Yet “toxicity” is not a floating signifier. In the era of Covid-19 and anxious preppers, virus metaphors having become part of the everyday parlance of information technology with its disposability of human beings through the logic of the social industry. “Toxicity,” on one hand, could be shorn of meaning. On the other hand, it can be seen as going beyond de-humanization in order to render a human being as a walking contagion…
Read moreA Worker Reads Graphic Novels
“Normie” socialists, having largely lost recent political arguments in the new socialist movement – particularly in the righteous backlash against Angela Nagle – seem to be redoubling their efforts on the cultural front. Jacobin recently posted two highly questionable articles along these lines; John Halle’s “In Defense of Kenny G” and Alexander Dunst’s “Graphic Novels Are Comic Books, But Gentrified.”
Read moreBorn Again Labor Museum (HM London)
This presentation on the “Born Again Labor Museum (BALM)” by Adam Turl (read here by a robot) was given, along with papers from artists Anupam Roy and David Mabb, at a workshop on different strategies for salvaging the “utopian impulse” in contemporary art, at the Historical Materialism conference in London (November, 2019).
Read moreReverence to Irreverence/Irreverence to Reverence: An Anti-Obituary of Paul Krassner
Paul Krassner Is dead. Of course I’m no believer in any after-life, except I like that theory that what we see as “the afterlife” as reported in near-death encounters is our final dream as a proverbial loop, that second between body and brain death. In that case, one imagines Krassner in the midst of wild group sex, smoking the best weed and drinking the best wine, while the best music in the world plays in the background. At 87, he lived an exemplary and humane life, an oddball among oddballs, a mensch and a yenta, a merry prankster with an AK47.
Krassner was in that small cohort of people who constituted the very threadbare, and perhaps never truly consummated encounter between the sixties-and-beyond counterculture and the radical and revolutionary Left. He travelled in every circle, a founding Yippie who never made an ass of himself with the kind of self righteousness of Abbie Hoffman or the zig-zagging yippie-to-yuppie trajectory of Jerry Rubin. It was Krassner’s real-deal hippy wisdom that encouraged some of the Left to nominate a pig for president in 1968. Get it? As Krassner recounts,
Folk singer Phil Ochs observed, “A demonstration should turn you on, not turn you off.” It was the credo of the Yippies. We were in Chicago at the Democratic National Convention, where a certain competitiveness developed between Yippie leaders Abbie Hoffman and Jerry Rubin.
Abbie bought a pig as a presidential candidate, but Jerry thought Abbie’s pig wasn’t big enough, mean enough, or ugly enough, so Jerry went out and bought a bigger, meaner, uglier pig, which was released outside City Hall. In the elevator inside, a few cops were chanting, “Oink. Oink.”
The obituaries that have already been written on comrade Krassner (he’d probably make fun of me for saying that!) have done a good job in filling in the facts of his life – starting out at Mad Magazine, doing stand-up along with his mentor Lenny Bruce, all the while running an underground abortion referral service. Founded the satirical magazine the Realist published on and off until quite recently, all of its archives are online and accessible. Indeed I would venture to say that there are almost as many words written by Krassner in that voluminous archive than by Karl Marx on the Marxist Internet Archive. So the focus I’d like to take here is more to understand Krassner in his context and how while neither reducible to nor deducible from his context, he acted as a determining figure. His aesthetic, for better more than worse, permeates the best in North American humour and North American radical politics, not to mention our relationships with sexuality, weed and psychedelics.
Without Krassner and Lenny Bruce and their ilk, steeped in the legendary milieu of Mad Magazine, you wouldn’t have Carlin, Pryor and so on. Yet Krassner was, as the obits all note, an activist above all else, the closest modern analogue would perhaps be Boots Riley. He was there fror the folks who needed abortions that he gladly helped with, he was there for queer liberation. He was there for the antiwar movement and the labour movement. He was there for the sex workers he championed – as workers, not objects – in his seventies writing on porn, he was here for the satirists and writers and cartoonists he championed and cultivated. He was the rare sixties male figure to by all accounts have genuinely decent gender politics. While ambiguous about it, it is not unreasonable to assume that he was bisexual especially if one reads his writing on sexuality as such. Yet he was not a “theorist’, he was a jokerman, his art was his profanity.
