In 2013, Schweizer founded another scholarly organization, the International Society for Heresy Studies, and is currently it's vice-president. Heresy studies is designed to provide an intellectual platform for philosophers, literary critics, theologians, historians, and artists who are interested in the dialectic between heterodoxy and orthodoxy, and who want to explore dissenting and heretical ideas outside of both confessional and anti-religious frameworks. He's the author of several books including Hating God: The Untold Story of Misotheism, and Christianity and the Triumph of Humor: From Dante to David Javerbaum, two titles that almost make me wish I'd stayed in school.
Prof. Schweizer isn't limited to writing in academic-speak. He can write well enough to pass muster with someone who appreciates Rebecca West for her writing style. Schweizer's substantive introduction explains in detail how he pieced together the notes and manuscripts of the book. I expect the chapter headings were part of this piecing together. Chapters include Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo, Trotsky, Mexico City, Race Relations and a dozen or so more subjects all in the best Westian prose. My favorite part of the book though is that about Dr. Atl and the Reclus brothers.
West was a prolific writer. She began writing for the Feminist publications The Freewoman, and The Clarion while still in her teens. She must have been a gifted child, if only because she was interested in and reading about the Dreyfus case, which trial was in 1899, when she was only seven years old. I've read two biographies of her; one book of letters; her semi-autobiographical novel; most of her better known novels; but none of her short stories and probably haven't made a dent in her journalism, though I have read The New Meaning of Treason, and A Train of Powder. I suppose I was trying to keep the memory of my father alive when, after his death in 1981 I felt compelled to read Black Lamb Grey Falcon. And when Robert Kaplan came out with his homage to Rebecca West with his book Balkan Ghosts, I latched on to it, all the while congratulating myself for being prescient concerning Rebecca West's importance. And my love still grows.
I
know she has her detractors, and I respect their right to be right or
wrong. I'm sure she made some errors of judgement and some errors of
fact in Black Lamb Grey Falcon, but how could one not, in a book so huge? Anyway,
history has a way of switching bogey men. One characteristic of R.W.'s
writing which some might find annoying is her frequent use of
hyperbole. For instance; in writing about Elie Reclus's attractiveness
to women, she said..."There are two types of women which eternally
attract Frenchmen, one tall and pessimist and Racinean, and the other
small and optimistic and Molierean, and Arabella was highly Racinean." (Arabella was her paternal grandmother.)
Carl Rollyson gives a chapter to Survivors in Mexico in his biography Rebecca West A Modern Sibyl. With the help of her notes, he explains beautifully how a monumental book idea developed in her mind during her first trip to Mexico. That trip happened in 1966 at the end of a book tour in which she promoted her novel The Birds Fall Down, which
had been a big success in both the U.S. and the U.K. The tour had been financed by The New Yorker
editor William Shawn in the non-contractual hope that
she might produce an article or two for his magazine. West's husband Henry
Andrews accompanied her but was somewhat of an impediment due to mental
lapses probably caused by hardening of the arteries. Henry was 72;
Rebecca was 74. (He died two years later.) She makes a few light-hearted comments about his
flakiness but to understand her relationship with Henry is beyond the
scope of this post. ...She loved him sometimes. Rollyson is very good
about Henry, understanding better than the other biographers I've read
so far that Rebecca knew that she was hard to love and not the most tolerant and patient of lovers.
*There were five Recluse brothers but for my purposes here we need only concern ourselves with the two.
