Friday, July 23, 2021

On The Road With Al and Ivy: A Homeless Literary Journal - July 2021



"For those who pass their lives afloat on boats, or face old age leading horses tight by the bridle, their journeying is life, their journeying is home."

- Matsuo Basho (The Narrow Road To The Deep North, 1702)

It was a dark day when Yahweh (now known as God), passed judgement on and sentenced the three culprits in the apple munching incident at the Tree Of Knowledge (Now known as The Internet), located in Mesopotamian Edin, located in what is now Iraq (now known as The Garden Of Eden). The serpent (now known as Satan) got off the easiest; he was condemned to stay slithering about for eternity, which didn't cramp his style, as snake legs had been ditched during the process of evolution.

Adam was condemned to work the soil for his food, and could no longer just pluck it off trees in Paradise (know known as Man Caves). Menkind later fobbed off most of the food preparation tasks on women to ease the pain of the "thorns and thistles" (Genesis 3:18). Which is why women have to do all the cooking on Super Bowl Sunday (most other days too, actually). It's a holy task that was first referenced in the "Forbidden Gospel Of Murgatroyd" in 1967 AD, the year of the first Super Bowl, though no copies, or even Internet fakes, have survived to verify this [Citation needed, source is unwilling to be cited].

Eve got the worst of it; she lost the relative equality and freedom of Eden, was condemned to suffer pain in childbearing (Genesis 3:16, and Whole Earth Natural Childbirth Manual - 1972 Edition), and to be ruled over by her husband (Genesis 3:16, and How To Pick Up Girls - 1970 Edition). 

I'm sure not even God knew that the consequences for many women would be a life filled with blame, servitude, exploitation, bras designed by men and priced really high, and to be bereft of God's love and forgiveness if menkind decided she wasn't worthy.

...a friend in Jesus...

Later on, Jesus bucked the tide and brought women into his inner circle, and even saved an adulteress from a public stoning (from which the male participant was noticably absent). If the New Testament is accurate, then the creed preached by Jesus didn't require women to be blamed or executed for being raped, make sandwiches after sex, or put up with men who leave their dirty underwear and socks on the floor. [citation needed on that last point]

But menkind was patient; that communistic, bad for business party pooper, Jesus, wasn't going to be around forever, and after he was gone, there'd be plenty of time to lock in profits and make sure women didn't get the notion that they could act like men, which is what menkind did after the Son Of God went, came and went, and promised to come again.

Keep in mind that the bible hadn't been written yet, so there was plenty of time for men who couldn't live with women but couldn't live without them, to get the proper procedures in place to make sure they stayed in their lane by the time the first manuals of life appeared.

There were contrary male voices, such as Saint Thomas Aquinas, who wrote in his Summa Theologica, "It was right for woman to be made from a rib of man. First, to signify the social union of man and woman, for the woman should neither use authority over man, and so she was not made from his head; nor was it right for her to be subject to man’s contempt as his slave, and so she was not made from his feet (Given how some men keep reusing the same socks, that's a good thing, right?)."

...as fast as a serpent...

Menkind just finessed whipped men like Aquinas into irrelevancy, with dare I say, the adroitness of a fast talking serpent, and in the case of the Lutherans and Protestants, restored the natural order by rejecting the Catholic Church, which came to it's senses and pioneered the innovation of trying and executing women for witchcraft, which was defined as being in league with the Devil (no longer a serpent, he needed legs after all) or in many cases, being uppity or rebellious in an ungodly manner.

Disclaimer: It should be noted that to quickly cover centuries of religious history, a lot of details had to be left out. In fact, I haven't even reached the actual point of this essay yet, so grand is the design, so I pause to assure the good readers here that a robust effort was made to ensure that the theological scholarship meets the exacting standards of unmoderated Internet research.

"...for the shield may be as important for victory, as the sword or spear."

- Charles Darwin (On The Origin Of Species)

Science joined in the fun and Darwin's book, On the Origin Of Species, became a secular sensation because it was a nicer way to say that men are number one due to being physically larger and able to beat the crap out of any woman who is uppity or rebellious in an ungodly manner.

However, Darwin never actually specified what the woman's role was, that is to say, in terms of how it's supposed to be actually lived. The description of a woman's role and duties that has evolved, in the name of natural law, are like the Judeo-Christian justice system, which is theoretically based on or extrapolated from religious doctrine, but ignore the exhortation to honor and treat women like human beings, except where required by law or in cases where a wussy is dominated by a woman.

Darwin's observations have often been extrapolated into the concept that power and money is the equivalent of survival of the fittest, and that the food chain is a linear hierarchy or patriarchal system. Modern interpretations of Darwin's writings have been used to justify sexism, racism, settling arguments by fisticuffs, accumulation of wealth by a small minority, patriarchal social orders, and the payment of enormous sums of money to athletes and attractive actors.

...minor factors...

Darwin noted that natural selection and evolution was dependent on many "minor factors" and conditions. One good example is the invention of crossbows, which helped end the power of individual knights who were the apex males in the social system. The Holy Church tried to restore the natural order by excommunicating anyone who used a crossbow, but gave up trying after gunpowder and firearms were invented. Kings found that infantry armies were cheaper and easier to send to their deaths than Knights, who generally acted like modern celebrities and were pains in the ass. 

Darwinism didn't create patriarchies, as those began much earlier when organized warfare and the macho warriors became a thing. Those elite soldiers generally served a dominant alpha (king, emperor, whatever) who assumed demigod status, or had it granted by the Priests of whatever religion was current by divine right or purchase. 

Disclaimer: It should be noted that to quickly cover centuries of scientific evolutionary history, a lot of details had to be left out. In fact, I haven't even reached the actual point of this essay yet, so grand is the design, so I pause to assure the good readers here that a robust effort was made to ensure that the scientific Darwinian scholarship meets the exacting standards of unmoderated Internet research.




"It was because the Apocalyptists believed so firmly in this power which they possessed of looking into the deep things of God that they claimed to be able to measure the significance of what had happened in the past and of what was happening in the present; and upon the basis of this knowledge they believed that they also had the power, given them by God, of foreseeing the march of future events."

- W.O.E. Osterley D.D. (The Book Of Enoch, trans. by R.H. Charles - 1917 Edition, quote from introduction)

There was one exception to patriarchal power, at least in ancient times, and that was the important religious function of divination, which was considered to be an ability mainly found in women. The most famous were the Greek Oracles, like Pythia, the Priestess to Apollo at Delphi. Although there's many types of prophesiers, the most revered were the ones like Pythia, who was considered a conduit who transmitted messages from the Gods.

Oracles were important for the same reason that people today examine statistics, data, opinions, and tap into their intuition to try and predict the stock market, figure out what women actually think of them, where sociological trends are headed, and to bet correctly on sports, which is, they don't want to lose money. Some might claim that it's a logical process based on probabilities and trends, which would be true if the forecasts were always correct, but in actual practice, there's a few that have real intuitive abilities, and the rest just guess. 

True Oracles were quite rare, as the punishment for making inaccurate predictions and revelations could be quite severe. Pythia could assume a certain level of power from being Apollo's priestess, but in the long run, she had to produce accurate revelation and predictions or possibly be forced into service as a Temple Prostitute. Perhaps then, it wasn't surprising that the messages delivered were generally poetic and cryptic in nature, and could be interpreted in different ways as needed to fit the situation (though to avoid the anger of the Gods, the predictions were rarely questioned).

How women came to dominate this area of divination possibly stems from an earlier era when religions had a stronger matriarchal influence, like the Greek religion in some regions before Zeus became the supreme God. The other main area of prediction, using "seers" who read bird signs, entrails and other physical methods, was dominated by male priests, but the two arts were rarely in conflict. The average female wasn't worth much in ancient times, but even a King had to step carefully around an Oracle.

