I first met Rebecca Solnit on-line. She sent an essay in to Tomdispatch in 2003, not long after the invasion of Iraq began, just as so many who had demonstrated against the onrushing war were packing their bags and heading home in despair. It was called Acts of Hope: Challenging Empire on the World Stage, and, soon enough, it would expand into a little gem of a book one that changed the way I looked at the world Hope in the Dark, Untold Histories, Wild Possibilities.
Consider that work the secret thirteenth companion to Solnit's 12 book choices below her "secret library of hope" which offer a reader encouragment not to curl up in despair when faced with a grim world. And here's a bit of small-scale synergy that brightens my own life. My favorite bookstore on the planet, City Lights in San Francisco, is putting up a "Secret Library of Hope" window display of Solnit's suggestions, with most of the books specially stickered and available inside (along with this essay).
As someone who regularly wears a "City Lights Books" baseball
cap in New York City, I can hardly imagine a more enjoyable response to
a Tomdispatch post except for your e-letters which pour in regularly.
I always read them and I try my best to answer, when I'm not swept
away. I've taken to calling them "the university of my later years." So
let me offer Tomdispatch readers a small thank-you for every one of
those letters, for all the support, encouragement, and
criticism you've offered this year, for the tips on articles or books I
might have missed, for the descriptions of lives I'd otherwise never
know about and places I'll never get to, for the just-after-publication
catching of mistakes and errors, for passing Tomdispatch posts on to
friends, colleagues, and those who disagree, for every small act you've
taken to mitigate the damage being done on, and to, this planet, for
every small space for hope you've created in me. Tom
The Secret Library of Hope
12 Books to Stiffen Your Resolve
by Rebecca Solnit
Hope is an orientation, a way of scanning the wall
for cracks or building ladders rather than staring at its obdurate
expanse. It's a worldview, but one informed by experience and the
knowledge that people have power; that the power people possess
matters; that change has been made by populist movements and dedicated
individuals in the past; and that it will be again.
Dissent in this country has become largely a culture of diagnosis rather than prescription, of describing what is wrong with them, rather than what is possible for us.
But even in English, a robust minority tradition can be found. There
are a handful of books that I think of as "the secret library of hope."
None of them deny the awful things going on, but they approach them as
if the future is still open to intervention rather than an
inevitability. In describing how the world actually gets changed, they
give us the tools to change it again.
Here, then, are some of the regulars in my secret political library of hope, along with some new candidates:
Monks, Slaves, Prisoners and the Power from Beneath
When the monks of Burma/Myanmar led an insurrection in September simply
by walking through the streets of their cities in their deep-red robes,
accompanied by ever more members of civil society, the military junta
which had run that country for more than four decades responded with
violence. That's one measure of how powerful and threatening the
insurrection was. (That totalitarian regimes tend to ban gatherings of
more than a few people is the best confirmation of the strength that
exists in unarmed numbers of us.)
After the crackdown, after the visually stunning, deeply inspiring
walks came to a bloody end, quite a lot of mainstream politicians and
pundits pronounced the insurrection dead, violence triumphant as
though this play had just one act, as though its protagonists were
naοve and weak-willed. I knew they were wrong, but the argument I
rested on wasn't my own: I went back to Jonathan Schell's The Unconquerable World: Power, Nonviolence, and the Will of the People, by far the most original and ambitious of the many histories of nonviolence to appear in recent years.
When it came out as the current war began in the spring of 2003, the
book was mocked for its dismissal of the effectiveness of violence, but
Schell's explanation of how superior military power failed abysmally in
Vietnam was a prophesy waiting to be fulfilled in Iraq. Schell himself
is much taken with the philosopher Hannah Arendt, whom he quotes
saying, in 1969:
"To
substitute violence for power can bring victory, but the price is very
high; for it is not only paid by the vanquished, it is also paid by the
victor in terms of his own power."
I hope that his equally
trenchant explanation of the power of nonviolence is fulfilled in
Burma. Schell has been a diligent historian and philosopher of nuclear
weapons since his 1982 bestseller The Fate of the Earth, but this book traces the rise of nonviolence as the other half of the history of the violent twentieth century.
