My College Search for Authenticity

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Friday

This is the latest post in my on-going series on “My Life in Literature,” which appears every Friday. Because an informal autobiography written by my great grandmother Eliza Scott means so much to me—she discusses the novels that were important to her as she grew up in Victorian England—I figured I should do something similar for family members who come after me. Of course, the subject is also consistent with the mission of this blog, which is to explore the many ways that literature enhances and sometimes changes our lives.

I want to pause for a moment at this point in my life history to reflect on feelings of inauthenticity that have plagued me for much of my life—up until I was 50 or so. I don’t know if this topic will be of general interest, but I’d like to figure it out for myself. As I’m telling my life through my experiences with literature, I can report that many of the literature essays I’ve written in college and graduate school—as well as some scholarly articles I’ve published–have felt inauthentic. That I received A’s on many of them just makes them appear even more inauthentic, as though I was good as jumping through meaningless hoops.

Authenticity is a big deal with the existentialists, who introduced me to the concept. The authentic individual, they contend, lives in accordance with his or her true self rather than conforming to societal expectations. Sartre’s No Exit, which I read in high school, features a political activist, now dead, who spends the afterlife being haunted by the fact that he hasn’t lived up to the ideal of a political martyr. Whereas he likes to think of himself as a heroic pacifist who was executed for his beliefs, in fact he was a jerk and a coward, one who abused his wife and who was executed for desertion.

Throughout my years in college, I felt like a political coward. I obsessed over my fear that I wasn’t doing enough to stop the war, which I saw as demanding something dangerous and committed. The marches I attended, and even my arrest, didn’t seem to require enough of me, as though I were just cosplaying a resistor. To be real, however, would involve stepping out of my comfort zone (or so I thought), and like Sartre’s anti-hero I worried that I wouldn’t be up to the challenge.

In fact, this proved to be the case. I once tried campaigning for George McGovern in 1972 but was so nervous about knocking on the doors of strangers that I became sick and gave up. Seeking a model for true commitment, I once attended a conference of the Trotskyist Worker’s League, but the members’ fanaticism repelled me. (Looking back, I suspect some of them were cosplaying revolutionaries.) In short, I felt perpetually guilty for not doing enough, even though I wasn’t sure what doing more would look like.

As I look back, I think the source of my anxiety was the conflict between desiring to stay safely ensconced in a world of ideas and books and feeling that I should be out in the world making meaningful change. (Perhaps this a variant of desiring to remain a child while knowing that I had to grow up.) To my eyes, my father appeared the ideal model, and I desperately desired to be just like him. Here he was, establishing himself as a world-class authority on the French poet Guillaume Apollinaire while, at the same time, devoting himself to noble causes (the civil rights movement, the anti-war movement, the feminist movement, the gay rights movement). He could even point to some tangible results, such as the desegregation of Franklin County schools and the University of the South.

And yet not only could I not entirely follow in his footsteps—after all, one must find one’s own way—but I worried that there was something unreal about him. When he was caught up in his theories, he sometimes seemed untethered from earthly concerns. It was my mother who kept the family grounded: she took care of the finances, handled our illnesses, made community organizations work, and ultimately founded and ran for 17 years our town newspaper (which she typed up every Wednesday on mimeographed pages). While I found my father more stimulating and exciting, somehow it was my mother who appeared to engage more effectively with the real world. 

My most meaningful college essays were ones dealing with this tension between wanting to remain in the world of books and feeling the need to break out. The Beowulf essay offered a way to bridge the conflict as it showed how a society could use a work of literature to negotiate the deep threats it faced. A satire I wrote for a “Utopian Literature” class showed how a dystopian society I called Notelarc (an anagram for Carleton) kept the population docile by burying them in books and essays. (In other words, I was worried about remaining in this safe realm and blamed college for enabling my desire.) My senior thesis argued that the works of Rousseau and Diderot had more of an impact on the French Revolution than did the “penny pamphlets” that activists wrote and hawked on the streets. In short, in these essays I was trying to find a place in the world for someone with my interests and passions.

By contrast, other essays I wrote felt inauthentic. To provide one example, I remember a paper I wrote in the early British Literature survey where I grappled with the question, “Why is Faustus unable to repent and turn back to God?”  I systematically went through the text, came up with answers, weighed them against each other, settled on one, and received an A. The question, however, didn’t speak to anything deep within me. (It does now as I more fully appreciate self-destructive inner struggles.) The same was true for an essay on W.B. Yeats’s Cuchulain plays as I can’t even remember what I wrote. Nor can I remember which novel I chose to analyze in my “Contemporary French Novels” class.

Something similar would happen in graduate school. It seemed like choosing a meaningful topic was a matter of chance, which sometimes I stumbled upon and sometimes didn’t. I was out to please the professor or the academy but not to reflect upon my own soul. I mention this because, as I evolved as a teacher, I decided I wouldn’t let the same thing happen to my students. I determined they would always have something “at stake” in their literature essays, and I devised various means (all of them requiring considerable time and work on my part) for steering them to topics what would mean something to them. Likewise, in this blog I focus on works that help me see more deeply into matters that I consider urgent.

I mention in passing that my commitment to meaningful engagement shaped how I worked with my advisees as well. I listened to them closely, tried to hear what moved and motivated them, and then brainstormed with them about possible careers and people who could advise them further. Our goal, I would tell them, was to find out what excited them and then figure out how they could get paid for doing it. Or as Joseph Campbell puts it, how to follow their bliss.

I don’t know how clear I have been in this introspective romp. Perhaps what I’m saying is that, as long as I was trying to be my father, and as long as I was trying to please the academy so that I could become a professor like him, I wasn’t living in accordance with my true self. Only when I encountered a crisis in my teaching—when inauthentic student essays started draining the life out of me—did I face the issue head-on. As a result, I became a very different kind of teacher than he was.

For too long I believed Athena’s problematic observation to Telemachus in The Odyssey: “It is rare for sons to be like fathers: Only a few are better, most are worse.” Many of us must symbolically kill our fathers if we are to find ourselves. How I finally did so will be the subject of a future post.

