Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Szopka Part 3: The Paxton Boys




The Conestoga massacre perpetrated by the Paxton Boys 












Calendar Gearwheels


The wolf also shall dwell with the lamb,
The leopard shall lie down with the young goat,
The calf and the young lion and the fatling together;
And a little child shall lead them.

The cow and the bear shall graze;
Their young ones shall lie down together;
And the lion shall eat straw like the ox.

The nursing child shall play by the cobra’s hole,
And the weaned child shall put his hand in the viper’s den.

Isaiah 11:6-8 (NKJV)
                                                               

Edward Hicks painted dozens of different versions of The Peaceable Kingdom. Hick’s has trapped the moment. Not only once, but in each painting he violates the fatalism of the clock. A profundity I can’t let go of. Death can be postponed, but the arrangement of past, present and future on time’s progressive slide-rule, the immutable law governs everything and offers no loopholes or compromise. But as Hicks reminds us, we have ways of subverting even this. Art, narrative in particular, offers a glimmer of hope. 
Edward Muybridge
A model trapped in time, never advancing or receding. A snapshot, like Muybridge’s racehorse, four hooves off the ground. Suspension. Each rendition starts and stops with an eternal moment, the treaty signing. Neither a history, nor a foreseeable future. Such an understanding of time underscores the child-like, or childish dysfunction of the work. Childhood, as Gaston Bachelard described, “liberated from the gearwheels of the calendar.”
   One imagines Hicks in his studio, painting a fleur-de-lis on a rocking chairs by the candle light. Boredom keeps him company. But there’s also guilt. Ornamental painting is, though not outwardly prohibited, frowned on by the tenants of “simple” Quaker living. But finances are problematic. A debt that will follow him for the rest of his life forces him to paint. Or so he tells his friends. He confesses guilt over attending to such a “superfluous” profession. To live the quiet Quaker life, free from distracting things (like painting) was to make space for this “inner light.” He quits painting and tries farming and fails, eventually returning to art. Over time, his patient friends accept, or tolerate, his work. He advertises in local papers, receives clients, hangs sign-boards and hires apprentices. Perhaps there’s a hint of rebellion when he picks up a shingle and draws an outline of an ox and then a lion. Over years he paints his Kingdoms in secret, trying again and again to “get it right” or to refresh a vision that comforts him. As an action, revisiting this narrative moment, Hick’s demonstrates some agency himself.
Time is conditional in art. Hick’s deference to his “inner light” won’t allow him to shake reason in favor of imagination, history in favor of memory. In the attack and completion of multiple Kingdoms, Hicks lived the memory of the history. The paintings aren’t to be confused with events real (as in historical), or anticipated (as in prophesied). Penn’s treaty and Isaiah’s prophecy are re-lived by the act of painting rather than the existence of the paintings themselves. The Kingdoms are indexes, foot prints, of the artist as inhabiting an idea. In this act of playfulness, Hicks “speaks” events to life.  
Distinctions between the spoken and the written, the act of listening in respect to the act of reading, are profound. As Walter Ong explains in his seminal, Orality and Literacy, “Sound exists only when it going out of existence. It is not simply perishable but essentially evanescent, and it is sensed as evanescent. When I pronounce the word ‘permanence’, by the time I get to the ‘-nence’, the ‘perma-’ is gone, and has to be gone.” (Ong 32)

Walter Ong
The brush stroke as breath, as a word spoken. And so Hicks made manifest a kingdom peaceable; not by finishing a painting and showing it off, but by the act. Process over product. The artist Hicks, becomes Sendak’s Max (Where The Wild Things Are), imaging and inhabiting his inner world. The final painting, doesn’t illustrate faith, but replies as an index, a footprint, of the artist at “play.”

Mnemonic Device

Direct written documentation of Penn’s treaty with the Lenni Lanape at Shackamaxon hasn’t survived, though the tribe recalled and retold the event for decades using techniques that hadn't changed in thousands of years: physical, tactile gestures corroborating memory. Hick's repetitions with his brush echo such gestures.
The oral traditions of the original inhabitants of the continent were complex and varied. For the Lanape and their neighbors these technologies were particularly elegant. These soft technologies of memorization are far more portable than writing and reading, and, unfortunately, are lost in our world of print and screen. In this particular oral culture, recitation was practiced under ceremonial protocols and coached by other members of the tribe (usually clan-mothers) who acted as correctives (ie. bullshit detectors), insuring a level of remarkable constancy over generations. These were not casual or primitive means of keeping record.
A Lenape man dedicated to preservation of the “Treaty of Amity and Friendship” would have relied on a belt of wampum beads. Wampum is neither currency nor text, but, like the knots on prayer shawls worn by Orthodox Jews (or the beaded bracelet, the japa mala that encircle the wrists of Buddhists and Hindus; or the pearls on a Catholic rosary; or the misbaha preferred by the followers of Islam), the beads are pinched to provoke the memory of a prayer, history, or in this case all of the above. In practice, each grain of narrative, each beat or phrase or formula, inhabits a bead caressed.
Like Faulkner’s claim to art (literature), in which he attests to “arresting motion,” in order for it to “move again, for it is life,” the wampum speaker would “breath” life into the event itself, for the breath and the word are coordinate, as is breath and life. “Law” therefore, becomes a living and breathing spirit, while written law an object, a thing, a contractual arrangement and to molder. Like any living thing, the oral agreement requires repeated husbandry. Life must be breathed into the agreement time and time again in order for the treaty to remain “alive.”
We think of breath as transient and paper and ink as fixed. But the paradox here is that written laws, which seem so intractable, are easily ignored or forgotten. And this forgetfulness anticipates one of the darkest periods of Pennsylvania’s history. Perma-nence here, was the idea, not the law as written
In the nineteenth century, the nadir of Penn’s Holy Experiment, a militia calling themselves The Paxton Boys would massacre the last remaining peaceful coalitions between the Indians and white settlers, a belt of wampum, strewn among the ashes, would surface as a sad reminder of all that was lost.