After his time with the Fairfield boys Elie continued his Anarcho-Syndicalist tendencies and with his brother was involved with the Paris Commune, and later, through political connections, became a director of the Bibliotheque Nationale. Rebecca West sums up her father's relationship with Elie this way:
"Naturally, my father [Charles Fairfield] was in part Elie Reclus all his life long. Of course, Elie failed in his intention of instilling into his pupils no idea contrary to their mother's faith. It is true that my father was a Tory, but of the extreme sort which exalts the individual and would give the state hardly any powers at all, which is very close to anarchism, as conservatism often is today. When William F. Buckley junior tells his students that the only thing the state should be allowed to do is to regulate currency, he is making a remark which most of the great anarchists of the past would have happily endorsed. Since my father was so largely Elie Reclus, so am I, and that is why I have a certain insight into the mind of Dr. Atl, who had certainly read the works of the Reclus brothers and claimed to have been closely acquainted with both of them, and probably with truth, for they were always surrounded by anarchist sympathizers from all parts of the world, including a number from Latin America."
Some
say Rebecca is, at least, expanding on her relationship with her
father when she credits so much rubbing off of personality, but what was
in her mind is guesswork at this point. I expect, (and I'm not alone); she had a father fixation. She does, certainly, romanticize him. And if
that leaves her open to the critique of reaction-formation with the men
in her life, well, I expect there's not too much room for argument
there. Nobody's perfect.
Ten years after he left prison he migrated to Australia, where he met Isabella Campbell Mackenzie, a Scot whose brother was the principal of London’s Royal Academy of Music. Fairfield was “a skilled horseman and a gifted orator”*..and charming. He and Isabella were married and moved back to London. Enough time elapsed for them to have three children, all girls, Cicely-Rebecca being the youngest. However, by the time they settled in Streatham, a district in south London, “Charles’s womanizing and squandering had led to a breakdown in the relationship. It was no longer a happy marriage.”*
*West's World: The Extraordinary Life of Dame Rebecca West; Lorna Gibb; Macmillan.
What we know is that Charles Fairfield knew Elie Reclus well. Do we know that Dr. Atl and either one or both of the Reclus brothers knew each other? As far as I can tell Rebecca wants us to believe so. We do know that the Reclus brothers were two of the prime movers of Anarcho-syndicalism. And we know that Charles mentioned in a letter that he had met Dr. Atl. But as to a real physical meeting I'm not sure. ...I see it this way. It was a much smaller world in those days, and all three were in Paris at that time, perhaps the 1890s. Dr. Atl made it a point to hear Henri Bergson speak on several if not many occasions, and it is almost certain that both Reclus brothers did the same. Is there a connection between Anarchism, Revolution, Bergson's Elan Vital and volcanic activity? I think that element can be safely included on metaphoric grounds. As for his adoption of the Anarchist-syndicalist faith, West has this to say;
"This
was the most fashionable of all socialist theories at the end of the
nineteenth and the beginning of the twentieth century. To apply the
current test, it would certainly have been asked to a Truman Capote
party, while Marxism, though well established, was just a little too
dowdy for that, and social democracy, of the sort which has won in Great
Britain, [circa 1960] would never have hoped to do more than read about
the festivities in the newspapers."
Born in 1875 into a wealthy Mexican family, when he was 21 his father sent Gerard Murillo to Rome to study law and philosophy, which he did, but at the same time he became more and more involved with painting, his first love, and, as West says,
"Working for some time in Paris teaching studios, [Dr. Atl] adopted
the Anarcho-Syndicalist faith. Of the nature of his treasured faith, Anarchism, most people will have to be reminded, for it is no longer
modish. It rejected parliamentary Socialism in favor of a society
formed of self-governing unions of urban and rural workers who minded
their own business and left a minimum of power to the state, which it
hoped to confine almost entirely to the conduct of international
relations."
In
Europe, in addition to painting, he studied philosophy and law at the
University of Rome, and heard Bergson lecture in Paris. In Italy he worked for the Socialist newspaper Avanti and became involved with Socialist causes. In 1902 he changed his name
to Dr. Atl.. Here's Rebecca on the name change;
" ...[and]...he early changed his name to Atl, which is a word
in the Aztec language, Nahuatl. That it means water, sperm, urine,
brain-stuff, cranium, head, and war suggests that conversation in
Nahuatl must be a risky game; but indeed, an idea can be seen passing in
a stately way through these definitions, moving from an essential fluid
(one without then one within man), extending to the idea of man's
essential part, the intellect, and ending with what the Indians
conceived to be man's essential occupation."
