MAINSTREAM MYOPIA

Louis Menand writes that "Postwar," Tony Judt's new history of Europe since 1945, tells "a remarkable story, and, fortunately, 'Postwar' is a remarkable book." We thought Menand's New Yorker piece, "From the Ashes," was pretty remarkable, too -- that is, until our friend William Osborne -- an American expat composer, musicologist and cultural observer who has lived in Europe for more than a quarter century -- offered his take on it.

Postwar: A History of Europe Since 1945, by Tony Judt"Interesting review," Osborne writes, "but something bothers me about Menand -- the essentializing Manhattan worldview, a hidden agenda that everything revolves around American finance and globalization."

(We hadn't thought of that.)

Menand writes: "Western Europe rebuilt its economy because U.S. Secretary of State George Marshall proposed a plan of unprecedented financial assistance, and the plan was intelligently implemented."

(That's pretty much the standard view.)

Osborne responds: "What myopia! What were the Europeans going to do, sit in their rubble indefinitely and do nothing if the Americans didn't help them? In reality, the Europeans would have rebuilt anyway. The Marshall Plan was in large part a massive effort to quickly bring Western Europe under America's sphere of influence and to keep it from taking a third way between America and the Soviet Union. The communists and socialists were very powerful in Western Europe. The United States conducted a massive campaign against them. The Marshall Plan was part of that history. Parts of the work were indeed altruistic, but there was a big hidden agenda."

Menand writes: "Western Europe became a place of social planning, nationalized economies, and strong states not because democratic socialism was in the Continental genes but because there were no reserves of private capital and few viable non-governmental institutions around to put the world back together again."

(Again, pretty much the standard view.)

Osborne responds: "Uh yeah, political thought isn't genetic -- and let's not forget to put in a putdown of social democracy. In reality, socialist thought had deeply influenced Europe's intellectual life, and many of the programs instituted in Europe were also formulated by the leaders of Roosevelt's New Deal -- a history the American corporatocracy now wishes to erase. The state radio and television networks of Europe, for example, were established through the influence of America. They thrived in Europe, but the rightwingers in our own American society never let us have such benefits ourselves. The neoliberal agenda is now to destroy Europe's social democracies as well. This is what Mr. Menand and Mr. Judt know full well, and yet they remain carefully silent."

LOUIS MENAND [photo: Joseph Tabacca]Menand, left, writes: "The European model, Judt says, was mostly an accident. There was no great political vision; necessity and pragmatism ruled the day. As [Foreign Affairs edtior Hamilton Fish] Armstrong wrote, you cannot eat ideology. A lot of what Americans take to be traditionally European is simply an artifact of the postwar scramble for survival, for example, national branding. The notion that cars made in Germany would ipso facto be better crafted than others, or that Italian-designed clothing, Belgian chocolates, French kitchenware, or Danish furniture were unquestionably the best to be had: this would have seemed curious indeed just a generation before, Judt writes. But it worked: Americans paid a premium for German engineering and Italian styling imagining that centuries of native craftsmanship lay behind them."

(We bought a Volkswagen once. It was cheap, and it worked great in the snow drifts of Northern Vermont.)

Osborne responds: "That is much overstated. Fine machine tooling does indeed have a long German tradition. And the Italians have been known for elegant design for 500 years. But of course, if you want to destroy cultural identity and create a massive neoliberal global economy, history and culture have to be erased. It's all just marketing, the sly neoliberal tells us."

Menand writes: "From the provincial American point of view, the most striking change in the status of Europe is that it is no longer the place where Americans with intellectual, artistic, or just life style aspirations wish or even pretend to wish to be."

(Scheisse! Call us provincials. We'll still take the French côte d'azure for our vacations anytime.)

Osborne responds: "OK, Mr. American White Guy, go live in Toledo or Omaha. Forget Paris, Utrecht, Heidelberg, Sienna, Florence, Dresden, Salzburg, Copenhagen, Barcelona, Prague, and Amsterdam. There's nothing quite like the wisdom of a closet neoliberal East Side Harvard professor writing for The New Yorker."

Menand writes: "Once, Europe was where all the new stuff seemed to be coming from. Then, some time in the nineteen-sixties, that stopped. Europe's great cities are still fascinating to Americans, but the fascination is fundamentally touristic. They're theme parks. Almost no one thinks that you can't be a real writer or painter or sophisticated bon vivant unless you spend some time living in one of them. This is not a judgment on the splendors of American civilization; it's just an observation about European civilization, and it bears on what sort of role in the world Europe will play during the rest of the century."

Osborne responds: "The Harvard professor apparently hasn't heard of Derrida, Foucault, Habermas, Henze, Stockhausen, Berio, Boulez, Beckett, Pinter, Pirondello, Fellini, Jean Renoir, and on and on. America is not nearly capable of producing intellectuals like these, because it does not even have the cultural infrastructure to support them. In fact, the American system, with institutions such as Hollywood, has already done much to destroy parts of Europe's fine intellectual life, including its once-wonderful film industry. Someone please take Mr. Menand to a Fellini
film or a concert of Berio's 'Sinfonia' or a Beckett play before he turns into a complete Yankee imbecile."

(Now that we've been hipped, we're going to sit down to lunch and, like the rest of our compatriot imbeciles, devour yesterday's turkey leftovers.)

-- Tireless Staff of Thousands

November 25, 2005 10:56 AM |

Categories:

Me Elsewhere

'WILD SIDE' STILL ROCKS 

Nelson Algren was one of the great American authors of the 20th century, it is no exaggeration to say, and among the most neglected. Consider his underrated classic, "A Walk on the Wild Side." The title -- popularized and co-opted as an idiomatic phrase by Hollywood and Madison Avenue (institutions Algren loathed) -- is familiar to most anyone who speaks English or knows Lou Reed's lyrics. But the novel itself? Hardly.

BUSTER KEATON REVISITED 
Buster Keaton: Tempest in a Flat Hat is not a biography. "This book is merely a fan's notes," Edward McPherson writes in the introduction, although his publisher ignores the disclaimer and calls it a biography on the cover. In fact, the book is a bit of both, a difficult combination to bring off unless you're David Thomson, who set the standard with Rosebud, his penetrating rumination on the life and career of Orson Welles, which was nothing if not a distillation of every obsessive thought he ever had about the myth and the man and all his movies.
LAUREN BACALL, STILL SALTY AT 80 
When Lauren Bacall writes that her singing voice ranges "somewhere between B minus sharp and outer space," she's being candid and funny. It's not every stage star with two Tony Awards for best actress in a musical whose vocal talent offers so little promise. (OK, Harvey Fierstein excepted.) Still less would one admit it.
THE STARS ACCORDING TO BOGDANOVICH 
Peter Bogdanovich's superb collection of movie-star profiles and interviews -- a sequel to Who the Devil Made It, his interviews of top film directors -- begins with an affectionate tale about Orson Welles that reminds us just how intimate the author's connection to Hollywood's greatest has been. But contrary to what we've come to expect from dime-a-dozen celebrities and celebrity interviews not worth two cents, the tale avoids bromidic egotism and journalistic platitudes.
HERMAN WOUK'S LATEST 
It's hard to say which comes off worse in Herman Wouk's latest novel, his first in a decade: the U.S. Congress or the American press. "A Hole in Texas" offers the choice between two emblematic stereotypes: a red-faced opportunist who heads the House Armed Services Committee and a mustachioed investigative reporter for the Washington Post.
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This page contains a single entry by Straight Up | published on November 25, 2005 10:56 AM.

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