further on,

You had the choice, my dear fellow, between nobility and a career. You made your choice. Be happy with it, but leave me in peace.

The Nazis love Henrik’s Hamlet. Given how Henrik interprets this role (he describes it to reporters), it’s clear why:

Hamlet wasn’t a weak man. There was nothing weak about him. Generations of actors have made the mistake of viewing him as a feminine character. His melancholy wasn’t hollow but came from real motives. The prince wants to avenge his father. He is a Renaissance man–a real aristocrat and something of a cynic. I want to strip him of all the melancholy traits with which he has been burdened by conventional portrayals.

But despite the applause, Henrik is not happy. Mann writes,

Yet, he himself realized he wasn’t expressing the real content, the poetic mystery of Hamlet. His interpretation remained on the level of rhetoric.

So how does this help us understand Romney? While I think Yeselsen is right that we can become too hung up on authenticity, there is more than exteriority to the art of politics, just as there is to the art of acting. To be sure, politics is an art and Reagan, Clinton, George W and Obama have all been pretty good at artfully portraying authenticity, just as George H. W., Dukakis, Gore, and Kerry were not. Yeselsen is on to something when he says we can’t know the real Obama any more than we can know the real Lincoln and it doesn’t matter anyway. What matters is what one does.

But Mann’s novel indicates that one has to have something to build on in one’s performance, some sincerely-held convictions, and it’s hard to see what Romney has. Maybe the emptiness, the Mittbott persona that even his supporters fret about, is the result of his no-holds-barred assault on the presidency. When you sell your soul, people pick up on it. That’s why the Faust story seems so applicable to the Republican nominee.

The performance may be good enough for those who want to be convinced. Mann, however, would say that even supremely talented actors can’t pull off a compelling performance if they have no soul.

Previous posts using literature to understand Mitt Romney

Mitt (who told lies and was burned to death)

Romney as Shakespeare’s Dark Lady?!

Using Lit to Figure Out Mitt

Presidents as Points of Projection

Is Mitt Romney a Doctor Faustus?

Mitt Romney, an American Podsnap

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When Werther-Fever Upended Europe


Wilhelm Amberg, "Reading Goethe's Werther"

These past couple of weeks my Theories of the Reader class has been giving presentations upon “a literary work that became an event.” Rather unexpectedly, we found a single theme running through all the reports: works that have liberated young people have often been decried and sometimes even censored by their elders. This was true of Picture of Dorian Gray (see last week’s post), Catcher in the Rye, Lolita, Harry Potter (attacked by certain rightwing evangelical groups), Perks of Being a Wall Flower, and Are You There God? It’s Me Margaret. It was also true in 1774 of Goethe’s The Sorrows of Young Werther.

Natalie Rauscher, a German exchange student, reported on what was known as “Werther-Fieber” or Werther-fever. Goethe’s novel is about a young man who falls in love with a woman, Lotte, who is about to be married. They separate, he returns, they almost kiss but realize that they can never be together, and then he commits suicide. The book attracted younger readers because, as Nathalie explained, the young hero “stays true to himself and his feelings . . . He is the embodiment of the melancholic anti-hero of the time struggling with his identity and his life. He is empowered by his emotions at the end, … leaving the despised bourgeois life behind that trips him with his archaic moral and ethical ideas.”

As she researched the book’s reception, Nathalie discovered that an entire cult grew up around it. (Note the rapt listeners in the painting above.) When the book sold out, young people copied it illegally and sold their own editions. They also wore blue jackets and dresses modeled on what the hero and heroine were wearing. Illustrated cups, saucers, plates and fans were produced, as were woodcuts and pictures. Natalie noted that one enterprising soul even produced an “Eau de Werther.”

Natalie cited one letter where a reader wrote,

Here I sit with my heavy heart, with my pounding breast, and with my eyes dripping with sweet pain, and I tell you, reader, that I have just—read?—no, devoured The Sorrows of Young Werther, by our dear Goethe. Criticize it? If I could, I have no heart. . . . The reflections . . . included in the book are full of sense, knowledge of the world, wisdom and truth.

As Natalie noted, young people of the age “wanted to feel something, even if it was painful.”  They wanted their lives to be filled with meaning.

Authorities hated the book with the same intensity that young readers loved it. Sermons were preached against it and editorials denounced it. Nathalie said that, in addition to emphasizing emotions during an age when the focus was on calm and tempered Reason (Werther helped initiate Germany’s sturm und drang or “storm and stress” period), the book also appeared at a time when literacy was expanding rapidly and when (with the upcoming revolutions) life and society were about to change dramatically. Thus the older generation saw the book as encouraging young people to rebel against authority and begin thinking for themselves. If young people began to be guided by their emotions, then carefully arranged marriages were in jeopardy, as was class structure itself.

Today, of course, the novel is just seen as a dry classic that young Germans are required to read in high school. At one point in history, however, it shook the world.

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Art Goes Where Humans Can’t

Evelyn de Morgan, "Angel of Death"

As I watched my three seniors present their St. Mary’s Projects to the school last week, the thought that went through my mind was “they’re grown-ups!” All three were confident, commanding the podium and then answering questions.  Only I knew how nervous they had been before stepping up.

To honor all graduating seniors, I share here an excerpt from Erica Rutkai’s project in which she studied the grieving process and applied her understanding to Gail Godwin’s novel The Good Husband. A past post describes how Erica has been writing this project while her mother is dying of a brain tumor. Her mother hopes to make it to Erica’s graduation and, rather inspiringly given the discomfort of a long car ride, came to the Baccalaureate ceremony to see her daughter win a major departmental award.

The excerpt looks at how Godwin’s protagonist, literature professor Magda Danvers, turns to John Donne’s “Of the Progress of the Soul: The Second Anniversary” to help her negotiate the cancer that is killing her. Magda focuses on the following passage:

Think then, my soul, that death is but a groom,
Which brings a taper to the outward room,
Whence thou spiest first a little glimmering light,
And after brings it nearer to thy sight;
For such approaches doth heaven make in death.

Through Magda’s use of Donne and her own use of Godwin, Erica shows how literature can help us find our way to grieving’s desired end: acceptance of death.

By Erica Rutkai ’12, St. Mary’s College of Maryland

. . . Magda uses her own background as a professor of visionary studies to further explore the meaning of life through death. By drawing on the power of literature, she is able to make broader connections between her own experience and the more general themes of life.

In a paramount exchange between Magda and [novelist and friend] Hugo Henry, Magda explores Donne’s “The Second Anniversary” by reflecting on an essay she wrote in her undergraduate years. She states that “the poet comforts his soul by comparing Death to a groom slowly approaching with a taper” and furthermore claims that the groom “brings the light closer into view.” In the essay, Magda claims that Donne “revers[es] the prevalent attitude towards death” by making the groom—read Death—approach with light, something that Magda claims “the human mind associates…with reassurance.” Later, Magda argues that Donne goes even further as to “make death equal heaven.”

After having Hugo re-read this essay, Magda makes the allusive remark, “’My good husband,” further claiming that he—read: it—is “[t]he only one I want.” Hugo, finally understanding her allusion to the poem, makes the connection that Magda  “meant the groom in the poem,” or Death, as opposed to Francis, her husband.  In this way, Godwin directly parallels the use of literature to finding acceptance in death.

Like Donne, Magda seems to think about death in a positive manner, as a “light” in the darkness that is sickness. Using literature to express her deepest thoughts, she exposes her mindset as viewing life as a journey ending in spiritual enlightenment through death. Keep in mind, this comes at a time where Magda’s slow decline has taken a turn for the worst. Thus, this could symbolize the beginning of Magda’s own acceptance of death through the calm realization that death might bring something monumental yet intangible, something relieving, as opposed to the mundane physical pain and stress found in the physical world that she is slowly departing from.

Even more central to the story itself is the way that, through her own slow death, Magda serves as a teacher. Through playing this pivotal role, Magda communicates with other characters to both help them to understand their own experiences with death and grieving as well as to sort out her own experience. As she thinks,

I have shown them some pointers toward the wholeness, led them on day-trips toward it, but I haven’t provided the wholeness myself. That is art’s purpose.  It may be the only way we can get what we strive for in this life. The human condition is notorious for its lack of wholeness.

With an eye to the future, she examines the lives of Francis, Alice, and Hugo in order to develop a schema of what is important in this life. Although her speculative gaze seems inconsiderate at times, she uses it in a proactive analysis of dying. What other characters may experience as secondary loss, Magda imagines as a way of “keeping company” after she leaves the physical world.

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When Great Artists Do Bad Things

Picasso's portrait of Gertrude Stein

Several weeks ago, when I was in Manhattan seeing my new grandson (oh, and his parents as well), we visited the Met and saw an extraordinary art exhibit that featured many of the paintings that the Stein siblings had collected (Leonard, Gertrude et. al.). Everyone interesting from the early 20th century seemed to be represented, including Picasso and his famous portrait of Gertrude. I learned yesterday from an on-line New Yorker article, however, that something had been left out of the explanatory material although it has since been added: the collection survived the German invasion of France between Gertrude collaborated with the Vichy government. In fact, she was a fan of Maréchal Pétain, Vichy’s president.

In the article, author Emily Greenhouse talks to Barbara Will, who has studied the Stein-Vichy relationship, and the interview broached the issue of problematic artists that produce greats work of art.  Here’s an excerpt from their talk:

But Will voices the danger of what Fredric Jameson called the systematic “ ‘innocence’ of intellectuals” which, as she puts it, “gives a free pass to those whose work we admire, regardless of the context in which it was written or its ultimate aim.”

I asked Will whether genius could ever justify itself—surely we wouldn’t want to put away Degas’s whirling ballerinas, or stop reading Heidegger, Eliot, Pound, or even Céline, just because their prejudices were bigoted and their politics abhorrent. “ I think we do need to ask ourselves whether our writers and artists should be judged by higher ethical and moral standards,” she told me. “The cult of genius that has dominated our understanding of the artist/writer for at least two hundred years—and which Stein thoroughly subscribed to—may have encouraged a certain exculpability for anything done in the name of creative expression. But the Second World War, as intellectuals like Theodor Adorno and others pointed out, inexorably changed the terms of how we think about art and its role and meaning in society. It made the ethical dimensions of art and the artist much more urgent.”

