{"id":1018,"date":"2005-02-02T03:14:59","date_gmt":"2005-02-02T11:14:59","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/herman\/wp\/2005\/02\/honky_myopia\/"},"modified":"2005-02-02T03:14:59","modified_gmt":"2005-02-02T11:14:59","slug":"honky_myopia","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/herman\/2005\/02\/honky_myopia.html","title":{"rendered":"HONKY MYOPIA"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><P><A class=inline href=\"http:\/\/www.aldaily.com\" target='new\"'><AB><STRONG><FONT\ncolor=#003399>Arts &#038; Letters Daily<\/B><\/FONT><\/STRONG><\/A> is one of the Web&#8217;s great<br \/>\ncultural boons. It is no more than a content aggregator, but its links provide some of the most<br \/>\nintellectual articles for a general audience to read about literature, philosophy, history, sociology<br \/>\nand science. I don&#8217;t mind that the site leans strongly to the libertarian right. It gives me something<br \/>\nto chew on. But I cherish even more the dissent it arouses, especially in my leftist friend Bill<br \/>\nOsborne. He doesn&#8217;t like ALD &#8212; at all. <\/P><br \/>\n<P>&#8220;If it were a political blog,&#8221; he writes, &#8220;more power to them. But it is actually a listing of arts<br \/>\nand letters that is owned by the Chronicle of Higher Education. College students should not read<br \/>\njust one side of the story, not left or right. That&#8217;s just bad journalism, and bad education. &#8220;On the<br \/>\nother hand,&#8221; he added, &#8220;maybe that&#8217;s what education is. In the past it has been a culture war<br \/>\nagainst stupid bigotry. In that sense, my college education very much helped me. Now the bigots<br \/>\nare firing back. Underneath is a hidden ethos that reads, <I>Long live the old South<\/I> etc., even<br \/>\nif they try to hide it with tokenism.&#8221; <\/P><br \/>\n<P>When I joked that perhaps ALD was turning over a new leaf, having just listed an <A\nclass=inline href=\"http:\/\/www.chron.com\/cs\/CDA\/ssistory.mpl\/editorial\/outlook\/3014680\"\ntarget='new\"<b'><FONT color=#003399><STRONG>article by Ramsey<br \/>\nClark<\/B><\/STRONG><\/FONT><\/A>, the former U.S. attorney general under Lyndon Johnson<br \/>\n&#8212; it gives his reasons for wanting to be part of Saddam Hussein&#8217;s legal defense team &#8212; Bill<br \/>\nreplied, &#8220;It doesn&#8217;t surprise me that they linked to that article. The site occasionally includes<br \/>\narticles from the left if it feels they will be seen as ludicrous. Scragly old Ramsey Clark<br \/>\neccentrically defending Sadam makes a perfect foil. As I said, it is disappointing that the Chronicle<br \/>\nof Higher Education hosts that site. Yes, ALD includes some good stuff if it isn&#8217;t on the left, but<br \/>\nto put together such an overtly biased assemblage in the name of the Chonicle damages the<br \/>\nChronicle&#8217;s reputation.&#8221; <\/A><\/P><br \/>\n<P><IMG src=\"http:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/herman\/images\/dresden.jpg\" width=200\nalign=right>In any case, Bill&#8217;s irritation was on full display the other day in response to Theodore<br \/>\nDalrymple, <A class=inline href=\"http:\/\/www.city-journal.org\/html\/15_1_urbanities-dresden.html\"\ntarget='new\"'><STRONG><FONT color=#003399>&#8220;The Specters Haunting<br \/>\nDresden,&#8221;<\/B><\/FONT><\/STRONG><\/A> which had been linked from the neocon magazine<br \/>\nCity Journal. ALD had alerted me to the article. After reading it, I asked Bill to have a look at it<br \/>\nbecause he has lived in Germany for more than a quarter centruy and has made a deep study of<br \/>\nGerman culture. The relevance of Dalrymple&#8217;s subject to post-9\/11 America is not stated<br \/>\nexplicitly, and an upfront reference to the current bombing of Falluja would perhaps be<br \/>\noverdrawn. Yet some parallels are implicit. <I>(Burnt-out Dresden, above. <A class=inline\nhref=\"http:\/\/www.emptymirrorbooks.com\/thirdpage\/neighboorhood1.html\"\ntarget='new\"'><I><FONT color=#003399>Bombed-out Falluja<\/FONT><\/I><\/A>,<br \/>\nbelow.)