Written by Paul Buhle and first
published at Counterpunch
It should be
a given that no memoir is inherently “strange.” Every life is lived uniquely
and has its own special qualities, drawn out at length (or not) by the writer.
In The
Lost Traveller’s Dream, Kovel has managed to summon up a spirit that
transcends as well as living within its, or his, own time. This is a life
“beyond,” something possible at any time but valuable especially in an era of
collapse, catastrophe, and perhaps improbable hope.
Joel Kovel,
to be brief, has been a prestigious and best-selling writer on psychotherapy, a
militant left activist from the middle 1960s onward, an eco-theorist and an
explorer of the world just beyond our sense perceptions. He offers us the
details most precious to him, the saga of his own family (or families), his
shift from one intellectual emphasis to another, his growth in politics but
also his political conflicts.
Memorably,
more than few times in this memory book, he steals mainstream prestige away from
himself. This is not exactly self-sabotage, although careerists would surely
think so. He contemplates the rewards alongside the political (and personal)
costs and chooses…not to be rewarded. Indeed, he sometimes chooses to be
anti-rewarded, not perversely but with political purpose.
Thus we come
back to the middle class secular Jewish lad
from Long Island going off to Yale in the later 1950s. His identity
group is mildly leftwing, including future New Press founder Andre Schffrin.
His future is in the budding psychotherapy field, and in A
Complete Guide to Therapy, he is on the literary (and career) fast track.
Alas, he does not like where it seems to be taking him.
The US
invasion of Vietnam, as for some of his generation but more of the ones following
shortly, distances him from his liberal sponsors. He enrolls in the Left,
carrying him and his would-be career to far places. His second marriage, to
left media activist Dee Dee Halleck, settles the matter, in a sense.
But there is
that professorship later on, at Bard College, traditional home of bohemian
intellectuals. He does his work and likes his job. And then the College becomes
the plaything of a high powered neoconservative, with the financial connections
that nearly extinguish faculty resistance around Kovel.
Add to this
Kovel’s commitments to ecosocialism, his intellectual explorations and
editorial energy, and you have a professor who seems, to conservatives and many
liberals alike, to be the sore thumb that sticks out. He became an ecological
theorist of note, shocking those academics whose inclinations are never really
toward “radical” solutions to global warming or the death cry of rivers. He
offered, more and more, a philosophy of struggle and transcendence. No wonder
he finds himself cashiered, bounced, in time to live a retirement of militant
resistance.
Some of the
many details of this heavily detailed book carry us toward St. Francis on the
one hand and the Sandinista Revolution in Nicaragua on the other. Or rather, to
his own surprise, these two seemed to be the same hand after all. A militant
atheist since youth, Kovel was taken with the connection of ecological
visionaries from the distant past and present. St. Francis had, after all,
broken with his own wealthy family and set himself for a life with the poor.
This saint did not actually defect to the heretics suffering persecution or
break with the Pope persecuting them. His was, finally, a sort of in-house
rebellion. The Sandinistas would certainly have preferred this option, but faced
a scolding Pope who desperately feared Liberation Theology and the “People’s
Church” that had arisen during the Revolution.
Kovel is
drawn, understandably, to the charisma of Ernesto Cardenal in particular, and
through that connection, ponders a leftwing religious mysticism that still
intrigues him. Given the sad fate of a Central American revolution too close to
the US to win like the Vietnamese, Kovel had another paradise of sorts, far
further North. That is: Vermont, also full of utopians. The Bread and Puppet
Theater had and has a creative vitality that could easily be called spiritual.
That Kovel never quite relocated politically to Vermont is attributed, in part,
to the well-known fractious sentiments of eco-anarchist Murray Bookchin, the
sage of Burlington known best, in later days, for personal attacks on Bernie
Sanders. It would not have been a happy partnership.
Kovel chose
instead upstate New York. This brought him into the Green Party, reaching
ballot status in the state by the late 1990s. The Greens possessed wonderfully
odd characters, the oddest perhaps Al Lewis (of The Munsters)—when out of
disguise an ancient Red. Kovel himself ran for the US Senate against Alphonse
D’Amato and Chuck Schumer, the latter an emerging Democratic centrist in the
pocket of the Israel Lobby. At a high point of Green activity, Kovel dreamed of
running for president on the Green ticket. This time, in 2000, Ralph Nader
stood implacably in the way.
That Kovel
afterward took over Capitalism, Nature, Socialism from James O’Connor (reviewer
acknowledgment: I have had an intermittent column in this journal for twenty
years) in 2003, seeing the journal through rocky times to another editorial
team. By the end of his tenure, Kovel had done his work. Travel, socialist and
ecological discussions across geographical zones, and more rumination have all
followed. The Lost Traveler’s Dream ends up as close to William Blake as to
Marx, a logic embedded in this book from its first pages.
No comments:
Post a Comment