May 17, 2010
This
article is long overdue. Margaret Atwood has been mythologized by
the Canadian literary establishment and it is about time she was put
into perspective.
I
have always found Atwood to be elitist and over rated. Her novels
are for the most part hard to follow and lacking in depth. When
you get to the end you realize there was no point and wonder why you
wasted your time. The
only redeeming factor in her writing for me is her ability to capture
the setting; she captures Toronto (my home town) and northern
Ontario
(fond teen memories) superbly.
For the most part, I have read her books because it just seemed
un-Canadian not to do so.
Her
latest book "Payback" is truly a farce. The only reason I
finished it is that I was on holidays and it was the only book I
brought. I kept thinking that if this is the best she could do
she should simply stop writing. It is over 200 pages of
flatulence to say what could have been said in 2 pages.
This
article is worth reading both in terms of substance and as an example
of good straightforward writing as opposed to Atwood's mindless prater
buried in elitist babble.
Margaret Atwood
Cashes In
By Jennifer Matsui
Novelist
Margaret Atwood’s decision to travel to Tel Aviv to share a literary
prize worth a million dollars has ignited a controversy in which the
septuagenarian author and vice-president of the literary human rights
organization PEN International has come under fire by Palestinian
rights activists. Ms Atwood’s acceptance of the Dan David Prize, whose
previous laureates include Al Gore and Tony Blair, is viewed by Ms
Atwood’s critics as a betrayal to the ideals she supposedly represents,
and an unwitting endorsement of Israel’s race exclusive policies.
[Click
here to read Atwoods typically non-sensical response to activists.]
The
Canadian author’s insistence that refusing the blood-spattered trophy
would be tantamount to “censorship” rings as false as her commitments
to justice as an anti-apartheid activist, and as a writer who has made
tyranny and oppression recurring themes in her novels, elevating her
from fiction writer to public intellectual. “False” because “justice
for some” is hardly an ethical stance with any merit, and certainly not
one that will maintain her status as an “oppositional intellectual”.
Sadly, this “intellectual” has made no effort to research the subject
of Israel’s illegal occupation of Palestinian land and its unyielding,
systematic oppression of the Palestinian people (as many Jewish and
Israeli scholars and activists themselves have bravely condemned).
Otherwise, she would use the occasion of the invitation to denounce an
increasingly murderous regime and call upon its people to support
sanctions, boycotts and divestments until their government accepted the
rule of International law and reversed its policy of displacement and
expulsion of Arab people from their ancestral lands. Instead the once
outspoken author has chosen to put monetary interests ahead of the
principled moral stances she has taken in the past, in order to lay
claim to a tainted prize given each year to fame-hungry “artists”
looking to boost sagging sales of their product while making all the
appropriate noises to the press about free speech.
Ms
Atwood’s blandly centrist posturing is symptomatic of a malady
particular to the cosseted and fossilized members of a wealthy nation’s
cultural elite, for whom “free speech” is a largely unexamined term
that by default, advocates the right of establishment opinion makers
laboring for the warlord and robber baron class to set the agenda of
public discourse. Thus the multi-billion dollar media conglomerate
behind South Park and its wealthy creators are portrayed as underdog
champions of free speech, bravely confronting an encroaching Islamic
Goliath, just as the Canadian author’s flaccid, self-serving
justifications for fence-sitting is spun into a battle against
“censorship”. It’s hard to pinpoint Ms Atwood’s definition of the word
“censorship” unless it means, “Can I just enjoy my windfall without
having to listen to a howling mob of Debby Downers”?
On the
surface, Ms Atwood’s Tel Aviv itinerary seems a worthy endeavor
undertaken by an energetic senior citizen who has put aside her basket
of knitting to embark on a fact finding mission devoted to sniffing out
the roots of a decades-long conflict, while indulging her recent
interest in issues related to water scarcity. How she will gather facts
on the ground from a plush Tel Aviv hotel suite surrounded by her
sycophantic handlers remains to be seen. Her new friends in Tel Aviv
will likely remind her that “Jews made the desert bloom”, omitting the
part about how Israel diverts water supplies from the Palestinians to
nourish the soil beneath its illegal settlements. Unlike Ms Atwood, I
am no poet. However, I can’t help but indulge the thought that so much
spilled blood must have had a hand in making Israel’s ill-gained desert
outposts a shimmering oasis of well-watered lawns, swimming pools and
flower beds on one side, and a parched, barren human cattle pen on the
other.
