The New Yorker - August 10, 2015

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AUG. 10 & 17, 2015




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GOINGS ON ABOUT TOWN THE TALK OF THE TOWN

David Remnick on Jon Stewart’s farewell; protest class; Jason Isbell; diatribes; James Surowiecki on Donald Trump. KELEFA SANNEH

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THE HELL YOU SAY

Free speech and political correctness. MINDY KALING dana goodyear

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COMING THIS FALL A GHOST IN THE FAMILY

Love and art in San Francisco. Jake HAlpern

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THE COP

Ferguson and the shooting of Michael Brown. peter hessler

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LEARNING TO SPEAK LINGERIE

Chinese merchants make inroads in Egypt.

michael cunningham

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FICTION “LITTLE MAN”

THE CRITICS THE CURRENT CINEMA anthony lane

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“Mission: Impossible—Rogue Nation,” “The End of the Tour,” “Best of Enemies.” BOOKS

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Briefly Noted ON TELEVISION

emily nUssbaum

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alex ross

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Anne Carson

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James Galvin

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“Halt and Catch Fire,” “Deutschland 83.” MUSICAL EVENTS

joost swarte

Rare works by Harry Partch and Ethel Smyth.

POEMS

“Each Day Unexpected Salvation (John Cage)” “Heaven Is a Heavy House: Axe, Drawknife, Auger, Crosscut Saw” COVER

“Summer Adventures”

DRAWINGS Liana Finck, Tom Toro, Benjamin Schwartz, Michael Maslin, Kate Beaton, Zachary Kanin, Drew Dernavich, Charlie Hankin, Will McPhail, Alex Gregory, Michael Crawford, Liam Francis Walsh, Carolita Johnson SPOTS Tibor Kárpáti 2

THE NEW YORKER, AUGUST 10 & 17, 2015



CONTRIBUTORS is the author of “Bad Paper: Inside the Secret World of Debt Collectors,” which comes out in paperback in October.

jake Halpern (“THE COP,” P. 44)

JOHN SEABROOK (THE TALK OF THE TOWN, P. 27) is a staff writer. His new book, “The

Song Machine: Inside the Hit Factory,” will be published in October. kelefa Sanneh (“THE HELL YOU SAY,” P. 30)

has contributed to the magazine

since 2001. dana goodyear (“A GHOST IN THE FAMILY,” P. 36), the author of “Anything That Moves,” won a 2015 James Beard Foundation Journalism Award for her New Yorker article “Élite Meat.” Mindy Kaling (SHOUTS & MURMURS, P. 35) created and stars in the television series “The Mindy Project.” Her book “Why Not Me?” comes out in September. peter hessler (“LEARNING TO SPEAK LINGERIE,” P. 56), who lives in Cairo, spent eleven years in China, where he was the magazine’s Beijing correspondent. “Strange Stones: Dispatches from East and West” is his latest book. james galvin (POEM, P. 62) has published two novels and seven books of poetry, including “As Is.” He teaches at the Iowa Writers’ Workshop. michael cunningham (FICTION, P. 66) is the author of seven books, including “The Hours,” for which he won a Pulitzer Prize and a PEN/Faulkner Award. His next book, “A Wild Swan: And Other Tales,” will be published in November. james surowiecki (THE FINANCIAL PAGE, P. 29)

writes about economics, business,

and finance for the magazine. joost swarte (COVER) is a Dutch cartoonist and graphic designer. “Is That All There Is?” is a collection of his cartoons.

NEWYORKER.COM Everything in the magazine, and more than fifteen original stories a day.

ALSO: DAILY COMMENT / CULTURAL COMMENT:

Opinions and reflections by Jeffrey Toobin and Hua Hsu. FICTION: On this month’s Fiction Podcast, Sam Lipsyte reads James Purdy’s “About Jessie Mae” and discusses it with Deborah Treisman. VIDEO: In the latest episode of “The

Cartoon Lounge,” Bob Mankoff takes a look at beach cartoons from the magazine.

PODCASTS: On the Political Scene, Jeffrey Toobin and Eyal Press talk with Dorothy Wickenden about the politics of abortion. Plus, on Out Loud, Nicholas Thompson, Joshua Rothman, Amelia Lester, and David Haglund debate the pros and cons of robots. SLIDE SHOW: Images of the lives and the work of the San Francisco artists Barry McGee, Clare Rojas, and Margaret Kilgallen.

SUBSCRIBERS: Get access to our magazine app for tablets and smartphones at the App Store, Amazon.com, or Google Play. (Access varies by location and device.)

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THE NEW YORKER, AUGUST 10 & 17, 2015


THE MAIL POWER BROKERS

Bill McKibben’s article on green energy discusses problems that must be resolved in order to realign economic incentives for utility companies (“Power to the People,” June 29th). The Green Mountain Power model he describes is a step in the right direction: end users save money in the long run without corresponding revenue decreases for utility companies. Homeowners undergo an energy audit and finance the recommended improvements by monthly payments through their utility bills. But this model often does not apply to rental units. In New York and other urban areas, renters almost always foot the bill for electricity, while landlords are responsible for property improvements, including renovations following energy audits. Making energy-efficiency improvements does not result in savings for the property owner, since the costs are borne by the tenants. Many rental units, especially those in low-income areas, have poor weatherization and inefficient appliances and lighting; the energy costs can be skyhigh. Until policies that reduce or eliminate the split incentive for landlords are enacted, renters will be left out of the potential for progress. Allison S. Larr New York City It is wrong to assume that electric utilities do not embrace renewable sources of energy. Electric utilities are making great strides to install and invest in renewable technologies, including wind and solar. Approximately sixty per cent of all solar capacity in the United States is owned, operated, and maintained by electric power companies. I am the executive vice-president of the Edison Electric Institute, the association that represents all U.S. investor-owned electric companies, which serve more than two hundred and twenty million Americans. Just last year, Edison Electric and the Natural Resources Defense Council signed an agreement to support policies that enhance the electric grid for the benefit of consumers and the environment. This puts us on a path

toward better clean-energy resources. The agreement includes an outline for a forward-thinking approach to distributed generation systems, which is the way that consumers generate electricity from small sources such as the rooftop solar panels that McKibben mentions. The electricutility industry is committed to serving consumers’ interests and promoting the growth of renewable technologies. David Owens Washington, D.C. I’ve never met the Borkowskis, but I am familiar with the energy system that they (and I, and McKibben) use. The system is not set up to take advantage of the family’s new heat pumps, because Vermont just closed its zero-carbon nuclear reactor. The heat pumps replaced oil, but what produces the electricity? Overwhelmingly, natural gas and coal. An oil burner that was at least eighty-per-cent efficient has been replaced with a combination of thirty-four-per-cent-efficient coal and sixty-per-cent-efficient natural gas, minus transmission and distribution losses. Solar panels won’t help the utility meet peak demand when heat pumps are running on Vermont’s dark winter nights. And it’s important to get the pricing right: I contributed to the Borkowskis’ panels, along with every other federal taxpayer, because they got a solar tax credit. I contribute monthly to my neighbor’s solar panels by way of the grid. My neighbor sells energy to the system at noon, at a fixed price, and buys it back at the same price at 5 P.M., when his panels produce little beyond his demand and wholesale prices are highest. I contribute to the infrastructure needed to meet his 5 P.M. demand, while he pays only for the net kilowatt-hours he buys. Matthew L. Wald Nuclear Energy Institute Washington, D.C.

• Letters should be sent with the writer’s name, address, and daytime phone number via e-mail to themail@newyorker.com. Letters may be edited for length and clarity, and may be published in any medium. We regret that owing to the volume of correspondence we cannot reply to every letter or return letters. THE NEW YORKER, AUGUST 10 & 17, 2015

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Ratking, the Harlem-bred trio at the forefront of the city’s hip-hop revival, delivers music that’s a pure

product of Gotham, with washes of noise and beats intercut with sirens, subway doors opening, and snippets of street conversation. Their ace in the hole is Wiki, a charismatic young m.c. whose nasal, machine-gun style harkens back to the heyday of lyric-driven rap. On Aug. 5, Ratking holds court in a high temple of local hip-hop: the East River Park amphitheater, which figured prominently at the close of Charlie Ahearn’s seminal 1983 rap film, “Wild Style.” The venue’s crumbling remains long stood as a monument to the city’s rap scene, but in 2002 it was renovated, making it an ideal setting for a new generation. p h oto g r a p h by jas o n n o c i to

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classical music NIGHT LIFE | THE THEATRE DANCE | movies | art ABOVE & BEYOND FOOD & DRINK


cLASSical MUSIC

This year’s Bard Music Festival celebrates Carlos Chávez with two abundant weekends of concerts.

master of music Carlos Chávez was the maximum leader of modern Mexican culture.

if an american festival of Mexican music were organized as a popularity contest, then the winner would certainly be Silvestre Revueltas (1899-1940), whose orchestral works “Sensemayá” and “La Noche de los Mayas” have been standard repertory for decades. Leon Botstein, however, has sensibly decided to name the next Bard Music Festival, at Bard College (Aug. 7-9 and Aug. 13-16), in honor of another composer: “Carlos Chávez and His World.” Audiences love Revueltas’s passionate lyricism, Technicolor orchestration, and spicy evocations of popular mestizo music, while Chávez’s brand of modernism is more severe and self-contained, like an Aztec temple. But twentieth-century Mexico was indeed Chávez’s world; Revueltas just lived in it. Chávez (1899-1978) was indisputably the most powerful Mexican artistic figure, musical or otherwise, of his time, an era that stretched from the modernizing but repressive dictatorship of Porfirio Díaz, through the bloody revolution and the socialistoriented nineteen-twenties and thirties, and into a new kind of conservatism that allied Mexico to the Cold War policies of the United States. Chávez was a natural politician; his successful establishment of the Orquesta Sinfónica de México, in 1928, was followed, 8

THE NEW YORKER, AUGUST 10 & 17, 2015

among other triumphs, by his role in designing and leading the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes, in 1947. (Imagine if the top job at the National Endowment for the Arts came with sweeping powers, enormous prestige, and a lot more money.) His tyrannical will governed the destinies of music schools, museums, and dance and theatre companies, advancing new projects while consolidating the country’s heritage. (The lavish illustrations in the program book testify to his collaborations with such artists as Paul Strand, Rufino Tamayo, and Diego Rivera.) Chávez’s music is national in spirit but proudly experimental in content. Chávez pieces adorn nearly every festival program; audiences can hear him paying tribute to the pre-Columbian world (“Xochipili: An Imaginary Aztec Music,” from 1940), making a rigorous adaptation of diatonic neoclassicism (the Ten Preludes, for piano, from 1937), matching the American academic modernists in recondite complexity (in the “Five Caprichos,” written in 1975), or facing down the entire Romantic piano repertory (the Piano Concerto, a work of overwhelming, granitic power, from 1938-40). Although neither “Sensemayá” nor “Noches” will be performed at Bard, the festival’s eleven programs will feature such Revueltas works as the keening film score “Redes” (“The Wave”) and the joyful String Quartet No. 4, “Música de Feria,” in addition to pieces by Manuel M. Ponce (the tangy “Concierto del Sur”), Blas Galindo, and many other Mexican musicians. Pan-Latin context will be offered in works by such composers as Falla, Ginastera (the ballet suite “Estancia”), and Villa-Lobos; Chávez’s American connections will be highlighted in performances of pieces by Sessions, Cowell, Cage, Ruth Crawford Seeger, and, of course, his close friend Aaron Copland (the Sextet). Botstein conducts the American Symphony Orchestra in Chávez’s most famous piece for orchestra, the “Sinfonía India”—a vividly persuasive work once championed by Leonard Bernstein— on Aug. 15. —Russell Platt ILLUSTRATION BY EDEL RODRIGUEZ



Concerts in Town Mostly Mozart Summer enters its latter half, with Mozart as accompaniment. Here are a few of the offerings: Aug. 4-5 at 7:30: The up-and-coming cellist Sol Gabetta makes her Mostly Mozart début, performing Haydn’s Cello Concerto in C Major, with the conductor Cornelius Meister (another débutant), who also leads the Festival Orchestra in Beethoven’s Symphony No. 4 in B-Flat Major and the Overture to Mozart’s “Le Nozze di Figaro.” (Avery Fisher Hall.) • Aug. 9 at 3: The Academy of Ancient Music, in its Mostly Mozart début, investigates the deep influence of a foreign landscape in its program “Mendelssohn in Scotland.” Edward Gardner leads the renowned period-performance group in the “Hebrides” Overture, the spry Symphony No. 3 (“Scotch”), and the Violin Concerto (with the young Russian soloist Alina Ibragimova). (Alice Tully Hall.) • Aug. 11-12 at 7:30: Aside from a performance of Mozart’s mercurial masterpiece Symphony No. 40, the Festival Orchestra (led by Louis Langrée) accompanies the baritone Matthias Goerne in a performance of Bach’s dramatic cantata “Ich habe genug” as well as orchestrations of Schubert lieder (including a rare performance of Max Reger’s visionary rendition of “Erlkönig”). (Avery Fisher Hall.) • Aug. 16 at 5: The International Contemporary Ensemble (ICE) presents a vibrant evening of comparatively recent fare, including Ligeti’s antic Piano Concerto (with Pierre-Laurent Aimard), Messiaen’s brooding “Oiseaux Exotiques,” and the chamber opera “Into the Little Hill,” by the festival’s featured composer—and the evening’s conductor—George Benjamin. (Alice Tully Hall.) (For tickets and a full schedule, visit mostlymozart.org.) Mostly Mozart: “A Little Night Music” Aug. 5 at 10: Sol Gabetta moves deftly to a more intimate realm in one of the festival’s late-night concerts. Joined by the pianist Ilya Yakushev, she plays the cornerstone Sonata for Cello and Piano by Rachmaninoff alongside a little-known salon piece by the nineteenth-century French composer Adrien-François Servais. • Aug. 7 at 10: Making its festival début, the Danish String Quartet offers a dizzying program of works rooted in the ferocious architecture of musical individuality. The evening includes Mozart’s arrangements of two fugues from Bach’s “Well-Tempered Clavier,” Thomas Adès’s probing, whirling quartet “Arcadiana,” and the titanic “Grosse Fuge,” by Beethoven. (Kaplan Penthouse, Rose Bldg., Lincoln Center. mostlymozart.org.) Mostly Mozart: “Written on Skin” The Metropolitan Opera has always been timid about importing new 10

compositions from other companies, so Lincoln Center and the New York Philharmonic have partnered to fill the void in New York’s opera scene. George Benjamin’s opera sets a high bar to inaugurate their series: a finely crafted work—at once erotic and gruesome, startlingly dissonant and painfully intimate—it was met with near-universal acclaim at the 2012 Aixen-Provence Festival. The excellent Barbara Hannigan and Christopher Purves reprise their roles from the première, joined by the countertenor Tim Mead; the Philharmonic’s Alan Gilbert conducts the Mahler Chamber Orchestra in Katie Mitchell’s production. (David H. Koch Theatre. 212-721-6500. Aug. 11 and Aug. 13 at 7:30 and Aug. 15 at 3.)

and Juliet,” and, with Jean-Yves Thibaudet, Saint-Saëns’s enticing Piano Concerto No. 5, “Egyptian.” And on Friday night “An Evening with Yo-Yo Ma” features works by Strauss and Ravel (including his fiery “Bolero”) alongside the superstar cellist’s reading of Haydn’s Cello Concerto in C Major. (Saratoga, N.Y. spac.org. Aug. 5-7 at 8.)

Out of Town Bridgehampton Chamber Music Festival Marya Martin’s stylish little festival is in full swing on the East End. The fortnight begins with a performance of works respectively quirky, intimate, and grand—Martinů’s Trio for Flute, Cello, and Piano, Mozart’s Duo in G Major for Violin and Viola, and Beethoven’s Piano Trio in B-Flat Major, “Archduke.” The following week features Pink Floyd’s Roger Waters narrating Stravinsky’s “The Soldier’s Tale.” (Bridgehampton, N.Y. Aug. 5 at 7 and Aug. 14 at 6:30. For tickets and a full schedule, see bcmf.org.)

Glimmerglass Festival Aug. 6 at 7:30, Aug. 8 and Aug. 11 at 1:30, and Aug. 15 at 8: In “Candide,” Leonard Bernstein and his collaborators transformed the satirical novella by Voltaire into a brisk and witty Broadway entertainment in which the hapless Candide (Andrew Stenson), his beloved, Cunegonde (Kathryn Lewek), and his pedantic tutor, Pangloss (David Garrison), try to maintain an optimistic outlook despite enduring an endless string of calamities, including war, an earthquake, and the Spanish Inquisition. The production is helmed by Glimmerglass’s artistic and general director, Francesca Zambello; Joseph Colaneri conducts. • Aug. 7 and Aug. 14 at 7:30 and Aug. 10 and Aug. 18 at 1:30: The director Madeline Sayet’s English-language adaptation of Mozart’s “The Magic Flute” moves the action to the Northeastern woodlands, where the characters commune with, rather than escape, the natural world. Sean Panikkar and Jacqueline Echols lead the ensemble cast; Carolyn Kuan. (Note: The Aug. 14 performance is a young-artists presentation.) • Aug. 8 at 8, Aug. 13 at 7:30, and Aug. 15 and Aug. 17 at 1:30: The magnificent bass-baritone Eric Owens puts another feather in his Verdian cap with his first outing as the dastardly Thane of Cawdor, in the composer’s flinty treatment of “Macbeth.” Also with Melody Moore, Soloman Howard, and Michael Brandenburg. Anne Bogart directs; Colaneri. • Aug. 9 and Aug. 16 at 1:30: Vivaldi’s stately, sparkling “Cato in Utica” gives a talented cast, including Thomas Michael Allen, John Holiday, and Sarah Mesko, plenty of opportunities to show off their aptitude for Baroque coloratura. Tazewell Thompson directs; Ryan Brown. (Cooperstown, N.Y. glimmerglass.org.)

Philadelphia Orchestra at Saratoga Performing Arts Center The Fabulous Philadelphians begin their residency in upstate New York with three concerts led by the group’s principal guest conductor, Stéphane Denève. On opening night, the Broadway legend Bernadette Peters joins the orchestra for some lighter fare, following a sampling of works by Brahms, Prokofiev, Beethoven, and Rachmaninoff. In the next program, “French Connection,” the orchestra performs Berlioz’s “Beatrice and Benedict” Overture, selections from Prokofiev’s “Romeo

Marlboro Music The storied festival’s sixty-fifth season rolls on just like the previous sixty-four: an assemblage of some of the world’s finest classical musicians, along with their exceptionally talented protégés, study and concertize in verdant summertime Vermont. As always, the programs are decided one week in advance of the concerts; Kaija Saariaho is this year’s composer-in-residence. (Marlboro, Vt. Aug. 7-8 and Aug. 14-15 at 8:30 and Aug. 9 and Aug. 16 at 2:30. For programs and tickets, visit marlboromusic.org. These are the final concerts.)

Bargemusic As the heat swells, New York’s favorite musical vessel continues its “Masterworks” series, offering customarily weighty, thoughtful concerts on the water. On successive Friday evenings, the powerful Russian pianist Vassily Primakov performs two programs, respectively devoted to Tchaikovsky (“The Seasons” and the Grand Sonata in G Major) and Schumann (staples like “Symphonic Études” and “Carnaval”); across two Saturday nights, the St. Petersburg Piano Quartet plays core works by Mozart, Schumann, Brahms, and Mahler. (Fulton Ferry Landing. Aug. 7 and Aug. 14 at 8; Aug. 8 and Aug. 15 at 8. bargemusic.org.)

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Maverick Concerts The leafy, rough-hewn serenity of the Maverick Concert Hall will be an inviting venue for a weekend with two of the finest string quartets in the world. On Saturday night, the formidable Miró Quartet brings powerhouse repertory to the hall (Schubert’s final quartet, in G Major, and Beethoven’s Quartet in C-Sharp Minor, Op. 131); on Sunday afternoon, the captivating Danish String Quartet, which seems to have all of New York at its feet, performs a varied program of music by Nielsen (the rarely heard Quartet No. 1 in G Minor), Thomas Adès, and Shostakovich (the potent Quartet No. 9, Op. 117). (Woodstock, N.Y. Aug. 8 at 6 and Aug. 9 at 4. For tickets and a full schedule, see maverickconcerts.org.) Tanglewood In mid-August, Boston’s musical duchy wraps up its classical offerings. Here is a selection. Aug. 8 at 8:30: Andris Nelsons, enjoying his first summer as the Boston Symphony Orchestra’s music director, conducts the piece that deep-pocketed orchestras offer when in a celebratory mood: Mahler’s colossal Symphony No. 8 (“Symphony of a Thousand”). Among the hundreds of musicians taking part are the soprano Christine Goerke, the baritone Matthias Goerne, the Tanglewood Festival Chorus, and the American Boychoir. • Aug. 12 at 8: Christian Tetzlaff, a violinist of psychological insight and commanding technique, has reached the plateau of middle age. His unaccompanied recital at Ozawa Hall is exclusively top-shelf: solo sonatas by Ysaÿe, Bach (No. 3 in C Major), and Bartók, with excerpts from György Kurtág’s “Signs, Games, and Messages” adding some contemporary perspective. • Aug. 13 at 8: Yo-Yo Ma is involved in three chamber concerts here this month. Two are with the pianist Emanuel Ax; this one, “A Distant Mirror,” finds him collaborating with a group of outstanding younger cellists (including Mike Block and Giovanni Sollima) to explore the dynamic cultural universe of the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries as described in Barbara Tuchman’s best-selling book. • Aug. 15 at 8:30: Nelsons’s final concert this summer offers great works by operatically inclined composers—Barber (the Second Essay for Orchestra), Boïto, Puccini (the Intermezzo from “Manon Lescaut”), Verdi (the “Willow Song” and “Ave Maria” from “Otello”), and Strauss (“Ein Heldenleben”)—in collaboration with his wife, the glamorous soprano Kristine Opolais. • Aug. 16 at 2:30: The curtain comes down, as always, with Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony (“Choral”), preceded this year by Copland’s portentous “Symphonic Ode.” The vocal soloists are Julianna Di Giacomo, Renée Tatum, Paul Groves, and John Relyea, assisted by the Tanglewood Festival Chorus; Asher Fisch conducts. (Lenox, Mass. bso.org.)




NIGHT LIFE Rock and Pop Musicians and night-club proprietors lead complicated lives; it’s advisable to check in advance to confirm engagements. Americanafest NYC The annual Lincoln Center Out of Doors festival includes a “Roots of American Music” portion, and this weekend it reaches its high point. Lincoln Center has teamed up with the Americana Music Association, a nonprofit out of Nashville, for three nights of back-porch sounds, presented the way they are supposed to be heard: outdoors and free. It starts on Aug. 7 with the gospel groups the Fairfield Four and the McCrary Sisters. The following day, Aug. 8, features the three-part harmonies of the Quebe Sisters, the country singer-songwriter Sam Outlaw, and the Australian singer Kasey Chambers. That night, an all-star lineup that includes the singer-songwriter Aimee Mann, the indie rocker Ted Leo, and the alt-country singer Justin Townes Earle, backed by the Watkins Family Hour with Fiona Apple, performs Bob Dylan’s classic album “Highway 61 Revisited” in its entirety. The afternoon of Aug. 9 belongs to the timeless singer Iris DeMent, whose new album, “The Trackless Woods” is inspired by the Russian poet Anna Akhmatova. The festival closes the night of Aug. 9 with Lyle Lovett and His Large Band. (lcoutofdoors.org.) Father John Misty In 2012, the modern-day troubadour Josh Tillmann, who had been drumming for Fleet Foxes, revealed himself as the magnetic front man he was born to be, adopting the name Father John Misty. The songs on his latest album, “I Love You, Honeybear,” which came out earlier this year, are earnest, dark humored, and introspective. He’s in Central Park, performing a benefit concert for SummerStage, accompanied by Angel Olsen, an indie-rock balladeer and occasional Bonny (Prince) Billy backup singer who performs sensitive and thoughtful songs with the slowburn vocal intensity of someone on the verge of angry tears. The indie-rock supergroup Summer Moon, featuring members of the Like, the Strokes, and Au Revoir Simone, opens the show. (Rumsey Playfield, mid-Park at 69th St. summerstage.org. Aug. 5.)

