Review - The Homepage of Dr. David Lavery
Transcription
Review - The Homepage of Dr. David Lavery
Review Cogito, Ergo Sum: The Life of René Descartes Richard Watson Boston: David R. Godine, 2002, 375 pages In his 1580 essay “Of Repentence,” Michel de Montaigne wrote, “If I had been able to see Erasmus in other days, it would have been hard for me not to take for adages and apothegms everything he said to his valet and his hostess. We imagine much more appropriately an artisan on the toilet seat or on his wife than a great president, venerable by his demeanor and his ability. It seems to us that they do not stoop from their lofty thrones even to live.” More than four hundred years later, Richard Watson notes in Cogito, Ergo Sum: The Life of René Descartes that “We are so in need of squeaky‐clean heroes that we present our great thinkers as Paradigms of Truth and Virtue rather than as the cranks they really were. Of course great men have to get only one or two major things right for people to forget the hundreds of things they got wrong.” On 18 January 1982, a member of the extremist Animal Liberation Front slashed a portrait in London’s Wellcome Art Gallery with a knife and escaped without being caught. The victim was a representation of René Descartes, who, as the ALF would later proudly point out, was also one of the founders of modern vivisection. In a new, aspiring‐to‐be‐definitive, forty‐years‐in‐the‐making biography of the father of modern philosophy, Richard Watson makes use of subtler weapons in ripping to shreds received opinion of the French thinker. Offering the first life of Descartes in nearly a century to be based on substantial new research, Watson is through‐and‐through—as he readily admits in the introduction—“skeptical.” Iconoclastically disenchanted with the centuries‐old coverup by the “Saint Descartes Protection Society,” he blasphemes regularly, presenting strong, inferential evidence against many a treasured Cartesian myth. We learn that Descartes was probably not the late‐sleeping “chambriste” at La Flèche, the Jesuit school he attended for eight years; that the legend of his fateful first meeting with Isaac Beeckman, the polymath who would prove so influential on The Collected Works of David Lavery 2 Descartes’ developing scientific interests, is just legend; that the location of the 10 November 1619 “Pentacost of Reason” (in Jacques Maritain’s memorable phrase)— the night of Descartes’ famous seminal dreams—is quite likely misidentified; that Descartes almost certainly did not, like a demented Terry Southern character, seduce a chambermaid in order to study the mechanism of reproduction; that it is doubtful his father’s supposed denunciation of his son, “Celui‐la' n'e'tait qu'a' se faire relier en veau” ("He is fit for nothing but having himself bound in calf"), was ever spoken; that most of the existing portraits, including the one in the Wellcome, may be inauthentic. (The most likely bona fide likeness, by Jan‐Baptist Weenix, graces Cogito’s cover.) Perhaps most surprisingly, we learn that Baillet’s often psychoanalyzed versions of the dreams are probably made out of whole cloth. Throughout Cogito, Ergo Sum, Watson leaves us in no doubt about his own opinion of his subject. In an introductory chapter (“The Curse of Cartesianism”) and a conclusion (“The Ghost in the Machine Fights the Last Battle for the Human Soul”), he joins the company of such anti‐Cartesians as Maritain, Johann von Hamann, Giambattista Vico, Karl Jaspers, Morris Berman, Allen Wheelis, Susan Bordo, Marjorie Grene, William Barrett, and Arthur Koestler in blaming the multiple failures of modernity on Descartes’ methodological legacy: “The modern world is Cartesian, then,” Watson insists, “not because it led professional philosophers to seek certainty (and to end up peering into their own navels) but because Descartes’s method of analytic reasoning allows ordinary people to be masters and possessors of nature. Descartes made control easy, step by step.” Watson even calls Descartes names— many names: “the father of machismo,” “the most vilified innovator this side of Karl Marx,” “a drone, a family parasite,” “a proud, excitable, egotistic little man.” Expert at debunking the myths of Descartes, Watson is equally skilled at uncovering fresh insights about one of the most examined figures in the history of thought. We learn about how Descartes was probably toilet trained, his likely height (five feet one or two), the governing logistics of his many moves in the Netherlands, the rationale for his obsequious correspondence with his brilliant critic Princess Elisabeth of Bohemia, the likely breed of his dog Monsieur Grott (“Mister Scratch,” Watson remarks, was—given his master’s fondness for vivisection—quite lucky to have been sent back to France from the Netherlands), and about Descartes’ almost certain fascination with the Rosicrucians. We learn, too, that Descartes may have been the first to describe the conditioned reflex, probably slept in the nude, may have been a mathematically gifted gambler, and likely smoked pot. The Collected Works of David Lavery 3 Like any good biographer, Watson is just as fascinating off‐message as on. American vs. Dutch licorice, porridges, swaddling, wet nurses, the use of mustard in weaning, the “Little Ice Age” of the seventeenth century, childhood considered as a disease, diets at the time of the “health nut” Descartes, the construction and maintenance of zeedijks (the low walls the Dutch built to hold back the sea)—these and a hundred other tangential matters attract his passing attention, and each visit remains memorable. The Library of Congress classification for Cogito will place it on the shelf with other books on Descartes and “Philosopher—France—Biography” (B1873.W38). But it is much more, most notably a travel book in which Watson takes us along on his scholarly perambulations, which are geographical, serendipitous, and autobiographical as well. Of all the complex moments in Descartes’ “torn and jagged . . . life curve” (the words are Karl Stern’s in The Flight From Woman), none presents a greater conundrum to a biographer than the great French thinker’s acceptance of Queen Christina of Sweden’s invitation to become her tutor, a decision that would prove fatal when Descartes succumbed to congestive heart failure in 1650. Watson is more than up to the challenge. In an earlier version of his chapter titled “On the Zeedijk,”* Watson had offered an academic analogy for Descartes’ fatal choice. Queen Christina was able to "add Descartes to her collection" because he was "like the professor in the sticks who waits all his life for the fabled call from Harvard. And lo, one day it actually comes. But it is too late, he is past his prime, he is an extinct volcano, recognition is as much a burden as a joy to him now. But he has to go anyway." Unwilling to entirely reject such a hypothesis, Watson now finds his analogy flawed (“compared to the French court, Stockholm was the minor leagues—not Harvard; Ohio State maybe”) and offers a new, more reductionistic, but well argued elucidation (“I believe Descartes went to Sweden because he was nearly flat broke”), and a more complex psychological interpretation that includes his own motivation as a writer. Two hundred seventy five pages into Cogito we realize conclusively what we have suspected throughout—that Richard Watson is not entirely a disinterested scholar. Contemplating Descartes’ journey to the far north, he makes a startling admission. Throughout Cogito, Watson often mixes both modes of life writing, autobiography and biography, foregrounding the scene of writing (and researching), intruding into his narration to speak to us in person in a colloquial style. (Watson is certainly the first biographer of Descartes to use the word “Yech” or to state, in the The Collected Works of David Lavery 4 context of the Cartesian debate about the souls of animals, “Jesus didn’t die for no stinking dogs!” or to relate a Morris Raphael Cohen Descartes joke with all the shtick of a Borscht belt veteran.) When he is about to go into elaborate detail about genealogical matters or family finances, Watson warns readers (whose attention he hopes to keep) that what follows will likely be boring. And, contrary to generic norms, the biographer’s wife Pat becomes an important character, his fellow climber on a perilous journey in the Alps in search of a Descartes locale, the skeptical spouse who questions his plan to reenact Descartes’ journey to Sweden, the woman who joined him on trips to Lourdes “just to see the show.” (“The procession of the cripples,” Watson observes, “is fabulous.”). But up until Chapter XIII, Watson has not been this personal, this confessional. “Once you reach this stage of awareness in life,” he explains, thinking of the mental state in which Descartes found himself in the late 1640s, you can never recover timelessness—not even in the most idyllic moments. Gone forever is that sense of vast and endless horizons that thoughtlessly framed your life before. The transition takes place at different times for different people. I am sixty‐nine (having lived already more than a dozen years longer than Descartes), and it seems to me that sometime between forty‐five and fifty, I began to calculate how much time I was spending doing this and that. I started eliminating projects that I had undertaken without thought in the past, before the change. There comes a time when one begins to worry whether there will be time, not just to do all the things one wants to do but time to finish even one last good one, like writing this book. Historian and biographer Edmond Morris’ authorized biography of Ronald Reagan, Dutch (1999), provoked substantial controversy by including a fictional version of the author as a participant‐observer in various events of our fortieth President’s life, events which occurred long before Morris had become Reagan’s official Boswell. How dare a biographer make use of an imaginary persona in a supposedly scholarly work, critics and pundits questioned? The inextricable role of the fictional in the making and interpretation of autobiography has been recognized for decades, but biographers, we still hope to convince ourselves, are in no way akin to novelists. Watson, however, is not just a distinguished professor of philosophy at Washington University in St. Louis and a The Collected Works of David Lavery 5 Cartesian scholar; he is also a novelist (The Runner, Under Plowman’s Floor, Niagara) and a non‐fiction writer (The Longest Cave, The Philosopher’s Diet). So it should not surprise us that he makes use of all the tools at his disposal, even the biographically unorthodox, in order to tell his story. The narrator of Jean‐Paul Sartre’s novel Nausea, Roquentin, seeks to write a biography of the eighteenth‐century figure M. Rollebon, but he finally abandons the project—for how can a man who finds his own existence unfathomable pretend to write the life of a spectre out of history? If Richard Watson experienced Roquentin’s dilemma during the multi‐decade creation of Cogito, Ergo Sum, he certainly did not capitulate. With astonishing perseverance, rich historical imagination, and revelatory skepticism, he has succeeded in producing a life that dethrones both biographer and subject, making Richard Watson the biographer more human and Descartes the crank more real. Review Jeremy G. Butler, Television: Critical Methods and Applications (Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 2002; 396 pages) The second edition of Jeremy G. Butler’s Television: Critical Methods and Applications is a textbook that succeeds superbly on a number of fronts. It covers its vast subject with true respect for its complexity. Though the presumed reader is a college or university undergraduate taking a course in television—Butler’s book, covering as it does both critical and technical aspects of the medium in depth, could certainly be beneficially adopted in a wide variety of such courses—much of its excellence might well be lost on such captive audiences. I read it not just as the “text in this class” but as a comprehensive introduction to the medium and discovered valuable insights on almost every page. Even when Television is merely summarizing and establishing what is already well known, it does so with such enviable clarity and sound organization that I continued to read with real admiration. (Television, it should be noted, is partly a collaborative effort: chapters on “A History of Television Style” and “Music Television” were authored by Gary A. Copeland and Blaine Allen, respectively.) Though it may be occasionally too difficult for lazy undergraduates, it approaches all of its many subjects with a precision of purpose and style, almost never lapsing into jargon. Its application of Bakhtinian dialogism and the methods of semiotics is executed unobtrusively but with substantial results. The name of Mikhail Bakhtin, for example, doesn’t appear anywhere in Butler’s book, and yet the influential Russian theorist’s shadow is perceptible throughout. Polysemy, heterogeneity, discourses—these Bakhtinian terms appear with regularity in a book grounded in the basic faith that the “cultural forum” of television enables the interplay of a wide variety of voices and visions. The all‐encompassing content of Butler’s book is, it must be admitted, almost overwhelming. A book that has something substantial to say about topics ranging from local newscasts to Gerald McBoing Boing, the history of the remote control, the intricacies of the Nielsens, the function of syntagms, panning and tilting, Anna Kournikova, TelePrompTers, method acting, ensemble casts, the