That's what books in a library of hope consist of not a denial of the
horrors of recent history, but an exploration of the other tendencies,
avenues, and achievements that are too often overlooked. After all, to
return to Burma, much has already changed there since September:
Burma's greatest supporter, China, has been forced to denounce the
crackdown and may be vulnerable to more pre-Olympics pressure on the
subject; India has declared a moratorium on selling arms to the
country; a number of companies have withdrawn from doing business
there; and the U.S. Congress just unanimously passed a bill, HR 3890,
to increase sanctions, freeze the junta's assets in U.S. institutions,
and close a loophole that allowed Chevron to profit spectacularly from
its business in Burma.
Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi was elected as Burma's head
of state in 1990 and has, ever since, been under house arrest or
otherwise restricted. She nonetheless remains the leader of, as well as
a wise, gentle, fearless voice for, that country's opposition. Since
the uprising, her silencing has begun to dissolve amid meetings with a
UN envoy and members of her own political party; some believe she may
be on her way to being freed. The Burmese people were hit with hideous,
pervasive violence, but they have not surrendered: small acts of
resistance and large plans for liberation continue.
The best argument for hope is how easy it ought to be for the rest of
us to raise its banner, when we look at who has carried it through
unimaginably harsh conditions: Nelson Mandela's Long Walk to Freedom
recounts his unflagging dedication to his country's liberation
(imperfect though it may still be); Rigoberta Menchu dodged death
squads to become a champion of indigenous rights, a Nobel laureate, and
a recent presidential candidate in Guatemala; Oscar Oliveira proved
that a bunch of poor people in Bolivia can beat Bechtel Corporation
largely by nonviolent means, as he recounts in !Cochabamba!;
and Nobel Laureate and Burmese national icon Aung San Suu Kyi radiates
even from the page an extraordinary calm and patience, perhaps the
result of her decades of Buddhist practice. She remarks, toward the end
of The Voice of Hope,
a collection of conversations with her about Burma, Buddhism, politics,
and her own situation, "Yes I do have hope because I'm working. I'm
doing my bit to try to make the world a better place, so I naturally
have hope for it. But obviously, those who are doing nothing to improve
the world have no hope for it."
For a book about those who did their bit beautifully long ago, don't miss Adam Hochschild's gripping Bury the Chains: Prophets and Rebels in the Fight to Free an Empire's Slaves.
It begins with a handful of London Quakers who decided in the 1780s to
abolish the institution of slavery in the British Empire and then, step
by unpredictable step, did just that. It's an exhilarating book simply
as the history of a movement from beginning to end, and so suggests how
many other remarkable movements await their historian; others, from the
women's movement to rights for queers to many environmental struggles,
still await their completion. If only people carried, as part of their
standard equipment, a sense of the often-incremental, unpredictable
ways in which change is wrought and the powers that civil society
actually possesses, they might go forward more confidently to wrestle
with the wrongs of our time, seeing that we have already won many times
before.
Indians, Environmentalists, and Utopians
One spectacular book along these lines already exists: Charles Wilkinson's Blood Struggle: The Rise of Modern Indian Nations.
For us non-native people, Native Americans became far more visible
during the huge public debates around the meaning of the Quincentennial
of 1992 the 500th anniversary of Columbus's arrival in this
hemisphere. They reframed the history of the Americas as one of
invasion and genocide, rather than discovery and development. But the
story was not a defeatist one; simply in being able to tell their own
stories and reshape their histories, native people of the Americas
demonstrated that they were neither wholly conquered, nor eradicated;
and, since then, the history of the two continents has been radically
revised and indigenous peoples have won back important rights from
Bolivia to Canada.
In the United States that reclaiming of
power, pride, land, rights, and representation began far earlier, as
Wilkinson's book relates. A law professor and lawyer who has worked on
land and treaty-rights issues with many tribes, he begins his story of
ascendancy with the 1953 decision by the U.S. government to "terminate"
the tribal identities, organizations, and rights of Native Americans
and push them to melt into the general population. This represented an
aggressive attempt at erasure of the many distinct peoples of this
continent and their heritage. Told to disappear, "Indian leaders
responded and by the mid-1960s had set daunting goals at once achieve
economic progress and preserve ancient traditions in a technological
age . Against all odds, over the course of two generations, Indian
leaders achieved their objectives to a stunning degree."
