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Authors: John Updike

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Jazz itself is not officially condemned and, as readers of Milan Kundera know, has a long and vigorous history in this very musical part of the world. The Jazz Section evolved, after its founding in 1971, from a union of dues-paying musicians to a kind of fan club for not only jazz but rock and the art of the capitalist West; it organized festivals and exhibits and—utilizing the printing privileges granted all official unions and clubs—published pamphlets and books; it became a gray-area purveyor of alternative culture. Its shaky semi-authorized status has been tenaciously maintained: when the musicians’ union, under government direction, disbanded the Jazz Section in 1983, it immediately reconstituted itself, with the same officers, as a local, Prague section; and when, in the next year, the entire Prague division of the union was disbanded, the section responded that its charter allowed disbanding only after a two-thirds vote of its membership.

The government’s piecemeal attempts at discipline, never addressing the issue of free speech, have had a flavor of desperation. In 1985, section member Petr Cibulka was sentenced to a seven-month prison term for “insulting the nation” after complaining that a restaurant failed to serve a low-cost meal as required by law. In 1986, section member Jaroslav Švestka was sentenced to two years’ “protective supervision” for “harming the interests of the republic abroad.” And a few days ago, I read in the papers, five of my comrades from that spring afternoon were pronounced guilty of “unauthorized commercial activity.” The proceedings had some Kafkaesque touches; when Karel Srp, testifying in his own behalf, said he had written one hundred thirty letters to the Ministry of Culture requesting clarification of its anti-Jazz Section actions, a government witness explained that “We could not answer letters from an organization that does not exist.” The judge, professing his admiration of their “contributions to Czechoslovak culture” and protesting that “we don’t want in any way to limit cultural movements in our country,” handed down sentences not only less than the maximum eight years’ imprisonment but significantly lighter than those the prosecutor
asked for. Karel Srp was sentenced to sixteen months, minus the six months he had already been in prison; the group’s secretary, Vladimir Kouřil, was given ten months minus the six; and the three others received suspended sentences. While the judge delivered his verdict, a crowd of over a hundred people, most of them young, clapped hands in the corridors and afterward sang “Give Peace a Chance.”

The Jazz Section has been punished, but with an awkward ambivalence, as the neo-Stalinist Czech regime, installed in the wake of a runaway liberalization twenty years ago, now tries to swing into line with the Soviet Union’s turn toward openness. The Jazz Section has suffered, but not in silence; international protest has been joined by braver open protest within Communist Czechoslovakia. I am told that the unofficial monument, so subversively remembering the founding of the United Nations, has been removed; I don’t know if the surrounding set of trees still stands. Trees can be cut down, but eventually others take their place. Eastern Europe is a forest where the growing will not stop.

A
NOTHER
“N
OTES AND
C
OMMENT,

published May 5, 1987
.

Birds do it. Bees do it. U.S. Marines in far-off lonely American embassies do it. Jim Bakker, evidently, did it. So, the strong implication is, did Gary Hart. Why do we care? Recent news developments demonstrate, if we ever doubted it, that we do care, out of all due proportion—nocturnal pairings and a ride to Bimini in the good ship
Monkey Business
easily eclipse such grave questions as whether or not the President of the United States, in his zeal to see hostages released and the Sandinistas deposed, knowingly broke the law. A startled young woman, gouged from her private life by a storm of publicity (which also brought to light many old photos taken of her wearing a bikini), is a more interesting object than the Constitution, even in this year of the Constitution. The affair (so to speak) is not merely, however, a testimony to the cheesecake in our hearts. Something new was injected into Presidential politics early in the administration of Harry Truman: the President has his thumb on the red button. The man we elect can push us into nuclear war and sudden death. Eisenhower’s was a slow and experienced old thumb we trusted; but the Presidents since, search as the electorate will, have been nervous-making: Jack Kennedy was bright and handsome and jaunty but young, with a thing about “Cuber” and Khrushchev; Lyndon
Johnson groaned with good intentions but seemed only to know Texasstyle arm-wrestling; Nixon was a bundle of suspicions and tics; Ford kept tripping over himself; Carter had that high twangy voice and a scary way of popping his eyes during press conferences; Reagan … well, Reagan has been soothing, but has he been minding the store? The issue was not whether Lee Hart could trust Gary but whether
we
could: he had an unsteady glitter to his eye, and maybe his hair was a little too long over his ears. We have to look these men over. With the limited accommodations the world has to offer nowadays, we all, more or less, get into bed with the President.

R
EMARKS
intended for the May 1989 ceremonial of the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters, left undelivered in deference to a fire scare that interrupted the proceedings, and published, three months later, with a timely new first paragraph, in, yes
, The Wall Street Journal.

We live in a nation where art rarely impinges upon the realms of government and power, aside from musical entertainment at White House dinners and the design of postage stamps. Americans are therefore naïve about government sponsorship of the arts, as if shown by the shocked indignation in culture-bearing circles at some Congressmen’s shocked indignation at the Mapplethorpe photograph exhibit and the NEA-sponsored image of a crucifix suspended in a container of the artist’s very own urine. The ancient law that he who pays the piper calls the tune has not been repealed even in this permissive democracy, and the cultural entrepreneurs so eager to welcome NEH and NEA money into the arts may now be aware that they have invited a dog—woolly and winsome but not without teeth and an ugly bark—into their manger.

The most dramatic government-sponsored event in arts and letters in the last year has been the promulgation by a head of state, the late Ayatollah Khomeini, of a death sentence upon a writer, Salman Rushdie, who was not then and had never been a citizen of Iran, but who instead was writing postmodernist fiction within the United Kingdom. The affair at worst may yet result in murder; at the least it has achieved, for Rushdie, a severe and apparently permanent impairment of his personal freedom. What are American artists to make of this astounding event? The concept of blasphemy seems quaint here, and almost as quaint the notion that artists might have to pay a price in blood for what they write,
paint, or compose. But it is perhaps salutary and, in the root sense, encouraging to be reminded that art is a significant activity, with possibly grave consequences, and that our freedom to be artists as best we can is not one that all societies automatically grant.

Nor, even in a society as generally indulgent as ours, is the artist asked to pay no price whatsoever for the delightful, cathartic exercise of his creative faculties. Neglect and relative poverty, to begin with, are the likely prices we pay for embarking upon the cloudy path of artistic self-expression. Further along that path, critical attack from one’s differently persuaded colleagues in art may await, and boycott, banning, and blame from the larger society’s enforcers of decency and positive values. In a capitalist society, art is expected to pay its way, and the demands of the marketplace work their own constraints. To reach market, one must negotiate with middlemen and envision a consumer, with his needs and prejudices. Friendly censors, in fact, offer guidance at almost every turn of a professional artistic career, and even the most amiable artist must at some point choose between an inner imperative of private vision and the outer imperatives of group acceptance. In America little appears sacred, in the sense that the Koran is sacred to the spokesmen for Islam, but success is sacred and tempts many to an insincere conformity.

None of this, of course, compares to Rushdie’s ongoing ordeal, or to that of Václav Havel and Frantisek Stárek in Czechoslovakia, or Albert Mukong in Cameroon, or of hundreds of artists under totalitarian regimes around the globe. But in all cases the artist’s defense against a society’s impositions and seductions must be the same—the problematical but deeply felt subjective answer to Pilate’s ancient question, “What is truth?” Each individual holds an impression of life, and the discourse of the arts attempts to revise the art consumer’s impression by the light of the artist’s impression. It is perhaps in the nature of modern art to be offensive: it wishes to astonish us and invites a revision of our presuppositions. A crucial offense that
The Satanic Verses
gave its enemies, indeed, concerns, precisely, revision—the possibility that the Koran itself was in a few verses revised.