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The Surrender Caucus, the Last Battle

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Thursday

I still haven’t gotten over the gut punch many of us felt when the “Surrender Caucus”—seven Democrats and an Independent who caucuses with the Democrats—voted to end the Democratic filibuster, which was the only tool the party had to prevent health insurance premiums for 24 million Americans from doubling, tripling, or even quadrupling. Republicans refused to negotiate, using SNAP benefits and hungry Americans as hostage, and their hard line appears to have worked. We’re now back to business as usual, only with the GOP once again learning that the party that cares about governing will always fold when the going gets rough. 

After spending months watching the Trump administration fearlessly violate norms, laws, the Constitution, and basic human decency, the resistance was finally feeling hopeful.  First there were the October 18 No Kings marches, which drew close to seven million protesters. Then we saw a blue wave on election night as Democratic candidates swamped the opposition, a positive sign for next year’s midterm elections. With the filibuster, we believed that Senate Democrats were finally showing backbone after capitulating on the budget last May. All the momentum, however, came to a screeching halt with this Neville Chamberlain moment.

My sick feelings have taken me back to my least favorite episode in the Narnia chronicles, which I otherwise adore. The last battle in The Last Battle involves the forces of King Tirian, which include Jill, Eustace, Jewel the unicorn, Farsight the eagle, Poggin the dwarf, and others. The Narnians have squared off against Calormenes intent on seizing Narnia, and the battle is notable in part because Jill takes part, the first C.S. Lewis heroine we see shooting enemy soldiers. The Narnians notch a temporary victory but then realize that more Calormenes are on their way against their now depleted ranks. They have another card to play, however, as wild Narnian horses rush to the rescue. Think of them as Senate Democrats demonstrating unaccustomed fortitude. Thanks to Narnian mice, the horses have escaped Calormene captivity:

“Listen!” said Jewel: and then “Look!” said Farsight. A moment later there was no doubt what it was. With a thunder of hoofs, with tossing heads, widened nostrils, and waving manes, over a score of Talking Horses of Narnia came charging up the hill. The gnawer and nibblers had done their work.

Then comes the stab in the back. A group of dwarfs, who owe their freedom to the Narnians, now turn their arrows on them:

Poggin the Dwarf and the children opened their mouths to cheer but that cheer never came. Suddenly the air was full of the sound of twanging bowstrings and hissing arrows. It was the Dwarfs who were shooting and—for a moment Jill could hardly believe her eyes—they were shooting the Horses. Dwarfs are deadly archers. Horse after horse rolled over. Not one of those noble Beasts ever reached the King.

At least the Surrender Caucus is not jeering at its allies as the dwarfs do. “Thought we were on your side, did you?” the dwarfs shout. “No fear. We don’t want any Talking Horses. We don’t want you to win any more than the other gang. You can’t take us in. The dwarfs are for the Dwarfs.”

A little while later, the dwarfs begin directing their arrows against the Calormenes, as we can expect the Surrender Caucus to begin doing again against the GOP.  The damage has been done, however, and, in the end, the dwarfs don’t fare any better than the Narnians. All are thrown into a stable, which functions as Lewis’s metaphor for death. “I feel in my bones,” says Poggin, “that we shall all, one by one, pass through that dark door before morning.” Better for the author to show Jill being dragged by the hair and thrust through the entrance than having her disemboweled by a sword.

In the novel the Calormenes presumably overrun Narnia, although we don’t see this since Lewis at this point introduces the Book of Revelation. Earthly setbacks ultimately don’t matter, we learn, since a final apocalypse renders irrelevant such trivial concerns. When the good guys all go to Narnia heaven and the bad guys to the other place, we cease to worry about old Narnia.

Labor activist Joe Hill mocked such consolation with “You’ll get pie in the sky by and by.” Those who oppose the authoritarian takeover of America don’t have that luxury. Their battles must be fought in what Aslan calls the Shadow-Lands, and we’ll be facing a desolate wasteland if the Calormenes win.

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Surprised by the Joy of Reading

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Wednesday

For a light respite from the news, I report today on an article on the humor website McSweeney’s entitled, “I Started Reading Performatively, and It Turns Out Books Are Pretty Good.” Just as some people “dress to impress,” apparently others “read to impress.” Or pretend to read.

If you see someone’s nose buried in, say, Moby Dick on a commuter train or bus, these days one may suspect that the individual is performative-reading since who would read Melville’s long and challenging work? Actually, my son Darien really did read Moby Dick while commuting to his Washington, D.C. job, along with E.M. Forster’s Passage to India, Henry Fielding’s Tom Jones, and other works. But, okay, he’s the son of a literature professor. The fictional author of the article, by contrast, posts a photo of Picture of Dorian Gray on her Instagram account to signal that she’s an interesting person—only to find a Reply Guy quizzing her about it.

Note: I had to look up what a Reply Guy is and learned that it is “an internet slang term for someone who excessively responds to social media posts, often in an annoying, condescending, or overly familiar or flirtatious manner.” No doubt my younger readers already know that.

Anyway, I can’t think of a better work than Dorian Gray for the McSweeney’s article since Instagram, Facebook, and other media sites invite us to present idealized versions of ourselves while hiding our corrupt inner souls (or whatever). As T.S. Eliot would say, we “prepare a face to meet the faces that we meet.” So when a Reply Guy queries the writer about the book, she foresees her “carefully curated online persona” unraveling. As she puts it, “They might wonder if my bed really is made every morning, if that’s my real dog, or if I am even a good person.”

Here’s how the discovery that she fears is presented in the novel. Dorian has taken artist Basil Hallward to see it years after he painted, during which time Dorian has descended into a life of depravity. As I’m sure you know, the portrait registers all of Dorian’s sins, even as he himself remains unblemished:

Hallward turned again to the portrait, and gazed at it.  “My God! if it is true,” he exclaimed, “and this is what you have done with your life, why, you must be worse even than those who talk against you fancy you to be!”  He held the light up again to the canvas, and examined it. The surface seemed to be quite undisturbed, and as he had left it.  It was from within, apparently, that the foulness and horror had come. Through some strange quickening of inner life the leprosies of sin were slowly eating the thing away.  The rotting of a corpse in a watery grave was not so fearful.