Back in the heyday of New Criticism (the 1950s and 1960s), formalism automatically gave a free pass because it deemed the intention of the author irrelevant to the art work. (This was called “the intentional fallacy.”) Interestingly Fredric Jameson, coming at literature from a Marxist point of view, makes a related (albeit a different) claim. Arguing against leftist ideologues who judge works by an author’s political position, Jameson calls them “vulgar Marxists” and says he prefers a good work by a reactionary writer than a mediocre or bad work by an ideologically correct author.

Defending that proposition, Jameson notes that Marx asserted that he learned more about capitalism from the royalist novelist Honoré de Balzac than he had from the leading economists of the day. British Marxist literary scholar Terry Eagleton has said something similar: in the works of the reactionary writer T. S. Eliot, he notes, one can get a much clearer depiction of capitalism’s crisis than one can from many leftist works.

The point here, I guess, is that if an author is really dedicating him or herself to truth, then we will learn more about reality than if the author is filtering reality through a politically correct bias.

That being said, however, Jameson and Eagleton, unlike the formalists, would still think it important to know about the political orientation of Balzac and Eliot and Gertrude Stein. Their perspective needs to be factored into understanding their vision. If, as I believe, literature (and art generally) is humanity’s attempt to express its deepest potential, a cry for freedom in a world that is always bound around with constraint, then we need to understand the boundaries that the vision is chafing against. These boundaries include the prejudices of the artist.

To cite one of my favorite examples (so that I don’t get hopelessly abstract here), I think that Chaucer sees depths in the Wife of Bath that we have been able to appreciate only after the feminist movement of the 1970′s. Furthermore, who knows what more is still waiting there for us to find out? But as far as Chaucer’s own views of women, I suspect that they were consistent with those of patriarchal medieval England. The Canterbury Tales is smarter than he is.

The tension between freedom and constraint, as I see it, is the drama at the heart of literature. Indeed, as we listen to what our greatest works are trying to tell us, we will become clearer about how we are limited by those constraints. Progressive authors, reactionary authors, it doesn’t matter—if they are true to the deep search, we will learn to see past where they are dishonest or shallowly conventional or politically objectionable. We will come to honor where they are true.

Of course, our other challenge is to build a society that honors humanity’s potential. That’s how literature’s visionary works can serve as a guide to politics. And yes, the process takes a long, long time.

This is far afield from Gertrude Stein’s art collection, which anyway is not the same thing as her art. I don’t know enough about her poetry or prose to figure out how it weaves together both her avant-garde progressive tendencies and her fascist sympathies. But this was a good occasion for me to sort out some issues I’ve been wrestling with.

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Anchorless and Yet Anchored

Spiritual Sunday

Several years ago a remarkable young student, Franz Yanagawa, gave me a collection of poems by St. John of the Cross. A biology and psychology student, Franz had just completed a senior project under my mentorship. In it, Franz charted his life through the lens of various philosophical, religious, and literary thinkers, including St. John, as he prepared to apply to medical school.

St. John coined the phrase “dark night of the soul,” and the poem below describes how he is able to push through the “darkness without light” to find God’s love. It is because of, not in spite of, the fact that he passes through “shadows” that he finds “the light of heaven.” Living with only the soul as a guide, he finds himself is consumed entirely by “the delightful flame that I feel within myself.” Unanchored to the things of the world, he must turn to a divine anchor.

Franz, incidentally, is currently a general surgery resident at Wellspan Health. Knowing Franz, he turns to St. John regularly.

Anchorless and Yet Anchored

By St. John of the Cross

Anchorless and yet anchored,
living in darkness without light,
I consume myself completely.

My soul is unattached
to any created thing,
raised above itself
in delightful life,
anchored in its God alone.
Now everyone will know
what’s most important to me:
that my soul now finds itself
anchorless and yet anchored.

And though I pass through shadows
in this mortal life
my pain is not excessive:
I may feel the lack of light
but I have life from heaven.
For when love grows this blind,
it gives us so much life
that the soul is left with
living in darkness without light.

Love has worked such things in me
since I came to know it,
that all my good and evil
it turns into my delight
making my soul like itself.
And so, in the delightful flame
that I feel within myself,
swiftly and thoroughly
I consume myself completely.

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The Hunger Games & the Job Market


Jennifer Lawrence in "The Hunger Games"

Film Friday

Every once in a while I break a cardinal rule and write about a film I haven’t yet seen. What others have said about The Hunger Games, however, squares with something I have been observing about how my students regard the job market. If you’ve seen the film, you can tell me if my thoughts have any validity.

The film sets teenagers in a dystopian future where, for the benefit of television audiences, they must kill or be killed. Of course, the heroine only kills bad killers and wins the game. Tim Noah of the New Republic absolutely hates the movie. The Hunger Games, he says, “wants to have it both ways”:

It wants us to register severe moral disapproval of a society that would require children to hunt one another as if they were woodland creatures. But—because it also wants to be an entertainment with a sympathetic heroine and some good old-fashioned suspense—The Hunger Games also invites us to root for the right person to win the competition by, um, killing other children. If a bunch of kids are going to die, we might as well hope that the nicest and bravest of them ends up triumphant atop the pile of corpses. Yuck.

Because The Hunger Games lacks the courage of its dark conceit, the story line must be contrived in such a way as to minimize any moral objection we might raise against the bow-wielding heroine’s kills. The nice (usually younger) kids, whom she tries to save, all get killed by others. The few she must kill are all nasty preppies apparently raised from birth to be smug, violent and cruel. Nowhere in the film is it suggested that if 12 moral individuals were told to kill one another for no reason other than to amuse the masses, then the only choice consistent with any notion of ethics that I’m familiar with would be to refuse and be executed. Hello? Hasn’t Collins, or the filmmakers, ever clapped her eyes on Rodin’s Burghers of Calais? The Hunger Games wants its audience to experience moral revulsion, but it also wants it to cheer when (I don’t think I’m giving anything away here) our girl wins. You don’t have to be a pacifist to find an entertainment built around this evasion a bit nauseating.

Nauseating or not, the film emotionally captures how my students see America at the moment. On the one hand, it captures their fatalism as they enter what they perceive to be a dog-eat-dog or kill-or-be-killed future with entitled kids having a special advantage. In this version of America, everyone is on his or her own, which makes everyone vulnerable to predatory, consumerist capitalism.  The world appears especially grim in this recessionary period with its high unemployment numbers and low salaries.

But because they are American, my students can’t surrender to pessimism. They have to believe that, though the odds are stacked against them, the future will work out because they are nice people (which they most definitely are). They simultaneously believe and don’t believe in the American system.

In short, The Hunger Games shows them their emotional reality and then gives them the fantasy that they themselves can transcend the situation. I felt the same at their age when we were in another recession (I graduated from college in 1973). And so the wheel keeps turning.

Notice that the film doesn’t offer a collective solution. Everyone is pitted against everyone. This contrasts dramatically with a cinematic vision that was presented to the country in 1940 when America was in even worse financial shape. John Ford’s Oscar-winning version of John Steinbeck’s Grapes of Wrath shows us strangers coming together to make common cause. As Ma Joad says in the movie’s inspiring conclusion,

Rich fellas come up an’ they die, an’ their kids ain’t no good an’ they die out. But we keep a’comin’. We’re the people that live. They can’t wipe us out; they can’t lick us. We’ll go on forever, Pa, ’cause we’re the peoples is in.

That’s how to play the hunger game. We shouldn’t turn on each other in some Ayn Randian struggle for supremacy but see ourselves rather as joined with others in a large throng that will keep on coming. If we do, we will go on forever.

We can begin by refusing to scapegoat as enemies all those others who are sharing the enclosure with us.

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Ayn Rand vs. the Catholic Bishops

Ayn Rand

The novelist and social philosopher Ayn Rand is once again in the news with the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops citing her in their criticism of the Paul Ryan budget plan, which slashes social services to the needy while reducing taxes on the wealthy. As the bishops’ letter notes, “[Y]our budget appears to reflect the values of your favorite philosopher, Ayn Rand, rather than the Gospel of Jesus Christ. Her call to selfishness and her antagonism toward religion are antithetical to the Gospel values of compassion and love.”

I wrote a year ago about Paul’s celebration of Ayn Rand. He regularly hands out copies of Atlas Shrugged to his staffers and has said, “The reason I got involved in public service, by and large, if I had to credit one thinker, one person, it would be Ayn Rand.”

So what is Paul saying now? “I reject [Rand’s] philosophy . . . It’s an atheist philosophy. It reduces human interactions down to mere contracts and it is antithetical to my worldview.”

The good news here is that Ryan suddenly feels a need to distance himself from Rand. The depressing news is that he appears to have adopted Mitt Romney’s cynical habit of baldly issuing denials that can easily be proved false. (But hey, it worked for Mitt.) Not to mention the fact that Ryan’s budget plan does seem to have been inspired by Rand, with its warnings that America’s social safety net has become a hammock.

In my earlier post I said I didn’t like to write about Rand because I don’t think her novels are any good. But I do think they have the ability to rewire the minds of certain readers. Blogger John Rogers of Kung Fu Monkey has one of the wittier things to say on this score:

There are two novels that can change a bookish fourteen-year old’s life: The Lord of the Rings and Atlas Shrugged. One is a childish fantasy that often engenders a lifelong obsession with its unbelievable heroes, leading to an emotionally stunted, socially crippled adulthood, unable to deal with the real world. The other, of course, involves orcs.

Nor is it only 14-year-olds who are affected. Literary ethicist Wayne Booth, polling readers on books that have impacted them (in both good and bad ways) was told by one,

Reading Ayn Rand’s works when I was working in my first job led me, I’m sorry to say, to cancel all of my gifts to philanthropies—I bought a convenient version of her ‘me-philosophy’ hook, line and sinker.

Ari Kohen has a good article (tip to Andrew Sullivan) which looks first at Rand’s appeal when he read her at 16, then at his qualms even then, and finally at the very problematic nature of novels that indoctrinate rather than explore. Keep his comments in mind whenever you see someone who, gripped with holy fire, is singing the praise of venture capitalists while, in the same breath, beating up on anyone who needs support:

But with Atlas, I was really troubled by all the talk about looters, moochers, and parasites (used to describe anyone who supports taxation or governmental involvement in business). This language allows Rand to effectively dehumanize vast swathes of humanity, which goes along with her argument that rational self-interest rejects sacrificing for others. I think this is a mistake for a great many reasons, but this shouldn’t really surprise anyone who reads this blog. I’m pretty clearly committed to the idea that sacrifice on behalf of others is morally heroic rather than some sort of slavishness.

