f y 4- * 4 + * 4 I _._ . .. '* * 1 Puerto Rican Poverty (Continued from page seven) the individual has a profound feel- ing of "marginality, helplessness, dependence and inferiority." The institutions and values of the cul- ture of poverty are consequently re- sponses both to economic depriva- tion and to this sense of alienation and frustration. Lewis's theory is particularly interesting because it claims that, in any industrial or quasi-industrial society which satis- fies certain conditions, an identical set of quite specific culture patterns will arise. The culture of poverty is, in o t h e r words, international. Among its characteristics Lewis finds a strong sense of community, a compulsive gregariousness, enor- mous emphasis on sex, mother- dominated families often based on consensual unions, authoritarianism on the family level, female aggres- siveness, and a general impulsive- ness. The book, itself it seems to me, admirably supports Lewis's analv- sis, there is no evidence that the facts are arranged to fit any kind of thesis. The book is composed of a series of long tape-recorded conver- sations, a technique which was used in Lewis's best-known book, The Children of Sanchez, a classic study, of a Mexico City slum family. He first turned to the intensive study of family life, he explains, because "It seemed to me that descriptions of a way of life on the abstract level of culture patterns left out the very heart and soul of the phenomenon we were concerned with, namely, the in d i v i d u a l human being." Wh ole-f a mily studies, he says, "bridge the gap between the con- ceptual extremes of culture at one pole and the individual at the other; we see both culture and personality- as they are interrelated in real life." The members of the Rios family of San Juan are the mother Fernan- da, her three daughters Soledad, Felicita and Cruz, and her son Sim- plicio. For the average- middle-class reader, the story of these lives is from the beginning -an intense, shocking, disturbing, profoundly re- vealing experience. It is revealing not only for what these people, in their amazingly candid and vivid discussions, tell about their own so- ciety and values, but also for what is implied about our own. Here is a world of brutality, vio- lence and promiscuity, where wom- en cut each other with razor blades and turn their husbands in to the police; where children are beaten routinely and learn the rudiments of sex almost before they can talk. Husbands and wives, parents and children, neighbors and comrades pursue and flee each other, love and suffer, in a grimly colorful, ani- malistic dance. The Rios family live constantly searching, constantly un- fulfilled lives. But _they are also lives of warmth, color, laughter, and generosity. It is this aspect, the courage and the flamboyance with which these people struggle against crushing conditions that prevents this book from being depressing. But it is not optimistic either, be- cause so many of these people are defeated by la vida. The book pre- sents, all in all, a relentlessly tragic picture. We soon see how irrelevant our own moral standards are to such lives. The fact that Fernanda, Sole- dad and Felicita each went into prostitution to support their chil- dren can only be evaluated in the total context of the relevant cultur al and economic factors. The cul- ture of poverty is a matter of life and death; and culture itself be- comes 'only the most generalized tool in the struggle for physical and emotional survival. That a certain amount of repeti- tion and tedium should appear in the course of this book's 670 pages of autobiographical reflection is perhaps unavoidable. Lewis does not have a novelist's discretion in arranging and inventing his mate- rial, because his aim is to present as complete and honest a picture as possible of life as it is actually lived in the slums of Puerto Rico and New York. But the longueurs, I be- lieve, are justified by the book's many intense moments and fine mi- nor touches. There is Fernanda at the age of ten forbidding the neigh- borhood bartender to give her fa- ther any more rum; there is Fernan- da recalling her first frightened, guilt-ridden night as a prostitute; there is Soledad telling of the shoot- ing of her favorite husband, a thief; or Felicita, generally accused of neglecting her children, thinking about her future: Since Georgie left. I haven't been able to go back to work or any- thing. I have no feelings, my heart is empty. ..When you get the kind of opportunity that I had, when you can relax, knowing that your chil dren are eating, you feel at peace. But if you have to go back to your other life. .:I cry though the nights at the thought of it._ She is, of course, talking about prostitution. "Because of my suffer- ing," says Cruz, in many ways the most courageous of the children "my heart is hard as concrete." Only in this century have men come to a full understanding of their immense capacity for evil, a realization that has been-strength- ened by the ambiguous promises of modern technological civilization. Correspondingly, we have relearned the enormous valor and resource- fulness of the human spirit. This is the optimistic side of books like La Vida. Nor need one, like Marx, adopt a gloomily deterministic in- terpretation of economic substruc- ture and cultural superstructure. One might just as easily rejoice in the variety and ingenuity of these multifarious modes of living. Even the German death camps could not stifle a rudimentary cultural organi- zation. Yet a sensible cultural pluralism need not refuse to admit the pres- ence of greater or lesser degrees of human misery in various environ- ments. Sometimes the struggle against despair is lost: Though he declines to moralize about the ethi- cal standards of the Puerto Rican culture of poverty, and does not deny the real opportunities