Wilkinson's monumental history of the past half-century concludes:
"By
the turn of this century Indian tribes had put in place much of the
ambitious agenda that tribal leaders advanced in the 1950s and 1960s.
They stopped termination and replaced it with self-determination. They
ousted the BIA [Bureau of Indian Affairs] as the reservation government
and installed their own sovereign legislatures, courts, and
administrative agencies. They enforced the treaties of old and, with
them, the fishing, hunting and water rights. Nowhere have these changes
been absolute and pure. In most cases the advances represent works in
progress, but they have been deep and real."
Late this
November, Canada set aside 25 million acres of boreal forest as a
preserve to be managed, in part, by the Native peoples of the region, a
huge environmental victory for the largest remaining forest on Earth
and for all of us. How did it happen?
I am still looking for an environmental history with the strength and focus of Blood Struggle or Bury the Chains. An exhilarating 2006 article in Orion
magazine by Ted Nace describes how a bunch of North Dakota farmers
killed off Monsanto's plans to promote the growing of genetically
altered wheat worldwide. The essay concludes:
"On
May 10, 2004, Monsanto bowed to the prevailing political sentiment. It
issued a curt press release announcing the withdrawal of all its
pending regulatory applications for [its genetically altered] Roundup
Ready wheat and the shifting of research priorities to other crops."
We need books on victories like this, books that tell us how this dam was defeated, this river brought back from being a sewer, that toxin banned, that species rebounded, that land preserved.
In fact, a broader history with some of those threads did appear this year, geographer Richard Walker's The Country in the City: The Greening of the San Francisco Bay Area.
It describes generations of struggle to preserve something of the
richness of this extraordinarily diverse region by defeating some of
the most awful proposals most of us have never heard of to, for
example, completely fill in the San Francisco Bay back in an era when
water and wetlands were just real estate waiting to happen.
The book does justice to a whole unexpected category of unsung heroines
the often-subversive affluent ladies who have done so much for the
environment and the community then moves on to document the emerging
environmental justice movement that took on toxins, polluters, and the
overlooked question of what ecology really means for the inner city.
It's a great, hopeful history of a region that has long created
environmental templates and momentum for the rest of the nation and
Walker makes it clear that this trend was not inevitable, but the
result of hard work by stubborn visionaries and organizers.
A decade ago, Alan Weisman wrote a profile of a town in the
inhospitable savannah of eastern Colombia, a miraculous community in
which that unfortunate nation's turmoil and our age's environmental
destruction was replaced by a green, utopian approach that involved
reinventing the roles of both technology and community. It worked,
though Weisman ended his 1997 book, Gaviotas: A Village to Reinvent the World, on a prophetic note of caution:
"[The]
fading of the Cold War has revealed clearly that a far more
incandescent and protracted battle a potentially apocalyptic resource
war has been stealthily gathering intensity throughout the latter
part of the twentieth century . Yet a place like Gaviotas bears witness
to our ability to get it right, even under seemingly insurmountable
circumstances."
Weisman's deservedly successful 2007 bestseller, The World Without Us,
takes an extreme approach to getting it right, by showing how the
planet might in part regenerate itself if we were to go away, all
of us, for good. The chapters on nuclear waste and plastic are
dauntingly grim, but the descriptions of New York City reverting to
nature go two steps past Mike Davis's Dead Cities in praise of entropy, weeds, and the power of natural processes to take back much of the Earth as soon as we let go.
While Gaviotas stands out as a rare, realized utopia, our choices among
the unrealized ones except as literature are legion. In 2007, I
finally got around to reading what has already become my favorite
utopian novel: William Morris' News from Nowhere.
Best known during his life as a poet, Morris is, unfortunately, now
mostly remembered for his wallpaper. He designed it as part of his
lifelong endeavor to literally craft an alternative to the brutality
and ugliness of the industrial revolution through the artisanal
production of furniture, textiles, and books all as models of what
work and its fruits could be.
