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5.03.2005

 

"This Moment the World Continues"

Is the apocalyptic mindset somehow a “white thing”? Is that why anti-nuclear demonstrations usually look so pale? Could it be that the “most oppressed” have more urgent things to worry them, that concern for the fate of the Earth is a bourgeois luxury? And could it be, furthermore, that there’s something secretly flattering about seeing oneself, one’s nation, one’s race, one’s civilization as uniquely responsible for whether Earth lives or dies? The universalism that easily imagines the whole--the planet as seen from outer space--is in some sense the result of an imperial projection, given that this distant photographic view is the byproduct of a Space Race engendered by competition for political control. We see the logical extension of this imperial worldview in hypocritical U.S. indignation over the prospect of various Third World countries acquiring nuclear weapons—though of course the lone superpower would never dream of giving up its own WMD.

The thought that ostensibly universal fears for the planet may actually represent nothing more than a very specific concern for a kind of imaginary extension of the white self and its assumed place in the world has bothered me at least since the earliest years of the Reagan administration. In those days, I was learning crucial lessons about race from feminists and lesbian-feminists of color, among them the editors of the indispensable collections This Bridge Called My Back and Homegirls: A Black Feminist Anthology. At the same time, I was deeply involved in the overwhelmingly white feminist anti-militarist movement that, at the time of the women’s encampment at Greenham Common in England, took shape in this country around a protest called the Women’s Pentagon Action. In those days (and since), many white activists have been all too ready to judge the failure of large numbers of people of color to show up for white-organized anti-nuclear and anti-war events as indicative of apathy or short-sightedness.

Those who adopt this condescending attitude have, however, conveniently forgotten the fact that the assault on the world did not begin with the sort of threats that have the potential to jolt even “mainstream” Americans out of their consumerist cocoon. There’s an argument to be made here analogous to the one set forth by Aimée Césaire in his Discourse on Colonialism, which recognizes the atrocities committed by European powers in Africa as part of a seamless whole that also takes in the Holocaust. Maybe the death of the world didn’t start with the superpowers’ suicidal nuclear enterprise, but with an assault on nature and indigenous populations that dates back at least to 1492.

Leslie Marmon Silko’s classic novel Ceremony explores this connection with an eloquence unmatched by any other fictional work I know. Its hero is Tayo, a young American Indian World War II veteran who returns home to Laguna Pueblo with a shattered mind. The army psychiatrists understand this as combat fatigue, but Tayo’s problems hint at more systemic wounds, wounds inevitable in the life of a colonized people. While I’m stunned by many dimensions of Silko’s accomplishment, a couple of things stand out when I read the text as a model of how fiction might confront the “futureless” condition I wrote of in my last post.

First off, Ceremony locates concern for “the world” in very particular, local facts of environment and culture. “The planet” is not represented by a view from outer space, but by the details of how spring water trickles out of standstone cliffs, how cottonwood blossoms smell, how the people of Laguna regard as their companions the intimately known land formations that surround their homes. The poet James Wright, whose correspondence with Silko is published in The Delicacy and Strength of Lace, once wrote to her that he felt as if the land were speaking the story. This identification with the land, which Tayo experiences through the memory of traditional stories told to him in childhood, is challenged by the values of the dominant society, with its competing stories of material abundance, mechanistic causation, and white cultural superiority.

Making use of her firm grounding in Laguna Pueblo and Navajo oral tradition, Silko evokes “the fate of the Earth” without resorting to the usual (implicitly Christian and Eurocentric) templates. She shows the battle for the whole through the struggle for survival of an indigenous community, a struggle that depends heavily on remembering stories about the identity between people and land. That struggle, she suggests, must call on local knowledge, homemade rituals, specific and painstaking understandings of how an intricate world is structured: “It took only one person to tear away the delicate strands of the web, spilling the rays of the sun into the sand, and the fragile world would be injured” (Ceremony, Penguin Books, p. 38).