This is just fine in a novel, incidentally, as novels challenge our thinking about things and serve to introduce us to all sorts of characters with whom we might identify or push back against. But Rand understood her novels to set the table for her Objectivist philosophy and, as a result, she intended for people who read her books to live their lives like Roark and Galt, and thus to think of other people as parasites and to reject the idea that a political community binds people together in some morally meaningful way.

Kohen goes on to distinguish between the two kinds of knowledge that philosophy and literature represent:

[N]ovels present their commentary and their conclusions without argument. Philosophy, conversely, is built on argument rather than simple assertion. Whether or not you ultimately agree with them, philosophers from Plato to Rawls make arguments in order to sway the way a reader thinks. Novelists, on the other hand, craft characters and situations that are intended to play on readers’ emotions. My problem with Rand is that she attempts to shape the way that people think about and interact with the world around them — to do political philosophy — without actually making any arguments for what are, ultimately, policy preferences with serious personal and societal consequences.

Of course, good literature also has its own form of deep knowing and is just as rigorous, in its way, as philosophy. A good novel is as true to the emotions as good philosophy is to rational argumentation. Rand’s novels, by contrast, cater to self-indulgent vanity, inviting us to imagine ourselves as Nietzschean supermen who are better than everyone else.

It’s okay, I suppose, for adolescents to try out her ideas. Congressmen, on the other hand, need to grow up.

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Obama as a Toni Morrison Character


Toni Morrison

Regular readers of this blog know that I am an Obama supporter who has been confused by the intensity of the attacks directed against him. A recent Washington Post article about conservative voters conjured up a Toni Morrison passage that is helping me make a little more sense of the antipathy.

The Post has a very useful “5 Myths” series where common misunderstandings about various issues are debunked. In “5 Myths about Conservative Voters,” conservative pollster Frank Luntz aims to debunk the myth that “conservatives worship Wall Street”:

Conservatives respect the role that businesses large and small have played in spurring America’s long-term economic success. But most agree with moderates and liberals that things on Wall Street have gotten out of hand. They believe that those who abuse the system should be held accountable and that those who work hard and play by the rules should be free to advance.

And while big names such as Rush Limbaugh and Larry Kudlow may defend “capitalism,” my polling indicates that conservatives would rather embrace “economic freedom.” The former represents big business and Wall Street; the latter evokes small business and Main Street.

I’ll talk in a moment about how, by Luntz’s criteria, I myself, a self-proclaimed liberal, am closer to being a conservative than Mitt Romney and many of the GOP politicians. But first to Obama and Toni Morrison. When Barack Obama stepped into the presidency, I can see how some would see him, not as coming to clean up the Wall Street mess but to join the Wall Streeters. Maybe Main Street conservatives hate him because he seems like just another CEO out to screw them. Thomas Frank in What’s the Matter with Kansas thinks this is why Democrats in general, not just Obama, have lost a natural constituency–they seem no less hand-in-hand with big money than are the Republicans and then are socially liberal to boot.

That thought reminded me of a scene from Morrison’s Song of Solomon.

In the novel the protagonist, Milkman Dead, at one point finds himself actually hitting his tyrannical father to protect his much-abused mother. Think of this as Obama seeming to stand up for the rights of minorities after years of oppression.

Only Milkman’s sister Magdalena isn’t impressed. In a scene where she unloads years of pent up frustration against her brother, she talks about how he has been the privileged one in the household, how everything has revolved around him while she and her sister were expected to cater to him.

When he stands up to defend their mother, she says, what she sees is a new tyrant walking in to take over from the old tyrant. Or as she puts it:

You are exactly like him [their father]. Exactly. I didn’t go to college because of him. Because I was afraid of what he might do to Mama. You think because you hit him once that we all believe you were protecting her. Taking her side. It’s a lie. You were taking over, letting us know you had the right to tell her and all of us what to do.”

So do white working class voters, those that Obama has the hardest time reaching, see him as just ignoring them as he steps into power? By this reasoning, Obama would have aroused less resentment if he had gone after the banks and financiers a lot harder than he did.

Then again, maybe they would have been angry regardless because he’s a black man who succeeded while their lives are crap. Luckily for him, he’s not running against someone who has a special affinity with working class voters. There is no doubt that his opponent worships Wall Street.

Returning to Frank Luntz’s description of conservative voters as Main Street populists who don’t really want to (here Luntz attempts to deflate the myths) deport immigrants or shrink the size of government or slash Medicare and Social Security or turn a blind eye to inequality—if what Luntz says is true, then there’s an enormous gap between what their candidates are saying and what they themselves believe. As Luntz describes them, his conservative voters would not approve of the Paul Ryan budget that the Republican House voted for and that Romney has endorsed, a budget that radically shrinks the size of government and slashes social welfare programs while further lowering taxes on the wealthy. Luntz’s voters would not agree with Romney’s endorsement of making life so tough for illegal immigrants that they “self deport.”

So what I want to say to Luntz is what John Wilmot, the 17th century author of “Satyr on Reason and Mankind,” says to an interlocutor who is trying to defend humans. In his biting poem, Rochester has been claiming that humans are animal-like–indeed, sometimes worse than animals–but he  is willing to grant that there are a few exceptions. He imagines one exemplary man but then concludes,

If such there be, yet grant me this at least:
Man differs more from man, than man from beast.

Or to put it in our terms, conservatives may differ more from conservatives than conservatives from liberals.

Posted in Morrison (Toni), Wilmot (John) | Tagged , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Stuart Little Rescues a Gay Boy

Stuart Little

Humorist David Rakoff was at St. Mary’s College this past Friday as part of our Mark Twain series, and I found myself deeply impressed by what has been described as his melancholy wit. At one point the gay author of Don’t Get Too Comfortable and Half Empty talked about the importance of Stuart Little upon his life. I went on line and found the essay that he read to us.

Marvelously entitled “The Love That Dare Not Squeak Its Name,” the Salon article (you can read it in its entirety here) confirms how vital a good story is in a child’s life. Rakoff, who as a small gay boy felt he didn’t belong anywhere, knew instantly that he had found a soul mate in E. B. White’s famous creation:

At age 7, having the book read to me in second grade by the sainted Mrs. Brailey, it was this initial confluence of traits — Stuart’s unquestioned membership in a family despite one glaring material difference from them and his tinyness only accentuating his courtly manners and dandy tendencies — that made me realize that I was somewhat like Stuart and that Stuart seemed, somewhat like myself, pretty gay.

This is not to say that Stuart Little necessarily sought the embraces of other boy mice. But had White, even in 1945, placed Stuart in his worsted blue suit with patch pockets anywhere near a schoolyard (there is an episode where he actually teaches school, but more on that later), Stuart would have learned conclusively from his human peers that he was, at the very least, a big fag, a sissy, a ‘mo and a poof.

Nor do I mean to claim the fine feeling and higher sentiment embodied by Stuart’s rarefaction as the exclusive province of the gays. Heaven knows that we inverts contain within our ranks many who have no manners to speak of, either shy or pleasant. And certainly a gray felt hat and cane are not necessarily gay props.

But props in and of themselves are an integral part of a gay childhood, with its vigilance against exposure, its years of passing. As a gay child, your life essentially consists of writing checks your ass can’t cover. The two remedies to this problem are either stepping back and remaining more an observer than a full-on, good faith participant, or going in for more performative behavior (during more judgmental times, we used to call this second option “living a lie”) until such time as one can move to New York.

After making a compelling case that Stuart is indeed gay and is never going to change, Rakoff talks further about the importance of getting this message at age 7:

Even White understands by [the end] that this is probably not a phase. Certain things might just not be in the tiny cards for some. And it was Stuart who taught me, in no small part, that this would be fine, too. Sitting on that classroom floor, legs crossed, I realized that I, like Stuart, might one day hope to walk down a big city street, a little mouse among many, “full of the joy of life and the fear of dogs.”

Don’t underestimate the power of the stories that you read to children. You are giving them life-saving resources. You may not always be able to predict which ones will take, however. So just read to them non-stop.

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Dorian Gray – Guilty of “Corrupting” Youth

Oscar Wilde

The students in my Theories of the Reader class have been sharing their research on books that had a concrete impact on readers, and their presentations are proving fascinating. Last week Lilian Timpson told us that she agrees with the prosecution’s charge against Oscar Wilde that The Picture of Dorian Gray corrupted young men, specifically Wilde’s lover Lord Alfred Douglas. Only, Lilian added, one should substitute “liberated” for “corrupted.”

The situation was as follows: Douglas, a young gay man at Oxford, was drawn to Wilde after reading Dorian Gray and soon afterwards became Wilde’s lover. His father publicly called Wilde out as a “sodomite,” Wilde was honor-bound to sue him, and in the subsequent trial Wilde was found guilty, both of “gross indecency” and of having written an immoral book. He was sentenced to two years of hard labor, an experience which broke him.

Drawing on Richard Ellmann’s great biography, Lilian noted that Dorian Gray became a kind of guidebook for young men and women, who read it with “a cult-like passion.” Ellmann writes,

Many young men and women learned of the existence of uncelebrated forms of love through the hints in The Picture of Dorian Gray.

The prosecution set out to prove this influence. The cross-examination included the following brilliant back and forth between prosecutor Edward Carson and Wilde:

C–Then a well-written book putting forward perverted moral views may be a good book?
W—No work of art ever puts forward views.  Views belong to people who are not artists.
C–A perverted novel might be a good book?
W–I don’t know what you mean by a “perverted” novel.
C–Then I will suggest Dorian Gray as open to the interpretation of being such a novel?
W–That could only be to brutes and illiterates.  The views of Philistines on art are incalculably stupid.
C–An illiterate person reading Dorian Gray might consider it such a novel?
W—The views of illiterates on art are unaccountable.  I am concerned only with my view of art.  I don’t care twopence what other people think of it.
C–The majority of persons would come under your definition of Philistines and illiterates?
W—I have found wonderful exceptions.
C–Do you think that the majority of people live up to the position you are giving us?
W—I am afraid they are not cultivated enough.
C–Not cultivated enough to draw the distinction between a good book and a bad book?
W
—Certainly not.
C–The affection and love of the artist of Dorian Gray might lead an ordinary individual to believe that it might have a certain tendency?
W—I have no knowledge of the views of ordinary individuals.
C–You did not prevent the ordinary individual from buying your book?
W—I have never discouraged him.

