Are you the author of an African
Writers Series title published by Heinemann
between 1962 and 2002? If so, Heinemann Educational
Publishers would like to speak to you about
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we can send you further information.
I like of course, the whole idea of a ‘new’
initiative, since I am pretty sick of the old
ones. But what really attracted me to the ad
was the ‘Quest’ theme. Heinemann did in fact
publish a series devoted to African writers,
and some of them were well worth publishing.
Only somehow, in the forty years intervening,
they have misplaced them. A pity, since African
writers are now good for business. Otherwise
ProQuest (listed on the New York Stock Exchange
as PQE) would not be promoting this exciting
initiative. Quest, and its subsidiary, the infamous
Chadwick-Healey, are eager outright purchasers
of texts which they then sell at a mark-up of
several thousand percent. Caveat vendor! And
Heinemann, send out one of those fearless explorers
of old!
*
The presidential election has come and gone.
Here is my two cents on the subject.
I hear that a lady walking her dog on New York’s
West Side felt fortunate, in the wake of the
election, that she lived ‘in an Island off Europe’
and not among the unwashed to the west of Manhattan,
those people ‘out there’ who were so simple-minded
as to vote for George Bush. Alas for her, ‘out
there’ was still, at last reckoning anyway,
part of the United States, though it is terra
incognita to The New York Times and
much of the American intelligentsia, not to
speak of those Europeans who thought it fitting
to tell me how to vote. These illiberal ‘liberals’
simply cannot understand that anyone would disagree
with them. Hence the much weeping and gnashing
of teeth at yet another loss to the ‘morons’,
to people who don’t eat soufflés, don’t
value the departed Jacques Derrida, and are
baffled by the common agricultural policy! To
the propagandists of the Enlightenment project,
why would anyone vote for a man who, in James
Bowman’s utterly ‘straight’ words, is ‘just
an ordinary guy trying to do what is best for
his country’? Maybe what we need is cheap package
tours to Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, Tennessee
and the like.
The Counter-Revolution, however, is not the
reason why John Kerry lost the election or why
George W. Bush won it. Nor was it entirely won
by the Republicans. It was lost by the Democrats.
In our national elections, it is perceptions
that count, ‘gut feelings’, intuitions, a sense
of one’s place in the world, what psephologists
and the pitch-men of the monstrous advertising
industry call one’s ‘comfort level’. These inner
convictions and (often) unstated feelings are
rich, complex and almost impossible to fathom,
and artists are far more likely to get them
right (intuitively) than scientists armed with
measuring sticks, surveys and charts.
Let me offer a single, hypothetical example.
If you, dear Reader, are the political ‘analyst’,
your guesswork appears in brackets.
Harold B. is black (therefore a Democrat) and
lives and works in Tennessee (Republican). He
works as a gang foreman for the electricity
company, a lower-management job he’s held for
twelve years (Republican?). He is now thirty-eight
(swing-voter). Had he been college-educated,
he now knows, he would be on the management
side; instead, he is unionized and on an hourly
wage (Democrat). His take-home wage is roughly
$35,000 a year (Democrat), but his company has
recently been merged with another and he is
insecure about his job (Democrat). He has been
married twice, the first time to a black woman
who works for the city government (Democrat)
and has two children he sees only intermittently
(Republican, because he is bitter about the
treatment he received in the courts from an
elected Democratic judge). Nor does he think
much of the way his children are being educated
by unionized teachers (Republican). He knows
several co-workers who have been to Iraq and
have told him that the war, which he considered
unavoidable (Republican) is going badly (Democrat).
His second wife is feisty, young, Hispanic and
hard-working (Democrat), but has liberal attitudes
(likely to make him vote Republican) and generally
despises politics and politicians (Democrat).
He is indifferent to religion (Democrat) but
believes himself to be a responsible working-class
citizen (Republican). He did not vote in the
last election (swing vote) but if he had, he
would not have voted for Al Gore (Republican)
because he thinks Gore would have taken him
for granted (Republican). In his eyes, the same
applies to Kerry (Republican). He knows no homosexuals
(Republican), and certainly can’t quite understand
why they should want to marry one another (Republican).
His co-workers and buddies, many of whom do
not vote, wouldn’t dream of voting Republican,
because that’s the big money party (Democrat),
but he himself thinks of himself as an ‘independent’
(Republican).
