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MISC. WORLD for 7/2/99
Recession Nostalgia

PRE-FOURTH-O-JULY SPECIAL: Found a used paperback at a sidewalk sale, Is America Used Up? (Judith Mara Gutman, Bantam Books, 1973).

Using the photo-illustrated essay format of Marshall McLuhan's paperback screeds, Gutman (whose works are all out of print, though she continues to travel and lecture about the history of photography) compared the old spirit of American can-do expansionism (as expressed in old photos of industry, homesteading, and family life) with the national angst she saw in the book's present-day era of recession, double-digit inflation, oil shortages, Watergate, and the last days of the Vietnam debacle.

"We move more hesitantly," Gutman wrote, "try to run risk out of our lives, and become more weary about reaching far-off ends. We've lost the surety and conviction that we formerly gained from living on an edge that we could never predictably know was going to provide a firm footing. We've lost the belief in what we could create, not in what we did create, but the belief in our ability to establish a new order of life should we want to."

Today, of course, we're supposed to again be living in boom times. Some commentators have proclaimed end-O-century American corporate capitalism as the final for-all-time social configuration for the whole world. Everybody's supposed to be hot-for-success, defined in strictly material terms. Few folk, it seems, want to talk about the underclass, about urban ghettos or abandoned factory towns, about victims.

(Seattle Times columnist Nicole Brodeur partly attributed the partly closing of the volunteer agency Seattle Rape Relief to a social zeitgeist that doesn't want to be bothered with such troublesome facts of human existence as domestic violence and its survivors.)

At least back in the supposed bad-old-days of the '70s, some folks were a little more willing to consider that all might not be completely hunky-dory in our land.

Gutman saw an America that suffered from nothing less than a lack of spirit.

In our day, America might be suffering from a misdirected spirit.

I'm not the only commentator to question why America's "reviving" cities can support fancy-ass stadia and convention centers and subsidized luxury-shopping palaces, but not (fill in your favorite cause here).

The simple answer is that business gets most anything it wants from government these days. What doesn't help business, or the managerial caste, gets ignored. If the NRA and Christian Coalition are losing some of their past political clout, it's just because business-centric politicians feel they no longer need to suck up to those groups' voting blocs. If you believe the op-ed pundits, next year's Presidential race will be a snoozer between two southern scions of boardroom deal-making, Albert Gore fils and George Bush fils.

What we need now is a third or fourth way--something beyond boomer-leftist victimhood, middle-of-the-road corporatism, and religious-right authoritarianism. Something that goes beyond protesting and analyzing, that empowers more folks (including folks outside the professional classes) to take charge of their own destiny. That's what Gutman believed had once made America great, but which became lost even as "diverse" expressions and art forms emerged:

"Though our dominant culture carries more diverse forms of expression than it ever before managed, we don't think of it as supporting our desire for expression. It's as if it can't. No matter how much we hoped the objects and desires that have widened our cultural patterns would swell our expression, they haven't."

(What do you think this country could, or ought to, do? State your case at our ever-belligerent Misc. Talk discussion boards. More on this topic a little later on.)

MONDAY: The end of Mark Sidran's reign of terror? One can only hope...

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