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Remarks by
Tony Kushner
at Not In Our Name: Evening of Conscience
(This
event included readings and performances by signers of the Not In
Our Name Statement of Conscience. It was held at the Great Hall
in Cooper Union, NYC, October 3, 2002.)
"Tonight
at Cooper Union I choose to believe that I'm a part of the beginning
of something, I choose to believe that I am a small part of the
beginning of a mass movement which will transform American democracy
and American society, which will liberate energies for social and
political progress, liberate energies for justice here and join
with sister forces in other countries all over the world, I choose
to believe that our global progressive movement will grow and grow,
less and less impeded and finally unimpeded by bigots and reactionaries
and cowboy ego-anarchists and the ayatollahs of Islam and the ayatollahs
of Christianity and the ayatollahs of Judaism and all fundamentalists
and free market predators who doom themselves through their cannibal
petrochemical parasite diets -- I recently read in the newspaper
that one of the characteristics biologists look for in determining
whether or not an animal is a parasite or not is that if the animal
is a parasite, it loses, after centuries of evolving, many of its
characteristics, becoming grublike, it becomes paler and smoother
and slipperier and blanker and blander and dimmer and duller and
more and more featureless the longer it lives by sucking the life
out of other animals, its uselessness strips it of its specificity,
I read this in the New York Times and then I turned the page and
there he was! Proof that the biologists are right!! George W. Bush,
no eyes no lips no neck no vocal inflection no brains his linguistic
skills slipping down the same sinkhole as his ability to chew a
pretzel without pressing his vagas nerve and passing out before
his two apparently unconcerned dogs -- there he was, the characteristicless
unPresident unelected unmandated undesired uappetizing unacceptable
bloodgrizzled fratboy schmuck of a parasite, and I choose to believe
that, though he is dangerous, he is a thing of the past (and things
of the past are always dangerous when encountered ambling about
in the present!) -- I choose to believe that this movement, this
force I choose to sense growing in the country, in the world in
fact, which not all the parasite classes' creepily characteristicless
minions will be able to stop, this movement is a new progressive
internationalist force for freedom but also for social and racial
and gender and economic justice, equality, democracy; I choose to
believe this is true and I renew that choice every morning no matter
what the Bushites or their friends the quisling Democrats are up
to, since I was a little kid I've been told I have choices, the
right to make a choice, and though I've never been dumb enough to
believe that was literally true I've also never been dumb enough
to be literal and I have always believed I could choose to believe
or not believe that the arc of the moral universe is long but it
bends towards justice and I have always always known that if I chose
not to believe what I was told by Theodore Parker and Martin Luther
King I would in short order begin to lose my characteristics and
become more Bushlike more grub-and-weevil like more Cheneylike more
Rumsfeldlike more KarlRovelike more Ariel Sharon like and more Saddam
Hussein like -- and God forbid a million billion times that should
happen to such a specific person as me.
"I
do not believe we have no ability to turn this horror back. I do
not believe the wicked always win. I believe we have to stop believing
these things. I believe our despair is a lie we are telling ourselves.
In many other periods of history people, ordinary citizens, routinely
set aside hours, days, time in their lives for the work of doing
politics, doing the work of politics, some of which is glam and
revolutionary and some of which is dull and electoral and tedious
and not especially pure -- and the world changed because of the
work they did. That's what we're starting now. It requires setting
aside the time to do it, and then doing it. Not any single one of
us has to or possibly can save the world, but together in some sort
of concert, in even not-especially-coordinated concert, with all
of us working where we see work to be done the world will change.
And we have to do it by showing up places, our bodies in places,
turn off the fucking computers leave the Web and the Net -- and
show up, our bodies at meetings and demos and rallies and leafletting
corners. Because this is a moment in history that needs us to begin,
each of us every day at her or his own pace, slowly and surely rediscovering
how to be politically active, how to organize our disparate energies
into effective group action -- well we are the smartest and most
specific people around, and I choose to believe we will do what
is required. Act. Organize. Assemble. Oppose. Resist. Find a place
a cause a group a friend and start, today, now now now, continue
continue continue. Being politically active is for the citizens
of a democracy maybe the best way of speaking to God and hearing
Her answer: You exist. If we are active, if we are activist, She
replies to us: You specifically exist. Mazeltov. Down with the parasites.
Parasite heaven awaits them, where they can lap fatglobules off
the surface of spoiled cream from tarnished silver catbowls and
all the angels who have to work up there in parasite heaven have
shaved off their bushes in protest. Now get busy, She replies. Maintain
the world by changing the world."
