<a href="http://www.wpunj.edu/newpol/issue41/Lemisch41.htm">http://www.wpunj.edu/newpol/issue41/Lemisch41.htm</a><br>
<br>
I attended part of a January 20, 2006, "day workshop of
interventions" -- aka "a day of dialogic interventions" -- at Columbia
University on "Radical Politics and the Ethics of Life."1 The event
aimed "to stage a series of encounters . . . to bring to light . . .
the political aporias [sic] erected by the praxis of urban guerrilla
groups" in Europe and the United States from the 1960s to the 80s.2
Hosted by Columbia's Anthropology Department, workshop speakers
included veterans and leaders of the Weather Underground Bernardine
Dohrn and Bill Ayers, historian Jeremy Varon, poststructuralist
theorist Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak and a dozen others. The panel I sat
through was just awful.3<br>
<br>
Veterans of Weather (as well as some fans) seem to
be on a drive to rehabilitate, cleanse, and perhaps revive it -- not
necessarily as a new organization, but rather as an ideological
component of present and future movements. There have been signs of
such a sanitization and romanticization for some time. A landmark in
this rehabilitation is Bill Ayers, Fugitive Days: A Memoir (Beacon
Press 2001; Penguin Books 2003). This is a dubious account, full of
anachronisms, inaccuracies, unacknowledged borrowings from unnamed
sources (such as the documentary, Atomic Cafe, 17-19), adding up to an
attempt to cover over the fact that Ayers was there only for a part of
the things he describes in a volume that nonetheless presents itself as
a memoir. It's also faux literary and soft core ("warm and wet and
welcoming"(68)), "ruby mouth"(38), "she felt warm and moist"(81)), full
of archaic sexism, littered with boasts of Ayers's sexual achievements,
utterly untouched by feminism. (Among Ayers's many errors are some that
betray ignorance of the Women's Liberation Movement: he repeats the
media-generated myth that 1968 Miss America protesters burned their
bras (117).)<br>
<br>
Ayers is the perfect Weatherman: "Hostility to
feminism," writes Dan Berger in a new history of Weather,
"characterized the organization from the beginning"4 -- and this at a
time when radical feminism was growing. Weather kept its distance from
one of the most vibrant movements of its time, taking such archaic
positions as "The Women's Question is a Class Question," just a part of
capitalism rather than patriarchy.5<br>
<br>
There are too many inaccuracies in Fugitive Days to
list here. Some are petty: Howdy Doody fans will wonder whether Ayers's
"Uncle Bob" (24) is the same as "Buffalo Bob." But some of the errors
reflect political blind spots. One such error concerns Marion Delgado,
who was a kind of a Weather saint, but Ayers can't even keep his
hagiography straight. A photo of Marion, a five- year-old Chicano boy,
smiling and holding up a piece of concrete, appeared in the Students
for a Democratic Society (SDS) weekly paper, New Left Notes, with a
caption indicating that he had caused a train wreck with his concrete.
Weatherpeople began, in hommage to this act, to sign and present
themselves as "Marion Delgado." But Ayers (144) places this event in
Italy -- with all of Weather's third worldism, he can't tell the
difference between Italians and Mexicans (or Californians) -- and says
that the train that Delgado derailed was a freight train, and that
nobody was hurt. Inaccuracies aside, it's bizarre for a political group
to admire this child's act. In a learned disquisition on Marion,
Kirkpatrick Sale, SDS (New York 1973), 605n explains that Marion had
derailed a passenger train in California in 1947. Ayers's changing a
passenger train to a freight train, and his stress on the claim that
there were thus no injuries, is one of many sanitizations in his book.<br>
<br>
[snip]<br>