...a long tradition...

Christianity has a long tradition of prophesy, though it's muted in the present day. One famous psychic in the 60s, Jeane Dixon, a devout Catholic, claimed to have received her powers from God, and was consulted by both Richard Nixon and Nancy Reagan.

Most of those who claimed to be psychics in the early Christian era, especially women, tended to tried and executed as witches who were in league with Satan (who not only needed legs again, but women assistants too), but there was a gray area where those who practiced divination could (sort of) escape the fury of the Church, or society. 

One example was the practice of "historicism," or the use of bible passages and chapters, such as the apocalyptic Books of Daniel and Revelation, to explain current events and predict the future. One famous interpretation of the bible chapter known as Revelation, was cited by Protestants, Calvinists, and even famous personages as Sir Issac Newton, as proof that the Pope was the anti-Christ. This is disputed today by most Catholics.

...Daniel, the Biblical Oracle...

Another biblical figure, Daniel (Daniel 1:6) was a prototypical Oracle (aka prophet), who received direct messages (not chat messages) from God, as opposed to one who reads signs or observed phenomena to make prophesy (like a modern betting handicapper would). He served as an adviser to the Babylonian King, Nebuchadnezzar, his son and successor Belshazar, and finally Darius the Mede, King Of Persia. 

The older Hebrew writings also touched on prophesy. An early work called The Book Of Enoch, which is now only considered canon by the Othodox Ethiopian Christian Church, contained a lot of predictions (and a section that was later incorporated into the New Testament). Early fragments have been found in the Dead Sea Scrolls and it remains a popular source text for Apocalyptists.

The most famous ancient Christian Prophets were generally men, which isn't surprising as almost all that kind of history was written by males. In recent decades, more women have became historians and writers and reclaimed their history, which is actually full of female prophets.



...Lady Eleanor Davies...

One such prophet was Lady Eleanor Davies, born in 1590, who lived in England and wrote over 60 pamphlets and poetic works of prophesy that were inspired by the Bible Books of Daniel and Revelation. 

Like Daniel, Davies claimed to be a conduit for God's messages, but often used bible passages to point out parallels between current events and biblical prophesy. She'd be virtually unknown today if not for the efforts of women researchers who've brought her writings back into print (both in books and the Internet).

If it'd been up to her two husbands, who literally burned her manuscripts, and royal society, which at one point institutionalized her in Bedlam, and imprisoned her in the Tower of London, she'd have simply gone down in history as one of many women of the era who professed to be prophets but were characterized as heretics or lunatics. 

Part of the reason that people, mainly men, didn't just try and execute her as a witch (the blanket term for a woman who was uppity or rebellious in an ungodly manner) or some such charge, was due to the fact that she was a propertied Lady, an aristocrat, which gave her a level of protection that a peasant wouldn't have had, and the other was that England didn't have a Spanish style Inquisition. 

Although Lady Eleanor couldn't avoid imprisonment, she did eventually get released through the influence of friends and family, and like many nobles, didn't bother to pay any assessed fines. None of that appeared to break the spirit of this very headstrong and intelligent woman.

...a good record of success...

Her record as a prophet, both biblical and secular was pretty good, and she was an excellent poet. Davies also correctly predicted when her first husband would die, and that her second would become unable to function (probably a stroke). Both revelations came after each had burned her manuscripts.

In her words, "...where the book of mine was sacrificed by my first Husbands hand, thrown into the fire, whose Doom I gave him in letters of his own Name (John Davies, Joves Hand) within three years to expect the mortal blow; so put on my mourning garment from that time:when about three days before his sudden decease, before all his Servants and Friends at the table, gave him passé to take his long sleep, by him thus put off (note: phrase means 'he said'), 'I pray weep not when I am alive, and I will give you leave to laugh when I am dead.'" (Source: Prophetic Writings Of Lady Eleanor Davies, Edited by Ester Cope)

Though that may sound like the words of a Jezebel, by most accounts she did try to be a good wife. The conflicts were primarily over the conviction that she was a prophet chosen by God. To be fair, there were males who claimed the same thing and were prosecuted, though mainly for treasonous statements, but received considerably lighter sanctions from the law. Nostradamus, one of the most famous, escaped prosecution because he did his prophesy in France, which in the 1600s was a country that didn't always act as Catholic as the Pope would have liked.

...both husbands did the burn...

Both of Lady Eleanor's husbands knew what the manuscripts meant to her, and burning those works was an act that was only considered OK because the author was a woman. If they had done that to another male, it would have required the use of swords or pistols to settle the matter. A musician would understand; if you took his or her instrument and threw it into a fire, it'd probably inspire a song about your untimely passing.

She lived in an age where men had almost complete power over wives (they couldn't just shoot them so there was a limit), and the men's main reason for burning the manuscripts was due to a perception that the controversial writings affected their chances for advancement. Her feelings were about the matter were irrelevant, and she was dealt with in the same way a man would punish a child who got caught with a copy of Playboy magazine (particularly if the kid stole it from Dad).

However, the idea that strong (and possibly stubborn) women needed to be brought down a notch by emphasizing her lack of power is a sentiment that's survived well into modern times, and has been depicted often in the arts.

...one flew...

One good example is Ken Kesey's 1962 book, One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest, a modern classic that has anti-feminine overtones. The movie version makes it seem a fight against the "system," type deal, but in the book, it was no accident that the main villain and symbol of power that was a woman. The movie obscures that point, along with the fact that the story was actually told through the eyes of a Native American.

In the climactic scene, the hero named McMurphy forces his way into the office where the villain, Nurse Ratched was, along with other staff including the actual head of the department, the Doctor.

McMurphy knew better than to attack a male authority figure. Even when attacking Nurse Ratched, he couldn't attack authority until he'd first reduced her to a woman's status. So, his first act, was to tear the nurse's blouse open and expose her breasts to the other males in the room. The end result was the power structure remained, as the doctor wasn't touched, but the target of McMurphy's rage had lost any air of authority after being reduced to a beaten, half naked woman. If he'd have pulled the doctor's pants down, then attacked him, it'd have been called what it really was, a sexual assault to humiliate and assert dominance.

That was confirmed in a later passage, which read, "We all left the tub room and came out in the hall to meet her, to ask about McMurphy. She jumped back two steps when we approached, and I thought for a second she might run. Her face was bloated blue and out of shape on one side, closing one eye completely, and she had a heavy bandage around her throat. And a new white uniform. Some of the guys grinned at the front of it; in spite of its being smaller and tighter and more starched than her old uniforms, it could no longer conceal the fact that she was a woman."

...disclosure...

As a matter of disclosure, I was an admirer of the book in the 60s, and still am to a large extent. Ken Kesey's imagery about the oppression and control is brilliant, and the use of a Native American as the narrator was pure genius. However, the book's attitude towards women is basically a parallel to the Biblical Jezebel or Delilah archetypes which does weaken it's larger message about control and conformity. 

The book is best read after the reader is alerted to potentially objectionable material, though an intro by an advocate describing the context would be fair. In this day and age, women and minorities do deserve to know ahead of time if a book contains negative stereotypes or language, particularly in a class room situation or if the reader is being asked to pay money for it.

An artist's freedom of expression and duty to the truth also requires having the moral courage to be clear about intent and message. 

...a strong undercurrent...

One of the factors that could blunt Lady Eleanor's impact on modern women's literature and history is that her works have a strong religious undercurrent, which doesn't always play well in a secular age like today (except in the New Age movement which embraces divination or with those who admire figures such as Joan of Arc). Many modern Christians wouldn't be likely to approve either, given that fundamentalism is still a significant influence, and is generally hostile to divination (though not to the idea of an apocalypse).

