By and large, even movies I like a great deal do not make me
think. The Hobbit,, for example, was great fun, but it did not set me to
thinking [save to wonder how they manage to make Gandalf look twice as tall as
Frodo -- or, for that matter, how they make Hagrid look so enormous in the
Harry Potter movies.] Even a truly
lovely film like A Late Quartet,
which I adored, and which made me burst into tears at its very end, was not in
any deep way thought-provoking.
But I find myself turning Lincoln over in my mind and trying to extract from it lessons for
our current situation -- which, judging from the fascinating interview with
screenwriter Tony Kushner that Jim put me onto, is very much what the makers of
the film intended.
Here, for what they are worth, are some reflections on the
present day that were stimulated or reconfirmed by Lincoln.
First, truly great political accomplishments, among which I
count the passage of the Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution, require
enormous efforts, by countless men and women far from the political arena, to
set the stage and create the circumstances that make those accomplishments
possible. In the case of Lincoln, it was the actions of several
millions of slaves and former slaves that weakened the South's military
campaign and made possible the North's impending victory. Without their actions, it is not at all clear
that the North could ever have won the war, nor is it clear, even if they had,
that the victory would have ended slavery.
Once again, let me refer you to Black
Reconstruction, in which Du Bois deploys the concept of the General Strike
to explain the role of the slaves in the defeat of the South. As I observed in my tutorial on Afro-American
Studies, the truly remarkable thing about Du Bois' thesis is that he advanced
it in 1935, two generations before the historiographical data required to
confirm it would be made available by Ira Berlin and his co-authors [and
legions of nameless graduate students] in Slaves
No More. Kushner, by the way, in the
Bill Moyers interview that Jim put me on to, and which stimulated this post,
gets this wrong, specifically denying that slaves or Free Blacks had anything
directly to do with the passage of the Thirteenth Amendment.
The lesson for us today, pretty clearly, is that it will
take the efforts of millions, or tens of millions, of Americans far from Washington
to create the conditions under which Obama and the Democrats can achieve
dramatic change.
The second lesson of the movie is that even heroic,
epoch-making political action is "solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and
short," to invoke Thomas Hobbes' classic description of the state of
nature. It is genuinely educational to
see, in the movie, how corrupt and devious are the machinations by which
something of transcendent moral importance gets accomplished in politics. Anyone whose sensibilities are offended by
the sight of Obama wheeling and dealing with Boehner or McConnell is just not
serious about wanting the world to change.
The third lesson is that in the midst of a dirty, no holds
barred political fight, it is very, very difficult to know just what precisely
is the most that one can exact from one's opponents. Knowing when to hold 'em and when to fold 'em
[to quote a Kenny Rogers classic] is a matter of art, not science, of
intuition, not of calculation. It is
natural, but I think a mistake, to construe differences of judgment about such
matters as evidences of moral failing.
But, to recur to the first lesson, recognizing this
character of political decision in no way alters the absolute necessity of mass
action in support of goals that cannot, in their nature, be completely
achieved. Anyone who knows even a little
bit about the promise and failure of Reconstruction, and about the century and
more of struggle that was required to realize the dream of genuine liberation,
will understand that only by
overreaching, by demanding what will not entirely be achieved, can we create
the pressure that will allow a Lincoln [or an Obama -- this is the real message
of the film] to achieve what can be
achieved in the present balance of political forces. My favorite character in the movie is Thaddeus
Stevens, not Abraham Lincoln, but if Abraham Lincoln had been a Thaddeus
Stevens, the Thirteenth Amendment would not have passed, and if Thaddeus Stevens had been an Abraham Lincoln, it also would not
have passed.