Silko makes another subversive move when she de-centers the destructive power of Euro-American culture via the inclusion of a story—one of many set off from the central narrative of Tayo’s attempted healing—that actually posits a non-Caucasian evildoer as the originator of the “witchery” that now threatens everyone. In this narrative, which mimics the form of a traditional oral narrative (although Silko has specified that it is her own invention, unlike many of the stories that frame Tayo’s experiences), the winner of a witches’ competition in evil prevails by telling a simple but terrible tale. It is a “destruction story” (a parody of creation stories), and it sets in motion the events of the Conquest and all the ensuing mayhem:

Caves across the ocean
in caves of dark hills
white skin people
like the belly of a fish
covered with hair.

Then they grow away from the earth
then they grow away from the sun
then they grow away from the plants and animals.
They see no life
When they look
they see only objects.
The world is a dead thing for them
the trees and rivers are not alive
the mountains and stones are not alive.
The deer and bear are objects
They see no life.

(Ceremony, p. 135)

Tayo is cheered by the news that white people are an invention of indigenous “witchery,” but, in a book intensely concerned with the ravages of this mechanistic, death-oriented worldview, Silko does not rest with pinning the blame solely on Euro-Americans. If the witchery story takes white people down a peg, it also implicates people of color. Responsibility is the price of agency; we are all potential makers and unmakers of the world.

When Silko gets around to addressing nuclear weapons directly, it’s once again in a local context, for Laguna Pueblo has the misfortune to be located not far from the Trinity Site, where the first atomic bomb was tested. The climax of Tayo’s quest takes place near an abandoned uranium mine, where he realizes that “he had arrived at the point of convergence where the fate of all living things, and even the earth, had been laid….From that time on, human beings were one clan again, united by the fate the destroyers planned for all of them, for all living things….” (Ceremony, p. 246). The traditional knowledge passed on by the old stories—the ones that express the world’s fragility—must be transformed into new healing ceremonies to match the new circumstances.

Keeping the world alive, Silko’s novel tells us, is not the work of a lone superhero, but a never-ending collective project. The novel concludes with a chant celebrating the temporary defeat of the powerful forces that tear at the fragile web: “Whirling darkness has come back on itself…It is dead for now” (Ceremony, p. 261).

Maxine Hong Kingston once suggested to an interviewer that peacemaking requires new narrative forms, alternatives to our culture’s fascination with escalating conflict and climactic explosions. She argued that we need to let go of our ingrained belief that peace is boring. It’s a provocative suggestion, the implications of which Kingston herself has begun to explore in a daringly structured cross-genre work, The Fifth Book of Peace. Along similar lines, I would like to suggest that we need alternatives to the world-ending story, the Armageddon tale, that has most often been imagined as the appropriate novelistic response to the planetary fix we’re in (if and when writers bother to acknowledge said fix at all). Ceremony offers a highly inspiring example of what such alternatives might look like. It denies us the gratification of the spectacle of doom, instead directing our attention to small ritual gestures that take on world-sustaining significance. For Tayo, healing means embracing the fragile enterprise of helping the world continue “for now,” despite the dreadful lure of witchery’s world-ending story.

Note: The title of this post is taken from a poem by Linda Hogan, “Disappearances,” from a chapbook entitled Daughters, I Love You, published in 1981 by Loretto Heights College.

Running Tab

5/1/05: According to a New York Times editorial page column by Brent Staples, the original Japanese film “Gojira” (“Godzilla” to English speakers) included an explicitly anti-nuclear message that was cut out when the film was released in the U.S. Director Ishiro Honda later said, “Believe it or not, we naively hoped that the end of Godzilla was going to coincide with the end of nuclear testing.”

5/1/05: Winston and I march in the anti-Iraq war, anti-nuclear weapons demonstration called to coincide with the start of the U.N. conference on the future of the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty. We walk across 42nd Street and up Sixth Avenue behind a large contingent of middle-aged Japanese people carrying a street-wide banner, their clothes pinned with messages about the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. I’m buoyed by their presence, which renders this demo blessedly devoid of the “usual suspects” atmosphere of recent demonstrations. I’m moved by the persistence of people who will not be diverted from harping on a single awful moment in history that most of the world seems happy to let go of.