Last year
Japanese novelist Haruki Murakami defended his decision to accept the
Jerusalem Prize in a rambling, incoherent public statement to his
detractors that ultimately demonstrated his worthiness to be be
recipient to this dubious honor. As this year’s winner of the Dan David
Prize, Ms Atwood is Israel’s most recent stooge-laureate of a cynically
motivated, prize-giving institution that lures artists from overseas to
be unwitting apologists for its government’s long standing system of
ethnic cleansing. Sadly, Ms Atwood has fallen into the same trap, and
like her Japanese prize-coveting counterpart, has released a factually
deficient statement accusing her critics of being intolerant,
politically motivated advocates of censorship, while she, the feisty
Grande Dame of capital ‘L’ literature rises above her host nation’s
open-air prisons where the view on the ground reveals deficiencies on
both sides of the conflict. Something tells me the feminist author
would take a less even-handed approach to the subject of domestic
violence.
It’s from
this lofty perch that Ms Atwood declares herself an ‘artist’ (emphasis
on the last syllable) and more importantly, an “individual”. Unlike her
more earthbound detractors, this ethereal entity insists, by virtue of
her divinely held privileges, that she is a “neutral observer”, and as
such, more intellectually equipped to grasp the situation on the
ground, while hovering celestially above the rest of humanity. She
might want to consider the possibility that those pretty cloud-like
bursts of white phosphorous dumped on civilians fleeing from relentless
ground and air assaults are anything but neutral – as are the
well-heeled and carefully vetted representatives of Tel Aviv’s cultural
elite with whom she will have lively discussions over tea and crumpets
about scarce water resources, global warming and the burdens of being
the Mid-East’s only “democracy” (sic). Throw in a Palestinian bird
enthusiast and score valuable PR points for demonstrating your nation’s
“diversity”. (“See? We don’t discriminate against our non-Jewish (non)
citizens. We grant special privileges to a handful of them, allow them
access to water, even sparing them the cattle prods when they wander
without permits into our cocktail parties”.) While ‘bird enthusiasm’ is
a noble and worthy career choice, you have to wonder why Palestinians
engaged in fields closer to Atwood’s own were not on the guest list.
Maybe it’s because (as the Open Letter from Gaza students states):
In the
Gaza concentration camp, students who have been awarded scholarships to
universities abroad are prevented every year from pursuing their
hard-earned opportunity for academic achievement. Within the Gaza
Strip, those seeking an education are limited by increasing poverty
rates and a scarcity of fuel for transportation, both of which are
direct results of Israel’s medieval siege. What is Tel Aviv
University’s position vis-a-vis this form of illegal collective
punishment, described by Richard Falk, the UN Special Rapporteur on
Palestinian Human Rights in the Occupied Territories, as a “prelude to
genocide?” Not a single word of condemnation has been heard from any
Israeli academic institution!
Ms Atwood,
whose scholarly credentials on the subject of conflict in the Middle
East has so far been limited to glancing at the op-ed columns in her
daily newspaper, repeats the same half-truths, obfuscations and
outright lies that are routinely and mechanically recited in the
establishment media – namely, that the crisis currently playing out in
the Middle East is the result of two warring powers of roughly equal
stature, stubbornly rejecting compromise.
I
sympathize with the very bad conditions the people of Gaza are living
through due to the blockade, the military actions, and the Egyptian and
Israeli walls. Everyone in the world hopes that the two sides involved
will give up their inflexible positions and sit down at the negotiating
table immediately and work out a settlement that would help the
ordinary people who are suffering. The world wants to see fair play and
humane behaviour, and it wants that more the longer the present
situation continues and the worse the conditions become.
According
to this cursory, lackluster analysis, the people imprisoned within the
occupied territories have had a hand in creating the intolerable
conditions they live under despite the fact their free and fair
elections have been overturned by Israeli authorities, their leaders
routinely imprisoned or targeted for assassination, or installed as
paid stooges to carry out Israel’s security operations. By Ms Atwood’s
lazy reckoning, the Palestinians themselves are somehow complicit in
their own misery. Never mind that one side has no military, no air
defenses, only limited and largely illusory political autonomy, and
whose already scant institutions and infrastructure lie in a still
smoldering pile of rubble. Meanwhile this deliberately starved
population only survives on the meager, “diet”-inducing rations their
Israeli occupiers call “humanitarian assistance”. Inflexible indeed.
Israel’s long standing commitment to derailing every attempt to
negotiate a peace settlement by refusing to halt or dismantle
settlements is yet another inconvenient fact Ms Atwood prefers to
overlook in a statement that reads more like a hastily signed
condolence card than confirmation of a principled, well-reasoned stance.