Who knows what hearts of darkness lie behind those engaging Facebook photos?

To her credit, our essayist does not cancel Reply Guy as Dorian cancels (stabs) Basil but instead figures that she should read the book:

Out of options, I read Oscar Wilde’s seminal work in one night, like an executioner was watching me. The book was actually relatable, even good. It made me… think. Perhaps the relentless pursuit of youth ultimately depletes our humanity? Or something. I told my Reply Guy this, and he said, “Nice.”

I love the ellipsis before “think,” as well as Reply Guy’s superficial response. He’s unaware that he has surprised her into depth. Having seen something interesting happen when she included a book in her Instagram post, the essayist decides to take the next step, which is performance-read on a bus. I love how she depicts Cervantes’s masterpiece:

I wasn’t sold on reading, but I did like feeling smart, and Don Quixote is like the Louis Vuitton bag of people with depth. I started bringing books with me onto the train, inside the bodega, to the park, just pretty much anywhere people could see me and wonder, “How can someone so conventionally attractive also have intellectual pursuits?”

What follows is another surprise:

But I could only fake flip the pages on the bus for so long without getting bored. It was easier to actually read what was on the page, and well, the rest is history. And science. And philosophy and romance and satire and fiction. I started to learn stuff, like did you guys know that Frankenstein wasn’t the monster? That women couldn’t get a credit card until 1974? Or that the Underground Railroad wasn’t underground like a wine cellar but underground like good music? Or that the CIA overthrew Latin American governments, and that’s where the term “banana republic” comes from?

Once you get hooked on reading, suddenly cute guys become not the goal but an irritant:

Soon, when a couple of the cute guys started chatting me up about the book, I got pissed and told them I was busy. Couldn’t they see I was at the climax? I’ve started going to the library, where I can be left alone. I’ve even got my own card now. And you don’t have to buy a nine-dollar latte to be there; they just let you sit down. How cool is that? 

Pretty cool indeed.

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Military Service and the American Dream

Ira Hayes, member of Gila River Indian Community and Iwo Jima hero

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Tuesday – Veterans Day

This year my church is sponsoring, as its Sunday Forum, a lecture series based on the Hebrew prophet Micah’s injunction to “do justice, love kindness, and walk humbly before your god.” Fortuitously, on the Sunday closest to Veterans Day we heard a veteran talk about what the passage means to him. Gene Hart is this year’s seminarian—basically a rector in training—and his talk on “Justice, Mercy, and Humility in the Land of Violence” traced his own evolution into a man who has cares deeply about the values of diversity, equity, and inclusion. Or put another way, he embraces Jesus’s vision of love for all humanity. 

Gene informed us that he hasn’t always thought this way. When he was growing up in rural Georgia, he acknowledged that he had the ingrained racism, misogyny, and homophobia that came with the territory. The military changed that, however, as he served alongside comrades who were female, LGBTQ+, and belonging to various races, ethnicities, and religions. A retired U.S. Army Lieutenant Colonel with over 32 years of distinguished service, Gene served in Bosnia, Israel, Kuwait, and Afghanistan. His bodyguard in Kabul, he reported, was a woman whom he trusted with his life. Now that he has left this profession for the church, Gene is determined to live out his new understanding.

As Gene was talking, I thought about how the armed forces have taken to heart the ideals articulated in the Declaration of Independence, so much so that reactionaries like Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Donald Trump are conducting an all-out assault on women, people of color, and LGBTQ+ folk who have advanced in the military. While I know that one finds rightwing bigots in the military, most of the veterans I personally know are like Gene, including one officer—recipient of a bronze star for service in Vietnam—who turned in his medals after he returned from the war and who is appalled at what the United States has become under Trump. And another, who passed two weeks ago, who was passionate about civil rights. A number of protesters who have stood up against ICE, sometimes getting arrested, are veterans. My own father, who served as a military policeman in Munich in the last year of World War II, had his eyes opened by the African American soldier who was paired with him, so that when he returned to the States he worked ardently for racial integration. All these veterans were or are appalled by America’s history of macho white supremacy.

The dream that military enlistment offers a path towards achieving the American DEI dream shows up in Ceremony, by Laguna Pueblo author Leslie Marmon Silko. The novel is about a veteran, Tayo, who survives the Bataan Death March but returns to his reservation with a severe case of PTSD. The healing ceremony he undergoes addresses not only this illness but also the psychological impact of racism on native Americans. 

Tayo follows his cousin Rocky into the army after a recuriter assures them that the military is the pathway to equality. “Anyone can fight for America,” he says, before adding—as though he is being wonderfully tolerant–“even you boys. In a time of need, anyone can fight for her.”

A little later in his spiel he tells them,

“Now I know you boys love America as much as we do, but this is your big chance to show it!” He stood up then, as he had rehearsed, and looked them in the eye sincerely. He handed them color pamphlets with a man in a khaki uniform and gold braid on the cover; in the background, behind the figure in the uniform, there was a gold eagle with its wings spread across an American flag.

Initially the dream seems to be working:

The first day in Oakland he and Rocky walked down the street together and a big Chrysler stopped in the street and an old white woman rolled down the window and said, “God bless you, God bless you,” but it was the uniform, not them, she blessed.

After the war, Tayo—drinking with his fellow veterans—articulates their longing to be accepted by white society. I think the passage explains why many minority voters were willing to vote alongside white supremacists for Trump in the last election, but put that aside for the moment. Tayo says that Indians saw the military as their golden ticket out of their inferior status:

One time there were these Indians, see. They put on uniforms, cut their hair. They went off to a big war. They had a real good time too. Bars served them booze, old white ladies on the street smiled at them. At Indians, remember that, because that’s all they were. Indians. These Indians fucked white women, they had as much as they wanted too. They were MacArthur’s boys, white whores took their money same as anyone. These Indians got treated the same as anyone: Wake Island, Iwo Jima. They got the same medals for bravery, the same flag over the coffin.

