A Report on the Afterlife of Culture
by Stephen Henighan
Biblioasis, 2008
Reviewed by Michael Bryson
So it turns out that Stephen Henighan's apocalyptic
view of Canadian culture is based on a vision of the apocalypse:
By 2050, wars and famines induced by
the scramble to seize dwindling sources of water, food, oil and
electrical power will have reduced the world's population to about
one-fifth its present size; the people who survive will be living at a
level of comfort roughly equivalent to that of medieval Europe. ... [G]iven
that we may only have a dozen years of rabid consumption left, it's
difficult not to pose the question[: what will happen to literature?]
... In the world of 2075, the struggle for survival through basic
agriculture may have reinstalled the gift of concentration to the
point where, if people have any leisure time, or light to read by in
the evenings, they may be more disposed to the pursuit of literature
than we are today (321-322).
It's hard to know what to make of this.
If we only have a dozen years left before the collapse of civilization,
the prescient among us will surely soon turn away from literature and
start hosting workshops on getting back
to the land and setting ourselves free. Henighan quotes Virginia
Woolf: "The merest pebble on the beach will outlast
Shakespeare." Then adds: "Plangent and personal when they were
written, these words encompass our collective condition today."
Steven
W. Beattie in Quill
and Quire (May 2008) lauded Henighan's "willingness to say the
unsayable, and his enthusiastic piercing of the balloons of Canadian
literary pretension." He also noted: "Henighan frequently lays
himself open to charges of paranoia ... and is prone to sweeping
generalizations." I concur with this summary, but as Henighan would
surely agree, it's the details that matter most.
The primary point of A Report on the Afterlife of Culture,
as I see it, is a lament for the loss of specific, local detail in
Canadian literature in particular -- and artistic products world-wide in
general. This is the other apocalypse Henighan wants us to see: The
clear-cutting and Disneyfication of local cultures around the globe.
What is "the afterlife of
culture"? Henighan illustrates the concept by telling a story of
Japanese tourist killed by Mayan villagers. The tourist was taking
photographs. The villagers thought he was stealing the souls of the
children. More significantly, Henighan wants us to see what the tourist represented:
the outside world, modernism, liberal capitalism. The camera was,
in this way, the tool of soul-destruction (not capture). The
"image," amplified through the centuries by technology (from
illuminated manuscripts to stained glass windows to TV, etc.), continues
to erode local (verbal) cultures. The local, Henighan asserts, is lost:
We live in its afterlife.
Like the Whos
down in Whoville, the Mayan villagers could not stop Christmas from
coming. But the story of the Mayan villagers doesn't end with singing.
The Mayan's lose the ability to conceive the world in their own
language. As their culture struggles to come to terms with modernity,
they suffer massive existential angst. Their young people commit suicide
in droves. The story ends with the domination of the Grinch: The United
States of America. More specifically, liberal capitalism. This is one of
Henighan's sweeping generalizations. International capitalism and the
USA are, in Henighan's view, the same thing.
International capitalism is destroying
the planet and the USA seeks to extend the assumptions of its culture to
the rest of the globe, erasing local distinction and cultural diversity
in the name of economic efficiency. The killing extends even to
spelling.
To state the spelling question in
terms of British versus American is to misunderstand it. Canadian
writers long ago forged distinctive spelling conventions. The question
is why ... these conventions are fraying. ... [This is] evidence in
microcosm of a culture that is being forgotten (238).
It is over four decades since George
Grant's Lament
for a Nation: The Defeat of Canadian Nationalism (1965). Hengihan,
strangely, doesn't evoke Grant's legacy, even
as he reprises his lament. Grant examined Canada's slip into the liberal
capitalist influence of the USA in the context of the defeat of the
Diefenbaker government. Specifically in the context of Diefenbaker's
refusal to allow US nuclear weapons into Canada. Henighan's analysis,
however, is built on a more recent foundation: NAFTA.
Some generalizations of my own:
- Henighan's longer essays are better
than his shorter pieces. The shorter pieces tend towards dogmatism.