Ms
Atwood’s powers of keen and relentlessly fine-tuned observations – the
hallmark of her deservedly lauded fiction – are nowhere in evidence
outside the rarefied air of her novel writing efforts. When it comes to
facts (Israel is guilty of war crimes and is in violation of countless
UN resolutions, not to mention its Apartheid style of governance that
grants democracy for a few and apartheid for the many) the Canadian
novelist has a tin ear, playing mostly deaf to the chorus of
condemnation that has dogged her since accepting the prize. Antoine
Raffoul, a London based architect and founder of ’1948: Lest We Forget’
– a Palestinian rights organization publicly addressed her (and
co-laureate Amitov Ghosh) in an open letter, politely pleading the case
that their presence in Tel Aviv was in opposition to the values that
the two authors presumably uphold as human rights advocates.
“We
writers belong to a space one can call ‘Republic of writers’ and do not
do cultural boycotts,” Atwood sniffed in response, conveniently
overlooking her support of sanctions and cultural boycotts of
Apartheid-era South Africa.
More
recently, the author pulled out of the fledgling Emirates Airline
international festival of literature to protest the organizers’
decision to withdraw their invitation to an author whose book was
considered too controversial. Curiously, the free speech advocate
couldn’t spare a similar show of solidarity with the blacklisted
Palestinian writers she is unlikely to meet in Israel.
According
to Atwood, “writers” are members of that elite, oft-awarded coterie of
establishment liberals who lend their support to fashionable causes
while attending cocktail receptions in their honor; a term that in
other words doesn’t apply to rabble like Mr Raffoul, or the group of
Palestinian students whose passionately articulated open letter to the
author was greeted with a dismissive acknowledgment of having received
it. Not surprisingly, The Republic of Writers, like its warm ally
Israel, doesn’t grant citizenship to its Palestinian members, or anyone
outside the highly fortified, well-appointed compound where Queen
Margaret reigns as self-crowned head of state.
The
prickly monarch goes on to dismiss criticism of her decision to accept
half of a million dollar prize from a foundation run by a photo booth
tycoon with ties to Zionist organizations. Dan David, the billionaire
philanthropist for whom the prize is named, was overruled by his
foundation’s board of trustees when early on in his philanthropic
career he nominated Muslim-bashing Italian xenophobe Oriana Fallaci a
prize for journalism. Clearly, the choice of Margaret Atwood as blood
money beneficiary for her “moderate” (but no less ideological) brand of
selective advocacy for human rights is meant to thwart unwanted
scrutiny on this generous endowment at the hands of a right wing
entrepreneur who conceals his zealotry behind a blandly institutional
cloak of high culture. Mr David’s critics allege the tycoon is aiding
and abetting his government’s propaganda efforts by dipping into his
own personal slush fund to launch a charm offensive aimed at silencing
Israel’s critics.
Ms
Atwood’s disingenuous claims that the prize is “is a cultural event”
and not “as has been erroneously stated, an “Israeli” prize from the
State of Israel, nor is it a prize “from Tel Aviv University, but one
founded and funded by an individual” proves she is either woefully
unskilled at using a search engine, or that she has deliberately
overlooked her billionaire benefactor’s unsavory, or at least
questionable business and political ties in order to claim a cash
prize. With its lucrative ties to the Israeli defense industry, Tel
Aviv University is hardly a benign institution, nor one that is
unaffiliated with Mr David’s philanthropic enterprises. Laureates are
required to donate ten percent of their prize money to the university.
Ms Atwood and her co-laureate Amitov Ghosh, whether they realize it or
not, are not only aiding Israel’s propaganda efforts, but helping to
directly fund its war machine.
It’s
probably too late to hope that Ms Atwood’s atrophied powers of
reasoning and compassion will compel her to recognize the ironies
inherent in her host nation’s insistence that “Never Again” means
business-as-usual when applying Nazi methodology to rid one’s country
of a despised ethnic group. Based on her own reasoning, Ms Atwood might
consider attending the next conference Iranian president Ahmadinejad
hosts, where invited dignitaries debate the existence of the Holocaust.
After all, how is this Iranian led peanut gallery aimed at burnishing
its president’s standing among anti-US allies any different from the
political stage craft Israel is orchestrating to shore up international
support for its own beleaguered leadership? By her own admission, there
is no topic off-limits to “dialogues across borders”, so why draw the
line at holocaust denial? Or for that matter, Dubai book festivals?
**************************************
Originally
published in PULSE - http://networkedblogs.com/3SLl1
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