Jamie xx “I Know There’s Gonna Be (Good Times),” a song off this producer’s arresting solo début album, “In Colour,” which came out in May, is a sun-drenched mush of alt-rap, dancehall, and bubblegum pop, and as clear a candidate for song of the summer as New York could ask for. In a recent interview with the online publication Grantland, the twenty-sixyear-old London resident said that the track was inspired by late-night drives across the Williamsburg Bridge, powered by the hip-hop anthems on Hot 97, the city’s premier rap station. It’s a surprising creation myth, considering the spare, yearning indie rock of the xx, the band that made him famous, but Jamie xx is good at surprises. (Terminal 5, 610 W. 56th St. 212-582-6600. Aug. 8.) Willie Nelson & Family and Old Crow Medicine Show The outlaw country legend Nelson is eighty-two, but he’s showing no signs of slowing down and is as prolific as ever. In the past year, the singer-songwriter, guitarist, actor, activist, and author published the memoir “It’s a Long Story: My Life,” launched his own cannabis brand, Willie’s Reserve, and released a duets album with his fellow country luminary and longtime friend Merle Haggard, called “Django and Jimmie.” In a benefit concert for the Celebrate Brooklyn! series, Nelson and his band share the bill with the old-timey string act Old Crow Medicine Show. (Prospect Park Bandshell, Prospect Park W. at 9th St. bricartsmedia.org. Aug. 12.) Philip Selway Selway, the drummer in Radiohead, isn’t the only member of the group to venture out on his own. His bandmates Thom Yorke and Jonny Greenwood also nurture solo careers on the side; but Selway’s journey is the most surprising, largely because he has stepped from behind the drum kit to the front of the stage. As a singer, the Oxfordshire native is soft-spoken, and as a songwriter he has a keen sense of melody and sonic texture. His second solo album, “Weatherhouse,” which came out last year, is a trove of pensive rock songs that are unblushingly tender and gently compelling. (Music Hall of Williamsburg, 66 N. 6th St., Brooklyn 718-486-5400. Aug. 6.)

Yuck This fuzzy U.K. four-piece was one of the most instantly likable acts of the recent nineties revival, due in large part to their crinkly-haired singer Daniel Blumberg, a lanky alt-rock poster child who penned withering anthems of postadolescent bewilderment on the group’s self-titled début, which came out in 2011. Two years after its release, Blumberg left the group to busy himself elsewhere, and the band promoted its lead guitarist, Max Bloom, to vocal duties. Yuck’s subsequent releases have been slightly uneven, but their live show still works just fine. With U.S. Girls. (Pier 84, W. 44th St. at the Hudson River. Aug. 6.)

3 Jazz and Standards Bill Frisell Stylistically unclassifiable and uncontainable by nature, the guitarist Frisell spends a week exploring new-jazz improvisation. During his residency at the Stone, he’s performing duets with the drummer Andrew Cyrille, the saxophonists John Zorn and Chris Cheek, and the guitarists Julian Lage and Mary Halvorson. He’ll also mix it up with the pianist Jason Moran, accompanied by the vocalist Alicia Hall Moran, the drummer Kenny Wollesen and the bassist Tony Scherr, and a spoken-word ensemble featuring the producer Hal Willner. (Avenue C at 2nd St. thestonenyc. com. Aug. 4-9.) Billy Hart In his quartet, which is at the Village Vanguard Aug. 11-16, the seventyfour-year-old drummer is as firmly clued in to a contemporary-jazz aesthetic as his considerably younger bandmates, who include the pianist Ethan Iverson (of the Bad Plus), the saxophonist Mark Turner, and the bassist Ben Street. One of the great post-bop percussionists, Hart may take on the title role, but the quartet’s two ECM recordings reveal an evolving ensemble eager to spread the collective wealth around. (178 Seventh Ave. S., at 11th St. 212-255-4037.) Roy Haynes That the innovative drummer Haynes is still performing at age ninety is praiseworthy; that he’s playing so well is little short of miraculous.

Bringing a long lifetime of experience (he’s played with everyone from Lester Young to Pat Metheny) and personal elegance to the stage, Haynes is unquestionably the hippest nonagenarian in jazz. (Blue Note, 131 W. 3rd St. 212-475-8592. Aug. 11-12.) Noah Preminger Quartet Preminger, an increasingly admired tenor saxophonist, pays homage to Warne Marsh, a too often overlooked stylist. A musician’s musician, Marsh was a cool-jazz tenor player who, during a career that stretched from the nineteen-forties until his death, in 1987, influenced a wide swath of players, including Wayne Shorter, Anthony Braxton, and Mark Turner. The pianist Aaron Goldberg, the bassist Kim Cass, and the drummer Matt Wilson round out Preminger’s quartet. (Jazz at Kitano, 66 Park Ave., at 38th St. 212-885-7119. Aug. 14.) Rudy Royston 303 Royston, the present day go-to drummer of jazz, allots himself enough space in his crowded schedule to occasionally lead his own band. Named after the area code for Denver, his home town, his 303 ensemble is a well-fortified outfit (two horns, guitar, piano, and two basses) that balances eclectically minded Royston originals with the occasional dip into the worlds of Radiohead and Mozart. (Village Vanguard, 178 Seventh Ave. S., at 11th St. 212-255-4037. Aug. 4-9.) Ches Smith A perennial figure of the new-jazz scene, Smith has grabbed attention in bands led by Marc Ribot, Tim Berne, and Mary Halvorson. Smith’s own obsessions have led him to the study of Haitian drumming, and in We All Break he’s joined by the pianist Matt Mitchell and two percussionists—Daniel Brevil and Markus Schwartz—who are steeped in the rhythms of the Caribbean nation. The group is at Ibeam, a performance and rehearsal space in Gowanus, Brooklyn, on Aug. 7-9 (ibeambrooklyn.com), and then at Korzo, a Hungarian restaurant on the southern edge of Park Slope with a thing for cutting-edge jazz, on Aug. 11. (667 Fifth Ave., Brooklyn, between 19th and 20th Sts. chessmith.com.)

THE NEW YORKER, AUGUST 10 & 17, 2015

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the THEATRE Openings and Previews Cymbeline Daniel Sullivan’s production, the second free Shakespeare in the Park offering of the summer, features Lily Rabe, Hamish Linklater, and Raúl Esparza. In previews. Opens Aug. 10. (Delacorte, Central Park. Enter at 81st St. at Central Park W. 212-967-7555.) Hamilton Lin-Manuel Miranda’s acclaimed hip-hop musical, in which Miranda plays the Founding Father Alexander Hamilton, moves to Broadway after a sold-out run at the Public. Thomas Kail directs. In previews. Opens Aug. 6. (Richard Rodgers, 226 W. 46th St. 800-745-3000.) John Sam Gold directs a new play by Annie Baker (“The Flick”), set in a bed-and-breakfast in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. In previews. Opens Aug. 11. (Pershing Square Signature Center, 480 W. 42nd St. 212-244-7529.) Love and Money Mark Lamos directs A. R. Gurney’s play, in which a wealthy widow plans to give away everything she owns, until a young man shows up to claim his inheritance. Previews begin Aug. 15. (Pershing Square Signature Center, 480 W. 42nd St. 212-244-7529.) Mercury Fur In Philip Ridley’s play, set in a dystopian near-future, two teen-age brothers throw parties for the rich in abandoned buildings. Scott Elliott directs for the New Group. In previews. (Pershing Square Signature Center, 480 W. 42nd St. 212-279-4200.) The New York International Fringe Festival The sprawling festival, which has spawned such cult favorites as “Urinetown,” “Matt & Ben,” and “Debbie Does Dallas,” returns for its nineteenth year. For complete programming—nearly two hundred shows in all—visit fringenyc.org. Opens Aug. 14. (Various locations.) Whorl Inside a Loop Sherie Rene Scott stars in a play she wrote with Dick Scanlan, about an actress teaching a storytelling class in a maximum-security prison. Scanlan and Michael Mayer direct. In previews. (Second Stage, 305 W. 43rd St. 212-246-4422.)

3 Now Playing The Absolute Brightness of Leonard Pelkey A whodunit with a heart of gold, James Lecesne’s sympathetic solo show traces a detective’s investi14

best in show Jane Lynch brings her cabaret stylings to Joe’s Pub.

fame came relatively late to Jane Lynch, first when she joined the cracked ensemble of the Christopher Guest mockumentaries “Best in Show” and “A Mighty Wind,” and then when she became Sue Sylvester, the tracksuited villainess on “Glee.” Her career as a chanteuse has come even later. Last year, 54 Below offered her four nights to perform her cabaret act. “I said, ‘Well, I don’t have an act, but I will get one,’ ” Lynch, who just turned fifty-five, recalled recently. She put together a set list of “obscure standards,” as she paradoxically described them, including Irving Berlin’s “Mr. Monotony” and the Flying Machine’s “Smile a Little Smile for Me,” as well as some satirical folk “hits” from “A Mighty Wind.” Since then, Lynch has toured from Beverly Hills to Red Bank, New Jersey. Her new show, “See Jane Sing!,” lands at Joe’s Pub Aug. 16-19. Like many of her characters, Lynch projects a self-assurance that can edge into aggression; she’s the master of bossy schmalz. Growing up in suburban Illinois, she struggled with social anxiety and the panicked realization that she was gay. But her house was full of singing. “My parents were wonderful harmonizers,” she said. “They would sit around the kitchen table and drink Ten High sour-mash whiskey and harmonize, and I always joined them.” She honed her comedic persona at Second City, and for a time played Carol Brady in the touring spoof “The Real Live Brady Bunch.” She made her Broadway début in 2013, as Miss Hannigan, in “Annie”—her solo, “Little Girls,” became an encore in her cabaret act. A few weeks ago, she was still brainstorming ideas for the upcoming show, where she’ll appear with a five-piece band. “We’re working on a medley of songs that made us cry as children,” she said. Her pick was “Puff the Magic Dragon,” which she insists isn’t really about drugs. “I think when you’re high you tap into the great unconscious anyway,” she said. “It’s about growing up—‘A dragon lives forever, but not so little boys.’ ” She paused. “I’m going to cry now.” Sue Sylvester would have had her for breakfast. —Michael Schulman

THE NEW YORKER, AUGUST 10 & 17, 2015

ILLUSTRATION BY SIMONE MASSONI


gation of a murdered teen, Leonard Pelkey. Under Tony Speciale’s direction, Lecesne, who helped to found the Trevor Project, a program for L.G.B.T.Q. youth, plays witnesses and suspects, from an acerbic beautician to a shrewd Mob wife to an unsociable gamer. Leonard never appears, though Lecesne shows us his fairy wings, his rainbow platform sneakers, and his journal filled with drawings and poems. In life, it seems, Leonard was discomfitingly flamboyant (if conveniently asexual). Plenty of people asked him, “Do you have to be so much yourself?” He did. Lecesne, with his dark eyes and strong chin, is a skillful actor, almost slick. Only the sweat staining his shirt betrays how hard he’s working. It’s for a good cause. While his script is structured like a police procedural, it’s really a plea for tolerance. (Westside, 407 W. 43rd St. 212-239-6200.) Amazing Grace Christopher Smith and Arthur Giron’s new musical tells the story of John Newton (the charming Josh Young), an eighteenth-century Englishman who is very much of his time and class. His father (Tom Hewitt) owns ships that carry slaves from Africa to England. Arrogant and fussy, Captain

Newton is a great annoyance to his son, whom he presses into service with the Royal Navy, accompanied by a black slave, Thomas (Chuck Cooper). During a storm off the coast of Africa, Thomas saves John’s life, inspiring him to write the title hymn. Gabriel Barre’s production is a fine enough spectacle, but the creators are after something more serious, about abolition and slavery and the ways in which lives can be changed by faith. It’s a worthy effort, all too noble and pat, but you want to thank the hardworking cast (including the very good Erin Mackey) and an audience that finds itself moved by such stories, no matter what. (Nederlander, 208 W. 41st St. 866-870-2717.) King Liz Liz Rico, a sports agent, is no pretender to the throne. She has a gold-plated client list, a bottomless expense account, and a flexible approach to professional ethics. “I lie, cheat, and steal for my clients,” she tells a young talent, proudly. As played by Karen Pittman in Fernanda Coppel’s drama, presented by Second Stage Uptown, Liz is a woman to be reckoned with, though not, unfortunately, a woman to believe in. Neither Coppel nor

DANCE Noche Flamenca / “Antigona” Martín Santangelo has adapted Sophocles’ “Antigone,” starring Soledad Barrio. (West Park Presbyterian Church, 165 W. 86th St. 212-868-4444. Aug. 4-8 and Aug. 10-15.) Ballet Festival This year, the Joyce’s annual showcase for up-and-coming ballet choreographers working outside the confines of big ballet companies includes chamber works created by the young Canadian Joshua Beamish (Aug. 4-5), for dancers from the Royal Ballet and American Ballet Theatre. Ashley Bouder, a virtuoso at New York City Ballet who has built the Ashley Bouder Project on the side, presents an evening of ballets (Aug. 8-9). Emery LeCrone (Aug. 13-14) offers her own work, including a pas de deux (“Partita No. 2 in C Minor”) that will be danced by the explosive Sara Mearns and Russell Janzen, both of City Ballet. Also taking part will be Chamber Dance Project (Aug. 6-7), BalletX (Aug. 11-12), and Amy Seiwert (Aug. 15-16). (175 Eighth Ave., at 19th St. 212-242-0800. Aug. 4-16.)

Celebrate Brooklyn! LeeSaar, the New York-based dance company of the Israeli-born choreographers Lee Sher and Saar Harari, brings a new version of their 2014 work “Grass and Jackals.” Perhaps the revision will minimize the maniacal laughter and insincere grins that, in previous performances, undercut the striking cast, seven extraordinarily pliable women in black catsuits. The influence of the Gaga technique, developed by Ohad Naharin, should be even clearer than usual, since the program also includes a Naharin duet danced by members of the Batsheva Dance Company. (Prospect Park Bandshell, Prospect Park W. at 9th St. 718-683-5600. Aug. 6.) “Solo for Two” Though Natalia Osipova and Ivan Vasiliev are no longer a couple in the romantic sense, their paired names are still box-office gold. Osipova is now a principal at the Royal Ballet; Vasiliev is based at the Mikhailovsky, in St. Petersburg. “Solo for Two,” an evolving platform for new choreography, is their joint project. Edward Watson, Marcelino Sambé, and

the able director, Lisa Peterson, has decided if this is a work of realism or satire. Consequently, the plot is far-fetched, the rhythms juddering, the characters and emotions less than credible. But Pittman is a dynamic performer, throwing herself at the role from the tips of her stilettos to the top of her burnished wig. A contrastingly understated Russell G. Jones, as the head coach of the Knicks, provides plenty of assists. (McGinn/ Cazale, 2162 Broadway, at 76th St. 212-246-4422. Through Aug. 15.) Summer Shorts 2015 Series A in the yearly festival of short plays for the dog days airs private woes in public places. In “10K,” Neil LaBute’s aerobic two-hander, a pair of pent-up joggers almost let their imaginations (and hormones) run away with them. Vickie Ramirez’s “Glenburn 12 WP,” named for an expensive Scotch quaffed by its commiserating characters, has a premise like a joke in poor taste: a Native American lawyer and an African-American physicist walk into a bar during a protest. But there’s not so much a punch line as a literal skeleton in the closet. And Matthew Lopez’s maudlin “The Sentinels” travels retrospectively through three 9/11 widows’ stages

Elizabeth McGorian (all of the Royal Ballet) will perform in a program that includes works by the British choreographers Alastair Marriott and Arthur Pita. “Mozart and Salieri,” a male duet by the young Russian choreographer Vladimir Varnava, will be danced by Vasiliev and Varnava. (City Center, 131 W. 55th St. 212581-1212. Aug. 7-8.) “Drive East” Now in its third year, this scrappy, event-packed, and frequently revelatory festival of classical Indian music and dance, produced by Navatman, expands into La MaMa’s largest theatre. Among the dance offerings are a kathak solo by Archana Joglekar, a bharata-natyam solo by Ashwini Ramaswamy, of Minneapolis’s excellent Ragamala Dance Company, and a kuchipudi duet by Kamala Reddy and Soumya Rajupet. (Ellen Stewart, 66 E. 4th St. 646-430-5374. Aug. 10-16.) Battery Dance Festival Formerly known as the Downtown Dance Festival, this week of free dance performances organized by the Battery Dance Company takes place against the backdrop (beautiful but often blinding) of New York Harbor at dusk. First, on Aug. 15, comes the nested Erasing Borders Festival of Indian Dance; along with distinguished performers from India, this year’s program includes a glimpse of Mayurbhanj Chhau, an originally martial form rarely seen here. The lineup on subsequent days

of grief, beginning with acceptance and journeying backward to doomed optimism. Competently crafted and well acted, but trivial despite weighty subject matter, these plays, like that Scotch, go down smooth, with almost no aftertaste. (59E59, at 59 E. 59th St. 212-279-4200.) Three Days to See There’s something so fake about the avant-gardism of theTransport Group’s verbatim evocation of Helen Keller’s life, as directed by Jack Cummings III, that whenever a tender moment declares itself—Cummings mostly crams them in at the end—it’s too late to believe anything that’s been said. Starring seven actors as Keller and Annie Sullivan, who taught Keller to sign, the piece is, ostensibly, about difference, and the hope that can come despite obstacles. But Cummings, who brilliantly put together “I Remember Mama” last season, is so all over the place with his influences, among them the Wooster Group and Richard Maxwell, that his desire to be hip takes precedence over everything else. It’s a shame, because there are talented performers, including Ito Aghayere and Marc delaCruz. (Theatre 79, at 79 E. 4th St. 866-811-4111. Through Aug. 16.)

features the host company in a new work by Tadej Brdnik, and the New York début of Polish Dance Theatre. On Aug. 18, the theme is Colombian, with the first New York visit of Sankofa Danzafro, a troupe from Medellín. (Robert F. Wagner, Jr., Park, 20 Battery Park Pl. 212-219-3910. Aug. 15-18. Through Aug. 21.)

3 Out of Town Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival Malpaso Dance Company (Ted Shawn, Aug. 5-9), a contemporary-dance ensemble based in Havana, will perform two appealing works: a heart-on-its-sleeve portrait of youthful anomie (set to folksy songs by Grandma Kelsey), by Trey McIntyre, and a sultry jazz suite by the company’s youthful artistic director, Osnel Delgado. • Jessica Lang’s “The Wanderer,” an evening-length work based on Schubert’s “Die Schöne Müllerin” song cycle, concludes its run (Doris Duke, Aug. 5-9). • The Sarasota Ballet, an up-and-coming troupe from the Gulf Coast, makes its festival première (Ted Shawn, Aug. 12-16) with a triple bill that includes Christopher Wheeldon’s “The American,” as buoyant and joyous as the Dvořák quartet to which it is set, and Frederick Ashton’s “Monotones I” and “Monotones II,” serene, mysterious trios set to the music of Erik Satie. • La Otra Orilla, a Canadian ensemble specializing in a refined, updated form of flamenco dance theatre, performs “Moi&lesAutres” (Doris Duke, Aug. 12-16). (Becket, Mass. 413-243-0745.)

THE NEW YORKER, AUGUST 10 & 17, 2015

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MOVIES Cop Car

Kevin Bacon stars in this drama, as a corrupt sheriff who seeks the return of his patrol car from the children (James Freedson-Jackson and Hays Wellford) who took it. Directed by Jon Watts. Opening Aug. 7. (In limited release.) The Diary of a Teenage Girl

Marielle Heller directed this drama, adapted from a graphic novel by Phoebe Gloeckner, about a highschool student (Bel Powley) who has an affair with her mother’s boyfriend (Alexander Skarsgård). Co-starring Kristen Wiig. Opening Aug. 7. (In limited release.) Fantastic Four

Josh Trank directed this Marvel Comics adaptation, about four teen-agers who are beamed to a distant universe. Starring Miles Teller, Kate Mara, Michael B. Jordan, and Jamie Bell. Opening Aug. 7. (In wide release.) The Man from U.N.C.L.E.

An adaptation of the television series, about two secret agents who team up to thwart criminals who seek nuclear arms. Directed by Guy Pearce; starring Henry Cavill, Alicia Vikander, and Armie Hammer. Opening Aug. 14. (In wide release.) Mistress America

Noah Baumbach directed this comic drama, about the friendship of a Barnard student (Lola Kirke) and her future stepsister (Greta Gerwig). Opening Aug. 14. (In limited release.)

movie OF THE WEEK

A video discussion of Elaine May’s “Ishtar,” from 1987, in our digital edition and online. 16

Now Playing Ant-Man The title may suggest a daunting genetic fusion of ant and man, along the lines of David Cronenberg’s “The Fly,” but Peyton Reed’s film, the latest entry in the Marvel series, declines to venture into the wilder limits of antsiness. Rather, it’s about a clever scientist (Michael Douglas) who once came up with an invention so wondrous—a suit that shrinks its wearer to the size of an insect—that he kept it tucked away. Now, decades later, he gets a clever burglar (Paul Rudd) to steal it, try it on, and do battle with a clever corporate villain (Corey Stoll), who has devised something similar and plans to market it as a weapon. The scientist also has a clever daughter (Evangeline Lilly), on whom the thief develops an unlikely crush. Despite the characters’ soaring levels of intelligence, the plot is lumpy and dumb, and Reed can do little but obey its stolid demands. Rudd, on the other hand, makes an endearing hero, forever signalling his amusement at the daftness of the whole conceit, and, to be fair, the climax is sprinkled with decent sight gags; by Marvel’s standards, two tiny guys duking it out atop a toy train makes a refreshing change from saving the world.—Anthony Lane (Reviewed in our issue of 7/27/15.) (In wide release.) Black Narcissus This lush 1947 adaptation of Rumer Godden’s 1939 novel, about Anglican nuns wrestling with the sensuality that surrounds their Himalayan mission, keeps the screen aglow and the mind agog. Made by the British producing-directing-writing team the Archers (Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger), it’s about faith and temptation; much of the Archers’ career is summed up when a British estate manager (David Farrar) tells the Sister Superior (a suggestively tense Deborah Kerr), “There’s something in the atmosphere that makes everything seem exaggerated.” Without leaving England, Powell and Pressburger created a rapturous landscape whose colors seem to spill over onto the nuns’ offwhite habits. This is a landmark of Hollywood-on-Thames trompe-l’oeil. With Flora Robson, Kathleen Byron, Sabu, and Jean Simmons (as a local girl).—Michael Sragow (MOMA; Aug. 7 and Aug. 10.)