That attempt had its political
and literary faces, which is to say that Morris was also a prolific
writer and an ardent revolutionary. He was more anarchist than
socialist, as well as an antiquarian, a translator of Icelandic sagas,
and so much more. News from Nowhere,
published in 1890, portrays his ideal London in the far-distant future
of 2102, a century and a half after "the revolution of 1952."
It's a bioregional and anarchic paradise: The economy is localized,
work is voluntary, money is nonexistent and so is hunger, deprivation,
and prison. The industrial filth of London has vanished, and the river
and city are beautiful again. (They were far filthier in Morris' time,
when every home burned coal, while sewage and industrial effluents
flowed unfiltered into the Thames.)
Most utopias, of course, aren't places you'd actually want to live.
Admittedly, Morris' is a little bland and mild, as life on earth
without evil and struggle must be. But his utopia is prophetic, not
dated, close to many modern visions of decentralized, localized power,
culture, and everyday life. It is, in short, an old map for a new world
being born in experiments around the globe.
Dreams on the Southern Horizon
Morris provided the name for the present-day News from Nowhere
Collective, a group that has edited one of the more rambunctious
handbooks for activists in recent times, We Are Everywhere: The Irresistible Rise of Global Anticapitalism.
A visually delicious, horizontally formatted little chunk of a book, it
features a lot of photographs, a running timeline of radical victories
in our era, and short, punchy essays from people immersed in changing
the world all over that world (from Quebec and Nigeria to Bolivia and
Poland). Playful, subversive, and far-reaching, the book even four
years after its publication demonstrates the scope of constructive
change and activism around the planet.
There are other such handbooks, including my brother David's Globalize Liberation: How to Uproot the System and Build a Better World,
out from City Lights Books a few years ago. It was in the course of
editing some of the essays in that book that I discovered the
beautiful, hopeful voice of Marina Sitrin, a sociologist, human rights
lawyer, and activist who has spent a great deal of time among the
utopian social movements of Argentina. Her encounters become ours in
her new book Horizontalism: Voices of Popular Power in Argentina.
That country's sudden economic collapse and political turmoil in
December of 2001 was largely overlooked here, but the crisis begat an
extraordinary grassroots response about as far from shock and
paralysis as you can imagine. Neighborhoods gathered in popular
assemblies to protest the political structure, and then stayed together
to feed each other during the fiscal crisis; factory workers took over
shuttered factories and ran them as cooperatives; the poor organized
and mobilized; but more than these concrete actions, Argentinean
society itself changed.
People began to talk across old divides and create new words for what mattered now none more valuable than horizontalidad, which Sitrin translates as "horizontalism," a direct and radically egalitarian participatory democracy, and politica afectiva,
the politics of affection, or love. The 2001 crisis was soon
transformed into an opportunity to overcome the legacy of the
terrifying years of the Argentinean military dictatorship, to step out
of the isolation and disengagement that fear had produced, to reclaim
power and reinvent social ties. With this, Argentina moved a little
further away from hell and a little closer to utopia.
It's not a coincidence that Weisman's Gaviotas
is in South America (though it is a surprise that it's in Colombia).
After all, the most powerful voice coming from the Spanish-speaking
majority of the Americas is that of the Zapatistas, and Our Word Is Our Weapon: Selected Writings of Subcommandante Insurgente Marcos,
edited by Juana Ponce de Leon, is still the best English-language
introduction to that indigenous movement's non-indigenous spokesman and
raconteur Subcommandante Marcos. Via his poetic, playful, subversive,
and ferociously hopeful manifestoes, tirades, allegories, and pranks,
he has reinvented the language of politics, pushing off the drab shore
of bureaucracy and clichι, sailing toward something rich and strange.
Ponce De Leon's book, however, only covers the first several years of
Marcos's contributions. City Lights recently brought out his The Speed of Dreams: Selected Writings 2001-2007.
On page 102, he advises an indigenous audience: "It is the hour of the
word. So then, put the machete away, and continue to hone hope." By
page 349, he's quoting a possibly fictional elderly couple in San
Miguel Tzinacapan, who say, "The world is the size of our effort to
change it."