So you’ve already been told by all the obits that he was a foundational yippie (he coined the term!) and lifelong peace activist who, as the AP notes, never burnt out and never faded away. In a sense Krassner was one of those Jewish guys who was born old, and just grew into his age, the rabbinical wisdom as cultural memory even if like me, he was Deutscherite to the bone. Yet he was someone who, in satire and in political activity, he groped for – meaning. Not God, not New Age woo woo, but meaning, cultivation of sensibilities, Bildung. Nothing under the sun was alien to him. And he found it and helped create it in the abode of the production and consumption of sex, drugs and rock & roll.
Indeed, Krassner was the first person I ever interviewed and wrote about as a 19 year old student journalist. Having recently been on the Prankster bus in a group with Ken Kesey when they showed up at a Phish concert in Buffalo, and even meeting Mountain Girl on the west coast, meeting Krassner was heady stuff for a young guy. I thought it was such a big deal that he was speaking in Montreal that it seemed almost awkward how nearly empty the space was in which he was doing his schtick, along with the inimitable Wavy Gravy. It occurred to me then that I was onto something that was like a forgotten history, and my writing and theoretical work has largely concerned this forgotten history – the politics of counterculture, what I call the missed encounter.
In the standard narrative of the sixties, the truism, if with some complications, that the hippie milieu was intrinsically connected to Left politics, or moreso that both were a manifestation of the spirit of the age has been somewhat eclipsed, even by some on the Left by a narrative that situates them as discrete and often at loggerheads. While there is much to say (I wrote a dissertation on the matter) on the obscurantism of some hippies and the tailism and/or moralism from some of the Left, this friction occurred within a shared common sense and a shared social experience and there is much more than obscurantism and moralism to engage – as seen in the revival of “Acid Communism”. The narrative, as told from some of the more socially conservative segments of the Left, and even some who should know better, is that counterculture militates against radical politics, that it is inherently a statement of life in capitalist society. Yet, as I wrote a few years back in a critique of A. Nagle, “Counterculture and the avant-garde, to be clear, are products of how everyday life is produced and reproduced within class societies in general, and capitalism in particular. This process echoes the system’s combined and uneven development, its constant search for novelty, the constant destruction and creation of capital, and the near universality of uneven and mixed consciousness. To outright deny any political meaning in counterculture or marginal or antinomian types is profoundly un-materialist”.
There certainly was meaning to Krassner’s satire. Whether it was to mock Spiro Agnew’s comments that opponents of the Vietnam war were women, he joked that “Spiro Agnew” could be scrambled to “grow a penis”. When that reactionary Walter Disney died, Krassner, publisher of the legendary radical satire magazine the Realist, conceived and commissioned from his former Mad Magazine colleague Wally Wood what was called the Disneyland Memorial Orgy. Upon first glance it is just a funny scene of a vast meadow of all the Disney icons in a wild orgiastic state. Some just watch, like the the lost Boys, Peter Pan and the enigmatic Stromboli masturbating to the site of Tinkerbell about to do some type of performance alongside none other than Jiminy Cricket. Indeed Pinnochio is watching and his nose grows and grows. And over there, the three little pigs are in a row, joyously fucking each other to the delight of the Big Bad Wolf. Over the brook, the Seven Dwarves dote on the dominant Snow White – at least five of them that is. Doc and Dopey have their own thing going on. Yet Mickey Mouse himself is oblivious, while Pluto gives a great big golden shower to an iconic Mickey portrait. Of course Minnie Mouse is in bed with Goofy, with an audience of Morty and Ferdie.
