Barack’s America
One of the more interestingâif not, for most of my students, the most novelâaspects of my undergraduate class in Contemporary American Literature is our discussion of the African-American experience as it can be gleaned from several poems and stories on our syllabus. With Barack Obama poised (or at least this corner hopes) to become Americaâs next presidentâand the first black man to occupy the postâI think itâs especially important for young Filipinos to understand just how historic even Obamaâs candidacy is, even if he may have nothing directly to do with me and you. English 42 is a literature course, but I teach it, in effect, as an adventure in American studies. From Day One, I try to impress upon my students the need to understand the worldâs most powerful nation and its societyâand one that has had a continuing and some say dominating influence on our own culture, economy, and politicsâfrom a Filipino point of view. Weâre not pretending or wanting to be Americans, although itâs just as important to try and see things from their perspective. We want to know America through its literature and culture, so we can begin to figure out and get a handle on the complexities of our century-long love-hate relationship with that Northern behemoth. I remind my students that our objective is neither to love nor hate America, but just to understand it better than when we began, and at least divest it of the undue power that mysteries and enigmas often wield over the uninitiated. To prepare my students for the task ahead, I start every semester not with literature proper but with an overview of American geography and history. Itâs amazingâappalling, actuallyâhow ignorant weâve become, even in this age of the Internet, of exactly where things are, and of what happened even just 20 years ago. Most of us seem to be living literally in the here and now, to the exclusion of almost everything else that doesnât register on our social screen. (Iâll bet, however, that the average educated Filipino still knows more about America than his or her Stateside counterpart would know about us.) So we begin with maps and a walk through Americaâs own colonial past, the trauma of the Civil War, its rise to industrial (and imperial) power, and its passionateâand sometimes contradictoryâdevotions to such ideals and concepts as freedom, the frontier, the individual, egalitarianism, and that comforting confection, âthe American way of lifeâ (for those of us looking in from the outside, âthe American dreamâ). Through stories like Shirley Jacksonâs âThe Lotteryâ and John Updikeâs âA&P,â we gain insights into the mindset of ordinary people in small-town America, far away from Washington and Wall Street; they are, after all, the farmers and workers who actually elect the American President (even if only about 35 percent of them actually cast a ballot on voting day), and thereby help direct the lives of billions elsewhere on the planet. But what we Filipinos know least about America has, I think, to do with its minorities, especially African Americans, whom we usually recognize as one stereotype or another. In the 1990s, you had to be one of two MJsâMichael Jackson and Michael Jordanâto be seen as a successful black man in America, and indeed we often think of blacks as being great entertainers and athletes, which is not a bad thing, unless you happen to be a black person whoâs neither one nor the other. There is, I suspect, a benign racism in Filipinos (the kind that insists that the only good PBA imports are black ones) shaped by the fact that as nut-brown as most of us are, we see the world through white eyes, and ascribe to whiteness all things good and beautiful. Nobody ever sold a tin or a tube of âblackeningâ cream in this country. We try to remedy that ignorance and misunderstanding in class by going over the history of slavery in America and the persistence of racism even long after the Civil War and the passage of the Civil Rights Act. We talk about black music as a form of protest and self-affirmation. We discuss how black Americansâwho make up less than 15 percent of Americaâs 300-million populationâexert a far wider and deeper cultural influence than their sheer numbers would suggest. I remind my students that such people and role models exist as black scientists, scholars, and artistsâthat Bill Cosby has a doctorate in education. Through such poems as Langston Hughesâ sharply ironic âIâm Makinâ a Roadâ and stories as James Baldwinâs horrifying âGoing to Meet the Manâ and Alice Walkerâs self-critical âEveryday Use,â we confront realities about America that we Filipinos would perhaps rather not deal with, especially when we begin to realize that we have more in common with Barack Obama than John McCain. This isnât to say, of course, that all whites are bad and all blacks are good. Such demonizing oversimplifications serve no one. Rather, between and within black and white are all kinds of shades of grayâand brown and pink and yellow. Unraveling the complexity of human beings and human society is one of literatureâs toughest challenges, and Iâm glad to engage my students in that pursuit, especially when it veers off to parts unknown. * * * * * The UP Institute of Creative Writing (UP ICW)âof which I recently became directorâis now receiving applications for the 48th UP ICW National Writers Workshop to be held in Camp John Hay, Baguio City, from April 12 to 18, 2009 and to be chaired by National Artist for Literature Virgilio S. Almario. We bring twelve creative writers up to Baguio every summer for a week of intense discussions about their work, and for the past few years weâve geared this workshop toward what we might call âmid-careerâ writers: people whoâve already made a mark in writing and who are working on some significant project we can talk about and help them with. We earmark eight of these slots for obvious standouts nominated by the UPICW staff, but four fellowships are available for open competition, open only to such advanced writers. More details and application forms are available at the UPICW office in UP Diliman and on the ICW website at http://www.up.edu.ph/~icw. The deadline for submission of applications is November 30, 2008. For inquiries, call 922-1830 and ask for Ms. Eva Cadiz. Email me at penmanila@yahoo.com, and visit my blog at www.penmanila.net.