<\/I><\/P><br \/>\n<P>Dalrymple writes: &#8220;Nowhere in the world (except, perhaps, in Israel or Russia) does history<br \/>\nweigh as heavily, as palpably, upon ordinary people as in Germany.&#8221; But in a statement that made<br \/>\nme flinch, he also notes that &#8220;the shame of German history is greater than any cultural<br \/>\nachievement, not because that achievement fails to balance the shame, but because it is more<br \/>\nrecent than any achievement, and furthermore was committed by a generation either still living or<br \/>\nstill existent well within living memory.&#8221; <\/P><br \/>\n<P><IMG src=\"http:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/herman\/images\/falluja.jpg\" width=240 align=left>I<br \/>\nflinched because Dalrymple implies that, in fact, the achievement <I>could<\/I> somehow balance<br \/>\nthe shame. Bill&#8217;s reply was pointed: &#8220;Yeah, what balances genocide? If you&#8217;re cultured enough, it<br \/>\nis sort of OK. What a logic!&#8221; But here&#8217;s his message in full: <\/P><br \/>\n<P>&#8220;I started by glancing at the City Journal site as a whole, so I would know where the author<br \/>\nmight be coming from. I found this in another author&#8217;s article about pomo history &#8211;or something<br \/>\nalong those lines&#8221;: <\/P><br \/>\n<BLOCKQUOTE>It is still suicidal to meet the United States in a conventional war at least for<br \/>\nany enemy that has not fully adopted Western arms, discipline, logistics, and military organization.<br \/>\nThe recent abrupt collapse of both the Taliban and Saddam Husseins regime amply proves the<br \/>\nfolly of fighting America in direct conflicts. The military dynamism that enables the United States<br \/>\nto intervene militarily in the Middle East in a manner in which even the richest Middle Eastern<br \/>\ncountries could not intervene in North America is not an accident of geography or a reflection of<br \/>\ngenes, but a result of culture. Our classical Western approaches to politics, religion, and<br \/>\neconomics including consensual government, free markets, secularism, a strong middle class, and<br \/>\nindividual freedom eventually translate on the battlefield into better-equipped, motivated,<br \/>\ndisciplined, and supported soldiers.<\/BLOCKQUOTE><br \/>\n<P>&#8220;We are going to get our asses seriously kicked in Iraq. When will these idiots figure out that<br \/>\nSadam&#8217;s army dissovled by plan and that the weapons and funding caches were also all carefully<br \/>\nlaid out. After the lessons of the first Gulf War the Iraqis knew they had to avoid a tactical war<br \/>\nand fight a strategic one. And when will that honky figure out that steam-rollering over<br \/>\nimpoverished Third World countries is not a test of military might. Dick-brained hubris.<\/P><br \/>\n<P>&#8220;Now that we know we cannot successfully occupy Iraq, we are going to follow the second<br \/>\nstandard operation procedure of U.S military\/economic strategy. We will so thoroughly destroy<br \/>\nthe country that it will remain incapacitated for at least a hundred years.<\/P><br \/>\n<P>&#8220;But on to the article by Dalrymple you mentioned. Yeah, what balances genocide? If you&#8217;re<br \/>\ncultured enough, it is sort of OK. What a logic!&#8221;<br \/>\n<P><br \/>\n<BLOCKQUOTE>Nowhere in the world (except, perhaps, in Israel or Russia) does history<br \/>\nweigh as heavily, as palpably, upon ordinary people as in Germany.<\/BLOCKQUOTE><br \/>\n<P>&#8220;Maybe that honky should spend the next two years living on [Manhattan&#8217;s] 130th street. The<br \/>\nlegacy of human slavery and all that has followed it has all but destroyed every major American<br \/>\ncity. But then, he is right, from his perspective. History vanishes in the suburbs. Honkies have no<br \/>\nhistory. On the other hand, talk to blacks, or Hispanics and Native Americans of the Southwest.