Her poetry and prose, like many other works of that age, can have various literary devices in play, such as anagrams, complex imagery or symbolism, religious references, etc., which was often done to obscure the direct message or person being described (like the King, who might order the arrest of the writer for sedition). The result can be difficult for a modern reader to understand without footnotes but still be enjoyable as a pure reading experience. 

Here's an example to illustrate that point; the excerpt is two verses from her "Given To The Elector Prince Charles Of The Rhine" in 1633, which alludes to the deaths of the King and Queen of Scotland, the latter being Mary, Queen Of Scots:

By star-light for device who gave,
  as graven on his Shield,
An Eagle mounted on the Crest,
  a Hart in silver field.
Extold again his God as high,
  blessed him all his days:
Others reputes them as nothing,
  alone proclaims his praise.

Whose seven times till served forth,
   in vain for rest to crave,
Whom Devils Legions do possess,
  a Monarch turn'd a Slave.
Deposed thus, thou knewest well,
  Belshazzar, O his Son,
And renown'd so deliverance his
  voyced by every one.

(Source: Prophetic Writings Of Lady Eleanor Davies, Edited by Ester Cope)

For comparison, here's a sample from Milton's "Paradise Lost," quoted is a passage that delineates Satan's rationale for his rebellion against God:

"Above his equals. Farewel happy Fields Where Joy for ever dwells: Hail horrours, hail Infernal world, and thou profoundest Hell Receive thy new Possessor: One who brings A mind not to be chang’d by Place or Time. The mind is its own place, and in it self Can make a Heav’n Hell, a Hell of Heav’n."

My point isn't that the two passages are similar in style (because as cryptic as both appear, there's notable differences in Lady Eleanor and Milton's intent and approach), but that her literary skill was on a par with male writers of that age. As far as their relative ranking, that's another matter, and each reader can develop their own opinion. 

A modern writer can read both samples, and in my case, discern that Lady Eleanor had talent. I enjoyed reading her verse (and prose), which has a musical quality that was present in the best literature from that age. As with the Sistine Chapel ceiling painted by Michelangelo, one doesn't have to be religious to enjoy it as art.

...from the soul...

Lady Eleanor's works were certainly from the soul, and reflect her idea of truth during a time when people did their best to discourage or suppress it. It's an important window into that era, and the struggle to express herself, like all good writers, is reflected in her work. The poetry and writing created in such a crucible can provide insight on how expression can defy oppression and survive, and give the reader an understanding of how the artistic drive helped protect her self image and identity when so many tried to extinguish it.

Lady Eleanor Davies may or may not have found eternal life in heaven, but as they say, a soul can live forever through art, and that's how she found it on earth.



...Sherlock preferences...

The June 2020 blog entry described how I prefer to read the Sherlock Holmes stories, but didn't talk much about the big and small screen adaptations. The fact is, I stopped watching any about halfway through the excellent PBS series starring Jeremy Brett, which ran for 41 episodes from 1984-1994. Brett was probably the best screen Holmes, and probably the most accurate (at least in the critic's view), and my reasons for getting bored with the series had nothing to do with quality issues. The acting and production values were impeccable, and for many, it was the definitive portrait.

However, Brett had the same fatal flaw that all of the Holmes actors had; he wasn't Basil Rathbone. There were a few that were better actors, others that were more physically perfect for the part, and in the case of Brett, more meticulous in getting all the details right.

The thing about cinema is that it's a different medium than literature. The aesthetic isn't just visual, like with paintings or comic books. The energy is kinetic and at the center of it all is the actor's personality and charisma. Although one of the core principles is that the actor becomes the character, that's only partly true. Marlon Brando, for example, was always himself, no matter the role, and that's not a flaw. It's through his personality that the character is humanized and becomes more than a laundry list of traits and behaviors.

...Hollywood...

That's why Hollywood always tries to bring back the same actors in a sequel. Hollywood's all about money but it's not stupid. They'd bring back a cheaper cast if they could, but in any performance art, whether it's movies or music, if you change the players, it changes the chemistry and the product. People don't mind changes to the scenery and sets, but they want to see the people who brought that story to life.

That's probably an oversimplification of the dramatic aesthetic, but sufficient for the purposes of this blog entry and fits comfortably within internet standards of accuracy, which only requires one person for the citation of any fact, no matter how broad or outrageous the statement.

The reason Basil Rathbone is my ultimate Holmes is because he's the one saw as a kid. I saw the movies and heard rebroadcasts of the old radio shows even before reading the books.

It was said that when the producers at 20th Century Fox discussed filming the first film, The Hound Of The Baskervilles in 1939, there was no question of who'd play Holmes. Basil Rathbone was the first and only choice, though at the time, he was regarded as a good character actor rather than a leading man. That made him cheaper too, and thus even more ideal for the part.

In fact, in that first film, both Rathbone and Nigel Bruce, who played Watson, didn't even have top billing. The two main supporting actors were actually more well known to the movie public, though of course that changed after the success of the film.

...the big move...

After one more big budget production, the series moved to Universal Studios, and began a long run as a series of B films, which on average ran about 60 minutes. The studio had plenty of sets and costumes, so the Holmes series never looked cheaply made, and the shorter run time made for a tighter, faster moving plot with no filler. In fact, take away special effects extravaganzas, second unit scenery, car chases, irrelevant close ups, and the time consuming process of having a leading man seduce the leading lady and having sex, and one finds that most movies are just one hour flicks anyway.

The Sherlock Holmes movies were quite successful, and although a mixed blessing due to typecasting, both actors became household names and until Rathbone quit the series, there was really no question about finding someone else to play Holmes.

I remember articles about the legendary detective in the 70s, which tended to rank Rathbone in the middle of the pack of screen Holmes (and Nigel characterized as a buffoon who mainly provided comedy relief). Part of that was standard Hollywood revisionism, because Holmes movies were still coming out featuring actors such as Nicol Williamson in the "Seven Percent Solution" and due to the ever growing cult audience of Holmesians who put out books and like most experts, managed to drown the appeal of the stories in a morass of micro-detail and consensus-based dogma.

...good harmless fun...

All that canon creation was just good harmless fun, of course, no worse than anointing rock stars who'd just put out one album as living legends or "Bostonais" assuming New York Yankee fans are uncouth cretins, but it did create a feeling that there was such a thing as an accurate Holmes portrayal, which is arguable, but not necessarily in line with the actual stories by Arthur Conan Doyle.

Sherlock Holmes underwent a series of personality changes over the course of the Strand Magazine stories. He started off as a seemingly egotistical man who was eager to find cases to test his abilities, calmed down and became sure of his abilities to the point where he was happy to let Scotland Yard take the credit for the solved cases, went through a high strung, almost paranoid period because of his obsession with arch enemy, Professor Moriarty, and finally ended up as a quiet recluse in the final set of Strand stories.

There were constants that most of us know about; cocaine use, eccentricity, a close and fast friendship with Doctor Watson, who eventually married and only visited on occasion, the occasional flash of humor, and a lack of interest in women (with only one exception, the immortal Irene Adler).

...my dear Watson...

The most common controversy was over how Watson was portrayed, which in the 20th Century Fox and Universal Studio movies was as a man who always made wrong guesses (and corrected by Holmes) and provided almost all of the humorous moments. That was characterized as "bumbling" by critics and writers who were reviewing and discussing the later films that were all over the map in terms of accuracy but generally depicted Watson as a solid, good old English fellow.

Which wasn't the case in the Strand Stories and books. Watson made a lot of wrong guesses because he was supposed to, as a foil to showcase Holmes' genius. In the stories he displayed behavior that ranged from stolid normalcy to hilarious levels of irritation at his roomie's slovenly house keeping. More importantly, he sort of became the Great Detective's Boswell style biographer, who Conan Doyle implied was the actual author of the Strand Stories, and their discussions about those were used to illuminate Holmes' ideas and philosophy about his craft.

In other words, turning Watson into a straight man tended to create a dead spot in later movies, which wasn't the case when Nigel Bruce portrayed him.