In
1906 having returned to Mexico and connected with Diego Rivera, Francisco de la Torre
and Rafael Ponce de Leon the three put together an exhibition of paintings sponsored by the
editors of the magazine 'Savia Moderna'. Atl issued a manifesto calling for the development of a monumental
public art movement in Mexico linked to the lives and interests of the
Mexican people, a precursor of the Mexican Mural Movement launched in
1933. He was also commissioned by the Diaz government to design a glass
curtain for the institute of Fine Arts under construction in Mexico
City, which he did and which was executed by Tiffany's of New York. The curtain featured
the two volcanoes overlooking the capital.
*All
active volcanoes of Mexico are listed in many places so you needn't rely on me for
your volcanic literacy. The nearest I can tell there are 48
Volcanoes in Mexico. Mexico's volcanoes are part of the Pacific Ring of Fire and formed on
the North American continental tectonic plate under which the oceanic
Pacific and (in the south) Cocos plates are being subducted.
The most active volcanoes of the country are Popocatepetl, Colima
and El Chichon, which had a major eruption in 1982 that cooled the
world's climate in the following year. (I remember taking close note of that occurrence because I was, being way ahead of the pack, worried about Global Warming. Since then I've found other things to worry about.)
By now Amazon knows of my relationship with Rebecca and the other day sent me an offer I couldn't refuse, The Essential Rebecca West; uncollected prose put out by someone called Pearhouse Press, Inc., a selected collection of 16 book reviews and 7 essays, ...for me it's just a perfect bunch, a great gift to myself. Full of humor, ...and "off the nose" criticisms. (Off the nose being a term from jazz, or swing, or someplace, meaning coming in a little before or after the beat..., drum, bass, whatever..rhythm.) Among the essays is an extract from 'Survivors', "Cortez Meets Montezuma", which not only works well in 'Survivors', but just as well in this collection, book-ended by two smart essays on writing. For that piece she did a lot of reading, mainly from the writings of Bernal Diaz del Castillo, a soldier with Cortez on that fateful trip for Montezuma.
Prof. Schweizer says it well in his introduction to Survivors in Mexico,
"As in Black Lamb and Grey Falcon, West brings her conventional historical material to life with brilliant interpretations and creative narrative extrapolations. She embellishes Bernal Diaz's stolid account of Cortes's first interview with Montezuma, for instance, so ingeniously as to shed a revealingly new, personal light on this fateful encounter."
Bernal
Diaz, who's writing she must
have read carefully and with enthusiasm judging from the way she drew
from it, was with Cortez on that expedition. Diaz, born in
1492, the beginning of the age of discovery, was an astronaut of his
day. Colonialism was in its infancy and Europe was in dire need of gold.*
Without it Western Civilization was going down the tubes, something
that Marxists of today might wish had happened, but leaving that behind......,
*Probably one reason why there were so many alchemists around in those days.
In The Essential Rebecca West
there is an introduction by Anne Bobby, an American actress, who explains to her fellow readers who Rebecca West was since according to Bobby no-one had ever heard of her. [Well, O.K., My father was a
Yugoslav, ...and..., everyone's heard of H.G. Wells..., I guess,
because of Tom Cruise...]
As
soon as Anne Bobby heard about Rebecca West she set about writing a
one-woman show about her, starring, well, Anne Bobby. Of course she had
help, probably lots of help, from Carl Rollyson and a grand-niece of
Rebecca's, Helen Atkinson. For me though,
there was one particular problem with the intro and that was a quote
from the play. Is it from Rebecca West, or the playwrights? But wait, it sounds familiar. I went to my copy of Rollyson's The Literary Legacy of Rebecca West, to the end of the book, and there it was in the first few pages of chapter nine.