<br \/>\nThey have some issues called history. Dalrymple is suffering from what might be thought of as<br \/>\nhonky myopia. No wonder neocons talk about the end of history.<br \/>\n<P>&#8220;It astounds me how even the basic infrastructure of our cities is decaying or even<br \/>\nnon-existent. Think of how the New York subways are so out of date and also allowed to rot to<br \/>\nhell. The repairs on the A train will take three to five years because the old switches that have to<br \/>\nbe replaced are of 1930s vintage and have to now be hand made.&#8221;<br \/>\n<P>The estimate of the time needed for repairs has declined since our exchange, from <A\nclass=inline\nhref=\"http:\/\/query.nytimes.com\/gst\/abstract.html?res=F50D17F8345C0C768EDDA80894DD404\n482&#038;incamp=archive:search\" target='new\"'><B><FONT\ncolor=#003399>years<\/FONT><\/B><\/A> to <A class=inline\nhref=\"http:\/\/query.nytimes.com\/gst\/abstract.html?res=F40B1FFD3D5F0C758EDDA80894DD40\n4482&#038;incamp=archive:search\" target='new\"<b'><STRONG><FONT\ncolor=#003399>months<\/B><\/FONT><\/STRONG><\/A> to <A\nhref=\"http:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2005\/02\/02\/nyregion\/02subway.html?oref=login\" target='new\"<B'\nclas=\"inline\"><FONT color=#003399><STRONG>weeks<\/B><\/STRONG><\/FONT><\/A>. But<br \/>\nBill&#8217;s point still holds.<br \/>\n<P>&#8220;I study ghetto subway stalagtites as a hobby,&#8221; he continued. &#8220;Eventually the ugly oozing<br \/>\nleaks that cause them will cause the walls to collapse. The honky goes on to tell about how after<br \/>\nthe Nazis communism also destroyed German cities. In reality, there never was destruction and<br \/>\nsqualor in the East Block that even remotely approaches the American ghettos. When whites<br \/>\nmake that remarkable transformation to being honkies they always end up seeing only one side of<br \/>\nthe tortilla.&#8221;<br \/>\n<P><br \/>\n<BLOCKQUOTE>Sixty years after the end of the Second World War, the disaster of Nazism is<br \/>\nstill unmistakably and inescapably inscribed upon almost every town and cityscape, in whichever<br \/>\ndirection you look. The urban environment of Germany, whose towns and cities were once among<br \/>\nthe most beautiful in the world &#8230;<\/BLOCKQUOTE><br \/>\n<P>&#8220;But this is a good point and one many Americans don&#8217;t fully understand, though it takes<br \/>\nabout one day to notice it if you go to Germany.&#8221;<br \/>\n<P><br \/>\n<BLOCKQUOTE>Well-stocked shops do not supply meaning or purpose. Beauty, at least in its<br \/>\nman-made form, has left the land [Germany] for good; and such remnants of past glories as<br \/>\nremain serve only as a constant, nagging reminder of what has been lost, destroyed, utterly and<br \/>\nirretrievably smashed up.<\/BLOCKQUOTE><br \/>\n<P>&#8220;Up here in Ghettoville, people say, my kingdom for a decent shop. And let&#8217;s not talk about<br \/>\nall the once beautiful, upscale parts of our cities that are now rat-infested, human dumping<br \/>\ngrounds. My God, the honky has forgotten that Philadelphia has 14,000 buildings in a dangerous<br \/>\nstate of collapse. But anyway, lets go get American meaning, beauty and purpose from the local<br \/>\nWal-Mart, which in many towns these days is all that&#8217;s left. Honkies get so astute in their cultural<br \/>\nobservations once they are abroad and looking at another country.&#8221;<br \/>\n<P><br \/>\n<BLOCKQUOTE>We started it [the war], she said. We got what we deserved [the<br \/>\nbombing.]<\/BLOCKQUOTE><br \/>\n<P>&#8220;Well, I think Dalrymple doesn&#8217;t understand that Germans have official pat responses when<br \/>\ntalking to naive Americans. There is a very considerable movement in Germany to define the<br \/>\ncarpet bombing of the cities as a war crime. It has even been the subject of several nationally<br \/>\nbroadcast German TV programs. They admit their own guilt, but feel that doesn&#8217;t mean that the<br \/>\nother side might have made bad decisions. (I&#8217;m torn two ways on this subject, but leaning toward<br \/>\nthe war-crime side. Hiroshima tilts the scales.)