Archive for the ‘Political Culture’ Category

#385 – The Sick-sties

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

the lingering haze of a decade’s long time passing.

Another Speaker, Tip O’Neill once said: ‘All politics is local.’  And I say to you tonight that when it comes to health care for all Americans, ‘All politics is personal.’ - Nancy Pelosi, Closing Statement for House of Representatives Health Care Reform Bill, 21 March 2010

One of the most surprising aspects of the Barack Obama era thus far has been the strangely mutating specter of the 1960s. The hoopla during Obama’s campaign framed him as a post-60s figure: this was a man who was not formed, stained, distorted, trapped, or motivated by the scars of 1960s political or cultural struggle. Neither non-inhaling Bill Clinton, nor Vietnam-vetted John McCain was he (nor Vietnam-evading George W. Bush either, for that matter).

But then, during the campaign, Bill Ayers the unrepentant ghost kept creeping out on to the scene as Obama’s main man. Rather incongruously, not to mention unconvincingly, but there he was nonetheless. Suddenly, at least as far as right-wingers were concerned, you did need a Weatherman to know which way the wind blows.

But it was not until the health care reform debate that the 1960s—or more importantly the fuzzy public memory of it, which folds together everything from the civil rights movement to women’s and gay liberation to Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society government programs to the anti-Vietnam War struggle to the counterculture into one big (medical) marijuana cigarette—really roared back into public consciousness. And when it did, the 60s returned in odd, new ways.

That bobo in paradise (or at least at the New York Times) David Brooks, as always keen to pin the downfall of modern America on the 60s, wrote a bizarre column in March that located the roots of the Tea Party movement in the New Left. Brooks’s argument contained a seed of truth—as Rebecca Klatch’s marvelous scholarship has shown, the libertarian left and right overlapped in the 1960s counterculture. It is true, after all, that the Tea Party decided to hold a self-proclaimed conservative Woodstock in Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid’s hometown. Significantly, though, the libertarian right clashed with the conservative right in the late 60s.

One thing that Brooks ignored in his column was the history of the libertarian right in the 1960s. Brooks, who believes conservatives should be understood exclusively as Burkean believers in human fallibility and the resulting need for tradition, structure, and restraint (except, for some reason, when it comes to the “free” market economy), did not mention the other historical side of the modern right: the Birchian right wing of firearms, dog-eat-dog liberty, and a nasty, brutish, and short paranoid style. No believers in Reinhold Niebuhr they. This omission occurred precisely because Brooks seeks to distance modern conservativism from its own checkered past.

Enter 1960s mass-mediator Todd Gitlin. Though only some of the world was probably watching in this case, Gitlin wrote an eloquent riposte to Brooks. The former SDSer, who disapproves of Bill Ayers as much as David Brooks, urged us to distinguish among the many confusing and contradictory elements within the New Left alone (not to mention the counterculture and myriad other progressive movements of the 60s). For Gitlin, Brooks’s argument is not only “glib,” but historically inaccurate. What is this dude smoking? That’s what Gitlin essentially asks without putting it that bluntly.

What not even Gitlin mentioned was a crucial difference between the New Left and the Tea Party movements. The New Left was never well funded, even as it grew into a mass movement before being derailed and dismantled by the likes of Bill Ayers and the Weathermen in 1969. But the Tea Party, if Michael Tomasky is to be believed, is no grassroots movement. It is, as they say online, astroturf all the way. Behind the supposed “people” assembling at town halls and rallies lurk corporate giants.

The only relevance of the 60s here is that one of those corporate giants behind the front groups of right-wing “populism” (if we can call it that) is Koch Industries, whose founder Fred Koch helped to create the John Birch Society way back when in the late 1950s (recall Bob Dylan’s early song, oh ye 60s nostalgists, “Talkin’ John Birch Paranoid Blues”).

What was perhaps more fascinating was that another, more unexpected 1960s ghost swirled forth on the froth of the health care reform battle. This ghost arrived in Nancy Pelosi’s sly reference to the old slogan from the women’s liberation movement: “the personal is political.”

Notice, though, how Pelosi flipped it: this was not the casting of light (light show?) on the previously off-limits terrain of the private sphere, where all sorts of injustices and inequalities were shielded from public view, but instead a strange new kind of privatization of public issues.

Pelosi unintentionally bespoke the loss of that intermediate ground—the local—in the contemporary struggle between behemoths (most especially corporations) and individuals. This evacuation of the local was present in the health care debate throughout 2009 and 2010, in mock town halls that were mediated imitations of the real thing and in the spectacle of public space as symbolic ground rather than actual terrain. Democracy may be in the streets now, but only when the streets are re-represented on the screens of television or computers.