The prosecutor then proceeded to read the passage from Dorian Gray where painter Basil Hayward expresses his adulation for Dorian. (You can read the excerpt and entire literary exchange here.) It appears that the prosecution used Dorian Gray as an illustration of what happened between Wilde and Douglas. In a passage Lilian quoted, Wilde noted that he was seen by the public as Lord Henry, who corrupts the young Dorian, whereas he saw himself as Basil, who is in search of a consuming passion. In both scenarios, Douglas would fit the role of Dorian.

Interestingly, Lilian pointed out that, even while Wilde claimed that he was not responsible for the effect his book had on readers, he describes the corrupting (or liberating) impact of a book on Dorian. The book is Huysman’s decadent French novel A Rebours (Against the Grain), and Wilde writes in his novel, “for years Dorian Gray could not free himself from the influence of that book.” Lilian also points out Dorian’s susceptibility to poems: “How exquisite they were! As one read them, one seemed to be floating down the green waterways.” In other words, literature can indeed have an impact.

Lilian concluded by citing the idea of German reception theorist Hans Robert Jauss that a great work of art will expand an age’s “horizon of expectations,” and she sees Wilde’s novel as having done that.

“Ultimately,” she said, “Wilde himself proves himself very wrong that ‘no work of art ever puts forward views,’” and then points out that “The Picture of Dorian Gray and Wilde’s defense of ‘the love that dare not speak its name’ gave voice to the unspoken identification of a large minority. . . At this time, there was no open gay community and to so publicly suggest that there might be one, Wilde challenged the authority of the church and the existing laws, for which he paid a great price.”

Put another way, the novel got people to think differently than the authorities wanted them to think. So by the standards of the time, Dorian Gray was indeed guilty of corrupting youth.

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Like a Cat Asleep on a Chair, O Lord

"Sleeping Cat" (folk painting)

Spiritual Sunday

Sue Schmidt, who blogs at Let’s Choose Joy, knew that I would be swamped with student essays this week and (showing herself a true friend) generously contributed this lovely post on a D. H. Lawrence poem. Enjoy.

By Sue Schmidt, Blogger, Let’s Choose Joy

This week’s liturgy includes Psalm 23, perhaps one of the most known and loved pieces of poetry found in Hebrew Scriptures. (The text is quoted in a past post of Robin’s, which you can find here.) Attributed to King David, himself a shepherd, the poem unfolds as a joyous declaration of God’s provision, grounded in a relationship of complete trust.  The path to the kingship of Israel had been fraught with dangers for this young upstart, but God had proven to be faithful.

David is confident that God will provide green pasture, clear water, and guidance through the “valley of the shadow of death.” He will continue to be protected from evil, enemies and famine and followed by goodness and love.  And, like a sheep, at the end of the day’s journey he will be brought safely back by the shepherd into the fold, “the house of the Lord,” where he will dwell forever.

In the poem “Pax” by D. H. Lawrence, the image changes from that of sheep to cat. The sense of peace remains, however. Like the sheep, the cat is reassured by the presence of a life-giving God. Knowing that the master/mistress is “sitting at the board” allows a deep calm to settle into the heart. Anxiety is relinquished, sweet rest can be entered.

Lawrence’s poem in turn reminds me of another Psalm, this one also accredited to David. In this “Song of Ascents” (sung by Jews heading up to Jerusalem for worship), the poet refers to himself not as a sheep but as a weaned child, resting at the breast of his mother.

My heart is not proud, O Lord,
My eyes are not haughty;
I do not concern myself with great matters
Or things too wonderful for me.
But I have stilled and quieted my soul;
Like a weaned child with its mother,
Like a weaned child is my soul within me. (Psalm 131:1-7)

A friend of mine noted that the difference between a nursing child and the child who is weaned is that the weaned child sees the mother as more than a source of nourishment. Over time, the child has discovered that all of her needs will be met.  Like the sheep, which is secure in the knowledge the shepherd can find green pastures and still waters and provide protection and safety, the toddler has no reason to fear any evil.

Whatever image is chosen–sheep, child, or cat–there is a common experience in these poems and also a welcome invitation: to quiet our own souls and allow ourselves to be cared for. At one with the God of life, we will find ourselves at home in the house of the living, peacefully at rest before the glowing hearth.

Pax

By D. H. Lawrence

All that matters is to be at one with You, the living God;
to be a creature in Your house, O God of Life!
Like a cat asleep on a chair
at peace, in peace
at home, at home in the house of the living,
sleeping on the hearth, and yawning before the fire.

Sleeping on the hearth of the living world,
yawning at home before the fire of life
feeling the presence of You, the living God
like a great reassurance
a deep calm in the heart
a presence
as of a master, a mistress sitting on the board
in their own and greater being,
in the house of life.

Note on the painting: The sleeping cat painting can be found at contentinacottage.blogspot.com/2010/02/do-want-this-folk-painting-of-sleeping.html

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Major in English, Make Millions

My son Toby, currently a graduate student in English, just sent me this link to a Slate article about Mitt Romney discouraging students from becoming English majors. Here is the paragraph that caught my eye:

“You really don’t want to take out $150,000 loan to go into English because you’re not going to be able to pay it back. You might want to think about something else that meets your interest,” Romney said, noting that “as an English major I can say this,” reports ABC News. Romney graduated with an English degree from Brigham Young University and later went on to study law and business at Harvard.

I too am appalled that students have to take out $150,000 loans but, as for majoring in English, I point out to my majors that they have a wonderfully versatile major that prepares them for virtually anything. Now I have proof.

After all, judging by Romney’s example, they can become a CEO, governor of a state, a multimillionaire, presidential nominee of a major political party, and possibly even president of the United States.

I rest my case.

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The Dead Return to Comfort Us

Maura, Cruz in "Volver"

Film Friday

This past week I finished teaching a continuing education course on the films of Pedro Almodovar and emerged liking the quirky Spanish director more than ever. While his early films, like Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown, were off beat and pop-art colorful, he has since added heart to his work. As a result, even though his movies remain as unpredictable as ever, one walks out of a number of them profoundly moved. This was true of the last three that we saw—All about My Mother, Speak to Her, and, this past Tuesday, Volver.

What comes through in Volver (the title is the name of a popular song and means “going back” or “returning”) is the strength of Raimunda (Penelope Cruz), who will do anything to protect her daughter—including cover up her killing of her father (or, as the daughter later learns, her step-father) when the man tries to rape her. Raimunda’s up-beat determination is inspiring.

But (and if you can, watch the film before you let my spoilers ruin the suspense for you) we learn by the end that no one is self-sufficient and that everyone needs someone to confide in. We eventually learn that Raimunda’s daughter is also her sister, Raimunda herself having been raped by her father when she was a girl. While her mother was alive, Raimunda grew away from her for not protecting her, but then, when Irene died in a mysterious fire in the arms of her husband, Raimunda idealizes their love.

Only Irene didn’t die in the fire but instead set it, burning up her husband and his mistress after learning what he had done to their daughter. Presumed dead, Irene lives as a ghost, taking care of her sister (who has dementia so no one believes her when she says that Irene is caring for her). This allows the plot to provide us with two very powerful fantasies: (1) if the dead could talk to us, they would apologize to us for the wrong they did and (2) rather than abandoning us with their death, our parents are still present to us and will care for us. Raimunda deserves to be cared for by her “dead” mother and, by the end of this film, caring is what she gets.

The film is very skillful in the way that it probes the thin membrane between the living and the dead. Even though there is a perfectly rational explanation for everything that happens, the film still has an aura of mystery, as though Irene is moving between the two worlds. To set the mood, the film opens with widows cleaning their husbands’ graves while a strong wind—spirits at work?—blows through the town. The townspeople believe in ghosts and who’s to say that they’re wrong.

In the powerful scene where Raimunda sings the title song “Volver,” we see Irene secretly watching her. She rises up when she hears the following lyrics:

We parted some time ago
but my moment to lose has come
you were very right
I listen to my heart
and I’m dying for going back

And going back, going back, going back
to your arms once more
I’ll get to your whereabouts
I know how to lose, I know how to lose
I want to go back, go back go back

Though we’re pretty sure by this time that Irene is no ghost, nevertheless the scene seems to indicate that our strong longing can call the dead back to us.

There are two scenes in the film I find particularly wonderful. In one, Raimunda has just learned that her mother is still alive, at which point she runs away, dragging her daughter (who already knows about Irene) behind her. For the first time, her daughter sees her indomitable mother break down, and she urges her to go back. It is as though, for a moment, she is the nurturing one, urging a reconciliation between the present and the past, the living and the dead.

In the final scene, meanwhile, Irene leaves the house to care for their next-door-neighbor, a sympathetic woman who is dying of cancer. (The woman all but sees Irene as a ghost coming back to care for her.) Panicked that Irene, only recently found, will vanish once again, Raimunda goes running to the neighbor’s and is assured by her mother that there will be plenty of time for them to talk and that she wants to hear all that Raimunda has to tell her. The mother that Raimunda rejected because of the rape has come back to her.

In the plot and the handling of the subject matter, Almodovar has found a compelling way to assure us that love is more powerful than death. With the anniversary of my own son’s death approaching (on Monday), it is a comforting message.

Posted in Volver (film) | Tagged , , , | 4 Comments

Students, Fling Up Your Windows!


Carl Wilhelm Anton Seiler

My poor students are in crisis mode at the moment. Three of them are working on long senior projects (each around 80 pages) which must be submitted to the Records Office on Friday. All three essays promise well but Caitie, Erica and Evan have miles to go before they sleep. We have been e-mailing back and forth.

I shared with them some comforting words from my son Toby, who remembers how his own St. Mary’s Project (we call them SMPs) crystallized in the final week. His SMP, on Wordsworth’s Prelude, Whitman’s Leaves of Grass, and Eliot’s Wasteland, was so ambitious that only an undergraduate would dream of undertaking it–which is what I love about this age. (I remember my Carleton senior project was on whether the French Enlightenment, specifically Jean Jacques Rousseau and Denis Diderot, caused the French Revolution.) He told me to remind my students that extreme pressure can result in diamonds.

Of course, he also noted that it’s no fun being the lump of coal.

Here’s a Stephen Vincent Benet poem for all those students in America and around the world who are frantically writing essays and madly cramming for exams. We your teachers have been there ourselves and feel your pain.

Or should I try to placate you with such nostrums as “no pain, no gain”? Which may be true but is hardly consoling.