Then come the rumblings that it may all be an illusion. I wonder if those in the military whom Hegseth has unjustly demoted and fired sensed ahead of time what was coming:

See these dumb Indians thought these good times would last. They didn’t ever want to give up the cold beer and the blond cunt. Hell no! They were America the Beautiful too, this was the land of the free just like teachers said in school. They had the uniform and they didn’t look different no more. They got respect.

When they return from the war, however, the discover nothing has changed:

First time you walked down the street in Gallup or Albuquerque, you knew. Don’t lie. You knew right away. The war was over, the uniform was gone. All of a sudden that man at the store waits on you last, makes you wait until all the white people bought what they wanted. And the white lady at the bus depot, she’s real careful now not to touch your hand when she counts out your change. You watch it slide across the counter at you, and you know! Goddamn it! You stupid sonofabitches! You know!

The civil rights movement in the south was set in motion, in part, by Black war veterans returning from World War II expecting to be treated differently by the country they had served. In “Will V-Day Be Me-Day too?” Langston Hughes addresses white America. The Jim Crow cattle car may be a reference to the Holocaust:

You can’t say I didn’t fight
To smash the Fascists’ might.
You can’t say I wasn’t with you
in each battle.
As a soldier, and a friend.
When this war comes to an end,
Will you herd me in a Jim Crow car
Like cattle?

Or will you stand up like a man
At home and take your stand
For Democracy?
That’s all I ask of you.
When we lay the guns away
To celebrate
Our Victory Day
WILL V-DAY BE ME-DAY, TOO?
That’s what I want to know.

            Sincerely,
                GI Joe.

Tayo’s war buddies, however, don’t want to hear what he’s dishing out, preferring to blame the truthteller. Tayo realizes that they

spent all their checks trying to get back the good times, and a skinny light-skinned bastard had ruined it….Here they were, trying to bring back that old feeling, that feeling they belonged to America the way they felt during the war. They blamed themselves for losing the new feeling; they never talked about it, but they blamed themselves just like they blamed themselves for losing the land the white people took. They never thought to blame white people for any of it; they wanted white people for their friends. They never saw that it was the white people who gave them that feeling and it was white people who took it away again when the war was over.

Ceremony is powerful in how it shows a healing way forward, not only for Native Americans but for all Americans. At the end of the novel, Tayo opts for non-violence as he builds a new life for himself and for his people. 

It seems ironic that an organization like the military would be a driver of the American Dream, but so it has proved in numerous cases, including Gene’s. And now, as we see veterans all over the country running for elected office to save American democracy—this includes Virginia’s recently elected first woman governor—we have reason to hope that what they saw modeled in the armed forces can put us back in touch with our founding ideals.

It’s another reason to thank them for their service.

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Chicago’s Big Shoulders vs. ICE

Chicago protests against Operation Midway Blitz

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Monday

Poetry is for when life gets tough, I used to tell my students, and when life got tough for Chicago, Judge Sara Ellis turned to Carl Sandburg’s famous homage to the city. Ellis recently cited “Chicago” as she issued an injunction against “Operation Midway Blitz” from using riot control weapons like pepper balls and tear gas without adequate justification and warning. 

According to Capitol Hill Illinois, Ellis

said she’d seen “ample evidence that agents … intended to cause protesters harm” during a number of clashes between the feds and members of the public that ended with the deployment of tear gas and left bystanders fearful and, in some cases, injured.

“I see little reason for the use of force that the federal agents are currently using,” the judge said Thursday. “Pointing guns, pulling out pepper spray, throwing tear gas, shooting pepper balls and using other less-lethal munitions do not appear to be appropriate.”

According to the journal, Ellis catalogued more than a dozen incidents in which immigration agents used excessive force against members of the public.

I haven’t been able to find a transcript of Ellis’s comments and so don’t entirely know how she used “Chicago.” Capitol Hill Illinois claims that she read the entire poem, which makes sense since the poem is set up as a response to the kinds of accusations the Trump administration has been making. Here it is:

Hog Butcher for the World,
   Tool Maker, Stacker of Wheat,
   Player with Railroads and the Nation’s Freight Handler;
   Stormy, husky, brawling,
   City of the Big Shoulders:

They tell me you are wicked and I believe them, for I have seen your painted women under the gas lamps luring the farm boys.
And they tell me you are crooked and I answer: Yes, it is true I have seen the gunman kill and go free to kill again.
And they tell me you are brutal and my reply is: On the faces of women and children I have seen the marks of wanton hunger.
And having answered so I turn once more to those who sneer at this my city, and I give them back the sneer and say to them:
Come and show me another city with lifted head singing so proud to be alive and coarse and strong and cunning.
Flinging magnetic curses amid the toil of piling job on job, here is a tall bold slugger set vivid against the little soft cities;
Fierce as a dog with tongue lapping for action, cunning as a savage pitted against the wilderness,
   Bareheaded,
   Shoveling,
   Wrecking,
   Planning,
   Building, breaking, rebuilding,
Under the smoke, dust all over his mouth, laughing with white teeth,
Under the terrible burden of destiny laughing as a young man laughs,
Laughing even as an ignorant fighter laughs who has never lost a battle,
Bragging and laughing that under his wrist is the pulse, and under his ribs the heart of the people,
                   Laughing!
Laughing the stormy, husky, brawling laughter of Youth, half-naked, sweating, proud to be Hog Butcher, Tool Maker, Stacker of Wheat, Player with Railroads and Freight
Handler to the Nation.

Whoever the “they” was in 1914, there are plenty of Trumpists attacking Chicago now. Indeed, the bullshit level has been turned up to 11. Trump recently said,

“I don’t know why Chicago isn’t calling us, saying, please give us help when you have over just a short period of time, 50 murders and hundreds of people shot. And then you have a governor that stands up and says how crime is just fine. It’s, it’s really crazy, but we’re bringing back law and order to our country,” Trump said.

Meanwhile the Department of Homeland Security, under Kristi Noem, claimed that it was targeting “the criminal illegal aliens who flocked to Chicago and Illinois because they knew Governor Pritzker and his sanctuary policies would protect them and allow them to roam free on American streets.”

