Sunddy, April , 1X73 THE MICHIGAN DAIIY Page Five Sunday, Aj~ri1 ~, 1q73 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pc~e Five The biggest conspiracy of them all Guidebooks and pinkos G R A V I T Y'S RAINBOW, by Thomas Pynchon. Viking Press, $15 cloth, $4.95 paper. By JOE DAVIS 'HOMAS PYNCHON'S n e w novel Gravity's Rainbow is more than an awesomely beauti- ful book; it is a literary event of the first importance; the sort of writing that incites violent criti- cal passions and brisk sales. Pynchon's cult, having endured ten lean years since he published his first major novel, V., have been graced with a veritable Pentecost. They should be babbl- ing in tongues for quite a while, each of themas preaching a dif- ferent version of what the novel signifies. They will agree only that it is one of the most sig- nificant books to come along in years, substantial by virtue of its more than 760 pages, and that it redeems the extravagant promise of V. At a time when Watergate is little more than a sordid comic caper, here is Pynchon uncover. ing The Biggest Conspiracy of Them All! Just as we think we've purged our consciences of Viet- nam, he has come out with one of those war novels that keen on siibtly nagging like Catch-22 or The Tin Drum. Immediately rele- vant without being merely trendy, it is a story about rocketry dur- ing World War II, with an intri- cate network of characters in- volving scientists, spies, soldiers, and victims, the Germans who built the V-2, and the British who suffered its terror and destruc- tion. The rocket business seems to be slumping these days, but the defense budget is up. Pyn- chon knows that the Big Money is on Death every time, that the serious investors will ride with the one sure thing. His instinct seems right in celebrating the ballistic missile as the totem of our times, and he is no modest aspirant for its shamanship. FICTIONISTS long ago discov- ered that Meaningful Uncer- tainties can be generated by the interplay between unreliable viewpoints. Pynchon carries out this principle with a hundred major characters for another author's ten. And what a set of viewpoints to rely on!-clair- voyants, paranoids, statisticians, Pavlovian and Freudian psy- chologists, counterspies, engi- neers, peasants, peers, capital- ists, Communists, anarchists, sadists, masochists, cops, gang- sters, black marketeers, acid- crazed Swiss chemists, zoot- sniters high on reefers, fools, clowns, and displaced persons, dead men (silent and otherwise), effete intellectuals, Machiavel- lian statesmen, Americans, Brit- ish, Germans, Russians, Africans, dozens of nationalities from scores of regions-each of these characters seeming to be con- nected to practically all of the others. Needless to say, the num- ber of Meaningful Uncertainties increases exponentially as the number of sinister and unreliable narrators increases numerically. Pynchon's unique contribution to the novel is his use of science in a scientifically sophisticated way. He is one of the few writers not writing exclusively science fiction to have taken science seriously. Who better than Pyn- chon, then, to develop the com- plex equation as a poetic form? Who better to use positivistic science as a symbolic language for exploring human and esthetic relationships? The title Gravity's Rainbow, to take one blatant example, refers to the parabola, the immutable form traced by a rocket within the earth's gravi- tational field. The parabolic arc governs the whole structure of this novel from its slow, stately beginning to its final breath- taking rush of destruction. Its rise-and-fall structure is that of working for Allied intelligence in London during the Blitz. As Slothrop pieces the puzzle to- gether, the conspiracy grows un- til it implicates literally all life, all spirit, all matter. It becomes clear that weapons cartels, gov- ernments, and in fact secular "reality" as we know it are only fronts for a larger and more sinister operation-the old con- spiracy of Death against Life, and more apalling still, the mas- ochistic collusion of Life with Death. This is no ordinary spy story; its plot cannot be summarized in terms of double and triple cross but only in terms of the n-th cross, where we begin to see the whole pattern of faith and be- trayal. Pynchon pushes the value of n to hitherto undreamed-of heights, like a cyclotron generat- ing wholly new kinds of energy to make wholly new kinds of in- quiries. Be warned, prospective reader, that there is nothing less than a Cosmic plot to be followed in this book, no linear story but an n-dimensional net to be dis- entangled or desperately jumped into as you will. BEHIND PYNCHON'S playful- ness lurks a deadly serious dialectic between Life, the Or- ganization of Things into Form or Synthesis, and Death, the Dis- organization of Life-forms into Chaos. His early works such as "Entropy" and V., influenced by Henry Adams' belief that "Chaos tion that Synthesis must and will be balanced by Control. Crea- tion and destruction combine to form a still larger Process. The struggle between them is "the real War," one which "is always there," and in which World War II was only a skirm- ish. Pynchon