Tuesday, January 20, 2015

"A rallying cry for insubordinate, smalltown America"

This is written by Wally Conger, a friend of mine, and is from his blog, Out of Step.


I’ve been reading and enjoying Bill Kauffman for two decades. I once heard someone call Kauffman a “category-busting radical crank.” Not bad. Kauffman has described himself as an American patriot, Jeffersonian decentralist, fanatical localist, and anarchist. What I love about him is that he’s so adaptable in finding allies — he frolics with both Right and Left — as long as they love America and despise Empire.

Bill’s a master of the beautifully crafted sentence and the subtly clever turn-of-phrase. I think he’s one of the best political essayists — strike that — best essayists period of the last 35 years. I spent the past week re-reading one of my favorite Kauffman books, Look Homeward, America: In Search of Reactionary Radicals and Front-Porch Anarchists, a paean to families, neighborhoods, and insubordinate, smalltown America. For almost a decade, it’s been one of my go-to, comfort books. When I need to “get a grip” philosophically and get my mind straight on where I fit in this big, messy world, I pick up Look Homeward, America. And every time I read it, I often stop at the end of paragraphs, rub the bridge of my nose, and mumble, “Goddamn that’s good.”

Here’s Kauffman writing about a pilgrimage he made in Iowa:

“So there we were, my wife, Lucine, our then-nine-year-old daughter, Gretel, and I, driving the gravel roads outside Clear Lake, Iowa, following directions like ‘first fencerow past the big grain bin,’ till we ditched the rental car and walked the narrow half-mile path between corn and soybean fields to the spot where on February 3, 1959, the plane carrying Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens, and the Big Bopper crashed, a tragedy later mythicized by Don McLean in ‘American Pie’ as ‘the day the music died.’ We found the cross and makeshift memorial to the three paleo rock-and-rollers. Lucine detests the har-har leering of the Big Bopper — ‘Hell-ooooooo Ba-Beeeee!’ — but Gretel and I persuaded her to join us in a spirited chorus of ‘Chantilly Lace,’ capped by a hearty ‘Oh baby that’s what I like!’ I imagined the Bopper, a bespangled specter, giving us a lewd wink.”

Still wandering through Iowa, Bill reflects on the late actress Donna Reed:

“At some point in post-World War II America, the Middle West and all its Middle American manifestations became inexplicable. Take Donna Reed, without question the most beautifully American-looking actress of the Cold War era. Donna was an Iowa girl, a tomboy who grew up playing baseball with her brothers on the farm — watch her hurl that rock at the window of the old Granville place in ‘It’s a Wonderful Life‘; what a wonderful arm! She was an Iowa Republican who was for her fellow Iowan Henry Wallace in 1948, for Barry Goldwater in 1964 because the Kennedy-Johnson Democrats offended her Iowa isolationism, and for Eugene McCarthy in 1968 for the same reason. Viewed through old-fashioned American glasses, Reed’s politics make perfect sense as the expression of a girl who attended the one-room schoolhouse in Nishnabotna, Iowa, and won a blue ribbon at the Iowa State Fair for the whole-wheat yeast rolls she made for the Nimble Fingers 4-H Club. It is only in the funhouse mirror of postwar American politics that the Donna Reeds are contorted and the Arnold Schwarzeneggers look normal.” Kauffman writes about the effect of war and empire on rural America:

“War devastates the homefront as surely as it does the killing fields. Soldiers are conscripted, sent hither and yon to kill and maim or to be killed or maimed; their families relocate, following the jobs created by artificial wartime booms. War is the great scatterer, the merciless disperser. How you gonna keep ’em down on the farm when Mom and Pop and Sis have found Elysium in Detroit?”

Look Homeward, America is a short book. (All of Kauffman’s books are.) But it’s stuffed with history, personal asides, and lots and lots of profiles of those Kauffman would call “reactionary radicals,” folks as diverse as U.S. Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan (for whom Kauffman worked briefly), Catholic Worker founder Dorothy Day, writer Wendell Berry, novelist Carolyn Chute, Robert Frost, and Mother Jones. What it all adds up to is a virtual manifesto for front-porch radicals — a loose-limbed movement where Left and Right can stop arguing the little stuff and meet on common ground in their admiration for small-scale over big-scale, local over nation-state, peace over war, America over Empire, and plain, old-fashioned neighborliness.

Bill Kauffman is the champion of common sense, building relationships, and getting the real work done of just living satisfying lives. If you haven’t read his books, you’re missing something very special.

5 comments:

Anders said...

"How you gonna keep ’em down on the farm when Mom and Pop and Sis have found Elysium in Detroit?”

There aint shit but blacks and post apocalyptic disaster porn in Detroit now. So much for Elysium, eh?

Anonymous said...

You again demonstrate superb judgment, for Kaufmann is indeed a gem.

Glen Filthie said...

Hmmmmph. I have no problem with insubordination - when it's warranted. But the libertarian/anarchist crowd have pissed me off for the last time and I no longer let their BS pass.

Jim said it best on his blog - those guys are finding that they have no friends among the conservative right, and no enemies on the liberal left. As a result they are becoming indistinguishable from lefties with regards to their more foolish policies.

Anonymous said...

Americans are, in a way, returning to that. People are increasingly moving to places where they can find like-minded neighbors with a similar outlook. In recent Presidential elections, most states voted either heavily for one candidate or heavily for the other. It's known as the Red State/Blue State divide, perhaps you've heard the term before. What's more interesting about it is that even if they rarely have person-to-person contact with them but cocoon within their own households. A site called Dusk in Autumn covers that, I think you'd find it interesting.

Ping Jockey said...

"...Lucine detests the har-har leering of the Big Bopper — ‘Hell-ooooooo Ba-Beeeee!’"

Go on Google and Youtube and get a listen to "The Big Bopper's Wedding" -- an unknown comedy gem that I stumbled across during my youth listening to Doctor Demento.