for hap- piness that it provides, Oscar Lewis nevertheless concludes, On the whole it seems to me that it is a relatively thin culture. There is a great deal of pathos, suffering and emptiness among those who live in (it). it does not encourage much support or long-range satis- faction and its encouragement of mistrust tends to magnify helpless- ness and isolation.', He feels that in the United States the members of the culture of pov- erty(six to ten millions, he estimates) are a relatively small percentage of the total population of the poor due to peculiar features of North Amer- ican civilization. This fact is a posi- tive sign, since there is evidence that "the elimination of physical poverty per se may not be enough to eliminate the culture of poverty, which is a whole way of life." Sole- dad Rios has fainting spells in her New York apartment. She is subject to madness (the "Puerto Rican syn- drome") and considers herself an old woman at the age of twenty- five. Cruz Rios, with her children in the housing project in San Juan, is scarcely eighteen - not even an adult by our standards - when she says, I feel so sad at times that I turn on the radio and do't even bear it. I just stand there with my eyes wide open, thing, and I seem to see bugs and scorpions in my mind. Ri is as if the scorpions were stinging me... La Vida cannot be forgotten. For the citizens of a powerful and wealthy country, which continues to pour millions of dollars a day into the slaughter in Vietnam, while a minimum of six million people in its midst is in the culture of pover- ty-a way of life which leaves as its legacy brutality, despair and waste of life-the implications are disturbing, and only too clear. Paul Sawyer Mr. Sawyer is a fourth-year student majoring in English at The University of Michigan. The Arrogance of Power, by Sen.. J. Wiliam Fulbright. Random House. $4.95 and $1.95. Words of wisdom come so infre- quently from the United States Sen- ate that one is loath to question even a r e a s o n a b 1 e- facsimile- especially where foreign policy- is concerned. - But Washington be praised! Here at last we have a Sen- ate committee chairman telling us that perhaps the Cuban Revolution wasn't so bad, either for us or for the Cuban people (who, after all, live only a hundred or so miles from the American-supported dun- geon of Haiti). Here at last we have a man of power telling us that America should look at China with love, not hate and fear, and should be ready to help her when she is ready to accept it. And here at last we have a senator of long tenure telling the American people they are, in fact,, shamefully anti- revolutionary and cannot hope to understand the needs and wants of the rest of the world well enough to tell it how to live. The senator, of course, is J. Wil- liam Fulbright, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Commit- tee and the Washington establish- ment's most outspoken critic of the current Vietnam policy. But his book is more than a criticism of the Vietnam war-it outlines the sena- tor's view of the American mind on foreign policy., Fulbright talks first of the "arro- gance of power-a psychological need that nations seem to have in order to prove that they are bigger, better, or stronger than other na- tions." This need, he feels, is the basic underpinning of America's drive to world military commit- ments, As the world's strongest na- tion, the United States seems "pow- erful, but not self-confident," and so must use its power to build self- confidence. Further, America "may be drifting into c o m m i t m e n t s which, though generous and benev- olent in intent, are so far-reaching as to exceed even America's great capacities." These commitments, Fulbright explains, are based large- ly on America's desire to protect other nations from the ugliness of Communism as she understands it. The senator traces the long histo- ry of America's self-image as cru- sader and puritan. He writes of the intervention in Cuba in 1898, and of Woodrow Wilson's intervention in Mexico-both instances of the Unit- ed States' benevolent but misguided meddling. Fulbright believes there was a strain of puritanism sur- rounding the Korean War also; but though our missionary zeal was em- ployed to save South Korean free- dom, he comments that now "Amer- icans little know or care" about the state of South Korean politics. Then he turns to Vietnam. For this sore case he proposes a general cease-hire, a U.S. promise for even- tual complete withdrawal, elections in the south to include the National Liberation Front, and an all-Asia conference to arrange a nation-wide referendum on reunification. The international conference w o u l d guarantee general elections and would subsequently "undertake to negotiate a multilateral arrange- ment for the general neutralization Sof Southeast Asia." He concedes that the achievement of this last ob- jective is "very doubtful." Finally, if agreement cannot be reached to end hostilities, Fulbright urges U.S. withdrawal from the war in its cur- rent form and recommends the sub- sequent establishment of military enclaves. So much for Vietnam. Ile gives no legal history of the involvement there, which is just as well, as it has been raped enough already. But most of what he says here he has said before. Yet his "plan" is vague, general, and unready for applica- tion to the complexities of the pres- ent situation. Fulbright does not of- fer -a full story of the forces that led us there in the first place; nor does he consider what could happen the next time a brush war breaks out. What Fulbright tells us is that we really didn't mean it. Vietnam was all a benevolent misconception: The official war aims of the Unit- e'd States government, as I under- stand them, are to defeat what is regarded as North Vietnamese aggression, to demonstrate the fu- tility of what