has outgrown his concept of history as a road which dead ends in Chaos, and has grown instead to think of his- tory as dynamic change, as an eternally ongoing process of Transformation. The agent of Transformation, and the true hero of Gravity's Rainbow, is the artist, Pynchon himself; but however heroically he may try to synthesize Every- thing, pot even he is exempt from the laws of Transformation. The implications of Pynchon's novel multiply beyond belief. His imaginative structure threatens to get out of control, like a can- cer transgressing the limits of cellular death. Like the nuclear physicist or the rocket scientist, Pynchon has created something which feeds only on itself and grows independently of the needs of men. The tragic parabola can barely contain the amorphous proliferation of his imagination. Normally we either lock these creative paranoids up in institu- tions or we build our institutions (churches, states, literary cults) around them where they stand. Cooptation is indeed a formidable method for Control; They have Their ways bending everything but he seems unable to disen- tangle decadence as a literary subject from decadence as a writer's habit of mind. Like many of his characters, he flirts with the sin of Pride by amplifying his own despair into a Universal Principle. PYNCHON IS his own best critic and articulates for him- self the difficulties of his enter- prise. He thinks of them in terms of Heisenberg's uncertainty prin- ciple, which asserts that the closer a physicist gets in his measurements of an object, the more his measurements are dis- torted by the interaction between the measuring and measured ob- jects. It seems that he must be imaginatively sucked into Their power game if he is to do his job for us, the job of illuminating that power game. This weakness, then, may be merely a hazard of novel writing, or it may be Pride of Intellect, a tendency to rest satisfied with the endless labyrinths of the mind. Pynchon is so busy Con- necting Everything that he has neglected to connect himself. Real suffering, real love, real human life are not to be found in his fictions, and there is some- thing finally sterile and barren about the hothouse blooms of his imagination. He develops the novel as a way of finding intel- lectual truths at the expense of its potential for finding emotional truths. Pynchon is, if not the books books books books the de casibus story, the most basic form of tragedy. GRAVITY'S RAINBOW is neith- er quick nor easy reading. Embark on it as you would on an unabridged version of the Penta- gon Papers. Pynchon's fictions do not have plots, exactly; they have, well, conspiracies. Nom- inally the conspiracy in this book involves international weapons cartels, the Boys in the Back Room who engineer wars and sell weapons to all sides. The hero, one Tyrone Slothrop, stum- bles upon this conspiracy while was the law of nature; Order was the dream of man," assert that Things in the long run tend toward Death, Decay, and Chaos. Pynchon's significant depar- ture in Gravity's Rainbow is to reformulate the conflict in terms of Synthesis versus Control. While Adams' thesis governed his previous work, this novel opens with a quote from Wernher von Braun: "Nature does not know extinction; all it knows is trans- formation." Pynchon moves from a fatalistic assertion of the Su- premacy of Death to the asser- to Their own purpose, the final consolidation of the Empire of Death. The Boys in the Back Room, it turns out, control even the politics of taste. They seem, at least, to have their way in Pynchon's sex fantasies, which are markedly preoccupied with whips, chains, leather, vinyl, and anality. Even relatively straight sexuality in this novel expresses the old decadent-Romantic con- fusion between love and death. To be sure, the eroticization of death in our time is exactly the "point" of Pynchon's writing; Bobby Fischer, then the Doctor Faustus of the contemporary novel. Gravity's Rainbow, in other words, has both the strengths and weaknesses of ambition. lie brings all that he's got (and per- haps all that we've got) into the creative effort. At a time when the novel is supposedly dying, Pynchon has staked six years of work on his belief in a fiction of total resources. The novel must either see him or fold. The stakes are always that high in the Back Room. THE,. DREAM AND THE DEAL: THE FEDERAL WRIT- ERS PROJECT, 1935-1943, by Jere Mangione. Little, Brown and Company, 1972, 416 pages, $12,50. By BOB BERNARD "In the early stages of Fed- eral One, when some of its di- rectors felt hamstrung by rigid WPA regulations, they de- manded and obtained an audi- ence with Harry Hopkins, their titular chief. Hopkins listened patiently to their complaints for some time; then, noting that Henry Alsberg (the direc- tor of the Writers' Project) was the only one who had not said anything, asked: 'What about you, Henry? What is your gripe?' Alsberg grinned, and in his slow and heavy voice, replied, 'I don't have any'gripe, Harry. I haven't had as much fun since I had the measles!"' ND FUN it was! But the Federal Writers Project was much more. From the very depths of the worst depression this