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Dispatches from the Culture Wars: How the Left Lost Teen
Spirit by Danny Goldberg. New York: Miramax Books, 2003. [xi,
312 p. ISBN: 0786868961 $ 23.96 (hd.)]
- Usually
a subtitle does work the main title does notbetter outlining
a books contents. However, the split title of Danny Goldbergs
Dispatches from the Culture Wars: How the Left Lost Teen
Spirit reflects the books split nature. It is mostly
a memoir of Goldbergs experience as
a
record executive,
officer of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), and progressive
activist. He recounts how he entered the music business as a
reporter in the late 1960s, became politicized in response to
the Parents Music Resource Centers (PMRC) attacks
on popular culture in the mid 1980s, and was led into relationships
with Democratic politicians (including Gary Hart, Jesse Jackson,
and Al Gore). While Goldbergs dispatches are
a good read for those interested in the history of both the
music business and politics, they are overshadowed by the parts
of the book identified in its subtitle. In examining How
the Left Lost Teen Spirit, Goldberg constructs a passionate
critique of the Democratic Party and the American Left and its
dysfunctional relationship with popular culture. He exhorts
Democrats to embrace their progressive heritage and to reconnect
with sympathetic voters through popular culture.
- His reflections
challenge those of us who study popular music to develop a politically
engaged music criticism. Helping politicians understand popular
culture provides them with a valuable resource for more effectively
communicating with voters, many of whom pay more attention to
entertainment than news. More importantly, interpreting the
cultural debates that take place in entertainment can assist
politicians in being more truly representative of their constituents.
This in turn enables them to translate the values voters embrace
in popular culture into policies they can enact in the voting
booth.
- In Goldbergs
view, the gulf between liberal politicians and popular culture
has created a paradoxical situation for the Democrats. Why,
he asks, at a time when he believes virtually every cultural
battle in America has been won by the left
abortion rights,
free speech, gay and lesbian rights, and racial equality,
has the Democratic Party consistently lost electoral ground
(2)? Even more perplexing, why have many leading politicians
affiliated themselves with the cultural right in an effort to
regain it? Goldberg first confronted this situation while combating
Tipper Gores PMRC campaign against representations of
violence, sex, and the like. Since then, many in the Democratic
Party have either felt it necessary to distance themselves from
a culture they see as a liability, or found it expedient to
attack it. Goldberg feels this has created an unnecessarily
antagonistic relationship between Democratic politicians and
allies in the world of entertainment, and, more importantly,
it has alienated young voters whom he sees as their natural
constituency.
- Goldberg
blames two forces within the Democratic Party for the current
situation: the liberal snobs and the tone-deaf
mavens. Liberal snobs, here epitomized by Connecticut
senator Joe Lieberman, condemn popular culture for its immorality
and its effect on Americas youth. While they are often
allied with a group he identifies as cultural conservatives
(such as Jerry Falwell), Goldberg believes they differ in key
ways. While liberal snobs agree that violence is a major pollutant
of popular culture, they are more appalled at bigotry (especially
misogyny and homophobia) than open sexuality. Moreover, the
two groups differ on the cultural history of the 20th century.
Cultural conservatives tell a story in which the moral zenith
of the 1950s was undermined by the degenerate cultural elements
planted by the beatniks and cultivated by the late-1960s counterculture.
Liberal snobs, however, remember the popular culture of their
1960s youth as a positive force that soured after they matured.
- While liberal
snobs push away young Americans by attacking the music they
love, Goldberg argues that tone-deaf mavens miss
cultures motivational power. These are the self-insulated
consultants and pundits
[whose] snobbery and insensitivity
to young people have created a Democratic party [sic] and a
public-interest left whose leaders appear unwilling or unable
to communicate with the unwashed masses. In
addition to losing votes, this arrogant blindness creates a
paradox for a party that believes it stands up for average Americans
because it disconnects progressive political leaders [from]
the culture of the people they want to lead (11).
- For Goldberg,
the chasm between the political Left and popular culture began
to open in the 60s. Political activists dont
always respect or understand artists, even politically committed
artists, he learned from witnessing events such as The
Whos Pete Townsend assaulting Abbie Hoffman when he interrupted
the bands set at Woodstock to make a political speech.
[T]he resulting failure to communicate, he asserts,
has haunted progressive American politics since the sixties
(47). Goldberg continues that the way the 1960s themselves Democratic
candidates has widened this rift, as politicians try to distance
themselves from what the decade has come to represent. He believes
that the conventional wisdom that sixties
protestors
too many women, blacks, gays, longhairs, and
showbiz types led to the Partys meltdown in the
late 1960s has misled Democratic leaders into abandoning their
core constituencies. Those who embrace the eras cultural
movements are left torn between choosing the lesser of
two evils, supporting third parties, or joining the vast and
growing ranks of those who simply dont vote (19-20).
