)a. 4. IN "The Greening of Charles Reich, THE GREEN- ING OF AMERICA, Random House, $7.95. By JIM NEUBACHER It has been evident since the mid-fifties that American tech- nological society produces, along with an abundance of goods and services, a deep and overwhelm- ing sense of alienation and per- sonal powerlessness in many of the citizens who play a role in that society. A number of perceptive social critics have produced books dealing with this national psy- chological crisis. Some, like Paul Goodman or Theodore Rozak, have dealt with this in a broad, cultural manner, while others, like Galbraith, Michael Har- rington, or Marcuse, have given us their more discipline-orient- ed views on the workings and failures of the American tech- nocracy. There are also books that fall into a subtype of the same genre -the books like those of John Hersey (his Letter to the Alumni), E d w a r d Bloomberg, Sidney Hook, and Nathan Pusey. These in particular are author- ed by men who, having spent the required number of years in academia and having dealt with "student leaders," profess to ex- plain to us the meaning of the unrest that comes to the sur- face as a result of those very feelings of alienation and pow- Prlessness. These books combine a sort of journalism ala fath- erly wisdom in an attempt to explain how to "deal" with stu- dent and public unrest, the main point here being, "how to sur- vive it." The Greening of America is certainly not an example of this second type of book. Yet, neith- er is it the first. That is not to deny that The Greening of America possesses many of the characteristics of both types. It is undeniably writ- ten from academia; it owes m u c h to Galbraith - Marcuse - Goodman; it is a personal jour- nalistic account or explanation of the feelings and attitudes of youth; not least, it is fatherly advice on the meaning of it all. It is a skillfully written com- bination all of these, but it is more. The popularity of the book and the interest and con- troversy it has engendered, are testimony to that. While we are always in need of a fresh and skillful analysis of the American crisis, we have grown used to the existence of that crisis-It has been a long time since 1956, and we are past the point at which a mere rewarmingmof the long acknowledged s p i r i t u a l flaws of American capitalism can be presented to us as the most controversial and signifi- cant writing of the year. Wh a t transcendent quality does Reich's book possess? Sim- ply, The Greening of America is Literature. It is a prophecy and a vision, Charles Reich's extension of the small begin- nings of the Life Culture to a terrifyingly beautiful end; it is a brilliant analysis of the psy.- chological development of a na- tion not in the language of science, but the language of so- cial philosophy; it is Charles Reich drawing the dividing lines between broadly general but dif- fering value systems by use of the labels Consciousness I, II, and III-labels which are strict- ly literary devices. As a personal philosophical approach to social problems, The Greening of America is lit- erature no less than Norman Mailer's Armies of the Night; Reich's analysis of society in terms of labels is a literary de- vice no less valid than Mc- Luhan's analysis of the media in might call it "the spirit of the age." while the New Left might label it "where our collective heads are at." Reich calls it Consciousness. Included within the idea of consciousness is a person's background, education, poli- tics, insight, values, emotions, and philosophy, but conscious- ness is more than these or even the sum of them. It is the whole man; his head; his way of life. It is that by which he creates his own life and thus creates the society in which he lives. . . . Culture and government interact with consciousness; t h e y are its products but they also help to form it. With this definition put forth, Reich goes on to trace the rise of the corporations, the massive I m erica formed an alliance which holds vast amounts of power over in- dividual lives - power which is both "legal" and "extralegal;" power served up over the last thirty years in chunks both small and large. Reich lists, at one point, some examples of these powers, all, ostensibly, accumulated in the name of such principles as free- dom, public interest, technical efficiency and progress: The power to make Business Week available to airline passengers, but not The Nation; power to change the culture of a forign country; power to provide rail- road passengers with washrooms that are filthy; power to wake all patients in a hospital at 6 a.m.; power to populize snow- mobiles instead of snowshoes; power to construct office build- N . . JIM NEUBACHER, a for- mer Daily editor, says Reich has been misun- derstood by his c r i t i c s. "Those critics ignore the fact that Reich did NOT write a blueprint for a revolution. He is writing literature." ency and production, dictate that peanut butter shall be widely manufactured in brands that appeal to the lowest com- mon denominator of consumer. In order to be able to eat "real" peanut butter in this