meaning of “Burt The Collected Works of David Lavery 7 Reynold’s” [sic] mustache, the vocabulary of gestures, Brechtian distanciation, mise‐ en‐scene, chiaroscuro lighting, CGI, technological manifest destiny, Divx, laugh tracks, HDTV, the function of the dystopia in the television commercial, the theory of the leisure class, and auteur theory (to name only a paltry few) is, it goes without saying, no ordinary text. And yet Butler and his collaborators succeed in making these and scores of other subjects comprehensible. (As one who has taught numerous introduction to film courses over the years, trying and not liking all of the texts on the market, it struck me that Butler’s book even has a very good intro to film book buried within it, though it remains faithful to the medium of television and never falls prey to cinema‐envy. In the typical introduction to film text, for example, we find the obligatory shot‐by‐shot breakdown of a scene from Battleship Potemkin— or Citizen Kane, or Bonnie and Clyde. In Television it is a conversation between Dr. Joel Fleischman and Maggie O’Connell on Northern Exposure that is cogently decoupaged.) The first edition of Butler’s book was highly praised. Its second has added much to make it even more valuable, including a new chapter on television commercials, updated examples and references, new drawings, and a well‐conceived and useful website (TVCrit.com), offering additional resources for teachers and students. Television comes only in black and white and is not nearly as glossy as some other current media text books (I am thinking, for example, of Richard Campbell’s stunning Media and Culture [Bedford/St. Martin’s]—though it is hardly a competitor), but it is a book of real substance. All those who teach television studies know how difficult it is to secure respect for our fledgling discipline. Books like Butler’s, itself a landmark, may help to put us on the map. Review Nicholas Mirzoeff, Seinfeld, BFI (BFI TV Classics), 2007. Given the relative paucity of critical attention paid to the sitcom—the lack, if you will, of seriousness the genre is given in television studies—an insightful monograph such as Nicholas Mirzoeff’s BFI TV Classics book on the American show Seinfeld (NBC, 1989‐1998) should be warmly welcomed, and indeed the volume is worthy of some praise, though Seinfeld’s appeal to the author is as a cultural document, his interest in it as a television program minimal. More personal essay than scholarly investigation, Seinfeld turns out to be in reality an Americanized British cultural studies professor’s commandeering of US’s television’s greatest show (according to a TV Guide poll) as the basis for an admittedly Barthesian, ‘mythological’ take on race, gender, politics, and American humour—especially the latter: ‘you could learn about how to be funny from Seinfeld’, Mirzoeff explains, ‘and how Americans in general had tried to be funny, no small thing for an immigrant, especially a person like myself who relies on humour to negotiate social situations’ (p. 5). While considering a variety of topics and subtopics, many pertinent, some tangential (‘like Seinfeld, this book takes pleasure in being digressive and discursive’ the author warns us [p. 4]), Mirzoeff shows himself to be adept at placing the show in its historical, social, and political context (much is made, for example, of its pre‐ 9/11ness); explaining the show’s surprising lack of offensiveness: ‘Seinfeld was not offensive as comedy, perhaps because it made its intent to offend so obvious’ (p 65); revealing (with a witty nod to Laura Mulvey) how a show once deemed ‘too Jewish’ came instead to be a manifestation of ‘Oslo‐era Jewishness’ (p. 73). He argues, controversially but persuasively, that the real reason Seinfeld never caught on in the UK was anti‐Semitism (p. 83). He pinpoints, brilliantly, the Brechtian origins of the show’s audience‐alienating characters (p. 86). Not all of Mirzoeff’s forays are successful. His attempt to unpack its supposed misogyny (p. 117), for examples, dies the kind of death a stand‐up comic dreads. The Collected Works of David Lavery 9 Seinfeld is, regrettably, more than a little careless, littered as it is by minor, annoying, and easily correctable errors. The actor who played NBC chief Russell Dalrymple in Seinfeld was Bob Balaban, not ‘Bob Babanal’. Jerry’s father’s Boca Vista Retirement Village nemesis, the man who disastrously gave our eponymous hero an astronaut pen, was Jack Klompus, not ‘Kloppus’. Christopher Reeve’s Superman hit the big screen in 1978, not 1987 (64). ‘The Parking Space’ was not the 22 nd episode th of the show but the 38 (even Mirzoeff’s own ‘Broadcast History’ shows his numbering to be incorrect). It was Carson Daly of Last Call with Carson Daly and not Carson Kressley of Queer Eye for the Straight Guy who inspired My Name is Earl’s karmic quest (p. 125). In the sentence beginning ‘As the three main actors, other than Seinfeld, had extensive acting experience . . . ‘ (pp. 27‐28), of course no italics are needed for the actor’s name. Other misidentifications are difficult to explain: It was the character Sidra’s, not the actress Terry Hatcher’s, ‘real and . . . spectacular’ breasts that were in question in ‘The Implant’ (4.18). Woody Allen is not a ‘cinematographer’ (p. 58). Jean Baudrillard and Umberto Eco are not philosophers (p. 46) in any strict sense of the term. Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray is not a short story (p. 26) but a novel of over 80,000 words. Bungling such as this subverts the book’s credibility in no small way. (Has BFI Publishing’s financial troubles resulted in the elimination of copy‐ editors?) Mirzoeff’s method brings into play a number of interesting sources— sociologists Frantz Fanon and Norbert Elias, for example, but like an earlier BFI TV Classics volume, Anne Bilson’s book on Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Seinfeld likewise commits the inexcusable scholarly/critical sin of refusing to consult, let alone acknowledge, the existence of other work already done on its subject. Early on Mirzoeff admits to not being a ‘media studies specialist’ (p. 3). Does he think this absolves him of the responsibility to inquire fully into what others have already said about Seinfeld?—to undertake a basic literature search? Bilson managed to ignore over a score of books and over two hundred published articles. (For a full‐fledged review of the voluminous literature inspired by Buffy the Vampire Slayer, see Rhonda V. Wilcox’s ‘In the Demon Section of the Card Catalogue’ in this journal’s debut issue [pp. 37‐48].) Mirzoeff’s has less to be oblivious of: a handful of significant serious articles, only a couple of which draw mention, and three books, one a sociological study (Tim Delaney’s Seinology), and two edited collections (one of which is, in the spirit of full disclosure, my own), none of which are even acknowledged to exist, T h e C o l l e c t e d W o r k s o f D a v i d L a v e r y 10 even though they cover much of same territory he stakes out. ‘If you make a Google search for Seinfeld’, we are told on p. 7, ‘most of the results that come up are very dry articles referring to the success of the show as a vehicle for advertising’. This is, of course, untrue and smacks of bad faith in a book written by the Director of New York University’s Visual Culture Program. Bibliography Delaney, Tim. Seinology: The Sociology of Seinfeld. Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books, 2006. Irwin, William, ed. Seinfeld and Philosophy: A Book About Everything and Nothing. Chicago: Open Court, 2000. Lavery, David, with Sara Lewis Dunne, eds. Seinfeld, Master of Its Domain: Revisiting TV’s Greatest Sitcom. New York: Continuum, 2006. Review The Television Genre Book Edited by Glen Creeber BFI Publishing, 2001, 163 pages The British Film Institute’s publication of the first edition of Pam Cook’s The Cinema Book in the mid‐1980s is often recognized as a watershed in the development of film studies. (A new edition was published in 1999.) Big (coffee table book format), comprehensive, and cumulative, the product of many hands (a variety of scholars, including Annette Kuhn, Christine Gledhill, Geoffrey Nowell‐Smith, contributed, almost anonymously, to its authoring and editing), with a unique format (“gray box” entries on individual films were interspersed throughout the text), it was a textbook example of a paradigm‐making text. As Thomas Kuhn observes in The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, the development of a prototypical episteme customarily requires a definitive, timely single statement of what everyone takes to be the truth. The Cinema Book was such a text: a statement, arriving after a couple of decades of fervent debate, of “what we know (or think we know) so far” about film studies. The physical dimensions of Glen Creeber’s The Television Genre Book, also published by the BFI (distributed by University of California Press in the United States), are a bit smaller than The Cinema Book, and it’s not even half as thick, but it quite consciously intends (as the preface acknowledges) to remind us of its predecessor. In its multiple authorship, its gray‐box discussions (this time of pivotal television texts), its intent to be wide‐ranging and summative, it owes much to its ancestor text, though it exhibits little or no anxiety of influence in doing so and may well be remembered a decade hence as holding a place in the history of television studies similar to that of the landmark Cook book. The Television Genre Book is organized into eight chapters: “What is Genre?,” “Drama,” “Soap Opera,” “Comedy,” “Popular Entertainment,” “Children's Television,” and “News and Documentary.” Each section, in turn, is comprised of an introduction followed by concise entries on sub‐genres (the chapter on drama, for example, includes individually‐authored sections on “The Single Play,” “The Western,” “The T h e C o l l e c t e d W o r k s o f D a v i d L a v e r y 12 Action Series,” “The Police Series,” “Hospital Drama,” “Science Fiction,” “Drama‐ Documentary,” “The Mini‐Series” [or “Miniseries” as we say in the United States], “Costume Drama,” “The Teen Series,” and “Post‐modern Drama”), as well as gray‐ boxes on shows (both British and American) from ER and Monty Python’s Flying Circus to Jerry Springer and Teletubbies. Contributors include such figures as Toby Miller, John Tulloch (both associate editors of the book), Steve Neale, John Hartley, and Jane Feuer. A total of twenty eight television scholars, primarily British, wrote for the book, many authoring more than one entry. We find (among others) Neale and Graeme Turner on genre, Robin Nelson on drama, Miller on the action series, Creeber on The Singing Detective, Hartley on the sitcom, Feuer on the “unruly woman” sitcom, Jane Shattuc on The Oprah Winfrey Show, John Corner on documentary. In each case individuals who have already written books or significant articles on the subject‐at‐hand offer succinct examinations of their special topics. The French critic of lifewriting Phillipe Lejeune has shown that even the seemingly clear‐cut quasi/para genre of autobiography is actually a complex “pact” (Le Pacte autobiographique), aesthetic, economic, narratological, between author, publisher, and genre. The Television Genre Book offers a multi‐faceted delineation of television’s intricate genre pacts. Under no illusion that a neat and tidy systematization of an inherently dialogical medium like TV is either possible or desirable, it strives instead for offering a comprehensive portrait of the complexity. The point is made early on (by Neale) that the study of genre in any aesthetic domain serves as an entry point into the domain as a whole and much, much more as well. The “more” The Television Genre Book examines along the way includes (a partial list): feedback loops, postmodernism, the telenovela, emotional realism, the impartiality of the BBC, quality TV, TV audiences, seriality, tabloidism, dramedy, hybridization, the nature of celebrity, theories of humor, the difference between “gay” and “queer,” cult TV, the Super Bowl, sitcoms as R & D tools, violence . . . The writing, for the most part is dispassionate and methodical but almost never dull or abstruse. (There are exceptions: I enjoyed, for example, Toby Miller’s memories of his Man from Uncle lunchbox.) Though limited in scope, each entry seeks to be as comprehensive as possible. The bibliographies—both the “Recommended Readings” at the end of each entry and the back‐pages full bibliographies which accompany each chapter—are uniformly excellent. The book should find a ready audience among serious students of television and will appeal as well to fans of the particular shows it examines. T h e C o l l e c t e d W o r k s o f D a v i d L a v e r y 13 The Television Genre Book is not without its faults. Nitpickers will note that the title of the series (in the United States at least) is Roswell, not Roswell High; that Buffy the Vampire Slayer does not include even one character who is a human/alien hybrid (perhaps the writer had Roswell or The X‐Files in mind?); that Twin Peaks was not by any definition a miniseries (though some have suggested that it might well have benefited from a predetermined run); that Friends and Seinfeld could not have competed with each other for ratings since both were on NBC. Grammarians will also note an error or two. Writing in The Chronicle of Higher Education in 1988, Robert J. Thompson, now Director of the Center for the Study of Popular Television at Syracuse University, recalled the one‐time dearth of serious writing on televison: "Even when I was in graduate