...the obvious solution...

The various movies that started with The Seven Percent Solution were, as I've said, were all over the map. The Holmes character in the movie, "They Might Be Giants," was a man who thought he was the detective and may or may not have been insane. Another movie caused a stir when it implied that the Baker Street pair were gay, and it all only came down to earth with the PBS series with Jeremy Brett.

I never took any of that personally (as a Holmes enthusiast). If I didn't like the premise, then I just skipped the film or show. The reason is that, early on, I quit expecting Hollywood to do any written story or book in an accurate manner.

The basic reason a studio buys the movie rights is to tap into a ready made audience, have control of the story (so it can be changed), and to use the characters. There's a common sense reason to not literally interpret the book, as it's not a good idea to have an audience that already knows the ending. Trying to do it exactly like the book is not always practical, as the movie can get nitpicked to death by hard core fans who know every detail. 

That wasn't a big deal before the internet, when the film company and movie theatre already had everyone's cash in hand before they could object to the changes, but nowadays a mistake or change in the details can be spotted and go viral. While there's no such thing as bad publicity, a trending complaint about a movie can turn off fans of the book, and getting them to come to the theatre is one of the reasons the producers spent the money on the rights in the first place.

...the last of the Mohican movies...

A good modern day example is the film, "Last Of The Mohicans," which came out in 1992, and starred Daniel Day Lewis. It was a great adventure film, with nice period costumes and sets, and full of charismatic performances by Lewis, Wes Studi, and others. It's a classic I saw once, enjoyed, and have never seen again and have no desire to.

The reason is simple; they butchered the book. I read Cooper's Last Of The Mohicans every few years, and enjoy parts of it now and then as casual reading. The most enjoyable character, for me, is Hawkeye, the Pathfinder, who was nothing like the Daniel Day Lewis character in the movie.

The book version of the Pathfinder is an older man, eccentric and basically feral, who loves to engage in long conversations that meander and shows a spiritual side that's as close to being a naturist pagan that a Christian can get and still be called devout. One of the characters in the book (who was omitted from the movie) was David, a young evangelist who engages in debates with the Pathfinder about the nature of God, which feature arguments that were surprisingly sophisticated for a book written in the 18th Century.

...the movie version...

The movie version of the Pathfinder was a 20th Century romance novel stud with long hair, who acted like a Scottish Rebel from the the Outlander TV series (which I like), and the two Mohicans were transformed from wise, intellectual warriors into a father and son Tonto team from the Lone Ranger TV show. That's a bit harsh, I admit, but to paraphrase Doctor Watson, when I see stuff like that, I begin to take on righteous airs.

But like I said, the 1992 film is a classic adventure, and deserved to be a hit, and I've always admired Daniel Day Lewis' acting genius. Like many Hollywood products, it's meant to be enjoyed for what it is.

There was one irritating review of the film in particular, which said that the movie brought new life into a "corny old book," and along with some other observations, made it clear to me that he hadn't really read the book, or if so, didn't remember all that much about it.

I remember writing a long rebuttal, but didn't send it because there was no point. The producers of the film knew what the book was about, so pointing out inaccuracies would have been a waste of time. They just wanted the basic story and name recognition, and they wanted it to be a vehicle to appeal to a modern crowd that wanted plenty of romance, action and Daniel Day Lewis. Hollywood does what it does, and it doesn't change the pleasure I get from the book.

...game of thrones...

If Cooper's Last Of The Mohicans had an audience like the Game Of Thrones crowd, then the producers would have made the characters truer to the book (more or less, Hollywood can only do so much), but as we've all seen, trying to please a crowd of nit pickers can be an impossible task. Heck, I'm still pissed about the final episode of Game of Thrones, I was a big Mother of Dragons fan!

But anyway, back to the movie Holmes. The thing about Basil Rathbone was that he seemed right for the part, even if the portrayal wasn't completely accurate. One reason is that, again, movies are a different medium than books; Rathbone's urbane personality, which could ramp up into high gear, thanks to his experience in Swashbuckler films, was perfect for the visual experience. Also, his voice was perfect for the part, which is why the radio version was popular.

Plus both he and Nigel Bruce were likable. Sure, Holmes was more irascible, and tightly wound in the books, but most people don't like to see that over the course of a whole movie. The idea that an entertainment medium has to make the audience uncomfortable isn't a mainstream concept. That's a valid notion for a smaller scale art or indie film, but the Sherlock films were made to entertain, and that's a whole different trip. The film world is big enough for both.

It'd be easy to get too wordy about the Rathbone films, as in my mind, it worked simply because they found the perfect guy. In fact, if you go into the Internet rabbit hole and read about Basil Rathbone, you'll find that decades down the line, a new generation has found him, thanks to the movies being free in YouTube, and while modern actors may be better (or hipper, etc.) than Basil Rathbone, all of them will have to work under the shadow of the one who got it right.

- Al Handa



The Al & Ivy Homeless Literary Journal Archive:

There are earlier blog entries on the Delta Snake Review section of this site that aren't on the On The Road page:
http://deltasnake.blogspot.com





Cover Reveal For Hide In Plain Sight


This is the cover for the upcoming book, Hide In Plain Sight, hopefully out sometime in 2021.




The American Primitive Acoustic Collection by Handa-McGraw International can be streamed on all of the major services, including Spotify, Apple Music, Amazon, and dozens of others.



The Music Of Handa-McGraw International can also be heard on the Electric Fog Factory on YouTube. You can hear the album, and dozens of unreleased cuts and demos, plus exclusive video ,of Ivy.






































Saturday, May 8, 2021

On The Road With Al and Ivy: A Homeless Literary Chronicle - May 2021




"...I rode away, thinking, I confess, not so much of the kind mother left alone, and of the home behind me, as of to-morrow, and all the wonders it would bring."

- William Makepeace Thackeray ("Barry Lyndon," 1844)

"Coming of age" rites for young men and women have pretty much remained the same throughout history; men endure epic tests of strength and will, while women are trained in the sacred roles of motherhood, parenting and how avoid getting a case of the ass from dealing with men.

Some cynics have suggested that a woman's parenting training applies to both men and children, while others indignantly insist that following a man's orders requires no special skill. While accurate attribution for such insights isn't possible due to the degraded condition of the ancient source material concerning motherhood discovered in the Chicago 5th Street Salvation Army Store book section in 1989, the debate appears to be divided along male and female lines. [citation would help here]

Further investigation on the subject on web search engines yielded opinions too incendiary to reprint here, and all were under false names, thus making the data only suitable for Internet grade research. However, there is an admittedly tenuous historical link to Sumerian cuneiform tablets on the subject of astronomy, circa 1856, that claim men are from Saturn, and women are from Venus. [citation needed]

...grow up already...

Although maturity is a desirable quality in men (the historical record isn't clear as to when it became so, and women's opinions on the subject weren't documented until, maybe, last year), it's always been treated as an optional quality since women have to do the thinking anyway, and be the adult in situations that doesn't involve fisticuffs, watching football games, or farting exhibitions.

I should note that I'm oversimplifying for the sake of brevity, but the accuracy of my facts should fall within acceptable internet standards of truth. [citation probably won't help here]

...back to the point...

Getting back to male rites of passage...it is an important stage and what constitutes coming of age depends on what the society in question believes are the first steps to adulthood. In addition, how society defines maturity varies depending on the sex of the person, regional customs, and how long one can get away with extending the adolescent stage (which generally depends on income level).

I've given the subject of this mystical transition a great of thought since the moment it became obvious that a blog entry was needed for May, and several avenues of inquiry were considered. Hollywood was ruled out because there's already 12,345,668,890 films [citation needed again] about young men trying to trick women into having sex, and it's not clear if they actually attained maturity after doing so. Rock songs were never seriously considered, and that left books as the fount of transitional wisdom. The result will be revealed shortly.