The New Orthodoxy and The Schism

Quaker ministers, Hicks in particular, favored allegory as a rhetorical strategy in their sermons. Yet the beasts inhabiting his Kingdom—lion, wolf, ox, and lamb—go beyond simply illustrating Isaiah’s prophecy.
   Allegory, any figurative comparison between un-like things, requires intellect and imagination rather than submission to literal interpretations. For Friends the Bible was a product of man’s imagination, not God. The Gospels were a source of inspiration, not law. Arriving at a such modern credo was symptomatic of The Enlightenment. Quakers were a product of the Enlightenment. The Quaker principle of “inner light,” was at the seat of Reason itself. The inner light as the universal germ of the divine: the ability to reason the gift of that divinity. Reason as virtue.

A painful schism among his fellows would disappoint Hicks, a revolution that would become the subject of later iterations of his Kingdom. His disillusion was a product of a new generation of Quakers, the up and comers in England, failing to adhere to the virtues of “inner light,” and the trust in Reason that so characterized his fellow believers. To Hick’s, the heresy of deluding the centrality of the “inner light” and the subsequent abandoning of Reason allowed for one’s animal nature to take over. 
The Four Humors
Descriptions of human behavior in that century still relied on pseudoscience. That relative balances of four bodily fluids (humors) produced distinct variations in temperament had yet to be challenged by hard science. In Hick’s Kingdom, each animal represents a particular temperament and its connection to one of the four humors. Note that each humor manifests itself in a virtue and its negative counterpoint.

 the wolf  > black bile/melancholic = thoughtful yet clever, deceitful
 the leopard > blood/sanguine = cheerful yet savage, wanton, cruel
 the bear > phlegm/phlegmatic = rational yet apathetic, calculating, voracious
 the lion > yellow bile/choleric = brave yet lustful, dominating, merciless

The schism began, Hicks believed, when the Orthodox lost their faith in “the inner light,” that flame of Reason over nature, the divine over the alchemical, thus falling prey to lust, greed, and ambition. The Later Kingdoms chronicle events. A historical record of the Quaker faith in the 19th century.

Understand that the idea of an “inner light” was considered a radical heresy for which European Quakers had been persecuted. William Penn himself spent time in jail for his beliefs. Freedom of religion was a novel idea, a meme adrift in salons. Quakers of Hick's generation were more than products of the Enlightenment, they were radicals. American Quakers read Voltaire and Thomas Paine. Reason and the ability of the intellect to discern God and worship him were required. But their practiced “quietism,” the philosophy of serenity through passivity, also kept them quiet. To live the quiet Quaker life, free from distracting things (like painting) was to make space for this “inner light.”
   English Quakers, evolving in a more fractious spiritual climate than their American counterparts, began to chafe under these ironically coined “primitive” beliefs in Reason and the Inner Light. Amidst the nineteenth century’s evangelical awakening, younger Quakers felt pressured to compete. To insure survival, the horizontal, egalitarian structure of the sect gave way to a deterministic, centralized authority. Adherence to scriptural dogma neutralized dissent. The idea of the “inner light,” so endemic to Quaker theology, diminished in value along with other trapping including a mistrust of worldliness and vanity. Yet they proved excellent in business, due in part to the rigor of their work ethic. English Quakers, and many of their cosmopolitan compatriots in Philadelphia, went about like dandies in expensive coats and buckled shoes. They shamelessly entered into commercial enterprises, banking and money-lending, professions frowned on by the Primitives. And they were successful (think Cadbury Chocolate and Lloyd’s of London). This new Orthodoxy was producing an entirely different animal.
   While tensions always existed between rural and cosmopolitan Friends, the arrival of this “new orthodoxy” instigated the schism. Characterization of the schism is difficult. The splinter, at first, was diametric between the new “Orthodox” and the old “Primitives.”     
   The “Orthodox” strove to incorporate the members of the Society under fundamentalist and authoritarian dogma. Ironically, it was these Orthodox Quakers that would ignite the eventual abolition of slavery on a global scale, an end to what was previously understood, throughout human history, as an intrinsic organ of civilization without which it would cease to exist. The “Primitives,” on the other hand, while they agreed that slavery was a gross injustice, were appalled by these broad sweeps of moral authority, and asserted the “inner light” as the only truly “Quaker” mechanism for achieving justice on this earth and resisted involvement in the noisy, worldly public sphere, even when such mechanisms support justice. And it must be noted that, while Quakers by Hicks’ time reviled slavery, their predecessors (even the founders of the sect) owned and traded African slaves.
     This perforation, while never violent, was so demoralizing that Hick’s couldn’t help expressing his disappointment through his art. His perceived role as the feud unfolded can be read in the faces of his beast. One imagines him laughing, for example, when he painted the miserable countenance on his poor lion. He’d made room for his anger on his easel.

