Sunday, November 3, 1568 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, November 3, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Mi. Saul Bellow and man's isolation By MARVIN FELHEIM Mosby's Memoirs and Other Stories, by Saul Bellow. Viking, $5. Saul Bellow, regarded by many as our outstanding novelist, has just published his eighth book, his" only collection of short fiction. Bellow's works to date include three long novels, three novellas and a play. The six stories in the present selection have,.all been pub- lished before, in'a variety of journals; they date from 1951 to 1968 and thus cover the years of his major works, from Angie March (1953) through Herzog (1964) to the present. (His first novel, Dangling Man, was published in 1944.) These stories, like the novels, have far-ranging settings; one takes place in Spain, another in Mexico; the other four are scatter- ed across the United States from New York to Chicago and the Utah desert. The richness of his sense of place, the skillful merg- ing of locale and theme, is a Bellow trademark.'With an infallible eye, he selects the appropriate details: the seasonal changes, es- pecially the coming of spring, in the Utah desert; the sights and sounds and winter cold of Chicago slums; the exotic small birds of Mexico. Authenticity is lthe result. It characterizes his knowledge of particular places. Even more, the same quality marks his treat- ment of people. Let us take Mosby. He is the central figure in "Mosby's Mem- oirs," the final, most recent (1968) and title story of the collection. Mosby is an 'old man, ex-international agent, ex-professor (Prince- ton has paid him off to retire early), ex-acquaintance of famous men (he once shook Franco's hand). Now, old and rich, he has re- tired to Mexico to write his memoirs. But instead of brilliant Bert- rand Russell-like reminiscences of the famous, he can recall only the sordid adventures of an international clown, Hymen Lustgar- ten from New Jersey. The story concludes with Mosby's visit to the Zepotec tombs at Mitla. He must run out of the cave to get air to breathe. Mosby is like other characters in these stories. Pictured at an advanced age (cf. old Hattie in "Leaving the Yellow House" or Dr.. Braun in "The Old System"), he contemplates the past ,in an ef- fort to find, even at this late date, a meaning for existence. In this -search he is doomed. He is left, at last, alone; a similar fate attends Hattie drunkenly contemplating the end, the inevitable tomorrow, and Dr. Braun looking out at the stars, "these things cast out- ward by a great begetting spasm billions of years ago." One is reminded of Melville's "isolatoes." If one of the major themes of these stories is the isolated hu- man condition (are we like those stars in the cold black heavens?), Bellow mitigates the harshness with some wonderfully deft touches of warmth and humor. The relationship of Hattie and her cowboy, Wicks, The family clashes between Dr. Braun's cousins, Tina and Isaac. The emotionalism, a key .possibly to the comprehension of life, that "crude circus of feelings." Or Rogin, angry and ready to explode, smothered instead in the warmth and brightness of Joan's "wonderful idea" (she is giving him a shampoo). A wonderful mixture, then, these'stories. They explore the hu- man condition with love and a sense of humor. Here are six vari- ations on the nature of existence itself. The stories are, further- more, brilliant demonstrations of Bellow's style, a subtle mixture of the best literary language (poetic rhythms And fine imagery) and direct folk speech patterns. But the major achievement of this collection is that we have a chance to observe Bellow's talent in a new area, the short story. His success in the novel and novella has prepared us for this vir- tuoso exhibition. ;sbooksbooksbooksbooksb 'Black and white and the ha' that's in between, BY JEREMY JOAN HEWES Look Out Whitey! black power's gon' get your mama, by Julius Lester. The Dial Press, $3.95. America is funny in a twisted way, and al- ways has been. Nobody much sees the humor of it, though. In the mid-1800's, businessmen -- Nor- thern as well as Southern-were too worried about profits to laugh, and were dead serious about squelching the Garrisons and Douglasses. White scientists then were diligent in their "proof" that the black race was anthropologically inferior. Today, scientists have turned their attention' and our taxes to the moon race, but you still can't teach evolution in Tennessee. American business- men who print full-page pictures of their black employees in Time use profits to buy nations and wars. "Ha," Julius Lester says to all of this. A twist- ed "ha" that echoes agonized screams from maim- ed black bodies; a "ha" that comes from behind white, eyes and between white teeth at the window of a maroon Cadillac; a "ha" that counts rats and cockroaches. His is a subterranean, human laugh that mocks helmets and nightsticks and cruelty and all the rest of America. It is funny: those thieves and murderers of the 19th century were the quintessence of Ameri- ca; and their values (ha) operate the 20th cen- tury-just ask George Wallace. America stands for equality and justice and self-determination, and good, patriotic Americans elect thieves and com- mit murder in the name of humanity. It is funny. But nobody's laughing. They're voting 4nd killing and profiteering and evading the income tax, but they don't see the humor of it. Maybe they aren't laughing because they are scared, or maybe because