SALON is running a series on labor unions in the 21st century. My contribution is a piece asking if struggling artists, musicians, authors, scribes, etc. can make use of a union or collective to negotiate these strange times.
I spoke to a number of folks -- a laid-off journalist, a music historian, screenwriter who helped lead the Hollywood writers strike, cultural observer Thomas Frank -- for this piece. And took the whole thing back to about the 12th century. Complicated issue.
Here it is.
Monday, March 18, 2013
Can Unions Save the Creative Class?
Labels:
art,
classical music,
creative class,
newspapers
Monday, March 11, 2013
Modern Architecture in LA
WHEN people think about LA urbanism, they still invoke the same old cliches -- Woody Allen's line about the only "cultural advantage" being a right turn on red, the notorious "sprawl," and so on. They recite Getrude Stein's line about "no there there" (applied originally to another California city) as if the early town fathers just sort of forgot that part.
So it was refreshing to hear from two Getty curators, who I spoke to last week about the place's new architecture initiative, that the sins and glories of LA were all pretty much planned out a century ago.
Here is my LA Times piece on the Getty's Pacific Standard Time Presents: Modern Architecture, and the inaugural show, Overdrive. (There will be a lot in the press on this over the next few months.) It is a sequel of sorts to its (much larger) initiative on postwar art in L.A.
The first press conference was at the Capitol Records tower, and the Getty seems to be rolling this out in style. What I wonder is, with all the work done on LA modernism -- by everyone from the Conservancy's Modern Committee to DnA radio host Frances Anderson to architectural historian Alan Hess -- can the Getty, which spent years basically ignoring LA and contemporary culture, add anything to the continuing story?
Looking forward to finding the answer to that question over the ensuing weeks and months.
So it was refreshing to hear from two Getty curators, who I spoke to last week about the place's new architecture initiative, that the sins and glories of LA were all pretty much planned out a century ago.
(I got very pumped up talking these guys about our bold, unconventional metropolis -- and then as I got on the 405, realized what an absolute disaster LA can be sometimes.)
Here is my LA Times piece on the Getty's Pacific Standard Time Presents: Modern Architecture, and the inaugural show, Overdrive. (There will be a lot in the press on this over the next few months.) It is a sequel of sorts to its (much larger) initiative on postwar art in L.A.
The first press conference was at the Capitol Records tower, and the Getty seems to be rolling this out in style. What I wonder is, with all the work done on LA modernism -- by everyone from the Conservancy's Modern Committee to DnA radio host Frances Anderson to architectural historian Alan Hess -- can the Getty, which spent years basically ignoring LA and contemporary culture, add anything to the continuing story?
Looking forward to finding the answer to that question over the ensuing weeks and months.
Labels:
architecture,
art,
Getty,
Los Angeles,
urbanism,
west coast
Tuesday, March 5, 2013
British History and Texas Music
A SHORT, insightful new book about the making of the modern
world – told in microcosm – has just come from the pen of a noted indie rocker.
I
guess I don't see much of a relationship when it comes to religion. In
the centuries that separate these bands from the people I look at in the book
there's a good case to be made that Christianity has almost died in Britain.
With the economy there may be more of a connection. These bands are
to de-industrialization what Ryder was to pre-industrialization. And
without the industrial revolution, Manchester and Leeds would still likely be
small towns with little of the context--gritty urban decay, university life,
radical class politics, and so on--that helped define those bands and their
sound, especially when their music was recorded by Martin Hannett. It's a
great question, and I wish I had a better answer.
Here at The Misread City, we’ve been impressed with the
melancholy genius of Matt Kadane since the first record, What Fun Life Was, from his old band, Dallas slowcore quartet
Bedhead. Like the group that followed, The New Year, Bedhead was defined by
melodic songwriting and intricate, understated guitar playing – VU’s hushed
third record, with a bit of Sonic Youth and New Order, a hint of Texas twang,
and almost no effects. (I wrote about The New Year for the LA Times in 2008, and the video for their song "Disease" appears near the end of this post.)
Turns out Kadane (who led both groups with his bearded
brother Bubba) spent much of his musical career getting a doctorate at
Brown; these days he teaches history at Hobart and
William Smith College in upstate New York.
In any case, Kadane’s new book is The Watchful Clothier: The
Life of an Eighteenth-Century Protestant Capitalist. This is the kind of
history we like – lucid, free of jargon and with a clear narrative and
analytical direction. (Full disclosure: The
Watchful Clothier appears on Yale University Press, the house on which I
will publish my own work on the perils of the creative class, sometime next
year.) It takes off from some ideas of one of our favorite historians, Christopher Hill. whose book on English radicalism, The World Turned Upside Down, inspired song sung by Billy Bragg song. (The Watchful Clothier, for what it's worth, includes an endorsement from the important historian Joyce Appleby, though it awaits its treatment by a British pop artist.)