Not that all resistance, all hope, comes from the
south. It can be found everywhere, or at least on many edges, margins,
and in many overlooked zones and one of the most exhilarating
histories of it is The Many Headed-Hydra: Sailors, Slaves, Commoners, and the Hidden History of the Revolutionary Atlantic
by Peter Linebaugh and Marcus Rediker. Their book traces a plethora of
acts of resistance to capitalism, exploitation, authoritarianism and
the generally sorry lot meted out to the poor in the eighteenth
century. That resistance was exuberant, inventive, and occasionally
ferocious, and it found its own utopias. The book begins with a 1609
shipwreck in Bermuda, in which the shipwrecked sailors and passengers
begin to form their own convivial utopia that the Virginia Company
forcibly disbanded. The Many Headed Hydra covers some of the same ground and ocean routes as Hochschild's book, and they make good joint reading.
I wish Linebaugh's The Magna Carta Manifesto: Liberties and Commons for All
was out in time for this list, but look for it in February. (I read it
in manuscript for the University of California Press, loved it, and
learned a lot from it.) Beginning with Bush's breach not just of the
Constitution, but of Magna Carta's grant of habeas corpus,
Linebaugh returns to that moment at Runnymede when King John was forced
to concede rights to England's citizens. Linking that despot to the one
in the White House, he ventures back and forth between the two times to
explore the once evolving and now revolving or maybe even regressing
territory of rights and liberties.
The Climate of Change
One thing becoming increasingly clear in this millennium: Human rights
and the environment are all tangled up with each other and not only
in environmental injustice hotspots like Louisiana's Cancer Alley or
oily places like Nigeria. Democracy and an empowered citizenry are the
best tools we have to make progress on climate change in this country.
The issue of climate change may be global, but in the U.S. a lot of the
measures that matter are being enacted on the local level by cities,
towns, regions, and states. Together, they have pushed far ahead of the
recalcitrant federal government in trying to take concrete measures
that could make a difference. Global measures matter, but so do local
ones: The change here is likely to come as much from the bottom up as
the top down.
One common response to climate change is to try to limit your own
impact by consuming less. An issue, for instance, that's front and
center in Britain but hardly on the table in the U.S., is taking fewer
airplane trips. (The state of California, however, did recently start
looking into ways to regulate and reduce airplane carbon emissions.) So
there's personal virtue, which matters. Then there's agitating and
organizing like crazy, which might matter more. Certainly, Bill
McKibben makes a rousing case for it in his introduction to Ignition: What You Can Do to Fight Global Warming and Spark a Movement.
The book, edited by Jonathan Isham and Sissel Waage, covers a lot of
ground when it comes to how policy gets made and how to make it
yourself, as does McKibben's own Fight Global Warming Now: The Handbook for Taking Action in Your Community.
Maybe the best news of 2007 is that we're finally doing something
about the worst news ever: that we've royally screwed up the climate of
this planet. After all, the rest of that news is: We still have a
chance to mitigate how haywire everything goes, even though no one is
yet talking about what a world of low to zero carbon emissions would
look like.
Maybe one thing we really need (just to be a little more visionary and less grim about the subject) is a modern version of News from Nowhere
portraying what a good life involving only a small carbon footprint
might mean most likely a more localized, less consuming life with
some cool technological innovations, including many we already have
(some of which are described in Weisman's Gaviotas). In ceasing
the scramble for things, there would be real gains; we'd gain back time
for sitting around talking at leisure about politics and the neighbors,
for wandering around on foot and for reading. But you don't have to
wait for everything to change: change it yourself by seizing these
pleasures now.
Rebecca Solnit blurbed a lot of books this year, wrote the foreword for Marisa Handler's Loyal to the Sky,
and provided editorial services on another book of her brother's, this
time with conscientious objector Aimee Allison: the counter-recruitment
manual Army of None. Her own book for 2007 is Storming the Gates of Paradise: Landscapes for Politics, a collection of 36 essays including several that first appeared as Tomdispatches. She is the author of Hope in the Dark: Untold Histories, Wild Possibilities.