country, one must search out and find some one who has survived the economic pressure to conform to the common, the popular. A trivial example? Perhaps. But all the more important for that triviality. If one must de- vote substantial energies to the process of finding "real" peanut butter to eat, imagine the strength and resources one would need in order to make an important decision asserting in- dividuality and control over one's life. If Reich represented the pea- nut butter example, or any of the others, as the source from which he was drawing ideas, as the data from which to make so- ciological conclusions, he would be suspect. But he is not writing sociology any more. than Does- toevsky or Dickens wrote sociol- ogy, though.they certainly wrote about society. Reich ,is writing philosophy. His ideas are put forth, then ex- amples listed to back him up. He uses the examples to express a condition that he feels, a phi- losophy he believes. But after dealing with the "peanut butter" criticisms, the criticisms from those who fail to view Reich in the correct perspective, there remain sub- stantial criticisms from those who understand Reich fully, from "Consciousness III's" as well as from "Consciousness ,'s." Especially a im o n g the o 1 d timers in the New Left there is a tendency to laugh at Reich, to pass him off as a man totally unaware of the realities of present day politics. Tom Hay- den, reviewing the book in the' New York Times, acknowledged the need for a new Conscious- -ness among people, a new way for people to relate to people. Then he wrote, "But to believe a system will change simply through a new consciousness is utopian. There is no change pos- sible without a program of or- ganization, struggle and con- flict." It is easy to understand why Hayden, (or John Sinclair writ- ing opposite me here) might have this sort of feeling. Sin- clair is currently in prison, after being busted for the third time for possession of a harmless weed. For the next 91 to 10 years he will be in that prison, if the prosecutors have their way, and it would not be an easy job to convince him that the repression of cultures, of the new consciousness, is not a pur- poseful and determined program of erradication of that new cul- ture. Sinclair's perspective is akin to that of those who view the actions of the federal govern- (Continued on Page 21) .. 1rA (Continued from Page 4) ment in prosecuting the Vi nam war as a calculatedp gram of murder and conqu directed by evil men. R would suggest there is a m valid perspective on the . and on the general level of pression in this country: B are the result of flounder but sincere attempts at run this country by men with st tures, values, and ideas that technology before humanity the security of the pres structure before the-need change. The difference in perspec is important, because ~wl both Reich and Hayden deeply concerned about the rection in which our societ moving, each has come to se rate conclusions about then essary means of change. Reich, it should be poi out, is not, as a matter of p ciple, hostile to violence a means of change - only a matter of tactics. I met u Reich in New Haven lastl vember to discuss his book, during the course of our t hour conversation, he made-; point clear. "The book is not hostile unsympathetic to violence," said. "I understand the viole and frustration among yo But I view it as a tactic wrong way of bringing abou revolution.- "I don't really think it work. If you really think t violence can succeed, then theory is a cop out. "I just hope to hell that M cuse is wrong about viole being the only way to lib tion. I respect Marcuse, I te him, but I think he is wn here." The necessityof a chang Consciousness accompanying change in social policy seem me abundantly clear. Both failure of federal legislation have more than token effec reshaping the lives of black, this country, and the real f ure of violent repression by government to stamp out growing new "Life Culture" testimony to the essential adequacy of legislative pol and violence to shape cha -without an accompany change in popular consci ness. Tom Hayden andab3 Sinclair will never be able mount a violent revolu FIRST, take control of theg ernment, and LATER shape Consciousness of the silentr jority by coercion. They doomed to failure if tha their real, if not admitted, go The revolution will c grin- s a is a with No- and wo- that or he nce uth. ally ut a will that my dar - ence era- each ong e in rga s to the n to t in :s in fail- the the are in- itics ange ying ous- ohn e to tion gov- the ma- are t is )al. ome through Consciousness. And Consciousness will change. The machine, as Reich says, is self- destructing. It will alienate Americans more and more rap- idly, and the process will multi- ply. There are an awful lot of. us now. More will be convinced by incidents like Cambodia or Kent State. For others, it will be an incident like the Mar- shall University football team crash last year: The megloman- ia of an athletic director who wanted to gain prestige by playing teams out of his area; who flew his team in an old, inadequate