Private Lives/Public Consequences:
Personality and Politics in Modern America
By William Chafe. Harvard University Press, 2005. 432 pages.
$29.95.
A month into the Montgomery Bus Boycott, Martin Luther King
Jr. received a late-night phone call. "Listen, nigger," the
voice said, "we've taken all we want from you. Before next
week, you'll be sorry you ever came to Montgomery." King,
who was twenty-seven years old and unknown outside Montgomery,
had recently come to the city to assume the pastorship, his
first, of the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church. Shortly after
he arrived, a succession of unexpected circumstances thrust
him into the leadership of the now-legendary boycott sparked
by Rosa Parks' defiance of local Jim Crow laws.
King had received threats before, but something about this
one was different. As he put down the phone, he was wracked
by self-doubt, wondering whether he should be putting his
wife, his two-month-old daughter, and himself in such danger.
Unable to sleep, he paced the floor of his kitchen and began
praying. Suddenly he heard an inner voice telling him to
fight on, that Jesus would always be with him. "Almost at
once," King recalled years later, "my fears began to go.
My uncertainty disappeared." According to William Chafe,
Alice Mary Baldwin Professor of history, that incident transformed
King and history—forever. "That night," Chafe writes in Private
Lives/Public Consequences, "he found a personal bond with
God, which provided the anchor that would sustain him through
trials sufficient in intensity and pain to break almost any
other mortal."
In a series of sharply drawn biographical sketches, Chafe,
whose previous books include a pioneering study of the civil-rights
movement, seeks to explain how the private lives of ten prominent
American leaders shaped their public careers. In addition
to King, he profiles Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt, John
and Robert Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson, Richard Nixon LL.B. '37,
Ronald Reagan, and Bill and Hillary Clinton.
The value of integrating the public and private lives of
such famous leaders seems so obvious one is surprised to
learn it hasn't been done before, at least not in a sustained
and systematic way. A bifurcated quality characterizes the
literature on most American political leaders. Just about
everyone who has written about FDR, for example, has treated
his ordeal with polio. A couple of fine books are devoted
exclusively to the subject. But few writers have examined
in any detail how polio influenced both FDR's major decisions
as president and his style of leadership. Chafe argues that
you can't fully understand either without referring to Roosevelt's
ordeal. Details differ, but Chafe finds the same holds true
for all of his subjects—and, by implication, for all leaders.
To understand their public performances, you have to delve
deeply into their personal histories.
And what troubled pasts most of them had. Despite being born
into a family of wealth and prominence, Eleanor Roosevelt
had a childhood clouded by an insensitive, sometimes cruel
mother, an alcoholic father, and a stern and repressive grandmother,
into whose home she was shunted after being orphaned at age
ten. Ronald Reagan's father was also an alcoholic who provided
for his family indifferently, and, as everyone knows, Bill
Clinton's stepfather was both an alcoholic and physically
abusive.
The Kennedy brothers grew up, in Chafe's words, in "a household
of many demands, enormous contradictions, and oftentimes
very little affection or emotional support." The crises of
Chafe's subjects continued into adulthood: King's night of
doubt and FDR's polio, of course, but also Eleanor's discovery
that Franklin was having an affair with another woman and
JFK's death-defying, PT-109 heroics during World War II.
For Bobby Kennedy, it was the assassination of his brother.
Most of these tribulations will be familiar to casual viewers
of the History Channel. But Chafe is trying to get us to
think about them in a different way—not as isolated episodes
in a life but as keys to future behavior. So, for example,
he traces both Lyndon Johnson's will to dominate and Ronald
Reagan's romantic vision and detached management habits to
difficult circumstances of their upbringings. Many of Chafe's
subjects might never have entered politics had their lives
been less troubled; public life offered a chance to exorcise
the demons of their past. It's unlikely Chafe's book will
find its way onto the list of must-read parenting guides.
The implicit message is, introduce plenty of tension into
your children's lives, the earlier the better, if you want
them to be president. (That Hillary Clinton, alone among
Chafe's subjects, had a relatively happy and uneventful childhood
would seem to bode ill for her presidential prospects.)
Each of Chafe's biographical essays is fresh and provocative
and comes with enough qualifications, disclaimers, and nuances
to prevent it from deteriorating into armchair psychologizing,
as could have happened in less skilled hands. Three essays
are especially good: those on Martin Luther King Jr., John
Kennedy, and Robert Kennedy. The Kennedy brothers emerge
more complex, more substantial, and, quite frankly, more
interesting in Chafe's pages than in many accounts.
Not everyone will accept Chafe's contention that wartime
service made JFK skeptical of military solutions and prone
to reject the bellicose recommendations of his advisers during
the Cuban Missile Crisis. Over against this is the Bay of
Pigs incident, the intensification of the arms race during
his first years in office, and the not inconsiderable danger
inherent in the naval quarantine of Cuba during the missile
crisis.
But one need not agree with Chafe's interpretation of Kennedy
or of anyone else to find this book rewarding reading. His
goal is to point us in new directions, and in this he has
succeeded admirably.