the communists call "wars of national liberation" and to create conditions under which the South Vietnamese people will be able freely to determine their own future. I have not the slightest doubt of the sincerity of the President and the Vice-President and theSecre- taries of State and Defense in pro- pounding these aims. Fulbright then destroys the idea that the war is, in fact, one of aggression from Hanoi. He tells us the domino theory is not relevant and certainly not worth the cost. Fi- nally he indicates that "guaran- teeing South Vietnamese" freedom is uncertain by present methods, and under those circumstances, not worth the cost in either American or Vietnamese men and money. Fine. But it seems rather strange that the Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee can, on the one hand, tell us thathe now regrets the freedom given the ad- ministration by the Tonkin resolu- tion, and, and the other, that he does not for one minute have "the slightest doubt" about the adminis- tration objective of free elections in the South. Is he, in his position, really convinced that the Johnson administration is willing to let the Viet Cong into the government? Is he also convinced that Johnson is considering peace -terms in the best long-run interests of the Viet- namese people, or rather of his own administration at home? Fulbright's statement exonerates the admins- tration, but his oversimplification leaves us in doubt. For the senator appears to have bent over too far to establish the "sincerity" of the American people in all this. If one is going to under- take an analysis of the character of a nation, to explain why that nation forms its foreign policy the way it does, then it would seem one should do just that. Fulbright wanders from the point. For example, in the midst of an explanation of the well-meaning American messian- ism, Fulbright finds it necessary to explin why the Rusk-Johnson Asia Doctrine is not relevant to Ameri- can security considerations. In the midst of telling us that America's "honest purpose" in stamping out leftists in Latin America "is the ad- vancement of development and de- mocracy," he must also explain that there was no national security justi- fication for intervening in Santo Domingo or for nearly blasting Cuba into the stonegage. Ithwould seem that in stringing together a series of speeches on a highly com- plex topic, the senator has passed over some of the more obvious but less tasteful emphases. And so he concludes: There are two Americas. One is the America of Lincoln and Adlai Stevenson; the other is thedAnmeri- ca of- Teddy Roosevelt and the modern superpatriots. One is gen- erous and humane, the other nar- rowly egotistical; one is self- critical, the other self-righteous; one is sensible, the other romantic; one is good-humored, the othertsol- emn; one is inquiring, the other pontificating; one is moderate, the other filled with passionate intepsi- ty; one is judicious and the other arrogant in the use of great power. Unfortunately, there are other Americas. One is paranoid about world .Communism and has been since 1945. To that one Fulbright offers-a new understanding of Com- munism. One is a munitions manu- facturer who grabs up generals with Pentagon contacts as fast as they can retire. One is an advisor to the Dominican intervention with clear interests in Dominican sugar cane. One is a general in Vietnam who tells the London newspapers about "zapping the Cong." One is a mid- dle-class Californian who demands laws to keep the "yellow peril" out of his state, and who certainly cares little about napalming a few more of them in Vietnam. These Ful- bright passes over And in passing them over, the de- bunker of myths refuses to do his job. As chairman of the Senate For- eign Relations Committee he was admittedly laggard in searching out errors and shortcomings in adminis- tration conceptions of the war; he ~ continues to do less solid reporting than he could. To Senator Fulbright, the Ameri- cans who compose our mind on for- eign policy "cry out against poverty and injustice," but somehow have been misguided on the realities of world politics, Communism, and so- cial revolution. Perhaps the senator, if he is going to do a serious analy- sis of the American mind on foreign policy, might stop treating the A Dose of the Arkansas Cure-All American' as an is( open his e against pt tice" in A Harlem. What h( that our a $3 billion Does "ber ten offer military as "Mistak just happ lost out tc happen be of forces c there. Eac be, in its t batted. Fu with only t Mr. Wasse dent major vers it .f one Bre o # "this o rd i msC l e TH Anna Grigorievna Dostoevsky gave the Soviet State Archives< a white tin case.. ..,containing 15 notebooks 4 for Dostoevsky's novels. In 1921 the case was ; opened... now the first three have been " t translated into English The Notebooks for CRIME AND PUNISHMENT Fyodor Dostoevsky edited and translated by Edward Wasiolek Written during the lonely and exultant moments of the crea- tive process, these wo.rking notebooks record the unfolding of Crime and Punishment. Here J& K is the embryo of the novel: Dostoevsky's intentions, trials, 2 mistakes, and uncertainties. Characters evolve and change. Plans, actions, and scenes are written and then discarded as ' the novel develops. Characteri* . nations and points left obscure in the novel are clarified once and for all by this intense dia. UNIVERMIT logue between the author and F cCIco his work. The Notebooks pre- RS sent a fascinating glimpse of gand Londo Dostoevsky's imagination and Ch canada:Undrsny the creative process. $6.95 Tornto Press Ml I "An invaluable antidote to the official rhetoric of goven- AMWLt'"--MAkX IFaAM FL, frOait page, N. Y, Tim.. Boo Re. cloth-. $s "Vintage 3ook paperbac .95. Now at your boooe * MIDWEST LITERARY REVIEW * May, 1967 May, 1967 * MIDWEST LITER,