One attitude to art, and not purely an old-fashioned one, construes it as a voice of the gods, flowing out through momentarily inspired mortals. It is magic, and the truth it proclaims is absolute, and mankind’s duty is to defend and repeat what it has thus received. The other attitude expects revision in the arts, experimentation in the sciences, criticism in
the public forum, and frequent change in the personnel if not the forms of government. All change, all revision, is something of an affront, and it leaves certain sacred securities behind. However, it contains not only destructive and dismissive tendencies but an optimism, a faith that the human sensibility can suffer revision and survive and even be the healthier for it. No doubt Rushdie knew his book would offend Muslim orthodoxy, just as James Joyce expected in
Ulysses
to offend the Irish Catholic Church, and Nabokov in
The Gift
to offend the orthodoxies of Russian Communism, and Hawthorne in his gently polemical works to offend the lingering representatives of Puritan theocracy. No doubt the artists who offended Senators Helms and D’Amato hoped to offend someone. But in this century, if we are not willing to risk giving offense, we have no claim to the title of artists, and if men and women are not willing to face the possibility of being revised, offended, and changed by a work of art, they should leave the book unopened, the picture unviewed, and the symphony unheard.

I would see art and government kept separate not to protect government funds but to protect the arts, for even the most enlightened patronage still exerts a controlling effect, and even the most well-intentioned and subtle control nevertheless contaminates the freedom of exploration and expression that we require from the arts, a purity of inner determination that distinguishes their enterprise from all others.

F
OOTNOTES
to
Self-Consciousness
(1989)
.

For one of our performances, she had been quite ill with a stomach flu
.

—page 38

Mary Ann Stanley Moyer reports that in fact she had food poisoning, from, of all things, some canned grapefruit juice.

My mother tells me that up to the age of six I had no psoriasis; it came on strong after an attack of measles in February of 1938, when I was in kindergarten.

—page 42

My mother sometimes kept carbons of letters that she had worked especially hard on, and among her papers I found a blue carbon of a letter from May 2, 1939, to her sister-in-law, Mary Ella Updike, on the occasion of the death of my grandmother Virginia Blackwood Updike. It begins, “On Sunday night a soldier quit fighting and all our lives will
have a new emptiness because your mother loved life enough to fight for it,” and goes on to mention me—“Now and then one of our neighbors tells me that John is a ‘good boy.’ They always say it with an exclamation point, as if hard to believe”—and concludes with this medical description:

John came out last November with the worst case of psoriasis I ever saw outside of a book on skin diseases. It’s like mine except that it doesn’t even try to confine itself to his scalp as mine did but parades in all its flaming scabbiness from head to toe. He had a very sore throat in March and an increase in the skin disease which may indicate a chronic infection of the tonsils. So, we think of selling John a tonsillotomy. How I’ll make a convincing sales talk with all my scabs and no tonsils to cause them I don’t know. Yet chronic infections do add to the horrors of psoriasis. And, of course, we want to do whatever can be done to keep the thing within the limits of decency. Bad as it sounds and looks, the children and teachers have treated him so humanely that (so far) there have been almost no mental complications and I’m mighty thankful. What the thing would do to his personality worried me most because, physically, there is little discomfort. But it has left him sane as far as I can tell and Wesley and I are trying to keep our heads too.

Louris Jansen Opdyck came to New Netherland before 1653, at which time he resided in Albany and bought land at Gravesend, Long Island. —page 192

David M. Riker, of the Holland Society of New York, wrote me early in 1990, “You might be interested in the enclosed record from the Van Rensselaer Bowier manuscripts which shows that Laurens (Louris) Jansz and his wife (Stijntje) Christina, were recorded as living on a Rensselaerswyck farm in January of 1650.” Thus my Dutch-American roots were deepened by several years. Rensselaerswyck was the second-most-populous settlement in New Netherland; a large tract granted in 1629, by the Dutch West India company, to Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, a diamond merchant of Amsterdam, it extended on both sides of the Hudson and included Beverwyck, which was renamed Albany when the English took over the Dutch colonies in 1664. Thanks to this genealogical chapter addressed to my two (now three) African-American grandsons, I have joined the Holland Society, a body of less than a thousand male descendants of the solid settlers of New Netherland.

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