THE NEW YORKER, AUGUST 10 & 17, 2015

Early Spring Yasujiro Ozu’s 1956 drama, about a married, thirtysomething businessman who begins an affair with a young female colleague, is both his longest film and his most comprehensive one. Sugiyama, who works for a respected Tokyo firm, has been married for about ten years; he and his wife, Masako, who doesn’t work outside the home, are still in mourning for their deceased young son. Though Sugiyama is a devoted employee, he’s just one of many striving salarymen, with few chances for promotion. Money is a constant struggle; Masako’s mother runs a small restaurant and barely gets by, and their neighbors are preparing to have a child whose upkeep they can’t afford. Disease is rampant, medical care is inadequate and expensive, and death is in the air, with nearly every family remembering relatives who perished in the war. Nonetheless, veterans reunite for rowdy drinking bouts and obliviously reminisce about the good old days. Amid the quietly terrifying stresses, Sugiyama’s romance with a secretary nicknamed Goldfish serves as just another form of intoxication. Ozu’s despairing view of postwar Japan looks as harshly at blind modernization as it does at decadent tradition. In Japanese.—Richard Brody (IFC Center; Aug. 14-16.) Five Star John (John Diaz), a timid teen-ager, lives with his widowed mother (Wanda Nobles Colon) in a Brooklyn housing project. John’s father, a gang leader, was shot to death; his father’s disciple, Primo (James “Primo” Grant), takes John under his wing and quickly molds him into a drug runner. But Primo, a devoted husband and father, tries to sustain the pretense of virtue even as he beats a debtor to a pulp and manages a team of brutal underlings. Meanwhile, John’s mother tries to keep John away from crime but can no longer control him; John’s girlfriend, Jasmin (Jasmine Burgos), also suspects that he’s up to no good. The writer and director, Keith Miller, establishes engaging characters but stifles their thoughts and emotions, sets up dramatic situations but avoids their practicalities and implications. The movie is little more than its plot, and much of the plot, for all the suspense it arouses, falls back on clichés. The hearty actors, who are nonprofessionals, convey much more depth than the script and

the direction do; Miller’s blend of documentary and fiction stints on both.—R.B. (In limited release.) Irrational Man Woody Allen’s light-toned, darkthemed comedy begins with duelling voice-overs, which keep wrangling throughout the film: those of Abe Lucas (Joaquin Phoenix), a philosopher with a taste for trouble, and Jill Pollard (Emma Stone), his disciple and admirer. Abe arrives at a small Rhode Island liberal-arts school in a funk. Depressed, reckless, and isolated, he instructs his students (especially the gifted Jill) in the futility of a life of the mind, and begins an affair with Rita Richards (Parker Posey), a colleague with romantic dreams. But a chance encounter in town with a victim of local misrule inspires a debate with Jill that prompts Abe to take action, turning the skit-like satire into an eerie and suspenseful thriller. As taboos fall away, so does Abe’s resistance to Jill’s flirtations. Allen’s sketch of the campus owes nothing to observations of real students or teachers; the setup is an abstraction that the actors fill with their own vitality. But when the Dostoyevskian drama kicks in, Allen’s venomous speculations bring to the fore a tangle of conundrums and ironies, as if the director, nearing eighty, already had one foot in the next world and were looking back at this one with derision and rue.—R.B. (In limited release.) Listen to Me Marlon The director Stevan Riley gained access to an inestimable treasure: hundreds of hours of Marlon Brando’s unpublished homemade audio recordings of himself, spoken into the microphone of a tape recorder over the course of decades. Riley edits the recordings into something like Brando’s posthumous self-portrait. The actor’s every turn of phrase is a ready-made work of art, an intimate performance for the ages. Unfortunately, Riley decorates these sonic gems nearly beyond recognition with audiovisual distractions, including a Max Headroom-like digital mockup of Brando, illustrative stock footage, and insipid reënactments, together with droning music and sound effects that intrude on Brando’s voice. Riley doesn’t trust the material; each time a tape is actually seen—including several that Brando labelled “self-hypnosis” —the sense of contact with the late

PHOTOFEST

Opening



People Places Things

Jemaine Clement stars in this comedy as a single father who must juggle his family life with his career as a graphic novelist. Directed by James C. Strouse; co-starring Regina Hall. Opening Aug. 14. (In limited release.) Ricki and the Flash

A drama, starring Meryl Streep as an aging rocker who seeks to reconnect with her adult daughter (Mamie Gummer). Directed by Jonathan Demme; written by Diablo Cody; co-starring Kevin Kline, Audra McDonald, and Sebastian Stan. Opening Aug. 7. (In wide release.) The Runner

Nicolas Cage stars in this drama, about a politician who seeks redemption after being caught in a sex scandal. Directed by Austin Stark; co-starring Connie Nielsen and Sarah Paulson. Opening Aug. 7. (In wide release.) Straight Outta Compton

A drama, based on the true story of the rise, in the nineteen-eighties, of the hip-hop group N.W.A. Directed by F. Gary Gray; starring O’Shea Jackson, Jr., Corey Hawkins, and Jason Mitchell. Opening Aug. 14. (In wide release.) Ten Thousand Saints

A comic drama, set in New York in the nineteeneighties, about three teen-agers who set up house together. Directed by Shari Springer Berman and Robert Pulcini; starring Asa Butterfield, Hailee Steinfeld, Emile Hirsch, and Ethan Hawke. Opening Aug. 14. (In limited release.) Tom at the Farm

Xavier Dolan directed and stars in this drama, about a gay man who visits the family of his late lover. Co-starring Pierre-Yves Cardinal, Lise Roy, and Evelyne Brochu. In French. Opening Aug. 14. (In limited release.) We Come as Friends

A documentary, directed by Hubert Sauper, about South Sudan and its war of independence. Opening Aug. 14. (In limited release.)

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actor is uncanny. Brando reflects on his contribution to the art of the movies; his view seems to shift over the years from pride to cynicism, but Riley doesn’t identify the recordings by date. Rather, he melds them into a banal concoction that’s unworthy of their source.—R.B. (Film Forum.) The Look of Silence Having already made one documentary—“The Act of Killing” (2012)— about the Indonesian genocide of the nineteen-sixties, Joshua Oppenheimer returns to the scene of the crimes. He follows an optometrist named Adi, who goes around testing the eyesight of elderly men and inquiring into their personal histories; Adi’s interest stretches beyond the professional, because the men in question were involved in the murder of his brother during the nationwide purge of Communists. Some of those whom he questions are annoyed by his gentle persistence; others—the cheerier and more frightening ones—seem all too keen to provide detailed accounts of the brutality that they meted out decades ago. (One fellow recalls the taste of human blood.) It’s no surprise that the atmosphere in the film is strained, and its theme remains so controversial in Indonesia—where children like Adi’s son are still fed anti-Communist propaganda in primary school—that much of the local film crew is listed in the credits as “anonymous.” Yet the backdrop is often peaceful, even benign, especially in the scenes between Adi and his parents; you keep having to remind yourself, with Oppenheimer’s help, that not so long ago the land was a charnel house.—A.L. (7/27/15) (In limited release.) A Matter of Time The director Vincente Minnelli ended his career with this romantic drama, from 1976, and it’s one of the great last films. His daughter Liza Minnelli stars as a world-famous actress and singer called Nina, who is awaited by an adoring crowd at a major ceremony. En route to the event in a Rolls-Royce, Nina reminisces about her path to fame. It began in 1949, when, at the age of nineteen, she took a job as a chambermaid at a faded Roman hotel and was befriended by an elderly guest, the Contessa Sanziani (Ingrid Bergman), a grande dame and love goddess of the early twentieth century. The penniless and isolated Contessa (whom Bergman portrays with an operatic fury) relives her grandiose memories with a nearly delusional intensity; she makes Nina her protégée, dressing her up and teaching her the cynical wisdom of society, which Nina puts to good use. Along the way, the director captures, in bold colors and delicate strokes, the melancholy nobility of a great past outlived and the dawnlike freshness of an imagination awakening. The result is a bittersweet masterwork about

THE NEW YORKER, AUGUST 10 & 17, 2015

the raging and frustrated passions of old age.—R.B. (Anthology Film Archives; Aug. 6.) Metropolitan Whit Stillman’s effervescent, calmly profound first feature, from 1990, looks at a sliver of a sliver, the barely collegiate subset of what one character calls the urban haute bourgeoisie— rich Wasp preppies whose lives are centered on Park and Fifth Avenues. The tale is told from the perspective of a near-outsider, Tom Townsend (Edward Clements), a red-haired, Ivy-styled intellectual who, after his parents’ divorce, lives on the West Side without a trust fund and must make an impression with his ideas. Swept accidentally into the Christmas-season wave of débutante balls, Tom becomes the habitual escort of Audrey Rouget (Carolyn Farina) but hasn’t got over a prep-school fling with Serena Slocum (Elizabeth Thompson), whose new Euro-trash boyfriend (Will Kempe) becomes a subject of controversy. Stillman films these rounds of romance and jealousy, old mind-sets and new friendships, as scintillating dialectical jousts in which verbal blows take the place of action and leave lasting emotional wounds. His sensitive cinematic balance of performance, image, and inflection suggests a sensibility inspired, worthily, by F. Scott Fitzgerald. Co-starring Chris Eigeman and Taylor Nichols, as Tom’s best new rivals.—R.B. (Film Society of Lincoln Center.) Mr. Holmes The Sherlock Holmes industry shows no sign of withering, but the man himself, according to Bill Condon’s movie, was all too subject to the corrosive powers of time. The guiding conceit is that Holmes was a real person whose deeds were transcribed by Dr. Watson; the need for Conan Doyle thus evaporates. Holmes is played by Ian McKellen, who rejoins forces with the director; their previous collaboration was on “Gods and Monsters” (1998), where McKellen was James Whale—another Englishman whose wisdom, late in life, was put to the test. The new film opens in 1947, at a time when the aging Holmes, recently returned from Japan, is cared for by his housekeeper (Laura Linney) and her young son (Milo Parker); in contrast to the look of the movie, which is decorous to a fault, Holmes is aggravated by the memory of an old case, from thirty years earlier, when he was asked to explain the curious conduct of a mother (Hattie Morahan) in mourning for her dead children. The heart of the tale is a finely wrought encounter between the sleuth and his prey, yet the central mystery feels, by Holmesian standards, barely worth unravelling. Much of the rest of the film, for some reason, is about bees.—A.L. (7/20/15) (In limited release.)

Ms. 45 A young woman who works as an artisan at a small garment-district fashion house endures unspeakable horror—she’s raped twice in quick succession, first by a masked thug in an alley, and then, upon her return home, by an awaiting intruder. Fighting off the second attacker, she bashes his head in with an iron, dismembers and stashes his body, and, taking his pistol, wanders the streets to shoot men who display aggression or even affection. In Abel Ferrara’s street-scuzzy, sunstreaked, neon-lurid New York film noir, from 1980, the protagonist, Thana (Zoë Tamerlis Lund)—short for the Greek word for “death”—suffers in silence: the character is mute, gesturing and passing notes to make herself understood, and her social isolation and her inability to vent her rage lend her gestures an ever-greater symbolic impact. With Grand Guignol relish, Ferrara depicts a city in the throes of a Wild West lawlessness that invites vigilante action (the Guardian Angels are thanked in the end credits). But his sardonic documentary portraits of cheesy styles of macho seduction set up an implacable gender opposition of legendary dimensions, beyond politics and perhaps beyond redress.—R.B. (BAM Cinématek; Aug. 15.) Phoenix The German director Christian Petzold’s drama, a historical twist on Alfred Hitchcock’s “Vertigo,” stars Nina Hoss as Nelly Lenz, a Jewish survivor of Auschwitz, who suffers gunshot wounds to the face in the last days of the war. After facial-reconstruction surgery, she returns home to Berlin and finds her husband, Johannes (Johnny) Lenz (Ronald Zehrfeld), a pianist, working at a night club in the American sector. She doesn’t identify herself, and he doesn’t recognize her; rather, he thinks that she resembles Nelly to the extent that, with a little effort, she could impersonate his late wife and claim her inheritance (since, as he knows, her entire family was killed by the Nazis). Petzold achieves a narrow but evocative realism on a slender budget, but the narrowness extends to his characters as well. His pristine academicism merely illustrates the story. The script’s spoonfuls of dialogue take the place of visual conception and symbolic resonance; the lack of directorial style renders the story all the less plausible. Nonetheless, the plot tautly builds suspense, and the ending is a legitimate corker. In German.—R.B. (In limited release.) Le Plaisir This 1952 costume adaptation of three stories by Maupassant matches the originals in frank sensuality and comic irony, but the director, Max Ophüls, reshapes the material with his distinctive blend of visual genius and bitter, worldly wisdom. The first two episodes—concerning a legendary seducer, now elderly, who dons a mask


to gavotte with the young belles at a dance hall, and the ladies of a smalltown brothel who send the local men into a tizzy when they close up shop to attend the first Communion of the madam’s niece—lift the veil of effervescent ribaldry to reveal the agonies of unsatisfied desire. In the dance hall, Ophüls’s gliding, gyrating camera captures the lusty, pounding steps of a quadrille as erotic as a night-club grind; in church, he slyly suggests the compartmentalized faith of unrepentant sinners. (No other director has so touchingly conveyed the exquisite social graces that arise from the pursuit of animal lust.) The third story, about a bright young artist whose relationship with his live-in model goes sour, is a philosophical tale with a whiplash ending. It presses the director’s elegant style to the breaking point, climaxing with a harrowing, vertiginous crane shot that rises to a nightmarish frenzy—and ending with one of the greatest last lines in movie history. In French.—R.B. (MOMA; Aug. 15.) Southpaw This pastiche of classic Hollywood boxing dramas, directed by Antoine Fuqua and written by Kurt Sutter, seems freeze-dried. It’s the story of the light-heavyweight champion Billy

Hope (Jake Gyllenhaal), who grew up in a Hell’s Kitchen orphanage and brings a bitter art to the sweet science: he absorbs a vast amount of punishment until, seized with rage, he fights back with an irresistible fury. His wife, Maureen (Rachel McAdams), who’s the brains of the operation, thinks that he’s taken enough blows. When she’s accidentally killed by a member of his entourage, Billy inadvisedly returns to the ring. Possessed by grief and anger, he quickly loses his championship, his reputation, his money, and custody of the couple’s daughter, Leila (Oona Laurence). Billy sets out to regain them all by putting himself in the hands of a guru-like trainer (Forest Whitaker). The suspense-free action strains beneath a hopelessly bland text and invisible, impersonal direction. The movie seems populated by humanoids who are endowed with the semblance of life by the thankless exertions of the extraordinary actors who embody them—and whose faces and voices might as well be applied digitally.—R.B. (In wide release.) Tangerine The director Sean Baker brings empathetic curiosity to the story of Sin-Dee (Kitana Kiki Rodriguez), a transgender prostitute in Hollywood

who, hours after her release from jail, learns that her pimp and boyfriend, Chester (James Ransone), has been unfaithful to her during her twentyeight-day absence. To make matters worse, the other woman, Dinah (Mickey O’Hagan), is everything that Sin-Dee is not—white (like Chester) and physically female from birth—and Sin-Dee careens through town to find her and kick her ass. While considering the practicalities and degradations of street life as endured by Sin-Dee and her best friend, Alexandra (Mya Taylor), Baker also looks at their johns—in particular, Razmik (Karren Karagulian), an Armenian cabbie who flees his overbearing mother-in-law (Alla Tumanian) for the prostitutes’ company. The action is set on Christmas Eve, and Baker leans hard on sad sentiment and cheap irony. For all the ugliness he depicts—none worse than the ordeal of Dinah, who works as part of a team of prostitutes in a sordid motel room—Baker revels in the power of clichés and the generic energy of his lo-fi cinematography, which was done with iPhones. The results are picturesque and anecdotal.—R.B. (In limited release.) Trainwreck After three successful seasons of “Inside Amy Schumer,” its creator gets

a starring role outside the realm of TV. Schumer plays Amy—a romantically reckless, dirty-mouthed, and alcohol-laced writer living, working, and sleeping around in New York. Aghast at the idea of seeing a guy more than once, let alone settling down, she is shocked to find herself falling for a sports surgeon (Bill Hader) whom she interviews for a magazine. Anyone hoping that the movie, written by Schumer and directed by Judd Apatow, would have the courage of its own waywardness, or that Amy might push her lonely transgressions to the limit, will be disappointed to watch the plot acquire the softness of a regular rom-com, and even Schumer’s fiercest fans may wonder if they are still watching a bunch of funny sketches being strung together, as opposed to a feature film. There are sprightly supporting turns from Tilda Swinton, scarcely recognizable as an editor with a heart of flint, and from John Cena, as Amy’s muscular squeeze; on the other hand, Apatow seems to have issued an open invitation to random celebrities—LeBron James, Chris Evert, Amar’e Stoudemire, Matthew Broderick, and Marv Albert—to join the film and make it into a party. Nice try.—A.L. (7/20/15) (In wide release.)

THE NEW YORKER, AUGUST 10 & 17, 2015

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ART Museums Short List Metropolitan Museum

“Wolfgang Tillmans: ‘Book for Architects’.” Through Nov. 1. Museum of Modern Art

“One-Way Ticket: Jacob Lawrence’s Migration Series and Other Visions of the Great Movement North.” Through Sept. 7. MOMA PS1

“Simon Denny: The Innovator’s Dilemma.” Through Sept. 7. Guggenheim Museum

“Doris Salcedo.” Through Oct. 12. Whitney Museum

“America Is Hard to See.” Through Sept. 27. Brooklyn Museum

“The Rise of Sneaker Culture.” Through Oct. 4. American Museum of Natural History

“Life at the Limits: Stories of Amazing Species.” Through Jan. 3. Jewish Museum

“Revolution of the Eye: Modern Art and the Birth of American Television.” Through Sept. 20. Morgan Library & Museum

“Alice: 150 Years of Wonderland.” Through Oct. 11. Museo del Barrio

Museum of Arts and Design

“Pathmakers: Women in Art, Craft, and Design, Midcentury and Today.” Through Sept. 27. Museum of the City of New York

“Folk City: New York and the Folk Music Revival.” Through Nov. 29. Neue Galerie

“Gustav Klimt and Adele Bloch-Bauer: The Woman in Gold.” Through Sept. 7. New Museum

“Sarah Charlesworth: Doubleworld.” Through Sept. 20. Noguchi Museum

“Highlights from the Collection: Iconic Display.” Through Sept. 13. Queens Museum

“Robert Seydel: The Eye in the Matter.” Through Sept. 27. SculptureCenter

“Erika Verzutti: Swan with Stage.” Through Aug. 3.

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In 1930, Grete Stern and Ellen Auerbach founded a photography studio in Berlin and called it ringl + pit, after their childhood nicknames. Their 1931 portrait of Auerbach and her husband, Walter, is included in the exhibition “From Bauhaus to Buenos Aires: Grete Stern and Horacio Coppola,” at the Museum of Modern Art through Oct. 4.

Museums and Libraries Metropolitan Museum “Van Gogh: Irises and Roses” This poignant four-painting show reunites two pictures in the museum’s collection with others from Washington and Amsterdam. In the late spring of 1890, after checking out of the asylum of Saint-Paul-de-Mausole, van Gogh quickly painted a quartet of dense bouquets he gathered himself, in tones far more subdued than his churning landscapes of the previous year. The irises are radically flat and slightly off-center. One pops against a yellow background; another floats against white. The roses—once pink, now faded— are pinwheels of thickly applied light blue, cream, and canary yellow. These still-lifes are a triumph of freedom achieved through restraint—the work of an artist in full command, seeing with burning clarity just three months before he ended his life. Through Aug. 16.

THE NEW YORKER, AUGUST 10 & 17, 2015

Cooper-Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum “Provocations: The Architecture and Design of Heatherwick Studio” “Provocation” seems like a belligerent word to describeThomas Heatherwick, the British architect famed for his whimsical work. A pedestrian canal bridge in London coils up like a snail when boats pass underneath it; a kinetic copper cauldron, designed for the 2012 Olympics, is made of more than two hundred calla-lilyshaped elements. In this exhibition, the whimsy is compounded by wall texts, introducing each project with a question that begins: “What if . . . ?” The notion that design is a game of make-believe may not endear him to functionalists, but Heatherwick has become a favorite of clients from Abu Dhabi to Singapore. His proposal for a “Garden Bridge” over the Thames, seen here in a mist-strewn rendering worthy of an antihistamine commercial, has elicited protest in London. New Yorkers have been

quiet so far about Heatherwick’s plan for a floating island in the Hudson River—a privately funded fantasia in a city whose public infrastructure is crumbling. Through Jan. 3. Studio Museum in Harlem “Stanley Whitney: Dance the Orange” It’s remarkably difficult to find words for the flustering magnetism of Whitney’s color abstractions. The works in the painter’s first solo museum show in New York present wobbly grids of variously sized and proportioned blocks of full-strength color in friezelike arrays, separated by brushy horizontal bands. Whitney, sixty-eight, grew up outside Philadelphia. He has lived and worked mostly in Manhattan since 1968, with sojourns in Parma, Italy, where he and his wife of twenty-five years, the painter Marina Adams, have a second home. He belongs to a generation of resiliently individualist American painters—Mary Heilmann, Thomas Nozkowski, David Reed, and Jack

COURTESY MOMA

“¡Presente! The Young Lords in New York.” Through Oct. 17.


Whitten come to mind—who have hewed to abstraction throughout periods of art-world favor for figurative and photography-based styles, if not of blanket disdain for the old-fangled medium of oil on canvas. Whitney has earned the passionate esteem of many fellow-painters and painting aficionados; now should be his moment for wider recognition. His recent work is his finest, and the case that it makes for abstract art’s not yet exhausted potencies, both aesthetic and philosophical, thrills. Through Oct. 25.

3 Galleries—Uptown “Photography Sees the Surface” This knockout show combines new and vintage photographs and straddles abstraction and representation. Organized by the artist Aspen Mays, it juxtaposes pictures by Minor White, Man Ray, and Frederick Sommer with works by young newcomers, several of whom make impressive débuts here. John Opera’s big, blue-black cyanotype image of melted venetian blinds has an eerie presence, and Jackie Furtado’s picture of a man’s face in a nearly impenetrable shadow finds an odd echo in a piece by Nick George

that suggests a featureless George Condo portrait. Through Aug. 7. (Higher Pictures, 980 Madison Ave., at 76th St. 212-249-6100.)