Likewise Huey, Dewey and Louis are on their own, masturbating to the sight of the dwarf scene while Donald Duck shakes his fist and angrily screams at the sky. This is to say that Disney’s iconic male characters are squares, oblivious fools who can’t even tell where they are. They may be angry at the death of the man who gave them voice, their own Gepetto, but they don’t look mournful. In the distance the Disneyland castle stands, gleaming with beams of dollar bills. Krassner’s spirit had brought the world not merely a pornographic profanation of the bastard Disney, but a dialectical critique. It engaged the telos of the charm of Disney characters by portraying them at the height of glorious fun, celebrating the feudal lord’s boss. The castle over the meadow was empty. What would happen in Disneyland with the death of the Lion King Walter? Mickey and Donald, those petit-bourgeois fucks care, but no one else gives a shit. This was class struggle profanation of the highest degree. And that – class struggle profanation – is the height of Krassner’s warm satire.
Krasner’s Groucho-Marxist revolutionary politics were fundamentally rooted in the profundity of satire, in itself a form of immanent critique, as he pointed out, “Satire has a truth embedded in the laughter and it can serve to wake people up from their cultural brainwashing.” Sometimes a truth had to be wrapped up in a joke, but his jokes were not only understandable by way of decoding, like that of Slavoj Zizek in his more tolerable guises, or the high-level wryness of McSweeny’s. And sometimes reality itself is satire, but then satire moves one step ahead. Krassner’s veneration of satire brings to mind the power of a figure like Chaplin breaking the fourth wall in Great Dictator. He saw a real wisdom in figures like Chaplin, and his close friend Groucho Marx, who he famously introduced to LSD. LSD, mushrooms and pot, the whole old fashioned hippy psychedelic ethos was a very large part of Krassner’s life and output, though that “stoner” cliché is part of how the history of his era is misunderstood by both prevailing narratives of the era.
Cinema often gets it right. In the Coen Brothers’ Big Lebowski, the perpetually stoned Dude was once one of the authors of the Port Huron document (the original one!), there was a politics to Krassner’s beliefs around drugs, not dissimilar to the lumpen-proletarian Lebowski gleefully lighting a J in the Big Lebowski’s office. It was a fuck you, I’m not like Donald Duck and Mickey Mouse. It was akin to what Abbie Hoffman, in one of his wiser moments pointed out when he that a lot of the generational difference of the sixties was the eclipsing of “alcoholic culture” by “grass culture”. Krassner seemed to imply that cannabis and psychedelics could bring about an epistemological shift not merely on an individual scale. Yet he was never a huckster or a mystic. The late socialist critic Andrew Kopkind writes of asking a comrade if the revolution would be “like acid”. The comrade replied that the revolution is acid. This is not to say that acid itself was the revolution, rather that the psychedelic experience provided tools with which to see the world in its contradictions and fluidity. Consciousness, the theory went, had to be expanded somewhere, and LSD and a few puffs of grass could help with that. “Feed your head”, as Grace Slick says.
Yet LSD was nothing next to the power of satire, that is to say, in a sense, the power of critique. Krassner could be called the Walter Benjamin of the American counterculture, the lost and rediscovered figure, except there is very little that is tragic about Krassner. Yet there is much to be rediscovered, and with the Realist magazine entirely online, this is a project well worth undertaking. Yet I can almost imagine Paul Krassner saying oy gevalt, you want to get all theoretical here, you’re telling people to read my work by telling them to engage with them. And I’d be a proverbial straight man and say back that this is how I talk, you got a problem with that? What are you doing when you discover someone’s writing, are you not engaging with them? No, he’d say, I’m reading them. Don’t forget to pass by that piece of writing that convinced a nation that Lyndon Johnson fucked JFK’s skull on the plane ride back from Dallas. And of course, don’t forget his assistance on Lenny Bruce’s memoir or his later collaborations with Kesey, Ginsberg, Dick Gregory, Terry Southern, and the whole old weird American counterculture.
Read Paul Krassner. Once in a while you get the shown the light, in the strangest of places if you look at it right. It’s fun stuff. He and his generation remind us of the necessity to keep socialism weird.
Here is a GoFundMe for Krassner’s widow and family. Please help if you can.
Jordy Cummings is an editor at Red Wedge. This is the inaugural entry in Jordy’s blog at the Red Wedge website, Tinpot Beria. Jordy would like to thank the rapscallion hack James Heartfield for the name.
Erasing Arnautoff
A false narrative has been produced pitting “aging white male art historians” against “young people of color.” This narrative is doubly false as some of the murals’ most prominent defenders are not white; and there is evidence that many students do not want the frescoes removed.[3] Moreover, this narrative creates a false choice between art and the needs and aspirations of the exploited and oppressed. The question to be examined here is (at least) twofold: why has this false narrative come to dominate and, secondly, what lessons do these dynamics hold for contemporary socialist artists.
Read moreAnti-Fascist Protest Targets MoMA
In 1969 a group of artists, critics, museum workers and others formed the Art Workers’ Coalition (AWC). One of their many achievements was to force the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) to have a free admission day – to democratize access to the musuem’s collection. So it is fitting that last night, during MoMA’s “Free Friday" (February 17), a group of a few dozen protesters – joined at times by hundreds of other attendees – erupted in protest in MoMA’s lobby – demanding the removal of Larry Fink from the board.Fink, CEO of BlackRock, Inc., is also a member of President’s Stratigic and Policy Forum – a collection of “business leaders” who advise the revaunchist Trump administration. The protesters have rightly taken a position against any normalization of the Trump presidency.
Read moreLa Trompestad
The comic “La Trompestad” by Michelle Sayles is the perfect illustration of what it feels like to live in the first week of Donald Trump's America. Although we may feel defeated, we must remain vigorous in our fight against Trump and his administrations' spectacle of “alternative facts”. Michelle Sayles is an artist and community organizer living in Burlington, Vermont. You can find more of her work on her blog. – Craig E. Ross
Read moreFuck 2016, Support Red Wedge
Count us among those who wish to drive a stake into the heart of 2016. This was a year in which the world definitively became a darker, more impoverished place. We lost battles and we lost friends. Trump won. Aleppo fell. The Ghost Ship burned and looks to have opened a rash of low-level war against DIY art venues. Some great artists left us and some important comrades. There were victories, and important ones at that (Standing Rock, the defeat of a few authoritarians at the polls in Europe), but too few
Read moreThe Return of the Crowd (Call for Submissions)
We are looking for essays, papers, reviews, short stories, poetry, visual art, comics, and other submissions that deal with some of these questions. What does the return of crowds mean for an insular art world and its weak avant-garde? What are the aesthetics of anti-capitalist totalities? What are the aesthetics of today’s neo-fascists? What is the difference between socialist and fascist aesthetic leveling? What lessons for contemporary art and culture can we take from the Russian Revolution – and its artists and writers? What about lessons from other key revolutions – the Mexican Revolution for example? What about the aesthetics of anti-fascist struggles – in Spain, in Italy, in Germany, in occupied France? What are the aesthetic relationships between class and other identities in trying to build militant anti-fascist resistance as well as counter-narrative to neoliberal capitalism? What do the crowds of art history and past literatures – Zola, Courbet, Brecht – have to tell us about making socialist art today?
Read moreintroducing wedgeshop
Red Wedge Magazine is pleased to announce our new project wedgeshop; aiming to distribute socialist and popular avant-garde art, media and cultural artifacts (at affordable rates that compensate artists). At wedgeshop you will be able to order copies of Red Wedge, subscribe to our print journal, order special chapbooks, pamphlets, posters, digital materials, t-shirts, and more. We are also building up a platform for our co-thinkers and other left-wing artists to distribute artwork. It has become clear that the institutions of the art world and the culture industry will not sufficiently support a popular avant-garde. It is up to us.
Read moreVictory to Striking Cinema Workers
Recently, one of Red Wedge's editors had the chance while in London to stop by the picket line at the Ritzy Cinema in Brixton. It was perhaps one of the more spirited and creative picket lines that he's attended in quite some time, particularly considering the bitter cold and the utter intransigence of management.