The thing is, the modern age is complex, even if human emotions and frailties haven't changed very much. A rite of passage can now be more than a simple transition to adulthood, which in ancient times came as soon as possible as parents needed extra hands in the fields and the King needed cheap labor for tasks below the dignity of the royal person.

...life experience...

I personally tend to define such rites as a life experience that has a profound effect on a person's development or direction. It can mean the end of innocence, a realization about the true nature of something, but most of all, a moment or time where one finds their true self. 

It doesn't necessarily mean you live happily ever after. Joan of Arc chose a path that lead to persecution and a painful death. Many explorers faced privation and death in remote places, and many great artists achieved everything but material success. A simple, and possibly inadequate way to put it, was that all of them found what it was they had to do.

Jack Kerouac discovered what he was meant to do on a road trip with Neal Cassidy on a road trip across the United States, documented in his seminal book, "On the Road."



...2009...

In 2009, the unpublished 1951 version of Jack Kerouac's book, "On The Road" was released and gave many of the admirers of the 1957 version a chance to revisit the work and it's legacy.

Allen Ginsberg, the legendary Beat poet and close friend, felt that the 1957 version of the book had removed much of the "mad energy" and life of Kerouac's story. Which is true, the Original "Scroll" version, which was typed out on eight long sheets of drafting paper and taped together into a single scroll, differs in some important ways.

The 1957 version was toned down, particularly in sexual details like the sexuality of some of the characters and all of the people in the book were given fictitious names. Which given the straight laced atmosphere of the 50s era, wasn't surprising, and using the real names of living persons can make any book risky to publish.

The Original Scroll (like it's later published version) had an episodic approach to story telling, moving from one scene to another as it appeared in Kerouac's head, as opposed to events tied to a linear time frame. He spends time in the San Francisco Bay Area, for example, yet describes very little of what he saw. Days or weeks are often covered with a single sentence, yet many pages are devoted to conversations with a friend or friends, and if he's waiting for money to come via mail (or wages on payday), he'll just skip over to it's arrival and then the narrative becomes full again.

Also, how the story was told was just as important, if not more so, than the plot. The whole work was a grand experiment in form. A description of Lawrence Sternes', "The Life And Opinions Of Tristram Shandy," probably describes Kerouac's book best, that it was about how far you could depart from classic novel tradition and still call it a novel.

...the America dream...

The 1950s in the United States was a time of great prosperity and the fabled "American Dream." The darker side of that vision was conformity and sexual repression, at least from the point of view of the intelligentsia and artists. They did have a point; social injustices such as the McCarthy witch hunt for communists or Jim Crow laws weren't exceptions to the rule, but part of a general attitude that if you didn't fit in, you were out.

That was the America that Jack Kerouac knew, and began to rebel against. He had an interesting and often tumultuous life, too full of detail to easily summarize here (a good subject to for you all to google), but by the time Kerouac began writing the 1951 version of "On The Road," known as the Scroll, his friends and acquaintances already included future greats like Allen Ginsberg and William S. Burroughs. 

The author typed the scroll version out in three weeks, taking Benzedrine to keep on pace, and the feel and energy of the book reflects this. Having been around a lot of meth users during my homeless period, the rhythm and flow of conversation closely matched what I heard out there. It wasn't unusual for a guy on meth to riff out long streams of thoughts which would range from brilliant to banal.

...it was much more...

The book wasn't just a speed rap...the point of laying it all out, straight through without correctly placed periods, commas, and structured paragraphs (often simply separated by three periods) was to break free of the strictures of formal grammar and composition. It was a work with a fluctuating but continuous metre, or rhythm. One could say it was like a long improvisational jazz composition but with words instead of musical notes.

A musician would certainly understand this concept and his Jazz references illuminate that sensibility. It's words as music, not just in sound or rhythm but as an immediate, and direct connection to the creative source without the filter of an artistic process, style or specific form. Everything that flowed onto the scroll was left untouched, with both the good and bad notes, so to speak, bypassing any impulse to self edit or adhere to the rules of grammar (or create something that would sell).

...a view of America...

To understand the basic premise of On The Road, one has to see it for what it was; a statement of Kerouac's view of America. As he saw it, it was a "sad" place, full of conformity, repression and materialism. Whether that was true or not isn't important as far as this book is concerned. It's all about how he saw it, and his explorations were influenced by that outlook.

What makes the book's themes about freedom relevant in 2021 is that much of his rebellion was on a social level, rather than political. Most of the pressures to conform are on a personal level, with the pressure applied by family, peers or acquaintances seen every day. 

Kerouac's road trips weren't an act of rebellion per se, as journeys into the unknown have always been an integral part of the American character (or mythology). What was different was that the aim of the journey was discovery and not material gain.

The underlying morality in the United States in the 1950's (and still is in many ways) was that material success is the end game or validation of any endevour. Most artists, particularly musicians, have experienced that arc of initial approval from others that begins to curve downwards when the pot of gold doesn't arrive. The attitude is that youthful rebellion and dreams are OK, as long as you grow up and get a real job afterwards.

Kerouac didn't buy into that. He sought a more direct connection to life; not what it was supposed to be or what others said it was. His immersion into philosophy, jazz, wandering, and writing was about living for experience, that is to say, leading a spontaneous or "mad" life. There was no pot at the end of the rainbow, his sights were always on the present. Such a life would experience a lot of highs and lows, but without the conception that a life could be ruined by a single mistake or failure.

...all about honesty...

One of the virtues of the Original 1951 Scroll is that it's an honest book. Jack's descriptions of various friends were candid. He describes Neal Cassidy, the other major protagonist in the book, as a Nietzsche-like philosophical primitive who stole cars in his youth, and was a womanizer (in so many words). He has a dispassionate view of another who married a woman because she had money for a road trip and dumped her once it ran out. 

Needless to say, in this day and age, it'd be hard to imagine a woman who'd find such storylines a milestone in modern literature and intellectual freedom. The women in the book, from Kerouac's mother to the various girlfriends and wives, could seem to some readers that they're mainly there for sex, support, and money. However, Kerouac's depictions of females are generally quite warm, particularly with his mother and sister, but his view of women was pretty much like any other male in the 50s. 

The honesty I'm talking about goes further than the sex, drug or booze fueled philosophical explorations. He was willing to include a lot of non-heroic details, like when he had to write home to get cash from his mother (though he sends her money too at times), and a lot of his adventures depend on the generosity of strangers. He's not depicting himself as a self-reliant pioneer in the wilderness. 



...Orwell's kind of guy...

George Orwell talked about that type of honesty; the willingness to write something that makes one look weak or disreputable. It's easy to brag about being a drug user in an age where it's fashionable, but would modern writers (who want to look cool) casually depict themselves as freeloaders, petty thieves, or in the case of guys, ones who want to respect women but can't because they love their cheating and freedom too much? Even in modern films, anti-heroes tend to have flaws that accentuate their macho appeal, not diminish it. 

One can have an opinion of how his adventures read in 2021, and since the book is being sold at a premium price, his actions can and will be judged by today's standards (and subject to reader reviews on commercial book sites). But to his credit, he didn't write the book to create a myth.

...until the next episode...

In 2021, Kerouac's book could be seen as a male oriented literary milestone that's at the least a historically valuable look at the beginnings of the Beat Culture, like the movie Easy Rider was of the 60s Counter Culture. At its best, the writing is a pleasure for the serious reader and an inspiration for any writer who aspires to do great work.

The Original Scroll is definitely the version that should have been published. To be clear, it's an uneven work, and there are parts that'll leave a modern reader wondering what all the talk is about, but the best passages come off as fresh and inspired even in 2021,  where most of us have pretty much seen everything written under the sun.