Interestingly, the accusations that Sandburg concedes as having some truth for Chicago (“wicked,” “crooked,” “brutal”) apply far more to the Trump White House than to the city. While Chicago politics were once notoriously corrupt, now it is the president and the Congressional allies who are wickedly covering for pedophiles (including possibly the president himself). Now it is the president who is crookedly and openly fishing for bribes, extorting law firms, media companies, and universities, and pardoning criminals in exchange for favors. Now it is the Trump administration that is brutally contributing to the wanton hunger of women and children (and of men too).

For its part, Chicago has cleaned up its act. Yes, murder is still a problem, although not more so than in many American cities and a fair amount of that is due to Republicans’ refusal to pass common sense gun laws. But Condé Nast Traveler‘s prestigious Readers’ Choice Awards has Chicago first on their list of Best Big Cities in the U.S. for the eighth straight year, and Chicago was recently listed as one of the world’s best cities for culture by Time Out, the only U.S. city to make the list. The real problem, as Donald Trump sees it, is that Chicago is a blue city in a blue state with an outspoken Democratic governor.

For her part, Ellis didn’t make any of the concessions that Sandburg makes, observing that it “simply is untrue” (as the Trump administration charges) that “Chicagoland area is in a vice hold of violence, ransacked by rioters and attacked by agitators.” 

“From Aurora to Cicero, and Chicago to Evanston to Waukegan,” she said, “this is a vibrant place, brimming with vitality and hope, striving to move forward from its complicated history.” Having caught out U.S. Border Patrol commander Gregory Bovino in some outright fabrications, she asserted that the Justice Department “lack[s] credibility.”

Given all that the city is currently suffering, imagine how powerful it would be for Chicagoans to hear a judge read from the bench,

So I turn once more to those who sneer at this my city, and I give them back the sneer and say to them:
Come and show me another city with lifted head singing so proud to be alive… 

Past Posts on Judges Citing Literature
Judge Invokes Handmaid’s Tale in Ruling 
Citing Orwell, Judge Rules against Trump 
Incoming Judge cites Maya Angelou
Trans Student Gavin and a Poetic Judge
A Judge’s Love Affair with Marcel Proust
Shakespeare in the Courtroom 
Trump Wants to Kill All the Lawyers
The Bard’s Defense of the Law and Lawyers
Marc Antony for the Prosecution

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Job’s Doubts vs. Job’s Faith

William Blake, Job and his “friends”

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Sunday

Today’s Old Testament reading needs surrounding context to fully appreciate it. Job is in the midst of his travails—everything has been stripped from him—and is wondering where God is. Why bad things happen to good people is about as basic as existential questions get. His friend Bildad is singularly unhelpful in this inquiry, having just told him that he must have brought his suffering upon himself, which Job knows is not the case. “I call aloud, but there is no justice,” he cries out.

In the midst of his complaining, however, comes a declaration of faith that provides us with today’s reading (Job 19:23-27a):

Job said,

“O that my words were written down!
O that they were inscribed in a book! 

O that with an iron pen and with lead
they were engraved on a rock forever! 

For I know that my Redeemer lives,
and that at the last he will stand upon the earth; 

and after my skin has been thus destroyed,
then in my flesh I shall see God, 

whom I shall see on my side,
and my eyes shall behold, and not another.”

Even as he says these words, Job’s skin has already been destroyed since Satan, with God’s permission, has afflicted him “with loathsome sores from the sole of his foot to the crown of his head.” “I am repulsive to my wife, loathsome to the sons of my own mother,” he laments.” But in spite of his suffering, Job asserts that God will redeem him in the end. How can one have doubts about God and assert faith in God at the same time?

Anne Lamott has a wonderful answer in her collection of essays Plan B: Further Thoughts on Faith. Faith, she says, takes one much further than definitive answers:

The opposite of faith is not doubt, but certainty. Certainty is missing the point entirely. Faith includes noticing the mess, the emptiness and discomfort, and letting it be there until some light returns. Faith also means reaching deeply within, for the sense one was born with, the sense, for example, to go for a walk.

The light returns for Job when God, in His/Her magnificent final speech, points out that Job has been thinking too small. Whatever happens to us as individuals—and yes, I can testify personally that when tragedy strikes we think of nothing else—we are part of a drama that is bigger than anything we can imagine. “Where were you when I laid the foundation of the earth?” God rhetorically asks before launching into a description of the wonders of creation.

Kahlil Gibran’s poem “On Death” captures some of this same wonder. Gibran gets at the meaning of Job asserting that he shall behold God and Jesus promising life eternal. It’s not that transcending death involves coming back in our old identities. It’s that we enter into a new relationship with creation. “[Only] when the earth shall claim your limbs, then shall you truly dance,” Gibran tells us. 

Then Almitra spoke, saying, We would ask now of Death.
    And he said:
    You would know the secret of death.
    But how shall you find it unless you seek it in the heart of life?
    The owl whose night-bound eyes are blind unto the day cannot unveil the mystery of light.
    If you would indeed behold the spirit of death, open your heart wide unto the body of life.
    For life and death are one, even as the river and the sea are one.

    In the depth of your hopes and desires lies your silent knowledge of the beyond;
    And like seeds dreaming beneath the snow your heart dreams of spring.
    Trust the dreams, for in them is hidden the gate to eternity.
    Your fear of death is but the trembling of the shepherd when he stands before the king whose hand is to be laid upon him in honor.
    Is the shepherd not joyful beneath his trembling, that he shall wear the mark of the king?
    Yet is he not more mindful of his trembling?

    For what is it to die but to stand naked in the wind and to melt into the sun?
    And what is it to cease breathing, but to free the breath from its restless tides, that it may rise and expand and seek God unencumbered?

    Only when you drink from the river of silence shall you indeed sing.
    And when you have reached the mountain top, then you shall begin to climb.
    And when the earth shall claim your limbs, then shall you truly dance.

Our job is to love life as deeply as we can when we have it. Because life will at times bruise us, doubts will inevitably arise.

Embrace those doubts. And then embrace whatever comes next.