3 Galleries—Chelsea Nobuyoshi Araki The seventy-seven black-and-white photographs in Araki’s “Eros Diary” are all time-stamped July 7, creating a fiction that all the pictures were taken on the same day—the anniversary of the Japanese artist’s wedding to his late wife. But the significance of the date weighs lightly on the series, which touches on mortality but pays more rapt attention to sex, toys, and sex toys. Araki’s imaginary day is filled end to end with nude women and food; his parents make a cameo appearance, but it’s Araki’s id that dominates this playful selfportrait of the artist as a provocateur. Through Aug. 7. (Kern, 532 W. 20th St. 212-367-9663.) Elmer Bischoff Large, moody, startlingly strong paintings, made between 1953 and 1972, argue for greater recognition for the Bay Area peer of Richard Diebenkorn and David Park. Bischoff countered Abstract Expressionism

(which he knew first hand, as a colleague of Clyfford Still and Mark Rothko, at the California School of Fine Arts, in San Francisco, in the late nineteen-forties) with a stubborn loyalty to figuration. His style might be termed neo-expressionist, avant la lettre, but with deep roots in modern traditions. Smoldering color and furious brushwork lend as much drama to a domestic scene, “Girl Getting a Haircut” (1962), as to a grand sea view, “Figure at Window with Boat” (1966). You feel as much as see the art. It feels like joy under pressure. Through Aug. 14. (Adams, 525-531 W. 26th St. 212-564-8480.) De Wain Valentine An overshadowed figure of California minimalism gets his first New York solo show in three decades. Valentine cast polyester resin, in a firmer than usual formula of his own creation, into tall, thin isosceles triangles with hieratic overtones, as well as disks, diamonds, toruses, and curved walls. The twelve-foot triangles’ dark-gray surfaces reflect visitors (and refract lighting), but the smaller, colored works are more beguiling. Mauve and ochre diamonds reveal different concentrations of color from different angles; a freestanding disk

in a smoky mix of blue and black suggests ink suspended in water. Through Aug. 7. (Zwirner, 525 W. 19th St. 212-727-2070.) “A Rare Earth Magnet” A prime wrapped-yarn sculpture by Judith Scott sets the tone for this show of works by artists who make use of found and unprecious objects. Unfortunately, too many aim for easy laughs. Adam Parker Smith’s wall-mounted sculpture is a Frank Stella parody, made of jump rope and faux-marble wallpaper. Ajay Kurian has rigged a linear actuator to compress and decompress the belly of one of this summer’s ubiquitous Minions. Better is the work of Ann Greene Kelly, whose assemblages of repurposed materials—an upturned stool and a mop head, a shoe tree mounted precariously on a steel rod—have some of the inscrutable appeal of Scott’s confounding creations. Through Aug. 21. (Koenig & Clinton, 459 W. 19th St. 212-334-9255.) “A Room of One’s Own” Don’t let Gagosian’s recent show on the same theme—the studio as photographer’s muse—deter you from this savvy exhibition, which delivers a more up-to-date take. Fine works


by Mickalene Thomas, Anne Collier, and Leslie Hewitt suggest how a space can shape a process. To make the largest piece in the show, Paul Mpagi Sepuya photographed a mirror whose surface was partially covered in a fragmentary self-portrait, creating a confusion of layers that snares your attention. Both Saul Fletcher and David Gilbert create environments for shifting installations of art and objects, treating the studio as a 3-D collage. Through Aug. 21. (Richardson, 525 W. 22nd St. 646-230-9610.)

“Organic Situation” For the artists in this ironically titled show, the natural is just raw material ripe for manipulation. Jonathan Bruce Williams places flowers behind the lenses of a stereoscope to create an optical experience that is at once artificial and hyperreal. Two Chinese scholars’ rocks on a white platform, by Tyler Coburn, look organic but are actually crafted from salvaged computer parts. If a few artists here fiddle with perception for its own sake (Miljohn Ruperto remade Kaspar

above POW! PortSide Open Weekend For the first time in five years, the waterfront nonprofit PortSide NewYork is presenting three days of public programs aboard its home, the seventy-seven-year-old tanker Mary A. Whalen, which moved to a new berth in May, after years of seeking a permanent place on the waterfront. The festivities commence Friday night with “Artists for PortSide,” which features a concert by the Swiss flamenco-jazz musicians Regula Küffer and Nick Perrin. Throughout Saturday and Sunday, educational tours of the tanker are provided. Saturday night offers more quality tanker time, during which guests may bring food and booze and lounge on deck while listening to the Folk Music Society of New York. The revelry concludes on Sunday evening, with a communal potluck dinner. Kids are welcome, and flat-soled shoes are recommended. (Atlantic Basin, Red Hook, Brooklyn. portsidenewyork.org. Aug. 7-9.)

Dirty Girl Mud Run This muddy obstacle-course event, which is dedicated to raising awareness and funds for breast- and ovarian-cancer education and to celebrating cancer survivors, spans roughly 3.1 miles of ground and is open to women of all fitness levels. It’s meant to be more fun than competitive, as there’s no timer, and runners may bypass any obstacle they wish. Participants can expect to get drenched in dirt, so bring a towel, a garbage bag to store your muddy apparel, and a change of clothes (and shoes) for the after-party. Protective eyewear is also recommended. Sorry, guys, but the run is open to women only, though all are welcome to attend as spectators. (Citi Field, 123-01 Roosevelt Ave. godirtygirl.com. Aug. 8.) Hong Kong Dragon Boat Festival in New York Now in its twenty-fifth year, this event brings dragon-boat teams from around the world to Queens for races on Meadow Lake, in Flushing Meadows

David Friedrich’s famous iceberg as a lenticular print), the majority make good on their efforts to erase distinctions between real and virtual. Through Aug. 21. (Koenig & Clinton, 459 W. 19th St. 212-334-9255.)

3 Galleries—Downtown “Our Lacustrine Cities” “Lacustrine” is to lakes what “marine” is to oceans, and the four sculptors here make use of fluids, emulsions, and secretions in art works on the

verge—or past the point—of spilling over. Anne Imhof, best known for her performances, has filled a suitcase with condensed milk that seeps onto the floor. Nancy Lupo presents a nuclear family of Rubbermaid pails filled with water. Liz Magor and Hayley A. Silverman each use resin and rubber to make disquieting objects poised between solid and gooey, inviting favorable comparisons to such virtuosos as Eva Hesse and Alina Szapocznikow. Through Aug. 14. (Chapter, 127 Henry St. 347-528-4397.)

beyond Park. The matches are vividly colorful and fiercely competitive, but the action isn’t limited to the water. Onshore, there’s an international food court, along with concerts, comedy performances, martial-arts demonstrations, and other activities. (hkdbf-ny.org. Aug. 8-9.)

Electric Chairs!” And, yes, there’ll be live music, from his group Blue Coupe, featuring Joe and Albert Bouchard, founders of Blue Öyster Cult. (Pier 1’s Granite Prospect, Old Fulton St. at Furman St. brooklynbridgepark.org. Aug. 10 at 7.)

Readings and Talks Bookcourt Julia Pierpont, who works in the editorial department of this magazine, and the writer Rebecca Dinerstein read from and discuss their début novels, “Among the Ten Thousand Things” and “The Sunlit Night,” respectively. (163 Court St. 718-875-3677. Aug. 5 at 7.)

Housing Works Bookstore Café The actor and writer Felicia Day talks about her new book, “You’re Never Weird on the Internet (Almost),” with the novelist Lev Grossman. (126 Crosby St. For more information, visit wordbookstores.com. Aug. 10 at 7.)

“Books Beneath the Bridge” The alfresco Monday-night reading series in Brooklyn Bridge Park comes to a close for the season with Dennis Dunaway, the original bassist in the Alice Cooper band, who co-wrote “School’s Out” and other hits that once addled many a parent. He’ll be reading from his memoir, “Snakes! Guillotines! and

“Poetry at the New York Public Library” The poets Parneshia Jones, Patrick Phillips, and Jean Valentine read from their work, as part of the Academy of American Poets’ summer reading series. (Margaret Liebman Berger Forum, New York Public Library, Fifth Ave. at 42nd St. For more information, visit poets.org. Aug. 11 at 6.)

The Mary A. Whalen, a historic oil tanker that’s home to the waterfront advocacy organization PortSide NewYork, now has a berth in Red Hook, Brooklyn. 22

THE NEW YORKER, AUGUST 10 & 17, 2015

ILLUSTRATION BY MICHAEL KIRKHAM


FOOD & DRINK BAR TAB lazy point

Tables for Two

shuko 47 E. 12th St. (212-228-6088)

ILLUSTRATION BY MATTHEW HOLLISTER

there’s no menu at shuko. You can either get a lot of sushi, which is the omakase option, or slightly less sushi along with some “composed” dishes, the kaiseki. Either way, most of it is prepared and delivered over the counter by Jimmy Lau or Nick Kim, the owners and head chefs, who used to work at the city’s priciest restaurant, Masa. The two of them understand the rich well enough to know that the only thing they like more than spending money is getting something for free. That would explain the service—is it paranoia, or are the high rollers getting more fish?—but also, following an exquisitely refined meal, the bonus: apple pie, a gloriously unreconstructed hunk of it. But there’s serious work to be done before brown sugar and streusel. Out comes a parade of sushi, though the chefs identifying their creations don’t always make themselves heard over Drake or Jay Z. Guessing games ensue: “Did he say scallop sperm?” He did, and it’s mild, sweet, and a little bit wobbly, like custard. Trying so many new things, without always knowing what it is you’re trying, is disorienting, but certain ingredients serve as comforting through-lines. Shiso leaf, astringent and clear, is there at the beginning, with pistachio miso on top of homemade mochi; again, nestled under a streak of sea bream; and then, at the end, wrapped around a pickled lotus root. What are Thai bird chilis doing on top of grilled toro sinew? It works, just like the heat of Sichuan peppercorns with cold ocean trout. But the biggest surprise is how, through all the many courses of nigiri, the rice itself remains interesting. It lolls around the mouth long after the Santa Barbara uni has slipped away. The number of courses might be hazy, but those grains of rice—you can count them. —Amelia Lester

310 Spring St. The summer Hamptons hordes cling to the comforts of Manhattan, with their East End Ralph Laurens, SoulCycles, and Citarellas. Meanwhile, those sweating it out in the city dream of ocean breezes—reveries not lost on the team behind Lazy Point, a new bar in “Hudson Square” (near the Holland Tunnel) that’s “bringing the seaside vibe to life” in an “urban beach house setting.” It’s named after a scenic spit of land in Napeague Bay, just west of Montauk, but borrows its aesthetic from raucous hot spots such as the Surf Lodge and Ruschmeyer’s, or maybe a Nautica store. The floor is teal, the exposed brick is whitewashed, and many remaining surfaces have been painted the colors of maritime signal flags. A recent Thursday felt like the weekend; a guy in a cycling cap gulped Narragansett and said, “I’m so excited to have twenty days off to just, like, hang.” A drink called Beets by Dre contained beet juice, gin, and rosemary—O.K. if borscht’s your thing; watch the white jeans. A safer bet was the Pistachio Mule (pistachio-shell-infused vodka, lime, ginger), a long way from Moscow. A dancey Talking Heads remix blared, “And you may ask yourself, ‘Well . . . how did I get here?’ ” over which a toned woman shrieked, “You’re so skinny!” as a greeting. Another confided, “I’m very close to moving to L.A.” Her friend said, “You should do it!” The grass is always greener. —Emma Allen

Open for dinner Mondays through Saturdays. Omakase $135; kaiseki $175. PHOTOGRAPH BY JAMES POMERANTZ

THE NEW YORKER, AUGUST 10 & 17, 2015

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THE TALK OF THE TOWN COMMENT EXIT, STAGE LEFT

ILLUSTRATIONS BY TOM BACHTELL

P

olitical life in America never ceases to astonish. Take last week’s pronouncements from the Republican Presidential field. Please. Mike Huckabee predicted that President Obama’s seven-nation agreement limiting Iran’s nuclear capabilities “will take the Israelis and march them to the door of the oven.” Ted Cruz anointed the American President “the world’s leading financier of radical Islamic terrorism.” Marco Rubio tweeted, “Look at all this outrage over a dead lion, but where is all the outrage over the planned parenthood dead babies.” And the (face it) current front-runner, the halfway hirsute hotelier Donald Trump, having insulted the bulk of his (count ’em) sixteen major rivals plus (countless) millions of citizens of the (according to him) not-so-hot nation he proposes to lead, announced via social media that in this week’s Fox News debate he plans “to be very nice & highly respectful of the other candidates.” Really, now. Who’s writing this stuff ? Jon Stewart? Over the decades, our country has been lucky in many things, not least in the subversive comic spirits who, in varying ways, employ a joy buzzer, a whoopee cushion, and a fun-house mirror to knock the self-regard out of an endless parade of fatuous pols. Thomas Nast drew caricatures so devastating that they roiled the ample guts of our town’s Boss, William Marcy Tweed. Will Rogers’s homespun barbs humbled the devious of the early twentieth century. Mort Sahl, the Eisenhower-era comic whose prop was a rolled-up newspaper, used conventional one-liners to wage radical battle: “I’ve arranged with my executor to be buried in Chicago, because when I die I want to still remain politically active.” Later, Dick Gregory, Richard Pryor, and Joan Rivers continued to draw comic sustenance from what Philip Roth called “the indigenous American berserk.” Four nights a week for sixteen years,

Jon Stewart, the host and impresario of Comedy Central’s “The Daily Show,” has taken to the air to expose our civic bizarreries. He has been heroic and persistent. Blasted into orbit by a trumped-up (if you will) impeachment and a stolen Presidential election, and then rocketing through the war in Iraq and right up to the current electoral circus, with its commodious clown car teeming with would-be Commanders-in-Chief, Stewart has lasered away the layers of hypocrisy in politics and in the media. On any given night, a quick montage of absurdist video clips culled from cable or network news followed by Stewart’s vaudeville reactions can be ten times as deflating to the self-regard of the powerful as any solemn editorial—and twice as illuminating as the purportedly non-fake news that provides his fuel. Stewart grew up in New Jersey. He was schooled at William & Mary, in Virginia. Adrift for a while, he took odd jobs. He tested mosquitoes from the Pine Barrens for encephalitis. He put on puppet shows for disabled children. At the Bitter End and other clubs around the city, he studied all the varieties of standup. He proved especially fluent in a meta-Borscht Belt post-Friars Club rhythm. As a performer, Stewart is nearly as connected to Molly Picon and Professor Irwin Corey as he is to George Carlin. On January 11, 1999, he made his début as “The Daily Show” ’s host, replacing a less political wisenheimer named Craig Kilborn. Initially, Stewart seemed ill at ease with the trappings of his position. He wore a suit that first night, and, in the midst of an interview with the actor Michael J. Fox, he blurted, “Honestly, I feel like this is my bar mitzvah. I’ve never worn something like this, and I have a rash like you wouldn’t believe.” The evening was rounded out by a report on the Clinton impeachment hearings by Stewart’s THE NEW YORKER, AUGUST 10 & 17, 2015

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“chief political correspondent,” a young improv comic named Stephen Colbert. Stewart soon found his footing, and what he became, with the help of his writers, his co-stars, and a tirelessly acute research team, was the best seriocomic reader of the press since A. J. Liebling laid waste to media barons like William Randolph Hearst and Colonel Robert R. McCormick. Stewart demonstrated that many of the tropes favored by the yellow press of Liebling’s day have only grown stronger. “There is no concept more generally cherished by publishers than that of the Undeserving Poor,” Liebling wrote. The contempt that he found in the plutocrat-owned, proletarian-read press, Stewart found on Fox News—particularly in ersatz journalists like Stuart Varney, a sneery character out of Dickens who regularly goes on about “these so-called poor people” who “have things” but “what they lack is the richness of spirit.” Stewart’s evisceration of Varney was typically swift and unforgiving. Perhaps his greatest single performance came in 2010, with a fifteen-minute-long bravura parody of the huckster and conspiracy theorist Glenn Beck. There was always something a little disingenuous about Stewart’s insistence that he is a centrist, free of ideological commitment to anything except truth and sanity. In fact, his politics tend to lean left of center. He’s been aggressive toward, and ruthlessly funny about, unsurprising targets from Donald Rumsfeld to Wall Street. His support for L.G.B.T. rights, civil rights, voting rights, and women’s rights has always been unambiguous. His critique of Obama is generally that of the somewhat disappointed liberal, particularly on issues like Guantánamo and drones. But Stewart is a centrist only in this sense: he is not so much pro-left as he is anti-bullshit. EXTRA CREDIT DEPT. PROTEST U

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n a recent Wednesday, Olivett Tisson, a rising senior at the Urban Assembly Institute of Math and Science for Young Women, in Brooklyn, stood with a group of her classmates at the edge of Cadman Plaza Park, holding a stack of leaflets. “I’m not the type of person to go out and, like, protest,” she said. “I keep to myself.” “It’s kind of scary for me to go up to people,” Nande Trant, fifteen, said. “I’m shy. Most of the time when I have opinions, I don’t know how to get them out.” “But I’m on Tumblr all the time,” Tisson said. “Eric Garner, the Confederate flag—I see the things that are going on.” 26

At the same time, he has occasionally dropped the nightly gagfest to reveal flashes of earnest anger and unironic heart. Just after 9/11, he began his program with a personal monologue: “The view from my apartment was the World Trade Center. And now it’s gone. And they attacked it, this symbol of American ingenuity and strength, and labor and imagination and commerce, and it is gone. But you know what the view is now? The Statue of Liberty. The view from the south of Manhattan is now the Statue of Liberty. You can’t beat that.” More recently, after a grand jury on Staten Island failed to bring any charges related to the death of Eric Garner, an African-American whose crime was the sale of loose cigarettes, Stewart declared himself dumbstruck. “I honestly don’t know what to say,” he told his audience. “If comedy is tragedy plus time, I need more [bleep]ing time. But I would really settle for less [bleep] ing tragedy.” Similarly, after this year’s mass murder in Charleston, Stewart said, “I honestly have nothing other than just sadness, once again, that we have to peer into the abyss of the depraved violence that we do to each other and the nexus of a just gaping racial wound that will not heal yet we pretend doesn’t exist.” Stewart set out to be a working comedian, and he ended up an invaluable patriot. But the berserk never stops. His successor, Trevor Noah, will not lack for material. As Stewart put it wryly on one of his last nights on the air, “As I wind down my time here, I leave this show knowing that most of the world’s problems have been solved by us, ‘The Daily Show.’ But sadly there are still some dark corners that our broom of justice has not reached yet.” –––David Remnick

“I know about catching people’s attention,” Shavonnie Victor, another rising senior, said. “But the denial is something I have to get used to. You go up to someone, and they’re, like, ‘Nah, I’m going to keep walking.’ I’m thinking, This is going to affect someone you love!” The girls were spending the morning chasing after pedestrians as part of a pilot program at U.A.I., a class on the fundamentals of organizing and protest. Eighty-five per cent of the students at the school are from what the state identifies as low-income homes. More than ninety per cent of last year’s graduates went on to college. “My girls are freaking awesome, but they’re trapped in teen-age bodies,” Kiri Soares, the school’s principal, said later. A year ago, she noticed that the girls “would have these really deepseated feelings about unjust things that were happening to them, but they don’t always know how to identify or articulate it.” An activist friend named

THE NEW YORKER, AUGUST 10 & 17, 2015

Cathy O’Neil suggested that Soares start the class, which they call Occupy Summer School. Union members, political economists, and organizers drop in to discuss protest strategies. O’Neil is a mathematician and former hedge-fund analyst who became disillusioned with finance during the credit crisis. (“I was Larry Summers’s quant,” she’s said. “It thickened my skin quite a bit.”) For nearly four years, she’s led a weekly working group on alternative banking and social justice at Columbia University. Most of the U.A.I. summer students were familiar with the Black Lives Matter campaign, but at the start of the summer only one or two had heard much about Occupy Wall Street. As part of the course, the students had to design their own protest. They decided to take on gender inequality. “We’re an all-female school,” Victor told the class. “We’re going to protest the things that we see because we’re females. Bam!”


The initial idea had been to engage passersby with a bake sale at which men would be charged a dollar for a cupcake or a brownie and women would be charged seventyeight cents. The girls hoped this would spark conversations about wage discrimination. After some calling around, the class grew concerned that it might be illegal (O’Neil had promised that no one would get arrested), so they tweaked the plan. They made signs advertising the theoretical price disparity but gave the sweets away for free, the only cost being a few minutes’ conversation. They handed out balloons with the leaflets to draw people to their table. At eleven, a skinny bearded man hopped off his bike and took a cupcake. Looking at the signs, he volunteered that he was a college professor and that many of his students were single mothers. “Don’t underestimate the power of a woman,” Victor told him. “They want to provide.” She brought up the Eric Garner case. “If I stand on the corner wearing a hoodie, I don’t want to feel like someone’s going to look at me, like, ‘What is she doing?’ ” she said. The cyclist was sympathetic. “Nobody in the neighborhood is complaining. Only the police are complaining.” Victor went on, “You don’t know what people think in their head. I don’t know if I walk up to someone, and they’re thinking, like, Ugh, look at that black girl.” The cyclist asked, “Do you think maybe they just don’t want to hear about problems?” “That’s the thing,” Victor said. “They’re already thinking, This is not my problem. But it’s everyone’s problem. One guy I approached today didn’t care about it. But he had a daughter sitting right next to him in a stroller!” Trant was reflective. “A lot of people want change, but they don’t really want to do much about it,” she said. “So it’s kind of, I did my part—they’ve got to do theirs.” The baked goods were almost gone, and the girls looked across the park. “There’s a lot of balloons out there,” Victor said. “If that represents the amount of people we got to talk to us, then we did good today.” —Alex Carp

1 THE MUSICAL LIFE REBOOT

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ack when Jason Isbell was drinking, he spent a lot of his New York City downtime at the Lakeside Lounge, on Avenue B. “It’s gone now,” Isbell, an Alabama-born singer-songwriter, said on a recent visit to the city. “I spent every hour I wasn’t working in that place getting fucked up.” Sometimes when he was working he’d get fucked up, too. He recalled a disastrous show at Webster Hall, when, after hitting the vodka backstage (“Rednecks can’t drink clear liquor”), he got into a fight with his bass player—who happened to be his wife at the time—and she ended up hurting her hand and had to perform with a bandage. “So much misery there,” he said. Now when Isbell, who is thirty-six, has time off in the city, he wanders. He and his manager, Traci Thomas, were on their way to the Brooklyn Museum, to see “Basquiat: The Unknown Notebooks.” Isbell was wearing a stiff denim jacket and had a couple of heavy silver rings on his fingers. His hair was slicked back, like a fifth-grade boy getting his school picture taken. Isbell, the former guitarist with Drive-By Truckers, quit drinking three and a half years ago. After getting sober, he recorded an acclaimed solo album, “Southeastern” (2013); his new release, “Something More Than Free,” continues the character-driven story-song vein. He and his wife, Amanda Shires, whose fiddle and vocal harmonies are heard on much of the new album, are expecting their first child in early September. To get to the Basquiat exhibition, Isbell and Thomas passed through the Decorative Arts Gallery’s period rooms, including one from a South Carolina plantation house. “The Iodine State!” Isbell exclaimed, walking around the dining-room table. Is it a burden for a songwriter with progressive values to represent the South in his music? “It might be a burden, but it’s also a blessing,” Isbell replied. “What would I have to write about if I were from Vermont?” Leaving the Old South behind, the

pair wandered on to “Unknown Notebooks,” which has a decidedly more urban vibe. The show depicts Jean-Michel Basquiat the writer—the late-night cokecrazed genius of visual jazz. Interspersed with the notebook pages are painted canvases covered with dense archipelagoes of words. Basquiat’s former girlfriend Suzanne Mallouk, in Jennifer Clement’s “Widow Basquiat,” recalls nights in the artist’s downtown loft, getting high and reading out medical terms from “Gray’s Anatomy” as Jean-Michel painted on whatever surfaces he could find. Then they’d go score more drugs. Isbell, who did his share of coke back

Jason Isbell in the day, could only shake his head over Basquiat’s fate. He said he felt lucky to be a songwriter, because it was a learned craft that is not helped by alcohol and drugs, “except for caffeine.” He added, “Another difference is, with a song, you know when it’s done. How do you know when that is finished?”—he gestured toward “Tuxedo,” a black silkscreen festooned with blocks of words. They kept moving. “He wrote the way people text now,” Isbell observed, squinting at another densely word-filled work. Other lines sounded like lyrics. One notebook page read, “NICOTINE WALKS ON EGGSHELLS MEDICATED.” “I know that feeling,” Isbell said. In the later works, the feeling of doom becomes more insistent. The writing gets more manic, the lettering strung out, foretelling Basquiat’s bleak death of a heroin overdose at twenty-seven. He THE NEW YORKER, AUGUST 10 & 17, 2015

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was found kneeling by a fan in his loft, as though trying to get some air. On his way through the gift shop, Isbell said, “Got to get me a Basquiat hat! That’s a no-brainer, as far as I’m concerned.” He put down twenty-five dollars, pulled the hat over his slicked hair, and was off to another gig in another town. —John Seabrook

1 DEPT. OF CRITICAL INQUIRY HARANGUE

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few days before the Adam Sandler movie “Pixels” was released, Bob Chipman saw an advance screening. “I was bored within two minutes, angry after five, and by the time all hundred minutes had run out I was sad and numb,” he later said. Chipman, who is thirty-four and lives outside Boston, blogs about video games under the moniker the Game OverThinker and reviews films as MovieBob. (Tagline: “Film. Gaming. Politics. Geek.”) “Pixels” is an actionmovie mashup of classic arcade games, such as Pac-Man. Chipman found the movie unequal to its subject matter. A few hours later, when his sadness had “simmered into pure, white-hot, pantsshitting rage,” he wrote down nineteen hundred words, read them into a microphone, paired the audio with a slide show and clips from the “Pixels” trailer, and posted the result on YouTube. “ ‘Pixels’ isn’t a movie,” Chipman says in the video.