<br \/>\n<P><br \/>\n<BLOCKQUOTE>The moral impossibility of patriotism worries Germans of conservative instinct<br \/>\nor temperament.<\/BLOCKQUOTE><br \/>\n<P>&#8220;Yes, that is very true and especially affects young people. But I feel this guy hasn&#8217;t lived in<br \/>\nEurope very long, if at all. All Europeans share the same concerns, if not the negative attitude,<br \/>\ntoward nationalism. Nationalism cost them about 80 million lives in the 20th century alone, and<br \/>\nthe almost complete destruction of many of its cities far beyond Germany. All the honky<br \/>\nflag-waving in America would be seen in Europe as completely uncouth, almost to the point of<br \/>\nbeing bonko. But I like his attempt to explain German Anglophilia. He&#8217;s on to something there.<br \/>\n<P>&#8220;Well, I am going to read on and not comment anymore if I can help it. Maybe you can see<br \/>\nwhy I don&#8217;t belong in the U.S. Something happened to my honkiness. [Bill was born and raised in<br \/>\nrural New Mexico in a family that lived near or below the poverty line.] And of course, you know<br \/>\nhow I feel about Germany. I am utterly dislocated on this whole goddamn planet. I might be able<br \/>\nto make a go of it in Italy, but that is iffy too.&#8221;<br \/>\n<P><br \/>\n<BLOCKQUOTE>The impossibility of patriotism does not extinguish the need to belong,<br \/>\nhowever. No man is, or can be, an island; everyone, no matter how egotistical, needs to belong to<br \/>\na collectivity larger than himself. A young German once said to me, I don&#8217;t feel German, I feel<br \/>\nEuropean. This sounded false to my ears: it had the same effect upon me as the squeal of chalk on<br \/>\na blackboard, and sent a shiver down my spine. One might as well say, I dont feel human, I feel<br \/>\nmammalian. We do not, and cannot, feel all that we are: so that while we who live in Europe are<br \/>\nEuropean, we dont feel European.<\/BLOCKQUOTE><br \/>\n<P>&#8220;Oh geez, I can&#8217;t stop with such choking remarks as this. This guy has a terminal case of red,<br \/>\nwhite and blue honkitis. No nationalism and flags to wave and he hears chalk scraping and loses<br \/>\nhis humanity. What a fucking asshole. He ought to feel mammalian. He&#8217;s a chimp.&#8221;<br \/>\n<P><br \/>\n<BLOCKQUOTE>In any case, can a German feel European unilaterally, without the Portuguese<br \/>\n(for example) similarly and reciprocally feeling European rather than Portuguese? From my<br \/>\nobservations of the French, they still feel French, indeed quite strongly so.<\/BLOCKQUOTE><br \/>\n<P>&#8220;The man is an imbecile. Germans are so German they reek of it. They just have the discretion<br \/>\nnot to strut it. When they do, people like the French, Dutch, Poles and Russians turn white and<br \/>\nreach for the guns. After all, one in five Poles died in World War II (6 million). And 18 million<br \/>\npeople died in the Soviet Union. By comparison, less than 300,000 Americans died fighting both<br \/>\nJapan and Germany. That&#8217;s about a 60th the number in the Soviet Union.<br \/>\n<P>&#8220;But of course, we claim that we defeated the Germans. The history of the war shows the<br \/>\nRed Army did about 80 percent of the work. Such idiotic misperceptions of history as America&#8217;s<br \/>\nhave a lot to do with the different perspectives about nationalism and this country&#8217;s deep infection<br \/>\nof honkiness.&#8221;<br \/>\n<P><br \/>\n<BLOCKQUOTE>A common European identity therefore has to be forged deliberately and<br \/>\nartificially &#8230;<\/BLOCKQUOTE><br \/>\n<P>&#8220;Uh, you mean like almost all nationalism? Gee, you&#8217;re brilliant. OK kids, let&#8217;s all stand and<br \/>\nsay the pledge of allegiance and then go home and watch John Wayne and Sylvester Stallone<br \/>\nshoot Indians and gooks. Is\/was Stallone just a natural cultural phenomenon and not an artificial<br \/>\nnationalistic construct??