school in 1981 . . . there was only half a shelf on the stuff." The situation has changed markedly in twenty years. The Television Genre Book single‐handedly will direct the reader to several shelves of valuable television criticism and will— along with its future editions— occupy a prominent, top‐shelf position in the years to come. Review Simon Blaxland‐de Lange, Owen Barfield: Romanticism Comes of Age, A Biography (Forest Row: Temple Lodge, 2006), £22.00 (ISBN 9781902636771) For those of us who have worked to keep the memory of the late British lawyer, philologist, disciple of Rudolf Steiner, proponent of the evolution of consciousness, and least well‐known Inkling Owen Barfield (1898‐1997) alive and his brilliant work better known, Simon Blaxland de Lange’s “biography” is a mixed blessing. Since some Barfieldians believed Blaxland‐de Lange, a special needs educator who became his subject’s confidante in his last years, an unlikely choice as official biographer, his book promised to be controversial. Owen Barfield: Romanticism Comes of Age turned out to be a solid analysis of Barfield’s key ideas. To deem it a biography, however, is a bit misleading. It begins and ends as life‐writing, grounded in‐part in heretofore unavailable access to correspondence and interviews with its subject, but Blaxland‐de Lange concedes early‐on the difficulty of keeping his focus on Barfield the man, a modest individual who always sought to belittle interest in the author and redirect it to his books, and begins to turn his attention to his central ideas. Imagination, idolatry, participation, R.U.P. (residue of unresolved positivism)—these and other key Barfieldian notions receive ample treatment. This central part of the book—over two thirds of its 300+ pages—offers as good, and as comprehensive, an introduction to Barfield’s complex thought as any study now in print. In some of the book’s best pages, Blaxland‐de Lange offers as well engaging portrayals of Barfield’s friendships—both personal and epistolary—with such st individuals as “1 Friend” Cecil Harwood, “2 nd friend” C. S. Lewis, novelist Saul Bellow, poets Howard Nemerov and Walter de la Mare, physicist David Bohm. In its few purely biographical pages, Blaxland‐de‐Lange succeeds in tantalizing us with some startling glimpses into Barfield’s troubled marriage to Maude Douie Barfield (1888‐1980), a decade his senior and, even more than his fellow “great debate” opponent Lewis, an anthroposophy skeptic—and his relationships with other women. T h e C o l l e c t e d W o r k s o f D a v i d L a v e r y 15 Such revelations, however, never come clearly into focus in an oddly organized book: Part Two: “Elucidation and Recognition The Lecturer (1964‐97)” precedes Part Three: “”The Forging of a Key: The Man of Letters (1919‐1964)”—for reasons that never become entirely clear. A 36 page plot summary of Barfield’s unpublished novel English People, for example, provides welcome knowledge of a virtually unknown side of Barfield’s work, and yet it’s placement in the overall flow of the book leaves the reader puzzled as to its inclusion. “This book is intended to be as far as possible the kind of biographical study that Owen Barfield would have wished to appear after his death” (1)—these words, the book’s first, tell us much of the intent of what is to follow. Barfield is not the first writer or thinker concerned with dictating the way he is remembered by seeking to control his biography. T. S. “Tom” Eliot, Barfield’s London literary acquaintance from the 1930s, was, justifiably, nervous that his admirers would learn of certain skeletons in his closet (or sanitariums); Freud and Nietzsche, according to Carl Pletsch, began leading an “autobiographical life” long before they were famous, judiciously editing in advance what might be discovered about them should they become famous. Owen Barfield did not anticipate fame in any comparable way and yet, even in his final years, he seemed nevertheless determined to keep the focus on his iconoclastic ideas. He was well aware he might be forgotten—a possibility that, over ten years after his passing, seems more, rather than less, likely. Blaxland‐de Lange’s book is faithful to his final wishes, but it is not what we really need: a full‐ fledged life that seeks to truly place Barfield, the person and the mind, in the th context of the 20 century he witnessed almost in its entirety. Works Cited Pletsch, Carl. Young Nietzsche. New York: Free Press, 1992. Review Bill Osgerby and Anna Gough‐Yates, eds. Action TV: Tough Guys, Smooth Operator and Foxy Chicks. London and New York: Routledge, 2001. 260 pages. In a soon‐to‐be‐published book, subtitled “Predicting/Preventing the TV Discourse of Tomorrow,” a group of like‐minded academics offers parodies of non‐existent (or at least not yet existent) television criticism: a critique of a make‐believe serious study of Baywatch, an appraisal of the new book Beavis, Butt‐head, and Bakhtin, assessment of “the year’s work” in Teletubbies studies. At first glance Osgerby and Gough‐Yates’s collection of essays on the action television genre would appear to have escaped from the pages of that book. With essays bearing titles like “’Who loves ya, baby’: Kojak, action and the great society” (Paul Cobley), “’A lone crusader in the dangerous world’: heroics of science and technology in Knight Rider” (Nickianne Moody), and “Angels in chains? Feminism, feminity and consumer culture in Charlie’s Angels” (Gough‐Yates), Action TV could itself be mistaken as parodic in intent. "Criticisms of Television Studies,” Geraghty and Lusted accurately observe in The Television Studies Book, “are often based on a confusion between what is studied and the act of studying, and so it is assumed that because some television is sloppy, badly researched and offensive so too is its study." No doubt such a confusion might well be at work in my response to this study of a television genre that gets no respect, but the book’s intentionally garish, orange cover, with its photo of Farrah Fawcett in mid‐kick, certainly encourages such a first impression, as does its contributors page, on which the author of “’Who’s the cat that won’t cop out?’: Black masculinity in American action series of the sixties and seventies” is said to have “just slapped her husband for reminding her that she sported an afro and a stripy beige tanktop in the 1970s.” To actually read the essays assembled in Action TV, however, confirms the serious intent of its contributors, even though many of the essays exhibit a certain playfulness. Many, in fact, are labored exercises in cultural studies. Dedicated to the proposition that action television is “a genre that is not only constituent in wider T h e C o l l e c t e d W o r k s o f D a v i d L a v e r y 17 patterns of social, economic and political change, but which provides audiences with an avenue through which to articulate meaningful cultural responses to these patterns of change” (3). Some utilize over half of their length to set‐up contexts (historical, media, popular culture, economic) for examination of a series and then spend little time the series in question. John Storey’s “The sixties in the nineties: pastiche or hyperconsciousness,” the book’s closing essay, to cite but one example, has virtually nothing to say about television, though it is a first‐rate examination of the complexities of the PoMo. (The relevance of Martin Pumphrey’s “The games we play(ed): TV Westerns, memory and masculinity” is of a different kind: though a readable and discerning essay on a distinctive film and television genre, the essay fails to make explicit the rationale for its inclusion in a book on the action genre.) The quality of writing in Action TV is, as is often the case in collections such as this, uneven. The reader must slog through mud like the following: “Yet the television production, Kojak, in spite of its many episodes, could not have built up such a complex site of investment—especially so quickly—without considerable work by readers. These readers would, of course, themselves, be caught up in the relations of history and the specific reading formation. One major constituent of this latter is the concept of genre and the fact that Kojak was part of the genre which concerns itself with the police” (my italics; 56). The book, is, indeed the “site” of much such wearisome siting. It is the sort of book in which the worst abuses of contemporary critical discourse (“Knight Rider can be seen as one of the first popular texts to visualize and narrativize [sic] effectively the potential of these technologies to transform daily life” [my italics 71]) co‐exist with archaisms (“Whilst the vehicles featured in Knight Rider’s contemporary rivals were foregrounded as almost magical agents of justice . . . “[my italics; 73]). Some of the subjects of individual essays are likely to be of little interest to American readers. All of Action TV’s contributors are British, and, not surprisingly a good number of pages are devoted to British television series never seen here: the short‐ lived The Persuaders! and Jason King (both 1971‐1972), and The Professionals (1977‐83). And it might well have enhanced the book’s credibility to have had at least a token US television scholar or two examine quintessentially American series. Still, some of the essays assembled in Action TV are indeed valuable. Co‐ editor Gough‐Yates’ reading of Charlie’s Angels, for example, is nicely done, and Elizabeth Withey’s “TV gets jazzed: the evolution of action TV theme music” is a worthy contribution to the meager bibliography on television music). Considered as a T h e C o l l e c t e d W o r k s o f D a v i d L a v e r y 18 whole, the book at least provides an historical scaffolding for future examination of a neglected, critically snubbed television form, and for that the book is and probably will remain of some value. Review Astrid Diener, The Role of Imagination in Culture and Society: Owen Barfield’s Early Work. Leipzig Explorations in Literature and Culture 6. Glienicke/Berlin and Cambridge: Galda + Wilch Verlag, 2002. 224 pages Readers of this journal may recognize the name of the author of this new monograph investigating the early work of Owen Barfield (1898‐1997), Inkling fellow‐ traveler, C. S. Lewis’s “second friend,” and one of the most neglected important thinkers of the 20th Century. Her interview with Barfield (included as an appendix in this volume) appeared originally in Mythlore in 1995 (20:4: 14‐19). But there was little in that brief conversation, mostly focusing on the contemporary context of Barfield’s Poetic Diction, that would predict this important, ground‐ breaking study. Readers of Barfield will no doubt be familiar with his repeated insistence that, in his seventy year career as a writer, he had never significantly changed: unlike a Wittgenstein or Heidegger, “there is no ‘late Barfield’ and ‘early Barfield,’” as he puts it in a letter quoted by Diener (17). Diener’s book, originally a D. Phil. dissertation at Oxford, and written in the author’s second language, casts serious doubt on this received wisdom. She careful considers almost completely ignored pieces written by Barfield in the 20s and early 30s, during a period after graduation from Oxford but before he abandoned his dream of becoming a full‐time writer to join his father’s law firm in London. Major works—History in English Words (1926), Poetic Diction (1928)—are not what captures Diener’s attention. She dwells instead on short fiction like “Dope,” “The Devastated Area,” “Seven Letters,” the novel The Silver Trumpet (Barfield’s first published book [1925]), and non‐fiction like “Some Elements of Decadence,” a review of Wilfred Owen’s poetry, “The Lesson of South Wales,” Danger, Ugliness and Waste. In the process she introduces us to a writer which even the small circle of Barfieldians are not likely to recognize. Take the following passage from Danger, Ugliness, and Waste, a pamphlet Barfield wrote in 1925 (quoted by Diener [159‐60]). [W]e may talk of education and of university extension, and we may be rightly proud of these things; but we know all the time in our hearts that without a general spread of means and leisure the world of culture must remain for ever the bitter farce it sometimes seems—an everlasting Decameron set in an everlasting plague. This social conscience of ours may be a comparatively recent addition to our hearts, T h e C o l l e c t e d W o r k s o f D a v i d L a v e r y 20 but it is a permanent one, and now that it has evolved in us, there is no greatness without it. Until its pangs are allayed, the sincerest works of art will also be the most tortured and preoccupied, sacrificing spirit to idea and life to propaganda. [. . .] I believe that for the future we have to face either a world without these things or a world in which the leisure and refinement which alone make them possible are not drawn in dividends from half‐educated millions to whom all chance of knowing them, or even the value of them is denied. One of two things is true. Civilisation is either a ghastly accident, or it is a means to the end of freeing the human spirit in this world. If the former—so; but if the latter, there can be nothing more than a fluttering of wings, until humanity has established its place in the sun. (159‐60) We recognize, of course, Barfield’s customary eloquence; but we are not immediately familiar with the social consciousness it exhibits. The Barfield of Diener’s study is a young intellectual wrestling not with original and final participation, polarity, logomorphism, chronological snobbery, the Residue of Unresolved Positivism (RUP), and the evolution of