[On September
17th, 2011 the Occupy Wall
Street protests began in lower Manhattan. So this week I’ll AmericanStudy
that event and four other mass protests, leading up to a special weekend post
on mass protest in the age of Trump.]
On a literary
classic that narrates but also challenges mass protests.
The
Armies of the Night: History as a Novel, the Novel as History (1968)
isn’t just (as I wrote
in this post) the best book from Normal Mailer’s crazy prolific and diverse
decade, nor even Mailer’s best book period; I think it’s one of the great works
of 20th century American literature, full stop. There are lots of
elements that make it so great, from those that I’ll admit might be somewhat
particular to this AmericanStudier’s obsessions (such as the book’s structural
division, as stated in the title, into two parts that mirror two different
emphases of the phrase “historical novel”) to those that are more universally
effective (it’s extremely funny, for example). It’s at once an incredibly
detailed and grounded depiction of a particular historical event and moment (a 1967 anti-Vietnam march
in which Mailer participated) and a broad engagement with many of the most
significant themes and questions at the hearts of America and the 1960s.
There’s no question that it’s a Norman Mailer book—the writer’s trademark ego
is prominently on display throughout—but to my mind likewise no question of its
greatness.
There
are also, however, very specific, contemporary reasons to read Armies in our own moment. The book’s
occasion is a protest, or more exactly two distinct protests: the first a
reading and lecture by Mailer, based on his 1967 pamphlet Why
Are We In Vietnam?; the second the following day’s anti-war march. In
part the inclusion of the former protest reflects that famous Mailer ego, as it
allows Mailer to feature himself and his exploits far more than would be
possible in an account solely of the march (during which he was arrested, but
which nonetheless featured some 200,000 protesters rather than just one drunken
and belligerent writer). But in part the two protests mirror the book’s two
structural sections and their interconnected yet distinct categories of history
and novel: the march being, from its origins and purposes on, very much a
self-consciously historical event, a grappling with the era’s biggest issues on
America’s most mythologizing stage; while the lecture, on the other hand, represents
a likewise purposeful and complex act of story-telling, a fictionalization of
self and of history in equal measure. That doesn’t mean that Mailer necessarily
privileges the lecture over the march, but it does, in my reading, allow the
former to influence the latter, set the stage for the march through the
lecture’s emphasis on story-telling and narratives.
It
would be crazy to suggest that Mailer’s semi-coherent lecture had as much
historical or national meaning as, or even influenced its own moment or
audience as much as, the following day’s march. But it would not be nearly as
crazy to note that protests, like any other events, are often and mostly
meaningful in direct correlation to how they’re narrated, to the
representations they receive in the media (it’s no coincidence that Mailer
begins the book with a quote from Time),
to the stories that are told of them. In fact, such questions of narration are
particularly salient for protests and other similar social and political
events—since these events will always be judged through the lens of their
effects, of the impacts and changes they produced, it becomes that much more
crucial how they’re represented, by whom, and from what perspective. Moreover,
as Mailer’s book makes clear, such narrations have at their best an ability to
humanize everyone involved in and impacted by events far more than might
otherwise be the case—in Mailer’s hands, not only the many different
communities of protesters but also the policeman and national guardsmen become
fully-realized American characters, participants in this event who not only
retain their humanity, but through it become the heart of an event that
illustrates the nation’s divisions but also reflects the larger community to
which all Americans still belong (whether they like it or not).
I’m
not a postmodernist about the past—I know that historical events happened,
independent of (and more significantly than) any subsequent narration of
them—and I don’t think Mailer is either; he took part in the march, was
arrested in the course of it and spent a weekend in jail as a result, and in
those and other ways recognizes its tangible and meaningful realities. Yet as much
of my work for the last decade at least has hopefully illustrated, I believe
that no political or cultural or ideological battles are more important than
those over narratives, over which stories we tell and how we tell them. Mailer’s
book not only exemplifies that idea, but likewise models the kinds of complex
and human stories that can comprise a richer and more genuinely communal
American history and identity, making it an essential American text for sure.
Special post
this weekend,
Ben
PS. What do you
think?
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