“It’s a motherfucking active crime scene, and the crime is cultural vandalism.” He goes on to describe the film as “a pile of skidmarked sumo thongs,” “a maggot-oozing head wound,” and a “waterfall of elephant jizz cascading into theaters this weekend.” He concludes, “Fuck everyone who made this movie.” Within a few days, the video had been viewed more than a million times and had attracted enthusiastic comments from the gamer set: “Best. Movie. Review. Ever.” “Preach it bro. As a nerd myself, I’m pissed.” “Marry me!” To some, MovieBob’s “Pixels” review isn’t a review at all; it’s a rant. The word comes from Shakespeare. Hamlet, at Ophelia’s funeral: “I’ll rant as well as thou.” Its meaning depends on the central question of the play: Is Hamlet raving mad, or is he making more sense than anyone else? This is the question we ask about our best ranters. In 2013 and 2014, Kanye West played stadiums in thirty-seven cities. For about ten minutes every night, he delivered an improvised performance that was part motivational speech, part critique of the fashion industry, and part off-the-cuff observations about water bottles and “The Hunger Games.” “I go off on these rants that don’t make any sense,” West recently acknowledged. “But I don’t give a fuck.” A. O. Scott, a film critic at the Times, conceded, last week, that the rant has its place. (He is about to publish a book, “Better Living Through Criticism,” that explores this idea, among others.) “There’s a long history—proud or ignominious, depending on how you look at it—of

vicious hatchet-job reviews,” he said. No one much liked “Moose Murders,” a Broadway play that opened and closed on the same night, in 1983, but Frank Rich, in the Times, strafed it so gleefully—invoking, for example, the possibility that the hunting trophies onstage were moose that “committed suicide shortly after being shown the script that trades on their good name”—that he subsequently became known as the Butcher of Broadway. “There will always be people who say, ‘That went too far,’” Scott said. Last year, he saw “Blended,” another Adam Sandler movie. “I very quickly and angrily wrote up six hundred words,” Scott said. (Sandler might well be the great muse of the apoplectic pan.) “That afternoon, it was one of the biggest things on the Times site.” His review lamented the movie’s “sheer audience-insulting incompetence”; the PG-13 rating at the bottom warned, “It will make your children stupid.” Lindy West, who is working on a memoir called “Shrill,” may be best known for her 2010 evisceration of “Sex and the City 2,” a movie that, she wrote, “takes everything that I hold dear as a woman and as a human . . . and rapes it to death with a stiletto that costs more than my car.” West said that she now regrets some parts of the review: “I’m still offended by garbage art that wastes my time, but I now try to reserve my ire for things that deserve it.” Chipman, though, stands by his rant. “ ‘Pixels’ annoyed me for very specific reasons,” he said. As a child, he adored PacMan. “The younger version of me would have been so excited for this premise, and for them to do the worst possible version of it—as I said in the review, it felt like someone taking a shit in my house.” After his review went viral, Chipman was contacted by a talent agent who wants him to audition for voiceover work, “which has certainly never happened before.” But he is reluctant to self-identify as a ranter. Donald Trump, for instance, gives ranters a bad name. “Fuck that guy,” Chipman said. Last month,Trump called Mexican immigrants “rapists,” and said that John McCain, a war hero, was “not a war hero.” On “The Daily Show,” while Jon Stewart rehashed Trump’s antics, a graphic appeared on the screen: “RantMan.” It was a parody of the poster for “Ant-Man,” a summer blockbuster that Bob Chipman actually liked. —Andrew Marantz


THE FINANCIAL PAGE DONALD TRUMP’S SALES PITCH

CHRISTOPH NIEMANN

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onald Trump’s campaign slogan is “Make America Great Again!” A better one might be “Only in America.” You could not ask for a better illustration of the complexity of ordinary Americans’ attitudes toward class, wealth, and social identity than the fact that a billionaire’s popularity among working-class voters has given him the lead in the race for the Republican Presidential nomination. In a recent Washington Post /ABC poll, Trump was the candidate of choice of a full third of white Republicans with no college education. Working-class voters face stagnant wages and diminished job prospects, and a 2014 poll found that seventy-four per cent of them think “the U.S. economic system generally favors the wealthy.” Why on earth would they support a billionaire? Part of the answer is Trump’s nativist and populist rhetoric. But his wealth is giving him a boost, too. The Democratic pollster Stanley Greenberg, who’s published reams of work on white workingclass attitudes, told me, “There is no bigger problem for these voters than the corruption of the political system. They think big companies are buying influence, while average people are blocked out.” Trump’s riches allow him to portray himself as someone who can’t be bought, and his competitors as slaves to their donors. (Ross Perot pioneered this tactic during the 1992 campaign.) “I don’t give a shit about lobbyists,” Trump proclaimed at an event in May. And his willingness to talk about issues that other candidates are shying away from, like immigration and trade, reinforces the message that money makes him free. Trump has also succeeded in presenting himself as a selfmade man, who has flourished thanks to deal-making savvy. In fact, Trump was born into money, and his first great realestate success—the transformation of New York’s Commodore Hotel into the Grand Hyatt—was enabled by a tax abatement worth hundreds of millions of dollars. Yet many voters see Trump as someone who embodies the American dream of making your own fortune. And that dream remains surprisingly potent: in a 2011 Pew survey, hard work and personal drive (not luck or family connections) were the factors respondents cited most frequently to explain why people got ahead. Even Trump’s unabashed revelling in his wealth works to his benefit, since it makes him seem like an ordinary guy who can’t get over how cool it is to be rich. For someone who talks a lot about winning, Trump has a résumé dotted with more than a few losses. On four oc-

casions, companies he’s been involved with have gone bankrupt. Yet these failures haven’t dented his reputation at all, contributing instead to a sense that he’s had to deal with adversity. In other countries, such failures would make it very hard for him to campaign as a visionary businessman. But the U.S. has always been exceptionally tolerant, in terms of both attitude and the law, toward business failure and bankruptcy. Indeed, Trump brags about how he used the bankruptcy code to get better deals for his companies; as he put it not long ago, “I’ve used the laws of the country to my advantage.” Trump is hardly the first Western plutocrat to venture into politics. Think of William Randolph Hearst or, more recently, Silvio Berlusconi. But both Hearst and Berlusconi benefitted from controlling media empires. Trump has earned publicity all on his own, by playing the role of that quintessential American figure the huckster. As others have observed, the businessman he most resembles is P. T. Barnum, whose success rested on what he called “humbug,” defined as “putting on glittering appearances . . . by which to suddenly arrest public attention, and attract the public eye and ear.” Barnum’s key insight into how to arrest public attention was that, to some degree, Americans enjoy brazen exaggeration. No American businessman since Barnum has been a better master of humbug than Trump has. Take the debate over how much Trump is worth. It’s impossible to get a definitive accounting of his wealth, since almost all of it is in assets—mainly real estate—that don’t have clear market values. Still, he’s clearly enormously rich. Bloomberg estimates his wealth at $2.9 billion, while Forbes pegs it at $4.1 billion—both tidy sums. But Trump will have none of that: thanks to the value of his brand, he says, he’s worth at least a cool ten billion. This number seems so absurdly over the top as to be self-defeating. But there is a kind of genius in the absurdity. Trump understands that only an outrageous number can really “attract the public eye and ear.” Trump’s lack of interest in policy and his inflammatory rhetoric make it easy to dismiss him as a serious candidate, and it’s highly improbable that he could ultimately win the nomination. But his bizarre blend of populist message and glitzy ways has allowed him to connect with precisely the voters that any Republican candidate needs in order to get elected (including many whom Romney couldn’t reach). As Greenberg says, as long as he’s in the race, “Trump is a huge problem for the Party. He’s appealing to a very important part of the base, and bringing out the issues the other candidates don’t want to be talking about.” Republicans may be praying that his campaign is just a joke, but right now Trump is the only one laughing. —James Surowiecki THE NEW YORKER, AUGUST 10 & 17, 2015

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DEPT. OF DISPUTATION

THE HELL YOU SAY The new battles over free speech are fierce, but who is censoring whom? BY KELEFA SANNEH

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itzgerald’s is an Irish pub in Chapel Hill, near the campus of the University of North Carolina, that counts among its attractions cheap burgers, flip-cup tournaments, and jolly music. One night last year, the soundtrack included “Blurred Lines,” the 2013 Robin Thicke hit, in which a night-club Lothario delivers a breathy proposition to a “good girl”: I hate these blurred lines I know you want it I know you want it I know you want it

A patron stepped into the d.j. booth to ask that the song be cut short—she later explained that she wanted to “cre-

ate a safe space,” and that Thicke’s lyrics evoked threats of sexual violence. The d.j. rebuffed her, and in the days that followed she and her allies took to social media to voice their dissatisfaction, suggesting that the pub was promoting “rape culture.” Before long, Fitzgerald’s conceded defeat, apologizing to the patron on Facebook and promising that “Blurred Lines” would not be played there again and that the offending d.j. would never be invited back. This was a small story, but something about it resonated: an account in the student paper, the Daily Tar Heel, was picked up by an irreverent site called Barstool Sports, which expressed its

Free speech really can be harmful, and its defenders should be willing to say so. 30

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certainty that the complaining student was a “crazy ass feminist” who hated fun, and then by Yahoo News. The same month, Brendan Eich, the C.E.O. of the software company Mozilla, was forced to resign after critics discovered that he had donated a thousand dollars to supporters of Proposition 8, a 2008 ballot initiative to ban same-sex marriage in California. And when Dan Cathy, the president of the fast-food chain Chick-fil-A, voiced his own opposition to same-sex marriage, in 2012, two big-city mayors—Rahm Emanuel, in Chicago, and Thomas Menino, in Boston—suggested that new Chickfil-A restaurants would be unwelcome in their cities. Both later clarified that they would not block any of the company’s expansion plans. But the episode was further evidence, for those collecting it, that American free speech was being muffled by soft censorship. “Is this the type of country we want to live in?” That is the question posed by Mary Katharine Ham and Guy Benson, a pair of waggish conservative commentators, as they ponder the fate of the d.j. who got fired for playing “Blurred Lines.” They are the authors of a new book titled “End of Discussion: How the Left’s Outrage Industry Shuts Down Debate, Manipulates Voters, and Makes America Less Free (and Fun).” They argue that what might seem like hypersensitivity is actually a form of political combat. Borrowing from the language of soccer, they write, “America is turning into a country of floppers, figuratively grabbing our shins in fabricated agony over every little possible offense in hopes of working the refs.” Kirsten Powers, a liberal—though a heterodox one—and a Fox News pundit, delivers an even starker verdict in “The Silencing: How the Left Is Killing Free Speech.” She detects, among those she might once have considered ideological allies, “an aggressive, illiberal impulse to silence people,” which often takes the form of meta-intolerance—that is, intolerance of any view that is judged to be intolerant. Half a century ago, the defense of free speech was closely identified with groups like the Free Speech Movement, a confederation of activists who came together at the University of California, Berkeley, after a student was ILLUSTRATION BY POST TYPOGRAPHY


arrested for setting up a table of civilrights literature, in defiance of antisolicitation rules. Defending free speech meant defending Lenny Bruce and Abbie Hoffman, and, later, Larry Flynt, Robert Mapplethorpe, and the 2 Live Crew. In a 1990 public-service announcement, Madonna, wearing red lingerie and an American flag, delivered a civics lesson, in verse: “Dr. King, Malcolm X / Freedom of speech is as good as sex.” She was urging young people to vote, in partnership with Rock the Vote, whose slogan was “Censorship is Un-American.” But as the nineteen-nineties progressed, fights over obscenity subsided and fights over so-called political correctness intensified; “free speech” became a different kind of rallying cry, especially on college campuses. Often, “free speech” meant not the right to protest a war but the right to push back against campus restrictions designed to shield marginalized groups from, say, “racial and ethnic harassment”— that was the term used by Central Michigan University, in its speech code, which banned “demeaning” expressions. The campus speech wars have since grown broader but vaguer, and many prominent recent incidents, like the “Blurred Lines” dispute, don’t involve legal claims. Instead, there are open letters and social-media campaigns, rescinded invitations and cancelled events. Young people who might, a generation earlier, have sided with the 2 Live Crew now ask to be delivered from Robin Thicke. Powers, in her book, accuses fellow-liberals of having switched sides. “Liberals are supposed to believe in diversity, which should include diversity of thought and belief,” she writes. This is a rather paradoxical formulation. (Is it possible to believe in diversity of belief ?) But then the current free-speech debate is rather paradoxical, too—it can be hard to tell the speakers from the censors.

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he freedom of speech promised by the First Amendment has fluctuating limits—in general, elected politicians want more, and unelected ones (that is, judges) want fewer. In 1919, the Supreme Court ruled that speech could be regulated only if it presented “a clear and present danger,” and then,

more narrowly, in 1969, only if it was likely to incite “imminent lawless action.” Each of these cases concerned a political protest: a socialist anticonscription flyer, in the first, and a speech by a Klansman, in the second. Courts have generally allowed exceptions only for “content-neutral” regulations that restrict how people may speak, not what they can say. When private business or government funding is involved, the legal lines are more tangled. For decades, the Federal Communications Commission attempted to insure balanced news coverage with its fairness doctrine, which compelled broadcasters to present “discussion of conflicting views of public importance.” And when disputes arise on campus, courts typically distinguish between public institutions, which are bound by the First Amendment, and private ones, which may retain stronger rights to set their own rules. For many modern free-speech advocates, the First Amendment is irrelevant: their main target is not repressive laws but shifting norms and values. In “End of Discussion,” Ham and Benson argue that the real problem is the politicization of everyday life. “Grievance mongering, apology demanding, and scalp collecting are modeled at the national level by ruthless professionals,” they write, “then replicated straight on down the line.” In their view, the effect of all this complaining is “an insidious strain of self-censorship” among regular folks. Ham and Benson have the requisite stories to tell, including a picturesque episode involving a Minnesota university that arranged to bring a camel to campus, as a stress-relief treatment, only to cancel the appearance after protests; one student explained online that “camels are associated with stereotypes that reinforce harmful Western (read: white) perceptions of Arab people.” What Ham and Benson want is to reënergize “the rich American tradition of a loud, raucous, messy, free speech free-forall,” complete with camels and lecherous pop songs. It is this vision of how we should speak to one another—and not an abstract belief in the right to speak—that animates their book. Ham and Benson, conservatives striving to be evenhanded, describe

hostility to free speech as a sickness to which both conservatives and liberals are susceptible, even though, in their judgment, conservatives have a stronger immune system. Powers, revelling in her status as a liberal speaking truth to the liberal powers that be, makes a more partisan case, and in some ways a more convincing one. She is battling an underlying ideology, one essential to modern liberalism: a belief that we have an urgent duty not merely to fight discrimination but to signal our disapproval of those who support it. Her examples include Voice for Life, a prolife group that was initially denied recognition by the student government of Johns Hopkins University, partly out of concern that its “sidewalk counselling” sessions could be considered harassment of women. Like Ham and Benson, Powers struggles to find worthy sparring partners. There is no advocacy group or high-profile politician avowedly devoted to the cause of cracking down on political speech, no national spokesperson for the war on camels. So the authors are forced to argue with evanescent Facebook groups or obscure junior faculty members or young people who had the misfortune to be quoted in the college newspaper. No doubt many liberals have grown increasingly sensitive to the uses and abuses of language. This might be a consequence of previously marginalized groups demanding respect, or it might have something to do with technological change, as the atomized Internet age gives way to the non-stop commentary of the social-media age. And it may be the case that this focus on language will prove, in the long run, unhelpful to the progressive movement. But it is hard to see how, as Powers argues, “the left is killing free speech” merely by paying too much attention to it. Last month, speaking about criminal-justice reform, President Obama issued twin exhortations. “We should not be tolerating rape in prison,” he said. “And we shouldn’t be making jokes about it in our popular culture.” To someone like Powers, this might have sounded faintly oppressive: the President telling citizens what jokes not to tell. Yet our discourse is shaped by innumerable taboos. ( Just think of all the

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things one shouldn’t say about members of the military.) Certainly, some new taboos are emerging, even as some older ones fade away, but no one with Internet access will find it easy to claim that, in general, our speech is more inhibited than it used to be. Taboos discourage some speech, but the system of taboos is also maintained through speech. If you say the unsayable, you might well be shamed—and that shaming can have consequences—but you will not be arrested. Mostly, what inhibits speech is the fear of being spoken about.

EACH DAY UNEXPECTED SALVATION (JOHN CAGE)

Forest shade, lake shade, poplar shade, highway shade, backyard shade, café shade, down-behind-the-high-school shade, cow shade, carport shade, blowing shade, dappled shade, shade darkened by rain above, shade under ships, shade along banks of snow, shade beneath the one tree in a bright place, shade by the ice cream truck, shade in the newcar sales room, shade in halls of the palace as all the electric lights turn on, shade in a stairwell, shade in tea barrels, shade in books, shade of clouds running over a distant landscape, shade on bales in the barn, shade in the pantry, shade in the icehouse (the smell of shade), shade under runner blades, shade along branches, shade at night (a difficult research), shade on rungs of a ladder, shade on pats of butter sculpted to look like scallop shells, shade to holler from, shade in the chill of bamboo, shade at the core of an apple, confessional shade, shade of hair salons, shade in a joke, shade in the town hall, shade descending from legendary ancient hills, shade under the jaws of a dog with a bird in its mouth trotting along to the master’s voice, shade at the back of the choir, shade in pleats, shade clinging to arrows in the quiver, shade in scars.

E

arlier this year, Powers took part in a debate over the proposition that “liberals are stifling intellectual diversity on campus.” One of the people on the other side was Angus Johnston, a historian of student activism. He cited the case of Robert J. Birgeneau, the former chancellor of the University of California, Berkeley, who was invited to deliver the commencement address at Haverford College last year, but declined in the face of protests; students had demanded that he apologize for the actions of U.C.B. police officers who arrested seven students during a 2011 demonstration. Powers considers Birgeneau the victim of a “campaign of intolerance,” but Johnston sees him as a perpetrator. “Birgeneau, an administrator who presided over the beating and arrest of student protesters, is portrayed as a free-speech martyr,” he said. “The students who just wanted to talk to him about that are portrayed as his oppressors.” Johnston conceded that “stifling” was worrisome, but insisted that the true culprits were administrators—liberal, perhaps, in political outlook, but motivated merely by “opposition to disruptiveness and clamor.” These days, just about everyone claims to be on the side of free speech. Two decades ago, the argument was more even. On one side were conservative advocates like Dinesh D’Souza, who, in his 1991 best-seller “Illiberal Education,” denounced what he called “the new censorship.” On the other side were liberal scholars willing to question both the cultural norms and the legal traditions underlying freespeech claims. In 1993, the legal scholar Cass Sunstein published “Democracy 32

—Anne Carson and the Problem of Free Speech,” which argued that the First Amendment was meant to protect “democratic deliberation.” With that goal in mind, he wrote, the government might justifiably act to promote healthy debate, as the F.C.C. did with its fairness doctrine, or to ban corrosive and nonpolitical speech, such as violent pornography. The so-called marketplace of ideas was, just like any other market, imperfect, and could similarly be improved by careful government intervention. Stanley Fish, the literary scholar, had even more fundamental objections to free-speech rhetoric. His mischievous contribution to the debate, published the next year, was “There’s No Such Thing as Free Speech: And It’s a Good Thing, Too,” which argued that free expression was no one’s “primary value.” On college campuses, for instance, the core educational mission routinely trumps students’ rights to express themselves. (Rules against plagiarism and disruptive behavior are both, in a sense, campus speech regulations.) Free speech, in Fish’s unsentimental account, was a “political prize,” a tag awarded by politically powerful

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groups to whatever forms of expression they approved of. And since all meaningful speech existed within a community, where it was shaped by what he called “productive constraint,” alarmist warnings about creeping political correctness were absurd. The question of whether to regulate socalled “hate speech” was “no more or less difficult than the question of whether spectators at a trial can applaud or boo the statements of opposing counsels.” In the years since, restrictive campus speech codes have been widely repealed, which is why modern free-speech advocates are often left to battle less draconian forms of censorship, like cancelled commencement addresses. Sunstein’s and Fish’s books now seem radical—but only in America, which is virtually the only place in the world that takes such an expansive view of free speech. (The U.S. is one of a handful of countries that refuse to honor a United Nations convention calling for laws against “dissemination of ideas based on racial superiority or hatred.”) In this respect, the First Amendment has something in common with the


Second Amendment, which secures the right to “keep and bear arms”: both are unusually broad legal guarantees that mark a difference between America and the rest of the world. Perhaps it is no coincidence that one of the most influential free-speech skeptics in America today is an immigrant. Jeremy Waldron is a law professor from New Zealand who teaches at New York University. In 2012, he published “The Harm in Hate Speech,” a powerful little book that seeks to dismantle familiar defenses of the right to indefensible speech. Waldron is unimpressed by the “liberal bravado” of free-speech advocates who say, “I hate what you say but I will defend to the death your right to say it.” In his view, the people who say this rarely feel threatened by the speech they say they hate. Unfettered political expression came to seem like a bedrock American value only in the twentieth century, when the government no longer feared radical pamphleteers. This, in essence, was Justice Holmes’s rationale, in 1919, when he argued in an influential dissent that antiwar anarchists should be free to agitate. “Nobody can suppose that the surreptitious publishing of a silly leaflet by an unknown man, without more, would present any immediate danger,” he wrote. Free-speech advocates typically claim that the value of unfettered expression outweighs any harm it might cause, offering assurances that any such harm will be minimal. But what makes them so sure? America’s free-speech regime is shot through with exceptions, including civil (and, in some states, criminal) laws against libel. By what rationale do we insist that groups—races, communities of faith—don’t deserve similar protection? Waldron uses the term “hate speech” in a particular sense, to denote not speech that expresses hatred but speech likely to inspire it. If we want a society that recognizes the dignity of marginalized groups, he argues, then we should be willing to enact “laws that prohibit the mobilization of social forces to exclude them.” This would involve carving out an exception to the First Amendment. But there are plenty of exceptions already, and taken together they form a rough portrait of what we value and what we don’t.

