Monday, June 12, 2006

A New Movement

I’m ready for something new. I don’t mean that I’m looking for a new personal area of interest (although this is never a bad thing), or that I’m making some vague political statement about the Bush administration (although it’s pretty clear he’s all washed up)--I’m talking about art in its most general and sprawling definition. It seems to me that no matter how hard we try, we can’t seem to get rid of the sixties—with all its washed out, shallow metaphors and drug-induced attempts at enlightenment. The “drifter” was a cool guy to be in the fifties; Jack Kerouac, Alan Ginsberg, these were guys worth having a conversation with--carving their stream-of-consciousness, counter-culture, live for the moment, leave your possessions, life is jazz mentality into the minds of the upcoming children of peace and love. But that’s where it should have stopped and been turned into something concrete. The Beatniks had something to say. They were the closest thing that this country has ever had to a mainstream intellectual/ artistic movement, where writers and poets and bright minds were taken seriously enough to be celebrities in the American mainstream. They lived their words: train-hopping, ground camping, money scrounging their way to the next town, looking desperately for some depth and meaning to set them free from the mundane, suburbanite bullshit that was eroding the minds of everyone around them. These were great men. They had courage to be something different and to say, “I’m intelligent, self-sufficient, and more alive than you are. I have no money, I have no home, and I am still an American, and what’s more, I have influence. I don’t need corporate sponsorship, I don’t need government protection--I don’t need anything but my pen. I live by my words and I’m willing to die by them." Each was a soldier in his own rite.

Then came the hippies. The hippies said, “That’s all fine and well, but we’re not so interested in the whole discipline thing." So, the Beatnik’s intellectual counter-culture turned into a thing of the heart. Hippies were, by and large, good-intentioned, big-hearted, talent-less vagabonds who turned, “scrounging for money to find Truth and create something lasting” into “scrounging for money to get to the next music festival and buy more acid." The musicians had some talent, but not a lot of discipline. The movement lost steam because it became more about having fun than about finding meaning. It stopped asking the big questions and started giving the easy answers—-simple answers, like love each other and make peace, not war, answers that were broad and spiritual and, ultimately, as we've seen, easier to say and sing about than to actually live out in reality. The now moody, reality-blurred movement dissipated into an age of bad music, confusion, and brainless disco dancing with only the Grateful Dead to keep the hippy dream alive. The Beatniks surely would have been disappointed to see that the hippies let drugs and sex and spinning around until they saw God come between them and their movement.

This is not to say that some good and lasting things didn’t come out of the sixties: Civil Rights, Feminism, conscientious objection to violence, these ideas were specific and useful towards a greater good. They were tangible ideas that Americans could understand and buy into. Many other worthwhile ideas were swept away with the Bohemian Mafia, content with cultureless dissent and structure-less, tacky, anything-goes art and music. In its place came the eighties' synthesized music with nothing to say and even harder drugs to do. With the voice of the intellectuals all but absent—-only Kurt Vonnegut to cynically mock the ridiculousness of the Regan years—-the voice of the Beatniks cowered even further from the mainstream into an elitist group sitting in campus coffee shops scratching their chins. The mainstream voice still trying to speak out for Truth and real Freedom (when it comes to big decisions), became angry in the nineties with grunge music (a fair attempt, but still ultimately undisciplined and lacking motivation), and has now turned to cynicism and sarcasm among anyone still tuning out and clinging to reality in a culture of people looking for anything that will catapult them into stardom: a gimmick, an image, a façade that will entertain the American people like dangling car keys in front of a newborn child. Today's "artists" have nothing to say, it's all about them. If an artist can stick to a inner voice and express something meaningful and people buy into it enough to make this artist wealthy--fine. But today's artists simply cater to what the people want and it has turned all of our fine arts into watered-down, mono-cultured, commercial bullshit. Every book on the bestseller list is the same book, every song on the radio is the same song, every voice in America is the same voice, and it's saying, "I care more about money than saying what I really think about life."

So, I’m ready for something new. I’m ready for this country to get fed up with the bullshit and start enduring some boring mindfulness for the sake of something beautiful and lasting, something with depth and meaning, something that might possibly echo the sentiment of the Beatniks who were willing to sleep in a barn rather than compromise with a culture that spends their time talking about what color couch will match their curtains. Anytime you’re ready artists and musicians. Anytime you’re ready intellectuals. Anytime you’re ready American mainstream—-to calm down and do something that involves talent and thought, something creative that is about enriching your culture and not about making you rich-—I’m ready to see it.

6 comments:

Jeff Hardesty said...
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Jeff Hardesty said...

I wish I knew what the answer was. I surely don't. Maybe a reality show on Who Wants to Write a Classic Work of Literature. Or Who Wants to Study their Artistic Craft Before Becoming a Superstar! Doesn't quite have the same ring, does it? I honestly don't think anything will change in this country until we run out of resources. We just have so much shit that it's hard not to get caught up. And any voice of dissent is so annoying to everyone that it's quickly silenced. It's kind of like this, "Don't ruin our good time" mentality. I would like to do some research on exactly where the materialism started and the value of cultural things ceased. I'm going back to school (today actually) for a Masters in English (real useful degree), maybe I can find a professor that can shed some light on the subject.

The house thing is the real problem. I don't know how to avoid debt once you buy a house. I'm trying to think of a way out of that right now, but I got nothing.

Anonymous said...

Jeff, I see where you are coming from. A number of comments come to mind but I am wondering if you and Allison will be around to discuss them maybe July 12th give or take. i am going to be driving from Lander to... well east. You are pretty much in the middle of that route!
E-mail me!

Anonymous said...

Dear Jeff,

I miss being around people like yourself and Allison who are just searching for simple meaning out of every day living. I've enjoyed reading your thoughts online as it brings me back to a younger time of life in New Mexico and elsewhere when thirty seemed like so far away instead of two months ago and lying under the stars and being able to experience countless moments of shooter above was an incredibly satisfying and memorable evening. Now I live ninety miles from LA and feel the pressure to be part of something I still don't understand nor necessarily believe in, that something being part of the buy till you drop and consume till you gorge society. I can proudly say that all my/our (now that I'm so happily married) possessions can still fit in our jeep. Not bad for the turning thirty two months ago generation. I wonder how long I can hold out before buying a television or microwave, those are two items that get higher on my priority list daily. But, after reading your thought... they just went back down on list a few notches. Thank you for reminding me the importance of simple living. Miss you both and think of you often... Ahhhh, New Mexico...the land of true friendship and sunsets like no other. Love Deb

Jeff Hardesty said...

I wish I could say I didn't own a microvave and TV. I don't watch it a lot (mainly because it's about ten inches squared and gets four channels), but they are convienent from time to time. I don't want to send the message that we can't have meaningful lives without being completely broke. I recognize that people with families don't want their kids to grow up with the stigma of being poor in a country that has so much, but it doesn't excuse raising children without teaching them the importance of conserving resources and respecting that their goods came from something that was once living. I want simple living to seem achieveable to people--something you can do without being fanatical and still function with other Americans. Like anything else, it can be practiced in degrees. It would be nice if people just thought about it from time to time; maybe chose a walk in the woods or a challenging book over a day of shopping at the strip mall.

Jeff Hardesty said...

I'm an ass for not responding more personally to you Debbie (if you get to read this). How are you? How's Cali? I miss you guys like mad and I hope you and your hubby are doing well. Allison and I are in love as ever and figuring things out here in Missouri. We're definitely ready to get back west. I hope we'll get to see you guys again in the near future! Take care!