Kerouac's best qualities as a writer, spontaneity and inventiveness, shine very brightly in the 1951 Original Scroll version of On The Road.

"They that know no evil can know no good; and, as the learned tell us, that a stone taken out of the head of a Toad is a good antidote against poison; so a competent knowledge of the Devil, and all his ways, may be the best help to make us defie the Devil and all his works."

- Daniel Defoe (The Political History Of The Devil - 1726)

...banning books, and related acts (part 2 of 3 parts)

I said (in the previous blog entry) that the act of banning a book doesn't always symbolize what it used to, in terms of it's actual effect, though the mentalities involved haven't changed much. Although it's common practice to make the issue all about freedom, the reasons can vary, and have become more complex due to the Internet and mass media.

The thing is, not much has changed in terms of human behavior. People have pretty much done the same things, and acted the same way, even if technology and advances in the sciences make us seem smarter than those who lived in ancient times.

The list of behaviors that haven't changed include; mobs, gangs, punishment of heresy or nonconformity, snobbery, racism, minute analysis of sports, exploitation, persecution, greed, and war. The list could include sexual behavior, but we'll leave that subject out of the discussion as 140,786,234 books have already been written on the subject (figure derived from anonymous internet sources).



...larger forces...

The banning, or burning of books is rarely about the work itself. There's larger forces in play, which can involve a wide variety of motives and agendas. It's often a form of political or even economic theatre, which can only incidentally involve a particular work. This in addition to commercial market forces that eventually condemn most new books to obscurity without any need for intervention. 

In fact, anti-book crusaders often have to act quickly before the merciless jaws of capitalism exile their target to the book section of dollar stores and bargain bins. No wonder many modern attacks are directed at publishers before the sales and distribution stage. That's also the best time to make a fuss if the intent is to increase sales (the book is without redeeming social value! Also available in audio!).

In ancient times, like with the Assyrians and other such early nations, things were simpler; after conquering a country, burning their library or archives was just part of the process of wiping out the conquered culture. One exception was the Sumerians, who had all their records and literature on clay tablets, which in many cases escaped the usual rapine and pillaging. Those earthy tomes were probably mistaken for piles of bricks or something.

...Information Age stuff...

As information technology progressed, and literacy became widespread, it goes without saying that books, in whatever form, began to express a wide range of ideas, creating more complex interactions like political, social, and religious disagreements, and as always, back then as with the present, porn addiction among men.

The primary power of a book is that it can communicate an idea to another person or persons. Just as old school Kings or nobles didn't want the peasants to have truly useful military training (because of the R word), the ability to communicate ideas to others has always been controlled as much as possible to keep the masses on point.

For an earlier example, after the First Council of Nicea, convened by the Roman Emperor Constantine (the first) in AD 325, when the first bible was compiled and sort of agreed upon, Arian of Alexandria, whose beliefs and documents were excluded from the Canon and labeled heretical, was exiled and all of his writings that could be found were burned (though Constantine later rescinded Arian's exile).

That was an early attempt to ban writings, though Arian's view of Christianity survives today through Jehovah's Witnesses, and some Unitarian sects. Also, Constantine the Second turned out to have Arian sympathies, so the attempt to wipe that particular denomination had the same effect that banning a book or writings has today. It often creates sympathy or at least curiousity about a work, rather than wiping it's presence or memory out.

...all of the possibilities...

Thanks to the epic advances of information technology, anyone can now enjoy debating the fine points of political theory with people they consider stupid or below them, get into drunken fights over football teams, enjoy the convenience of cyber bullying instead of having interact with real people to form a mob to burn a witch or future Saint, and of course, for men who are so inclined, to marvel at the bleeding edge advances in porn. That stuff has "ban it" written all over it.

That might be a one sided picture of mankind, and a more balanced view should read: "Humankind is unsurpassed in it's commitment to ensuring the happiness of all who share this unique space called Earth, which is why we're proud to partner with really wealthy guys to release PR statements that raise awareness about the poor people and cows who waste the oxygen that the ever shrinking number of trees produce, and affirm our commitment to sustainable energy so that all can continue to consume beef.

I do have to point out (yes again) that a certain amount of oversimplifying and generalization is necessary to keep the narrative short and the digressions long. To paraphrase Rousseau, I may be short of facts, but not of the truth.

...that darn Internet again...

The effort to ban books has become commonplace due to the Internet, which makes it possible to read a lot of ebooks for free or at low cost. That does increase the chance that some tome or another will be hated or vilified (Keep in mind, I'm not saying every book deserves to be read. That's a different issue).

The Internet though, is anarchic in nature, and resistant (though not immune) to "cancelling." Because of that, nothing's ever truly wiped out. In fact, a hundred years from now, if humans are still around, historians will see the net as a valuable look at the sheer variety of human thought and behavior that existed, but wasn't documented as it used to only matter what kings and wealthy men thought.

As they say, the Internet is forever, and book burners are kidding themselves if they think destroying or banning any book actually eliminates any idea, even ones that deserve to be, from the face of the earth. But 100 years from now, there'll still be those who'll try. Some things will never change.

Note: in part three, I'll talk about some famous book burner types. They're often more interesting and harmful than the ideas and books they tried to destroy.

- Al Handa




The Al & Ivy Homeless Literary Journal Archive:

There are earlier blog entries on the Delta Snake Review section of this site that aren't on the On The Road page:
http://deltasnake.blogspot.com





Cover Reveal For Hide In Plain Sight


This is the cover for the upcoming book, Hide In Plain Sight, hopefully out sometime in 2021.




The American Primitive Acoustic Collection by Handa-McGraw International can be streamed on all of the major services, including Spotify, Apple Music, Amazon, and dozens of others.



The Music Of Handa-McGraw International can also be heard on the Electric Fog Factory on YouTube. You can hear the album, and dozens of unreleased cuts and demos, plus exclusive video of Ivy.

Friday, February 12, 2021

On The Road With Al and Ivy: A Literary Homeless Blog - Feb. 2021




"In this land of boundless expanses and unnerving strangeness, this land with which none of their memories were linked, the bunker was a semblance of home."

“Seems long to you, does it,” Steiner said tightly. He shook his head slowly. “It was yesterday, I tell you. Yesterday and today and tomorrow and always.”

- Willi Heinrich (Cross Of Iron 1955 - translated by Richard and Clara Winston for 1956 English edition)

"But there is no honor in this war, memories will be ugly, even if we win, and if we die, we die without God."

- From 1957 movie, "The Enemy Below"

Director Samuel Peckinpah's work was often pigeonholed into a violent, macho loser niche by critics in the 70s, and any philosophical underpinnings misunderstood or treated as thematic flaws. His visual art was judged by superficial elements like his trademark slow motion deaths (a technique now in common use in films). 

Those mainstream opinions, thanks to the Internet, have multiplied by a factor of around a million (calculated by net standards of accuracy) and certainly are valid, at least as personal opinions. As far as my feelings on the various critiques, none are relevant to what really is interesting about the subset of four films that resonated most.

 "Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid," "The Wild Bunch," "Major Dundee," and "Cross Of Iron" all dealt with the themes of decay, change, loss of faith and physical distance. All showed people in the twilight of an era, stuck in degraded routines and duties played out over vast stretches of land that didn't add grandeur but emphasized their rootlessness.

Those themes struck home out there in the car. My homeless life played out in five locations, each quite different from the other. It all started up north in Marin County, then moved down south to Silicon Valley, and finally alternated between the farmlands of Gilroy and the coastal region of Salinas, with a short sojourn to the Sierra Foothills and Fresno.

It wasn't a search for home. Like with Corporal Steiner and his squad in Cross Of Iron, it was just a long journey shaped by circumstances and outside forces, and my earlier life as a well off worker in Silicon Valley was a memory that seemed more and more unreal.



...the cost of war...