plane; who saw phecy. It is encouragement to those of us who are working toward the attainment of the final end Reich presents us-a truly humane society. It is reassurance that as long as we keep the faith and strug- le against the high priests of Consciousness II, the revolution will come. It will come whether we drop out, and turn off the machine, or take control of it bit by bit. It will NOT come UNLESS we continue to try to convert those who do not yet understand us, continue to ex- pose the contradictions and cruelities of the current dom- inating theory. It is a reminder, in this age of cynicism and disgust, to be- lieve in man. -Daily-Jim Judkis misunderstood? g Astro. them die on a mountainside- 'iet that meglomania will demon- pro strate tothousands of Americans ps eCHARTS CAS nest, that the machine is trying to eich destroy our humanity. Their No Interpretati Wore humanity will rebel. war, It is essentially this last point TABLES-Eplh re- which is the crux of an accept- 3oth ance of Reich. The humanity of Table of House ing, man must be not only respected, ning but believed in. His ability to TEXTBOOKS ruc- rebel at the last minute, (asT B put a matter of "urgent biological and Interpretat and necessity" if nothing more,) sent must be believed in, either in for fact or in faith. Faith is the spirit of what aCI CLE tive Reich presents us. 'hile A month ago, I met with a A Con plete Occ are Washington journalist who no- di- ticed I carried a copy of Reich's y is book. "I see you're reading the 215 S. STATE ST. 2r epa- Bible," he said. I laughed then. -ec- But the observation has merit. .,... _ The Greening of America, like ni ed the Bible, is a vision and a pro- terms of the labels "hot" and cool.' It is this essential fact that has been so misunderstood by so many of Reich's critics - critics who range from far right to far left. Ignoring the fact that Reich did not write a blue- print for a revolution, they blast him for being 'naive"' or foolishly "utopian." Let us examine what The Greening of America attempts to be. It is the task of Reich in the first half of his book to trace the evolution of our society to its present form. In an expert, often brilliant analysis which merges political, social, and cul- tural trends, Reich presents a convincing description of the moods, perspectives, values and social ethics which prevailed in the nation at different points during its growth. The scholar wounds they inflicted on land- scape and psyche both, the well-meaning attempts of the New Deal to put the -lurching ship back on keel, and the sub- sequent failure of the post-war Corporate State to promote in- dividual freedom, creativity, and personal satisfaction on a mass scale. Whether or not one is inter- ested in Reich's prognostications on where we will go in the fu- ture, it is still worth reading the first half of his book for this analysis alone. The combination of beautiful writing with his compact, multi-disciplinary ver- sion of the growth of this coun- try makes it invaluable for any serious student of American history. Today says Reich, we have reached a state in which gov- ernment and industry have, in- stead of balancing each other, ings with windows that will not open, or without any windows at all; the power to require pea- nut butter eaters to choose be- tween homogenized or chunky peanut butter, and to prevent them from buying "real" peanut butter. Peanut Butter? "A man of Professor Reich's eminence should not stoop to- include this in his indictment against our power structure," cried one prominent attorney in his critique of Reich's book on the op-ed page of the New York Times last year. But the peanut butter exam- ple is as valid and important as any of the others. How many of you reading this are sure you even know what "real" peanut butter is, let alone eat it. The demands of mass technology and marketing, based on the principles of maximum effici- a 40 -an exciting new4 steak specialty from 'The f/1(d 9ox featuring the fine flavors found in Spain's finest kitchens-served on a wooden plank with the Spanish carving tool FOR THE FINEST IN STEAK ASK FOR EL ZORRO-TODAY! (THE FOX) 'he tZ"d 390X 5400 PLYMOUT HRD Open 1 1 a.m.-2 p.m. NO 8-9387 4 p.m.-lOp.m. SUPER SAV] Sensationl The Sony FM STEREO/FM/ SONY has developed an envial only top quality stereo compone: the STR-6055, a receiver of ad has lived up to its reputation. I: neers have brought together in c ior FM and AM tuners, versatil amplifier. With 145 watts IHF d STR-6055 makes a fine addition AND TWO ELECT SPEAI SAVE & Reg. $6 The Compl Rent your Roommate with a Classified Ad r------- -- -- - ------- A broad selection of classical music on records, open reel tapes, and cassettes at the lowest regular prices in town. , ,:, s ' ,, :,, . ,f; , , ., - ,. a l I~13G MuSIC rl .. 717 North University ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN We Give Our Custome We Give Our Custo 2019 West Stadium Bld -Daily--Jim Judkis _...., Page Four THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, April 11, 1971 Sunday, April 11, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY