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WSWS : Arts
Review
Questions and answers at David Walshs talk at York University
in Toronto
By David Walsh
23 January 2007
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the author
Students and faculty members attended the talk on Film,
history and socialism given by WSWS arts editor David
Walsh at York University in Toronto, January 17. The following
is an edited version of the question-and-answer period that followed
Walshs presentation.
First questioner: I was really interested
in your talk, and there are a couple of things Id like to
try to piece together. On the one hand, you speak about this incredible
political and cultural ferment that went on in the 1930s and 1940s
due to both immigration and a more active Left in
both the United States and in Europe, which you are quite right
to say is lacking now.
Yet this implies that we now need a much bigger crisis in order
for that type of ferment to happen again. Would conscription in
the United States right now, for example, make people more politically
engaged? So this is something Id like to hear more about.
Im interested in, and a little skeptical of, this notion
of the past always having a far more engaged public sphere. If
we look at the 1930s, 1950s, and 1960s, that sort of critique
continuously comes up with this sort of nostalgia for a better
past.
David Walsh: I dont want to set up any
sort of parallel lines between now and the 1930s. And whether
you choose to believe it or not, I have not the slightest nostalgia
for that period. It was a time of the greatest defeats of the
working class, terrible tragedies in Germany and Spain, the murder
of Trotsky himself in 1940, the destruction of the socialist intelligentsia
in the Soviet Union through the Moscow TrialsI have not
the slightest nostalgia for that.
I want to emphasize that the past century has not taken place
for nothing. We dont begin from zero, at any point. We feel
that there has been a temporary cultural regression that is attributable
to those basic tendencies that I outlined: the decline of the
influence of Marxism and socialism as a result of the crimes of
Stalinism and the relative prosperity and boom of the 1950s, which
was itself only possible on the basis of tens of millions of corpses
and a world war. Those events can be tapped into, they can come
to life, were certainly not saying, First Hitler,
then us.
First of all, I think you underestimate to a certain extent
the degree to which a radicalization has already taken place.
Certainly in the United States, the present situation is a very
peculiar one. There was an election that repudiated the policy
of the president, and he is proceeding with precisely the policy
that was repudiated. And the so-called opposition party is quite
happy to go along with it. So what is the population to do?
We obviously draw some conclusions, such as the radical conclusion
that the two-party system itself is worthless and the population
is going to have to draw that conclusion for itself and create
alternatives. Now the process by which that takes place is obviously
very complicated. A population or a social class doesnt
change perspective like you or I change shirts. In the United
States, for example, the residue of pragmatic, individualist thinking
weighs heavily. There has been a mass discrediting of the establishment
over the course of a series of events, starting with the manufactured
impeachment scandal against Clinton, the stealing of the election
in 2000, the launching of a war based on liesthese things
have had an impact, believe me.
But how they express themselves politically is a more complex
manner. How that is translated into a political movement is a
complex process, and how that is translated into a cultural advance
is perhaps even more complicated. Culture lags behind. Of course
when it comes to an extremely mediated institution like the Hollywood
film industry, it lags even farther behind.
So as I said, Im not saying this is a repetition of the
1930s. There are convulsive events ahead, and I think there are
great shocks in store. Absolutely, and we dont have any
control over that. Im not urging conscription, Im
not urging war in Iran. A war in Iran would be a disaster, but
do I think its likely? Yes, I do. Because the American ruling
elite will stumble from a disaster in Iraq to an even greater
disaster in Iran.
We have no control over their intentions. We live in an extremely
revolutionary and convulsive period. What people make of it, and
how this appears in their consciousness and in their art, is another
matter. Obviously were calling for a certain orientation,
but events will present themselves, I dont think there will
be any shortage. On the contrary, one has to worry about truly
horrifying events taking place.
But in the 1930s, American capitalism had considerable reserves.
As Trotsky said, Germany has to re-organize Europe, but America
will have to re-organize the world. Thats what you see today,
the attempt by America to re-organize the world. And it will provoke
enormous radicalization not only in the Mideast, but also in the
Midwest.
Second questioner: I was interested in how
you said that you think filmmaking is going to get better, and
that it will be from young filmmakers hopefully stepping up and
changing things. Do you see technologies such as the advent of
more democratizing film production practices as being a signal
towards this sort of change?
DW: Yes, I think that is an element of it.
Again, I dont want to pat anyone on the back or flatter
anybody, but I think the digital culture that you have all grown
up in is an extraordinary culture with extraordinary potential.
Do I think its being utilized in the most advantageous way?
Obviously not, as my presentation would indicate. But the possibilities
in terms of its informality, flexibility, universality, and yes,
the democratic character of this technology, are absolutely extraordinary.
I dont think you or I have any idea what this will look
like in five years from now, and linked to a mass movement I think
the sky is the limit. And, yes, there will be difficulties. There
are difficulties in ideas, difficulties in perspective, but I
see absolutely no reason for pessimism. Look at what weve
seen with the mass protests in 2003 over the war, and the way
in which protests themselves are organized these days via the
Internetthe fact that there are social explosions that can
be organized that way is far more democratic. And there are new
means of distributing films, technologies, and artistic works,
though frankly Im probably the wrong person to ask because
Im somewhat of a technological dinosaur. But I have great
confidence that if this generation learns to think more deeplyand
it has to do that!and combines that with this technology,
it would be extraordinary.
People will learn much more quickly than my generation or previous
generations. Again, though, in order to learn you have to be oriented
towards learning and studying the history of social theory,
and the theory of the art form itself. But I have every reason
to be confident in this potential.