The military aspect of Willi Heinrich's Cross of Iron, the book on which Peckinpah's movie was based, wasn't entirely relevant to my experience. Not because of any philosophical objections but because it was a story that could only be written by someone who'd been a soldier. All the research in the world can't put even an empathetic writer or observer in that state of mind. At best, points of view or accounts can be quoted to insert a sense of experience into a work, but it won't be the author's truth.

Sure, a Jack Kerouac or other master could write a book about war, and it would probably be a great one, but he'd either have to lean on another's personal accounts of combat, or substitute or transpose feelings from an activity that seems to provide a similar experience. Which is why Vietnam vet Oliver's Stones' movie Platoon would have more intrinsic truth than Saving Private Ryan, and the side question of which is a better movie is a discussion more in the realm of art (and commerce).

Which is why some aspects of Peckinpah movies related to my situation and only my situation. My book will make a strict differentiation between actual experience and observation or research. 

For example, I was aware of homeless camps and been through some, but had reasons to avoid living in those. Some based on what I saw, and some from what I'd read and heard from others. Second hand accounts can be described, but an understanding of what motivated someone to live in such groups would have to be derived through research. That may be good literature in a sense, but not necessarily truth.

...there is relevance, though...

One interesting subtlety, the various characters in those movies, who are failures to the respectable folk do teach an important skill; how to live with failure. This isn't a small thing. Focusing too much on winning can result in paralysis or self-punishment in the aftermath of losing. The nature of competition at all levels guarantees that everyone loses at some point in their life.

The soldiers in Cross of Iron did experience the same feelings of rootlessness and loss that the homeless had. Contrary to some critics and reader comments about the book, that it was "talky" and "slow" at points, it was in fact very much how many human beings will act and think in such circumstances. Many American comments, for example, came from people who grew up watching war movies where the morale officer was depicted as a trivial idiot, and the conclusion of a tense plot is some pyrotechnic. Losing was an unthinkable outcome, like a heresy.

Which is admittedly oversimplifying, but many Americans don't understand homelessness and that's not a criticism, just a fact. Most opinions on the subject are observations and judgements filtered through Puritan or Darwinian (i.e. Capitalism) attitudes. There's been no real comprehensive study of the phenomenon and most "experts" that the media do quote on the subject are speaking from a small sample size or vast statistics that are open to interpretation. "Homelessness" is basically treated as a single catagory, and at worst, a stereotype.

Most modern images of the homeless are stereotypes (which I've discussed in earlier blog entries), and the actual diversity of the scene is great enough that I had to limit the scope of the book to what was actually seen or heard.

...critical discussion...

I recall an early critical discussion of the Cross of Iron movie, and the negative comments seemed to focus on the seemingly irrelevant philosophical discussions. The western point of view is more about men of action who get things done and chase women (or want more action scenes), and there isn't much appetite for self-examination.

It was a surprise to run into homeless people who did engage in philosophical explorations. In retrospect, it shouldn't have been. Most intelligent people will try to understand how they found themselves in such a catastrophic situation, and are acutely aware of what was lost.

Now, I'm not saying that we discussed Newtonian Agnosticism or chaos theory (though I did give some thought as to the absurdity of making all soda sizes .99 cents at a gas station sale. I mean, will people actually chose the smaller size?), but more than a few had astute descriptions of the scene or had evolved a viable survival strategy, which doesn't come to one dimensional types.

The soldiers in Corporal Steiner's unit weren't simply losers or outcasts (another critical characterization of Peckinpah movies). Most by sheer survival of the fittest had become very smart soldiers (Nietzsche's Supermen?) who whatever their differences (or how Gumplowicz describes the shaping of society via conflict) could rely on each other. Their disillusion (Sartre's other side of dispair?) didn't preclude trying to live on to go home (or was Thomas Wolfe right, you can't go home?). The idea that they were "losers" (or Bukowski's vision of rebels) is really a western idea, where success (Spinoza's attainment of perfection?) is calculated against metrics (mainly money given that we're a dialectical materialist society). 

However, it's best not to overthink such things, as Steiner says in the book, "it seems to me that philosophy, too, finds new questions in every answer."

All of the characters in the aforementioned Peckinpah movies had been successful in their younger days, or experienced a time when they were winning the game. Aside from the lost optimism of youth, they were all still the same person, and in most cases, considerably smarter than they had been. Survival is both a skill and instinct.

...time waits for no one...

What changed was the era, due to the movement of time and the implicit loss of freedom. In the Wild West, the setting for The Wild Bunch and Pat Garrett and Billy The Kid, being an outlaw was probably as free as any other life choice, at least in terms of not having to having one's life run by the military or some tycoon. Pat Garrett loved Billy The Kid, yet later in life, they had to be enemies because "law" had come to the west, and he had become a lawman to survive.

In Corporal Steiner's case, time had brought the realization that the war really wasn't what he thought it was, that it had become a remorseless machine that just went on and on and ate up lives to no real purpose. 

The Cross of Iron book, of course, is richer in psychological detail than the movie, and it's interesting how his perception of time evolved. Rather than become a existentialist who only lived in the present (as some war books or movies would depict men), his past moved into closer view and influenced the present. An entire lifetime was vividly alive in his head, so his emotions could fluctuate in an unpredictable manner.

...childhood's end...

That happened to me; events from childhood merged with my view of the present, like a filter that colored every perception and situation. It was such a complex web that I began to think that it was due to some mental illness. It didn't help that early on, due to sleep deprivation and poor nutrition, I suffered from periodic hallucinations. Had the police or other authorities caught me in that state, I'd have been at least temporarily held and tagged as just another mentally ill transient. In my book, you'll find that I almost was.

Luckily, it didn't go in that direction, and one reason it didn't was that there was an archetype of a person who had a vivid merging of past and present, aggravated by poor nutrition and exhaustion. That being Corporal Steiner, and if he was sane, so was I. That's the difference between a good book and literature that speaks truth.



"Thou art the god, thou art my lord, etc. This was in heathen Babylon, some three thousand years ago. Since then, the world has moved on—"

- Upton Sinclair (The Profits Of Religion)

In medieval times, priests served a vital function in the armies: they made sure that the peasants who served as coerced unpaid infantry, forgot about the Ten Commandments long enough to kill the King's enemies, but quickly return to being happy with their humble lot in life.

Their status as all knowing experts on the Word of God helped with a variety of ills that could afflict the fighting morale of armies; such as conscience, fear of dying, pacifism, resentment over being exploited, and dismay at the entitled ingratitude of the nobility towards their sacrifice. The good and noble Lords of the King got into the spirit of things too, enthusiastically torturing and executing any soldier that offended God's favored servant, the King, with a variety of methods that were zesty tonics for the recalcitrant and cowardly.

That might be an overly cynical view of those shepherds of men's souls in the glorious, but grim task of enriching Kings who only answered to God, but the Internet has proven that similar influencers and experts will always be needed to guide flocks into absurd and illogical behavior, or in modern times, spend money.

...in defense...

In defense of priests and other types of sages; there's now a host of aimless souls with disposable incomes not derived from sweaty back breaking toil, who no longer have the simple task to serve or die, and are thirsty for guidance navigating the bewildering responsibilities of choice in a complex modern world, particularly in the west, where artificial intelligence hasn't yet reached the point of being able to decide things for them like the good ole days.
 
It's not easy figuring out which vegetable will increase your life span, how to relate to a partner without personal communication, or finding a socially acceptable outlet for bigotry. In a materialistic world where people regard God as a rabbit foot keychain, there still is a need for people who can provide guidance and stifle dissent. Even the Communists needed commissars to keep the workers paradise ship shape and feeling that old time religion.

The word "expert" now has the same power as the old phrase, "it's the will of God." It should be noted that this doesn't always apply to the Internet where it's not necessary to identify as an expert to give relationship or financial advice, diagnose mental illness in people you've never met, and of course, expound on theories covering all aspects of diet and nutrition.