country e v e r suffered emerged the most novel, most positive relationship the United States government has ever had with its literati. Originally con- ceived of as little more than a method for giving writers a dole while keeping them busy, Fed- eral One as the Writers Project was called eventually produced through the vehicle of state guide-books some of the best writing on America's towns and cities and ethnic groups. Some of America's best writers, men such as Ralph Ellison, Richard Wright, and. Saul Bellow, ap- proached their maturity while working on the Project. The thirties were a desperate time and not just for journalists without newspapers and profes- sors without students. Fully one third of the working force were on the street in endless bread lines or dismal shanty towns affectionately named Hoover- villes. Roosevelt and his closest aide Harry Hopkins, a former social worker, sought to create programs that would provide the ilhision of productive labor while helping to keep millions of Americans alive until somehow American capitalism could hoist itself from the sewer into which it had taken a swan dive. THE MOST comprehensive of 1 New Deal programs was the Works Progress Administration. For most enrolled in this pro- gram, work consisted of simple pick-and-shovel labor or conser- vation projects. But the legisla- tive act that created the Works Progress Administration,. t h e Emergency Relief Act of 1935, also contained a clause authoriz- ing "assistance to educational, professional, and clerical per- sons; a nationwide program for useful employment of artists, mu- sicians, a c t o r s, entertainers, writers . . . and others in these cultural fields." On the basis of this provision, art, theater, mu- sic, and writers programs were developed. Of all the groups disaffected by the plight of the economy, writers and intellectuals were the most drawn to left-wing ex- planations of what had brought on the misery. As early as 1931, 53 of the nation's most promi- nent writers had signed a "man- ifesto" declaring their support for the Communist Party, and as early as 1932, 11 "proletar- ian" novels had been published in the United States. The ex- tent of left-wing influence in Federal One was to have a dis- ruptive influence on the Project and ultimately served as the cat- alyst for bowdlerizing and event- ually dismantling it. At the same time, by serving the most imme- diate needs of literally starving intellectuals and by providing some kind of focus for literary energy, the Writers Project served to defuse the revolution- ary fervor of thousands of its employees. Many leftists were Vth. ANNIVERSARY SALE! thanks to your response, continues thru April. 10% OFF on oil hardbound BOOKS and 78 phono records fully aware of the cooptive na- ture of the Project and severely criticized the government for tossing such sops. .. rHE MAN chosen to head the Federal Writers Project, Henry Alsberg, brought to the program a background and set of personal contradictions that in a highly complicated way served to lend color and addi- tional dimensions to the Project, but at the same time implanted the seeds of eventual chaos and destruction. Born of Jewish - German par- ents, graduated from Columbia Law School at twenty, Henry Alsberg found his most exciting calling in journalism. An editor- ial correspondent for the Nation, the New York World, and the London Daily Herald, Alsberg made six forays into revolution- ary Russia. Appointed a direc- tor of the American Joint Distri- bution Committee, he spent seven months riding the rails through the Ukraine swith ten thousand dollars in his pocket which he distributed to village Jewish elders as he saw fit. Eventually Alsberg became dis- enchanted with the Bolshevik regime and fell afoul of the po- lice. Alsberg returned to the states in the 1920s, dividing his time between protests to Soviet suppression of civil liberties along with anarchists such as Emma Goldman and producing for the Provincetown Players some very successful plays by E.E. Cummings and Paul Green. Originally hired as a publicist for the Works Progress Adminis- tration, Alsberg came to his job with a reputation as one of the worst administrators in the government. Something of a slouch with food crumbs and cigarette ashes covering his suit, Alsberg had a lot of trouble making decisions and no trouble at all leaving projects unfinish- ed. Yet he was a deeply com- passionate man with 20 years of experience in journalism. Als- berg had another trait very rare- lv found in the top echelons of any bureaucracy - creative critical intelligence. The Project had its central headquarters in Washington, with local offices in each of the states and most of the major cities. Each state office was responsible for researching, editing, and get- ting its own guidebook published. The guidebooks came to be di- vided into several sections, with the first s e c t i o n s containing essays, maps, and photographs on literary, historical, and just plain anecdotal topics, while the last sections presented a number of interesting motor and walk- ing tours of the state. THE STORY of the Writers Project could be told high- lighting