Our painter Edward Hick’s, emphatic about the virtues of Primitive Quaker values, was a staunch follower of Elias Hicks, his cousin, whose followers became known as “Hicksites.” Though the schism remained bloodless, Elias found himself excised from Friend’s meetings, his followers ostracized.

Gladtiding

In later Kingdoms a new theme overshadows Penn’s Treaty Vignette: a gathering of primitive Quakers. A banner proclaims: “Mind the LiGHt Within…IT IS GLADTIDING of Grate JOY…PEACE ON EARTH…GOOD WILL to ALL MEN Every where.” By this time the schism has become history, and though the sect has split, Edward has rekindled hope. The homage includes the recently deceased Elias Hicks, as well as founding fathers George Fox, Richard Barklay, and Edward’s hero, returned for the sake of continuity, William Penn.
     William Penn represented for Hicks the paragon of Quaker quietism, piety and virtue. He didn’t set out to deceive, but his “inner light,” his reason, like the Orthodox generation that would follow, was eclipsed by an animal nature. The “Holy Experiment” ran at cross-purposes with Penn’s obligation to King Charles II. Penn was merely a real estate agent. His true nature, his humor, might have been the cartoonish bear: a chubby, slow moving, coldly calculating appetite. Though Penn deserves some credit for at least imagining tolerance at all (particularly novel at the time), divergent from reality as it was.
After he died, utilitarian materialism would outlive any fairy-tale of oxen and black bear, kid and leopard, poisoning the story that would unfold there after.

Predator and Prey

Pax Zoologica is a fantasy, but who wouldn’t like to imagine an alternative universe in which the Conestoga, the Lane Lanape, and the Seneca live side-by-side with German Anabaptists and Hickite Quakers without threat of violence? The end of the international slave trade began in the late eighteenth century, and, though it would take decades of work to put an end to the peculiar institution, freed slaves as well would be part of Penn’s happy enterprise. Given insurmountable odds against such a peace, is it worth envisioning the hybrid style of civilization that might have evolved if things hadn’t gone to shit?

If I could imagine a fantasy for Pennsylvania: What would such a peace yield?

Even holding to the best of intentions, tragedy, unfortunately, appears illimitable. Syphilis and small pox would have taken their toll no matter how righteous William Penn might have been. Even without violence, jostling between vastly different cultures creates insurmountable deficits. Imagine the growing pains of an ancient culture fully adapted to oral discourse suddenly switching to chirographic technologies, to writing and reading. Every mode of discourse no longer has meaning: standards of truth and falsehood rendered in-concrete. memories and histories lost forever. And that’s just the start.

Tolerance

Even the word “peace” is difficult to translate, particularly when “peace” for the Seneca doesn’t mean cessation of inter-tribal warfare but simply the maintenance of a balance of power. Peace is a state of perpetual nature. For the nineteenth century Quaker “peace” meant the antithesis of violence unless necessity, such as a revolution, required a call to arms. And for the new “Orthodox” Quakers “peace” meant the complete absence of aggression.
    The outlook for my fantasy of Pennsylvania, even with a generous dose of luck, remains grim. But to imagine a peace that encourages the mutual cooperation between vastly different societies into perpetuity, is a worthy vision. Is it worth considering intentions, even when sewn with hypocrisy?
Pennsylvania’s “Great Law” hosted incongruous religious stripes that otherwise lived in the expectation of violent persecution. Along with the Quakers, Anabaptists and Amish, Moravians, Unitarians, Mennonites, Coptic Christians, even Jews braved the Atlantic to get here. Tolerance, a fringe virtue in Europe, delivered them. William Penn himself, jailed for his beliefs, had first hand experience. Following an unheard of model set forth by Rhode Island, Pennsylvania boasted no official religion. It would become, in eighteenth century, one of the most diverse communities in the entire world. The epitome of enlightened tolerance, and a cautionary tale.
     Having come out of Europe’s bloody religious wars, the notion of tolerance seemed like a pipe-dream. Intolerance didn’t undo the Peaceable Kingdom, private property, the idea that land existed to be mastered, cut apart, bought and sold was the misplaced gene that caused the malignancy of intolerance. The distinction determines everything, if you’re a Marxist. Private property is like a corrupted gene from one generation to the next. Though more like a virus with its likelihood to spread. Land as currency is an awkward analogy to make unless you’re a capitalist. To the Lane Lanape and Conestoga the forest was eternal, endless, as was their preeminence. The Indian believed in the permanence of the land and her people, with the colonists as novel irregularities.
     Had Penn’s vision, his idealism, displaced his official mandate, and had it survived past his lifetime Pennsylvania, predicated on coexistence and tolerance, a living and breathing hybrid of folk styles, would be the most advanced society in the world today. Now its lost history serves as only a vague reminder of a genre of democracy that seems further and further out of reach. But this is the convenience of rear-view mirror thinking. A utopia, perhaps?

The End of History

Lotto and Capoferri's marquetry, Bergamo, Italy.
On the rocky hills outside of Bergamo, in the north west of Italy, behind ancient stone walls is a small church. Displayed here are several inlaid wood panels depicting biblical stories, products of a collaboration between Renaissance artist, Lorenzo Lotto, and master craftsman Giovanni Francesco Capoferri. The subtle art of marquetry illustrates David’s victory over Goliath, the trial of Lot, and Judith’s beheading of Holofernes. The characters’ gestures, the ingeniously rendered through the deft pairing of swatches of olive, oak and walnut. As astonishing as the craftsmanship may be, what struck me most was that each frame contained a single landscape in which all events of a particular story were contained simultaneously. Certainly this contamination of a narrative present by its past and future isn’t unique to Lotto’s work, but his particular arrangement, his  elevated liberties elevates the work above crafty novelty. Time acquiesces to the artist. Stories unfold clockwise or not. The end suggests a beginning, etc. This is painting akin to memory, not history. Art, not politics. 

As any undergraduate will tell you, utopia means ou topos, no place, and eu topos, a place where All-Is-Well. An oxymoron of sorts. All is well, as in “all,” that is, “everything.” Taken literally, theoretical dangers begin to mount, probable hazards confirmed by history. As Steven Pinker points out in his seminal, The Better Angels of Our Nature, utopian dogma begins with “pernicious utilitarian calculus.” Thomas Merton calls this state of state-being "the proximate Utopia" a provisional, penultimate state "where the last sins are currently being eliminated and where, tomorrow, there will be no more sins because all the sinners will have been wiped out." If one believes in a forthcoming infinite happiness, a true utopia, the systematic removal of obstacles to this perfected state of being is rational. Of course, these “obstacles” are the would-be critics of this perfect happiness: i.e. people who bleed. But of course their numbers are limited in respect to the future. Finite individuals, even in gross hoards (tens, hundreds, millions?) remain finite, and their elimination, absolute and complete, is validated in the happiness, absolute and complete of the lucky generations inhabiting this infinite state of happiness, infinitely. A utopia must be born out of purges…
     Christianity, even in this century, continues to believe in such a perfected life, the afterlife, and proves the best example of this grim logic: this imperfect world matters not when perfection exists elsewhere. Those who believe go to heaven. The utopian vision imagines holding on, pinching the clock, stopping time as imagined in the pages of their lexicons. Mao attempted to end history by the implementation of continuous beginnings (perpetual destruction), an unquenched revolution. And all this orbited his megalomaniacal narcissism. Some thirty million dead, mostly by neglect.
     The classical Marxist notion of historical inevitability features as a target the end of change itself. Christianity serves the beginning of history (as Christians like to think) and the Marxist revolution as its end. The proletariat will cleanse the world of inequity and paradise will follow. Free will and agency only buttons fitting buttonholes, links in a causal and final chain. The Third Riche was supposed to be around for at least a thousand years. The narcissism of childishness. Idealists of the worst kind make play with time on a grand scheme.
     Perhaps then, Penn’s vision, or any democracy, is not utopian in the strictest sense of the world, for such a society was predicated not on a purified ideal, but on an awkward cohabitation between distinctly different ways of life. This cohabitation takes every day for its own history. Every day one must relive the notion of tolerance, breath life into it word by word.

The inmates of Hick’s zoological allegory stand waxen, static: an ideal to ruminate on, an infinity to ponder. His beasts animate his inner turmoil, personal as it was, but freeze themselves in symbiotic harmony. The arrangement of Penn and his treaty’s cosigners stop in their tracks. This is the best it will ever be. Perhaps. A singular moment of tranquility. A beautiful notion, but imperfect.Verbs acquire the taint of time.
     The clock stops. Not a megalomaniac messing with the gear works, just an artist, an obsessive in his workshop. This is passive agency, this peculiar Kingdom. A suggestion of how we could be. The verbs that describe the behavior of the actors may be passive. The grass is being eaten by the lion, the treaty is being exchanged, etc.

The image of these beasts coexisting becomes a fetish, the fetish becomes is reclaimed as parody, the end result may be satire. What happens after the ox and lion run out of straw, or when the child that leads them looks away? While Hick’s fantasy achieves a state of perfection, Pennsylvania’s Peaceable Kingdom fell short of Utopian absolutism. Its flaws were in its DNA. When Penn died his sons inherited the mandate, and, perhaps chaffing against their father’s piety, detoured the colony away from peace, particularly in respect to the “heathen” natives.

