
Sites of Interest
(courtesy Empire Burlesque)
Arthur Silber
Angry Arab
Antiwar.com
A Tiny Revolution
Gore Vidal
William Blum/Killing Hope
Baltimore Chronicle
Buzzflash
Magnificent Valor
The Distant Ocean
Glenn Greenwald
Horton/Harper's
Informed Comment
Vast Left
TomDispatch
Truthdig
Welcome to the Sideshow
Winter Patriot
Andy Worthington
Alicublog
Counterpunch
Mark Crispin Miller
Dennis Perrin
Booman Tribune
Crooks and Liars
ConsortiumNews
Eschaton
Black Agenda Report
LRB Blog
The Raw Story
Sadly, No!
James Wolcott
William Bowles
European Tribune
Iraq Vets Against the War
Blues and Dreams
Bright Terrible Spirit
If the Republic still existed, if it was even a shadow of what it was
meant to be (and never was), then bells would toll across the land
and flags would be flying at half-mast, in sorrowful honor for one of
its true sons. The loss is great. His was a unique sensibility: artistic, caustic, unsentimental, casting a Yeatsian cold eye on the human comedy, and in this way -- with no false pieties, no dogma, no ideological crutches -- revealing, with inescapable clarity, the rank injustices and murderous hypocrisies of power, and the ludicrous pretenses of power's sycophants.
It is here we see not only
Vidal the thinker and media figure, but Vidal the man: steeped in
history -- like few others of his time and almost no one of our day --
yet also riding on the sharp, cool edge of modernity as it sliced its
way through the 20th century. He seemed to radiate a sense of
liberation, in many forms: political, sexual, cultural. He was also a
consummate detector of bullshit, and a ruthless dismantler of its
celebrated dispensers. (His evisceration of John Updike -- "Rabbit's Own
Burrow" -- is a splenetic wonder, on a par with Mark Twain's takedown of Fennimore Cooper or Robert Graves' demolition of Ezra Pound, leaving the reader incapable of taking the victim seriously again.)
But
again, I come back to the fiction. I think this is where Vidal's true
greatness lies. Perhaps so much in the "experimental" novels, the
surreal affairs like Myra Breckenridge, Duluth, and Live From Golgotha.
As enjoyable and insightful as these are, they seem to me more like
extensions of his political writings: send-ups, or mash-ups, of American
society, in broad strokes, a species of commentary. Of course, this
might just be a matter of personal taste. But for me, his accomplishment
reaches its height in several of his other novels, most of them in
historical settings, which are brought to uncanny life through the
sharply-realized consciousness of individual human beings. Though the
novels are set in the past, these characters are always in their
present, in the eternal now where we all live, making our way through
the chaos of the moment to the forever-unknowable future.
Lincoln is
generally considered the best of the novels, with good reason. It is a
remarkably effective -- and remarkably subtle -- example of the
"polyphonic novel," as pioneered by Dostoevsky and championed by
Bakhtin. Through a kaleidoscope of consciousnesses, Vidal reanimates the
crucible of the American experience -- the Civil War -- and the man
whom Vidal called our "most mysterious of presidents." Lincoln was part
of what Vidal came to see as a series of related novels, a family
chronicle -- and a national epic of America's peculiar history:
"Narratives of a Golden Age," beginning with the presidency of Thomas
Jefferson and ending at the dawn of the 1960s (with an epilogue in the
new millennium). While Lincoln may hold pride of place in the Narratives, several others in the series are also outstanding works, particularly Burr, 1876 and Empire.
The Narratives caught a perfect pitch of the faint but persistent
idealism -- the humanism -- wafting through the always-overpowering, and
always-triumphant, corruptions of power in the miasmic swamps of
Washington and beyond, as the Republic slouched bloodily toward its
current monstrosity of empire.
But Vidal, of all people, was no
American Exceptionalist, and neither was his best work confined to
America's mores and madness. In fact, I believe that his finest novel,
his finest work of art, was Julian: an astonishing recreation
of the life and mind of the Classical world during its final, fatal
flowering during the short reign of "Julian the Apostate," the Roman
emperor who tried to reverse the Empire's conversion to Christianity,
initiated a half-century earlier by Constantine I. The book is steeped
in a rigorous historical learning that is worn so slightly, is so
thoroughly worked into the very human story of a very human man, that it
is scarcely noticeable at all. Julian's world simply lives, and the
reader lives in it -- yet at the end, emerges with a new understanding
of this absolutely crucial period of history.
In the same vein is Creation,
which once again immerses us in the human realities of a crucial era in
the life of humanity: the "Axial Age," which saw the rise and
development of new religions and new thinking across the world, an era
when Buddha, Socrates, Confucius, Jeremiah, Zoroaster, Lao Tzu, early
Greek philosophers like Heraclitus and other pivotal figures were
walking the earth and revolutionizing ancient structures of thought and
belief. But again, the learning is carried lightly, in the ironic person
of Cyrus Spitama, a witty, aging Persian diplomat in Athens whose main
claim to fame is that he is Zoroaster's grandson. He narrates the tale
of his long life -- his youth in the Persian court of Darius and Xerxes,
his sojourns in India and China, and the machinations and corruptions
of the rising Greek city-states.
This is not the time or place for an exhaustive look at Vidal's literary achievements. (For more on this theme, see Critical Malfunction: Misreading Gore Vidal.)
But in the media onslaught of obituaries and appraisals, most of which
seem, perhaps understandably, to focus on the gadfly persona noted
above, I thought it was important to recall this vital element of
Vidal's legacy: his fiction, which at its best has richly enhanced our
awareness of what it is to be a living human being -- mortal, troubled,
confused, alone -- caught up in the maelstrom of historical forces we
can scarcely understand and cannot control.
It is no small thing
to have left such a mark. It is a legacy well worth celebrating, and
one that will outlast even the wittiest and most telling of his aperçus.
***
On a personal note, it would be hard for me to overestimate Vidal's influence on how I see the world, in so many different areas. His death is like losing a spiritual father. (If I can be forgiven for using such an outrageous term for a man so entirely worldly! ) His work schooled me and sharpened me and, in the words of Henry Miller (another writer he once wittily skewered, albeit with more affection than bile), "inoculated me with disillusionment" -- a task which Miller called the highest purpose of an artist. Vidal made me see the world -- and myself -- with new eyes, and taught me how to keep on seeing in this way: relentlessly, fearlessly, unsentimentally casting "a cold eye, on life, on death." I've fallen short of this teaching -- woefully, continually -- at nearly every turn, but it is still there, a lodestar in a night sky that is now a bit more lonely, more harrowing than it was.