the bureaucratic jockey- ing, political infights, red tape, hatchet jobs and personality con- flicts, and Mangione devotes lots of space to doing just that. Yet remarkably, a lot of good work was done during the all-too-brief existence of the Project. The first of the guidebooks to be publish- ed, the Idaho Guidebook, set the standards for all future Project work. Largely written by Vardis Fisher, the state director, this book is so good it seems unbe- lievable that it could be a pro- duct of the federal government. The Writers Project sponsored a number of studies of ethnic groups and their folklore. Every- thing attracted the investigator's attention - Jamaican proverbs, Irisih songs and stories, stories of Father Divine and Daddy Grace. In New England the lives of Con- necticut clock makers and mu- nition workers were studied; in Oklahoma came tales of the oil- field workers; from Chicago the life stories of railroad workers and sign painters. The New York City Project even pubihed a study in Yiddish. Among the most exciting chronicles were those of the ex-slaves. Trans- cribed in their own idiom, these precious narratives recapture the wide range of experience of the slave from kidnapping in Africa through the misery and uneven personal compensations of slav- ery to Civil War and freedom. frustrating dilemma for many of its employees. As creative s the programs could be, it did not permit any personal work to be done on government time. To many this negated the whole function of paying writers to practice their craft. As a partial compensation some writers such as Edward Dahlberg, Maxwell Bodenheim and Richard Wright were secretly permitted vy Als- berg to work at home on their own material with the only pro- viso being that they report to the office once a week with evidence of their work. It was during this time that Richard Wright wote his first novel, Native Son. For others satisfaction had to come from independently mimeograph- ed collections of poems, essays, and short stories such as those published in a local mgazine of San Francisco writings edited by Kenneth Rexroth. THE WRITERS Project posed a dilemma for many of the other New Deal make work projects-the demands posed by a world war. Yet the unpopulr- ity of any intellectual enterprise sponsored by the government of a people deeply committeed to a pragmatic approach guaanteed its ephemeral nature. Most im- portant as a precursor of evil times to come were the red-bait- ing hearings held by the Dies Committee. In fact the commit- tee Dies chaired, the House Com- mittee on Un-American Acdvi- ties, was created as a temprary. body to investigate Communist influence in the Federal Writers Project in New York City. As short-lived as the Project was, as marred as it was by bureaucracy, it left a body of popularly received literature and manuscript anid research mate- rial that can only strengthen and enrich one's understanding of this country. We owe a debt to the writers who provided us with this legacy and to the authQr of this history of the Project for retelling the story with such completeness and with such in- volevement. Watertown: American mainstream CRISIS IN WATERTOWN: THE POLARIZATION OF AN A'JERI- CAN COMMUNITY, by Lynn Eden. The University of Michigan Press, 218 pages, $6.95. (Nomi- nated for the 1973 National Book Award in Contemporary Affairs.) By TONY SCHWARTZ N THE SURFACE, Crisis in Watertown: The Polarization of an American Community is a book about the events leading to the firing of a young activist min- ister in Watertown, Wisconsin, a few years back. Its immediate significance lies in the fact that its author is 21-year-old Lynn Eden, who graduated last year from the University's Residential College, and who became the first student ever published by the University of Michigan Press. The book's message, however, transcends Watertown, and de- serves attention for better rea- sons than the fact that a local yokel has made good. Crisis in Watertown is a rare document of collected voices, predominant- ly the voices of that ethereal group Richard Nixon has always referred to as his "silent major- ity." In this work they have been given a 200-page opportu- nity to step forward and speak out about how they perceive the world and their own lives. The result, at least for this reader, is a disheartening tale of paranoia, parochialism, and ra- tionalization-all of which seem to stem from one cause: an em- passioned resistance to change, any change. There are exceptions of course; the minister himself, the couple Eden lived with while she wrote the book, and a few young peo- ple, but more of them have the vision of a Jean Bertling: "I don't think much. It used to bother me-being inactive. When we first moved to Water- town I started doing more then, working with the kids in Girl Scouts and Sunday School. Well you know as you get older, you just don't have time to worry about the world. I get a big enough thrill just balancing the budget, going to the store with enough to buy something extra. I know I'm a frauhousewife but it's an awful lot of work with three and taking care of the house, and Bob." It is to Eden's credit that when she went