The Paxton Boys

Outliving its moment as a flagship of tolerance and peace, Pennsylvania succumbed to capitalism’s predatory nature and thimblerigged one of the most outrageous shell games of all time. The American art of larceny went pro along the banks of the Susquehanna River in the nineteenth century. The most infamous, the so-called “Walking Purchase,” in which the Penn family defrauded the Lane Lenape (Delaware) out of a million acres, cut so deep that, to this day, the unhealed wound continues to sting Diaspora. As recently as 2004, the Delaware Nation sued for justice, and even though the US Supreme Court acknowledges The Walking Purchase as fraudulent, it still dismissed the case.
  Shackamaxon Wampum (Penn Treaty Museum, Pennsylvania)
Like present day Israel, squatters fueled by a mythic sense of entitlement pushed westward, laying claim to prohibited territories and, unsurprisingly, provoking violence from inhabitants brushed aside.
     Paramilitary bands of Scotch-Irish settlers marshaled tit for tat raids of revenge. One of these militia, The Paxton Boys, marched on the city of brotherly love, lobbying for assistance. But Philadelphia’s pacifist, Quaker lawmakers, scoffed at such requests. At least officially: It was mighty convenient to leave the dirty work of conquest to these Ulster Presbyterians.
     Issues of class complicate the narrative. The Quakers running the show from Philadelphia were the same breed that so irked Edward Hicks and his cousin Elias, while the settlers, as cantankerous and violent as they were, lived hand-to-mouth. The Scotch-Irish had had it up to here with landed, ruling classes and would stop at nothing to cast off the yoke of servitude of serfdom endured for millennia. Liberation for these immigrants started and stopped with property. Land was their divine entitlement. The Indians were heathens. Do the math. 
     The tipping point occurred in 1763, after the peace settlement between the French and British, when the Paxton Boys, a militia made up of these Scotch-Irish, massacred a settlement that included a half dozen Conestoga Indians, including men women, and children, who’d been living peaceful with Moravian residents for over a decade. The event would prove the tipping point in Pennsylvania’s relationship with Native Americans. The long downward slope from Shackamaxon to finally coming to its flat-line at a place called Conestoga. The Paxton Boys, blood soaked murderers, marched on Philadelphia a month later to galvanize state officials, including Benjamin Franklin, into supporting their campaign, and were met, while not with immediate support, without punitive disaffection for their lawlessness. In other words, the overt breaking of treaties and bloodletting was no longer criminal.
     A further irony is that, according to historian James H. Merrell, the site of the massacre was itself a historic treaty ground, and, from under the smoldering ruins of the house in which the murders took place, wampum belts and paper treaties were recovered. One document, signed by the hand of William Penn, pledged:

“…that they (the colonists, and the Conestoga) shall forever hereafter be as one Head & One Heart, & live in true Friendship & Amity as one People.” Penn’s own note to self and surviving offspring stated, “for himself, his heirs and Successors, yt he and they will at all times shew themselves true Friends & Brothers to all & Every one of ye Said Indians.” (Merrel 288)

Now the Indian population in Pennsylvania, while present, is officially invisible. Those who remain have little political clout. During the Kennedy administration Pennsylvania Indians were forced off tribal land so engineers could minimize the risk of flooding by the upper Allegheny river. The resulting Kinzua dam condemned forest belonging, by law, to the Seneca, displacing 600 people whose claim went back as far to a treaty with George Washington. The tense shifts to past participle: were living, were breathing.

Evanescent

Ignoring all this inglorious history, Edward Hick’s vision, his William Penn and Tamanend, and his wild-things all frozen in amber, might be read disdainfully as romantic. A willful impediment to that narrative quality called profluence, the river’s condition of constant forward movement. A gesture of sad longing for a past that really never was. A fantasy. Even if there was a historical moment in which enlightened tolerance produced any modicum of peace, that moment was like a word spoken, impermanent. Or as Walter Ong might insist, evanescent.
 
As Edward’s brush settled on a liberated landscape, he holds his breath. In that instant he succeeds in perfection. His work is play, perhaps, but serious play. Serious play in which he controls time, a magic that remains, and will always remain, solely in the hand of the artist and the poet. Breath expired, the moment is gone again, only to be re-imagined on another plank. And as we spectators stare back at the lion and the lamb, excusing their tentative uncertainty, we too relish the possibility of peace.



Saturday, April 6, 2013

Szopka Part 2: A Kingdom Peaceable








Edward Hicks

In the neighborhood of my childhood, in a friend’s house, over a brick mantel hangs a print of Edward Hick’s Peaceable Kingdom. At the edge of a forest colonists and Indians huddle under an elm tree, while in the foreground an odd assortment of wild forest beasts, conducted by a pudgy human infant, stare back at the viewer. A varnish paralyzes the actors and the entire mise-en-scene, like flies in amber. 

Similar in effect to Paul Gauguin’s romantic vision of Polynesia, or Henri Rousseau’s work, (both of which came later), Hick’s pallet and child-like naïveté serve nostalgia for a history to which the spectator may have no connection. The Kingdoms stink of late summer melancholy. The velveteen meadow invites caress. We’ve returned to the garden before The Fall, discovered Arcadia.

For those of us born in the 20th century, who feasted on the illustrations of Maurice Sendak’s Where The Wild Things Are, Hick’s work strikes oddly familiar, like finding your profile in a moldy daguerreotype. Sendak’s book, however, entertains domination of the id by ego. Max, deep in the wilderness of imagination, nearly succumbs to its intoxication. He saves himself when he commands his inner demons to “Be Still!” In this exclamation, the most courageous of utterances, is the distillate of the civilizing process. 

Hick’s vocabulary functions in a similar way to Sendak's, but with a different idea of the civilizing process. Hick's child, though seemingly powerless and lacking identity, coerces a lion into playing nice with bovine prey. Rebellion in Hick’s world is the antithesis of harmony, the Quaker ideal of spiritual “quietism.” After Sendak’s Max makes mischief he is condemned to his room without supper, called a “wild thing” by his mother, a reproach he  shamelessly counters with: “I’ll eat you up!” The gravity of the situation, fertile soil for true horror, is softened by Sendak’s hand. 

Hick’s child is a genderless doll, porcelain and pink cheeked. A wingless cherub dropped from heaven. Innocence underscored by innocence itself, almost with irony, but not. Every brush is in earnest. We walk away with, rather than a smirk, an aftertaste of shame at having doubted intentions.




A Shock of Paradox

The white man, William Penn, sports a tri-corn hat and shakes hands with Tamanend, chief of the Turtle Clan of the Lenni Lanape. These Lanape (Delaware) Indians, draped in blankets, crowned with feathers, hold a smoking calumet to seal the agreement. The portrayal is humane, hopeful: two distinct cultures willfully agreeing to tolerate each other. The time is the beginning of the eighteenth century at Shackamaxon in Eastern Pennsylvania. 

There’s skepticism over Hick’s portrayal. Some doubt that the event ever happened at all given the lack of official documentation. Even the historic wampum belt that “contained” the treaty has been lost. Whose account do we believe? Native oral tradition that confirms “The Great Treaty” might as well be trusted. The absence of direct written testimony says nothing given the audacity of settlers whose duplicity relied on skillfully crafted documents in the first place. Most of the written documentation available attests to nothing more than centuries of larceny.

Artist Benjamin West imagined this diplomatic benchmark, this “treaty vignette,” years before Hicks, and Hicks borrowed freely from West’s treatment. By the time Hicks painted his first Peaceable Kingdom, a hundred years had passed since William Penn’s “Great Law” of tolerant inclusion, and sixty years since that final blood-letting, the end of the French-Indian War that cemented British rule. Worse, the decades between Penn’s Experiment and the war could hardly be called peaceable. Countless failures of diplomacy, treaty breaking, revenge, raids, rapes, and massacres, mostly instigated by colonists, help characterize that century in not such a favorable light. Hicks neglected all this in-between history. His work memorializes a single instance of light in an otherwise grim, but not surprising, story.

In most of the multiple variations of The Peaceable Kingdom, Hick’s “treaty vignette” is only a part of the landscape. Upstaging this wax museum moment is our angelic child and the top to bottom food-chain. There's often a bear and leopard, a goat and lamb in the mix. The animals are cuddly and button eyed, the humans stiff and poised. All are toy-like. Between Kingdom variations, people and animals come and go in number and variety, but all feature the child and the iconic ox and lion. Were it not for the toddler, what bloodshed might follow? The paired beasts, contrite but game, remind me of embarrassed teens splitting a malted. As if in explanation, Hicks adds Isaiah’s prophecy:

And a little child shall lead them…
And the lion shall eat straw like the ox.

Beautiful Obsessive

Hicks re-imaged his Peaceable Kingdom over sixty times across three decades (1816-1849). His day job involved detailing coaches and furniture, adorning hope chests with flowers and gold leaf. His obsession, in part, reveals a love of painting not held in esteem among his peers. Though not forbidden, making art was considered “superfluous” by Quakers. Hicks was a devoted and beloved minister who was shamed by his vocation, a skill he’d taken up before he’d formally entered into the Society of Friends. He made promises time and time again to quit painting. At one point he tried his hand at the honest vocation of farming only to fail, returning to his pallet and brushes as if directed by an unseen hand. 

Revisiting the tableau of The Peaceable Kingdom over and over again, year after year, the artist exercised his mastery of technique. Comparisons reveal experiments in perspective and texture. But ignoring these superficial differences and taking account of biography, one witnesses a chronicle of discord between the painter and his community, and, even more strikingly, the circuitous trajectory of history though that chunk of time. Here, in these meadows at the forest’s edge, the awakening of progressive ethics, the Rights Revolution, leaves its footprint. 

Dwelling on the autobiographical and the sociopolitical satisfies the critic and sociologist, or the activist with an axe to grind, but what I find most striking is the mystery of the recursive return to the same story over and over again. In any case, I don’t wish to flatten Hick’s uncanny work, disembowel it, sap it of its potential for wonderment. To reduce a work of art is an anathema to my discourse here. However, to dislocate art from experience, from history and social evolution—The Art for Art’s sake position—I consider equally reductive, anti-intellectual, shallow and dangerous.

Evidenced in the recursive Kingdoms is Hick's unwillingness to let go. He must hold on to a moment by revisiting it. A willful deflection of laws that govern space and time. In art, of course, these laws don’t exist except to be broken. As William Faulkner affirmed, The aim of every artist is to arrest motion, which is life, by artificial means and hold it fixed so that a hundred years later, when a stranger looks at it, it moves again since it is life.” 