As Gitlin himself has shown us, the 1960s was the moment when the local began to vanish both upward and downward, to the mass systems of corporate capitalism and the isolated individuals increasingly unmoored from traditional communities. Or if it was not when this transformation began, it was certainly when it accelerated rapidly.

Health care bespeaks this strange new situation, for it’s an area of life and death (but not death panels) in which we struggle to take care of our bodies amid the magnetic resonance imaging radiation waves of a massive technological system. We look for our bodies, our selves in those MRI images and all that they represent: certainly we seek to discover the well-being of our individual bodies, but perhaps we also hope to glimpse the essence of the collective social body through what those enormous scanners reveal.

This puzzle of self and system in a world where the stabilities of the local are disappearing, both into our very molecules and into the machine, both into our cells and into our cell phones, is perhaps why the memory of the 60s still lingers, free-form dancing through the purple haze, tripping forward on the networked web of the present.

In this respect, Brooks is partially right even when he is so wrong. Whether we tilt rightward or leftward now, Americans are perhaps still searching—both politically and culturally—for that moment when the self burst forth, paradoxically, from community and yet found community still around, phantom-like, glimmering simultaneously on the scrim of the self and the screen of the mediated world.

Medicated or not, we wait to see if this new community floats, and whether we are on a good trip or a bad one.

#382 – Crocus Behometh Strikes Again

Friday, April 16th, 2010

America’s “crank prophet” puts the pere ubu into ubu roi.

Andrew Hultkrans has a wonderful review of Pere Ubu henchman David Thomas‘s latest mad work of punk-theater, Bring Me the Head of Ubu Roi.

Favorite line:

Thinner than in the old days, though still physically imposing, he resembled Rush Limbaugh as a homeless flasher.

There is so much going on in that comparison I don’t know where to start! But forget about starting, I’m glad to follow Hultrans as he follows Thomas, even if they might be taking us off a cliff. Such pratfalls and swan dives have always been there when listening in to David Thomas’s brilliant, disturbing rants and Pere Ubu’s careening mutant-rock.

#374 – Bloc That Metaphor!

Friday, March 12th, 2010

the long march through the institutions has not reached the new yorker, apparently.

“Gramsci would not be pleased.” – Hendrik Hertzberg

Hendrik Hertzberg, trying to be funny in his March 8th Talk of the Town column for the New Yorker, mentions Iowa Representative Steve King’s bizarre invocation of Antionio Gramsci in an anti-healthcare reform speech at C-PAC, the Conservative Political Action Conference.

Here is a transcript of King’s speech, in all its McCarthyist (or is that McCarhtyite?) paranoia:

Now who are we up against? I want to define that enemy. They are: liberals, they are progressives, they are Che Guevarians, they are Castroites, they are socialists, more enemies on this list, Gramsciites, ring anybody’s bell? Trotskyites, Maoists, Stalinists, Leninists, Marxists. They are all our enemies. Who’d I leave out? I think I heard that. How about I go to: democratic socialists? And I’m going to ask you to go to the dsausa.org website and take a look and see what you find there. The Democratic Socialists of America. They are the socialists. There is a game plan on there.

Hertzberg, rightfully critiquing this paranoia by joking about the obscure reference to Gramsci, writes:

Strictly speaking, that should be Gramscians, followers of Antonio Gramsci, the Italian Communist Party leader of the nineteen-twenties. Ding-dong!

The journalist ends his piece by pointing out how centrist the current health care legislation is:

The health-care reform bill—which, despite everything, is still alive—is an ambitious piece of legislation, however modest it may be by the measure of the rest of the developed world. Ideologically and substantively, it is centrist. It has Republicans, and Republicanism, in its family tree. For better or for worse, it’s already bipartisan. Gramsci would not be pleased.

But if you’ve read your Gramsci, you would know that Gramsci actually might be pleased.

This depends a bit on your interpretation of Gramsci, of course. Those who use Gramsci to affirm older, clunkier Marxist theories of ideological domination by ruling economic classes would cite the watered-down nature of the health care bill as an example of what Gramsci called “consent”: the compromised nature of health care reform offers an example of how the dominant class asserts its ideology over everyone, thus limiting radical reform. In this use of Gramsci, the socialist thinker and activist would not be pleased—though he would get to say “told you so!” from the prison he was thrown into for his beliefs.

Or, more intriguingly, the centrist health care bill could be read as the beginnings of what Gramsci called a “counter-hegemonic bloc,” a new set of ideas and cultural attitudes that draws together groups that might not always agree with each other or have the same economic interests in society.

In the case of health care reform, these beliefs revolve around the realization that corporate capitalist markets do not, in fact, solve all problems—and that it may be better in the case of health care for government to step in, regulate, and shape health care to make it a right, accessible and affordable for all. With this reading of Gramsci, he would indeed be pleased about the long march through the institutions, including the Congress, to make life better for citizens.