- Much of
Goldberg's discussion of how the left lost teen spirit
is illuminating and impassioned, creating the expectation that
he will provide concrete suggestions on how Democrats could
use popular culture to reach young voters. Unfortunately, he
does not clearly translate the lessons learned from his experiences
into useable strategy. Extrapolating from his experience with
political campaigns and public education efforts (such as MTVs
Rock the Vote), he seems to believe that popular music is primarily
useful because it has the ears of young America and its celebrities
can bring attention to progressive causes. Yet Goldberg clearly
has a broader view of musics political power. In discussing
the formation of his musical-political consciousness in the
late 1960s, he describes how the music that held pride-of-place
in his high school record collectionPhil Ochs, the Beatles,
the Rolling Stones, and Jimi Hendrixhad the visceral
power to make tangible a sense of community united by
shared beliefs and provide an emotional link between the personal
and the political for him. Bob Dylans music was particularly
powerful. I could immediately bond with a stranger who
quoted key Dylan lyrics intelligently, Goldberg remarks,
and recounts being unexpectedly pulled aside by a high school
classmate whose excitement about Dylans Ballad
of a Thin Man demanded that he share it with someone
right away. The musical power of such songs brought listeners
together in a shared social consciousness.
- But although
Goldberg has a complex understanding of musics power and
has repeatedly succeeded in capturing the imagination of Americas
youth (managing bands ranging from Led Zepplin to Nirvana),
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George
Wallace (seated) and Elvis Presley
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his personalized
perspective of the history he discusses hinders his ability
to offer political solutions for the present. Like the politicians
he criticizes, Goldbergs interpretation of the 1960s and
its social movements blind him to the decades cultural
legacy. Though correct in castigating politicians for being
spooked by the ghosts of the decades radicals, one of
the most prominent specters haunting the politics of culture
do not appear in this narrative: Alabamas Democratic governor,
George Wallace. The segregationist demagogue made nationally
(in)famous by his Segregation Forever pledge and
his Stand in the School House Door to prevent the
integration of the University of Alabama, created a political
shockwave with his presidential bids in 68 and 72.
Both campaigns were built around anger towards African Americans,
anti-war activists, and the counterculture. His message won
him electoral votes in the South, as well as large numbers of
votes from working-class whites, unionized workers, and first-generation
suburbanites outside the region. Wallaces campaigns broke
loose many of the Democrats core
constituencies, benefiting Republicans who were later able to
use the social issues Wallace campaigned on to effect an electoral
realignment.
- Popular
culture was deeply implicated
in this shift. The same music that provided the
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Merle
Haggard
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link between
young people and progressive politics for Goldberg angered many
of these formerly-Democratic voters. In the
music Goldberg writes about, these Americans heard a romanticization
of drug use (Jefferson Airplanes White
Rabbit), a contempt for hard work, a disrespect for
traditional sources of authority (Phil Ochss Im
Gonna Say It Now), and a rejection of gender and sexual
norms that outraged many. This anger found its own voice in
the rapidly expanding genre of country
music, most famously in Merle Haggards Okie
from Muskogee and The
Fighting Side of Me, which took aim directly at the
pop culture associated with the Left as well as its activism.1
- Simultaneously,
youth culture was becoming more fragmented than at any time
since the early 1950s (prior to rock and roll), reducing the
cultural opportunities for political coalition building. The
1950s and early 1960s produced acts like Chuck Berry, Elvis
Presley, and the Supremes that brought audiences together not
only across racial lines but regional and class barriers as
well. The rock of the late 1960s that Goldberg idealizes was
the product of a dramatically resegregated environment. The
deaths of Hendrix and Otis Redding left Sly Stone as the only
black superstar in rock music, who ultimately despaired at the
seeming impossibility of an integrated society.
- In ending
his book, Goldberg invokes one of Bob Dylans most legendary
lines to emphasize how urgently the Democratic Party needs to
change: You better start swimming or youll sink
like a stone, for the times are a changin. Yet this
line is only half-applicable to the present. It
may very well be sink-or-swim time for the Democratic Party,
but the times havent changed that much. The cultural fragmentation
of the late 1960s remains largely in place today, and the Democrats
have yet to figure out what constituencies they represent.2
Social issuesincluding gay rights, abortion, and religioncontinue
to divide Democrats from the voters they believe they are fighting
for: those who have not benefited from the countrys prosperity.
Additionally, there is a lagging commitment within the Democratic
Party to address the thorny issues of economic injustice in
which racial inequality remains entrenched. (In contrast to
Goldbergs rosy view of progressive victories in these
domains, it seems to me that it is far too early to declare
mission accomplished. ) It is not just ambivalence
that accounts for the Democrats dysfunctional relationship
with popular culture. Social issues continue to be the focus
of profound political struggle, and popular culture a terrain
on which these battles are often fought.
- I share
Goldbergs belief that the Democratic Party must do a better
job reaching young voters, and he is correct to call upon its
leaders to pay attention to popular culture in order to do this.
But this is not simply a matter of figuring out what kids like
and embracing it. It requires a fundamental grappling with what
the Democratic Party stands for, on the one hand, and a deeper
understanding of what popular culture means to its audience,
on the other. Popular music is most politically effective when
its ideological implications coincide with concrete political
goals. The political dimensions of our current social conflicts
do not translate easily into a cultural form. Harnessing musics
electoral potentialgetting people to vote for candidates
who stand for certain thingsis especially difficult at
a time when popular music remains divisive and constituencies
divided.
J.
Lester Feder
1.
Haggard’s articulation of this viewpoint is especially significant,
given that his much of his other work remain among the most powerful
class critiques found in ‘60s and ‘70s popular culture representing
the ideas the Democrats believed themselves to be fighting for.
2.
Though hip hop has perhaps brought white and black teens back
into a single listening community, the terms by which well-off
whites are appropriating working-class black culturewith
its strong roots in minstrelsyperhaps inhibit meaning coalition
building as much as the music might aid it.
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