Friday, January 11, 2013

Szopka Part 1, Teaching Michael Cunningham's White Angel







In the opening scene of the story, White Angel, sixteen-year-old Carlton shares a hit of LSD with his little brother, Frisco. Years later, long after Carlton's death, Frisco remarks, “I was the most criminally minded nine-year-old in my class. I was going places.”
         Set at the end of the nineteen-sixties, when “radios played love songs all day long,” White Angel eulogizes both a beloved brother and the turbulent era in which he thrived. Despite Frisco’s admission, this isn’t a story about criminality or the perils of libertine abandon, excess, amorality, or anything so droll. One must trust a pretty slippery slope that would connect the recreational drug here to the story’s tragic end, and, despite the obvious perils these kids put themselves in, that opening scene celebrates the generosity and depth of fraternal affection. What happens at the story's climax is nothing more than a run-of-the-mill domestic accident, a stupid example of Murphy's Law that allows a widget of plate glass from a sliding patio door to claim Carlton’s life. If we weren't warned on the first page that something like this is about to come, then we'd mark Cunningham's story as the best classroom example of a Deus Ex Machina--ever. 
         But Frisco is telling us this story as a sober adult. This is an act of remembrance, a votive candle lit in the honor of his brother. The purpose of the act of telling is first to breathe life into that husk of memory and the moment in which he thrived, when the snown falls, dropping into the moment as if hypnotized, shutting one's eyes and reliving each scene in the present tense. At the end, however, we discover another motive for the storyteller's act of telling and realize that this keen display of nostalgia is, in part, a means to an end.



I teach the story in a fiction writing class at an art school. It’s a juicy yarn, defying an eighteen-year-old's expectation that what they're about to read will be dry and boring, worse, it won't reflect any of their own experiences. And while it is a story about suburban white kids in the late 1960s, it's also about brothers, and (yes) sex, drugs, and anything else that they shouldn't be doing. I don't want to cowtow I beleive that we all should encounter and read and delight in what's outside of our comfort zone or purview, and truly feel it's a teacher's duty to encourage broad exposure to what we call "the human condition," and I make every effort to foster inclusivity, and yet know that I also must meet them at some point eye to eye. Incidentally, most folks between 16 and 25 (at least when I first wrote this essay) have a peculiar framework regarding vice. I'm often surprised at their moral chauvinism their inability to think further on human behavior beyond whatever they're told. It's very easy for them to stop at axioms, memes, go-tos, and labels than it is to address phenomena critically, diagnostically, dialectically, or with any tools of investigation at hand. Perhaps that's always been true. I find it very interesting that they view with skepticism the survivors of that epoch and are wary of those self-aggrandizing boomers-- and there's merit in this--but there's also a slick little shortcut, a   desire to not appear too generous, to (stupid as it sounds) look "cool": a concussive trap of the spirit and imagination I call "romantic cynicism." 
         But Carlton isn’t trying to corrupt our narrator, or to spoil him; he wants to make his little brother a gift of the world as he sees it. “You wait,” Carlton says, “Miracles are happening. Goddamn miracles.”
         Of course, Carlton’s problem is his inability to recognize the incongruity between the universe and his ideals. He takes dangers for granted, naively believing that benefits outweigh risks. It’s the spiritual risks Carlton takes that are the most hazardous. And though the story concludes with his death, the real tragedy, as played out in the dénouement, is what happens to those who have survived him.

Carlton is an idealist. He’s also a narcissist and a lawbreaker, but his visionary mindset trumps these. Sewn on the back of his buckskin jacket is a luminous eye. The drugs he uses and the music he listens to are means to the same end. He wants to achieve bliss, but he also wants to share it, and he believes in a physical space that can contain such generosity. His idealism is flawed not in its grandness, but in his inability to reconcile the purity of his Utopian visions with the movement of history, of events over time. The state of being he celebrates, he believes, exists elsewhere, some five hundred miles from Cleveland Ohio, on a pasture owned by a farmer named Yasgur in Woodstock, New York. Nothing happens, one might think, in a fly-over state.
         This is Carlton’s dominant objective, an objective he states directly: to go to Woodstock and be part of the “new nation.”

Carlton’s desire provides the perfect object lesson for a teacher answering the central question of what it is that he wants. This classic approach harkens back to Aristotelian axiom, desire is fate.
         Character-driven stories necessitate motives. All objects in space have tendencies: water flows, turns to ice or vapor; ants burrow, fight, and feed. But only sentient beings have choices. “What does the character desire?” One might think globally, zooming out and squinting at the story’s silhouette, but the active reader will also get in close so they can smell the ink on the page, absorb themselves with the question scene-by-scene.
         Not only has the plot featuring hallucinogens and marijuana and sex succeeded in sparking interest, but my students have begun to entertain analysis. Their brows begin to furrow. So, when asked, what does Carlton want? clichés abound. Carlton wants to be a rebel, or he wants Freedom, or to get high. Though not wrong, these answers miss the target.
         A few students usually “get it.” It is on “Woodstock” Carlton harps. This is a story about the nineteen sixties, about idealism confronting pedestrian realities. Carlton wants release from social obligations, he wants rebellion and music: “a life among the trees by the river.” Universal desire submits to manageable particulars. Woodstock is a place, a “New Nation” a concept. Arcadia. Eden. Perfection. He wants infinitives: to go, to do, to be. Or, to clarify: Carlton wants Woodstock.