I could go on about the intimate details that
might influence his choice, but that is enough
to show that there is no way a journalist, a
social scientist, or a political activist can
be sure which way Harold B., or anyone else,
is going to vote. Indeed, poor Harold has no
sure conviction himself. Those who seek his
vote, therefore, must somehow wrest it from
him. Huge amounts of money were spent to that
end, great forces were mobilized.
But if there is one thing I am sure about in
the recent election, it is that this largesse,
this insistent scream, this electoral Blitzkrieg,
is something the millions of Harold B.’s, even
in New York, do not like. Because he (and those
other millions) thinks ‘independently’, he doesn’t
like to be sold a bill of goods. In fact, over
his whole adult life, he has become increasingly
resistant to anyone who seeks to seduce him
or sell him anything. For him (and them) journalists,
ad-men, the CEO’s of big companies (including
his own), lawyers and politicians are all cut
of the same cloth. They are not only useless
and idle and too big for their boots, they represent
a sort of insidious evil which he cannot identify
rationally but understands is destructive of
the often painful but idealistic America his
mother and grandmother have told him about.
If it costs a billion dollars to win an election
and those running for president have to be millionaires,
or take money from millionaires, who gets those
millions? Advertisers, TV, newspaper, lawyers,
that’s who. Why should an election cost billions
when voting is such a simple matter?
In other words, it is the very excess of politics
and of the money it involves, the superfoetation
of opinion and pundits and talking heads who
think they know how he is going to vote, that
actually revolts him. Neither money nor stridency,
neither bullying nor patronizing, make it any
easier for the average American to choose whom
to vote for. In fact, it makes it a lot more
difficult.
What do most of us do when the messages we
receive are hugely contradictory, divisive,
murky, confused? I suggest that we move into
some quiet, internal space in which we know,
regardless of what others tell us, what the
worth or non-worth of persons X, Y and Z really
is. We say to ourselves, ‘Do I want him sitting
next to me at the bar? How would I react if
I ran across him in the street? Would I tell
him anything about how my life really is?’
Do I know any better than anyone else what
happened on November 2? Probably not. The movement
of opinion in any mass is fickle. Am I saying
this is an irrational process? Yes. Democracy
is. Money and morals simply make it more irrational.
Of one thing I am fairly sure, and that is
that the whole Enlightenment project has been
hi-jacked by the intolerant. I know that, whatever
their personal merits, neither Al Gore, in 2000
nor John Kerry in 2004, are representative of
anything particularly American. And if a president
does not represent the whole people, how can
he lead his people? Bill Clinton, whatever his
faults, and they were many, was a representative
American—perhaps more in his faults than his
virtues. So were all the electable Democratic
candidates in my lifetime. And I voted for them,
though I did not for Clinton. The historical
compromises involved in the Electoral College
guarantee that.
The forefathers saw to it that the differences
between Americans would be mitigated by the
several states, that the will of the Majority
would not necessarily triumph over the individual
rights and traditions of the Minority. That
is, that a president could only be elected when
a sufficient number of that minority felt comfortable
with majority opinion.
Since the Second World War (I first voted for
Harry Truman of Blessed Memory) and with the
single exception of John Kennedy (by the narrowest
of margins), the Democratic presidents in my
time have been from what was once a broad party
of Consensus. I grew up believing, like most
Americans, that the Republicans represented
Money, Business and the Booboisie. It was the
party of the vast Middle West, of the Volk,
of Progress and Optimism and the Rotary Club,
of Boosters and Chambers of Commerce. In a profoundly
and fortunately centrist nation, the Democratic
party was our ‘left’ and the Republicans were
our ‘right’. This, of course, was a misunderstanding
on our part. We were right about the Republicans
of the day (Eisenhower and Reagan were its icons)
but wrong about the Democrats.
The Democratic party of Truman (from a conservative
border state), of Lyndon Johnson (from the South)
and Jimmy Carter (likewise), was a party with
two constituencies: the solid, conservative
South and the heteroclite industrial belt, sustained
ideologically by an immigrant intelligentsia.
To put it at its simplest, the Democrats ceased
to be the ‘natural’ majority party when they
threw away (or alienated) their southern, states’
rights, base. The gurus of the cities, inflamed
by issues of civil liberties, captured the party.