consciousness but with economic issues, the nature of consumption, contemporary manifestations of philosophical dualism, the future of leisure, Matthew Arnold’s concept of culture, Lost Generation pessimism, industrial development, advertising, and the promise of technology. Diener illuminates as well Barfield’s indebtedness to three of his great influences, establishing new links between Barfield’s and Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s confrontations with dualistic thought, examining Barfield and Lewis’s encounter with the contemporary philosophical climate, and delineating important similarities in Barfield and Rudolf Steiner’s struggle to surmount the widening gap between idealism and practicality. (Almost in passing, Diener establishes convincing internal evidence for the date of Barfield’s much disputed first exposure to Steiner and anthroposophy.) By no means uncritical—Diener accuses the early Barfield of a tendency toward evasiveness—she argues that Barfield’s development as a thinker shows him aware of his weaknesses and striving to go beyond them in his later work. Barfieldians spend a great deal of their energy trying to account for the astonishing ignorance of his achievement among those who should appreciate his work. Diener faults the near absence of Barfield from Humphrey Carpenter’s seminal book on the Inklings as a contributing factor, but the real cause may be our disregard for the writings her study seeks to foreground. For to know them forces us to rethink Barfield’s place in modern thought and, in addition, that of his mentor/collaborator Rudolf Steiner. As Diener explains in the book’s closing lines: These writings reveal T h e C o l l e c t e d W o r k s o f D a v i d L a v e r y 21 an author who, in contrast to many of his more pessimistic contemporaries, welcomed change and technical progress. He welcomed them as positive means to the end of creating those conditions which would make the experience of wholeness and participation possible in modem life. For this reason, despite the weakness in the area of practical detail already noted, Barfield ultimately has to count as an essentially progressive and modem thinker. Unfortunately, his practical reform writings have so far been completely neglected in scholarship. This is perhaps not surprising. Indeed, our present inability to appreciate the practical reform aspect of his thought may itself result from the dualism which he himself had hoped to overcome. Such partiality has had serious consequences, and not just for Barfield’s reputation: “he has become obscure and esoteric and has lost his concrete relevance in the practical world of our daily experience. He has thus suffered a similar fate to that of Rudolf Steiner—a fate which neither he nor his predecessor deserves” (174). The notion that there was essentially no development in Barfield’s long career is not the only truism Diener’s book subverts. It has long been assumed that all the interest in Owen Barfield was North American. American universities, after all, inspired Barfield’s post‐retirement resurgence; most prominent Barfieldians, from G. B. Tennyson to Shirley Sugerman, Tom Kranidas, Howard Nemerov, and Lionel Adey, were from the United States or Canada; and an American press (Wesleyan) kept Barfield’s work in print. But Diener’s interest in Owen Barfield began in Freiburg— where Professor Elmar Schenkel, who edits the book series which produced The Role of Imagination, was her mentor—and culminated at Oxford, under the direction of Professor A. D. Nuttall. (Both Schenkel and Nuttall have contributed to Diener’s book, writing the Afterword and Foreword, respectively). This German and British involvement bodes well for the future advancement of “Barfield studies.” If such is to come, it seems indisputable that Astrid Diener’s book will be seen as a watershed study. Review Television Histories: Shaping Collective Memory in the Media Age. Edited by Gary R. Edgerton and Peter C. Rollins Lexington, KY: University of Kentucky Press The television spectrum of the early 21st century is wide and varied, but Tony Soprano’s favorite destination is The History Channel. As the fictional New Jersey mob boss tells his daughter during a discussion of his brief matriculation at Seton Hall, history has always been his favorite subject, and he demonstrates a good grasp of it for a college drop out in the waste management business. When an Hasidic Jew Tony’s gang seeks to beat into submission brags that “For two years, 900 Jews held their own against 15 thousand Roman soldiers,” choosing “death before enslavement” and asks (he thinks rhetorically) “And the Romans, where are they now?”, The History Channel fan replies, “You're looking at them, [bleep].” In Gary R. Edgerton and Peter C. Rollins’ valuable new collection of essays on television’s treatment of history, The History Channel, not surprisingly, warrants a chapter (Brian Taves’ “The History Channel and the Challenge of Historical Programming”), a very good one, in fact, offering a pioneering, model approach to assessment of an entire network (television criticism customarily dealing with programs or episodes or series). But it offers much more of value to those interested in understanding rather than simply condemning TV’s role in the creation of “collective memory.” A few of the essays in Television Histories demonstrate a conscious, preemptory defensiveness against the anticipated complaint of the “historian cop” (Robert Sklar’s phrase, quoted in the book) that television history isn’t true history, but all seem committed to a future “mediation where professional history must ultimately share space with popular history” (Edgerton in the “Introduction”). Television Histories is grounded in large part on the assumption—laid out by Edgerton in his Introduction—that “television is the principal means by which most people learn about history today” (1), that it has replaced journalism proper as the “the first flawed rough drafts of history” (the title of a very perceptive piece by Philip M. Taylor). Its sixteen essays, arranged in four sections (Prime‐Time T h e C o l l e c t e d W o r k s o f D a v i d L a v e r y 23 Entertainment Programming as Historian, The Television Documentary as Historian, News and Public Affairs Programming as Historian, and Television Production, Reception, and History), present an ambitious agenda. Some of the subjects examined seem almost obligatory in such a volume: the documentaries of Ken Burns (Edgerton’s essay focuses on Thomas Jefferson but provides an excellent introduction to Burns’ “emotional archaeology”), for example, or television coverage of the fall of the Berlin Wall, and the Victory at Sea and Profiles in Courage documentaries. But many inclusions are surprising and original. Steve Anderson’s “History, TV and Popular Memory” examines You Are There, Steve Allen’s unforgettable Meeting of Minds, Star Trek, and the completely forgettable Dark Skies as exemplars of what he calls “fantastic historiography.” Mimi White’s chapter on “Masculinity and Femininity in Television’s Historical Fictions: Young Indiana Chronicles and Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman offers an unusual look at the inventive way in which both series revisit history. Robert Hanke’s essay on Quantum Leap, perhaps the most theoretically sophisticated (and most challenging) in the book, brings Walter Benjamin, Foucault, and de Certeau to bear on a science fiction program that has not garnered much serious attention. And Thomas Doherty’s “Pixies: Homosexuality, Anti‐Communism, and the Army‐McCarthy Hearing” uses a single word uttered by attorney Joseph Welch as a wormhole through which to enter and explore the mindset of the McCarthy era. Although most of the essays are likely to be of considerable value to any attentive student of television, a few are likely to be too specialized and academic to be of much interest. Chris Vos’ “Breaking the Mirror: Dutch Television and the History of the Second World War,” Carolyn Anderson’s “Contested Public Memories: Hawaiian History as Hawaiian or American Experience,” and Netta Ha‐Ilan’s “Images of History in Israel Television News: The Territorial Dimension of Collective Memories, 1987‐ 1990” are all well researched and well‐written essays and valuable contributions to comparative television studies but perhaps too esoteric to hold the attention of the general reader. And at least one essay, James L. Baughman’s “Nice Guys Last Fifteen Seasons: Jack Benny on Television, 1950‐1965,” though informed and engaging, does not seem to belong at all: television history it clearly is, but even on second reading it doesn’t seem to mesh with the overall agenda of Television Histories. On the back of the dust cover of Television Histories we find the following blurb (from Michael Schoenecke of Texas Tech University): “A pioneer work that T h e C o l l e c t e d W o r k s o f D a v i d L a v e r y 24 weaves an inspired and informed interdisciplinary analysis of television and history. The chapters are enlightening, readable, and entertaining; the editors and authors have produced a work that enriches and strengthens the study of film and history.” This assessment seems to this reviewer accurate and fair (though I might question the accuracy of the word “entertaining”), but I find it puzzling that Professor Schoenecke would characterize Television Histories as a contribution to “the study of film and history. This is a book about television, is it not? As Edgerton recognizes in the introduction “it goes without saying that television has only recently emerged as a focus of serious study within universities and colleges; one might even say that it has become a fashionable subject in a number of the humanities and social sciences.” Not fashionable enough, it would seem, when Schoenecke cannot distinguish between a book on film and a “serious study” of television. Review Inside Prime Time by Todd Gitlin University of California Press Teleliteracy: Taking Television Seriously by David Bianculli Syracuse University Press Many serious people pride themselves on a contemptuous ignorance of television entertainment, accompanied by a sneaking fascination with its raw cultural power and a horror of its effects on public sensibility. At least half the time I have been one of these people. Todd Gitlin, "Prologue" to Inside Prime Time I’m arguing that television should be taken seriously enough to be judged in context, without preconceptions, on its own merits. . . . David Bianculli, Teleliteracy In Teleliteracy David Bianculli quotes Robert J. Thompson on the subject of serious books on television: "Even when I was in graduate school in 1981 . . . there was only half a shelf on the stuff." The situation has changed, of course: television is much more earnestly studied now. The several shelves that now exist include recent republications of Bianculli's 1992 book by Syracuse University Press (a new volume in The Television Series) and Todd Gitlin's classic study Inside Prime Time (1983) by the University of California Press. Except for a new introduction by Gitlin, both volumes are straight reprintings, and yet these books by one of television's best working critics (Bianculli now writes for the New York Daily News) and one of its harshest academic detractors (Gitlin now teaches at New York University) deserve our attention as exemplars of two very different approaches to television criticism. In his introduction Bianculli quotes Mark Crispin Miller (now Gitlin's fellow "professor of Media Ecology" at NYU): "Everybody watches [television], but no one really likes it. . . . Its only champions are its own executives, the advertisers who exploit it, and a compromised network of academic boosters. Otherwise TV has no spontaneous defenders, because there is almost nothing to defend." As a now proud member of the "compromised network of academic boosters," I should declare at the T h e C o l l e c t e d W o r k s o f D a v i d L a v e r y 28 outset of this review my own conflict of interest, but I must admit too that I am a recent convert to boosterism and once counted both Miller and Gitlin among my major influences back in the days when Miller's Boxed In: The Culture of Television (1988), Gitlin's Inside Prime Time, and of course Jerry Mander's Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television (1978) were key planks in my own anti‐ television platform. Now I have gone over to the other culture and count myself as a defender of the medium, and I find Bianculli's book much more appealing and relevant. "There is no way around television" Gitlin explains in his new introduction, "there are only ways through it." It was in the pages of Gitlin's heads‐on encounter with the medium that this trained‐as‐an‐ English‐professor‐critic first became conversant, almost two decades ago, with such concepts as counter programming, least objectionable programming, spinoffs, recombinant television, syndication, and Gitlin’s analysis of these and other television vectors remains illuminating and relevant. In Gitlin's, neo‐Marxist, cerebral (in its pages we encounter not only Norman Lear and Grant Tinker and Fred Silverman but Theodore Adorno and Alexis de Tocqueville) critique what is lacking is any sympathetic understanding of the process of television creation at the level of the individual program. (What Bianculli says of Miller—that he “seems incapable of accepting the fact that many of the people who make television, like many who watch it actually have an affection for it”—would appear to apply equally well to Gitlin.) Except for a very good chapter on Hill Street Blues, Inside Prime Time is