Or should I say that, having been abused ourselves, we are now abusing you in turn?

Here’s the poem, which was probably inspired by Walt Whitman’s “When I Heard the Learned Astronomer.” And maybe also by Wordsworth’s “The Tables Turned” (which has the line “We murder to dissect”). Use it to vent a little, just as the student  in the poem literally vents (flings up a window). And good luck.

Before an Examination

By Stephen Vincent Benet

The little letters dance across the page,
Flaunt and retire, and trick the tired eyes;
Sick of the strain, the glaring light, I rise
Yawning and stretching, full of empty rage
At the dull maunderings of a long dead sage,
Fling up the windows, fling aside his lies;
Choosing to breathe, not stifle and be wise,
And let the air pour in upon my cage.

The breeze blows cool and there are stars and stars
Beyond the dark, soft masses of the elms
That whisper things in windy tones and light.
They seem to wheel for dim, celestial wars;
And I — I hear the clash of silver helms
Ring icy-clear from the far deeps of night.

“Lies” is a bit strong and, of course, students today might regard Benet’s own writings as “the dull maunderings of a long dead sage.” In defense of those of us who assign the writings of the long dead, I could point out that if one has read, say, The Iliad, the work can enhance the star gazing experience. How else would one find oneself musing upon “celestial wars” and “the clash of silver helms” as one looked heavenward? Still, I get Benet’s point.

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Shakespeare with a Smart Phone

Olivier as Hamlet

Alexandra Petri yesterday had an amusing post on her The Washington Post blog about how many of Shakespeare’s plays would have ended differently if their characters had owned owned smart phones:

–Romeo and Juliet text each other about the poison
–Hermia would use GPS
–To handle the Ides of March, Caesar would telecommute.
–To check on Desdemona after hearing accusations from a fellow worker, Othello could log keystrokes.

But then, after wondering how Shakespeare’s reputation has soared so high, Petri got around to admitting that there’s something there after all:

Look at his most famous play. Hamlet? A whiny college student, evidently overeducated and underemployed, comes home for break, sees a ghost and dithers. Eventually some pirates show up, but wouldn’t you know, they remain offstage. Shakespeare is one of the few writers in history who, given the option of including pirates in a play, thinks, “Nah, you know what? I’d rather have this dithering hipster talk about mortality some more.”

Come to think of it, maybe he’s never been more relevant.

People complain about their Millennials moving home. Try having Hamlet in your basement for a semester. “Tis not alone my inky cloak, good mother, nor customary suits of solemn black…” That would get old at breakfast, I imagine.

His plays still tell the truth, boiled down to their essences.

King Lear: Your kids put you in a home? You should be so lucky!
Titus Andronicus (or, Guess Who’s Coming As Dinner?): Cannibalism is never the answer.
Romeo and Juliet: Check your messages before ingesting poison.
The Tempest: Wizards pretty much get to do whatever they want.

And then Petri mentions something else vital that Shakespeare gives us: a common referent:

And he’s one of the few writers we still have in common. We’re dragged through the thorns of his work so that we’ll have something to talk about on the other side.

Her conclusion echoes the immortal epitaph of Ben Johnson, “He was not of an age but for all time.”

Or as Petri puts it:

Write what you know? Shakespeare adamantly didn’t. But in the process, he wrote what we all know.

And he didn’t need a smartphone to do it.

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A Creeping Sense of Entitlement

Model of Hrothgar for 2007 "Beowulf" film

Sunday I sent the manuscript for my book to my publisher (which is to say, to my son Darien). Writing How Beowulf Can Save America: An Epic Hero’s Guide to Defeating the Politics of Rage has been an eye-opening experience for me. As I let the poem guide me to an understanding of contemporary America, I realized as never before the depth of our “greedy king” problem—which is to say, how damaging it is for a society to have a growing income gap between the very rich and everyone else.

The statistics are startling. To cite just a couple, America’s 450 wealthiest citizens now have as much money as the bottom 150 million, and as we were climbing out of a major recession in 2010 (according to Berkeley economist Emmanuel Saez), the top one percent captured 93 percent of income gains. In other words, even as most of us saw the value of our homes and retirement plans drop, those at the top were claiming an even greater share of the country’s wealth.

This is not healthy for anyone—not for the wealthy, who increasingly feel cut off from the rest of us, and not for America as a whole. Beowulf shows us how countries that are victimized by hoarding kings  fall into dragon gloom.

The following excerpt is from my book. In it I quote a lengthy speech by Danish King Hrothgar on how a creeping sense of entitlement takes over those who have wealth and power. They may start out as good kings but it is as though they are stalked by “an archer who draws a deadly bow,” who shoots them in the heart. Their old possessions appear to them “paltry” and they covet and resent. The end result is paranoia and separation from their fellows.

Here’s the excerpt:

It all begins with a sense of entitlement, with the moneyed interests feeling they deserve an ever bigger slice of the American pie. Their belief that they are entitled far surpasses that of the poor, accused by Mitt Romney of expecting handouts. Ironically, anxiety rather than contentment arises from the conservative elite’s growing prosperity. The more they get, the more worried they are that (in the words of New York Magazine blogger Jonathan Chait) the “masses” will use their political power “to gang up on us and seize our wealth.”

Chait arrived at his understanding while trying to figure out why Supreme Court rulings are increasingly favoring the wealthy. The Obama era, he says, appears to have “unleashed deep-rooted conservative fears of economic democracy”:

Conservatives have come to see the majority’s threatening ability to shape economic policy not merely as an impediment but as a dire existential threat.

A similar sense of paranoia is captured in Beowulf when King Hrothgar describes the evolution of a greedy king. I quote the extended description in full because it brilliantly charts the psychological progression.Hrothgar begins by noting how the wealthy and the powerful have been blessed with “fulfillment and felicity on earth,” and I have noted how, in recent American history, the upward movement of the country’s wealth began in the 1980’s. That’s when tax rates began to go down and financial speculation increased. Treasures were heaped upon our men and women “of distinguished birth”—if not by God, then by a globalized economy and favorable legislation:

It is a great wonder
how Almighty God in His magnificence
favors our race with rank and scope
and the gift of wisdom; His sway is wide.
Sometimes He allows the mind of a man
of distinguished birth to follow its bent,
grants him fulfillment and felicity on earth
and forts to command in his own country.
He permits him to lord it in many lands . . .

The first sign of trouble is when the king starts to take all these gifts as his due. He thinks he is rich because “the whole world conforms to his will,” not because he is fortunate to have been born into a race (in our case, the United States) that has been graced “with rank and scope and the gift of wisdom”:

. . . until the man in his unthinkingness
forgets that it will ever end for him.
He indulges his desires; illness and old age
mean nothing to him; his mind is untroubled
by envy or malice or the thought of enemies
with their hate-honed swords. The whole world
conforms to his will, he is kept from the worst . . .

Arrogance, and with it discontent, continues to grow. The passage notes the imperceptible gradualness of the change.  Instead of seeing himself joined with the country in a common enterprise, the king gradually finds himself resenting others. The “devious promptings of the demon start” as he imagines them eyeing “his” possessions:

. . . until an element of overweening
enters him and takes hold
while the soul’s guard, its sentry, drowses,
grown too distracted.  A killer stalks him,
an archer who draws a deadly bow.
And then the man is hit in the heart,
the arrow flies beneath his defenses,
the devious promptings of the demon start.
His old possessions seem paltry to him now.
He covets and resents; dishonors custom
and bestows no gold; and because of good things
he ignores the shape of things to come.

In the end, the poem predicts, the king will reap what he has sown:

Then finally the end arrives
when the body he was lent collapses and falls
prey to its death; ancestral possessions
and the goods he hoarded are inherited by another
who lets them go with a liberal hand. . . .

With our own wealthy citizens and their political and media allies, what once would have been seen as munificent is now regarded as “paltry.” It is now assumed, for instance, that CEOs should be paid hundreds of times what their employees make, that golden parachutes should be the norm, and that any attempts to redistribute the wealth—say, through increasing income tax rates—are an egregious infringement.  They even seek to forestall, through their angry opposition to the estate tax, the poem’s fantasy of their money being liberally redistributed when they die.

The poem doesn’t tell us exactly what it means to covet, resent, dishonor and bestow no gold, but we can come up with our own contemporary examples.  For instance, if we believe that basic fairness should prevail in America and that everyone should have equal opportunity to succeed, then legislators dishonor that spirit when, seduced by lobbying dollars, they write favorable legislation for big corporations and steer large contracts and generous subsidies their way. If Americans on both the Left and the Right were furious over the TARP bank bailout, necessary though it may have been, it was because they feared that once again they were being scammed.

My book goes on to show how Beowulf, himself in danger of falling into dragon gloom, shakes himself free and liberates the dragon’s treasure so that it can circulate freely and reinvigorate society. I describe how he can’t do it alone but must work in concert with the next generation. I’ll have details soon on how to get a copy of the book.

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Loose Cannons and the 2008 Meltdown


Daniel Vierge, illus. from "Ninety-three"

I recently read a fascinating Washington Post article about the TARP bailouts and how taxpayers will not be on the hook for as much as we originally feared. The good news is that the government, which initially allotted $700 billion dollars for the rescue effort, will (astoundingly!) recoup all but $19 billion of that money.

Of course, the bad news is that regulatory laxity led to the meltdown in the first place. People will never recoup the money that they lost in ravaged retirement accounts and diminished home equity, not to mention lost houses, lost jobs, and other personal tragedies. As author of the article Jared Bernstein puts it,

Government regulation of financial markets failed miserably, but government actions helped put out the fire, albeit after badly burning the economy. It’s hard to applaud the fire department when it abetted the arsonists.

Bernstein’s observation brings to mind a powerful passage from Victor Hugo’s novel Ninety-Three, which I read decades ago in a Carleton College French class. I’ll set the scene and then you can decide how well it applies.