Even though the music is over, he insists that the concertgoers have not abandoned the ideals made manifest. His flawed logic is shared by anyone who clings to Utopia: he believes in the possibility of stasis, of suspending history’s movement forward. He imagines that the hippies at Woodstock have maintained the high-pitched enthusiasm that came about almost accidentally, like a juggler magically hovering a ball in the air, even though it  (the love, peace, and communal joy) has all (in reality) come to an end. History begets irony. Tragedies, like the one at Altamont, will blemish the nobler sensibilities of the era.
         At this point, my students begin to understand how a story’s plot is connected to desire. Desire is fate. They enjoy an “ah-ha” moment. But their excitement is often misplaced. They are taught to believe that art, literature (poetics in particular), is appreciated by reduction. Art as a problem to be solved. Algebra. There is a key, a silver bullet, a code to be cracked. In their thinking, a story possesses a singular reason to be told. The reader reduces the text to this singular essence (the author’s imagined intent, moral, or message), and, once achieved, the thing is conquered. Such maltreatment isn’t new, but nowadays defenders of arts education are shamed into arguing the virtues of music, literature, theater, dance and art as valuable only in their quantifiable connection to improved test scores. Utilitarian pragmatism at its worst. Now students look forward to the convenience of answers like, “this is a piece about racism,” or “this work is about the dog-eat-dog world we live in.”

As a teacher of college writing, as apposed to English as an academic pursuit, I’m not burdened with the catechism of contemporary literary criticism. The irony, from a pedagogical perspective, is that encouraging sensitivity to techniques and conventions stimulates critical thinking without succumbing to the “isms” of the day.
         We ask what Carlton wants and the answer is “Woodstock”. When asked if Carlton ever gets Woodstock, most shake their heads no. The question appears moot: Carlton never leaves Ohio, never sets foot in upstate New York. But there’s always at least one student who will speak up and claim that he does obtain this superobjective. It, Woodstock, manifests as a facsimile of his ideal in the final act.
         To celebrate the end of winter, Carlton’s parents throw a big party and invite their mortgage paying, middle aged, “Ohio hip” friends. What should follow is a fete comprised of aging folkies tipping back wine jugs and strumming acoustic guitars. But Carlton senses an opportunity for a mini revolution. He invites his own cadre, leather-clad “outlaws,” and arranges a “blind date” between the two societies. The blending of young and old sets us up for a comedy of embarrassment, yet Carlton’s social engineering will prove to be his finest moment. The party is his experimental “New Nation.” Woodstock in a jar.
         It proves successful. An evening of dancing and merriment follows. Frisco steals cocktails. Dylan goes electric. Middle-aged schoolteachers groove to The Rolling Stones. Social divisions blur. Sans Arcadian pasture, “Woodstock” has arrived in Cleveland. 



But Woodstock in miniature, the toy version Carlton has created, is lacking. When one of the party goers reports seeing a flying saucer hovering over the back yard, a knot of excited party goers spill out the patio door to catch a glimpse. Mist and an airplane explain away the UFO, so, disappointed, they file back inside to continue merrymaking, shutting the glass door behind them. But, Carlton (still wistful?) has remained outside.
         Frisco observes these events from the hall. His mother, with Carlton’s support, has sent Frisco to bed, and spying suits his clandestine revenge. He’s furious with Carlton’s disloyalty. From this vantage, he witnesses his brother running across the back yard towards the closed patio door. He could do something to stop his brother, but doesn’t Indeed, he relishes the inevitable impact (imagined as a mere bump on the nose) because he has been betrayed.
        In the split second before it happens, Carlton’s girlfriend screams, but it’s too late. The beloved brother doesn’t bump his nose on the door, but “explodes” through the glass. There’s a moment in which he stands in shock. When he reaches up to remove a piece of glass stuck in his neck, “…that is when the blood starts.” Frisco shoulders guilt for not having warned his brother, having wished him harm, and  (even as an adult) can’t shake this feeling.
        But what is so important here is the question of wants and desires. Perhaps it’s fixated in an idea of original sin, or in the idea of sin itself, of impure thoughts and how they corroborate and infect out material lives.

Carlton fails to see the good thing he’s done. He has created a version, vaguely metaphorical, that just falls short of his ideal. A plaything, toy-like in scale and disposability; but perhaps not lacking in gravity entirely: The playfulness of the little world he creates furnishes its inhabitants with joy and sweetness. Too bad he can’t see it. He longs for the complete version, the unbounded, authentic Woodstock that actually never existed. The Woodstock that exists at the end of history, rather than its beginning.
         Even if Carlton hadn’t died, the party would have come to an end. The guests would have gone home. There would be hangovers and stains on the carpet other than blood. He’d have faced disappointment. He’d have witnessed little change in his family, though the “thaw,” the ease and peace that result from shared pleasure, might be there.