One of the women behind the banner gives us small gifts: a photocopy of a simple drawing made by a survivor (a half-naked mother holds out the rigid body of her dead child); a button inscribed with Article 9 of the Japanese Constitution. What a great idea, this text on a button, more radical than the Communist Manifesto: Aspiring Sincerely to an international Peace based on justice and order, the japanese people forever renounce war as a sovereign right of the nation and the threat or use of force as means of settling international disputes. In order to accomplish the aim of the preceding paragraph, land, sea, and air forces, as well as other war potential, will never be maintained. The right of belligerency of the state will not be recognized.


Comments:
I think Ceremony is a great book too, though I am attracted to different elements of it. The writing about love and how that is told in/through nature is something I haven't found elsewhere. I always thought the ending was a little disingenuous though, however inevitable it must be given the framework of the story--and in some respects, any work of fiction. "Whirling darkness...it is dead for now." To/for whom? If Ceremony is a spell, it wants to cross the line and change the mind of the reader as much as the writer--and I would say Ceremony is as much a work of psychic integration for Silko as it is a prayer for the world. But will Ceremony work its magic on Cheney? or the current president of Sudan? or Sharira courts in Nigeria? It's hard. Keeping the world alive is a never ending collective project. The sharira courts think they are keeping the world alive by stoning pregnant women after they have been raped.

I think those small ritual gestures that take on world-sustaining significance may be all we have, if we are looking for alternatives to the usual cycles of change. Collectives of people form around those gestures they have sympathy with, and then change occurs. Part of the problem we face today is noticing the value of these small gestures. The purpose of human lives seems to be widely accepted as material (profit) driven. Even in tribal cultures it is like this more often than not. The degrees are different and perhaps not so extreme, but they exist nonetheless. Even to justify this materialism under terms of "safety" (I need money to feel safe from illness, accident, and to protect my family's future) is wrong headed, but who could argue against wanting to feel safe when you live in a place like America? It's a cycle of self consumption; the title of your new book is aptly named. I don't think it has to be apocalyptic though. The good thing about a world order of communication and networking (as we have today) is that the small gestures that sustain the world are not so far away or hard to appreciate as they once were. Today Tony Blair tried to evade protesters at his speeches by keeping the venues secretive and arriving by helicopter, but the protesters were never far away and they always caught up with him. He didn't look happy about it either!
--Ian
 
You are presuming, in your opening
paragraph of this post, I take it, that white people always have more money than non-white people. It might work statistically but like anything spread over a large grouping, it leaves so very many exceptions. Does it leave enough
exceptions to make it a generalization not worth making?

Thinking about the end of the world - hasn't the end of the world been expected for an awfully long time? When speaking of an imaginative response to this idea, does it matter that the end of the world has only "really" been a likely outcome for sixty years? People used to - many people still do - believe in a divinely wrought ending. What is the effective difference, imaginatively, between
a materialistic end of the world
and a fantastic end of the world?

Having come from "the eighties"
myself, I have never understood
how anybody during that time period
could have felt that the nuclear
end was near during the Reagan days. Anybody who didn't realize
that the Cold War was a gentleman's agreement to fight all battles on some poor body else's turf (Africa, Asia, South America) just wasn't paying attention. The most popular nuclear war fantasy of the 80's, War Games, was destruction predicated on mistake rather than intention.

I don't live my life or raise my children as though the world is ending any time soon. If I'm wrong, I'm wrong. When I write something creative it is probably more likely that my work will expire through irrelevance to the future than the lack of one.

Vic Perry
 
I regret I have but one world to save from destruction...

I find myself in advance mourning for my children and my husband. I look at them and try to memorize where a freckle is or what their eyebrows do when they are happy.

Once my daughter came home from my mom's upset about the news that her dog wouldn't be in heaven with her. Heaven, I told her, is what will make you happiest. Why wouldn't your dog be there if that's what would make you happiest?

My mother, a teletype of religious bad news, enjoys predicting the end of the world often, most recently with the death of the Pope and most predictatbly every Good Friday, particularly if it is stormy out, which it seems it was every Good Friday of my childhood.

It is the luxury of every generation to imagine themselves poised on the lip of oblivion. When I die, my world ends. When my husband dies, or my kids die, or Vic Perry dies, a lot of my world will end. This is all I can bear.
 
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