What follows is my Q and A, conducted by email, with the
historian and indie rocker. I ask Kadane about both sides of his amphibious
identity.
Protestantism
and the market economy are two of the key forces in the modern West, and have
been specially joined at least since Max Weber and maybe since the Puritans.
How did your "watchful clothier" seem like the right lens though
which to gaze at these big issues?
The
clothier, Joseph Ryder, lived in eighteenth-century Leeds where he ran a small
business. Leeds was one of the great cities of the industrial revolution
and was undergoing big changes during Ryder's life, which ended in 1768, right
around the time that industrialization was noticeably beginning. But
already while he was in his active years, the population was growing at an
unprecedented rate, more and more people were becoming wage laborers, the cloth
that the town produced was heading to markets further and further afield, and
all these things played a major role in laying the framework for modern
capitalism. Ryder was, at the same time, a deeply pious and traditional
Protestant and wrote a two and a half million word diary to document his
religious life. So he lived at the intersection of these big religious
and material forces, and he's an ideal case study for seeing how they
interacted.
Today,
Protestantism and capitalism seem pretty comfortable with each other -- in many
parts of the American South and Midwest, for instance, they both stand
triumphant, with arms joined. But in the 18th century you chronicle, they seem
to be in some serious tension with each other, don't they?
I
agree that they now they seem designed for each other. Mega-churches meet
all the basic definitions of big business. There are also, to be fair,
subplots that complicate the story, more selfless social activists within the
various denominations, and so on. But the way things largely stand today
is pretty different from how they were envisioned in the centuries closer to
the Reformation. Sermons back then railed against acquisitiveness,
successful parishioners wrung their hands even when they balked at the idea of
maximizing profits. What complicates this image is that the Puritan ethos
was also partly responsible for a new more relentless mode of striving in the
world. For reasons that I think Max Weber was basically the first to see,
and however much the argument may need to be modified, Protestantism at its
most scrupulous, at its most unguided by external authority, and in the right
economic setting could encourage secular ambition as a way to overcome anxiety
about salvation.
The
nature of Christianity changed during this period, as Newton took hold and the
Enlightenment reinforced the prestige science and rationalism. "A watchful
God had become a watchmaker," you write. What happened and how was it felt
at the time?
Christianity
in the eighteenth century is hard to describe without qualification. This
is, after all, the age of the first great awakening. But if traditional
Christianity in western Europe was reasserting itself, this was in large part
because it was also changing in the hands of rationalists, who may have been a
minority of the population but who for that very reason were also radically
vocal. In the eyes of these anti-traditionalists, Jesus was often seen as
a mere man, God was conceptualized as a sort of mathematician who designed a
universe according to such sublime laws that it could run itself without
Providential intervention, and the notion that humans are fundamentally
depraved no longer seemed tenable. Religious figures who were coming to
think this way were also especially successful by the later eighteenth century
in getting their message across to the emerging industrialists. Churches
throughout the north of England that had more or less been Calvinist at the
beginning of the century were actively looking for religious radicals,
particularly Unitarians, to start leading the flock. Historians have more
or less known that this was happening, but what has been missing from the story
is the sort of parishioner's first hand account that Ryder offers.
Ryder
recorded in his diary something like 5,000 sermons that he heard preached
throughout Yorkshire, and what this record shows are two really interesting
things. One is that the new religious outlook, with its emphasis on the
dignity of humans and the humanity of Jesus, had a natural affinity with
emerging commercial self-interest. Puritanism could also encourage
economic striving to overcome anxiety about salvation, but it had a much
stricter definition of what counted as economic excess. And it's much
easier to be fully self-interested if, for example, you actually believe that
you're worthwhile rather than utterly depraved as Puritans thought.
So to accommodate the remarkable wealth that industrialists were
generating, the religion of so many of these people had to soften on certain
points. A more rationalist religion was more compatible with more
materially rational expectations. But then the other thing that Ryder
shows is that this religious and cultural shift could unsettle more
conservative parishioners, who nevertheless stuck it out with some of the
chapels that were basically turning the old Puritan ethos upside down.
Ryder went to his grave feeling like the ministers who were telling him
to love himself a little more were actually getting Christianity wrong.