Hugo’s novel, his last, is about the 1793 French civil war between supporters of the French Revolution and supporters of the aristocratic counterrevolution. (The revolutionaries won and the terror was the result.) The scene I’m thinking of involves a ship’s cannon that has gotten loose. Hugo tells us that there is nothing worse on board a ship than a loose cannon (thus the expression). As you read his description, imagine that something comparable was occurring in 2008 in the world’s financial sector. Think of the cannon as a financial derivative:

A gun that breaks its moorings becomes suddenly some indescribable supernatural beast. It is a machine which transforms itself into a monster. This mass turns upon its wheels, has the rapid movements of a billiard ball; rolls with the rolling, pitches with the pitching; goes, comes, pauses, seems to meditate; resumes its course, rushes along the ship from end to end like an arrow, circles about, springs aside, evades, rears, breaks, kills, exterminates. It is a battering ram which assaults a wall at its own caprice. Moreover, the battering ram is metal, the wall wood. It is the entrance of matter into liberty. One might say that this eternal slave avenges itself. It seems as if the power of evil hidden in what we call inanimate objects finds a vent and bursts suddenly out. It has an air of having lost patience, of seeking some fierce, obscure retribution; nothing more inexorable than this rage of the inanimate.

The mad mass has the bounds of a panther, the weight of the elephant, the agility of the mouse, the obstinacy of the ox, the unexpectedness of the surge, the rapidity of lightning, the deafness of the tomb. It weighs ten thousand pounds, and it rebounds like a child’s ball. Its flight is a wild whirl abruptly cut at right angles.

This loose cannon claims human victims:

At the moment when the lashings gave way the gunners were in the battery, some in groups, others standing alone, occupied with such duties as sailors perform in expectation of the command to clear for action. The carronade, hurled forward by the pitching, dashed into this knot of men, and crushed four at the first blow; then, flung back and shot out anew by the rolling, it cut in two a fifth poor fellow, glanced off to the larboard side, and struck a piece of the battery with such force as to unship it. Then rose the cry of distress which had been heard. The men rushed toward the ladder; the gun-deck emptied in the twinkling of an eye. The enormous cannon was left alone. She was given up to herself. She was her own mistress, and mistress of the vessel. She could do what she willed with both. This whole crew, accustomed to laugh in battle, trembled now. To describe the universal terror would be impossible.

It appears only a matter of time before the cannon destroys the entire ship. And while people weren’t dying in the financial crisis, Secretary of the Treasury Henry Paulson and those who understood the situation must have experienced their own brand of terror as they watched the world’s credit seize up, with no bank willing to loan money to any other bank.

The cannon is saved by an extraordinary act of bravery. The man in charge of the gun, he who failed to secure it properly, darts in and, at the risk of almost certain death, plants a handspike inside the cannon’s wheel, bringing it to a stop:

It was ended. The man had conquered. The ant had subdued the mastodon; the pygmy had taken the thunderbolt prisoner.

What happens then? First, the gunner is presented with the cross of St. Louis for exemplary bravery. All the sailors cheer.

Then, because the accident was his fault, he is shot.

So looking back at those grim days of September 2008, let us applaud Paulson and George Bush and those legislators (some who would go on to suffer electoral defeat for their vote) for having taken the necessary steps. With the world on the brink of a second Great Depression, the secretary and president jawboned bankers, twisted arms in Congress, and saved the country. And while we’re at it, let’s give Bush credit as well for the auto bailout, which he, not Obama, set in motion. If the United States is currently doing better than Europe, it is because of those measures.

And then let’s shoot them for having dismantled the banking regulations in the first place. If they hadn’t loosened the chains holding the cannon, it wouldn’t have done its damage. To be bipartisan about it, I’m also willing to execute Bill Clinton for his role in banking deregulation.

As we look at the way that Congressional Republicans since then have been fighting regulatory reform tooth and nail, let’s remind ourselves of the state of the ship that Barack Obama inherited. I can’t put it better than Victor Hugo:

The man had conquered, but one might say that the cannon had conquered also. Immediate shipwreck had been avoided, but the corvette was by no means saved. The dilapidation of the vessel seemed irremediable. The sides had five breaches, one of which, very large, was in the bow. Out of the thirty carronades, twenty lay useless in their frames. The carronade, which had been captured and rechained, was itself disabled; the screw of the breech-button was forced, and the leveling of the piece impossible in consequence. The battery was reduced to nine pieces. The hold had sprung a leak. It was necessary at once to repair the damages and set the pumps to work.

The gun deck, now that one had time to look about it, offered a terrible spectacle. The interior of a mad elephant’s cage could not have been more completely dismantled.

“Mad elephant” about fits our situation. Almost from the first, all but a handful of Republicans refused to work with the president to fix the ship and prevent future mishaps from occurring. (Keynesians under Bush who argued, with Cheney, that deficits don’t matter, magically transformed into deficit hawks under the Democrats.) If Obama loses the election because the electorate fails to remember what he inherited—if people can’t see anything more than that the ship has failed to reach the cruising speed we would all like to see—then I can’t help but think that an injustice will have been done.

Update – I see that New York Times columnist Paul Krugman has a column this morning on this question of amnesia as he wonders whether the American people and the media will let Mitt Romney get away with claiming that the financial crisis happened on Obama’s watch. (Romney was giving a press conference in front of a factory that had been closed under Bush.) Not that Krugman lets Obama off the hook, noting that even given the political constraints under which he was working he could have done more. But Krugman notes that Romney’s anti-regulatory, safety net slashing, laissez-faire economic proposals would be like a third Bush term.

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The Silver Water Crushes Like Silk

N. Pirosmani, "Roe Deer Drinking from a Stream"

Spiritual Sunday

When I posted Mary Oliver’s “The Fawn” on Easter Sunday, I became aware, for the first time, just how many of her poems are structured by a Good Friday-Resurrection progression. Although Oliver almost never mentions religion in her works—the church bells in “The Fawn” may be as close as she ever comes—in any number of poems one finds a journey from desolate imagery (forcing oneself through brambles, plodding through a swamp) to sudden, miraculous revelation.

In a poem like “Egrets,” for instance (which I posted on here), she describes a kind of crucifixion as the speaker forces herself through a pathless wood:

Finally
I could not
save my arms
from thorns; soon
the mosquitoes
smelled me, hot
and wounded, and came
wheeling and whining.

Ultimately, however, the long hard trek concludes in mystical revelation as she sees three egrets that transcend the world of logic and “step[] over every dark thing”:

–a shower
of white fire!
Even half-asleep they had
such faith in the world
that had made them—
tilting through the water,
unruffled, sure,
by the laws
of their faith not logic,
they opened their wings
softly and stepped
over every dark thing.

Oliver seems to be very much in the tradition of Emily Dickinson when it comes to spiritual experience. Dickinson may have talked more overtly about religion but she too looks for God in nature. (See my post here on her poem “Some Keep the Sabbath Going to the Church.”) Dickinson seems to fall within the Gnostic tradition that Harold Bloom says is foundational to American religion. Bloom says that most American worshippers see themselves as having a spirit that is in close relationship to God. As intellectual historian Henry May sums up Bloom’s formulation, this spirit is “an uncreated ‘spark of God,’ totally isolated from and older than the created world.” In this formulation, Bolom says (in May’s words) that “knowledge and experience of God can be achieved only through some sort of special revelation.”

Oliver is constantly searching for something beyond herself, with which she desires to be ecstatically united. As we are still in the Easter season, here’s another poem where we see her emerging from the night, with its “black waterfalls,” its “craven doubt.” Healing comes with the dawn, and at the sight of a deer drinking, your heart “wants more, you’re ready/to rise and look!/to hurry anywhere/to believe in everything.”

It sure sounds like Resurrection morning to me.

Morning at Great Pond

By Mary Oliver

It starts like this:
forks of light
slicking up
out of the east,
flying over you,
and what’s left of night–
its black waterfalls,
its craven doubt –
dissolves like gravel
as the sun appears
trailing clouds
of pink and green wool,
igniting the fields,
turning the ponds
to plates of fire.
The creatures there
are dark flickerings
you make out
one by one
as the light lifts –
great blue herons,
wood ducks shaking
their shimmering crests –
and knee-deep
in the purple shallows
a deer drinking:
as she turns
the silver water
crushes like silk,
shaking the sky,
and you’re healed then
from the night, your heart
wants more, you’re ready
to rise and look!
to hurry anywhere!
to believe in everything.

A Note on the Artist: Years ago I saw a magical film based on the life of Niko Pirosmani, the 19th and early 20th Russian primitivist. I’ve never been able to track the film down but you can see other paintings by him at www.pirosmani.org/pirosmani.

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Young Idealists, Become Sam Spade

Film Friday

New York Times columnist David Brooks had a recent column where he talked about the need for idealistic young people to toughen up. While admiring their commitment to service, he noted that they underestimate the problem of disorder and human darkness. They are naive, he believes, in thinking that compassion and resources are enough and that one can avoid the grimy reality of politics.

His suggestion? Do what the “greatest generation”  did and model yourself on Sam Spade. Here’s Brooks:

The noir heroes like Sam Spade in The Maltese Falcon served as models for a generation of Americans, and they put the focus squarely on venality, corruption and disorder and how you should behave in the face of it.

A noir hero is a moral realist. He assumes that everybody is dappled with virtue and vice, especially himself. He makes no social-class distinction and only provisional moral distinctions between the private eyes like himself and the criminals he pursues. The assumption in a Hammett book is that the good guy has a spotty past, does spotty things and that the private eye and the criminal are two sides to the same personality.

He (or she — the women in these stories follow the same code) adopts a layered personality. He hardens himself on the outside in order to protect whatever is left of the finer self within.

He is reticent, allergic to self-righteousness and appears unfeeling, but he is motivated by a disillusioned sense of honor. The world often rewards the wrong things, but each job comes with obligations and even if everything is decaying you should still take pride in your work. Under the cynical mask, there is still a basic sense of good order, that crime should be punished and bad behavior shouldn’t go uncorrected. He knows he’s not going to be uplifted by his work; that to tackle the hard jobs he’ll have to risk coarsening himself, but he doggedly plows ahead.

This worldview had a huge influence as a generation confronted crime, corruption, fascism and communism. I’m not sure I can see today’s social entrepreneurs wearing fedoras and trench coats. But noir’s moral realism would be a nice supplement to today’s prevailing ethos. It would fold some hardheadedness in with today’s service mentality. It would focus attention on the core issues: order and rule of law. And it would be necessary. Contemporary Washington, not to mention parts of the developing world, may be less seedy than the cities in the noir stories, but they are equally laced with self-deception and self-dealing.

Jesus advocated a similar balance to his disciples: “I am sending you out like sheep among wolves. Therefore be as shrewd as serpents and as innocent as doves”(Matthew 10:16). And why not wear trench coats while you’re doing it?

