Saturdoy, June 11, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven THE IC~iAN DILY age eve make the people live with apartheid. These little changes are coming too I:ste. All oar people want is the seizure of power so that they can be in a position to determine their own destiny. That's our understanding of self determination. We are not saying we are going to dump the white man in the ocean or slit their throats, but we are at war against apartheid, we are at war against the exploita'ion of our people, and anyone that stands for that must face the consequences. Q: What if any significance do you attri- bute to the recent appointment of Andrew Yo'ng as anbassador to the U.N., and do you think his recent visit to Africa had any effect on the sitoation there? A: Well, for us, when Andrew Young was appointed to the position of ambassador to the U.N. for the U.S., we already had a clearly fhrmnlated policy. Andrew'Young of course has been involved in the civil rights movement in this country, and he is also black. When yot see his entry into the U.N., after Daniel Patrick Moynihan, you can't help but think that the present administra- tion is trying to undo what that clown Moynihan did at the U.N. That is antagon- izing the third world nations, and putting the position of the U.S. far back so that it became a reactionary kind of approach to South African issues, to third world issues. Now you have a man who is experienced in the civil rights movement, who is black, and who is also very ammenable, (and) is quick to open his mouth and say what he feels on a particular issue. I don't know what Andrew Young has been saying up to now, how much of it is just orchestrated stuff, because on about three occasions when he has made statements in relation to South Africa, someone in the state de- partment has come out to say something different. That it is not really a major policy iss'te, or an issue where there has been confrontation. I think that in many ways Andrew Yotng is ventilating the views of the administration, bt what can we say now the U.S. administration's position is toward S,),th Africa? We don't know.. Q: The U.S. has talked about the crisis in South Africa, and we have taken some dilnlmatic action--sending An- drew Young, and Vice President Mondale. I would like to know if you think that diplomacy in and of itself will be snfficient to bring about the necessary change in South Africa, or do you think there will have to be some form of armed struggle? A: Clearly diplomacy alone is not going to bring about majority rule in South Africa. Nothing short of armed struggle is going to bring about the desired change. It is im- portant of course also to keep all these options open. Diplomacy has a place, but it can only be effective if there is armed confrontation and the liberation movement shows some teeth. And then they will be forced to negotiate. Those white men and their minority regimes are not just going to give us our freedom and independence in that manner, they're not going to give up the privilege of slavery with which they've lived for so long. So that therefore to em- ploy only diplomatic means is to divert the attention of the people from the major issues in South Africa. And I don't think now that can be an appropriate method to bring abou't change. Vorster himself has said that apartheid is non-negotiable, and while these diplomatic talks are going on you saw Smith (Rhodesian Prime Minister Ian) committting acts of aggresison in Mozambique a few days ago. I think at the back of their minds they know that as long as we still believe that we can negotiate this, so long can they continue. They are buying time. No, the only thing we can do is to intensify the struggle, and then they will be forced to come out and negotiate. At some stage we must get to the roumd table, but we will do that after we have asserted our position and our strength. Q: What level is the struggle going on now? Are weapons available to your people? A: We have weapons available and it's no secret that it. has been the socialist coun- -ries that have been providing these weap- ons. Not the U.S., not Britain, not France, not Japan, not Germany. All these have been arming the white minority reactionary regime in South Africa. And all this is go- ing to lead to armed struggle in less than five years. In fact I wouldn't be surprised if it happened tomorrow. We are going to get the power, and it is going to come soon. eryone at least has decent hous- could improve the education of ca which was the main objective They don't intend to do that, heir gsul is to keep the people in seritsd, tnid therefore they will his eany of apartheid only to Archeology of a iterary decade By MARNIE HEYN he Auden Generation: Literature and olitics in England in the 1930's, by amuel Hynes, New York: Viking, 1977, 10 pages, $12.50 hristopher and His Kind 1929-1939, by iristopher Isherwood, New York: Far- se, Straus and Giroux, 1976, 399 pages, 10 NTICIPATING BOOKS carries the same attendant risk of disappoint- sent as does anticipating anything else. td with literary work, like every fame- taught occupation, a hint of promise can 'ell be the kiss of death. So it is with amuel Hyne's The Auden Generation. he flaws of the book (other than gratui- 0us anticipation by readers) cannot all > laid at Mr. Hynes's feet; a stern edi- or, a more candid production, and a ore modest title would have contribr ed to a more seemly volume. But the "thr deserves some figurative lumps 00; curiously, critics roughly of his own eneration seem loath to give them to im. Karl Miller, writing in The New York levi.w of Books (9 June 1977), is gen- tally pleased with Hynes's perceptions ibout the politics of the time and of the ople involved. But he notes that fnes's perhaps overcautious thesis al- S him to omit those writers who are ard to cram into his preconceived teory (and, in my estimation, those th are not yet dead and are thus cap-, Of objecting from positions of au- hor.51 Miller also