RA-L
[liste ra-l] (en) interesting reading: rebecca solnit on the power of radical ideas
From: Laurence Davis <ldavis-AT-oceanfree.net>
The following piece by Rebecca Solnit, published in the Jan/Feb 2008 issue of
*Orion* magazine, may be of some interest to list members.
ld
—
From the Faraway Nearby
Our Storied Future
Never underestimate the power of an idea
by Rebecca Solnit
Published in the January/February 2008 <http://www.orionmagazine.org/index.php/mag/issue/498/>
issue of Orion magazine
THE EUROPEAN tradition loves opposites. One that Hannah Arendt dwelt upon in The Human Condition is the vita activa and the vita contemplativa. For Arendt, the active
life was the life lived in the world, the life of making, laboring, and acting;
the contemplative life was the monastic and philosophical life, life on the
sidelines. But contemplation is what gave the monks of Burma the tranquil
courage to walk out of their monasteries and temples last fall, chanting the
Metta Sutta of compassion for all beings amid rows of heavily armed soldiers
prepared to kill them. It was as moving, as brave, and as defiant an exercise
of nonviolence and spiritual strength in action as we may ever see, those boys
and men in robes the color of blood standing up to the military junta that has
long ruled their country. The ethics of their contemplative life demanded
action.
The same was true for many Vietnamese monks during the U.S. war on that
country. Action and contemplation can be parts of the same life. The latter
gives us the depth, the ethics, the imagination, and the understanding to
become active, to work for what we believe. And action brings our contemplative
work to life, gives it purpose and meaning; compassion may be learned by
meditation but it can only be realized by some form of engagement. I know I
have learned much by reading and writing, but I have also learned by traveling,
by encountering, by watching history firsthand and sometimes participating in
it. There is no divide.
An equally disabling distinction, handed down from Plato, is the one between
representation and reality. This exiling of representations to the realm of the
irrelevant, the inactive, the opposite of acts and actualities, trivializes the
power of words and ideas. Campaigns of destruction always begin with language
and symbols—even calling a forest a natural resource makes it easier to
see it as board feet. People die of ideas all the time. The representation of
people as loathsome or invasive, for example, is often the first step toward
brutalizing or exterminating them. The anthropologist Hugh Raffles points out
that the Nazis made constant analogies between Jews and insects and then made
the metaphors real by using the insecticide Zyklon B to murder some of us in
the gas chambers. Ideas matter. This is what Patrick Reinsborough, founder of
San Francisco–based Smart Meme, calls “the battle of the
story.” There are battles in the streets and then there are battles over
which metaphors and images will be used to tell those stories and, ultimately,
which version of history will shape the memories and imaginations that guide
and limit the future. To write, to make art and film, to work as a journalist
or an educator can be a radical act, one that blurs the lines between action
and contemplation by employing ideas as tools to make the world as well as
understand it.
I often joke that I want to be a Latin American intellectual—a loose
rubric for the remarkable contributions of Ariel Dorfman, Eduardo Galeano,
Elena Poniatowska, Gabriel García Márquez, Subcomandante Marcos, and many more
writers from south of the border—because these writers offer great
examples of the union of the active and contemplative lives, the union of art
and politics. They do not believe, as so many English-speaking writers do, that
there could be, let alone should be, an art that is not political. Apolitical
art and artless politics are the fruit of a divide-and-conquer strategy that
weakens both; art and politics ignite each other and need each other. The idea
that political art must degenerate into propaganda or unsubtle screed is also
misguided. There is enormous beauty in the way Galeano and Marcos, for example,
write about politics, a poetics of policy and possibility, of seeing the
unexpected and teasing out the meaning. And there is hope. As Galeano said on
the radio recently, “We are all obliged to live life as a duty, but
secretly willing to live it as a feast.” And sometimes the feast is not
on luxuries and private pleasure, but on braveries and public hopes.
Another dichotomy that we can throw out immediately is the false opposition
between the naïve and the cynical. English-speaking writers too often believe
that you are one or the other. But cynicism is itself naïve. I often hear
people make cynical statements in defiance of actual history—you
can’t change anything, they control everything, we’re powerless, it
never works—as if there had been no civil rights movement and no feminist
movement; as though to be gay or lesbian in 1960, when it was considered both a
crime and a mental disease, were the same as today; as though unarmed citizens
had not overthrown dozens of governments in recent decades. Yet cynicism,
defeatism, and despair are often considered to be signs of worldliness.
At a conference where I’d stood up to celebrate the Zapatistas as an
example of revolution in our time, a powerful man from an environmental
foundation later hissed at me angrily, in private, “The Zapatistas
lost.” He was so attached to their failure, as so many U.S. progressives
are attached to failure and defeat, to the excuse for doing less, hoping less,
dreaming less. If not much is possible, not much is demanded of us. He meant
that they had not succeeded in what he imagined to be their goal, abolishing
the Mexican government in Chiapas or in Mexico altogether. But they have
survived, and that is one victory. They have created autonomous areas in
Chiapas, another. And their greatest victory has been a victory of art, of
story, of the revolutionary vita contemplativa: they have inspired people
around the world to rethink power, participation, revolution, and the possible
in the most beautiful and unexpected ways. When the Zapatistas rose up on the
day that NAFTA went into effect, most people around the world knew little and
cared less about neoliberalism, corporate globalization, and the economic
forces that shape our lives; that has all changed, in part because of them.
Despair is a luxury. If I despair I can drive a Yukon and watch bad television.
Despair makes no demand upon us; hope demands everything. For people around the
world, in places like Burma and Chiapas, giving up means accepting hideous
conditions of life, or death. Despair is cheap for us, expensive for them. What
does it mean to be radical, to tell radical stories in our time, to win the
battle of the story? The North American tradition seems to focus its activity
on the exposé, the telling of the grim underside of what we know: the food is
poison, the system is corrupt, the leaders are lying, the war is failing. There
is a place for this, but you cannot base a revolution on the bad things the
status quo forgot to mention. You need to tell the stories they are not
telling, to learn to see where they are blind, to look at how the great changes
of the world come from the shadows and the margins, not center stage, to see
where we’re winning and that we can win something that matters, if not
everything all the time.
Thus the Latin American intellectuals: having survived coups, gone into exile,
faced off dictatorships, seen their countries taken over by generals and
neoliberals, seen destitution and death squads, they understand that cynicism
is naïve and hope is radical. The mainstream story about the Burmese
insurrection last fall was that the monks rose up spontaneously and naïvely,
met with an unexpected crackdown, and were quickly defeated. It was a story
with no imagination for how history unfolds, told even while competing stories
about fissures and defections in the Burmese army emerged, small acts of
resistance and great determination continued among the Burmese citizenry, and
activists around the world organized in solidarity with the ongoing uprising.
As citizens engaged in the daily task of remaking the world, we get to choose
our stories—the stories that divide and conquer or those that tie things
together with possibility.
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