they are honest. Lester's Look Out Whitey! black power's gon' get your mama Is not much of a laugh. To the solemn America to which it speaks, in fact, it -isn't funny at s all. Lester traces the evolution of Black Power, explaining black attitudes and assigning definitions to "whiteness." At times he is sardoni- cally humorous: when James Meredith was shot in June, 1966, the author notes, "he received su- perficial wounds and a telegram from Hubert Humphrey." Elsewhere he talks straight: "It is clear that America as it now exists must' be destroyed. There is no other way. It is im- possible to live within this country and not become a thief or a murderer.' Look Out Whitey! chronicles many events in contemporary black life and briefly places the 1960's in historical perspective. Although millions of words have covered these same topics, Lester has made a necessary and important contribution. Even if all of his facts, quotations and arguments could be read elsewhere, still shining like white eyes and teeth through the black ink of these pages would be the man Julius Lester. A person -of broad interests and experience, Lester is well qualified as chronicler of the move- ment. He spent his boyhood in Tennessee and Ar- kansas and now lives in New York. He has spoken out before-as a fierce black poet, blues musician and songwriter, field secretary for SNCC and regu- lar columnist for the Liberation News Service and The Guardian. He, speaks with simple clairvoyance: it takes a special sort of vision to be smack in the middle of something and look at it from without and within at once. Lester assesses his allies and ene- mies with equal candor and states the objectiyes of Black Power without claiming that every black person in America is at, or even on, his side. The writer, considers Martin Luther King "a good and honest man" who "did not condemn Black Power outright, but sought to temper it with love." Love, however, is suspect in Lester's view, because "black expectations of what it might pro- duce have been betrayed too often." Rather, Les- ter calls himself one of "the children of Malcolm X." Malcolm "was responsible for the militancy of black people .. . his clear, uncomplicated words cut through the chains on black minds like a giant blowtorch." The slain Black Muslim leader, in fact, provided much of the rhetoric for Look Out Whitey! and the basic ideology for the SNCC of Stokely Carmichael and Rap Brown and, more re- cently, for all-black CORE and the Black Panther Party. White liberals are treated harshly by Lester. He writes that John Kennedy only proposed a civil rights bill when demonstrations injured the Amer- ican image abroad and that the bill was "compro- mised into ineffectiveness when Bobby the K ap- peared before Senator Eastland's Senate Judiciary Committee." Johnson surprised blacks with his fine civil rights speeches, but "the talk was talk" and his bill created more backlash than freedom. Moreover, Lester's clairvoyance' points up another sad fact: "Somehow, nothing is true for a white man until a white man says it. And al- though the Kerner Commission report became a bestseller ha), the void of active response to this largely white-written document suggests that white politicians, at least, don't even take their own brothers seriously. In and around Chicago's stockyards last Au- gust, a lot of whites found out how it felt to be groundhogs up against elephants. Now if they (and others) will recognize the clear parallel be- tween these plights, they can understand;,if only by proxy, the rationale of Black Power. Perhaps such knowledge and a reading of Look Out Whi- tey! will scare some people to honesty and some, honest people to change. Lester's vision is not so' narrow as to ignore other aspects of the contemporary American nightmare. He states that money is "the essence of power" and cites the Vietnam war as "the most glaring example at present of the 'American way of life'."rThe author argues that the attitude to- ward blacks at h1ome is translated into foreign policy - two years ago President Johnson articu- lated this theory when he reminded U.S. troops in Korea: "Don't forget, there are only 200 million of us in a world of three billion. They want what we've got and we're not going ,to give it to them." The black poet likewise exposes White Power - what LBJ says "we" have and won't give up - by analyzing the federal budget for 1967. Defense appropriations accounted for 44 per cent of the $172 billion budget, while "welfare and social pro- grams" amounted to 34 per cent of the funds. While personal and payroll taxes financed 59 per cent of this budget, corporation taxes provided less than 20 per cent of the year's expenses. Meanwhile, Lester notes, thesecorporations own a big piece of the world and control most of what the American government does. (Ha - this is White Power.) And when their foreign domina- tion is threatened, they holler "Communist" and send the Marines; when challenged at home, they yell "anarchist" and maybe whisper "nigger" and send the dogs. Black Power's answer is loud and clear. The au- thor asserts that it is not a movement to distrib- ute White Power but to destroy it. No more Un- cle Bens arid Aunt Jemimas, living according to white America's conception of how Negroes ought to live. Now the struggle is upon us and the black ethic is: "To die in the attempt to humanize America is preferable to being an American as America is now constituted." Julius Lester makes sense of the evolution of Black Power and: clearly indicts the prevailing complex of power and attitudes to which his move- ment responds. And he argues that whites who respond with him must deny their whiteness and eliminate White Power. The signs all point to racial war, the author states, unless young whites "convince blacks, through their actions, that they are ready to do whatever is necessary to change America." Melting the barrier: Great Britain and the U.S. By DREW BOGEMA The Great Rapprochement: England and ;lte United States, 1896-1914, by Brad- - ford ,Perkins. Atheneum, $7.95. To a generation that has wit- nessed the demise of Great Britain as a Great Power since the end of Hitler's War : the incredible restraint of Wood- row Wilson in the face of Brit- ish blockade practices in 1915- 1916, Anglo-American unity at the Versailles Peace Conference in 1919, and FDR's "all aid short of war" may all seem of little consequence. Today, Great Britain is considered gssentially as an American satellite in the slowly receding Cold War con- flict. However, there was no conditioning factor of greater prominence on the foreign po- licy of the United States in the 20th century than the growth of Anglo-American friendship. The beginnings of this de- velopment coincided with the British rejection of her "splen- did isolation" and the polariza- tion of European politics before World War I. The development of German power under Bis- marck, the growing friendship between France and Russia, and the Mejei Restoration, all demanded that England revise '.her foreign policy. In Japan, she secured an alliance which, allowed her to divert warships to more critical areas of the world. In the United ; States, the years under the Repub- lican administration of McKin- ley, Roosevelt, and Taft form- ed the underpinnings of a friendship whose course was to be vastly accelerated by Amer- ican participation in World War I. Bradford Perkins in the Great Rapprochement, boldly steps across the traditional lim- its ip order to analyze the foundation of this developing courtship. His essential aim, in this very unique approach, is "to give a rounded treatment of the great transformation- particularly the shift in Amer- ican sentiment which was to be so important after Europe went to war" and to explain the origins of that shift. Diplomatic history hasj too often been isolated from the great tides of emotion that de- termine the destinies of states. American diplomatic historians have all too often stressed the careful archival approach to appreciate why the nation ac, quired Oregon or why Jefferson and Madison sent the nation blundering into war in 1812, without!understanding the na- tional drives of Manifest Des- tiny or widespread national de- pression. Prof. Perkins of the University's history department instead places before himself a most difficult task: to pro- vile an integration of national mood and sentiment-of Eng- land as well as America-with the diplomatic postures of American and British diplo- mats, then to place this inte- gration into the rapidly chang- ing diplomatic context, char- acterized as "The International Anarchy." The result is a lucid and cogent analysis, an in- triguing and delightful volume, considering; the weight of the burdens he carries.' In 1911, the German Ambas- sador to Washington, Count Johann von Bernstorff, report- ed: "the British efforts (to cul- tivate America) are meeting with a certain return of pla- tonic affection. The old rooted dislike to England is gradually vanishing ... But it is not ac- companied by any wish to offer anything in return." This shrewd observation, Perkins as- serts, is crucial to an under- standing of the great rap- prochement. As each conflict between the two nia t i o n s emerged (Venezuela, Alaskan boundary claims between Can- ada and the t.S., the Clayton- Bulwer Treaty, the tolls ques- tion), Great Britain perceptive- ly sought to transfigure possible hostility into political accom- modation. She quickly retreated, from an unfortunate combina- tion with Geriiany to secure pre-revolutionary debts from Venezuela, concluding t h a t American public opinion would feel that the Monroe Doctrine was being insulted, and would force the Republicans into a hostile diplomatic mood. She bludgeoned Canada into ac- cepting American demands for the Alaskan boundary. She fully recognized the dangerous influence of Anglophobia in American politics, which, Per- kins asserts, had come to rep- resent more of a symbol of past grievances than a reaction to present crises. Besides. England's great ca- pacity for toleration and con- cession, a racist theme played a role in driving the nations closer together. "Anglo-Saxon- ism .. . a combination of cor- rupted Darwinian ideology and faith in limited government... suggested both superiority, and .. a vaguely shared angle of vision." The feeling of a great common brotherhood of the English speaking reached its peak in 1898 (when Great Brit- ain showed incredible restraint In passively supporting Amer- ican action against Spbain), and "shaded into a less strident ad- vocacy of friendship between the English-speaking peoples. They seemed to have special talents and particularly de- sirable qualities not possessed by others. Their countries were the garden places of a troubled world." Spokesmen for each country felt that the other was taking a road that had brought the one immense political advan- tages. After the Spanish-Amer- ican War, Perkins asserts, both nations became "concerned to preserve the new status quo of their