Many free-speech arguments turn on a deceptively simple question: what is speech? It’s clear that the protected category excludes all sorts of statements. (The First Amendment will be of no use to someone who writes a fraudulent contract, or who says, “Hand over your wallet and iPhone,” and means it.) But judges have also agreed that some forms of speech are more important than others, and therefore more protected. They sometimes talk about “expressive conduct,” which can seem like another way of saying “useless speech”: utterances that do little more than disclose a point of view. When speech serves a clear purpose, we tend to call it something else. One example is political advertising; its apparent efficacy is precisely the reason that some reformers want to limit it. In the case of Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, the Supreme Court considered the case of a conservative political group, Citizens United, that wanted to broadcast and advertise a documentary critical of Hillary Clinton, who was then a senator and a Presidential candidate. The F.E.C. viewed the film as an improper “electioneering communication.” The Court ruled against the F.E.C., declaring that

“prohibition on corporate independent expenditures is an outright ban on speech.” Citizens United was probably the most consequential free-speech ruling of the modern era, although its detractors would say that it wasn’t about free speech at all. (Powers has said that she disagrees with the Citizens United decision, which explains why she wrote a book about free speech without mentioning it.) Earlier this year, on the first day of her current Presidential campaign, Clinton called for a constitutional amendment to get “unaccountable money” out of politics, as a response to the Citizens United decision. For opponents of the decision, it is awkward, to say the least, that their leading ally is the same politician whom the plaintiffs’ film sought to criticize. Waldron argues that hate speech could, in theory, be very consequential, and therefore a proper target for regulation. His book, which is rigorous, if rather cool-blooded, has little to say on the subject of how these harms actually occur. It begins with the hypothetical example of a Muslim father who sees a sign that shows a picture of Muslim children along with the words “They are all called Osama.” Waldron’s point is that such signs would

“How regularly would you say you ride off into the sunset?”


constitute an assault on the dignity and the status of Muslims in America. (A British man who displayed similar signs in his window was sentenced to a year in prison, for “religiously aggravated harassment.”) But Waldron doesn’t succeed in showing that such a provocation really would undermine civil society. He cites the same hoary examples that have shaped recent jurisprudence: neo-Nazis marching through an Illinois town, far-flung Klansmen and their crosses. Waldron would be more persuasive if he had more to say about newer forms of hate speech, which tend to be more personal—and possibly more damaging.

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ho was the d.j. that night at Fitzgerald’s? In “End of Discussion,” Ham and Benson say they tried and failed to identify him; they call him “some dude who was just trying to pay his bills by spinning records.”The complaining student, on the other hand, has been named in numerous accounts of the incident, including Ham and Benson’s, and, as a result, she has become the target of online vituperation. More than a year after the incident, a Google search for her name brings up, on the first page, a comment thread titled “EataDICK dumbcunt.” We live in a world, evidently, where a college-town d.j. who plays a popular song can inspire a Facebook protest that will eventually cost him his gig. But we also live in a world where an undergraduate who protests at her local bar can find herself vilified around the world, achieving the sort of Internet infamy that will eventually fade but never entirely dissipate. And it’s not obvious that the first development should trouble us more than the second. Perhaps America’s First Amendment, like the Second, is ultimately a matter of national preference. In Britain, Twitter users have been jailed for sending abusive tweets; in France, Twitter was compelled to help a prosecutor identify pseudonymous users accused of sending anti-Semitic tweets. But legislators in this country have had a harder time outlawing online harassment. Last year, Arizona enacted a law aimed at curbing so-called “revenge porn,” the popular term for sharing naked or sexual images of people 34

without their consent. The American Civil Liberties Union sued, calling the law overly broad, because it could have been used to imprison anyone who shared the Abu Ghraib photographs, or the ruinous self-portraits of Anthony Weiner, the former congressman. In a settlement, Arizona agreed not to enforce it. Speech nuts, like gun nuts, have amassed plenty of arguments, but they—we—are driven, too, by a shared sensibility that can seem irrational by European standards. And, just as goodfaith gun-rights advocates don’t pretend that every gun owner is a thirdgeneration hunter, free-speech advocates need not pretend that every provocative utterance is a valuable contribution to a robust debate, or that it is impossible to make any distinctions between various kinds of speech. In the case of online harassment, that instinctive preference for “free speech” may already be shaping the kinds of discussions we have, possibly by discouraging the participation of women, racial and sexual minorities, and anyone else likely to be singled out for ad-hominem abuse. Some kinds of free speech really can be harmful, and people who want to defend it anyway should be willing to say so. On social media, the posts are often public, but the forum itself is decidedly not. Most of the time, disputes about online harassment are handled not by government investigators but by administrators from the small number of companies that dominate social media. We are outsourcing some of our most important free-speech decisions to these sites, which must do what the First Amendment often prevents government from doing, at least explicitly: balance the value of free speech against other, competing values. Earlier this year, a journalist named Lindy West wrote about the many ways she has been harassed online: she said that just about every day someone calls her “a fat bitch (or some pithy variation thereof )”; one particularly enterprising foe apparently created a satirical Twitter account in the voice of West’s father, who had recently died. In the aftermath, Dick Costolo, the C.E.O. of Twitter, conceded, “We suck at dealing with abuse.” A few months later,

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Twitter announced that it would begin allowing users to report abuse even if they weren’t the targets, and that it would require users suspected of harassment to provide their phone numbers, to make it harder for people banned from the site to re-register. Compared with a jail sentence, the threat of account termination may seem mild. But, as social networks grow more powerful, online erasure may come to seem more intimidating. And freespeech activists might find that tech executives make even more effective censors than college administrators do. The rise of social media illuminates the incoherence in Ham and Benson’s book, which both celebrates the power of the First Amendment and mourns the kind of “free speech free-for-all” that, they suggest, the First Amendment is powerless to protect. The Constitution, as currently interpreted, seems to offer little help in fostering the kinds of conversations they believe to be so vital. It’s not hard to imagine a time, not long from now, when advocates decide that more proactive measures are needed in order to protect our speech rights online. Imagine a law written to make sure that controversial users—pastors dedicated to “curing” gay people, say, or activists reproducing the Charlie Hebdo images of the Prophet Muhammad—wouldn’t be blocked or suspended by social-media networks merely for speaking out. When government officials tell a private corporation to allow citizens to speak, are they upholding the First Amendment or flouting it? That was the question that President Reagan considered in 1987, when Congress moved to enshrine the fairness doctrine, arguing that it was necessary to “ensure the widest possible dissemination of information from diverse and antagonistic sources.” Reagan vetoed the bill, and delivered a stern statement explaining why. He said that government had no business telling radio and television stations what kinds of political discussions they should broadcast. Any effort in that direction would be “antagonistic to the freedom of expression guaranteed by the First Amendment.” In his view, robust debate was important—but free speech was more important still. 


ing wine while sprawled on couches. And they’re always wearing jeans and are barefoot, sitting with one foot tucked under them.

SHOUTS & MURMURS

COMING THIS FALL

HOT SERIAL KILLER WHO’S KIND OF LITERARY

BY MINDY KALING

He leaves sonnets pinned to the corpses. The murdered prostitutes all have the first names of Jane Austen heroines. The kindly police commissioner’s name is Chuck Dickens. The whole thing takes place in a tough housing project in Newark, called Stratfordup-by-Avon. A melancholy English actor plays the lead in this mysterydrama, and he uses his accent no matter what country it takes place in. This is everyone’s mom’s favorite show. NEUROTIC SENSITIVE GUY IS ALSO SUPER-UNHAPPY

I

’ve been in the television business for eleven years, long enough for people to start calling me “seasoned.” Seasoned means a cross between “old,” “disagreeable,” and “only wears slacks.” TV, like professional sports, is a young man’s game, and after eleven years you’re just the guy in the dugout talking about the old days and spitting into a tin can. That last part is the only part I actually do. Each fall, the trade papers publish loglines of the upcoming TV pilots. As a seasoned pro, I can see certain tropes getting recycled. Not just familiar characters (“boozy mother-in-law,” “hyper-articulate child of dumb-dumbs,” “incomprehensible foreigner”) but also basic premises. Here are some of the kinds of shows the networks seem to be clamoring for lately.

President, surrounded by gross, sexist men. She is the very best person at her job. She is so moral that she would send her own husband to the electric chair if he were found guilty of shoplifting. But she harbors a humiliating dark secret: she’s dyslexic. And, in the world of this show, that could get her impeached. DAD! MOM!

You know that thirty-eight-yearold guy in your office who falls to pieces when his seventy-year-old parents get divorced? Then Dad moves in and has to learn about Internet dating? And Son reverts to behaving like he did when he was ten? No? Well, you’re the only one, because there are usually five pilots on this subject at any given time being developed by every network.

EDWIN FOTHERINGHAM

BOY-MAN MUST FACE THE ADULT WORLD

Carter can’t keep a job. His girlfriend left him because he smoked too much pot. His dog ran away because he never took it outside. He lives in filth. He high-fives his AfricanAmerican roommate while they play Xbox. He sometimes wears his pants inside out. This is the story of how he became the Attorney General of the United States. THE STAUNCH OVAL OFFICE DAME

Our heroine is a tough, well-educated woman. She is the first female

THE ABANDONED-SPINSTER CLUB

A confident workaholic named Marcia or Alex comes home to find her husband cheating on her with his secretary. The discovery always occurs in the middle of the afternoon, and the adultery is always happening in her own bed, in view of photographs of her kids. The rest of the series explores her journey to a new life as a sex-positive fortysomething. She gets a really fun assistant who’s an expert on all the new, slutty dating protocols. Also, everyone on this show spends a lot of time drink-

A half-hour cable comedy show about a wealthy L.A. or N.Y.C. man who makes his living doing something creative, and is miserable despite having suffered no traumas and having no immediate health problems. If he has kids, they are invoked only as impediments to his sex life. The pilot always involves a child’s birthday party with a bouncy castle, or a clown who breaks character when he’s not around the kids. Deemed brilliant and hilarious, this show usually has no jokes. REMAKE OF GRITTY ISRAELI SHOW ABOUT TERRORISM / INFIDELITY / MENTAL ILLNESS

This well-produced and depressing show will be the one you know you should be watching but just can’t make yourself do it. Best-case scenario: you invest time watching the show, you mention it at a cocktail party, and some guy tells you how much better the original Israeli version was. Ditto for British comedies about the workplace. TALKATIVE CHUBSTER SEEKS HUSBAND

A sexually unapologetic fashionista tries to find love in the big city. Wait, that sounds like the premise of “The Mindy Project.” Not many people know this, but “The Mindy Project” is actually based on a famous Venezuelan show called “Puta Gordita,” or “The Chubby Slut.” 

THE NEW YORKER, AUGUST 10 & 17, 2015

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ANNALS OF ART

A GHOST IN THE FAMILY Love, death, and renewal in San Francisco. BY DANA GOODYEAR

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arly on the morning I went to see the San Francisco artists Barry McGee and Clare Rojas at their weekend place, in Marin County, a robin redbreast began hurling itself at a window in their living room. “It won’t stop,” Rojas said. She picked up a sculpture of a bird from the inside sill to warn it off. When that didn’t

McGee said. Rojas shook her head, smiled tightly, and said, “Maybe it’s Margaret.”

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t was 1999, and Rojas was newly graduated from the Rhode Island School of Design, when she first saw the work of the painter Margaret Kilgallen, who was thirty-one. It was at

woods with fierce animals—and, like many young painters, she was struck by the scale of Kilgallen’s work. “I was, like, ‘Who is this?’ ” Rojas told me. “There were not many women artists out there being outspoken and loud and big and feminine. I remember saying, ‘I want to see big women everywhere now!’ ” Rojas was living in a small apartment in Philadelphia, folding clothes at Banana Republic and working as a secretary to pay off student loans, painting her miniatures when she got home, tired out, at night. She couldn’t wait to make big paintings of her own. Kilgallen, a book conservator at the San Francisco Public Library, drew upon old typography, hand-lettered

Barry McGee and Clare Rojas with Asha, his daughter by his late first wife, the artist Margaret Kilgallen. work, Rojas instructed her fourteenyear-old daughter, Asha, to cut out three paper birds, which she taped to the window, as if to say : GO AWAY. “Can I let it in, Clare?” McGee asked gently. Absolutely not, Rojas answered. Thud. The bird hit the glass again, and their three dogs barked wildly. “I think it’s time to let it in,” 36

Deitch Projects, in SoHo. For the exhibit, a solo show called “To Friend + Foe,” Kilgallen had painted freehand on the gallery walls, in a flat, folk-art style, a pair of enormous brawling women, one wielding a broken bottle, the other with her fists up. At the time, Rojas was painting miniature dark-hearted fairy tales—girls in the

THE NEW YORKER, AUGUST 10 & 17, 2015

signs, and the gritty urban environment of the Mission, where she lived and worked, to evoke a wistful, roughedged West Coast landscape. She used leftover latex house paint in vintage circus-poster colors like blood red, ochre, and bird’s-egg blue-green, and, when she wasn’t painting straight on the wall, worked on found wood. She PHOTOGRAPH BY PETER BOHLER


represented women as stoic, defiant, and usually alone—surfing, smoking, crying, cooking, playing the banjo. She admired physical endurance and courage. One of her icons was Fanny Durack, a pioneering swimmer who won a gold medal at the 1912 Olympics. Her word paintings, playful and fatalistic, provided a melancholy undertow to the bravado: “Windsome Lose Some,” “Woe Begone,” “So Long Lief.” In her work, Kilgallen dropped arcane hints about herself. “To Friend + Foe” included a painting of two surfers, female and male, holding hands; a month before the opening, Kilgallen had used the image on the invitation to her wedding, to Barry McGee, in the hills overlooking San Francisco’s Linda Mar Beach, where the couple surfed together. McGee, who is Chinese and Irish, grew up in South San Francisco, where his father worked at an auto-body shop, and started writing graffiti under the name Twist when he was a teen-ager. Even now that he is nearly fifty, and has shown at the Venice Biennale and at the Carnegie International, crowds of teen-agers show up at his openings to have him sign their skateboards. Among the artists associated with the Mission School—a loose group working in San Francisco in the nineties who shared an affinity for old wood, streetscapes, and anything raw or unschooled—Kilgallen and McGee were the most visible and the most admired. “They were the king and queen,” Ann Philbin, the director of the Hammer Museum, in Los Angeles, says. “They were the opposite of putting themselves forward in that kind of way, but everyone understood that they were such exceptional artists and so supremely talented, and, by the way, so beautiful.” Five feet ten and slender, Kilgallen was intrepid, stubborn, and mischievous, a winsome tomboy with curly reddish-brown hair that she often pulled back in a clip at her temple. She was stylish and insouciant; she shoplifted lingerie from Goodwill and wore an orange ribbon tied around her neck. When I asked McGee the color of her eyes, he wrote, “Margaret’s eyes were blue as can be.” He was also tall and slim, with boyish dark

hair that flopped into his eyes. Where Kilgallen was direct, McGee was subtle and evasive. Each was the other’s first love. “In social situations, Barry let Margaret do the talking,” Jeffrey Deitch, who founded Deitch Projects, says. “He’d be shuffling around shyly.” Cheryl Dunn, a filmmaker who spent time with Kilgallen and McGee, remembers her saying that if she didn’t tell him to have a sandwich he’d forget to eat. Like children playing away from the adults, Kilgallen and McGee occupied a world of their own invention. They lived cheaply and resourcefully, scavenging art supplies and fur niture. Pack rats, they filled their home—first a warehouse building and then a two-story row house in the Mission—with skateboards, surfboards, paintings, thrift-store clothes, and other useful junk. At night, dressed identically in pegged work pants and Adidas shoes, they went on graffitiwriting adventures. She was daring, scaling buildings and sneaking into forbidden sites. He once painted the inside of a tunnel with a series of faces so that, like a flip book, it animated as you drove past. In the studio they shared, Kilgallen and McGee worked side by side. He showed her how to make her own panels, and she brought home from the library the yellowing endpapers of old books, which they started painting on. She worked on her women; he painted and repainted the sad, sagging faces of the outcast men he saw around the city. They worked obsessively, perfecting their lettering, their cursives, and their lines. “Barry is busy downstairs making stickers,” Kilgallen wrote to a friend. “I hear the squeak of his pen—chisel tipped permanent black—I have been drawing pretty much every day, mostly, silly things; and when I feel brave I have been trying to teach myself how to paint.” When he needed an idea, he’d go over to her space and lift one. Deitch likens them to Picasso and Braque. From a distance, Rojas, too, idealized them. “That was a perfect union, Barry and Margaret,” she says. “You couldn’t get more parallel than the feminine and the masculine communing together.” As recognition of Kilgallen’s and

McGee’s work grew, they tried to retain the ephemeral, pure quality of paintings made on the street. Little pieces they recycled or reworked, sold for a pittance, or let be stolen from the galleries. Wall paintings were whited out when shows closed. When Kilgallen became fascinated by hobo culture, she and McGee started travelling up and down the West Coast to tag train cars with their secret nicknames: B. Vernon, after one of McGee’s uncles, and Matokie Slaughter, a nineteen-forties banjo player Kilgallen revered. The cars marked “B.V. + M.S.” are still out there.

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ojas, too, had an alternate identity: Peggy Honeywell, a lonesome Loretta Lynn-like country singer who sang her heart out at open mikes around Philadelphia. Rojas is short and strong, half Peruvian, from Ohio, with nape-length dark hair and a smattering of freckles across her nose. As Peggy Honeywell, she wore a long wig and flouncy calico dresses, and sometimes, because she was shy, a paper bag over her head. Her boyfriend at the time, an artist named Andrew Jeffrey Wright, idolized McGee; he and his guy friends called McGee and his graffiti contemporaries the Big Kids. Smitten by Kilgallen’s work, Rojas started sending her and McGee cassette tapes of Peggy Honeywell, recorded with a four-track in her bedroom, and decorated with covers she had silk-screened. The songs Rojas wrote were naïve and stripped down, just a guitar and her voice. “Can’t seem to paint good pictures / you want good pictures don’t listen to my words / But my paintings are pretty to look at / can’t find a rhythm of my own so I listen carefully to yours and probably will steal it.” Kilgallen, who was, like many of her subjects, a banjo player, loved homespun music. She and McGee started listening to the Peggy Honeywell tapes incessantly. “It was like a soundtrack for us,” McGee said. “Whenever we’d go on a drive, we’d play those tapes.” They began a correspondence with Rojas, encouraging her music and her painting, and Rojas sent more tapes. It was more than a year before

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Kilgallen and Rojas met properly, in May, 2001, installing “East Meets West”—three West Coast artists and their East Coast counterparts—at the Institute of Contemporary Art in Philadelphia. For Rojas, the exhibition was a milestone: it was her first museum show and it placed her in a context with an artist that to some extent she’d been modelling herself on. “Clare was sort of in awe of Margaret—that’s how it all started,” Alex Baker, who curated the show, told me. Rojas, who was by then finishing her first year of graduate school, at the Art Institute of Chicago, had introduced him to Kilgallen’s work. Baker says that the admiration went both ways; Kilgallen was astounded by how psychologically complex and refined Rojas’s paintings were. “She said, ‘I could never make work like this! It’s beyond my abilities.’ ” Kilgallen arrived in Philadelphia seven months pregnant and set about her usual installation process: attacking a blank wall that, in this case, was thirty-two feet tall. She insisted on working alone, using a hydraulic lift, which she pushed from spot to spot. When it was time to paint, she took the lift up, put a roller to the wall, and pressed the down button. In the early morning, after working all night, she rode a bicycle from the museum to Baker’s house, where she was staying. Her back hurt and her stomach was bothering her, but she refused offers of help. No one was to hover over her. At one point, she started sleeping in a surf shack she had made from recycled panels, part of her installation. Rojas was impressed, but she also disapproved. She told me, “There were some things about her that I was, like, ‘You are crazy, and I don’t like the way you’re acting, pregnant, at all. Where’s your husband? He should be here with you. And why are you smelling paint fumes?’ ” One evening, in the gallery, Rojas saw Kilgallen run to the bathroom, crying. She followed her in. Kilgallen was scared. She kept touching the top of her belly and saying she could feel something hard, and it hurt. Rojas suggested that they call Kilgallen’s mother, but she strenuously refused. “She was really stubborn,” Rojas says. 38

She persuaded her to call McGee, who was in Venice, getting ready for the Biennale, but they couldn’t reach him. Finally, Rojas called her own mother, who got Kilgallen to agree to go to the hospital. Baker took her the next day. At the hospital, she was given a sonogram, told to drink some Gatorade, and sent home. She declined the Gatorade—too artificial. Baker says, “Once the baby was confirmed as being healthy, she acted like everything was fine. Obviously, something else was going on, but she didn’t want to talk about it.”

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ilgallen’s secret was that she had recently had cancer; in the fall of 1999, immediately following the opening of her show at Deitch, she had gone home to San Francisco to have a mastectomy. She told almost no one. Her mother, Dena Kilgallen, took a month off work to come and help her while McGee installed a show in Houston. Margaret’s cancer was small, three millimetres, and it was caught early. She refused chemotherapy, a decision that Dena, herself a breast-cancer survivor, found maddening, if consistent with her daughter’s headstrong ways. But the surgeon didn’t disagree with Margaret; chemotherapy, she counselled, would probably decrease her risk of a recurrence within five years by just two to three per cent. Margaret started a course of Chinese herbal medicine instead. Kilgallen had regular follow-up visits, and every time was given a clean bill of health. She got pregnant, and around the same time started a new sketchbook. She filled its pages with baby names: Piper, Mojave, Biancha, Clare. McGee says that they were happy and busy and didn’t think about the cancer, but the sketchbook betrays a creeping awareness of her illness. Always alert to language, Kilgallen began compiling ominous word lists: “smother,” “black out,” “keep dark,” “far away,” “underground,” “under-neath.” Two days before leaving for Philadelphia to work on her “East Meets West” installation, the most ambitious of her career, Kilgallen felt a tender lump below her diaphragm. At an appointment with a midwife, she prom-

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ised to have it checked upon her return, a few weeks later. Like one of her heroines, she was determined to see her job through—the installation and the pregnancy. “Blind bargain,” she wrote in her sketchbook. When Kilgallen got back to San Francisco, McGee was still in Europe, scheduled to return before the baby’s expected arrival, in late July. Alone, she learned that the cancer had metastasized to her liver; that tender, palpable mass was an organ seventy-five per cent overtaken by disease. Still, she held off telling her husband and her mother. When Kilgallen arrived at the hospital, she was jaundiced and extremely weak. “She was one of the sickest women I’ve ever met,” a nurse who examined her told me. “You looked in her eyes—she knew. But she flat out wasn’t going to talk about it.” Her only concern was for the pregnancy. On June 7th, Kilgallen gave birth to a healthy baby, six weeks premature. She and McGee named her Asha, Sanskrit for “hope.” He arrived from Europe the next day, as Kilgallen was moved down to Oncology for aggressive chemotherapy. She stayed for two weeks, before being transferred to intensive care and, ultimately, to hospice, where she would open her eyes only to see Asha. “I’m going to get better,” she said, as her organs were failing. On June 26th, with her husband and her daughter at her side, she died.