Third questioner: You talked a lot about early
cinema and about how the movement had to come up against the Hollywood
system, and I think thats whats so interesting about
those directors. They somehow used cinema to sort of weave around
what was going on and the constructs they were working under.
I know youre not pleased with what is going on now, but
you certainly cant cast out everyone. Do you think amongst
the people who are working against globalization, which seems
to be the underlying crux of the political shift thats been
happening over the past 15 to 20 years, there are any bright lights
in cinema? You had a long list of earlier cinema so Im wondering
if you also have a list of filmmakers now.
DW: Im not sure its quite posed
that way. In the last couple of years, weve seen a more
honest appreciation of some of the difficulties, and not necessarily
just from the younger generation of filmmakers. A lot of it relates
to the first question, and its about the war in Iraq, the
torture at Abu Ghraib, Guantánamothese things have
an impact in the United States and elsewhere, obviously. And you
know, shame is a revolutionary sentiment, among the better elements
of the intelligentsia. These things are being done in the name
of the American people. So there are films like Syriana,
Good Night, and Good Luck. I also thought Munich was
interesting, and thats Spielberg.
So you know, there are signs of life, but I think they are
all limited. This fall we noted a host of films, dozens, that
were of enough substance for us to feel we had to deal with them.
From Babel to Clint Eastwoods film, even Scorseses
film, which I didnt like at all, there were dozens of films
about the political and social situation in a general sense. And
they continue to come outChildren of Men, Freedom Writersin
a certain sense there are many that are well-intentioned, so the
general weight of the average American or international film has
increased. You can feel it, there is something more substantial.
I cant say that Ive thought any of those films were
truly successful, but I think there is a change.
But again, to get back to what I was trying to say before,
this change is bound up with what has shaped people. You know,
you come into this situation, youre revolted by the Bush
administration, youre revolted by war, social inequality,
the criminality of the corporate elitethere are many blights
on American society, Canadian society, French society, etc. But
what baggage do artists have when they bring these issues up?
What are they bringing to these issues? In my view, in many cases,
very little. That to me is the crisis. You can sense the intentions,
you can sense the honesty, but there are very limited efforts
because of the conditions that have formed people. So in that
sense they are not equipped to deal with these things they are
trying to take on. So there is nobody who I look to as a shining
light.
I think it will be more generalized than that. I cant
say that there is anybody who I think is really, really remarkable,
but there are a lot of people who are beginning to do interesting
things. But how could they not? Unless you are a complete hack,
how could you not be impacted by the events of the last decade?
And people have been, even in Hollywood. Its a very difficult
situation there where people are making literally tens of millions
of dollars, and they have to be guarded, they have to have those
entourages around them and live through a kind of gauze or a haze.
Its very difficult, and I have a certain sympathy. How can
their work have any immediate direct contact with the world when
they dont have it in their daily lives?
Thats just speaking of Hollywood, but to be honest with
you, independent cinema doesnt do a great deal for me, this
year at least. I know there are people who have done serious works,
but there is also a lot of self-involvement.
Third questioner: Hasnt there always
been that?
DW: Yes, but especially the last few years.
Third questioner: Well, it actually seems
that our technology has allowed us to be even more self-involved.
DW: Yes, but I dont think thats
just it, because these people have been formed under very different
conditions. I dont want to just sneer at them, though I
know I just did; to be fair, people arent responsible for
the conditions into which they are born. However, they then have
a certain responsibility to try to come to terms with those conditions
and with their own limitations. And you can only do that by studying
history, the history of society and the history of your own art
form. If you consistently see works that have more weight than
the work that youre producing, then you have to figure out
why. And I dont see a great deal of effort along those lines.
Fourth questioner: My question is based on
what youve expressed in your talk regarding consciousness,
intent and purposefulness. Do you think the artist creating a
work of art should have a political intent or purpose in the work
that they create? Or is it sufficient to just want to entertain?
DW: Thats a very difficult question
that I think depends on all sorts of circumstances. The unconscious
itself is historic; the French artist in 1924 took for granted
a hatred of religion, government institutions, police, the military,
the king, war, patriotism, so is that truly unconscious? Peoples
unconscious lives say a lot about their historical conditions.
Buster Keaton and Charlie Chaplin set out to make entertainment,
but what did they bring to it, both in terms of their artistic
sensibilities and histories, and also in terms of the politics
of the era?
So I dont think you set out to make a politically exact
film as such, or let me say, I dont think you set out with
a block of ideas that you then flesh out. Obviously, you have
a set of ideas, conceptions about the world, but it has to be
done with a certain spontaneity. If you begin a work knowing all
there is to know about the final result, then there is no point
in doing it. It will be dead and have no effect upon anyone. A
work of art should involve an exploration of what you dont
know. Also, you delve inside yourself and find out things about
yourself you dont like, as well as things you take pride
in. So it is somewhere in this mix of spontaneity and important
ideas that serious work gets done.
Goethe said you must be someone to do something.
Im not blaming the present generation for its lack of experiences;
you cant just invent these sorts of things. But you can
orient yourself towards these experiences historically and in
the present day. You cant make a film from a recipe book,
you make it from life. And in a certain sense when youre
writing about films, thats what youre trying to sort
out. Sometimes youre successful, sometimes not, sometimes
youre unsure. What is authentic in the work? What strikes
a chord? What seems to come from an authentic or spontaneous place?
Who is a poseur? Who is just trying to impress? Who doesnt
mean a damn thing he or she says, and just wants his or her name
dropped in the right circles? Theres a great deal of that
kind of thing going around, even here in university. I think that
is a very vexing problem. So thats just a partial answer
to your question.
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