Nixon & GR
alice wellintown
alicewellintown at gmail.com
Wed Jan 16 18:07:21 CST 2013
They are “self-made” men and women, in the sense that they did not
generally inherit great riches (though of course in another sense they
are government-made, depending, as in oil and aerospace, on large
favors from Washington, but they hardly like to think of it that way),
and they tend to a notable degree to be politically conservative, even
retrograde, usually anti-union, antiblack, anticonsumer, and
antiregulation, and quite often associated with professional
“anti-communist” organizations. Whether because of the newness of
their position, their frontier heritage, or their lack of old-school
ties, they tend to be without particular concerns about the niceties
of business ethics and morals, and therefore to be connected more than
earlier money would have thought wise with shady speculations,
political influence-peddling, corrupt unions, and even organized
crime.
The World Behind Watergate
May 3, 1973 NRB
Kirkpatrick Sale
On Wed, Jan 16, 2013 at 6:57 PM, alice wellintown
<alicewellintown at gmail.com> wrote:
> One could write a book on this subject, and perhaps some ambitious
> young scholar will do so....as we wait for this we might consider how
> Nixon fits into the networks that GR explores, and how the old
> network, the setting of the romance, the War, functions as the Puritan
> American period does in The Scarlet Letter or in the Cruciable, but
> the novel is about, its contemporaries and the lives in the balance,
> and so the new network, and, of course, the new money; yes, P's
> concern is with new money and the Nixon period, not with the old
> money, though readers have often focused on the Nazis and the Standard
> Oil, ICI, and IG Farben Octopus, but just as P explains how Orwell has
> been misread as saying something about the past, or as a propher, he
> is neither, and neither is P prescient, but only writing about his
> world, the new money world of Nixon, so of aerospace and defense
> contracting, of oil, and natural gas, and of the alliances, yes, the
> military industrial complex alliance, formed around these domestic
> opperations, in contrast with the international IG Farben and Standard
> Oil and so on of the War Period...of the setting of the novel's
> historical events, so we need to look, to a zone actually, but that
> zone is not European History, but American Expereince circa 1970, and
> so, as TSI and CL49 suggest, we need to look at real-estate operations
> during the postwar period, and the new money invested there, in the
> sunbelt, where the population explodes and so....Nixon.
>
> To argue that the book declines as it brings this into focus, or
> foregrounds it, is to engage in a selective misreading, as the
> evidence of the theater that is America circa 1970, as aopposed to the
> theatre that is the War in Europe is there from the very first
> page....and when we meet Malcolm X, or Little, and as we read on into
> the post-Invisible Man Nixonian American Experience, there can be no
> mistake as to where we are: in Nixonland.
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