imperialistic possessions. Imperialism in the Caribbean and in the Pacific brought the United States to the recogni- tion that order was the essen- tial priority to her rapidly ex- panding industrial economy. This was an order that sought a clear delineation of rights and privileges in China as well as growing American control of Latin American markets.. After the Liberals came to power in Great Britain (with Teddy Roosevelt symbolizing to vigor of Progressive reform in America), the proximity of, political systems became more aparent: "the Liberals . . . quickly established, particularly by their domestic program, a position of respect in the eyes of Americans." The growing aggressiveness of the "Wil- helms and Holsteins and Bern- hardis s e e m e d threatening 'enough to force rapproche- ment" for "the two nations seemed bastions of parliamen- tarianism in a world troubled by autocracy." These factors, primarily the British drive to opt Ior concession in face of European challenges to "her" balance of power, are the ma- jor forces that brought Anglo- American relations into a state of, if not harmony, at least understanding and restraint. Yet there is another virtue of the Perkins account, besides the analytical perception: the incredible balance he is able to maintain throughout the vol- ume. More than any other fac- tor that contributes to this deftness is his solid knowledge of British sources and attitudes. He is not content to base his interpretation on the American experience alone; he is equally familiar with British Liberals lican Progressives of the Her- .bert Croly stripe, Conservatives bsrt Croly stripe, Conservatives close to Lord Salibury as with Republicans near John Hay. And, he is capable of provi- ding excellent summaities when he is ready to place this scheme of attitudes into a diplomatic perpsective and context. His account of Roosevelt's crucial role in the Portsmouth peace negotiations and at Algeciras makes for easy understanding. To this list, one could add the capsules of Venezuela, Panama, Alaska, and the Spanish-Amer- ican War. The Great Rapprochement clearly places Perkins in the forefront of American diplo- matic historians. Two earlier works had concentrated upon chronicles of Anglo-American relations during the formative years (The First Rapproache- ment, Prologue To War) while another - Castlereagh and Adams - had charted the in- fluence of these two important personalities on Anglo-Amer- ican relations from the Treaty of Ghent to the promulgation of the Monroe Doctrine. The Great Rapprpachement, much more of an interpretative work than any of the other three, clearly illustrates the width and breath of Perkins's ability and quite logically follows from the comprehensive knowledge displayed in the earlier works. Today's writers. . . 1 MARVIN FELHEIM, professor of English, is currently on leave from the University, working on a book on the American novella. In addition to his duties in the English department, he serves on the faculty committee of the American Culture pro- gram. Sometime student DREW BOGEMA reviews a book writ- ten by a professor whom he has had the opportunity to observe as both a teacher and an author. It is his first effort for the Daily Book Page. JEREMY JOAN HEWES is a graduate student in American Culture. Last summer she studied in the Radcliffe College spe- cial publishing institute, and looks to the day when she will be reviewing books somewhere on the West Coast. a- loin the q uest for the world's largest cheese!I (v Franklin Pierce, you will recall, had a pet marmoset living with him in the White House. Jonathan Swift, on the other hand, observed in Polite Conver- sation, "'Why, everyone as they like,' as the good woman said when she kissed her cow." President Lyndon 9. Johnson put it another way when, reporting to the nation in the aftermath of the Detroit riots of July 1967, he observed, "Righteousness and peace must kiss each other." It's all part of the same thing. The Italian Waiters' Convention at Yellowstone Park had the right idea. They're part of a Cow Cycle, of course, as is The Cradle Tmb at Westminster. ~ (It must be admitted, <;-.'-' however, that the "r latter is part of , : an Aborted Cow Cycle.)M It's about time somebody invented a new literary form again. The mantle has fallen on the ;manly, young shoul- ders of Christopher Cerf, editor, song- writer, singer, citizen soldier, film maker, and former editor of the Har- vard Lampoon. He's had. help from Michael K. Frith, who drew some pic- tures. These are not to be confused with the author's drawings. What more do you want? Cheese? On to the Wis- consin Pavilion at the New York World's Fair! Once you have read Mr Cerf's book you too i com- prehend as never before the mys- teries of symbiotic relationship between animals, fruit, girls, dreams, and cheese. i Studs $12.! Special 0 accredite to becom rate of$ Privilege publicati MuseumI slides, re on art ma Newslett admissio SDepartmc 11 West. New York Student A Extra pas Make ch of Moden ent Membership so offer to students at edcolleges and universities e members at the reduced 12.50 with full privileges. s include 4 free Museum ons, 25-50% discount on books, reproductions and duced subscription rates agazines, monthly Members ers, and unlimited free ns. vent of Membership sum of Modern Art 53 Street k N.Y.10019 Membership. $12.50 ss for husband or wife: $2.50 ecks payable to The Museum rn Art Please enclne a II L NOW IN STOCK: Mosby's Memoirs and other Stories -by Soul Bellow