Sundry, December 7, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Sunday, December 7, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY U ~ Wolf meets Schlesinger and emerges unscathed By STEVE ANZALONE Peasant Wars of the Twen- tieth Century, by Eric Wolf. Harper and Row, $7.95. N OAM CHOMSKY in his recent American Power and the New Mandarins reports about an exciting new concept in counterinsurgency proposed by a senior economist of the RAND Corporation. The study, conducted by a man named Charles Wolf, considers two ap- proaches to counterinsurgency. The first approach, Wolf says, is to win the hearts and minds of the people of a nation. But he claims that this approach is not appropriate "as a conceptual framework f o r counterinsur - gency programs." Whatever that means. Rather, the RAND economist thinks it would be more valu- able to try to modify behavior rather than the attitudes of the populace. He suggests such things as "confiscation of chick- ens, razing of houses, or destruc- tion of villages" as ways to in- duce peasants to shun insur- gents. It's just like conditioning the behavior of rats--when they make an undesired response, they are given a shock. Chomsky's book was hotly de- nounced by many liberals who argued that a linguist lacked the necesary expertise to speak intelligently about their exclus- ive fiefs - be it history, Viet- nam, or political analysis. The most notable of these irate in- tellectuals - if you can call him that - was Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., who defines his fief as the sancrosanct realm of spiritual and political adviser to the na- tion. Schlesinger was so agitated by Chomsky that he devoted a section in his Crisis of Confi- dence to denouncing both Cho- msky's scholarship and his au- dacity as a linguist to dare ven- ture an opinion on matters that only a select few can possibly understand. THE APOPLEXY caused for many liberals like Schlesinger by the strident a n d indicting tones of Chomsky's book is un- derstandable. C h o mis k y did make a few errors in scholar- ship, so they have no qualms in dismissing the b o o k as a whole, and they can rest con- T NEW MAGAZINE NEEDS POETRY, SHORT STORIES, ES- SAYS. $5.00 per printed page or part thereof. Manuscripts will not be ret'd. unless accompanied by self-addressed, stamped envelope. Mail to KEN GAERTNER, 605 E. William. sbsbooksbooksbo(, tent that the Vietnam war is just a mistake in an otherwise sound foreign policy. But liberals will not be able to dismiss a new and penetrat- ing book by Prof. Eric Wolf of the anthropology department. The book, called Peasant Wars of the Twentieth Century, is a study of social revolution in six countries - Algeria, Mexico, Russia, China, Cuba, and Viet- nam. Wolf's book will probably have schizophrenic effects on the apologists for American in- volvement in Vietnam. They will f I n d themselves comfortable with Wolf's cool prose and ra- tional scholarship. But at the same time many will find them- selves uncomfortable with the lessons that Wolf draws. What Wolf does in his case studies is to analyze the histor- ical social arrangements in these countries, show how these ar- rangements were disrupted by a new economic and social order, and how men displaced by these forces rose to strike up against them. The situations in e a c h country were by no means iden- tical, and Wolf never tries to minimize these differences. But his evidence supports an impor- tant generalization: "Thus, paradoxically, the very spread of the capitalist market- principle a ls o forced men to seek defenses against it. They could meet this end either by cleaving to their traditional institutions, increasingly sub- verted by the forces which they w e r e trying to neutralize; or they could commit themselves to the search for n e w social forms which would grant them shelter. In a sense all our six cases can be seen as the out- come of such defensive reac- tions, coupled with a search for a new and humane social order. "Yet the advent of capitalism produced still another - and equally serious - repercussion. It initiated a crisis in the exer- cise of power." Similarly, we find that: ". . . the peasant is an agent of forces larger than himself, forces produced by a disordered past as much as by a disordered present. There is no evidence for the view that if it were not for "outside agitators," the peasant would be at rest. On the con- trary, the peasants rise to re- dress wrong; but the inequities against which they rebel a r e but, in turn, parochial manifes- tations of great social disloca- tions. Thus rebellion issues eas- ily i n t o revolution, massive movements to transform the so- cial structure as a whole." I would be inclined to send my review copy of Wolf's book to Mr. Nixon, if I could believe that he actually ever reads any- thing of this caliber. I am not all that sure defeat in Vietnam will convince people like him that our foreign policy is built upon a fundamental misunder- standing of the social forces operating in the twentieth cen- tury. Intellectual work like Wolf's will probably go unnoticed in the places where it will do the most good. The government is not interested in finding out the lessons of Wolf's study; it is more interested in having people like himself spend their time developing a winning strategy in global affairs. As Wolf describes t h e m, "These new engineers of power call themselves realists, but it is a hallmark of their realism that it admits no evidence and