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Why I Majored in History, Not English

Antonio Gransci

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Friday

This is the latest post in my on-going series on “My Life in Literature,” which appears every Friday. Because an informal autobiography written by my great grandmother Eliza Scott means so much to me—she discusses the novels that were important to her as she grew up in Victorian England—I figured that I should do something similar for family members who come after me. Of course, the subject is also consistent with the mission of this blog, which is to explore the many ways that literature enhances and sometimes changes our lives.

Because of southern racism, I determined that, for college, I would get as far away from the south as I could. It wasn’t only that I was attending a segregated high school—we had our first African American student my senior year—but that I regularly encountered racist remarks from fellow students and some teachers. For instance, the day after Martin Luther King was assassinated, our rightwing American History teacher observed, “He lived by the sword, and he died by the sword.” I, who the year before had attended a King speech in Charleston where he decried the urban riots (“Therefore I say to you, not “burn, baby, burn!” but “build, baby build!”) stewed in silence. This is one reason why I left for my parents’ alma mater, which was Carleton College in Northfield, Minnesota. 

I knew I wasn’t in Tennessee anymore when, for first-year orientation, we were assigned various books by African American activists. I read them and remember being baffled by Eldridge Cleaver’s Soul on Ice, which was far too accepting of the violence that King was condemning. (I now know that the author was a rapist masquerading as a liberation figure.) Nevertheless, it signaled to me that college was a far cry from high school.

1969 was a tumultuous year. Along with the urban riots, the Vietnam War was in full swing, and while I had a four-year student deferment, to our eyes it appeared that the war would never end. Our school observed a special protest moratorium in October and closed down for a week in April because of the Kent State killings. During that week I joined 80 Carleton and St. Olaf students and faculty in a demonstration designed to disrupt the Minneapolis draft induction center. We went intending to get arrested and, in order to participate, had to promise that we would go nonviolently when it happened. After two hours of blocking the doors, we were carted off to the Hennepin County jail in police wagons. 

I remember all of us singing John Lennon’s “All we are saying is give peace a chance,” which caused the elevator operator to roll his eyes. We were housed in the drunk tank—no other place was big enough to house us—and then released on our own recognizance. Later there would be a jury trial where we would be found guilty of a misdemeanor. We had a choice between a light fine and a week in jail. As I was in Tennessee when the sentence came down, I paid the fine.

Only years later did I fully appreciate how angry we were. Having grown up reciting the Pledge of Allegiance and singing “America the Beautiful,” “God Bless America,” and “My Country ‘Tis of Thee,” we felt like our country had betrayed us. Men our age were being sent to fight and die in a war that no one could satisfactorily justify.

Of course, the war wasn’t the only thing going on since college demanded a lot of us academically. The joke at Carleton was that, on the first day of class, you were two weeks behind, and it’s true that the courses were difficult. In that first year I took Composition, two British literature surveys, two interdisciplinary humanities courses (one in 5th century Athens, one in the Renaissance), two French literature survey courses, anthropology, geology, and an introductory history course on Nazi Germany. I was a willing and eager student, writing essays on Marlowe’s Doctor Faustus and Tamburlaine for the early Brit Lit survey and grappling with T.S. Eliot’s Waste Land in the 20th century survey. But the only course that allowed me to connect with what was going on in our lives—the only course in which I truly caught fire—was the history course. I remember writing an essay on Fritz Stern’s The Politics of Cultural Despair: A Study in the Rise of the Germanic Ideology, which I tried to apply—not entirely successfully—to our own time

I would catch fire a second time my sophomore year in a course I took on the French Revolution. Carl Weiner, a charismatic professor who made the events come alive for us, assigned J. L. Talmon’s The Origins of Totalitarian Democracy for the final essay. There I had to reflect on how an intellectual like Robespierre, even when driven by the lofty ideal of a “republic of virtue,” could also usher in a bloody reign of terror. As I considered myself an intellectual, it prompted me to do some self-questioning—and to distance myself from the more radical leftists one encountered in those days, especially the Trotskyite Worker’s League, which had a small campus chapter.

The following year I journeyed to Normandy with a group of Carleton students, headed by Weiner, to study the Student-Worker Uprising of 1968. As this history was only three years old, there was still a lot of unrest and we had the opportunity to witness, first-hand, a student demonstration over worker rights that involved molotov cocktails and tear gas. The Maoists and the Trotskyites were quarreling, and I believe it was the more violent Maoists that captured a police van by throwing a molotov cocktail through the window, emptying it out. Then they drove it onto the University of Caen campus, where the police were not allowed, and parked it by a statue of a phoenix, symbol of Caen’s recovery from World War II bombing. As they burned it, everyone there lifted their left hand in a fist and sang the Communist “International.”

I add that the day ended somberly as a student was badly hurt from having been hit by a teargas canister. An ambulance had to come on campus to care for him and, as the day was ending, the protest ended there and then. We Americans, functioning as observers, felt like we had been a part of history.

Grappling with urgent concerns was not occurring in my English classes. In those days formalism reigned supreme, with scholars contending that literature rose above the dirty facts of history. I now realize that it was therefore almost inevitable that I would major in history, even though literature was my deepest love and even though I wasn’t interested in history’s drive to figure out what really happened. I was drawn to historical ideas, not historical facts, and so confined myself mostly to intellectual history courses. I was fortunate that I also had history professors who encouraged me to regard literary artifacts as prime source material. In Medieval History I I wrote an essay on “Beowulf and the Historical Role of Monsters in Barbarian Society” and in Medieval History II how author of Arthurian tales Chrétien de Troyes regarded adultery in 12th century France.

In my book I recount how the Beowulf essay was one of the most meaningful moments in my life. That’s because I saw a connection between literature and world-shaking events that my literature classes didn’t care about. It was not only that poems and stories reflected what was going on (although formalists didn’t even admit to that much) but that they provided people a way to negotiate the forces that were threatening to tear apart their societies.

The theorist who influenced me the most was the Italian activist Antonio Gramsci, whom I encountered in a course on Marxist thought: Gramsci spoke of the need for cultural workers (philosophers and poets), who could penetrate false consciousness and see class relations as they really were. Gramsci especially prized these cultural workers if they came from working class, and since I had begun dating my future wife at that time, we had fun labeling her (since she grew up on a farm) a Gramscian “organic intellectual.” For that class I would write a clarifying Gramsci-like “manifesto” of my beliefs.