—Patrick J. Maney
Maney is chair of the history department
at the University of South Carolina and author of The Roosevelt
Presence: The Life and Legacy of FDR.
|
The Near Future
By Joe Ashby Porter.
Turtle Point Press, 2006. 248 pages. $15.95,
paper.
Joe Ashby Porter's intriguing, meticulously constructed realm
called Manatee, a retirement village in Gulf-coast Florida,
unfurls in The Near Future's opening pages to reveal a swampy,
overheated milieu both familiar and strange. "Blinking lights
whiz along the freeway, palm fronds and hibiscus, egrets and
ruined haciendas and blue electronic jungles," Porter writes,
describing a highway between Manatee and Miami. Determining
exactly when the action in the novel takes place presents an
interesting question.
In The Near Future, a new sexually transmitted disease called
OIDS has developed, which afflicts sufferers with blue spots
and robotic speech tics, and AIDS has been vanquished. A population
explosion has jammed even sleepy back alleys of south Florida.
The Internet is no more, victim of a meltdown. "Virts," or
virtual worlds, are available with the ease of running a living-room
film projector. Libraries have been outlawed because computers
and virtual worlds made hard copy obsolete, leaving them to
devolve into havens for the homeless. In the future, Porter's
world warns, petty crime will rise and people will travel less—a
depressing result of routine car bombings.
With a close eye for detail enlivening his narrative, Porter,
who is also known as professor Joseph A. Porter in Duke's English
department, offers a window into the lives of a small set of
characters during a few days set in Manatee and on a road trip
to Key West. Placing his characters in neat trailers on Manatee's
flowering lanes, he introduces us to Gwen and Brent Runkles,
whose adult daughter has abandoned them, and their friends,
Vince and Lillian Margiotta, all of whom are in their seventies.
Before the novel opens, though, Lillian walked out on Vince,
and he's been speedily picked up by a fetching spinster named
Vola Byrd. Completing the cast, Denise Passaro, the Margiottas'
granddaughter, who is in her twenties, arrives from Baltimore
in a sporty coupe with Tink Quinn, her boyfriend.
Hyperreality, here, is tethered to actual events. 9/11 cost
Vola a lucrative New York real-estate career; during Vince's
childhood, hanging laundry air-dried in Brooklyn; Brent fought
in Korea. These grandparents show sensibilities from 1950s
suburbia, and their grandchildren a post-millennial insouciance;
baby-boomers, interestingly, are absent. To focus on fixing
Manatee at a spot in time, though, is to miss the point. The
characters' relationships—between spouses, children, lovers,
neighbors, strangers at a bus stop—shape its narrative arc.
Each of these funny, truculent individuals seems to be seeking
something, though the haphazard, comical nature of that search
is foreshadowed early, when Denise (Neesy) misstates the explorer
who sought Florida's fountain of youth: "Corleone," she says.
In The Near Future, opportunism thrives. Neesy and Tink, who
met when he attempted to rob a convenience store where she
worked, are in Florida to launch a pyramid scheme. Vola, whose
interest in Vince peaks around mealtimes because she's always
strapped for cash, shoplifts cheap bracelets at a souvenir
shop. Vince has damaged his marriage with affair after affair,
but remains dumbfounded that the behavior would ultimately
alienate his wife.
Stymied by repeated efforts to win Lillian back, Vince travels
with Neesy and Tink to Key West, and Vola rides along. Wandering
around Key West, now a major drug-trade port—crack, yes,
but geriatric contraband like memory drugs and hair tonics,
too—the characters meet a string of odd people. Vince wanders
into Hemingway's house and finds himself the target of
a gonzo drug-world assassin.
Here, the novel's storyline
becomes a bit confusing—a dozy Florida sojourn turned dangerous
by a criminal undercurrent. Porter writes with ruthless
efficiency, paring his images to a few stark words, to
lasting effect, and he applies a similar economy to his
characters' dialogue, but as the action escalates, punchy
banter between them sometimes blends into a glib blur.
Missed connections between the characters also build tension,
but it's a relief when the four Key West adventurers pile
back into the car and rehash events. The most harrowing
scenes for Vince happen away from the other characters,
and are only described by him on their way back to Manatee.
Florida's inherent surrealism, fast-forwarded and steeped
in an irreverent retiree worldview, gives latitude to Porter's
talent for fiction. Porter, the professor, also creeps in
occasionally—when, for example, it's noted that scholarship
on Hemingway's sexism is outdated. A tumultuous street-fair
scene, with identity mix-ups and peopled by Hemingway look-alikes,
also bespeaks elements of Shakespearean comedy.
The near future, as it happens, may be only a few years away,
or it may exist even now, an alternate reality, with the
help of virtual electronics. "I wonder," says Lillian, "why
time has to be real in a virtual world," her question perhaps
a wink from the writer about fiction's very construct. Freed
of the question, a reader examines the complication and pathos
of growing old still enlivened by heartache and hopefulness.
—Lauren Porcaro
'96
Porcaro is on the editorial staff of The New
Yorker and the Editorial Advisory Board of Duke Magazine. |