The Ritzy is part of the Picturehouse chain of cinemas in Britain, which presents itself as somewhat art-house but unpretentious (the Ritzy, for example, is currently showing Jim Jarmusch's latest film Paterson as well as Office Christmas Party).
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Dollar Art House Sells Out
These are hard times. These were hard times before the ascendancy of Donald Trump; before the fascist human dust of the United States became emboldened; before the incoming administration started planning a series of social policy arsons. Times are even harder now. To pay for these hard times the Dollar Art House is selling out; or rather we are selling artwork and putting on some first rate poetry and musical performances. From 5pm to 11pm on Friday, December 9, the “Dollar Art House Sells Out” will feature music and performances by Poet X, IndyBlack, Sunni Hutton and Jesa D’Or, along with artwork by Craig E. Ross and Adam Turl.
Read moreThe Resistible Rise of Donald Trump: Two Performances
Poor Mike Pence. Greeted with a friendly gaggle of actors who both recognize him and are willing to express well-meaning concern over the havoc he may wreak as vice president. Pity too Donald Trump, who now feels blindsided by the realization that the theater isn't somewhere he and his cohort can retreat from the consequences of their actions.
Trump's reaction is what ultimately makes the action of the Hamilton cast a Good Thing. The man spent fifteen months using his own bully pulpit in a far less kindly way.
Read moreDylan as Poet
Bob Dylan has won the Nobel Prize for Literature. His name had been occasionally mentioned as a possible nominee in the past decade or so, but he was seen as unlikely to win for two reasons. The obvious one is that as a singer-songwriter rather than a published novelist, playwright or poet, his work has stood outside mainstream notions of what constitutes “literature” for most of Western establishment opinion, although the Nobel did, long ago, honor Winston Churchill for his works of history.
The second reason this was unlikely is that Dylan is American, and therefore, as we know from a gaffe years ago from a ranking member of the Swedish Academy, a provincial...
Read moreThe Flood
Hard Times at The Dollar Art House
We are pleased to announce the launch of the Dollar Art House and its first exhibition, “The Hard Times Art Show.” The Dollar Art House is a DIY project, based in St. Louis, Missouri, of Red Wedge editors and artists Craig E. Ross and Adam Turl. Dollar Art House aims to provide a platform for a popular avant-garde; experimental art that is connected to popular concerns and audiences.
Read moreDancing On Phyllis Schlafly's Grave
There is a special place in Hell reserved for Phyllis Schlafly. It is by no means the hottest or most painful sectors reserved for the Hitlers or Pol Pots. But it is a dismal one.
It is likely a gray, colorless room with no doors or windows. Before her are three buttons that provide a break from the endless, blood-curdling screams piped in from outside. Each button will briefly play a short slice of soulless elevator music chosen by the Satan's hand-picked focus group.
Read moreLucy Parsons at the Golden Nugget
Alex Pullman claimed to have been abducted by aliens. While aboard their spacecraft he had the following visions of the future. The bombs and missiles of World War Three were frozen above the world's cities just as the UFOs arrived. Later that day long-dead communards reappeared as zombies and ghosts – walking anachronisms in the streets of each city and town. The "Evicted Art Blog" will, over the coming months, share Pullman's account of his visions.
Read moreEvicted Art (8 Points)
As Ernst Fischer observed in The Necessity of Art, the origin of art in hunter-gatherer societies resulted in the projection of the human imagination on all that which could not yet be understood. Fischer argued that this was both a social and spiritual aspect of early art. Humans, he argued, rebelled against consuming themselves in the confines of their own life. At the same time art served to unite small bands of human beings around common concerns and a common narrative.
Read moreWhy Don’t We Make Love Anymore?
Annihilate, the new comic by Brandon Daniels and Sam Boven (Hive Mind Comics), begins with what appears to be some kind of microscopic cell, bacteria or virus. It divides. It then relinks as it grows. It is part of a subterranean network, a complex ecology. Evolutionary biology runs its course. It produces larvae and insects. “The grotesque concept of the body is not a closed completed unit."
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