devoted almost entirely to "thick description" (anthropologist Clifford Geertz's term) of the decision making process of the movers and shakers/beggars and choosers of television at the network level. Given unprecedented access to the men and women behind the curtain as he researched Inside in the early eighties, Gitlin in the end is able to ask large questions (“the question of whether there would be an American culture without [TV]”), make startling observations ("the genius of consumer society is its ability to convert the desire for change into a desire for novel goods"), and offer rather opaque formulae (television is “meaninglessness raised to a universal principle”; “the deal is the art form”; “Off the screen as on it, slick and quick get the job done”). At the end of his new introduction, Gitlin insists that he wished his "book . . . were strictly of historical interest" but concludes that it "is, alas, in my judgment, as germane today as when it was first published." He is partly right: much of it is still T h e C o l l e c t e d W o r k s o f D a v i d L a v e r y 29 pertinent. But the reader may find it hard to agree that a book only barely cognizant of the rise of niche programming and of the expansion of the cable spectrum, that laments to a new millennium able to acquire home dolby sound systems, the awfulness of television sound, that devotes a good part of a chapter to Today’s FBI (1981‐82) but knows nothing of The X‐Files, is timely as well as germane. Until and unless Gitlin rewrites inside Prime Time for the new millennium or authors Inside Prime Time: The Sequel, his book is likely to be primarily of historical interest. When we find him in his new intro observing, with his usual conceptual brilliance, that the networks are now “wildly spinning off cable networks and Internet auxiliaries in the manner of hit series that used to spawn new programs for secondary characters,” we are left longing for at least a remake, an inspection of our prime time, not the Reagan era’s. In Teleliteracy David Bianculli characterizes the anti‐television stance of Mark Crispin Miller quoted above as the sort of pose we can expect from "someone who writes about TV a lot more than he watches it—or, at least, of someone who watches all the wrong things." Careful to insist that he is not himself "soft on television" (should there be any doubt of his politics, the interested voter need only examine his twenty year voting record as a practicing critic), Bianculli's book seeks to expose the origin and nature of television prejudice, a form of bigotry still acceptable in even the best intellectual circles. "Where else," he asks, "but in the land of TV criticism are prejudice and ignorance considered assets?" "Almost alone among the major critical disciplines,” he complains, “television criticism fosters— and often encourages—an overt antagonism toward the medium being analyzed. A film critic displaying constant contempt for that medium would soon be replaced; a TV critic with the same attitude would likely be promoted." Asking for a "change of venue" for television's trial, he then sets out to provide it: his book, with its large historical canvas, is the new court he seeks. In a readable, well‐researched, pun‐filled (perhaps too pun‐filled) 300+ pages, Bianculli not only offers us a great deal of television history ("if we do not learn from our TV history," he reminds us, recasting Santayana's famous dictum, "we are condemned to repeats") and an admirable chronicle of high culture disdain for new media from Plato to Newton Minnow to Miller, he makes a strong case for why television deserves more respect. Marshalling support from a host of FOTs (friends of television), including Dennis Potter, Thompson, James L. Brooks, William Link, Linda T h e C o l l e c t e d W o r k s o f D a v i d L a v e r y 30 Ellerbee, Shelley Duvall, and Kurt Vonnegut, Bianculli concludes that "Only idiots continue to think of it as an idiot box." Like Inside Prime Time, the book is to a degree dated. The John Milton to Milton Berle "teleliteracy pretest," for example, though witty and comprehensive, would benefit from more attention to the 1990s. Indeed the whole book seems to some degree a product of the Gulf War era. Some of the foes of television he sets out to challenge— Thomas Radecki and The National Coalition on Television Violence, George Gerbner's reductionism—seem no longer worthy of opposition, even if their successors no doubt are. Film rose to prominence and attained serious consideration as an art form, Bianculli suggests, because TV "absorbed most of the cultural flak." The era of TV the flak catcher is, Teleliteracy argues convincingly, may and should be over. Review Buffy the Vampire Slayer: The Monster Book Christopher Golden, Stephen R. Bissette, and Thomas E. Sniegoski New York: Pocket Books Buffy the Vampire Slayer: The Watcher’s Guide. Vol. 2 Nancy Holder, with Jeff Mariotte and Maryelizabeth Hart Pocket Books The Sopranos: A Family History Allen Rucker New American Library Over a decade ago, John Fiske reminded us (in Television Culture) that TV series are “activated texts,” generating much more than the individual episodes that constitute a series’ actual on‐air presence. Both secondary (criticism, publicity) and tertiary (discussion and commentary occurring at the fan level) texts follow in the wake of most TV shows, and the meaning and significance both kinds of texts generate are plowed back into the primary texts themselves, becoming part of how viewers “read” them. That Entertainment Weekly guide to Seinfeld deepened our appreciation of a show about nothing. That fanfiction we discovered on the internet, the one that imagines Kirk and Spock as lovers, lead us to see Star Trek in a radical new light. That book of “fantasy blueprints of classic TV homes” (Mark Bennett’s Television Sets) enhanced our grasp of the “textual geography” of The Clampett mansion or Gilligan’s island. Contemporary television has likewise spun‐off a wide variety of “commodity intertexts” (James Collins’ coinage), secondary texts, both official and unofficial, fiction and non‐fiction, to satisfy the often cultic needs of television fans to know more—much more—and imagine more about their favorite programs. A decade ago, T h e C o l l e c t e d W o r k s o f D a v i d L a v e r y 32 Twin Peaks produced not only The Secret Diary of Laura Palmer but The Autobiography of F.B.I. Special Agent Dale Cooper: My Life, My Tapes, and Welcome to Twin Peaks: Access Guide to the Town—all official Twin Peaks books. Over the last decade The X‐Files industry has generated annual official guides to Chris Carter’s series, now in its 8th season. Buffy the Vampire Slayer has inspired over a dozen popular paperbacks for those viewers, mostly teens, who can’t get enough of Sunnydale and its heroes and villains. Two of current television’s best shows, Joss Whedon’s Buffy, now in its fifth season on the WB netlet, and David Chase’s The Sopranos, about to begin its third on HBO—both genuine cultural phenomena, part of what we talk about even for those who do not watch—have also recently produced official companions: for Buffy, a comprehensive examination of the series’ many monsters and a second “watcher’s guide” covering seasons three and four (an earlier volume, written by Golden and Holder, had appeared in 1998) and for The Sopranos, a family history. From the beginning, Buffy the Vampire Slayer (hereafter BtVS), a series which this season will produce its 100th episode, has been one of the most underrated on all of television (this year’s Viewers for Quality Television Founder’s Award a recent exception). Indeed, as Richard Campbell acknowledges elsewhere in this issue, announcing unashamedly that one simply watches BtVS elicits “blank and open‐ mouthed stares” in some circles—especially among academics. And yet it has always been the most bookish show on television, one in which books and research have figured prominently. BtVS’ primal scene, at least for the first three years, is Buffy and the Scooby Gang—her friends Xander Harris and Willow Rosenberg and her Watcher, librarian Rupert Giles—gathering in the Sunnydale High School library, researching the monster they are about to fight, acquiring the knowledge which is their power. Rupert Giles (Anthony Stewart Head), according to reports, has done for librarians what Indiana Jones (Harrison Ford) did for archaeologists. It seems only fitting then that BtVS’s arcana should find its way into book form. BtVS is a series with a complex and ever‐evolving mythology, explained in germ by Giles in the second part of its pilot episode: This world is older than any of you know. Contrary to popular mythology, it did not begin as a paradise. For untold eons demons walked the Earth. They made it their home, their. . . their Hell. But in time they lost their purchase on this T h e C o l l e c t e d W o r k s o f D a v i d L a v e r y 33 reality. The way was made for mortal animals, for, for man. All that remains of the old ones are vestiges, certain magicks, certain creatures... The books tell us the last demon to leave this reality fed off a human, mixed their blood. He was a human form possessed, infected by the demon's soul. He bit another, and another, and so they walk the Earth, feeding . . . killing some, mixing their blood with others to make more of their kind. Waiting for the animals to die out, and the old ones to return. BtVS does not limit itself to these demons, of course. As Giles likewise explains: Now, I believe this whole area is a center of mystical energy, that things gravitate towards it that, that, that you might not find elsewhere. . . . Like zombies, werewolves, incubi, succubi, . . . everything you've ever dreaded was under your bed, but told yourself couldn't be by the light of day. They're all real! The first Watcher’s Guide had offered a brief “Monster Guide,” but the monsters have continued non‐stop for the last two years and earned their own separate volume. Divided into sections on Demons, Vampires, Magic Users, Primals, Ghosts, The Walking Dead, Bogeyman, Invisible People, Faith [a fellow slayer who succumbs to the Dark Side] and the Human Monster, The Monster Book not only offers encyclopedia‐style entries on each specific monster the series has disgorged, including basic information (key relationships, unique attributes, most monstrous moments, current status), relevant quotations, and, of course, a black and white photo, but includes as well comprehensive essays on the background mythology, both inside and outside BtVS, of each type. The insightful essay on vampires, for example, is thirteen pages in length. The second volume of The Watcher’s Guide presents an all‐inclusive guide to what BtVS’s creators and fans now call the “Buffyverse.” We are given comprehensive character and episode guides, cast profiles, a listing of all the (largely unknown) bands whose music has been featured on Buffy, and a largely self‐serving guide to BtVS merchandise. The Guide is at its best tracking continuity (as it does in each entry of the episode guide), for BtVS is a show with an extraordinary memory which puts great demands on the narratological skills of viewers (a joke in episode T h e C o l l e c t e d W o r k s o f D a v i d L a v e r y 34 79, the last episode of Season Four, required viewers to recall a dress Willow wore in episode 1), and such help is most welcome, although such guidance is already available on the web (at such unauthorized, superb free sites as Buffy Guide.com (http://www.buffyguide.com/) and Buffy World (http://www.buffyworld.com/index.htm). The one completely unique section of the Guide is “Creating Buffy: The Production Process,” which, through interviews and commentary focusing on the creation of the 4th Season episode “The I in Team,” takes us deep behind the scenes of the ever‐amazing process of TV creation. It is must‐reading for anyone hopeful of unraveling the continuing mystery of how quality television happens in spite of the time and money constraints of the medium. These two BtVS companions, though useful and comprehensive and well done, pale by comparison as books with the brilliantly conceived and beautifully designed (by Dan Newman) The Sopranos: A Family History. Purporting to be the by‐product of author Allen Rucker’s assignment to organize a massive archive on the Sopranos family assembled by an expert on organized crime named Jeffrey Warwick, this coffee‐table book presents itself as “little more than journalistic housecleaning” compared to “Warwick’s Herculean efforts.” At the outset we find a list of contributors: a group that includes all the people Warwick and Rucker supposedly spoke to, from ex‐gangsters now in the witness protection program to Tony Soprano’s favorite teacher, to Livid Sopranos’ briefly employed geriatric caregiver. Jeffrey Warwick, of course, is actually a character on The Sopranos (as are many of the other contributors), appearing on television in an episode like “The Legend of Tennessee Moltisanti” (Season One, Episode 8), sharing his knowledge of the New Jersey mob with local media. One day, we are told, Wernick will tell all, but “the Sopranos story is a long way from over” (aka the series is still ongoing), and in the meantime we will have to make due with his assistant’s pastiche assemblage of Sopraniana. False modesty is part of Rucker’s fiction of course. The book offers all the givens of a TV companion volume: an interview with series creator David Chase (who, the official Sopranos website tells us, “was instrumental in developing the look and content of the book”), profiles of each of the major players, and an authoritative episode