But, if that is the case, then is King right?! Only if you think that the more than 25 million uninsured people in the United States more than 44 million uninsured and 25 million underinsured are also the enemy within.

#367 – Metered Out

Saturday, February 13th, 2010

the state is dead, long live the state.


#359 – The Presidency: Late Night Edition

Tuesday, January 26th, 2010

first time as comedy, second time as farce.

We thought we elected Conan O’Brien to the presidency—here would be a breath of fresh air: smart, sharp, competent, analytic, funny, truthful, even radical—only to find Jay Leno reinstalled.

#350 – Culture Rover’s Unfamiliar Quotations

Friday, December 4th, 2009

world accords according to chords.

There are these rare moments when musicians together touch something sweeter than they’ve ever found before in rehearsals or performance, beyond the merely collaborative or technically proficient, when their expression becomes as easy and graceful as friendship or love. This is when they give us a glimpse of what we might be, of our best selves, and of an impossible world in which you give everything you have to others, but lose nothing of yourself. Out in the real world there exist detailed plans, visionary projects for peaceable realms, all conflicts resolved, happiness for everyone, for ever—mirages for which people are prepared to die and kill. Christ’s kingdom on earth, the workers’ paradise, the ideal Islamic state. But only in music, and only on rare occasions, does the curtain actually lift on this dream of community, and it’s tantalizingly conjured, before fading away with the last notes.

—Ian McEwan, Saturday: A Novel

#342 – Grow Up Government!

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009

exercising the option on the social contract.

It seems unjust. But look what happened to the global economy after Lehman failed. Unemployment in the U.S. went to 9.5 per cent. It’s not just Wall Street that suffers when you ‘teach people a lesson.’ The tragedy of financial populism is that you do terrible things to innocent people. – Timothy Geithner

You can’t just go out and shoot the bankers. You can’t have an economy without a functioning credit system. People are angry. They’re furious. But you have no option but to live with these people. – Barney Frank

From James B. Stewart, A Reporter at Large, “Eight Days,” The New Yorker, 21 September 2009.

Obama will have to directly attack the fortified bastions of the newest ‘new class’—the makers of the paper economy in which he came of age—if he is to accomplish anything. These interests did not spend fifty years shipping the greatest industrial economy in the history of the world overseas only to be challenged by a newly empowered, green-economy working class. They did not spend much of the past two decades gobbling up previously public sectors such as health care, education, and transportation only to have to compete with a reinvigorated public sector. They mean, even now, to use the bailout to make the government their helpless junior partner and if they can they will devour every federal dollar available to recoup their own losses, and thereby preclude the use of any monies for the rest of Barack Obama’s splendid vision.

From Kevin Baker, Barack Hoover Obama: The Best and the Brightest Blow It Again, Harper’s Magazine, July 2009.

In the quotations above, what’s so remarkable about the difference in perspective between, on the one hand, Timothy Geithner and Barney Frank, and, on the other, Kevin Baker, is their sense of possibility for anything other than neoliberal capitalism. Geithner and Frank simply cannot imagine anything outside the binary of inegalitarian “free” markets  or what Geithner calls “financial populism.” It’s either give the über-rich what they want or shoot them.

Baker, thankfully, calls for government to grow up.

Part of this growing up involves imagining a new relationship between government and the financial sector, and a rethinking of assumptions about capitalism and the equitable distribution of wealth.

It means imagining government neither as witch doctor, hoodwinking the populace or conjuring up magic cures, nor as witch hunter, madly convicting the guilty and innocent alike.

Instead, the financial crisis offers a moment to rethink what should be normal in our society, what should be privileges (the privilege to be “too big to fail,” for instance) and what should be rights (health care, a good education, policy for the greater good of all). It’s a chance to reimagine what freedom is and whose freedom “free” markets and the government policies that shape them really serve. And, as Baker suggests, it’s a time to admit that there has to be a struggle—probably a nasty one—between those who reap the rewards of the current ideologies of neocapitalism and those who seek a better alternative to a jobless recovery and the suffering it causes along the way even if the economy comes booming back.

And since it was government, after all, that stepped in and saved us from a financial catastrophe wrought by anti-government free marketeers, there is a chance now to take stock of the possible positive and beneficial roles for American government all grown up. Contrary to Barney Frank (bless him), there are other options to exercise, other bonds that should reach their maturity in the coming years.

#328 – Happy Anniversary!

Friday, August 14th, 2009

mr. fish reflects on the 60s.

FISH_Woodstock_40yrs-500

Image: Mr. Fish

#327 – Culture Rover’s Unfamiliar Quotations

Friday, August 14th, 2009

the economic democracy/cultural democracy problématique.