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ojas remembers the first time she saw Asha. It was in Philadelphia, at a memorial for Kilgallen held on the last day of the “East Meets West” show. McGee walked in, skinny and shaky and shell-shocked, carrying a seven-week-old child. When Rojas held Asha, she was overcome with emotion. “The whole story went away, and it was about this beautiful, tiny baby with super-long legs,” she says. “I remember feeling immediately, I’m going to protect you.” Kilgallen’s death had thrown McGee into turmoil. “It was Code Red,” he says. In a span of weeks, his wife had gone from a seemingly vital woman on the verge of motherhood to a body washed and laid out for viewing. But there was no time to



grieve; he had a newborn to care for. The house that McGee brought Asha home to was full of helpful relatives, sleeping on the floor, amid piles of art work, surfboards, and found wood. Artist and surfer friends arrived, offering to babysit. “I’m looking at some of these people, particularly the guys. Here you have this little preemie baby—babies are supposed to be kept clean and neat,” Dena Kilgallen says. “I thought, Oh, my God, that can’t happen.” She stayed for a month, feeding Asha, singing to her, while McGee buried himself in work at the studio and lost himself in the ocean. “He was just genuinely angry,” Dena says. “He had this beautiful baby and Margaret wasn’t there to enjoy it. He would get up and say nothing and leave to go surfing.” At night, he insisted that Asha sleep not in the bassinet that Dena had procured but snuggled on his chest. In Philadelphia for the memorial, McGee and Asha slept inside Kilgallen’s surf shack, just as Kilgallen had, pregnant, a few months before. He asked Rojas to perform, as Peggy Honeywell. “The music was already in our lives,” he said to Rojas recently. “You had infected us.” Over the next few months, McGee and Rojas started writing e-mails back and forth. She came out to San Francisco to play another memorial show and, in Santa Cruz, went surfing with him—or, rather, he invited her into the water and then left her bobbing like a buoy while the waves tumbled around her. It was her first time in California. In November, Deitch Projects presented “Widely Unknown,” an exhibition of artists whom Kilgallen had admired. McGee showed an upended van, cluttered with old papers and marred by graffiti. He brought Asha, not wanting to be away from her for more than a few hours. Rojas was also in the show, with her miniatures and a Peggy Honeywell set. The gallery was noisy and dusty, except for Rojas’s area, which was quiet and clean. While Asha slept there, in a little nest of blankets on the floor, Rojas painted pink and blue flowers on the wall and strung up bird garlands. Her performance space took on the appearance of a nursery. 40

During this time, McGee travelled constantly, Asha in tow, tending to two increasingly demanding careers— his and Kilgallen’s. For a show in Athens, and again for the Whitney Biennial in 2002, he re-created Kilgallen’s wall paintings, studiously embodying her hand. In his own installations, he started to include makeshift shacks of recycled wood, which he filled with her paintings. He wanted to be close to them, as a source and as a solace. “I didn’t know what else to do,” he said. “That whole time is just a wash of ‘Is this the right thing to honor her work?’ ” McGee knew he couldn’t raise a child alone, nor could he live with a crowd of well-meaning family and friends. “I needed help,” he told me. “I needed to feel good again. I needed it fast. It was really scary.” Rojas was funny and fierce and steady. That winter, on the way back to San Francisco from New York, McGee stumbled around Chicago in a blizzard, with a cooler full of breast milk and a baby strapped to his chest, trying to find her student apartment. In the spring, he enlisted her to come to Milan, where he was installing a show at the Prada Foundation. Her roommate warned her to be careful, but Rojas would not be deterred. Scattered as McGee was, he represented a kind of freedom. “He was showing me the world,” she told me. Just before Asha turned one, Rojas finished graduate school and moved

the Baby Bjorn, and get out to write “Matokie Lives” on a freight car. It enraged Rojas; she didn’t think graffiti was an appropriate activity for an infant. She says, “There was nothing I could do but sit there and be the lookout, and watch him write Margaret’s name.” The difficulty of the situation didn’t intimidate Rojas—a sad man, a complicated man, she could deal with that—or maybe she was young enough that its full range didn’t occur to her. “I think most people would just completely head the opposite direction, like, ‘Good luck with this, Barry,’ ” McGee says. “But she walked straight in.” Not everyone was happy to see her. Friends of Kilgallen’s, Rojas says, treated her with hostility: “The attitude was ‘Who are you and why are you here?’ ” McGee and Rojas were married in 2005. Even so, at Asha’s school, other parents assumed that Rojas was the nanny. Asha, on the other hand, called Rojas “Mom,” and Rojas referred to her as “my daughter.” Early on, she learned to play the banjo; she thought it would comfort Asha to hear the music Kilgallen had played while she was in the womb, and she thought it might console McGee, too. She taught herself to surf, so that she wouldn’t get stuck babysitting on the beach. At every turn, with every parenting decision, she asked herself if Kilgallen would approve. She took refuge in the notion, shared by McGee, that Kilgallen intended for her to take over where she had left off. She told me, “This was an arranged marriage. By Margaret. I swear to God.”

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in with McGee. When she got to San Francisco, she’d still barely been alone with him. They started taking road trips, heading north, escaping the families to see if they could be one. She was twenty-five, in love, and at his mercy. “We were in his car—with a baby,” she said. “I had no idea where we were going. He wouldn’t tell me.” In little towns that Rojas later learned he’d visited with Kilgallen, he would head for the train yard, pop Asha in

THE NEW YORKER, AUGUST 10 & 17, 2015

ilgallen had designed her work to be broken down—subsumed into some new creation—or to disappear entirely. Little remained to look at, but the world was hungry. People tattooed images of her art on their skin. “There’s a cult of Margaret Kilgallen,” Dan Flanagan, a close friend of hers from the library, says. Charismatic in life, she was sainted in death. Flanagan wasn’t at the hospital, but he heard that people had taken pieces of her clothing and strands of her hair. In the void left by Kilgallen, Rojas’s


work incubated. It started with a paintbrush, which McGee sent Rojas in the mail when she was still in grad school. It was sable, with a tapered tip, and, at twenty-five dollars, it was five times as expensive as the brushes she usually used. It pulled the paint like a calligraphy brush, making an undulating line. “I couldn’t wait to learn how to use it,” Rojas says. “I never looked at that poor brush and said, ‘Fuck no.’ ” It wasn’t until she’d mastered it that she realized what she’d done. The line was a vocabulary: McGee’s, Kilgallen’s, and now hers. Rojas’s favorite paper was a thick white Bristol card stock. On road trips, when she ran out of it, McGee handed her some of what he was using—the endpapers from old books, like the stuff Kilgallen used to bring home from the library. Kilgallen and McGee had worked in the same studio, borrowing from each other, refining their styles against the whetstone of the other’s craft. When Rojas, like them a printmaker, accustomed to working flat and with a limited palette, started sharing a studio with McGee, a similar dynamic came into play—only McGee was an established artist, with a distinct style, whereas Rojas was talented but still finding her way. “Barry and I were painting side by side. We were having conversations I assume he and Margaret had,” she told me. “He’d say, ‘When you reduce the palette to one or two colors, that looks really good.’ ” Kilgallen’s old paint was sitting around the studio, and Rojas, unthinkingly, used it. In San Francisco, Rojas finally had the space to experiment with scale. Instead of finely rendered miniatures, she began to paint large women, like the ones that had first attracted her in Kilgallen’s show at Deitch. Outsiders found it hard to comprehend. “She was basically making Margaret’s paintings for the first two or three years she and Barry were together,” Aaron Rose, a former gallery owner who showed Kilgallen and McGee, and who has known Rojas for years, says. “A lot of people were pissed.” The similarities were so extensive that when Rose curated “Beautiful Losers,” a travelling show of Mission School


“That’s just a bush that happens to be on fire—I’m over here.”

• artists, which included Kilgallen and Rojas, museum staff could not distinguish between their work. “I was thinking about Margaret, and I let myself go, do whatever I needed to do to sort through that as an artist,” Rojas told me. “I was having a conversation with myself, with her, and with the past.” Her fantastical, psychological narrative now included a ghostly love triangle. Often, she depicted female figures in communion with other women or with young girls; sometimes a spirit or a bird hovered overhead. The work was strong, and it led to solo museum shows, public commissions, and gallery exhibitions. Asha, who travels the world with her parents, leads a life that is remarkably similar to the one she might have had with Kilgallen and McGee. On summer evenings in Marin, the three of them ride bikes to the beach and go surfing. But Asha seems unburdened by the past. Last year, on her thirteenth birthday, McGee and Rojas took her to the top of a building in the Tenderloin to look at a mural that Rojas had made, seven stories tall, of two women, flat and folkloric, facing 42

• each other, starlike offerings in their hands. “I’m cold,” Asha said. “Can we go home?”

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or ten years after Kilgallen’s death, the house in the Mission remained virtually untouched. Rojas put her clothing in drawers with Kilgallen’s, and ate her meals on furniture Kilgallen had dragged in from the street. For a while, Rojas’s car was a 1965 Chevy Nova with faulty brakes, which Kilgallen had bought and started to rebuild. Rojas resented it all, and she resented herself for resenting it. Kilgallen had become an angel, a martyr, an icon of perfection. From one point of view, her death had given Rojas her life. There was no room to complain, or even tidy up. But it is tiresome to live with a ghost, and Rojas is a deeply practical person. She got a Prius. She insisted that McGee take Kilgallen’s paintings, which had been stacked against the walls, to his studio, and bought some storage baskets, lined with fabric, to organize the downstairs. The living room now is snug and spare. Kilgallen’s banjo hangs above a couch, and one of Rojas’s paintings is on another wall.

THE NEW YORKER, AUGUST 10 & 17, 2015

One evening this winter, when I was visiting McGee, Rojas and Asha came in with bags of groceries and a bunch of white tulips. At fourteen, Asha is slender and tall, with gestures and facial expressions so reminiscent of her mother that Dena often slips and calls her Margaret. “Mom! What happened to the rug?” Asha asked. Rojas explained that she had got rid of it, part of an ongoing effort to declutter. “Did you get rid of all our cassette tapes?” McGee asked, half joking, already sure of the answer. Rojas smiled, trying to be stern. “Barry! I’m not answering that question.” As she enumerated the new furniture they needed—chairs, a rug, a floor lamp, an office table, a diningroom table, and a ceiling fan—Asha disappeared into her room to get to work purging it of junk. After an hour, she emerged with two bags of garbage and two bags of giveaway stuff. “Want to come see?” she said. “Oh, my God, girl!” Rojas said as she took in the clean dresser top and the empty drawers. Asha had made enough space for a cozy reading chair. “You can have Margaret’s chair, how about that?” she said. Asha bounded to the living room and lay sideways across a mustardcolored upholstered chair. “My favorite,” she said. McGee and Rojas have talked about having a second child, but Rojas feels that their family is complete. In 2008, she adopted Asha, and stopped secondguessing every parenting decision. “Margaret gave me Asha, and I will obviously never forget that,” she said, but on a basic level the adoption freed her. Still, when I remarked that Rojas and McGee didn’t yet seem to be over Kilgallen, she looked at me frankly and asked, “Are we supposed to be over her?”

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ojas arrived in San Francisco with her own artistic concerns, and a vision of collaboration forged in part by what Kilgallen and McGee had projected. But working closely with McGee turned out, for her, to be a trap. His taste was his taste, and he steered her toward what he liked. “You trust this person. He’s your husband, and a very successful artist,” she told me. “It took me a long time to figure out that what he was


encouraging me to paint was either very similar to what he encouraged Margaret to paint or what she did paint.”Whatever Rojas accomplished as an artist, the credit always seemed to go to Kilgallen. She told me, “I went under two shadows”—Kilgallen’s and McGee’s—“and I don’t think I’m out of it yet.” Rojas kicks herself now for how naïve she was, underestimating the power of Kilgallen’s legacy. “For years, I’d paint something and show it to my mom or Barry, and say, ‘Does this look like Margaret’s work? Is there anything of her in this?’ If there was any inkling, the way they’d squint their eye, I would get rid of it. Which really got in the way of my narrative, if I wanted to paint a woman. Which was what my work was all about.” In time, Rojas’s sensibility changed. The figures of women that had been present in her work since her student days were joined by men, often naked and in postures of submission.The paintings got angry, to the point that Rojas didn’t want to make them anymore. She stopped painting altogether, and for two years she only wrote. Afterward, she got her own studio, out of the Mission, in Dogpatch. “I don’t even have the key to Barry’s studio—that’s how interested I am in ever going there,” she told me. Most of her work now is abstract. Rojas’s studio is huge, airy, and light, suitable for the oils that have become her preferred medium. When I visited in June, she was pushing to finish nine canvases for an art fair in the fall. She opened the door wearing a paint-dabbed denim apron and a pair of white-onblack Adidas. The paintings were big, four by five feet, in black, cream, red, and cerulean—like flattened Calder stabiles. “It’s all about harmony, balance, and finding joy through compositions,” she said. Her old paintings had geometric elements in the background. To make these new ones, she simply excised the figures. “It was about letting go of the story,” she says. She took off her apron and sat down on a couch in a front room. She told me that she had recently taken a motorcycle-safety course, so she can ride a Vespa around Marin County on the weekends, and eventually use it in the city, to go from home to the studio. At the school, there was an obsta-

cle course made out of cones. “One of the main things they teach you, going in and out, is not to fixate on the object in front of you, always to go straight ahead,” she said. “I fixated on the thing in front of me for a really long time.” Rojas is thirty-nine and has been with McGee for fourteen years. In that time, his work has changed, too, showing signs of her influence. She teases him that it’s stealing; he agrees. “I let Clare work through things for years, and then I scoop it in,” he says. For the first time, in the fall, they collaborated on a show, in Rome. Their collaboration was not the side-by-side, kindred-spirits way of Kilgallen and McGee but something distinct: she would start a piece and leave the gallery; alone, he’d finish it. Then he would start something and she would finish it. Her lines were hard; his were soft. It was like checkers; they were equals, and it was fun.

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cGee still starts many of his mornings in the freezing-cold ocean, beneath the hills where he and Kilgallen were married. He drives a white Chevy Astro van loaded with longboards, stickers, wax, and zines. Rojas told me that either he had never mourned for Kilgallen or he is mourning still. She never knew; she’d fall asleep listening to the sound of his chiseltipped black pen and wonder what he was working out. Surfing, for him, is like drawing, or like grief— repeat, repeat, squeak, squeak, squeak. In the water, he is graceful, stoop-shouldered, cross-stepping toward the nose of his board, crouching down and disappearing into the froth. He can go on like that for hours. One morning after surfing, McGee put on a red hooded windbreaker and brown pants, and drove the van to Menlo Park to see a piece of his that had been installed in the sprawling new Frank Gehry building at Facebook. He shuffled past employees eating scrambled eggs from Styrofoam clamshells to arrive at his “boil,” an optical hoard, bulging out from a wall, made from hundreds of odd-shaped thrift-store

frames containing drawings, paintings, graffiti photographs, doodles done on napkins by his dad. “It’s about abundance,” McGee said. “Just more. More everything.” On the way back to the city, McGee stopped in South San Francisco, at his brother Mike’s auto-body shop. Mike has thousands of pedals, fenders, and pieces of trim that fit old muscle cars; boxes full of Fisher-Price toys; vintage beer cans bought at swap meets; and most of the things Barry has tried to get rid of over the years, including all the visitor’s passes that Mike amassed when Kilgallen was in the hospital. They sit on a shelf, along with stickers she made, skateboards she designed, and posters for her shows. Barry craned his neck, looking around the shadowy space. “Jesus Christ, this is my future,” he said, moving past a rusted-out Chevelle to another car, on a lift in the back. It was Kilgallen’s Chevy Nova, which Barry hadn’t known was there. “I’ve been working on it,” Mike said. “It’s almost done.” The fenders, the roof, and the hood were ready for a final sanding and then paint. Barry looked at it with trepidation. Rojas would be furious. “I forgot the car even existed until I saw it,” he said. “Where are we going to keep this thing? Crap.” Maybe he could crash it, so that Mike would have to fix it up again. Or put it in an installation. He didn’t want to own it; he didn’t want to own anything precious, sentimental, or nice. He’d be afraid of losing it somehow. A few months ago, McGee’s van, anonymous and utilitarian, was stolen from the street in front of the house in the Mission. Rojas was ecstatic; she thought it was a hazard, and she didn’t like the mess. But McGee was distraught, and immediately set about replacing it. “You know how when your family structure is broken you gotta fix it right away?” he said to me. “That’s how I felt about my van. I had a new van by eleven the next morning.” Then the other van was recovered, and now instead of one white Chevy Astro van full of longboards he has two. 

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PROFILES

THE COP Darren Wilson was not indicted for shooting Michael Brown. Many people in Ferguson question whether justice was done. BY JAKE HALPERN

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arren Wilson, the former police officer who shot and killed Michael Brown, an eighteen-year-old African-American, in Ferguson, Missouri, has been living for several months on a nondescript dead-end street on the outskirts of St. Louis. Most of the nearby houses are clad in vinyl siding; there are no sidewalks, and few cars around. Wilson, who is twenty-nine, started receiving death threats not long after the incident, in which Brown was killed in the street shortly after robbing a convenience store. Although Wilson recently bought the house, his name is not on the deed, and only a few friends know where he lives. He and his wife, Barb, who is thirtyseven, and also a former Ferguson cop, rarely linger in the front yard. Because of such precautions, Wilson has been leading a very quiet life. During the past year, a series of police killings of AfricanAmericans across the country has inspired grief, outrage, protest, and acrimonious debate. For many Americans, this discussion, though painful, has been essential. Wilson has tried, with some success, to block it out. This March, I spent several days at his home. The first time I pulled up to the curb, Wilson, who is six feet four and weighs two hundred and fifteen pounds, immediately stepped outside, wearing a hat and sunglasses. He had seen me arriving on security cameras that are synched to his phone. Wilson has twice been exonerated of criminal wrongdoing. In November, after a grand jury chose not to indict him, the prosecutor, Robert P. McCulloch, was widely accused of having been soft on him, in part because McCulloch’s father was a police officer who had been killed in a shootout with a black suspect. In March, the U.S. Department of Justice issued two official reports on Ferguson. One was a painstaking analysis of the shooting that weighed physical, ballistic, forensic, and crime-scene evidence, and 44

statements from purported eyewitnesses. The report cleared Wilson of willfully violating Brown’s civil rights, and concluded that his use of force was defensible. It also contradicted many details that the media had reported about the incident, including that Brown had raised his hands in surrender and had been shot in the back. The evidence supported Wilson’s contention that Brown had been advancing toward him. The Justice Department also released a broader assessment of the police and the courts in Ferguson, and it was scathing. The town, it concluded, was characterized by deep-seated racism. Local authorities targeted black residents, arresting them disproportionately and fining them excessively. Together, the two reports frustrated attempts to arrive at a clean moral conclusion. Wilson had violated no protocol in his deadly interaction with Brown, yet he was part of a corrupt and racist system. The federal government’s findings did little to soothe the raw emotions stirred by Brown’s death. Many Americans believe that Wilson need not have killed Brown in order to protect himself, and might not have resorted to lethal force had Brown been white. Ta-Nehisi Coates, in his new book, “Between the World and Me,” writing of the psychological impact of incidents like the Brown shooting, says, “It does not matter if the destruction is the result of an unfortunate overreaction. It does not matter if it originates in a misunderstanding.” Coates also notes, “There is nothing uniquely evil in these destroyers or even in this moment. The destroyers are merely men enforcing the whims of our country.” Many police officers have defended Wilson, pointing out that cops patrolling violent neighborhoods risk their lives. Some right-wing publications have lionized him. In The American Thinker, David Whitley wrote that Wilson “should be thanked and treated as a hero!” Support-

THE NEW YORKER, AUGUST 10 & 17, 2015

ers raised nearly half a million dollars on behalf of the Wilsons, allowing them to move, buy the new house, and pay their legal expenses. But, as Wilson knows, such support has only deepened the resentment of people who feel that he deserves punishment or, at the very least, reprimand. During our conversations, Wilson typically sat in a recliner, holding his baby daughter, who was born in March. He said that, after Brown’s death, people “had made threats about doing something to my unborn child.” Wilson, a former Boy Scout with round cheeks and blue eyes, speaks with a muted drawl. When Barb went to the hospital to give birth, he said, “I made her check in anonymously.” Wilson said that he had interviewed for a few police positions but had been told that he would be a liability. “It’s too hot an issue, so it makes me unemployable,” he said. He tried not to brood about it: “I bottle everything up.” The baby has helped Wilson, who also has two stepsons, accept the constrictions of his current situation. It has also allowed him to maintain a pointed distance from the furor that the shooting helped to unleash. He told me that he had not read the Justice Department’s report on the systemic racism in Ferguson. “I don’t have any desire,” he said. “I’m not going to keep living in the past about what Ferguson did. It’s out of my control.”

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ilson, who is from Texas, is the son of a woman who repeatedly broke the law. His mother, Tonya Dean, stole money, largely by writing hot checks. After completing high school, she married Wilson’s father, John, who had been her English teacher. They soon had two children to support—Darren and his younger sister, Kara—but Dean spent wildly. She left John Wilson for another man, Tyler Harris, who ran a Y.M.C.A. They had a child, Jared, and Darren


Wilson hasn’t read the Justice Department’s report on systemic racism in Ferguson. “I’m not going to keep living in the past,” he said. PHOTOGRAPH BY RYAN PFLUGER

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and Kara lived with them. “Tonya had me in debt—almost twenty thousand dollars—that first year,” Harris told me. Dean, it seems, often repaid debts to one person by stealing money from someone else. The family eventually moved to St. Peters, west of St. Louis. When Wilson was thirteen, he stopped trusting his mother altogether, because she stole funds that she had helped raise for his Boy Scout troop. He worried that she would steal what little money he made working summer jobs, so he opened two bank accounts. The first, which had almost no money in it, was a decoy. He put his real earnings in the second, secret account. Wilson also tried to preëmpt his mother’s stealing. Once, he warned a friend’s parents not to let her inside their house, because she would surely find a way to steal their identities and max out their credit cards. Dean was loving, Wilson said. “She never wanted to hurt us.” He added, “But when it came to money she was going to get it, one way or another.” Dean, who had been told by a psychiatrist that she was bipolar, began engaging in elaborate cons, at one point posing as an heiress poised to inherit millions of dollars.