Perhaps the form encourages oversimplified argument, which the
longer essays allow Henighan to avoid.
- Henighan's sharp dismissal of T.F.
Rigelhof as the exemplar of the "degeneration of the
culture of literary criticism" is as distasteful as the poor
criticism he is attempting to uproot. The piece argues Rigelhof
writes consistently sunny (i.e., uncritical) book reviews, then ends
by noting "his only full-bore negative literary review."
The book was by Bryan Demchinsky, "not coincidentally the
editor who dropped Rigelhoff as a reviewer at the Montreal Gazette."
And the same Demchinsky thanked by Hengihan on the acknowledgements
page of The Afterlife of Criticism.
- Henighan's argument is underpinned
by his explanation of the relationship between literature (the
books) and the publishing industry (the means of production). I find
Henighan generally convincing on this point. Roy MacSkimming's The
Perilous Trade, however, illustrates that the Canadian
publishing industry had been around many deep curves well before
NAFTA, online bookselling, and the dominance of the Chapters/Indigo
chain. The industry is in constant flux, and to read recent changes
as signally the beginning of the end times is ... um,
apocalyptic.
- Also, Henighan devotes little space
to examining the regional nature of most small presses in Canada. He
desires more emphasis on the local, yet that is exactly what most
small presses in Canada do (with government support...).
- Similarly, Henighan's analysis of
the history of the novel is socio-historical. His readings of the
novels of Latin America (the works of Gabriel Garcia Marquez et al)
are informed, for example, by his critique of global capitalism.
This approach is illuminating -- and Henighan's scope is often
remarkable. However, his approach underplays other aspects of the
development of the novel, such as narrative and language technique,
about which I wish he'd said more.
- One of the strengths of this book is
Henighan's global connections. He is well-travelled as well as
well-read. The Afterlife of Criticism speaks to a global
audience (while maintaining the local specificities of its Canadian
roots, of course). I don't know of another recent book of Canadian
literary criticism that accepts the challenge of globalisation
(globalization?): Both the economic and cultural
streams. Henighan treats CanLit within the context of WorldLit and
attempts to discuss CanLit in real-time, historical context.
- What does this last sentence mean?
Well. On the one hand, Henighan's grapples well with the influence
of global capitalism and culture, which is the leading force of
change in our world, afterall.
- On the other hand, Henighan
engages the reviewers and critics of his previous book When
Words Deny The World. Hengihan's battles with Michael Redhill,
Lisa Moore and Russell Smith are reprised here, for example.
- It's disappointing, however, that
Henighan finds it "difficult to think of one [reviewer] that
engaged in any depth with the [previous] book's central aesthetic
contention." When Words Deny The World, Hengihan says,
received 30 reviews: Not one "engaged in any depth with
the book's central aesthetic contention"? This reads like
egotism and serves to isolate Henighan from the community he is
critiquing.
- Isolation, however, appears to be
Henighan's main operating mode. He recounts how agents attempted to
groom him to be "the next Mark
Kingwell," following the release of When Words Deny The
World and how he resisted their overtures. He has, in other
words, remained uncontaminated by the forces of global capitalism
against which he is fighting the good fight.
- I imagine a poster above Henighan's
computer of Joe
Strummer.
Some final words from Henighan:
Let the local resonate! Listen to the
rural local and the urban local and all their points of
interconnection. The vast changes that will overtake us once the oil
and water run out may mire us in local life. Now is the time to forge
our aesthetic of the cosmopolitanism on our doorstep (339).
Final words from The
Clash:
London calling to the faraway towns
Now that war is declared-and battle come down
London calling to the underworld
Come out of the cupboard, all you boys and girls
London calling, now dont look at us
All that phoney beatlemania has bitten the dust
London calling, see we aint got no swing
cept for the ring of that truncheon thing
Chorus
The ice age is coming, the sun is zooming in
Engines stop running and the wheat is growing thin
A nuclear error, but I have no fear
London is drowning-and I live by the river
Michael Bryson is the
editor of The Danforth Review.
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