&#8221;<br \/>\n<P><br \/>\n<BLOCKQUOTE>Eighteen years after the end of the war, in 1963, the pro-Nazi historian David<br \/>\nIrving published his first book, &#8220;The Destruction of Dresden.&#8221; In those days, he was either less<br \/>\npro-Nazi than he later became or more circumspect &#8212; the memory of the war still being fresh &#8212;<br \/>\nbut it was probably not entirely a coincidence that he devoted his first attention to an event that<br \/>\nChurchill suspected might be a blot on the British escutcheon. &#8230;<br \/>\n<P>There were faint signs of Irving&#8217;s later acceptance of the Nazi worldview in this book, though<br \/>\nthey probably went unnoticed at the time. Describing the state of medical services in Dresden after<br \/>\nthe bombing, he mentioned that &#8220;a vast euthanasia-hospital for mentally incurables&#8221; was<br \/>\ntransformed into a hospital for the wounded, without any remark upon the very concept of a<br \/>\n&#8220;euthanasia-hospital for mentally incurables&#8221; &#8230; Irving&#8217;s book was influential, however, precisely<br \/>\nbecause he hid, or had not yet fully developed, his Nazi sympathies.<br \/>\n<P>It achieved its greatest influence through &#8220;Slaughterhouse Five,&#8221; Kurt Vonnegut&#8217;s famous<br \/>\ncountercultural antiwar novel, published six years later, which makes grateful acknowledgment of<br \/>\nIrving&#8217;s book, whose inflated estimate of the death toll of the bombing it unquestioningly accepts.<br \/>\nVonnegut, an American soldier who was a prisoner of war in Dresden at the time of the bombing,<br \/>\nhaving been captured during the land offensive in the west, writes of the war and the bombing<br \/>\nitself as if it took place in no context, as if it were just an arbitrary and absurd quarrel between<br \/>\nrivals, between Tweedledum and Tweedledee, with no internal content or moral meaning &#8212; a<br \/>\nquarrel that nevertheless resulted in one of the rivals cruelly and thoughtlessly destroying a<br \/>\nbeautiful city of the other.<br \/>\n<P>But Vonnegut, to whom it did not occur that his subject matter was uniquely unsuited to<br \/>\nfacetious, adolescent literary experimentation, was writing an antiwar tract in the form of a<br \/>\npostmodern novel, not a historical reexamination of the bombing of Dresden or of Germany as a<br \/>\nwhole. The problem that has bedeviled any such re-examination is fear that sympathy for the<br \/>\nvictims, or regret that so much of aesthetic and cultural value was destroyed, might be taken as<br \/>\nsympathy for Nazism itself. The difficulty of disentangling individual from collective responsibility<br \/>\nfor the evils perpetrated by the Nazi regime is unresolved even now, and perhaps is inherently<br \/>\nunresolvable.<\/P><\/BLOCKQUOTE><br \/>\n<P><\/P><br \/>\n<P><IMG src=\"http:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/herman\/images\/2WWdresden2.jpg\" width=200\nalign=right>&#8220;Dalrymple&#8217;s summations of Vonnegut might be one-sided and full of stupid<br \/>\ninnuendo. I read &#8220;Slaughter House Five&#8221; when I was young and might see it very differently now,<br \/>\nbut I think people would be hard pressed to say that Vonnegut isn&#8217;t a writer who thinks about<br \/>\nthings fairly deeply. His cynicism <I>is<\/I> pretty dangerous stuff &#8212; almost worse than Beckett&#8217;s<br \/>\n&#8212; because he mixes it with such odd humor and poor taste. But so is my disgust at &#8220;honky&#8221;<br \/>\nmyopia. I should politlely say White America.<\/P><br \/>\n<P>&#8220;Well, I skimmed on over the rest of the article. It is not information about Germany for me,<br \/>\nbut information about how intelligent but naive Americans try to understand it. I&#8217;ve been there and<br \/>\ndone that myself. [Vonnegut] saw Dresden the day after the bombing. He was part of a body<br \/>\nbrigade. <I>(Piles of dead bodies in the streets of burnt-out Dresdon, above.)