So I think you have to see religious change in the Enlightenment for the
incredibly complicated process that it was. But once you do see that,
then the reason that the cultural effort to decriminalize self-interest was so
concerted becomes intelligible--and this really was a decades long effort on
the part of opinion makers like David Hume, Adam Smith, and others. It
was hard to convince people, the very sorts of industrious people who Smith
theorized could make the nation unprecedentedly rich, that the traditional
Christian take on wealth was exactly wrong. Trying to transform
self-interest from a vice into a virtue was such a massive cultural project for
people like Adam Smith because people like Ryder, however poised they were to
bolster the wealth of the nation by virtue of their industry and enterprise,
were committed to a sort of morality that Smith and others saw as antithetical
to capitalism.
What
surprised you the most in your research as you dove into Ryder's life and
times?
That
he was actually interesting. I recognized right away that his diary was
an incredible source, and I knew I had to try to do something with it, but I
was put off by his perspective. I had originally been much more
interested in the radicals. But I didn't just grow to like him, which is
in any case not a necessary condition for writing about someone. I grew
interested in how torn he was. He equivocates about everything, not just
commerce. He could come across rioters and feel for them, but only if
they were rioting from need and in reaction to unfair laws. He had a deep
sense of social propriety but could still feel sympathy for a maligned woman
who showed up at his house drunk one night looking for spiritual advice.
He dressed down his household workers who helped him make cloth and
afterwards confided to his diary that he was just as undisciplined in his youth
and should think twice before feeling superior. Those same workers were
often orphans who he seems to have been attached to in at least of couple of
cases, in no small part because he and his wife tried but failed to have
children of their own. And then that wife, a woman he never actually
names in his diary, was an object of serious ambivalence. When they
married just a few months after the woman he was really in love with got away,
he found her less exciting than his diary. A few years into the marriage
they had grown emotionally attached, and he was devastated when she died before
her fortieth birthday and he had to go on alone for another decade and a half.
By all accounts people also liked him. Maybe not surprisingly.
Ambivalent people see things from at least two angles, and that can make
them much more empathetic beings than the dogmatists.
Which
historical school or method are you most indebted to, and why is is important
to you?
When
I was an undergraduate I had a picture of Foucault on the wall beside my desk,
still such a great picture from the interview he did in Vanity Fair in '83, not
long before he died. I don't see him in the same exalted way, but one
thing I took from him I still believe: doing history can usefully
denature the present. You get the same insight in Marx, another big
influence. Nietzsche too. But Foucault also made me think that a
key part of the story was the early modern past, especially in western Europe.
In graduate school I fell more under the influence of people like Weber,
Pierre Bourdieu and others who more or less assert the importance of culture as
a motive force even while staying tuned in to the material. And when
trying to describe culture I've learned not just from Clifford Geertz but from
the major figures in semiotics who I avidly read as an undergraduate, from
practitioners of microhistory like Carlo Ginzburg, from the British Marxists
historians, especially Thompson, Hill, and Hobsbawm, that last of whom, despite
his flaws, was particularly inspiring as one of my own teachers in graduate
school. A number of historians have also directly taught me the
importance of archival research. Margaret Jacob stands at the top of that
list. Her energy and curiosity in the archives are legendary, and she has
had major insights about the enlightenment and the causes of industrialization
because of her willingness to undertake some pretty unromantic labor. I
could say the same about my undergraduate mentor William Taylor, one of the
great colonial Latin Americanists, whose footnotes will make you tremble.
Really I could say the same about two other guys who I worked with in
graduate school, Tim Harris and Phil Benedict. When you approach history
as a philosophy student, as I did when I first began graduate school, there's a
real temptation to be theoretical at the expense of contemporaries' experience.
I'm grateful to the theorists who can so clearly lay out the big
questions. But if I hadn't been encouraged by these historians I've just
named, and they're not the only ones, then I don't think I'd have anything
remotely useful to say about what happened in the past.
For
a musician or music fan, there must be a double resonance to studying northern
English industrial cities like Leeds or Manchester. Not only did they
experience what you call "the birth pangs of modern capitalism" more
acutely than anywhere else, these cities have produced more than their share of
great rock music -- Gang of Four, Mekons, Joy Division, Smiths, Stone Roses,
many more. Do you see any relation between those early-modern social forces and
the culture that emerged much later?
Congratulations
to Matt Kadane the historian -- what is next for Matt Kadane the indie rock
star?
The
New Year is two-thirds finished with a new record. The basic tracks are
done and in the case of a few songs we're further along. My brother and I
also have a new band with David Bazan and Will Johnson called Overseas.
We just finished mastering the first record, which is set to come out at
the beginning of June, followed by some shows in August on the east coast, west
coast, and in Texas. I'm excited to play music again.
Labels:
academia,
books,
brit culture,
history,
indie,
rock music,
Texas
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