Thus they lost the long-range war. The South,
and a startling proportion of the newer immigrant
vote, is now Republican. In terms of the Electoral
College, that leaves the Democrats with population,
but not votes.
Yet this is a total contradiction of the natural
order of things. The great leap forward of the
United States—of involvement with the world,
of civil liberties, of economic prosperity,
of educational equality—is a product of Franklin
Delano Roosevelt and Lyndon B. Johnson who,
to add to his luster, also extricated the nation
from Kennedy’s war in Viet Nam. They won because
of their party’s natural base in the southern
states. Yet can anyone imagine the present Democratic
party nominating either man? Roosevelt, Truman
and Johnson all believed that the government
should act for all the people; it was they who
enfranchised the poor; yet they were part of
and dependent on retaining that minority of
states (and electoral votes) that wished for
none of the reforms that took place. Nonetheless,
they in their wisdom finally accepted that the
changes were inevitable, and perhaps even desirable.
That the most recent Democratic candidates
were not for all the people is, I think, self-evident.
They were anthropophagously virulent about Bush
and his kind of people. Like Hollywood darlings,
Bruce Springsteen, or the Guardian of England
they weren’t simply against Bush; they wanted
him for lunch. They perfectly reflected the
lady walking her dog on Central Park West: those
who voted for Bush were ‘morons’. Necessarily
so, because they don’t agree with Us.
Since all political analysis is essentially
personal, I will tell you why and when this
life-long Democratic voter did not vote for
Kerry. Quite apart from the issues of war or
the environment my epiphany came with the arrival
in my mail-box of The New Yorker, the
East Coast middlebrow weekly to which a million
people subscribe because if you don’t, six or
seven times a year (and ever more rarely) you
may miss something really good. And half way
through the magazine was a full page photographic
portrait of Act Up, a homosexual activist group.
Ten bodies are portrayed with stencils saying
‘STOP AIDS’ across their pectorals and dugs,
with trousers (yes, the women too) around their
feet, and four of them in the front row with
everything else, including pubes and genitals,
showing, dead center being a quiescent black
penis. This, the magazine was saying, is what
you should be voting for.
I chose not to and I think many Americans felt
as I do. The portrait, the magazine, the harassment,
liberal money, the Smart set, the failure to
understand the nature of offensiveness, did
not sit well in the America I prefer, the America
of my inner space. If more of that was what
Kerry had to offer America, I wanted no part
of it. The tastes of the few have become the
agenda of a party adrift in a sea of solipsism,
hedonism and seething hatred. Thus does a self-styled
intelligentsia commit public suicide. Unless
it recovers its base, I see nothing to indicate
that it will not repeat its own disembowelment
in 2008.
*
A recent review by Michael Gorra deals with
Orhan Pamuk and a subject I think bears a close
look, the development of an ‘international’
style, one that ‘travels well from one country
to another.’ Gorra lists its avatars: Grass’s
Tin Drum, Gabriel Garcia Marquez’s One Hundred
Years of Solitude, Rushdie’s Midnight’s Children.
Easy enough to think of others: Peter Esterhazy
in Hungary, Kundera, displaced in France, Julian
Marias in Spain, Paul Auster, somewhere. Its
characteristics Gorra defines as (1) having
‘a political edge’, grappling with ‘terror,
atrocity and tyranny’; (2) ‘grimly comic’; (3)
‘not above trading on the charms of the exotic’;
(4) in style, ‘flamboyant’ and ‘prolix’; (5)
sometimes ‘fantastic’ and often referring to
the ‘folk tale’ and the ‘oral tradition’; (6)
in characterization ‘broad’ and ‘at times over-determined’
or ‘verging on caricature and therefore coming
‘to stand . . . as the embodiment
of an entire national literature, as though
one story could indeed do the job of many.’
Wryly, Gorra goes on to argue, that for writers
in these un-English literatures, the international
style has become ‘the choice of those who expect
to be read in translation.’
This is meaty stuff—a search for universals,
for events and processes that are particular
to a single culture but must be perceptible
to another. I don’t think this works. Literature
is firmly based in language, and thereby horribly
dependent on translation. There is no such thing
as an ‘universal’ literature, any more than
there is a world-wide language, or can ever
be ‘universal’ jurisdictions or law. We are
products of a particular place and particular
customs. Those who seek to transcend their own
cultures for the sake of ‘general’ ideas sacrifice
the only readers likely to see their messages
as relevant to themselves.