back to Watertown to get releases from the people she had quoted, every one of them consented. But it is also frighten- ing; frightening because none of the statements can be viewed any longer as off-the-cuff re- marks. They express what these people believe, and more than that, they express what they are willing to admit they believe. ALAN KROMHOLZ, the Con- gregational Church minister, did have time to worry about the world, and he wanted others to worry about it with him. He m a r c h e d in Milwaukee with Fatther James Groppi, in the push for open housing, and he urged a similar policy for Water- town. In his sermons he preach- ed about putting the humane principals of the Bible into daily practice. Kromholz was fired as minis- ter by an overwhelming vote of his congregation on May 19, 1968. The real reasons for his dismiF- sal were not the apparent ones. It was claimed that Kromholz did not properly minister to the sick. He was accused, usually indirectly, of being a Communist. It was said that he edited a local newspaper, which was put out, in fact, by a group of students who advocated progressive change in general, and open housing in particular. The rum- ors' about Kromholz were as numerous as the anonymous, threatening phone calls he re- ceived toward the latter part of his ministry. The accusations were merely a comfortable f r o n t. As Betty Eberts, one of the most percep- tive Watertown residents, ex- plained, "They wanted a tran- quilizer, and they wanted to be assured that everything was ale right. They didn't like somebody upsetting the apple cart." What they didn't want specifically were blacks in their backyards, and that was the applecart they saw Alan Kromholz tampering with Father Thilman, a Krom- holz supporter !rom the local Catholic church, summed it up when he said: "It' so much status quo. They had no vision beyond the Rock River." EDEN IS painstaking in her effort to let the people of Watertown speak for themselves and in keeping any of her own value judgments out of the book. That effort is admirable at first -both because of the obvious temptation to pounce on contra- dictions, and because people like these, for better or for worse the voices of "average" Ameri- cans, are seldom given an oppor- tunity to speak their minds. Ironically, however, it is prob- ably this very effort which is the book's major lacking. Eden's stance is so detached that the book loses a certain sense of richness, dimension, and move- ment. The characters seem to exist in a vacuum, identified only by their words, and it is hard to remember one from another when the book ends. The narra tive suffers from the author's lack of descriptive input. How do these people respond in every- day situations? What do they look like? What distinguishes one per- son from another? Who is re- spected in town, and what seems to be the criteria for respect? What were their parents like? How do they interact with others? What makes them squirm and in what situations are they most comfortable? Most important, did anyone go through any changes as a result of the events leading to Kromholz's dismissal? Were there any who, deep down, came out with doubts, mixed feelings, retrospective guilt? Eden hasn't probed these ques- tions, and the reader is left with a resulting sense of superficial- ity. The book is an important beginning, but one in which only the tip of an iceberg has been exposed. It remains for another writer-or for Eden herself-to further pursue the subject; to find out where the attitudes of the people of Watertown, and the many others like them, come from; to offer, finally, a more dimensional and analytical look at the reasons why the prospect of social change so frightens them, M. E. C. H. A. presents ELTEATRIO CAMPESINO de AZTLAN "THE CH ICANO FARMWORKER THEATER" The Chicano Struggle UFW Union and Boycott Efforts MUSIC-PLAYS-SATIRE-SPIRIT Sat., April 14-Hill Auditorium U of M Campus--8 P.M. NO ADMISSION Dr. CharlesL. Stevenson Professor, Department of Philosophy SPEAKS ON "Man and His Values WHAT VALUE JUDGMENTS ARE AND HOW WE CAN USE SCIENCE TO SUPPORT THEM 6th Lecture of a Series entitled MAN AND HIS WAYS International Center Recreation Room I- The littlest conspiracy FAIRY TALE, by Erich Segal. Harper & Row, 46 pp., $4.95. NEVER read Love Story, and . I didn't see the movie either. I have been told by those who- ought to know that I didn't miss anything, but there are obviously an awful lot of Americans who would d i s a g r e e, presumably most of those many millions who digested that piece of maudlin sentimentality in one of its two First of all, it's not funny; not a bit. And second, at $4.95-ten cents a page, mind you-it is more expensive per word than even the slimmest book of poetry ever hoped to achieve for the most avaricious publisher. And lastly, if it makes any difference, it ain't even original, at least in the sense that too many borrowed phrases, too many copied styles, too many . ..oh well. HOP WOOD LECTURE Robert W. Corrigan Drama critic, editor, and essayist. Founder and first editor of THE TULANE DRAMA REVIEW. Author of THE THEATRE IN SEARCH OF A FIX (April, 1973) "The Changing of the Avane-arde" I