summary,1 but it is hard to imagine a book of its kind any more original than this. I did find three errors in the episode guide. We are told that, after the Junior‐ ordered, unsuccessful hit (in “Isabella”), Tony crashes “his Suburban into a tree,” T h e C o l l e c t e d W o r k s o f D a v i d L a v e r y 35 when in fact he smashes into some parked cars. In “Guy Walks into a Psychiatrist’s Office,” Philly Parisi “runs into Gigi Cestone (working for Tony) at the airport. In fact Parisi had unwittingly gone to the airport to pick his killer up. And Sandra Bernhard’s name (she appears in “D‐Girl”) is spelled wrong (Bernhardt). Picky, picky? Perhaps, but this is, after all, the “official” companion. ("As the Bible is to Western thought,” David Chase proclaims on the website, “so is The Sopranos: A Family History to the field of companion books”!) In ten chapters—The Sopranos, A Soprano Family History, Tony’s Children, The Soprano Crime Family, Life with Livia, Tony and Carmela, Tony on the Couch, The Business, Growing Up Soprano, and The Future—Rucker presents us with deep background on the series in a variety of forms. We are privy to FBI e‐mails detailing what is known about both of Tony Soprano’s families; insights into New Jersey’s immigrant population from a Newark Public Library expert; family photos (some from the old world); the crudely‐conceived family trees of AJ (Anthony Soprano, Junior); FBI surveillance transcripts; probation reports; a 1975 letter on Tony Soprano’s behalf by an English teacher seeking to prevent him from being expelled; a college letter from Tony to Carmela; Johnny Boy Soprano’s arrest record; a page from Christopher Moltisanti’s awful unfinished screenplay, “You Bark, I Bite”; confidential reports on Livia Soprano (including complaints filed by fellow residents) from the Green Grove Retirement Home; a letter from Carmela to her interior decorator declining an offer to have her home featured in “New Jersey Today;” a list of materials found in the Sopranos’ trash; Carmela’s ten favorite movies (from a contest at her video store); an “abridged dictionary of Northeastern regional mob patois”; a diagram of the Sopranos’ cashflow; a “body count” roster of those who have (allegedly) died at the hands of the Sopranos; transcripts of Meadow Sopranos’ visits to an online chatroom; Meadow’s Discover Card bill; Joan O’Connell Scrivo’s equivocal letter of recommendation for Meadow to Georgetown (written as a result of Carmela’s mob‐mom encouragement)—and this is only a partial list. The result of this polyphony of voices is a simulated oral history in which the series’ already rich, multi‐dimensional characters and its meticulously genuine milieu are realized even further. There is so much even a faithful watcher of the series would never have known: that Tony hates Bruce Springsteen (because the music of his fellow Jerseyite is too depressing), that Livia’s father was a Eugene Debs style socialist, that Tony subscribes to Waste News, that Livia had an annoying neighborhood dog whacked, that the yearly income of Paulie Walnuts is between T h e C o l l e c t e d W o r k s o f D a v i d L a v e r y 36 $60,000 and $100,000 a year; that at Seton Hall Tony hired another student to write his English paper for him (“Symbolism in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof”—it received a B+); that Janice Soprano’s estranged son Harpo may have changed his named to Hal after being beaten up on the playground . . . In a classic essay on cult movies and “intertextual collage,” Umberto Eco observes that one given of The Cult is its ability to "provide a completely furnished world so that its fans can quote characters and episodes as if they were aspects of the fan's private sectarian world, a world about which one can make up quizzes and play trivia games so that the adepts of the secret recognize through each other a shared experience" (Travels in Hyperreality 198). These three books, inspired by commercial motives but each in its own way if not a “holy” text at least an essential Baedeker, will appeal most to cult followers of Buffy and The Sopranos—to those always ready, despite the dangers, to drop in, at the next possible opportunity, to Sunnydale and/or Northern New Jersey, great places to visit, via the imagination, if not to live. Review TV Creators: Conversations with America’s Top Producers of Television Drama, Volume 2 James L. Longworth, Jr. Syracuse: Syracuse University Press, 2002 The first volume of James L. Longworth’s interviews with TV drama creators appeared in 2000 and included colloquies with such VIPs of the medium as Dick Wolf, David Chase, Tom Fontana, John Wells, Nancy Miller, Ed Zwick, and Steven Bochco. In Volume 2 of TV Creators, a new publication in The Television Series from Syracuse University Press, Longworth dialogues with twelve more significant producers/creators, patriarchs like Roy Huggins (the original The Fugitive) and Aaron Spelling (Charlie’s Angels, Dynasty), multiple series veterans like Glen Gordon Caron (Moonlighting, Now and Again), Don Bellisario (Magnum P.I., JAG), Paul Haggis (The Facts of Life, Family Law), Clifton Campbell (21 Jump Street, Profiler), Barbara Hall (I’ll Fly Away, Judging Amy), and emerging figures like Martha Williamson (Touched by an Angel), Aaron Sorkin (West Wing), Anthony Zuiker (CSI: Crime Scene Investigation), Joss Whedon (Buffy the Vampire Slayer), John McNamara (the second incarnation of The Fugitive). Longworth’s interviewing style is likely to annoy some. He is not one of those who asks pertinent questions and then stays out of the way (think for example of the almost‐devoid‐of‐self‐reference approach of a Terry Gross on National Public Radio’s Fresh Air), nor is he is a Barbara Walters: none of his interviewees is brought to tears (though they laugh constantly). Often garrulous, sometimes offensive (he actually asks Caron if he went to college to “get laid”), not terribly systematic (the free‐ wheeling subject matter of the interviews often appears devoid of a logical order), sometimes manipulative, inclined at times to monopolize the conversation, prone to engage in silly banter the reader may wish had been edited out (the Spelling interview, for example, contains pages of yada, yada, yada chitchat about the subject’s failed career as an actor and the interviewer’s horses), Longworth comes across as a bit full of himself. But the self he is full of exhibits remarkable knowledge about the industry, T h e C o l l e c t e d W o r k s o f D a v i d L a v e r y 38 demonstrates a firm and sympathetic grasp of each subject’s life and career, and succeeds again and again in soliciting remarkable insights. Who knew that Roy Huggins was once a communist and that the original Fugitive was seen as virulently anti‐American? That Aaron Spelling considers himself an innovator in the portrayal of gender and sexual preference on television? That “God genre” founder Williamson is a tremendous admirer of HBO’s Oz and admits that, given the assignment to helm a profane and controversial prison drama on cable instead of Touched by an Angel, would produce a very similar show? That, as Whedon admits, one of the ironic side‐ effects of always‐obsessive entanglement in the generation of a season of television is that there is never any time to actually watch television? That Caron, discussing his legendary clashes with Cybill Shepard, could admit “I may in fact be a chauvinist and not know it.” That Anthony Zuicker, creator of CSI, one of the biggest hits of the last two seasons, would exhibit a refreshing sense of humility borne of his awareness of the place of a newcomer in television’s hierarchy: What people don’t understand is that when you write the first television script of your life and it becomes the highest‐rated drama in the country and up for Golden Globes, it doesn’t mean that you’re calling all the shots. You have to find your position and work as a team, because it’s such a team effort from top to bottom. I know David Kelley and Chris Carter and those guys write their own episodes and call the shots, but those guys have earned the right to do that. They’ve been in the business ten, fifteen, twenty years. I’ve been in the business for a year. It is generally acknowledged that writers have more status in television than in the movies, and not surprisingly these interviews with individuals most of whom are producers and writers are at their best when they concern authorship. Almost every one of Longworth’s subjects sheds light on the difficulties and rewards of writing for TV. Perhaps the most memorable exchange comes in his interview with Joss Whedon: LONGWORTH: Has writing become a chore for you, or is it still fun? WHEDON: It is the most fun I'm ever going to have. I love to write. I love it. I mean, there's nothing in the world I like better, and that includes sex, probably because I'm so very bad at it. (Both laugh.) It's the greatest peace. When I'm in a scene, and it's just me and the character, that's it, that's where I want to live my life. I've heard about guys who find it strenuous and painful and horrible, and I scratch my noggin. I don't get it. I definitely get tired of T h e C o l l e c t e d W o r k s o f D a v i d L a v e r y 39 rewriting, something that I'm not creating from whole cloth is tough. So every now and then I have to drum up the enthusiasm to write this exposition scene. It's a real drag. But, ultimately, the moment I break into a scene, the moment I figure out what it is, I'm there, I'm loving it. Longworth’s interview with Whedon may well be the best in the book, and it is certainly the most intriguing discussion yet with the mastermind behind Buffy and Angel. Longworth’s own prose, which includes sometimes lengthy set‐ups for each conversation, an introduction (“Television and Society in the Twenty‐First Century”) surveying phenomena from reality television to vertical integration, government intervention, and technological developments, and a concluding chapter offering a brief but comprehensive examination of 9/11’s ramifications on television drama, exhibits some of the same qualities as his interviewing style. We learn a great deal about the state of television art, but we must put up as well with such florid prose as this forced segue: History is replete with explorers. Men and women who thought outside of the box. Pioneers whose vision opened up new paths for us to follow and enjoy. One famous explorer said of his exploits, “I always think disaster is an inch away.” That explorer is Glen Gordon Caron, and, on many occasions, he has ventured into uncharted territory so that television could be a better place for us to settle in. That television is a producer’s medium has been received wisdom for decades. Rarely do we know, rarely do we care, who wrote or directed a particular television episode, even of our favorite series, though the attentive might know a particular show is the product of a Bochco or a Wolf or a Grant Tinker or a Norman Lear. Longworth’s interviews with producers does not expressly challenge this assumption, nor is it likely that television criticism will go through the kind of auteur phase the movies experienced, but they do contribute mightily toward our growing understanding of the complications of television creativity. There is so much we do not know about the roles of motivation, inspiration, influence, collaboration, failure (almost every one of the book’s subjects speaks sadly about the experience of cancellation) in the medium’s imagination. Longworth’s books (presumably there will T h e C o l l e c t e d W o r k s o f D a v i d L a v e r y 40 be at least a third volume) provide us with substantial oral history helping us to comprehend these dynamics. Review Essay William Irwin Thompson. The American Replacement of Nature: The Everyday Acts and Outrageous Evolution of Economic Life. New York: Doubleday, 1992, 155 pgs. Bill McKibben. The Age of Missing Information. New York: Random House, 1992, 252 pgs. In Don DeLillo's White Noise, the small Midwestern town where Hitler Studies professor Jack Gladney teaches at the College on the hill is threatened by an "airborne toxic event" spread by a nearby chemical factory. Soon after the accident, Gladney speaks with a technician from SIMUVAC, a member of a "simulated evacuation" task force delegated to the creation of a working model of "events" like the one that has just taken place. "But this evacuation isn't simulated," Gladney observes. "It's real." "We know that," the technician acknowledges. "But we thought we could use it as a model." Asked, then, how the actual event is going, he replies: The insertion curve isn't as smooth as we would like. There's a probability excess. Plus which we don't have our victims laid out where we'd want them if this was an actual simulation. In other words we're forced to take our victims where we find them. . . . You have to make allowances for the fact that everything we see tonight is real. There's a lot of polishing we still have to do. . . . In its historical subversion of the distinction between real and simulated, America, like DeLillo's technician, is still willing to make allowances for the real, but the polishing nevertheless progresses apace. William Irwin Thompson's The American T h e C o l l e c t e d W o r k s o f D a v i d L a v e r y 42 Replacement of Nature and Bill McKibben's The Age of Missing Information should be read as progress reports. Formerly a member of the faculty at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and founder of The Lindisfarne Association, a counter‐culture think tank dedicated toward synthesizing and preserving esoteric knowledge beyond