Anne Bobby introduces the quote in the following paragraph; "I remember a line from the play in which Rebecca traveling in Mexico with her husband, Henry, visits Trotsky's grave, and in speaking with his grandson feels the idea for what would have been her last book, her, "Final algebra of human suffering...," take shape;
"I would tell (Trotsky's) story, and mixed into it...would be my marriage, my family background and Henry's, the Aztecs, Meso-American art, the Spanish conquest, Cortes and Montezuma, even Napoleon. For we were all exiles and survivors...Though it was a huge pyramid of a book to scale, I hardly noticed."
Is that a direct Rebecca West quote? The last sentence in particular? If it is it must have come from Rollyson's research, or from that chapter, which, by the way, is fine by me.
West's
first trip to Mexico was in 66. My first trip across the border was in
1963, having hitch-hiked from Amagansett, N.Y. to Laredo, Texas. My impressions
though were registered on a muddled if not blank slate of a mind, since
I hadn't bothered to learn much of anything up to that time. I was
twenty and stoned. Rebecca West was 74 and she had been reading and retaining
ferociously for probably 70 years.
On her first trip to Mexico, stopping in Mexico City, they spent that evening and several more watching the sunset from the penthouse restaurant of an expensive hotel, followed the next day by a chauffeured tour of the city and it's parks and monuments.
One Sunday morning the driver took them to the Diego Rivera Museum, which is not the beautiful civilization that Bernal Diaz saw but a carefully arrayed ruins, austere and solemn. Inside the museum she felt a certain feeling of the interior of a pyramid. The shadowed walls were being used as a background for beautiful pottery and sculpture,
""which were also grey and black, [but], went for nothing because they had been designed to stand in bright light or against bright colours; and since the intention of many of them was comic, they were as disconcerting as Rowlandson* drawings would be hanging in a crematorium."
*[Thomas Rowlandson, 1757 - 1827 English artist and caricaturist of the Georgian Era.]
She gives a brief biography of Kahlo without much enthusiasm, but then she can't help interpreting Frida's work, and it ends up that she sees Kahlo as beautiful and crazy; a schizophrenic-narcissistic slightly silly but competent artist. (Can you be schizophrenic and narcissistic at the same time?) Then as they continue driving through the city she lets loose with the following zinger which I love. They drove but she had "...no idea for how long. It is odd that the evolution of our species never implanted a clock in our brains which would have been most serviceable, but perhaps Teihard de Chardin could have proved that this omission showed a divine care for the populations of Switzerland and Waterbury, Connecticut. [No footnotes for that, you're on your own.]
But she's not through with Kahlo yet and after seeing her in a certain dress and learning the story of the dress, the China Poblano dress, she tells how China Poblano became a saint in the minds of the people and Frida Kahlo too, a saint in the eyes of the mythologizing cab driver, who lets her know in no uncertain terms that she, Kahlo, was "....so good, so kind. Think of what she and her husband did for Trotsky."
It isn't far from the Rivera museum to Coyoacan , but West uses that cab ride as an introduction to the story of Trotsky's last days. And she tells the story with great sympathy for someone she believes was a great man. Was Rebecca West in love with Trotsky? I think she says as much somewhere but I've searched back and haven't found the exact spot, but Carl Rollyson says as much in his last chapter of The Literary Legacy of Rebecca West, a sensitive critique of Rebecca's last years, 1967-1983.
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P.S. Notes: I do think that in her time, (it was my time too, though I was much younger; I still, with the help of clarification by my parents, understood the social import of Trotskyism), to align yourself with Trotsky if you were on the Anti-Stalinist left, was the only sensible thing to do.
Was Rebecca over emphasizing her romantic feelings for Trotsky; perhaps as a charm offensive on her Communist sympathizing fellow Socialists? Why did she continue to call her self a Socialist? I suppose she thought there was no alternative, particularly in terms of taking care of the poor; but I do enjoy imagining her spending time with William F. Buckley, [which she did], and in the evening having a drink and letting her hair down, so to speak.
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