The Hidden Hope in the Darkness
On the occasion of the release of her latest book, The Beginning Comes After the End, Rebecca Solnit sat down for an interview with David Marchese of the NY Times. Here’s the video version:
This is a great interview. Marchese’s first question is about how we find the positive in a world filled with grim news:
Even the right tells us something encouraging, if we listen carefully to what they’re saying. They tell us: You are very powerful. You’ve changed the world profoundly. All these things that are often treated separately — feminism, queer rights, environmental action — are connected, so they’re basically telling us we’re incredibly successful, which is the good news. The bad news is that they hate it and want to change it all back. There is a backlash, and it is significant. But it is not comprehensive or global.
And I loved this part (emphasis mine):
One of the great weaknesses of our era is that we get lone superhero movies that suggest that our big problems are solved by muscly guys in spandex, when actually the world mostly gets changed through collective effort. Thich Nhat Hanh said before he died a few years ago that the next Buddha will be the Sangha. The Sangha, in Buddhist terminology, is the community of practitioners. It’s this idea that we don’t have to look for an individual, for a savior, for an Übermensch. I think the counter to Trump always has been and always will be civil society. A lot of the left wants social change to look like the French Revolution or Che Guevara. Maybe changing the world is more like caregiving than it is like war. Too many people still expect it to look like war.




Comments 3
Jason, your emphasis is, for me, in exactly the right spot and intersects with something I keep thinking about. I recently sat in on a session with a professor and scholar of polarization at the university where I work. He talked about the need for all people to be engaged in some kind of non-politicized space (a rec league, volunteering, Kottke.org, etc.) so that we can regularly see "the other side" at their human best. I think that's a big part of how we build our capacity for caregiving and empathy.
I play Magic at a game store every week and some of the guys there are pretty far out right-wing political guys, in the vein of gamergate meme-lordery. But I'm also there, with my class war button and peace sign pin and bernie hat, and I we go in together for pizza, and we argue arcane rules, and we talk about work and traffic and pop culture. I'd like to think that if anyone at that table got, I don't know, kidnapped off the street by agents in an unmarked van, everyone else would think that something terrible had happened, no matter which of us it was.
I listened to this on a walk early this morning and sent that very section about caregiving to 3 friends. It really rings true. Makes me think about my midwife and doula colleagues offering care and support to homebound folks in Minneapolis this past winter. Care makes the world go round.
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