ON COMING OF POLITICAL AGE-1960
COMMENTARY/BOOK REVIEW
THE PRESIDENTIAL PAPERS, NORMAN MAILER, VIKING, 1963
At one time, as with Ernest
Hemingway, I tried to get my hands on everything that Norman Mailer wrote. In
his prime he held out promise to match Ernest as the preeminent male American
prose writer. Mailer certainly has the ambition, ego and skill to do so.
Although he wrote several good novels like The Deer Park in his time I believe
that his journalistic work, as he himself might partially admit, especially his
political, social and philosophical musings are what will insure his place in
the literary pantheon. With that in mind I recently re-read his work on the
1960 political campaign-the one that pitted John F. Kennedy against Richard M.
Nixon- that is the center of the book under review. There are other essays in
this work, some of merely passing topical value, but what remains of interest
today is a very perceptive analysis of the forces at work in that pivotal
election. Theodore White won his spurs
breaking down the mechanics of the campaign and made a niche for himself with
The Making of a President, 1960. Mailer in a few pithy articles gave the
overview of the personalities and the stakes involved for the America of that
time.
Needless to say the Kennedy
victory of that year has interest today mainly for the forces that it unleashed
in the base of society, especially, but not exclusively, among the youth. His
rather conventional bourgeois Cold War foreign policy and haphazard domestic
politics never transcended those of the New and Fair Deals of Roosevelt and
Truman but his style, his youth and his élan seemingly gave the go ahead to all
sorts of projects in order to ‘‘seek a newer world”. And we took him up on
this. This writer counted himself among
those youth who saw the potential to change the world. We also knew that if the
main villain of the age , one Richard Milhous Nixon, had been successful in
1960 as he graphically demonstrated when he later became president we would not
be seeing any new world but the same old, same old.
I had been eclectically interested
in politics from an early age. Names like the Rosenbergs, Joseph McCarthy,
Khrushchev and organizations like Americans for Democratic Action and the like
were familiar to me if not fully understood. I came of political age with the
1960 presidential campaign. Mailer addresses the malaise of American political
life during the stodgy Eisenhower years that created the opening for change-and
Kennedy and his superb organization rushed in. These chances, as a cursory
perusal of the last 40 odd years of bourgeois presidential politics makes
painfully clear, do not come often. The funny thing is that during most of 1960 I was actually ‘Madly for Adlai’, that
is I preferred Adlai Stevenson the twice defeated previous Democratic
candidate, but when the deal went down at the advanced age of 14 I walked door
to door talking up Kennedy. Of course, in Massachusetts that was not a big deal
but I still recall today that I had a very strong sense I did not want to be
left out of the new age ‘aborning’. That, my friends, in a small way is the start
of that slippery road to the ‘lesser evil’ practice that dominates American
politics and that took me a fairly long time to break with.
Mailer has some very cutting,
but true, remarks about the kind of people who populate the political milieu
down at the base of bourgeois politics, those who make it to the political
conventions. Except that today they are better dressed and more media savvy
nothing has changed. Why? Bourgeois politics, not being based on any fidelity
to program except as a throwaway, is all about winning (and fighting to keep on
winning). This does not bring out the better angels of our nature. For those
old enough to remember that little spark of youth that urged us on to seek that
newer world and for those too young to have acquired knowledge of anything but
the myth Mailer’s little book makes for interesting and well written reading.
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