...a short disclaimer...

I should add at this point of the essay that I'm certainly not referring to you intelligent and discerning readers who visit and enjoy this blog.

The media needs experts to ensure that customers aren't distracted by crippling doubts as to where the information came from or suffer the mental paralysis caused by pondering if what's being said is actually true. The Giants of Commerce need influencers to assist in the holy task of making life as expensive as possible and ensure that money is concentrated into the ever shrinking number of hands of the truly deserving.

Quoting experts is now like waving the cross or flag in earlier times. It simplifies the issue; any skeptics are recalcitrant cretins and the like minded are rallied to the standard. Which is good, as arguing over every fine point of an issue (though the Internet has opportunities available for those who enjoy doing that) wastes precious time better spent on online games, waiting for a superfood to work wonders on your body, or, if truth be told, arguing over every fine point of an issue with strangers (but on more agreeable and relevant subjects).

...once upon a time...

There was a time when the title of "expert" meant that the person was really an expert (I'm only speculating here, I'm not sure there actually was such a time). Before the net, there were less media outlets and only those who could truly provide unassailable commentary to further the point of a news story and sell commercial time could get the gig. 

However, with the number of news and commentary outlets now estimated at five zillion (a number derived from the same methods used by political event organizers, which should be accurate enough by Internet standards), the demand for experts now exceeds that required for testimony in lawsuits by a factor that some experts estimate at four superduperquadrillion times the norm. That may seem like a lot, but still only enough to fit on the head of a pin.

That's a lot of experts, man, but necessary in an age where vegging out time with the phone or big screen TV is precious, and not to be wasted thinking about complex issues, like for example, wondering which of a hundred brands of guitar will make you into a rock star. After all, most guitars are the same anyway, and thinking too much wastes valuable time guitar makers could be spending making their owners richer.

...absolution...

There's also the vital job of absolution. Falling short of high moral standards can cause feelings of guilt and stress that pharmaceuticals can't always relieve. People who fret that their phones and other goods are made in substandard sweat shops need assurance by experts and other butt kissing toadies directly employed by employers that "the company is committed to providing outstanding working conditions and above market level wages in a joyous environment that lifts workers out of the poverty caused by previous colonialist exploitation by ((http:// << fill in national origin of business here >>))."

I may not have worded that quite correctly, but close enough I think. To achieve the great aims of capitalism, the captains of industry are more than happy to help absolve the customer of any culpability in the evasion of First World safety and wage standards. If that ain't priestly power, I don't know what is.

You, most alert and virtuous reader, may have noticed that the essay seems to concentrate on process and not policy. That is to say, not delineating how those who use and quote experts determine who is one. 

I can only say, when they know, we'll all know.



"JAM3:07 For every kind of beasts, and of birds, and of serpents, and of things in the sea, is tamed, and hath been tamed of mankind:  JAM3:08 But the tongue can no man tame; it is an unruly evil, full of deadly poison."

- King James Bible

...ban the book...part one (to be continued next blog entry)...

Banning a book meant more before the advent of the Internet, when access to the written word was limited (Nowadays, blocking your internet access is the modern equivalent). Plus in eras like the 50s, much of the public trusted the various gate keepers who controlled access to the printed word in the name of protecting public decency.

It's more of a symbolic act these days, and more often than not, posturing to get media coverage or even increase demand for a book. In fact, even being involved in a sex scandal or committing a crime can induce yawns with a jaded public so finding that juicy grey zone of outrage that'll get people reaching for their piggy banks gets more elusive by the day.

The whole idea of banning books is more about the concept that information is power. In this case, people are kept from reading a book based on the judgement of a few who did read it. They shun the work on faith, trusting in the judgement of the gatekeeper or gatekeepers that it's a tome that would cause concrete harm to society, or some such thing. That's assuming the protected public gives a crap, of course, but let's assume every book is important for the purposes of this argument, shall we?

...these days...

These days, banning a book, particularly a public domain classic that can be easily downloaded, is an act that really has no real world effect. You can't stop distribution and there's no economic damage to an author who's long gone. That doesn't mean a ban has no effect at all. For a new author, getting proscribed or attracting grass roots opposition can be disasterous.

...the interesting thing...

What's really interesting is the relationship of gate keepers (most being self-appointed), and the compliance of those who accept instruction to not read a particular book. Understanding that process gives one a real insight into the mechanics of power via control of information (and ideas), and what is supposedly being protected. 

Say, for example, some historian or activist says that Mein Kamph by Adolf Hitler is dangerous or Darwin is blasphemous, and a large portion of society then assumes that's it's bad and never read the work.

That's a form of faith, which can be as harmless as thinking anyone rooting against your football team is an idiot, but the issues that surround both of the aforementioned books do get debated and influence actual laws and social behavior. In that case, the debate can become manipulated by a few who actually know (or think they know) what the books said.

Most of the people who throw the word fascist or blasphemous around haven't read the books in question. They end up arguing in terms of symbols, throwing around terms like Nazi or heathen, or bypass discussion by dismissing the unconvinced as dingbats of low intelligence.

...black and white...

There is an absolute (in my opinion); people can't intelligently discuss a book they haven't read. Period. You can quote someone who has, but it isn't your thought or conclusion. Now, there's no law that says you can't comment on the bible, for example, even if you haven't read it. Plus, in most democratic counties, you can even advocate the banning of a book you've never read. 

However, try to say that a diet consisting of bacon and steak won't shave lots of pounds off the hips and there'll be calls to prove it by those who have studied nutrition data (we'll avoid the larger question of what valid data is) or the even larger number who started the diet because some website said it was guaranteed to give you a swimsuit booty. To be fair, eating burgers and steak to lose weight is an attractive concept so even having proof that it doesn't work may not sway the carnivores. That gets into questions about faith, so we'll avoid such bends in the road in the interests of staying on point.

Like I said earlier, a century ago, banning a book was a more powerful gesture. Books and paper media were once the equivalent of the Internet (the info side that is). The more educated fascist type now knows that to cut the public off from ideas, it's better to cut off Internet access, and it's really the same idea, as most bans are aimed at a person or single idea (book, movie, etc).

...control...

If people are content to just assume Mein Kamph is evil because someone says so, then having it on every library shelf won't make any difference. Sure, some fascist types might get all tingly reading it, but they were already inclined to be Jack bootees. Plus in the personal sphere, sociopaths don't need a handbook by Hitler to control people, they already know how.

The problem with such an atmosphere isn't that certain books won't be available, as the Internet pretty much guarantees that won't happen. It's more of a concern that people may want to cut off your access. I use the word access because it's impossible to read every book ever written, so it's silly to say people should read every banned book. But if an issue or work interests you, a free society should allow that research. In fact, encourage it, as it reduces the amount of hearsay type arguments that can devolve into who or which expert is right.

The essence is that while books are safer now, the concept of suppressing an idea, or voice hasn't gone away. The anarchic freedom of the Internet also permits the social control or suppression of a person or their voice as expressed in a blog, web site, or social media account.

I'll do part two in the next blog entry, and get into specific examples.

Al Handa




The Al & Ivy Homeless Literary Journal Archive:

There are earlier blog entries on the Delta Snake Review section of this site that aren't on the On The Road page:
http://deltasnake.blogspot.com

Cover Reveal For Hide In Plain Sight


This is the cover for the upcoming book, Hide In Plain Sight, hopefully out sometime in 2021.




The American Primitive Acoustic Collection by Handa-McGraw International can be streamed on all of the major services, including Spotify, Apple Music, Amazon, and dozens of others.



The Music Of Handa-McGraw International can also be heard on the Electric Fog Factory on YouTube. You can hear the album, and dozens of unreleased cuts and demos, plus exclusive video of Ivy.