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The Day Rabbits Attacked Napoleon

Slovenian beehive art

In honor of Earth Day, which is Sunday, I am sharing a poem by my father, who is an ardent birdwatcher and nature lover. He particularly enjoys literary accounts of nature fighting back against civilization. I’ve written in the past (in a post about the movie Avatar and environmentalist revenge fantasies) about Kipling’s short story from The Jungle Books where angry animals annihilate a village and “let the jungle in.”  Here’s one of Scott Bates’s contributions to the genre.

It all starts with a story, mentioned in a Napoleon biography (he’s forgotten which one), of rabbits designed for slaughter turning on the hunters.  Delighted with the account, Scott lets his imagination run from there.  The poem appears in his ABC of Radical Ecology:

R Is the Rondo of Rabbit Run

A thousand rabbits, released for the day’s hunt, turned on the Emperor’s party and put it to flight – Life of Napoleon

By Scott Bates

Have you hard of the Battle of Rabbit Run
When the rabbits attacked Napoleon

It was back in the summer of 1805
Scarcely a hare is now alive
Who hasn’t heard of that famous fray
When a thousand rabbits refused to play
And rose up in wrath and won the day . . .

This is the way it came to pass

They had taken them out in the meadow grass
To provide some sport and some innocent fun
For His Imperial Majesty Napoleon
They has opened their cages “Allez! Allez!
Expecting to see them run away
From the little man with the great big gun

When a thousand rabbits refused to run!

And turned and attacked Napoleon!

They went for that little son-of-a-gun!

All he could do was cut and run
Over the meadows and under the sun
Pursued by those hedge-hoppers by the ton
Shouting Conspuez Napoleon!
Shouting Down with Napoleon!

All they could do was flee in dismay
The Imperial Party in disarray
Jettisoning champagne and liver pate
Crying Morbleu! and assassines!
Running like humans to get away

From a thousand rabbits who every one
Was a Chicagov or a Wellington!

From a thousand heroes and everyone
The Waterloo of Napoleon!

And thus it befell that they carried the day
The historic Battle of Rabbit Run
Cony and Cottontail white hare and gray
They sipped champagne and they nibbled pate

And they drank to the day that would surely come
The day of the Rabbit Millennium

When Rabbits’ Rights would outlaw guns
And ragout de lapin and Napoleons

Note on the artwork: Slovenia, where I’ve twice spent Fulbright years, is famous for its beehive art (panjska koncnica). Often there are depictions of animals turning the tables on hunters.  Honey is very important in Slovenia as the basis of many of its medications, and hunters could disturb the hives. In the fantasy above, the animals have gained the upper hand but at least are doing more than the hunter would do for them and giving him a proper burial.

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Who Is Your Favorite Dickens Character?

Anna Maxwell Martin as Esther Summerson

In my Theories of the Readers class, I’ve been teaching Wayne Booth’s work on “ethical criticism,” which talks about books as friends. Usually the books towards which we feel the friendliest are those with memorable characters, which is why Dickens ranks high on people’s friendship lists.

Reader and high school English teacher Carl Rosin sent me the link to a series of articles that England’s Guardian newspaper ran on people’s favorite Dickens characters (in honor of the author’s 200th birthday). Here’s one on Aged P in Great Expectations. You can find other characters at the end of the article.

The series got me to ask myself who I liked best.

I haven’t read Bleak House in 35 years but I remember really, really liking Esther Sommerson, so she may be my favorite. (My wife, incidentally, like a comparable character: the selfless Lizzie Hexam from Our Mutual Friend.) Wemmeck from Great Expectations is great—I was enchanted by the image of his home being his castle—and I have a fondness for the big-hearted innocence of Pickwick. I am inspired by the friendship between Nicholas Nickleby and poor Smike, one of a number of  children who have the misfortune to die in a Dickens novel. (While I surrender to my soft side when I read Dickens, I also appreciate Oscar Wilde’s brilliant putdown of Victorian sentimentality in a comment on The Old Curiosity Shop: ““One must have a heart of stone to read the death of little Nell without laughing.”)

Of course, our friends aren’t only the positive characters. Dickens’ evil and mixed characters become part of our lives, acquaintances in their own right. Madame Defarge terrified me as a child, Scrooge presents us with the grim specter of a closed heart (until he has his revelation), and Bounderby is alive and well in America today (see my post on him here).

It’s been so long since I read Bleak House that instead of Esther I’ll write on Sissy Jupe from Hard Times. Raised in the circus, she brings imagination into Grandgrind’s and Bounderby’s cold, industrial, fact-oriented world. She has an innocence that refuses to surrender to the so-called “facts” and knows that a horse is not in fact (as defined by thus-and-much-more Bitzer) a “Quadruped. Graminivorous. Forty teeth, namely twenty-four grinders, four eye-teeth, and twelve incisive. Sheds coat in the spring; in marshy countries, sheds hoofs, too. Hoofs hard, but requiring to be shod with iron. Age known by marks in mouth.’

But while innocent, she also has the wisdom that comes from being in touch with what is important in life. She understands human dignity and why her father, no longer able to perform his acrobatics, runs away. She uses this wisdom to save Louisa Grandgrind, both from scandal and, even more importantly, from an empty life. She has much in common with Dickens who, despite his childhood hardships, held on to the world of the imagination, through which he redeemed the world.

I conclude today’s entry with the wonderful passage where Sissy routes Harthouse, the rake who is prepared to ruin Louisa. Feel free to let me know your own favorite Dickens characters:

‘Mr Harthouse,’ returned Sissy, with a blending of gentleness and steadiness that quite defeated him, and with a simple confidence in his being bound to do what she required, that held him at a singular disadvantage, ‘the only reparation that remains with you, is to leave here immediately and finally. I am quite sure that you can mitigate in no other way the wrong and harm you have done. I am quite sure that it is the only compensation you have left it in your power to make. I do not say that it is much, or that it is enough; but it is something, and it is necessary. Therefore, though without any other authority than I have given you, and even without the knowledge of any other person than yourself and myself, I ask you to depart from this place tonight, under an obligation never to return to it.’

If she had asserted any influence over him beyond her plain faith in the truth and right of what she said; if she had concealed the least doubt or irresolution, or had harboured for the best purpose any reserve or pretence; if she had shown, or felt, the lightest trace of any sensitiveness to his ridicule or his astonishment, or any remonstrance he might offer; he would have carried it against her at this point. But he could as easily have changed a clear sky by looking at it in surprise, as affect her.

‘But do you know,’ he asked, quite at a loss, ‘the extent of what you ask? You probably are not aware that I am here on a public kind of business, preposterous enough in itself, but which I have gone in for, and sworn by, and am supposed to be devoted to in quite a desperate manner? You probably are not aware of that, but I assure you it’s the fact.’

It had no effect on Sissy, fact or no fact.

‘Besides which,’ said Mr Harthouse, taking a turn or two across the room, dubiously, ‘it’s so alarmingly absurd. It would make a man so ridiculous, after going in for these fellows, to back out in such an incomprehensible way.’

‘I am quite sure,’ repeated Sissy, ‘that it is the only reparation in your power, sir. I am quite sure, or I would not have come here.’

He glanced at her face, and walked about again. ‘Upon my soul, I don’t know what to say. So immensely absurd!’

And further on:

‘I suppose a man never was placed in a more ridiculous position,’ he said, after looking down, and looking up, and laughing, and frowning, and walking off, and walking back again. ‘But I see no way out of it. What will be, will be. This will be, I suppose. I must take off myself, I imagine — in short, I engage to do it.’

Sissy rose. She was not surprised by the result, but she was happy in it, and her face beamed brightly.

‘You will permit me to say,’ continued Mr James Harthouse, ‘that I doubt if any other ambassador, or ambassadress, could have addressed me with the same success. I must not only regard myself as being in a very ridiculous position, but as being vanquished at all points. Will you allow me the privilege of remembering my enemy’s name?’

‘My name?’ said the ambassadress.

‘The only name I could possibly care to know, tonight.’

‘Sissy Jupe.’

‘Pardon my curiosity at parting. Related to the family?’

‘I am only a poor girl,’ returned Sissy. ‘I was separated from my father — he was only a stroller — and taken pity on by Mr Gradgrind. I have lived in the house ever since.’

She was gone.

‘It wanted this to complete the defeat,’ said Mr James Harthouse, sinking, with a resigned air, on the sofa, after standing transfixed a little while. ‘The defeat may now be considered perfectly accomplished. Only a poor girl — only a stroller — only James Harthouse made nothing of — only James Harthouse a Great Pyramid of failure.

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Ellison’s Invisible Man, Always Relevant

Ralph Ellison

A couple of weeks ago I alluded to Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man (60 years old last week) in an attempt to understand Obama-derangement. I see that David Denby in this week’s New Yorker also appreciates the novel’s continuing relevance, not only to current race relations but to the figure of Ellison himself. Ellison’s dramatic account of how people project different images onto black men describes what readers would go on to do, often unkindly, to Ellison himself. You can read the entire article here, but below Denby applies Invisible Man to the Trayvon Martin shooting and to Barack Obama’s confusion as a young man:

What I want to say on the anniversary of Invisible Man is that everyone should get off Ellison’s back. Just get off his back. Stop lamenting what he didn’t do and celebrate what he did do—which was to create a work of art that, as it happens, has never been more “relevant” than now. Ellison’s hero is “invisible” because no one has much interest in seeing him as he is in all his ornery individuality. Virtually everyone—black and white alike—wants to use him, to make him over in their own image, to turn him into a portent, a warning, a threat, a possibility. Has not the same thing happened to Trayvon Martin in the last few weeks? (It has happened to George Zimmerman, too, which makes the case more complicated.) Ellison, like his hero, didn’t want to be used. He was wary and experimental, looking to break the code, to find the key to making his way in a white-dominated society, a problem that also intrigued the young Barack Obama. In Dreams For My Father, Obama writes, “There was a trick somewhere, though what the trick was, and who was doing the tricking, and who was being tricked, eluded my conscious grasp.” It is a sentence that could have been uttered by Ellison’s hero at his most baffled.

I’m in the process of putting together a book list for my contemporary English-Language Literature survey for next semester. I’d been planning on Toni Morrison’s Song of Solomon or Beloved but Invisible Man, long though it is, is tempting.

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“Harry, I Am Your Father” – Voldemort

Harry Potter and The Brothers Karamazov seldom get mentioned in the same sentence, but my student Evan Roe—in the third of the senior projects I have been mentoring this year (you can read reports of the other two here and here)—points out that both works demonstrate that sons must break free from oppressive fathers if they are to find themselves.