To see
footage from the entire evening which also featured Eve Ensler, Edward
Asner, Wallace Shawn, Andre Gregory, Marisa Tomei, Suheir Hammad,
Pete Seeger, Oscar Brown Jr., Jeremy Pikser, Miles Solay, Marie Howe,
Paul Lisicky, Jessica Hagedorn, JoJo Gonzalez, Ellen McLaughlin, David
Anzuela, Howard Zinn, and Danny Glover, go to: www.freespeech.org
An
hour-long program from the evening is being edited now. For more
information, go to www.nion.us or write rnrarts@hotmail.com.
Read
Tony Kushner's Commencement Speech to Vassar College
Tony
Kushner's Homebody/Kabul
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Interview with Playwright
Tony Kushner in Political Affairs
[The following interview appeared in Political
Affairs, January 2003. For copies please write Political Affairs,
235 W 23rd St., NY, NY 10011.]
Editors note: Tony Kushner, a Pulitzer Prize-winning
playwright and a gay activist, has written a number of plays, including
Angels in America, Part 1: The Millenium, Angels in America, Part
2: Perestroika, Slavs!: Thinking about the Longstanding Problems
of Virtue and Happiness and Homebody/Kabul. In addition, Kushner
has received grants from the New York State Council on the Arts,
the NEA, the Whiting Foundation, and the American Academy of Arts
and Letters. He also received a Lila Wallace/Reader's Digest Fellowship
and a medal for Cultural Achievement from the National Foundation
for Jewish Culture. Angeles in America is being made into a HBO
film directed by Mike Nichols. Kushner's new play Caroline or Change
will open on Broadway in September. Kushner was interviewed by Joe
Sims.
PA: You emphasize the need to speak the truth
and advocate an art that is engaged and committed. You also suggest
culture is partisan. But, in theater and in the cultural world many
say that culture should not be political. Why is this?
TK: I think in general there is a powerful
tradition of denying the existence of politics in art. The easiest
answer is what Barthes or Brecht says, that the denial of ideology
is an ideology--a bourgeois ideology. The way you protect your interests
is by pretending you are not speaking from a historically determined
or dialectical place, but rather from some position of immutable
truth that lies beyond history and critical thinking. And we like
to pretend--since we pretend these truths exist--there are means
of getting at those truths. Religion is one example, it is supposed
to be a discourse that lies completely out of the historical framework,
and art is another.
There is an anxiety that generates an attack on
the notion that art is political, that art is partisan. It is a
fantasy of being able to protect the purity in art, a fantasy of
being able to outlast the vicissitudes of the present moment, a
way of guaranteeing immortality in art, which of course increases
its market value. Something that can be thought to have a life of
50 or 100 or 500 years must be worth more than something that is
only of value for an instant. We know a 600 year-old statue is more
valuable than one made the other day.
For American artists specifically, it's a conservative
gesture that seeks to deny the extent to which democracy has succeeded.
One of the ways it succeeded is in the creation of people who think
politically, who have a deeply bred political common sense and an
understanding of political struggle. By creating the arena of civil
rights, we made public a certain kind of struggle that in other
countries, even democratic countries, are hidden or in a nonpolitical
arena. In America, it is all in the courts, the legislature, out
on the streets. It's a civic event; it's part of the life of the
state. And I think when artists deny politics a place in the theater,
a place in the museum, it's a way of denying what is powerful and
important as an accomplishment of American constitutional democracy.
PA: Is McCarthyism still a factor in this
denial?
TK: Yes, I think McCarthyism is still certainly
alive. We just had an example of it in political life rather than
artistic life with the Not in Our Name statement against the war
in Iraq. A journalist, who I think is actually rather well-meaning,
discovered the Not in Our Name statement was organized by a group
called Refuse and Resist, which was organized, although not exclusively,
by people who are part of the RCP [Revolutionary Communist Party].
So an alarm was sent out, and an article appeared in Salon saying,
"Are you aware that Not in Our Name is a front for the RCP?" [This]
is a) completely untrue and b) red-baiting in the grand old McCarthy
tradition. There is still this notion of guilt by association. I
think McCarthy, the HUAC and that whole period of the red scare
traumatized this country. We haven't completely recovered.
I imagine it is also operative in art. There is
a fear maintained to this day that government funding for the arts
is used as a tool of censorship. It's not censorship where artists
are arrested and hauled off to prison. One knows certain kinds of
expression simply aren't going to get funded. If you make a decision
to say certain things, you realize you are probably going to be
denied funding.
PA: Setting aside the problem of funding,
at one point there was a broad left movement in theater, literature
and Hollywood. Wouldn't you say that if the organized left wants
to have influence it must engage in the arena of broad popular culture?
TK: Yes, and that still goes on. For instance,
with the gay and lesbian struggles, we've triumphed on a cultural
level primarily through the medium of popular entertainment. When
the Christian right accuses Hollywood of peddling a homosexual agenda,
they are completely correct. This is, in fact, the only thing that
we've triumphed in. We've failed totally legislatively. Every time
we try to pass a lesbian or gay rights or an anti-discrimination
bill and certainly in the struggle to get married, we've endured
terrible defeats. We are going to continue enduring them until we
get a federal government that rises to its historical role, as the
protector of minority rights.
But on a political level we have failed to make
common cause with other groups. On a cultural level, you can't turn
on television without running into lesbians and gay men. There's
an enormous amount of progress that is changing this country and
the world. But it's not of the organized left.
When you talk about the organized left, it's hard
to know exactly what that means. I think the most activist people
on the left, the people with the most radical disenchantment with
capitalism, with the deepest belief there must be another way of
organizing human relationships, people with a really deep understanding,
a lived understanding, have fallen in love with a marginalization
and a powerlessness.
PA: They've fallen in love with marginalization?
TK: I think so. People on the left constantly
decry the lack of identifiable left voices on television, and in
some mainstream discourse. We have been shoved to the side, and
it's really a debate between the center and the far right.
That certainly is the case in legislative bodies.
I don't believe that's simply a conspiracy of giant corporations.
We also have lost the ability to speak in a way most people understand.
There has been drifting apart of left intelligentsia and "the people,"
the middle class and the working class. We've become irrelevant
and in a certain sense become comfortable with that. It allows us
to spin fantasies that have no need to be reconciled with reality,
which is an easier thing than to have to actually take responsibility
for changing the world. To be a critic of the world is an easier
thing than to be an activist. In a way, we have gone back before
Marx and abrogated the fundamental tenet: philosophers are felt
to understand the world, the point is to change it.
I worry we have drifted away. Because of the crisis
of theory, because of various other kinds of crises, we have become
less capable, and more and more used to being not capable.
PA: Let's talk about the crisis in theory.
There is a character in your play the "Oldest Living Bolshevik"
who decries the lack of a theory. Do you think that the left feels
it can't proceed for lack of a grand explanation for moving forward
particularly in light of what happened in the Soviet Union?
TK: Yes. I think it's complicated, because
I don't know that a meta-theory can really ever have credibility
again. I don't know it ever should. In my play, Homebody/Kabul,
I found myself surprised in arriving at [that conclusion]. Any theory
that seeks to explain all of history, and offers a single prescription
for the incredible variety and the complexity of human behavior,
has to rest on an oversimplification of people. Human beings are
both communal beings and individuals, and to lose sight of one or
the other is problematic. On the other hand, I think that in the
absence of some grand theoretical ideas that can assist people in
the interpretation of their own lives and suggest directions for
change, we become lost.
I still believe deeply in the socialist tradition,
which has taken many, many forms over the last 1000 years. But it's
the notion of economic justice, something like social justice, something
like a recognition finally of the communal as well as the individual,
the communal basis of wealth as well as property rights. These are
powerful ideas have persisted for centuries and clearly aren't gone.
There is clearly great value in them. I think [what is needed is]
an articulator, someone who redeems Marx from the mess Stalinism
made of Marx, and in a sense Marxism made of Marx, or, a group of
theories that will in a sense replace what Marx once was, because
it was a theory.
PA: But did it ever claim to be all encompassing
or to be the truth?
TK: I think, in a way, yes. Because it is
dialectic, in a way it proclaims to be the truth in the sense that
Kant and Hegel claimed the truth. It's a methodology for arriving
at an unfixed and constantly changing truth. The truth is not a
fixed object that lies in the past waiting to be discovered and
held on to forever. The dialectical method is a way of extending
reason to its absolute limits and discovering that its limits extend
much farther than one would have ever imagined. It is a way to think
one's way out of the nightmare of history. I think to that extent
it's intended to be a grand scheme. Marx had those kind of protean
ambitions, in the same way that Freud did and other thinkers of
the 19th century--it was a time for that kind of thought.
The French deconstructionists are right to point
out that there is a consonance between colonial ambitions and empirical
empire-building ambitions, and the giant continental-sized theories
of the grand thinkers of the 19th century.
It's extremely difficult to grope one's way back
to what was there originally. But the work is still immensely powerful,
and all you have to do is read history to see what astonishing power,
the articulation of not just Marx but also Rousseau, Hegel, Kant,
and what these people did by naming something. Before Rousseau,
people fought for freedom but didn't know what it was they were
fighting for. By giving them the name, he created the preconditions
for the French Revolution. Naming is a tremendous power.
There are still principles that are so utterly irreplaceable
and international. It really takes us back to 1917, and earlier
of course, to look at where things went wrong. In a certain sense
they went wrong in exactly the way Marx warned they would: there
can be no socialism, no Communism in one country, national socialism,
national identity, and national boundaries are the problem.
Effective internationalism and solidarity are so
unbelievably important. The labor theory of value still holds; the
notion of profit being unpaid labor is still critical. So it's how
do you get all that and rescue it from the bloodbath it became mired
in by Stalinism, and how do you look through it to find where it
went wrong. A lot of the voices of those big battles at the end
of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th century [need to be listened
to]. The voices of Antonio Gramsci and Rosa Luxemburg and Trotsky
even, who knew exactly, at least on paper, what the errors of judgment
were in Leninism. I think there is a lot of reinvestigation and
reformulation that needs to happen.
PA: We have been discussing how to create
a socialist alternative in the wake of these difficulties. It is
like the question you posed at the end of your play Slavs, What
is to be done? So how, as an artist and an activist, do you see
moving forward?
TK: I was on a panel on Saturday with two
Russian playwrights. The moderator read this quote from Stanley
Kunitz, who I think is one of our greatest poets ever. Kunitz said
that it's always the job of the artist to oppose the state. I thought
about it and said I wasn't sure if that was entirely the case.
We are in a very complicated moment. It seems to
me there are two areas of judgment, one is the notion of a revolutionary
vanguard party that will pave the way and a rejection of democratic
norms. I have a deep conviction that democracy is a good idea. All
the problems of democracy can only be solved by more democracy.
If there is hope, it lies in a radical vision of democracy as a
universal enfranchisement. I think the big question of revolution
versus evolution, which was so much a part of what 19th century
political theory was about, speaks directly to the question of violence
itself. I'm not a pacifist, but I wrestle all the time with my reasons
for not being one. The question is about the tempo of change. Is
it tolerable for current circumstances to remain the same, and how
abruptly must they change? Speed is obviously necessary to save
lives. But is it so necessary that a revolution is justified? And
what does one make of the history of revolution, which is unfortunately
a very depressing history?
So those are the questions. I think there is a question
of a revolutionary fantasy and an anarchist fantasy. And I think
that an exploration of those things that are problematic is what
I want to work on, both as an artist and also as an activist.
What is the role of the left now? It is going to
be very bad for everyone if the Republicans get hold of the Senate.
The Democrats have behaved appallingly, but why is the Democratic
Party, which I believe is not identical to the Republican Party,
behaving so badly? Again, who is to blame? There are a huge number
of progressive people in this country. Why are our voices not being
heard? In part it's because we tell ourselves, and teach each other,
that the machinery of American constitutional democracy, is of no
value. Consequently we abdicate the field of legislative and presidential
power to the middle and the right. We gave up at some point on constitutional
democracy. That was a mistake.
PA: But don't you think that there is a growing
movement in the unity between the left and center in the labor movement
and in the peace movement? Over 100,00 people marched against war
last April. Compare that the beginning of the Vietnam War.
TK: We learned from [the Vietnam War] and
we remember it. The right is caught up in fantasies of WW II and
has skipped over that. On the left when [we] think of war, [we]
still [are] thinking, as we should, of Vietnam. So we are starting
out having learned a lot, and there are changes and positive signs.
But there is a lot of work to be done.
I mean take the globalism movement, the anti-globalism
movement--in a sense it's both--is incredibly exciting. But it is
a little bit disturbing. The extent to which it seems, at least
in the demonstrations that I've gone on, to be fueled primarily
by a kind of an eco- anarchism, is immensely romantic. And I can
understand, I mean I'm 46--I don't mean to be condescending to anybody--but
if I was 19, I wouldn't be terribly interested in who won as Senator
of Minnesota. It's much sexier to put on a bandana and throw a brick
through a Gap window. But where that's going to lead, I don't know.
As an incitement, as an advertisement, as a calling
of attention, it is extraordinary. Where it goes from there, I think,
is a big question. And I think that what you are saying is absolutely
true. There are important connections being made between the left
and left of center, between liberals and radicals. But there is
still an immense amount of work to do to try and find a left that
actually wields power.
We want to actually be able to say you are not going
to bomb, because we won't let you. We can do it because there are
enough progressive courageous representatives in Washington to say,
"go fuck yourself," when another Bush comes back and says, "I want
you to pass this resolution." I believe [we need] like 150 more
Barbara Lees, then we'll be somewhere. Until we get that, where
are we? Why aren't there 150 Barbara Lees? There are more than enough
people who are progressive. By my sort of intuitive estimate, around
30 to 40 percent of the population really is certifiably left, so
why do we feel there are six of us?
I was involved in Act Up, and one of the great lessons
was that it was only about an achievable agenda, about getting things
done. People worked on so many different levels. It was direct action,
but it was also incredibly smart infiltration. It wasn't about hanging
on to some cherished notion of being on the outside or being in
opposition. Because if that's all you are, then when do you stop
opposing and start creating?
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