Lumping humanity into two categories, the noble and the rest, may seem to lend itself to anti-democratic sentiments or even to a violently reactionary form of politics. But Scialabba affirms the distinction without snobbery. Perhaps he suspects that the division runs right down the middle of most of us. Even so, it can undermine the will to egalitarianism. Economic leveling means giving more to those who have less. Cultural leveling seldom has that implication. How, then, to resolve the tension?

- Scott McLemee, “A Worried Mind,” Introduction to What Are Intellectuals Good For? Essays and Reviews by George Scialabba.

#317 – My Baby Don’t Care

Monday, June 8th, 2009

when “i don’t care” is caring deeply: tom stoppard’s rock ‘n’ roll & the sixties.

If the genre of rock ‘n’ roll proposed that pop music could be theater, then Tom Stoppard’s play Rock ‘n’ Roll proposes that theater could be rock ‘n’ roll. At least in Charles Newell’s staging at the Goodman Theatre in Chicago this was the case. Featuring rows of stacked amplifier speakers and stage spotlights behind all the scenes, whether they took place in Cambridge, England cottage gardens or Communist-era Czech flats, the set hinted at how rock music suffused the most informal spaces of everyday life with an energy of the theatrical.

As the play conveyed quite well, rock circulated a pulsating dreamworld light that was at once semi-secretive, a glow concealed in the grooves of LPs and hidden within inner sleeves of record covers, and roaringly present, exploding the listener into an alternative universe of drama, comedy, and catharsis. Not unlike its precise opposite — state surveillance — rock was both always there, lurking in the shadows, and front and center, mesmerizing the citizenry.

stoppardrocknroll

Rock ‘n’ Roll, by Tom Stoppard.

“I don’t care,” is the final line of the play. It is spoken by the middle-aged English daughter of a Cambridge Marxist philosopher to her father’s ex-student, a Czech lover of Western rock who stumbles into becoming an anti-Communist dissident. She declares “I don’t care” after she runs off with the student decades after they first met in the months after the 1968 Prague Spring. By play’s end, it’s 1990, the year after the fall of communism, and she says the line moments before she and her new lover witness the Rolling Stones performing in Prague.

In the immediate context of the scene, the line teeters between an admission of failure and a shout of astounding victory.

Most directly, “I don’t care” is about the daughter finally forgiving herself for her own sense of a wasted youth.

But it also sounds like Stoppard himself finally giving up on the conventional Marxist politics that guided key characters in the play, such as the daughter’s father, a stalwart Stalinist and CP member. At the same time, “I don’t care,” also sounds like a suspicion that, even when rock music kept the spirit of dissidence alive in the Eastern Bloc, the Rolling Stones’ performance feels surprisingly like a shallow victory over communism. Thrilling, yes, but anything more than that? Knowing that the fall of communism only presented the new, and deeply troubling, problems of global capitalism in Eastern Europe, we’re not sure.

As the play ends, the spotlights turn up and glare into the audience’s eyes. We’re blinded for a moment. We care deeply, and in a blast of bass, guitar, and drums, are swept up, carefree.

But there’s more.

“I don’t care.” This line is spoken, I think, in the spirit of the Plastic People of the Universe, the Czech rock band who haunt the play along with the ex-Pink Floyd singer and Cambridge, England, recluse Syd Barrett. Like so many counterculturalists, the Plastics just wanted to be free. They sought self-expression and group experimentation and a space for art-making. The Plastics merely wanted to play their music and thought of themselves as apolitical. They “didn’t care.” Yet they became dissidents, co-conspirators with Vaclav Havel, and a cause célèbre in the West, simply for not caring.

Not caring, when you get to thinking about it, actually turns out to be a complex idea. Stating that “I don’t care” is, oddly, a declaration of caring. In negating concern, it winds up communicating concern. Intentionally foregoing control, the speaker of this declaration asserts a strange kind of autonomy. Far from apathy, “I don’t care” comes across in Stoppard’s play as a carefully-wrought carefreeness rather than carelessness. The choice not to choose is to care enough not to care.

Okay, so it all starts to make sense, perhaps, the more stoned one gets. Fine, so be it. That does not make it any less intriguing as a speech act or the staking out of a position. To not care is to ask whether any of one’s past was worth it at all. To throw in the towel. To cease to matter. And yet, to not care is also the encapsulation of what Stoppard notices as the strange politics of the sixties counterculture: the refusal of “I don’t care” is what, in fancier language, the historian Julie Stephens has called, an “anti-disciplinary protest.”

“I don’t care” becomes a kind of paradoxical statement close to the heart of the sensibility that guided the sixties counterculture. If not exactly political, then the declaration “I don’t care” was certainly public.

It was, after all, a declaration of independence — one with all the dangers of living in, and living out, the paradox of caring not to care.

Addendum: “Can theatre and rock music ever mix?”

Image: Goodman Theatre