interpretation other than that which serves their purposes." Apologists for American for- eign policy like Schlesinger will probably not be impressed by Wolf's book. They will ask what business an anthropologist has talking about contemporary af- fairs. But among thinking peo- ple, it can be hoped that Wolf's book will get the attention that it deserves. For we cannot escape Wolf's conclusion: "T he peasantry confronts tragedy, but hope is on its side; doubly tragic are their adver- saries who would deny that hope to both peasantry and them- selves. This also is America's dilemma in the world today: to act in aid of human hope or to crush it, not only for the world's sake but for her own." Today's writers STEVE ANZALONE is an editorial page editor at The Daily. His number in the lottery was four. Happy Valentine's Day, Steve. LIZ WISSMAN is a former assistant editorial director of The Daily. She is now a teach- ing fellow and PhD candidate in the English Department. Her number in the lottery was 12. Happy Pearl Harbor Day, Liz. 22.99 Ladies' & Men's Houston 14" tall SCHNEIDER WESTERN SUPPLY 2635 Saline Road Ann Arbor, Mich Ph. 663-0111 TOMORROW, MON., DEC. 8 G.O.P. STATE _ _ ._ .,, y A, thropoescape By LIZ WISSMAN Technicians of the Sacred, edited by Jerome Rothenberg, Doubleday A n c h o r Books, $3.95. r10 AT LEAST one contem- porary author, all literature is "anthroposecapism." That is, poetry and narrative are activi- ties arising from the most es- sential strata of human exist- ence, born of those first combi- nations which gave us our tools, our defense and shelter, and the systems of language and gesture. There is something in the tri- umph and frustration of human society, in the schizophrenic re- quirements of a complex of so- cial roles which must be learned and lived by the weary individ- ual, which necessitates a poetic. In poetry, the friction of ordi- nary communication becomes harmonious and the words which often seem to impose themselves upon our experience become an experience in them- selves. We "escape" the quoti- dian precisely by a willing ex- ercise and control of those arbi- trary forms, the tyrannies of times and the proprieties of space, which otherwise control our social being. Perhaps in search of some definition of what makes man poetic, poet Jerome Rothenberg has devel- oped an anthropological collec- tion which encompasses the "primitive" poetries of Africa, America, Asia, and Oceania, OF COURSE it is a vast Romanticism to seek for human essences in archaic or pre-tech- nological cultures. There is al- ways the danger that we will distort what is alien by facile analogies or, in fact, make it more alien by investing it with all those values which contra- dict our p r e s e n t existence. Rothenberg is at least conscious of the criteria hie has used in order to mark off his subject matter, and to select his texts- the self-criticism of his intro- duction is refreshingly candid. Rothenberg admits, for exam- ple, that he has a predilection for "strong Poems" and for a theory of primitive society which stresses the unities, the darkness and mystery presumed to con- stitute the life-style. (It is no accident that disunity and ba- nality are the aspects of con- temporary life which fall under attack.) But where he can not be unbiased, Rothenberg has NOW SHOWING BATIKS ENAMELS JEWELRY CARVINGS COLLAGES GIFT ITEMS THE JUDLO GALLERY 204 East Huron attempted to clearly formulat the nature and the justification for his biases. The anthology consists of ove 500 pages, with some 150 pager devoted to appendix and com mnentary. The commentaries are irregular, but often highly en tertaining for their own sake (An index, however, or some system of specifying who ma' be found writing on which poem is sorely lacking.) Rothenber does not attempt to recreat an exhaustive context for hi selections, but rather relies o a tonal fragment to illustrat what he calls the "key" of eac poem. The tone or atmospher is developed by brief descrip tions of ceremonial rites com mon to the culture, by quota- tions from practicing poets and by works which, althougl contemporary, Rothenberg feel are analogous to the archai texts. He admits that the "poems under consideration most ofter were part of complex perform antes, requiring fixed, tradition al associations and a certai amount of activity and partici pation upon the part of the audience, Buthis impact, h# hopes, will be to arouse a con temporary interest which wil lead to further exploration an discovery. In addition, "whenE culture's alive to its own needs --as Rothenberg believes thi, culture must become-it is cap- able of making its own context and meanings for this poetry. IT IS DIFFICULT to rende the quality of this "primitivi poetry. Generalizations abou its insistent and almost self consuming pattern, its ver3 bodily and organic reference and rhythms, destroy the con crete particularity which is vita to its beauty. Only an exampl will suffice, such as the incred ibly spare "Eskimo poem agains Death:'' "I watched the white does o the dawn." e I' S r 5 e y 1, ',s r': , ' y GRAND ,e ! OPENING DECEMBER 5-24 h Is G With the purchase of any wig, you may have a I 112 oz. wiglet at half price. The first styling " (on your purchase wig) is free. High quality n ; hair at low prices -guaranteed. n is]ELADONNA e WVIG SALON " SHERATON-ANN ARBOR MOTOR INN 769-7620 Open 10-9 Wiglets $4.95 and up Mon.-Sat. Wigs $18.95 and up e 100% Human Hair. 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