*
I have been playing and listening to a lot
of Janácek piano music lately. He didn’t
write much. It is quiet, reflective music: ‘emotion
recollected in tranquillity’ describes it perfectly.
He had a troubled life; women agitated him,
as they do most artists. He wrote much of it
in the country, an idealized place which artists
often seek out (see Martial) but where in most
cases they spend their days chopping logs. The
result is serene, sometimes foggy, seldom bright,
mainly autumnal. It is where he explored what
might be called ‘private’ harmonies, the ones
he would use later in noisier, more open compositions.
I happen to like that quietist approach to
music, which is why I went down to Hampden-Sydney
College in Virginia just as summer was about
to break on us. Hampden-Sydney is a small private
college founded in 1776, and it annually offers
a very attractive chamber music festival. The
countryside is lovely, the campus clean, the
auditorium modest but pleasant, the audience
(largely but not exclusively drawn from Washington)
is cultivated, the musicians friendly and available.
As does Gidon Kremer at Lockenhaus, its directors,
the clarinetist Ethan Sloane and the pianist
James C. Kidd, keep its proportions reasonable.
Though there are young and talented artists
around, the festival is neither a show-case,
nor just an assembly of seasoned musicians seeking
extra summer honoraria by offering the public
lollipops. It is not as earnest as Marlboro
(nor indeed as faintly pretentious) nor as dumbed-down
as the modern Tanglewood can sometimes be. Its
programs are neither over-long nor skimpy, and
seek neither to shock nor to bore. In short,
it’s rather close to what I truly want from
a festival, and it is devoted to chamber music
of the sort with which we are all familiar,
but know insufficiently, largely drawn from
the nineteenth century.
This sort of chamber music repertory is far
more taxing than it seems, though every instrumentalist
of caliber has probably ‘been through’ it. Its
special quality, of course, is that it brings
out the best in those whose instrumental careers
have not led them to the purely grandiose. Chamber
music is ever intimate and requires that the
players interrelate and blend, that they submerge
their big moments into the whole, and that they
pay every attention to detail while retaining
the over-all flow of the music. This does not
exclude virtuosity, as was amply proven in the
two concerts I attended.
The first program included Mozart’s E-flat
major trio for piano, cello and violin,
played in sprightly, melodic and clean-as-a-whistle
style by Ethan Sloane, Gilbert Kalish and Arturo
Delmoni on the violin (not the most ingratiating
part) and the quite wonderful Nathaniel Rosen
on the cello. If I say that this was followed
by two works, Fauré’s Elégie
and Saint-Saëns’ Allegro appassionato,
both for cello and piano, both played with mastery
and great lyricism by Messrs. Rosen and Kidd,
you will have an idea that the Hampden-Sydney
Festival does explore even the remoter parts
of the repertory. Both were revealing as music
and nicely romantic in performance. The center-piece
was Dvorák’s Dumky trio, which I have
never heard played with more verve, a greater
drive in the parts where drive is required,
and a lyrical subtlety and expressiveness in
the haunting lentos and adagios that are the
heartland of this piece. Here Delmoni showed
his prowess with the bow, Gilbert Kalish his
fine understanding of how this great melodist’s
rhythms need to be observed but not thumped,
and Rosen on the cello just had himself one
of those utterly memorable performances that
congenial group-playing sometimes produces.
The same could be said of the second concert.
A Glinka trio pathétique was nothing
great as music, but sympathetically played proved
to have plenty of musical ideas, especially
for the clarinet, where Sloane had a seamless
sense of melody and showed no signs of strain,
sustaining even the longest lines. There followed
a medley of quite spectacular show-pieces (by
Kreisler, Chopin, Sibelius and Fauré)
that showed to advantage Delmoni’s Paganini
side (which is considerable both as to musicianship
and technique) and Kidd’s delicacy of touch.
Here again we ended with a formidable, brooding,
many-colored trio, Schubert’s in B-flat major.
And once again, a trio (itself a formidable
challenge to a composer) that is, in so many
celebrated hands, a war-horse to be played for
effect, came completely alive. Would that Delmoni-Rosen-Kalisch
were a permanent trio! And recorded!