<\/I> Charred<br \/>\ncorpses of children by the hundreds affect you, whether your conclusions are right or wrong.<br \/>\nMaybe I need to write about Americans who write about Germany.&#8221;<\/P><br \/>\n<P>Seems to me you&#8217;ve just done that, Bill.<\/P><br \/>\n<P>In fairness, it should be noted that, <A class=inline\nhref=\"http:\/\/www.cis.org.au\/policy\/winter02\/polwin02-5.htm\" target='new\"'><B><FONT\ncolor=#003399>according to Policy magazine<\/FONT><\/B><\/A>, Dalrymple &#8220;is a psychiatric<br \/>\ndoctor working in an inner city area in Britain where he is attached to a large hospital and a<br \/>\nprison. His columns report on the lifestyles and ways of thinking of Britain&#8217;s growing underclass,<br \/>\nand in his [2002] book <A class=inline\nhref='http:\/\/www.amazon.com\/exec\/obidos\/ASIN\/1566635055\/qid=1107447969\/sr=2-1\/ref=pd_k\na_b_2_1\/103-5767698-7222227\"' target='new\"<\/b'><STRONG><FONT color=#003399>&#8216;Life at<br \/>\nthe Bottom,&#8217;<\/B><\/FONT><\/STRONG><\/A> he warns that this underclass culture is spreading<br \/>\nthrough the whole society.&#8221; To clarify further, Publisher&#8217;s Weekly says the book is essentially a<br \/>\nconservative &#8220;critique of liberalism and the welfare state.&#8221;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Arts &#038; Letters Daily is one of the Web&#8217;s great cultural boons. It is no more than a content aggregator, but its links provide some of the most intellectual articles for a general audience to read about literature, philosophy, history, sociology and science. I don&#8217;t mind that the site leans strongly to the libertarian right. [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":4,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_genesis_hide_title":false,"_genesis_hide_breadcrumbs":false,"_genesis_hide_singular_image":false,"_genesis_hide_footer_widgets":false,"_genesis_custom_body_class":"","_genesis_custom_post_class":"","_genesis_layout":"","jetpack_post_was_ever_published":false,"_jetpack_newsletter_access":"","_jetpack_dont_email_post_to_subs":false,"_jetpack_newsletter_tier_id":0,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paywalled_content":false,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":"","jetpack_publicize_message":"","jetpack_publicize_feature_enabled":true,"jetpack_social_post_already_shared":false,"jetpack_social_options":{"image_generator_settings":{"template":"highway","default_image_id":0,"font":"","enabled":false},"version":2}},"categories":[4],"tags":[],"class_list":{"0":"post-1018","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-standard","6":"category-main","7":"entry"},"jetpack_publicize_connections":[],"jetpack_featured_media_url":"","jetpack_shortlink":"https:\/\/wp.me\/pbvgEs-gq","jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/herman\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1018","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/herman\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/herman\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/herman\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/4"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/herman\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=1018"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/herman\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1018\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/herman\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=1018"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/herman\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=1018"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/herman\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=1018"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}