identifies several casisns when Hynes, in his concluding hapters, rather tramples the apparent, ensible interpretations of several of Adet's Poems and of Evelyn Waugh's ile Bodies in order to bring the litera- re itto line with Hynes's conclusions Sthe literature. interesting near-inversion of criti- cal-publication roles, Diana Trilling's commentary on The Auden Generation in The New York Times Book Review (22 May 1977) calls Hyne's textual ex- plications ". . . helpful . . . empathetic, normally trustworthy, sometimes com- monsensically illuminating." Then she rips him to confetti for his enormous obtuseness about all political questions, and accurately attributes many of the book's deficiencies to Hynes's hidden agenda. It is not strange that both these critics found problems with the book: the prob- lems are unavoidable. It is not even very perplexing that their diagnoses of the problems are almost diametrical oppo- sites: each reader brings different knowl- edge and quirky prejudices to a book, and can be satisfied by different ele- tments of the same material. What is puzzling is that after paragraphs of rich- ly-deserved and well-written complaints, both Miller and Trilling commend The Auden Generation to other readers (back- handedly, in Trilling's case), and then go on to list further objections to the book. It is as if Hynes's raw material is innately so interesting that neither Mil- ler nor Trilling can quite bear to reject his book. And, in candor, I share their hesitation. The Auden Generation is full of fascin- ating anecdotal bits. Accounts of the In- ternational Surrealist Exhibition opening, and the -Mtass-Observation project are both helplessly comic in themselves and immensely informative about the literary and social milieu. Hynes has rescued significant letters and articles from the press of that day and made them avail- able to readers who would otherwise have missed important issues and nuances in a socio-poetical colloquy which involved nearly every writer, of what- ever stature, of that decade. lut these functions fall more to library-stocking and bibligraphy than they do to literary history and criticism. Perhaps Hynes has mistaken his calling. Part of the failure of The Auden Gen- eration is methodological. The author sorts his material into chapters accord- ing to the year of the event or publica- tion. On one hand, although no critic or theorist I can think of would argue that chronology is completely irrelevent, neither, on the other hand, can I think of any serious analytic work, literary or historical, which is successfully or- ganized or argued in a simply calendri- cal sequence. The main conclusion which can grow out of this kind of framework is that the years went by, and we al- ready know that. Perhaps Hynes's aware- ness of the limitation of his structure is the cause of his increasingly frantic tone toward the end of the book. Another basic flaw is less mechanical. Hynes is so self-consciously Writing for The Ages that he repeatedly parades conclusions which, if they are not im- mediately obvious, are at least clear enough that any reader with a sufficient vocabulary to read the book would sure- ly catch on after the first explanation. (Two conclusions for free: Auden and his peers were hugely and unfavorably impressed by the war that was past and the war that was coming, and youth of the thirties yearned for leaders.) Un- like Trilling, I find Hynes's literary analyses plot-limited and far too reduc- tive. Unlike Miller, I find that Hynes's political sensibilities are of the either/or variety, and that he tries to jam art, letters, history, and science into a col- umn-a-and-column-b paradigm. The Au- den Generation is not an unenjoyable book, but neither is it a good book. BACK AT THE RANCH, Christopher and His Kind is both good and fun. Isherwood has taken on a chore very similar to Hynes's, the reconstruction of a decade of a literary subculture largely from its written artifacts. Be- cause Isherwood's reconstruction is cen- tered around well-realized characters, and because it avoids pretensions to grandeur, it is an illuminating and often poignant document. Perhaps the most impressive aspect of Christopher and His kind is the deft- ness with which the older Christopher (the "I" of the book) untangles himself from his own earlier avatar (the "Chris- topher" of the book). "Christopher" re- mains as young, awkward, and less- than- omniscient as he might reasonably have been, and "I" is free to evalupte the younger man's unintentional folly and inadvertent wisdom. This differentiation of character is especially important in those passages which comment on the fascism and communism of the thirties, and is at least partially responsible for the unlabored, profound candor of Isher- wood's self-analysis. He wears his fail- ures and successes rather gracefully. Isherwood manages, for the most part, to let the members of his coterie move through his account as recognizable per- sonalities, without lampoon or eulogy. His lapses into spite and sentiment are controlled and nearly always reflexively satiric. And he has a healthy respect for the vagaries of human circumstance and volition. His treatment of Heinz's return to Ger- many, their cabalistic attempts to find sanctuary, and Heinz's misfortune at the hands of the Nazis, maintains a cl-u- cial ambiguity. It would indeed be un- reasonable to imagine that all the mach- inations of weather, disease, and govern- ment conspired merely to punish one young German homosexual draft-dodger and his friend. On the other hand, un- reason always has a hand in politics, and malevloent unreason was the strong' suit of the Third Reich. Without strong evidence, Isherwood refuses either to pos- tulate or discount a conspiracy against them, and that is perhaps the wisest course: to acknowledge the pain and hold the blame in reserve; It is a situ- ation which American dissidents of the Vietnam era will probably find familiar. Mtrtnie Jdnu is a graduate suden in English