the turning of another Yeatsian gyre and disseminating it to a coming New Age, Thompson is the author of such earlier books on cultural history and futurism as The Imagination of an Insurrection (1967), The Edge of History (1971), Passages About Earth (1974), Darkness and Scattered Light (1978), The Time Falling Bodies Take to Light (1981), and Imaginary Landscape (1989). Now a resident of Switzerland, Thompson writes about American culture, in the tradition of Henry James and T. S. Eliot, as seen from a European perspective, as an expatriate (he praises his new country's efficiency). But he is careful to distinguish himself from postmodern Eurocentric travel writers like Jean Baudrillard and Umberto Eco who have taken the United States as their subject: "fascinated by America's hyperreality," Thompson observes, "they always try to appropriate it as exotic ethnographic material for European discourse. They are more like moths drawn to a flame than swallows demonstrating the possibilities of air for imaginative flight." Always an extoller of such flight, Thompson prefers cultural criticism (Thomas Pynchon's is his example) able "to perform the culture in the process of describing it." The American Replacement of Nature is indeed a performance. (Nowhere is this more apparent than in the multiple point‐of‐ view/three camera shoot dream sequence that inconclusively ends the book.) "In an electronic culture," Thompson demonstrates convincingly, "one cannot think, one can only entertain ideas"; and yet Thompson's thinking, metaphorically rich, dense with allusion (full appreciation and comprehension requires the reader to recognize references to everything from "punctuated equilibrium" to The Tibetan Book of the Dead and Andrei Tarkovsky) nevertheless entertains. A true "thinker" in E. M. Cioran's sense ("thinkers," notes the Romanian essayist, write for other writers, while philosophers write only for professors), Thompson traverses an incomparable variety of topics with a playfulness that makes him always readable even when dealing with the most abstruse material. (How many writers can forge a description of wrestler Hulk Hogan's trademark off‐the‐mat resurrection and an evocation of William Butler Yeats' "The Second Coming" into a powerful commentary on ecological destruction?) T h e C o l l e c t e d W o r k s o f D a v i d L a v e r y 43 Literalists, no doubt, will find it difficult to decipher Thompson's tone. They may not understand that when he refers to "New Age sissies," or quips that "Any peasant with a dumb cow can make whipped cream, but it takes a chemical factory to make Cool Whip," it is in fact, as the context in each case makes clear, the patriarchal mind‐set and obsessive technology for which he has no sympathy. When they read the following account of contemporary Los Angeles, they may take it to be a paranoid raving and not a metaphoric alternative history: My city was attacked in the fifties by General Motors with poison gas warfare in the skies of L.A. First they infiltrated the local government, then they took out the infrastructure of the city by demolishing the Pacific Electric railways, and then when they had a clearer path for their land war, they invaded with millions of poison gas‐emitting tanks. With a characteristic relish for metaphor, Thompson speaks disdainfully of contemporary "dehydrated" non‐fiction shot‐up with "shelf‐life additives put in by editors and packaging by the sales department so that it can be quickly microwaved in two minute radiations on TV talks shows," plugged by "microwaved celebrities [who] grow cold as fast as they grew hot." The American Replacement of Nature is not microwaveable, nor does Thompson seek celebrity (though he has been interviewed by Bill Moyers). Earlier books have ranged over the perennial philosophy and the philosophy of science, high culture and low, the Gaia hypothesis and the ecology of mind, Teilhard de Chardin and Sri Aurobindo, kundalini yoga and oral sex. The American Replacement of Nature is similarly eclectic. Even a partial catalogue (the book, alas, has no index) would have to include: the dubious motives of Biosphere II; Omni as a postmodernist Popular Mechanics; a phenomenological analysis of Disney World's Pirates of the Caribbean; noise as "the solvent of Renaissance individuality"; the health effects of ELF (extremely low‐ frequency radiation); cyberpunk science fiction; the contemporary relevance of occult philosopher Rudolf Steiner; Marshall McLuhan, Jean Gebser, and Owen Barfield on the evolution of consciousness; Disney "Imagineering" compared to deconstruction; the Catholic Church as the "world's first multinational corporation"; the evolutionary causes of the Great Depression; jazz as the manifestation of a new economic order; the movie theatre in the Depression as a "mystery school in which T h e C o l l e c t e d W o r k s o f D a v i d L a v e r y 44 people could pass from misery to happiness"; pollution as "the new source of improvisation, the new 'ground' for economic value"; Jungian‐style interpretations of 1) planetary ecological damage, 2) Third World drug trafficing, and 3) the Persian Gulf War; the "cultural entropy of global religious warfare from Ireland to Indonesia to Idaho"; the philosophizing of Richard Rorty as "the frustrated shriek of a pettifogging clerk"; the essentially patriarchal mind‐set of his friend, poet Wendell Berry; Islamic "nativistic attacks" on airlines compared to the Ghost Dance movement of the plains Indians; Ted Turner as "the true dharma heir in the esoteric lineage of Walt Disney"; Ronald Reagan as "the first entirely Audio‐Animatronic President"; George Bush as the perfect President for our "TV‐shortened attention span"; why Saddam "ironically energized the system he wished to annul"; an impressive catalog of potential tribal and racial wars across the globe; the skinhead movement as the "ghost dance of the rednecks"; a meditation on the "industrial delicacies" available in an Arkansas supermarket; chicken farms as concentration camps; "the debasement of food in America" as "a very clever and rather insidious preparation for a more general debasement of our politics as culture" (in the U.S., Thompson writes,"even the food is a moon shot, a fast food rocket aimed away from the Earth"); addiction as "adaptation . . . to the newly emerging artificial environment"; the Gnostic visions of robotics pioneer Hans Moravec; an analysis of the prophetic value of Moby Dick; the "autopoetic" nature of American capitalism and its uncanny ability to "generate new planetary mythological systems" . . . For the most part Thompson's method is that of the Nietzschean aphorist, a mountain climber leaping from one peak to the next. His descents nevertheless lead to some valuable discoveries in several significant valleys. He finds the now‐emergent medium known as Virtual Reality a momentous evolutionary step. He discovers in the special body suit VR users must wear "a technological literalization of the esoteric subtle body, or etheric body, the pranamayakosa of Yoga and Tibetan Buddhism." Nor can it be accidental, he writes, that the goggles and helmet of VR "give the appearance of being a new Neanderthal, supraorbital ridge, an evolution of the hominid forehead in which the Self becomes the theater itself." In The American Replacement of Nature's largest section (the book is divided into five parts, intended to give it the appearance of a VCR deck or the face of a remote control device: "Fast Foreword," "Play," "Record," "Erase," "Reverse"), Thompson explores "Disney's World: The American Replacement of Culture." Having T h e C o l l e c t e d W o r k s o f D a v i d L a v e r y 45 learned in his youth the power of the "Disney version"—autobiographical reminiscences tell of his first initiation as a child into the mysteries of the evolution of consciousness while watching Fantasia—Thompson finds Disneyism "secular camouflage for a civic religion": "In the midst of the Depression, Walt Disney received his inspiration to recover the archaic through modern media; his mind drifted off into a reverie, sank to archaic levels of consciousness in totemism and animism, and resurfaced with an animated mouse." (Ronald Reagan, Thompson suggests, provocatively, was Disney's Lenin; i.e. Lenin was to Marx as Reagan was to Disney.) The Persian Gulf War receives twenty two pages of attention, as Thompson tries to explain why an avowed opponent of American involvement in Viet Nam's fear that Saddam's belligerency could lead to "a dark age of universal ethnic violence" forced him to become (to his own great surprise) a supporter of George Bush's expulsion of Iraq from Kuwait. But the war itself, Thompson is well aware, cannot itself lead to any New World Order: "If we are to progress from an electronic collective . . . to a planetary culture of more individually enlightened consciousness," Thompson concludes, "then we need to have another renaissance on the other side of this last crusade." An entire section is devoted to "CNN: The American Replacement of Historical Reality." (In reality it is these pages which become Thompson's interpretation of Gulf War.) CNN, which came into world prominence because of the war, Thompson hypothesizes, may itself represent a key phase in mankind's evolution. The CNN Center in Atlanta, he suggests, can be taken as "a rendering of Teilhard de Chardin's noosphere," "a planetary lattice of satellites in which non‐stop 24‐hours‐a‐day news gives us the experience of time under control—history under new American management." But such media imperialism may have positive repercussions: "If we are lucky or blessed, global electronics will continue to uplink individuals in Baghdad and Vilnius and Riga until a new world civilization is so widespread that it makes it impossible for any dictator to lock up a cult or a culture." "The world has had enough of nation‐states and their armies," Thompson concludes; "it now needs places in which to experience itself as a world." Paradoxically, CNN and other global electronic media may, in their very placelessness, provide such a place. Thompson's great subject throughout is his own native land. His criticism of the "ever teenage culture" of the United States—of "Dan Quayle's Spaceship America"—is unrelenting and, coming from an author who coined the phrase "the Los T h e C o l l e c t e d W o r k s o f D a v i d L a v e r y 46 Angelization of the planet," not surprising. Like the German poet Rilke ("Now, from America, empty indifferent things are pouring across, sham things, dummy life"), he finds the land of his birth the seedbed of the ersatz, a "peculiar wedding of low kitsch and high tech": In truth, America is extremely uncomfortable with nature; hence its culturally sophisticated preference for the fake and unnatural, from Cheeze Whiz sprayed out of an aerosol can onto a Styrofoam potatoed chip, to Cool Whip smoothing out the absence of taste in those attractively red, genetically engineered monster strawberries. Surprisingly, The American Replacement of Nature's critique of American simulation is, by his own admission (a first), that of "a patriot." Thompson's new hesitant faith in America may seem at first to be the all‐too‐ typical turn‐to‐the‐right which has characterized the aging of many early radicals, from William Wordsworth to John Dos Passos, but it is in fact deeply ironic and of a piece with his larger faith in the evolution of consciousness: So call me an optimist in that I blindly choose to see our dark ages as temporary, give or take a century or two. And put me down as a patriot who saw in the repellent, ugly, and evil of our American society's revelation of a planetary culture approaching us on the other side of catastrophic transformation. Throughout The American Replacement of Nature, Thompson returns to his underlying hypothesis: that the "esoteric destiny" of America in the "planetization of humanity" (a concept he borrows, of course from Teilhard but which he reads with an Hegelian grasp of dialectic) "does seem to be that of the catalytic enzyme that breaks down all the traditional cultures of the world, be they Asiatic, Islamic, or European," a necessary dissolution (and disillusionment) which may well seem for those undergoing it like "an intellectual dark age," but prelude to, in a world‐ historical irony, "a new global culture that will become humanity's second nature." Damning America to its evolutionary fate with faint praise, Thompson even finds justification in the Muslim characterization of America as "the Great Satan": for indeed the new human nature that awaits us "is so artificial, so opposite to anything T h e C o l l e c t e d W o r k s o f D a v i d L a v e r y 47 that a traditional person would wish to call cultural or natural, that it appears on the horizon of the human as something inhuman, monstrous, and evil." But neither the now moribund Communist menace or the Islamic Ghost Dance has been or will be capable of preventing the advent of this new humanity: "there seems little chance," Thompson concludes, "of getting out of this century with the same human nature with which we entered it." The Age of Missing Information is the record of—or, more precisely a meditation on—an experiment. It is an extended comparison and contrast essay on two days, on two realms of experience, two sources of information: 1) two thousand hours of videotaped television, all recorded on a single day (May 3, 1990) on the 93 channels of Fairfax, Virginia's cable television and 2) a summer day spent entirely in nature. A chapter of description and commentary, call and response, to an hour of television is followed by reflections on his time in the "real world." I must admit I found myself reading rapidly through the book's nature writing, not because it is ineffectual or dull, but because, as I quickly, discovered, McKibben's talents as a television commentator are impressive. With McKibben in charge of the grazing, the "vidiocy" (Thompson's word) of quiz show, infomercial, sitcom, music video, televangelism, and talk show becomes food for substantial thought and provides, thanks to the heuristic value engendered by his experiment, meaningful discoveries about television's subversion of the immediate, its polishing away of the patina of the real. Many pages of the book chronicle McKibben's attempt to render into words the rich, various, and vacuous super‐text of television‐as‐a‐whole at any given moment of its flow. (As McLuhan taught, the meaning of a medium can only be expressed in another medium.) But McKibben's doomed‐to‐fail endeavor to transcribe TV's medium into his own medium of words becomes surprisingly involving. His bizarre, surrealistic juxtaposition of fragments of TV's superfluity—the book is framed by what I have deemed as "exquisite corpses," surrealistic exercises in random selectionŸŸŸ—are distinctly comic. And the book is full of other guilty pleasures. Frequent TV watchers will enjoy many shocks of recognition as they realize that they too have seen an unhealthy amount of Brady Bunch or Divorce Court or Super Sloppy Double Dare —and not even in the service of a scientific experiment. For the most part his insights about TV itself—that television alters our perception of the natural world; that it functions as an "emotional thermostat"; that T h e C o l l e c t e d W o r k s o f D a v i d L a v e r y 48 it is "less an art form than the outlet for a utility"; that its content is almost immaterial (television, he notes, "can find subjects of interest to all only by erasing content"); that television reduces all that came before its existence to "prehistory" (the medium's four decades, McKibben writes, now "seem utterly normative to us, the only conceivable pattern for human life"); that television preempts our suspicion of it by ceaselessly belittling itself, adopting a "deride and conquer" strategy—these are not really new. Jerry Mander, Todd Gitlin, Mark Crispin Miller—all have written urgently and incisively on such themes, and McKibben duly credits their influence. Like Thompson, he casts his nets wide. (A good one third of The Age of Missing Information could be characterized as digression, asides, usually interesting in their own right, not so much about television as suggested by its Rorschach patterns.) He explains why it is more important to understand the Brady Bunch than Twin Peaks. He analyzes television's role in the "globalization of markets." He exposes the false appeal of animals on TV ("nature documentaries are as absurdly action‐packed as the soap operas, where a life's worth of divorce, adultery, and sudden death are crammed into a week's worth of watching"). He contrasts God in nature vs. God on TV. He speculates on why it is that the memories of Baby Boomers are "spookily familiar." He shows why an ad for "Glassmates" reveals how paltry are "the kind of dragons we have left to slay" in an age of consumption. He wonders about TV's motives in "actively . . . savaging . . . an old order it once helped set in stone." He traces the evolution of teenage telephone secrecy from Leave it to Beaver to One Day at a Time. He investigates the "breakup of [the] Donna Reed order." He explains TV's complete inability to bring war into our living rooms. He considers the techno‐effects of virtual reality and HDTV. He ponders what would happen if God delivered the Ten Commandments on the Today show. He recounts how Finland terminated a McDonald's ad because "it falsely leads people to believe that a Big Mac can replace friends and ease loneliness." He realizes television's role in making weather less real. He exposes TV's inauthentic celebration of choice: "As much as it loves choice . . . it doesn't actually believe in choosing. It urges us to choose everything—this and this and this as well." He unearths television's secret link to contemporary disembodiment: If it is doing its job "correctly," you lose consciousness of your body, at least until a sort of achy torpor begins to assert itself, and maybe after some hours a dull headache, and of course the insatiable hunger that you never really T h e C o l l e c t e d W o r k s o f D a v i d L a v e r y 49 notice but that somehow demands a constant stream of chips and soda. If you off your nose to spite your face, or for any other reason, it wouldn't impair your ability to watch television. "People who didn't grow up with television," McKibben reminds, "tend not to understand its real power—they already had a real world to compare with the pictures on the screen. People my age didn't—we were steeped in television, flavored for life." He recalls that as a child "TV was like a third parent—a source of ideas and information and impressions. And not such a bad parent—always with time to spare always eager to please, often funny." A baby boomer, a decade younger than Thompson, McKibben grew up with television and immerses himself willingly in it, not with metaphysical intent, but just to watch what he calls "TV TV." Continuing his metaphor, he compares his experiment to "spending the holidays with your parents once you've grown up—in three days you comprehend more on a conscious level about your mother than you did in twenty years of living with her." And what he discovers is that the parent he had once loved is in fact dysfunctional. What is new here is the context in which such ideas are presented. When Susan Sontag issued her call for a new "ecology of images" two decades ago (in On Photography), she had in mind the application of the principles of a then emergent science to the proliferation of media messages in order to safeguard our consciousness against their possible polluting effects. The Age of Missing Information answers her call, partly through its own metaphors (consider, for example, McKibben's observation that "The most fanatic environmentalist doesn't recycle with half the relish of television producers"), but most of all in its project to study television as a phenomenon in and of the natural world. (The book's jacket shows a "Peaceable Kingdom" scene with lion and lamb lying down together—before a television set.) McKibben's thesis is simple and serious, unmuddied by paradox, presented up front: We believe that we live in the "age of information," that there has been an information "explosion," an information "revolution." While in a certain narrow sense this is the case, in many important ways just the opposite is true. We also live at a moment of deep ignorance, when vital knowledge that T h e C o l l e c t e d W o r k s o f D a v i d L a v e r y 50 humans have always possessed about who were and where we live seems beyond our reach. An Unenlightenment. An age of missing information. In THe End of Nature, McKibben's meticulously careful pondering on recent ecological controversy led him to conclude that the most significant effect of mankind's pollution of the environment may well be philosophical. The hole in the ozone layer, acid rain, possible global warming—these developments are important, according to McKibben, not because of their (much‐debated) meteorological ramifications but because they mark the coming of a "postnatural world." We have domesticated the planet, THe End of Nature argues, extinguished, perhaps forever, the existence of the inhuman. "We have changed the atmosphere, and thus we are changing the weather. By changing the weather, we make every spot on Earth man‐ made and artificial. We have deprived nature of its independence, and that is fatal to its meaning. Nature's independence is its meaning; without it there is nothing but us." McKibben's new book returns to the same important argument, for the "missing information" of its title—intelligence about which television as a medium can tell us nothing—turns out to be "about the physical limits of a finite world. About sufficiency and need, about proper scale and real time, about the sensual pleasure of exertion and exposure to the elements, about the human need for community and for solid, real skills." At one point in his meditations on Walt Disney, Thompson considers the meaning of the word "nature" as used by contemporary naturalists—like Wendell Berry and Bill McKibben. The "balance of nature" as these writers use it, Thompson insists, is in fact a "cultural fiction." "What Bill McKibben tends to think of as nature in his Adirondack musings . . .", he contends, "owes far more to the culture of Sierra Club calendars, the photographs of Ansel Adams, and the painting of Constable and Caspar David Friedrich than it does to the cosmic activities of the Creator." The book Thompson has in mind is McKibben's earlier work, THe End of Nature (1989), and yet it is unlikely that The Age of Missing Information would escape his criticism. From Thompson's visionary perspective, McKibben's ecological stance is monolithic, moralistic, and domestic. "Home means a lot to moralists," Thompson writes, "but the mystic"—and it is clear he has himself partly in mind—"is society's alien and is not allowed to have a home smaller than the universe, and any time he tries to settle for less, to settle down, and to set up fences, God appears as the T h e C o l l e c t e d W o r k s o f D a v i d L a v e r y 51 moving whirlwind." With no voices in the sky to serve as inspiration, no privileged knowledge of the turning gyres of history, McKibben's more darkly pessimistic book is necessarily of smaller scope, adhering to a sustainable, literally quotidian economy, which, in its minimalist fashion, is no less ambitious than Thompson's, as faithful to the earthly as Thompson's is to the timeless. Review Essay Television and the Legal System. London and New York: Routledge, 2010; bibliography, filmography, index; 141 pages. We now have Barbara Villez’ valuable Television and the Legal System in English. First published in French as Séries télé: visions de la justice in the middle of the decade by the Presses Universitaires de France, it has now been republished by Routledge in its “Law, Society and Popular Culture” series, translated by the author, a native New Yorker now teaching at University of Paris 8. Reading it again now, after struggling through the French version, I must admit to only grasping a fraction of its subtlety and breadth. It is certainly no surprise, coming as it does from one of the seminal European figures in the development of the study of comparative media and law, that this monograph offers an important guide, proposing new ways to think about how the import/export of television legal drama inexorably influences legal culture in a nation like France. “American citizens know their rights and how their judicial system works,” Villez writes in an important passage, although there has never been an obligatory program on the subject included in school curricula, contrary to France. It is likely that a vast majority of the population in the United States has acquired this information simply from watching courtroom dramas, perhaps religiously and for some, from a very young age. If the French television channels buy American law series and French viewers watch, when programming is reasonable, then it should be no surprise that people in France have acquired criteria on the American legal system rather than on their own. Watching the American law series produced since the 1990s, which provide a complex image of law and justice, the French have become aware of questions which are not foreign to their own society, one that has become just as judicialized and complex. Thus, it is perhaps not only the quality of these programs which lure the French viewer, but also the questions dealt with and which echo those of all modern societies. Villez also suggests discerning ways to think about each of the major players in such dramas, from judges to juries and contemplates lawyers as both mythic figures and models. T h e C o l l e c t e d W o r k s o f D a v i d L a v e r y 53 Television and the Legal System is, however, also a first‐rate book about television. So much writing about television these days—the Open Court series (The Sopranos and Philosophy, Seinfeld and Philosophy), the BFI TV Classics, for example— often have little or nothing to say about television itself. Villez offers not only important insights concerning the particularities of television narrative but a rich survey of seminal American legal dramas as well. Whether writing about Perry Mason, Ally McBeal, Picket Fences, or The Practice, she demonstrate an indigenous knowledge of the genre. Comparing developments across decades or laying out a valuable typology of the genre, Villez’s writing is consistently clear and judicious. She even examines the industry question of whether to “purchase or produce” and ponders the implication of the increasing international circulation of television, especially American television, for understanding legal systems. Television and the Legal System is not merely a translation. Villez has updated, in an afterword, developments since the book was published in France and given us a thorough and useful filmography as well. May I add as well, as an admirer of the form, that the book’s epigraphs are a thing of beauty? I count myself lucky to have heard Barbara Villez speak on more than one occasion. The same combination of engaging modesty and critical acumen she radiates in person shines through these pages as well.