Finally, for my senior thesis I contended that Enlightenment figures like Jean Jacques Rousseau and Denis Diderot had a far more profound influence on the French Revolution than did the pamphlet writers of the day, even though the latter were in the thick of things and had an immediate impact.

In other words, faced with the Vietnam War and other momentous events of the day, I was looking for reassurance that someone who loved books and ideas could play an historical role. I had once been part of a lawsuit that integrated the Franklin County schools but now I was feeling impotent. My history classes provided me with a framework for exploring possibilities, my English classes not at all. 

What those literature classes gave me, however, were moments of aesthetic ecstasy missing from my more prosaic history courses. To this day I remember where I first encountered “Why this is hell nor am I out of it” and “We are such stuff as dreams are made on” and “I will show you fear in a handful of dust” and “One man loved the pilgrim soul in you” and “Mad Ireland hurt him into poetry.”*

For this reason, when I was writing my senior thesis I floated the idea that Rousseau and Diderot had the impact they did on the French Revolution because of the aesthetic quality of their works. The higher the literary quality of a work, I speculated, the greater the historical impact.

At that moment I decided I needed to go to graduate school to figure out if this was true.

*The lines are from Marlowe’s Doctor Faustus, Shakespeare’s Tempest, Eliot’s Waste Land, Yeats’s “When You Are Old,” and Auden’s “In Memory of W.B. Yeats.”

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A Novel Predicted A.I., Zoom, the Internet

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Thursday

Greg Olear at the Substack blog Prevail has alerted me to an E.M Forster dystopian novella that, in 1913-14, predicted our technological future far more accurately than Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World or George Orwell’s 1984. As Olear points out, in The Machine Stops

Forster foresaw the Internet, Zoom calls, bleeping notifications, well-honed HVAC systems, tech worship, globalization, Reddit boards, Yelp reviews, Spotify, YouTube, environment-destroying pollution, shitty automated customer service, psychological issues involving physical isolation, and more. 

About this astonishing perspicacity Olear observes, “maybe the future was always mapped out this way, for those visionaries sensitive enough to survey the undiscovered frontier.” If authors and poets have such sensitivity, I think it’s because (to borrow from Wordsworth) “they see into the life of things.” Above all, they see into the life of people and can imagine what they are capable of in various conditions. It’s an advantage they have over engineers and sociologists.

Machine Stops features a mother (Vashti) and her son (Kuno) who live in an underground world serviced by “the Machine,” which provides them with all necessities of life—or at least it does so until it starts breaking down. They are underground because the outside environment has been degraded to such an extent that it is no longer habitable. Vashti teaches remotely about safe subjects from the past (such as “Music from the Australian Period”) and is contented with her life remotely. Kuno, by contrast, feels confined and wants to explore the outside world, even though to do so is forbidden. In certain ways the story resembles the movie Matrix, with Kuno being a red pill guy. He works to expand his mother’s consciousness and, when the Machine fails, comes to her side.

The novella begins with a scenario that many who lived through the Covid pandemic can relate to:

Imagine, if you can, a small room, hexagonal in shape, like the cell of a bee. It is lighted neither by window nor by lamp, yet it is filled with a soft radiance. There are no apertures for ventilation, yet the air is fresh. There are no musical instruments, and yet, at the moment that my meditation opens, this room is throbbing with melodious sounds. An armchair is in the centre, by its side a reading-desk – that is all the furniture. And in the armchair there sits a swaddled lump of flesh – a woman, about five feet high, with a face as white as a fungus. It is to her that the little room belongs.

At that point Vashti is essentially Skyping with Kuno, who is in Australia. (Remember, this was written in 1913!) He tells her he wants to see her in person rather than through “the wearisome Machine,” and when she says he must not say anything negative about the system that rules their lives, he replies, “You talk as if a god had made the Machine.” And then,

I believe that you pray to it when you are unhappy. Men made it, do not forget that. Great men, but men. The Machine is much, but it is not everything. I see something like you in this plate, but I do not see you. I hear something like you through this telephone, but I do not hear you. That is why I want you to come. Pay me a visit, so that we can meet face to face, and talk about the hopes that are in my mind. 

Her objection is that it will take two days by airship to reach him and that she will have to witness “the horrible brown earth, and the sea, and the stars when it is dark.” She complains, “I get no ideas in an airship.”

For a moment after Kuno hangs up she feels lonely, but she finds an instant way to escape her loneliness in a way that we can all relate to. First, the setting:

Then she generated the light, and the sight of her room, flooded with radiance and studded with electric buttons, revived her. There were buttons and switches everywhere – buttons to call for food for music, for clothing. There was the hot-bath button, by pressure of which a basin of (imitation) marble rose out of the floor, filled to the brim with a warm deodorized liquid. There was the cold-bath button. There was the button that produced literature. And there were of course the buttons by which she communicated with her friends. The room, though it contained nothing, was in touch with all that she cared for in the world. (My emphasis)

What happens next is what we happens when we return to our messages after having silenced our phone:

Vashanti’s next move was to turn off the isolation switch, and all the accumulations of the last three minutes burst upon her. The room was filled with the noise of bells, and speaking-tubes. What was the new food like? Could she recommend it? Has she had any ideas lately? Might one tell her one’s own ideas? Would she make an engagement to visit the public nurseries at an early date? – say this day month.

“Last three minutes” is a nice touch.

There’s even telemedicine in this world:

“Kuno,” she said, “I cannot come to see you. I am not well.”

Immediately an enormous apparatus fell on to her out of the ceiling, a thermometer was automatically laid upon her heart. She lay powerless. Cool pads soothed her forehead. Kuno had telegraphed to her doctor. 

So the human passions still blundered up and down in the Machine. Vashti drank the medicine that the doctor projected into her mouth, and the machinery retired into the ceiling. The voice of Kuno was heard asking how she felt. 

“Better.”