Evan has entitled his project “Not All Scars are Lightning-Shaped: How Harry Potter and Alyosha Karamazov Overcome the Oedipus Complex.” I first blogged on Evan’s ideas as he was starting off the project, but he has fleshed them out considerably since then.

Freud famously uses the Oedipus story to get at the psychological conflicts that boys have with their fathers. The trauma that causes the Oedipus complex begins in childhood when the newborn child, who initially has his mother all to himself, grows a little older and discovers that he has a rival. Somehow daddy thinks he has a place in mommy’s bed as well. What Freud calls “the primal scene” is the moment, actual or imagined, when the boy witnesses his mother and father having sex. If he is to grow up, the boy must move past his pure longing (to return to the mother) and his pure hatred (to get rid of the father who appears to have supplanted him). There are those who remain forever trapped in one or both of these emotions, becoming emotionally stunted adults.

Freud thought that Dostoevsky’s Brothers Karamazov was the world’s greatest novel, and, while I am inclined to agree, Freud liked it because it perfectly illustrates the Oedipus complex. Evan points out that three of the brothers are never able to escape their father’s orbit—one is accused of killing him, one is an unwitting accomplice to his murder, and the third actually kills him. The first remains a virtual adolescent, the second goes mad, and the third commits suicide. Only the fourth brother, Alyosha, is able to successfully move beyond his childhood emotions and achieve emotional maturity.

It’s less obvious how the Oedipus complex relates to Harry Potter, but Evan’s interpretation has caused me to see J. K. Rowling’s series in an entirely new light.

First, Evan says that we see Freud’s “primal scene” occurring in the episode where Voldemort visits the infant Harry’s house and tries to kill him. Seen in this light Voldemort is Harry’s father, separating him forever from his mother, and he indeed remains inside Harry’s head through most of the books. But because we can’t only imagine our father as evil, Harry believes that he once had a perfect father (James), who was killed by this man. Evan points out that many fairy tales have a girl’s version of this: the perfect mother dies and is replaced by an evil step-mother. Freud calls this process “splitting.”

Okay, so that’s in the realm of myth. But then Evan takes us into Harry’s adolescence. Harry at this point has an actual father and his name is Vernon Dursley. Harry sees Vernon as many teenaged boys see their fathers and therefore indulges in the fantasy (or rather, the book indulges in the fantasy) that he is an orphan. Here Evan shifts from Freud to Carl Jung and Joseph Campbell and describes the process that an adolescent boy must undergo to “individuate,” which is to say, to become a full individual. If he is not to remain emotionally dependent and crippled by father hatred, he must embark on what Campbell describes as the hero’s journey.

Evan says that we have an example of what a failed maturation journey looks like in the figure of Dudley, Harry’s cousin. If he is not to remain a pampered and infantile Dudley, Harry must successfully pass the tests that stand between him and adulthood. School (Hogwarts) is the realm where this occurs although, in the end, Harry must leave Hogwarts and show that he can handle the world.

In his project Evan charts all the father figures that Harry encounters as he works to become his own person. Some operate as benevolent guides (Sirius Black, Lupin, Mr. Weasley, Albus Dumbledore), and there is also a stern disciplinarian who seems to be his enemy (Severus Snape). I am anxious to see what Evan does with Snape but I suspect that he will find significance in Harry’s softened attitude towards his “teacher of the dark arts.” A sign that Harry is maturing is that he no longer sees his father in extreme terms, no longer either perfect (James) or villainous (Snape). In a symbolic sense, both merge into a single individual: both are partnered with his mother

Keep in mind that everyone, from Voldemort to Vernon to James to Snape to Dumbledore, is a symbolic version of Harry’s actual father. (Think of the series as the Freudian dream of a teenaged boy named Harry Dursley.) We know that we have truly matured when we see our fathers as people in their own right and not as projections of our inner maturation dramas. Although to be honest, we may never achieve absolute clarity or absolute maturity. But it’s a goal worth striving for.

Back to Harry, where the father-son drama gets played out most dramatically in Harry’s battles with Dumbledore and Voldemort. To be sure, Harry doesn’t fight Dumbledore. But he does become disillusioned with him and he can only rise to his true powers if Dumbledore leaves the scene, seemingly killed by Harry’s bad father (Snape). I remember a stage in my own life—rather late, actually (I was in my 30’s)—when I unloaded on my father, whom I had heretofore worshipped. Neither the idealized image I had of Scott Bates nor the image I reacted against was the actual man.

In the end, we see Harry going against the father of his projections, the father from the primal scene who seems to stand in Harry’s way. But Harry’s can’t symbolically kill him because that would just be a sign that he is trapped in father hatred, a sign that his father still has a crippling hold on him. We see this drama also with Luke Skywalker in the original Star Wars trilogy when Luke is going up against his father Darth Vader. If Luke stays locked in his hatred of Vader, the evil emperor/hatred wins.

Fortunately, Evan points out, Harry is able to see his father as a suffering child and can even have compassion for him. At this point, Voldemort essentially self-destructs, which is another way of saying that Harry has superseded him. Voldemort no longer has power over him and Harry is able to define himself.

And what kind of man does Harry grow into? Evan points out that Harry manages to get virtually all of his fathers into his kids’ names (although Voldemort and Vernon are missing). James Sirius is his oldest, Albus Severus his second, so there we see Harry’s idealized father, his surrogate father, his guide, and his disciplinarian. Harry also marries into the ideal family that he wishes he had grown up in. We can honor our fathers once we are mature enough to stop fighting them.

Evan and I have been joking about the projected versions that James and Albus will have of Harry. He may want to think of himself as an ideal father and hopefully he will be a better father than, say, Vernon Dursley was. But having acknowledged that, maybe there will always be a way in which we are Voldemorts to our sons. Indeed, Harry’s sons will have a particularly hard time finding themselves. After all, everyone will compare them with the boy who saved the world.

Harry thinking that he can circumvent the Oedipal conflict with his sons reminds me of a conversation that I had a couple of years ago with my two sons (I report on it here) where I said that I felt that we weren’t having the classic father-son battles. Darien and Toby would have none of it. No, they must symbolically kill me, just as I symbolically killed my own father. (See also Patrick Logan’s guest post on the subject here.) Given how mature both of them are, they’re well on their way. Once they do so, our relationship will take new and wonderful forms, as my relationship with my father has.

Another note on Evan’s project. He has been intrigued by how a classic work and a popular work can both have deep things to say about an issue that matters to him. He wonders what this means.

I’ll say to him here that, while Harry Potter may be more complex than we at first think, it is no Brothers Karamazov. (I imagine certain readers at this point saying, “Duh!”) Both may tap into the same archetypes and work through similar issues, but the character depth of the Karamazov brothers and their profound exploration of life’s psychological and spiritual complexities far surpass anything that we find in J. K. Rowling’s books.

I’m not putting down Rowling when I say that. Henry James, writing about a popular bestseller of his day, wrote, “I call Treasure Island delightful, because it appears to me to have succeeded wonderfully in what it attempts.” Robert Lewis Stevenson’s work is no Portrait of a Lady or Turn of the Screw, but James (who was a good friend of Stevenson) isn’t being patronizing here. Just accurate. Harry Potter attempts less than Dostoevsky’s novel but succeeds in what it attempts.

One other note: Here’s another of Evan’s ideas that, as it’s not about fathers and sons, may not make its way into the essay. Drawing on Jungian psychology, Evan notes that the Karamazov brothers function as parts of what together would be an integrated self: Dimitri is body, Ivan mind, and Alyosha soul, while Smerdyakov plays the role of the shadow, the darkness that the hero must transcend. Without integration, they cannot mature, and only Alyosha opens himself up to his other selves. In Harry Potter, Harry is soul while Hermione is mind and Ron body. (I suppose Malfoy would be the dark brother). In the end, Harry, Hermione, and Ron must all work together to defeat the dark lord. Harry can’t do it alone.

That’s the thing about the journey of the hero: he can’t do it alone, and if he’s got a good father, that father will help him grow strong enough to transcend him. In some ways it may seem like a thankless task, but in fact it can lead to a father’s greatest sense of fulfillment.

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Reach Out, Like Thomas, into the Darkness


Caravaggio, “The Incredulity of St. Thomas”

Spiritual Sunday

The Gospel reading for today’s Episcopalian/Anglican liturgy is the very human story of Thomas, who refused to believe reports that Jesus was alive. “Unless I see in his hands the mark of the nails, and place my finger into the mark of the nails, and place my hand into his side,” John (20:24-29) reports him as saying, “I will never believe.”

Welsh poet and Anglican clergyman R. S. Thomas has a remarkable poem about the despair one experiences when, like Thomas, faith has gone out of one’s life, leaving only a vast looming abyss. The “still small voice” mentioned in the poem is the voice that God, foregoing whirlwind or fire,  used to speak to Elijah–but even that voice, Thomas says, seems no more than the onslaught of decay. At such moments, he asks, what can one do but reach out one’s finger, like Adam’s reaching out in the Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel ceiling painting, and hope that God reciprocates?

True faith is to have doubts yet forge on anyway. Or as Anne LaMott says, the opposite of doubt is not certainty but faith. In the passage from John, it may be significant that, upon seeing Jesus (and unlike in the famous Caravaggio painting), Thomas does not appear to actually touch Jesus. The sight of his Lord is enough. But Jesus pushes the lesson further. “Have you believed because you have seen me?” he asks. “Bessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed.”

Would Thomas, feeling alone on the surface of a turning planet, have reached out had he not seen Jesus? Balanced between doubt and faith, what would he have done? Better to continue following the soul that had been leading him toward the light, the poet says. Better to reach across the threshold into unknown space and hope for a reciprocating touch.

Threshold

R.S. Thomas

I emerge from the mind’s
cave into the worse darkness
outside, where things pass and
the Lord is in none of them.

I have heard the still, small voice
and it was that of the bacteria
demolishing my cosmos. I
have lingered too long on

this threshold, but where can I go?
To look back is to lose the soul
I was leading upwards towards
the light. To look forward? Ah,

what balance is needed at
the edges of such an abyss.
I am alone on the surface
of a turning planet. What

to do but, like Michelangelo’s
Adam, put my hand
out into unknown space,
hoping for the reciprocating touch?

Michelangelo, "The Creation of Adam"

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