“The machine” has become so pervasive in Forster’s novella that people have started worshipping it:

Sitting up in the bed, she took [the instruction manual] reverently in her hands. She glanced round the glowing room as if someone might be watching her. Then, half ashamed, half joyful, she murmured ‘O Machine! O Machine!’ and raised the volume to her lips. Thrice she kissed it, thrice inclined her head, thrice she felt the delirium of acquiescence. 

The machine doesn’t only provide services. Kino points out that it reconfigures the way we experience space itself:

“You know that we have lost the sense of space. We say ‘space is annihilated,’ but we have annihilated not space, but the sense thereof. We have lost a part of ourselves. I determined to recover it, and I began by walking up and down the platform of the railway outside my room. Up and down, until I was tired, and so did recapture the meaning of ‘Near’ and ‘Far.’ ‘Near’ is a place to which I can get quickly on my feet, not a place to which the train or the air-ship will take me quickly. ‘Far’ is a place to which I cannot get quickly on my feet; the vomitory is ‘far,’ though I could be there in thirty-eight seconds by summoning the train. Man is the measure. That was my first lesson. Man’s feet are the measure for distance, his hands are the measure for ownership, his body is the measure for all that is lovable and desirable and strong. 

Unfortunately, “man” in the novella has farmed out all that is lovable and desirable and strong to machines. And not only to machines, as Olear makes clear:

I worry because the Machine, in 2025, is owned and operated by some of the greediest, cruelest, least empathic men on the planet, who are doing everything in their power to accelerate our destruction. The Internet was conceived as a democratic space; it has become an oligarchy. A.I. was intended to help humanity; it may well stamp it out.

Because he is mostly focused on technology, Forster doesn’t deal with the men who run the machine. One must go to Orwell’s 1984 for that.

Further thought: For a related take on technology, my wife Julia has been conducting a class for our church on Becky Chambers’s Psalm for the Wild-Built. In the author’s more optimistic vision, when robots start becoming a full replacement for the human workforce rather than merely a supplement—when we “had bastardized constructs to the point that it was killing us”—they develop consciousness and walk away. Humanity is thereby saved as it is forced to revert to an earlier and healthier stage where the handcrafts flourish once again.

And yet another thought: Regarding how advancing technology reconfigures how we experience space, I am put in mind of the Ursula K. Le Guin short story “The Direction of the Road.” It is narrated by a oak tree, which complains that, with advancing speed technology, human beings notice trees less and less. Le Guin invokes the principle of relativity to make her point: 

I’d approach steadily but quite slowly [to the walking man], growing larger all the time, synchronizing the rate of approach and the rate of growth perfectly, so that at the very moment that I’d finished enlarging from a tiny speck to my full size — sixty feet in those days — I was abreast of him and hung above him, loomed, towered, overshadowed him. Yet he would show no fear. Not even the children were afraid of me, though often they kept their eyes on me as I passed by and started to diminish. Sometimes on a hot afternoon one of the adults would stop me right there at our meeting-place, and lie down with his back against mine for an hour or more.

This healthy relationship declines with the advent to the automobile and finally ends when someone is killed crashing into the tree:

It is not [the killing] that I protest. I had to kill him. I had no choice, and therefore have no regret. What I protest, what I cannot endure, is this: as I leapt at him, he saw me. He looked up at last. He saw me as I have never been seen before, not even by a child, not even in the days when people looked at things. He saw me whole, and saw nothing else — then, or ever.

He saw me under the aspect of eternity. He confused me with eternity. And because he died in that moment of false vision, because it can never change, I am caught in it, eternally.

“I am not death. I am life,” the tree complains, before throwing some serious shade at humans:

If they wish to see death visibly in the world, that is their business, not mine. I will not act Eternity for them. Let them not turn to the trees for death. If that is what they want to see, let them look into one another’s eyes and see it there.

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They Oz You Up, Your Mandias

Fragments of the Great Colossi (of Rameses II)

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Wednesday

Being in need of some humor at this dark time, I share today a poetic parody circulating on Bluesky that had me laughing out loud. Actually, as you will see, it is a double parody—two poems simultaneously parodied—and while you may know the two originals, I’ve included them below so that you’ll fully appreciate how much fun the parodist had. (Let me know if you know the name of the author.)

First, there’s Shelley’s “Ozymandias,” which I recently applied to Trump tarting up the White House with gold trim everywhere. (This was before we saw him level the East Wing for yet another vanity project.) 

Ozymandias
By Percy Shelley

I met a traveler from an antique land
Who said: “Two vast and trunkless legs of stone
Stand in the desert . . . Near them, on the sand,
Half sunk, a shattered visage lies, whose frown,
And wrinkled lip, and sneer of cold command,
Tell that its sculptor well those passions read
Which yet survive, stamped on these lifeless things,
The hand that mocked them, and the heart that fed:
And on the pedestal these words appear:
‘My name is Ozymandias, king of kings:
Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!’
Nothing beside remains. Round the decay
Of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare
The lone and level sands stretch far away.”

The other original also was the subject of a recent essay, Philip Larkin’s grim but highly quotable poem about child-rearing. That essay, incidentally, itself featured a parody of Larkin’s poem by someone with a more positive take on mum and dad. But here’s Larkin: 

This Be the Verse
By Phil Larkin

They fuck you up, your mum and dad.
They may not mean to, but they do.
They fill you with the faults they had
And add some extra, just for you.

But they were fucked up in their turn
By fools in old-style hats and coats,
Who half the time were soppy-stern
And half at one another’s throats.

Man hands on misery to man.
It deepens like a coastal shelf.
Get out as early as you can,
And don’t have any kids yourself.

Do you have all that? Now for the two combined. The final result reminds me of “Jabberwocky,” written by one of literature’s greatest parodists: 

They Oz you up, your mandias
They may not mean to, but they do
They give you vast and trunkless legs
A sunken shattered visage too.

But they were ozzed up in their turn
by Mandias upon the sand
Who half the time had wrinkled lips
And half in sneering cold command.

Oz hands on mandias to man
Like mighty works upon the shelf
Look on them early as you can
Ye mighty and despair yourself.

So there you are.

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