Despite her compulsive thievery, Dean somehow avoided prison. Finally, a judge warned her that if she appeared in his court again she would be jailed. Shortly afterward, in 2002, she died unexpectedly. At the time, Wilson didn’t understand what had triggered her death, but he now thinks that it might have been suicide. (Harris suspects that she drank antifreeze.) At the time, Wilson refused to talk about the tragedy, but his family knew that he was struggling: he started skipping school and hanging out with troublemakers. He graduated, though, and began doing construction work in the St. Louis area. He seemed directionless and unhappy. In 2008, the real-estate market crashed, and he could no longer find jobs. He applied to the Eastern Missouri Police Academy and was accepted. Being a police officer, he reasoned, was a recession-proof career. Wilson found the classwork fascinating, especially when he and other cadets role-played at handling stressful situations. If they made a mistake, Wilson said, the instructors pounced: “They’re— bam!—in your face. Done. ‘You’re wrong.’ ‘It’s over.’ ‘That person just died.’ ” He welcomed the pressure. Wilson’s relatives had worried about

“I know it’s late, but you wanna come up for a coconut or something?”

how Dean’s tumultuous life and death might affect her kids. Wilson’s grandmother Susan Durso recalls asking herself, “Are they going to be completely scarred?” Darren Wilson, at least, had found a sense of purpose.

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hen Wilson applied for a police job, he focussed on the northern portion of St. Louis County. The towns in what is called North County tend to be poorer, and to have a higher percentage of black residents, than other towns in the St. Louis area—such as St. Peters, the broadly middle-class, white town where Wilson grew up. North County also has more crime. Wilson felt that working in a tough area would propel his career. “If you go there and you do three to five years, get your experience, you can kind of write your own ticket,” he said. There are almost fifty municipalities in North County. The officers in some of the towns are not just fighting crime; they also issue countless traffic tickets and ordinance-violation citations. The local governments often rely on the fines generated by tickets and violations to balance their budgets. (In 2013, the town of Edmundson, which comprises less than a square mile, issued nearly five thousand traffic tickets.) Police officers, meanwhile, can be paid as little as ten dollars an hour, according to Kevin Ahlbrand, the president of the Missouri Fraternal Order of Police. Ahlbrand says that the low pay can create “unprofessional police officers,” adding, “You get what you pay for.” In 2009, Wilson got a job in Jennings, a town on Ferguson’s southeastern border, where ninety per cent of the residents are black and a quarter of the population lives below the poverty line. “I’d never been in an area where there was that much poverty,” Wilson said. Interacting with residents, he felt intimidated and unprepared. A field-training officer named Mike McCarthy, who had been a cop for ten years, displayed no such discomfort. McCarthy, a thirty-nine-year-old Irish-American with short brown hair and a square chin, is a third-generation policeman who grew up in North County. Most of his childhood friends were African-American. “If you just talk to him on the phone, you’d think you’re talking to a black guy,”


Wilson said. “He was able to relate to everyone up there.” Wilson said that he approached McCarthy for help: “Mike, I don’t know what I’m doing. This is a culture shock. Would you help me? Because you obviously have that connection, and you can relate to them. You may be white, but they still respect you. So why can they respect you and not me?” McCarthy had never heard another officer make such an honest admission of his own limitations. At the same time, he sensed a fierce determination: “Darren was probably the best officer that I’ve ever trained—just by his willingness to learn.” McCarthy wasn’t surprised that Wilson had difficulty interacting with residents. Police officers are rigorously trained in firing weapons and apprehending suspects but not in establishing common ground with people who have had different experiences. “If you go to an academy, how much is on that?” he asked me. “Basically, nothing.” A recent survey by the Police Executive Research Forum revealed that cadets usually receive fifty-eight hours of training in firearms, forty-nine in defensive tactics, ten in communication skills, and eight in de-escalation tactics. For several months, McCarthy taught Wilson how to walk the beat—coaching him to loosen up, joke, and curse occasionally. He should avoid “sounding like a Webster’s Dictionary,” never condescend, and never expect people to rat. At first, Wilson says, residents laughed at him, but he followed McCarthy’s advice to “just keep going.” By the end of the training, Wilson said, he “was more comfortable” on the streets. McCarthy told me, “There is so much distrust in the African-American community toward the police.” The only way to overcome it was by establishing bonds with people. McCarthy, who is gay, said that he understood what it meant to be marginalized. “In the United States, where everybody is supposed to be equal, I’m not. So that’s a major thing.” McCarthy helped Wilson, in part, by letting him make mistakes. One night, they were patrolling a neighborhood where burglary was common. Wilson saw a car idling on the side of the street, and McCarthy didn’t object when Wilson pulled over and asked the driver to

show I.D. Wilson ran a check on the man’s name; nothing came up, so he let him go. Later, McCarthy asked, “What would’ve happened if you’d found a gun?” Wilson said that he would have arrested the man. McCarthy asked him what his case for probable cause would have been, and Wilson couldn’t answer. “You’d be screwed,” McCarthy said. McCarthy had spent two years working as a police officer at a predominantly black middle school in the city of Normandy. (Michael Brown attended the school, but not when McCarthy worked there.) McCarthy told me that police officers he knew often disliked working in North County schools, because many students had an “us versus them” attitude. But he loved talking with the kids and “investing in the community.” He recalled, “I would do the adopted-student program—take them to basketball games and things of that nature.” Many of the kids confided in him about the stress of having to be “man of the house” when a parent worked nights. McCarthy said that his openness made the students more respectful: “I wasn’t the police to them, because they knew me on a personal level, rather than what that badge stood for.” He said, “People are amazing, and you have no idea what’s going on behind that façade until you stop and try to know.” Too many cops, he went on, weren’t interested in understanding the “root causes” of crime; they preferred to “go on calls, handle the call, and leave.”

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hen Wilson became a police officer in Jennings, he was joining a department that had a reputation for racism. Wesley Bell, a newly elected member of the Ferguson City Council, told me that he used to avoid driving through Jennings “like the plague.” This feeling endures. The current mayor of Jennings, Yolonda Henderson, who is black, told me that African-Americans in nearby towns “still say, ‘No, no, no, I ain’t going over there.’ ” Wilson recalls hearing “old-timers” talk about racism in Jennings’s past, but their stories didn’t make a vivid impression on him. McCarthy, however, said that in the seventies and eighties the Jen-

nings police “did not play.” He added, “Basically, they’d beat you.” During that period, many blacks from St. Louis moved to North County. Numerous towns there went from being majority white to being majority black.The police forces remained almost completely white. McCarthy showed me several police logs from those decades, and many entries documented bigotry on the part of Jennings authorities. In April, 1973, a lieutenant described a holdup that had occurred near the police station. The suspects were two black males. At the bottom of the entry, someone had written, “Men, you better leave your wallets at home. Niggers are going to come in the police station next and rob us.” An entry from December, 1979, described an eighteen-year-old black male who was believed to have been involved in the shooting of a police officer but was then released, “due to his lack of mental capacity.” Below this, someone had scrawled, “Kill the Fucker.” McCarthy said that police officers resist discussing racism, past or present. “If an officer speaks out, they are ostracized,” he said. “They don’t want anything negative to be out there. But we’re humans—there’s gonna be negative. Be honest about it. If you acknowledge it, that’s the first step.” Wilson strongly disagreed with McCarthy about this. He granted that, in North County, the overt racism of past decades affected “elders” who lived through that time. “People who experienced that, and were mistreated, have a legitimate claim,” he told me. “Other people don’t.” I asked him if he thought that young people in North County and elsewhere used this legacy as an excuse. “I think so,” he replied. “I am really simple in the way that I look at life,” Wilson said. “What happened to my great-grandfather is not happening to me. I can’t base my actions off what happened to him.” Wilson said that police officers didn’t have the luxury of dwelling on the past. “We can’t fix in thirty minutes what happened thirty years ago,” he said. “We have to fix what’s happening now. That’s my job as a police officer. I’m not going to delve into people’s lifelong history and figure out why they’re

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feeling a certain way, in a certain moment.” He added, “I’m not a psychologist.” Wilson said that, despite what he’d said about experiencing “culture shock,” race hadn’t affected the way he did police work: “I never looked at it like ‘I’m the only white guy here.’ I just looked at it as ‘This isn’t where I grew up.’ ” He said, “When a cop shows up, it’s, like, ‘The cops are here!’ There’s no ‘Oh, shit, the white cops are here!’ ” He added, “If you live in a high-crime area, with a lot of poverty, there’s going to be a large police presence. You’re going to piss people off. If police show up, it’s because it’s something bad, and whoever’s involved can’t figure out the problem for themselves.” He continued, “Everyone is so quick to jump on race. It’s not a race issue.” There were two opposing views about policing, he said: “There are people who feel that police have too much power, and they don’t like it. There are people who feel police don’t have enough power, and they don’t like it.” During Wilson’s tenure in Jennings, an angry debate arose about how much power the police should have. In January, 2011, a white officer stopped a vehicle with expired license plates. The driver got out, but a black woman who had been riding in the passenger seat drove off. There was a child in the back seat. The officer shot at the car’s tires. Though the car didn’t crash, the child could have been seriously hurt. (The officer resigned.) Not long afterward, it was discovered that a lieutenant in Jennings had stolen federal funds allocated for drunk-driving checks. In March, 2011, the Jennings City Council voted to shut down the police department and hire St. Louis County to take over. McCarthy secured a job at the local jail, which the town still ran, but most of the other officers were laid off, including Wilson. “When I left Jennings, I didn’t want to work in a white area,” Wilson told me. “I liked the black community,” he went on. “I had fun there. . . . There’s people who will just crack you up.” He also liked the fact that there was more work for the police in a town like Jennings—more calls to answer, more people to meet. “I didn’t want to just sit around all day,” he said. Wilson, who had recently married a college student named Ashley Brown, didn’t have to look far to find a new job. 48

That October, he began policing in neighboring Ferguson, which was slightly more prosperous and about two-thirds black. He was mentored by another field-training officer: Barb Spradling, his future wife. Barb had been working in Ferguson for seven years, as one of three women on a force of roughly fifty officers. “I always thought it was easier to work with guys, because they’re not as catty,” she said. The training went smoothly. “I made it easy on her, because all she really had to show me was the city limits and the paperwork,” Wilson told me. “I already knew the job.” They began confiding in each other, and Wilson revealed that his marriage was foundering. Wilson also told Barb stories about his mother. Barb was moved, and before long they became a couple. “I was, like, ‘Wow, this guy has been through a lot,’ ” she told me. “And it seemed like he handled it all pretty gracefully.”

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n July, 2014, Wilson visited the home of Scottie Randolph, a sixty-sevenyear-old African-American man, after Randolph reported hearing gunfire. Randolph says that shootings often occur in his neighborhood when “the teen-agers are out of school.” The frequency “depends on whether they’ve got a drug war or a gang war going on.” His neighborhood had fallen into disarray because of “the economic meltdown.” He added, “A lot of people lost what little they had.” Young people who couldn’t find work resorted to selling drugs. Randolph told me that he needs the police for protection, but—echoing the Justice Department’s findings—feels that they target blacks for fines: “I kind of resent the fact that they’re using minorities as a cash cow.” Wilson said that he often handled calls like Randolph’s, and that such work was tough, because he could do little to help. I asked him if he agreed with Randolph that the neighborhood’s main problem was the absence of jobs. “There’s a lack of jobs everywhere,” he replied, brusquely. “But there’s also lack of initiative to get a job. You can lead a horse to water, but you can’t make it drink.” He acknowledged that the jobs available in Ferguson often paid poorly, but added, “That’s how I started. You’ve got to start somewhere.” Good values, Wilson insisted, needed

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to be learned at home. He spoke of a black single mother, in Ferguson, who was physically disabled and blind. She had several teen-age children, who “ran wild,” shooting guns, dealing drugs, and breaking into cars. Several times, Wilson recalled, he responded to calls about gunfire in the woman’s neighborhood and saw “people running either from or to that house.” Wilson would give chase. “It’s midnight, and you’re running through back yards.” If he caught the kids, he checked them for weapons, then questioned them. He recounted a typical exchange: “ ‘Why you running?’ ‘Because I’m afraid of getting caught.’ ‘Well, what are you afraid of getting caught for?’ ‘I don’t know.’ ‘Well, there’s a reason you ran, and there’s a reason you don’t want to get caught. What’s going on?’ ” Wilson said that he rarely got answers—and that any contraband had already been thrown away. Once, he arrested some of the woman’s kids, for damaging property, but usually he let them go. In his telling, there was no reaching the blind woman’s kids: “They ran all over the mom. They didn’t respect her, so why would they respect me?” He added, “They’re so wrapped up in a different culture than—what I’m trying to say is, the right culture, the better one to pick from.” This sounded like racial code language. I pressed him: what did he mean by “a different culture”? Wilson struggled to respond. He said that he meant “pre-gang culture, where you are just running in the streets—not worried about working in the morning, just worried about your immediate gratification.” He added, “It is the same younger culture that is everywhere in the inner cities.” Most of Wilson’s calls were routine— traffic stops, house alarms—but some were deeply distressing. At one crime scene, he discovered the mangled bodies of two dead women. A two-year-old, “covered in blood,” was crawling between them. I asked him if such incidents made it hard to sleep. “No,” he replied. “I’ve never brought my work home.” This was partly a matter of disposition, but Wilson noted that, while he and Barb were on the force, they lived twenty miles outside Ferguson. They needed “that buffer”—a “chance to get out of that element.” Wilson’s home life wasn’t entirely peaceful, however. In May, 2013, Barb’s ex-boyfriend John—the father of her


younger son, who was then four—assaulted her, and also attacked Wilson. According to court papers, Barb said that John drank, and had beaten her in the past. (Barb asked me to omit John’s surname, to protect her son’s identity.) Barb testified in court that John “pulled my hair,” “choked me,” and “punched me in the face.” The Wilsons declined to discuss the incident with me.

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ilson says that he liked working in Ferguson, but after a year or so he discerned problems within the department. One day, he received a call about a woman screaming in the street. When he arrived on the scene, a rookie officer had already forced her onto the ground, arrested her, and handcuffed her. But the woman, the rookie had realized, hadn’t deserved this treatment: she was having some kind of anxiety attack. “Now what?” he asked Wilson. “You don’t even know why you arrested somebody?” Wilson said. Then he recalled who the rookie’s field-training officer had been. Wilson summed up that officer’s approach as “Arrest them and figure it out later.” Wilson blamed the rookie’s meagre training for his mistake. “He didn’t learn how to talk,” Wilson said. There isn’t much in the way of a reliable record about Wilson’s own mode of communicating, except for a fifteen-second video that shows him arresting a twenty-nine-yearold white man named Michael Arman. That day, in October, 2013, Wilson was visiting Arman’s house to deliver a court summons. Arman had several brokendown vehicles parked on his property, in violation of city rules. In his police report, Wilson says that Arman refused to take the summons, and so he arrested him for “failure to comply.” In the video, Wilson approaches the front porch of the house and notices that he is being videotaped. “If you want to take a picture of me one more time, I’m going to lock your ass up,” he says, in an almost bored tone. “Sir, I’m not taking a picture, I’m recording this incident,” Arman says. “Do I not have the right—” “No, you don’t,” Wilson says, inaccurately. The video ends. The encounter apparently did not escalate, but it is hardly a testament to Wilson’s communication skills.

Arman was fined for his violation. According to NBC News, in 2013 Ferguson filed more than twelve thousand cases charging ordinance violations— everything from loitering to petty larceny. And there were more than eleven thousand cases charging traffic violations. The Justice Department report on the city of Ferguson notes that police officers were punished when they didn’t write enough tickets, and often issued multiple citations for a single stop. Wilson told me that he knew of an officer who had once issued sixteen. “What the hell is the point?” he asked me. He believed that such fines could create a “vicious cycle,” in which people could not pay what they owed, then were fined further for missing payments. “That’s almost abusive of power,” he told me. I asked Wilson if he had issued multiple tickets. He said that he “usually” never wrote more than three.

Three tickets, of course, could have ruinous consequences for a resident who was poor. I met a man from St. Louis named Sean Bailey, who had been stopped by the Ferguson police in 2005. He had parked his mother’s car outside a Chinese restaurant, left a friend in the car, and run in to get take-out food. The police issued three violations, charging Bailey a hundred and two dollars for parking in a fire lane, and citing him for failure to register his car and driving without a valid license. Bailey, who was unemployed, couldn’t afford to pay, and when he missed deadlines he was charged additional fines. He has since been arrested half a dozen times for having outstanding fines, and has spent three weeks in jail. He says that, cumulatively, he has paid hundreds of dollars, but the city says that he still owes another hundred and fifty-eight. He has little hope of paying the debt, because he and his

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“Ahhhh.”

• four-year-old daughter are homeless. Though Ferguson police officers routinely arrested people for “failure to comply,” Wilson’s arrest of Arman was unusual in one respect: Arman is white. The Justice Department report concludes that Ferguson’s officers disproportionately charged black citizens with such violations. Wilson insists that he didn’t perceive this bias. But the inequity was extreme: between 2011 and 2013, the Justice Department reported, ninety-four per cent of the people arrested in Ferguson for “failure to comply” were black. The Justice Department also reported that the Ferguson police routinely performed “pedestrian checks,” in which residents were stopped on the street, often without proper legal justification. In police records, I found four welldocumented instances in which Wilson was involved in “ped checks.” On February 27, 2014, he stopped a twenty-threeyear-old black man named Aaron Simmons, outside a minimart. In the police report, Wilson remarks that the minimart was known as a place where drugs were sold. He also mentions that it was cold outside, and that while patrolling he had seen Simmons four times “in this area.” Wilson reports that, for his own safety, he told Simmons to remove his hands from his pockets. Simmons objected: it was freezing, and his pockets were empty. Wilson forcibly removed Simmons’s 50

• “hands from his pants, during which Simmons actively resisted my control.” Wilson then requested Simmons to place his hands against the police car, so that he could be searched for weapons. When Simmons refused, Wilson arrested him for failure to comply. The report does not say that Simmons possessed anything illegal. During the arrest process, Wilson notes, he and Simmons had several physical confrontations, including one, at the police station, in which “Simmons was pushed against the wall.” I showed the four reports to Erin Murphy, an N.Y.U. law professor who studies Fourth Amendment issues. Murphy said that, in the case of Simmons, there was no legitimate reason for detaining him. The other ped checks were less dramatic, but also reflected “questionable constitutional behavior.” These reports, she noted, painted “a familiar picture of contemporary law enforcement.” Police officers, she added, are not entirely to blame—often, they are trying to “enforce vague standards for detaining people that they don’t really understand.” (Wilson conceded that the failure-to-comply ordinance was exploited as an “easy way to arrest someone.” True violations, he said, involved more resistance than “you telling someone to come here, and them saying, ‘No, screw you.’ ” But when I asked him to explain the ordinance further, he said, “I’d have to read it again.”)

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The Justice Department found other examples of systemic racial bias in Ferguson. From 2012 to 2014, the Ferguson police issued four or more tickets to blacks on seventy-three occasions, and to whites only twice. Black drivers were more than twice as likely as others to be searched during vehicle stops, even though they were found to possess contraband twenty-six per cent less often. Some charges, like “manner of walking in roadway,” were brought against blacks almost exclusively. Wilson told me that Ferguson’s force had a few bigoted members, but he denied that racism was institutional. The Justice Department’s numbers were “skewed,” he said. “You can make those numbers fit whatever agenda you want.” Within the city government, however, there appears to have been a disturbing level of cynicism about race and crime. In 2011, an e-mail circulated by police supervisors and court staff joked that a black woman who had an abortion was practicing good crime control. While Justice Department officials were investigating Ferguson, city officials repeatedly told them that the arrest statistics simply reflected the fact that black residents lacked “personal responsibility.” Indeed, before August 9, 2014—the day of Brown’s death—there seems to have been almost no sense that the city needed to change. When I asked Wilson if he felt that Ferguson might boil over, he said, “There’s always going to be a little bit simmering in a high-crime, poverty area. In that area, police usually aren’t coming over to have dinner.” Mark Byrne, who has been a councilman in Ferguson since 2010, told me that there were things he had missed: “I didn’t know, on August 9th, that we only had four African-American police officers on a force of fifty-three.” In 2014, the city spent four times as much money on police uniforms as it did on police training. Byrne said, “I could have done a better job.”

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ust before noon on August 9, 2014, Darren Wilson was heading for a lunch date with Barb when his radio announced that there was a “stealing in progress” at the nearby Ferguson Market and Liquor. The dispatcher offered a description of the two suspects. Wilson radioed


back: “Do you guys need me?” The dispatcher replied that the suspects had “disappeared.” Wilson, who had just assisted a mother whose infant was having difficulty breathing, decided that if the robbery trail was cold he would continue on to lunch. Moments later, he encountered Michael Brown and his friend Dorian Johnson, walking down the middle of Canfield Drive. Brown was at a precarious juncture in his life. When he was twelve, his parents had split up. At first, he had lived with his mother, Lesley McSpadden, but by the age of sixteen he had moved in with his father, Michael Brown, Sr. “He wasn’t doing so good over there,” Brown, Sr., told me. “She was working—wasn’t nobody there to kind of help him out—so he came back my way, and he was staying back and forth with me and my mother.” Last summer, Brown was living with his maternal grandmother. Brown had struggled academically, and had switched schools several times. He was six feet five and weighed nearly three hundred pounds, and, because of his size, people often thought he was older than he was. Brown, Sr., recalls worrying that his son’s physical stature might make him a target for the police. “We had a conversation about just following orders,” he said. “After you thought that you were being disrespected, get a name and a badge number, so your parent can reach out to the police department and file a complaint.” Most important was a simple directive: “Obey.” Brown had just graduated from Normandy High School, where he had participated in an alternative-education program. He was planning to study heating and cooling at a technical school, but hadn’t yet started. Now summer was ending, and he had decisions to make. Each spring, Duane Foster, a music teacher at Normandy, who knew Brown in passing, tells his seniors, “Since you’ve been a child, you have known every year, from August to June, that you’re going to go to school. . . . For the first time in your life, you won’t have anything set in stone. And that should make you scared.” For many of the students at Normandy, Foster said, attending college is not a possibility. At home, these students are often told that, once school ends, they must earn their keep. Some of these young

people have very few options, he said, then asked, “How do I compete with somebody struggling with poverty? How do I come into a classroom and say that you don’t need to be selling drugs or participating in gang-like activity?” Foster grew up near Ferguson, in Velda Village Hills. When his family moved there, in 1969, it was among the first black families in town. By the mid-seventies, the neighborhood was almost entirely black. Back then, there were jobs and two-parent families, and this created stability. “We had General Motors, Chrysler, and Ford,” he told me. “So many factories.” Those jobs are now gone, as are many fathers, he says. According to a recent analysis by the Times of American communities with at least ten thousand black residents, the city with the largest proportion of black men who are “missing”—in jail or prematurely dead—is Ferguson. Foster said, “There’s no real design for a middle class, or even a lower-middle class, in this area.” Michael Brown’s father played an active role in his life, but this isn’t always the case for Normandy students. A third of Foster’s students have a father in jail. Many of them believe, rightly or wrongly, that their father is innocent, and this inevitably shapes how young people in Ferguson view the police. This context, Foster says, helps provide a clearer picture of where Brown came from, and who his peers were. The image of Brown that many people have was shaped by the surveillance video from Ferguson Market and Liquor. In that footage, we see Brown take several packages of cigarillos, then head toward the door. A clerk tries to stop him, but Brown easily shoves him aside. Store employees later told federal investigators that Brown looked “crazy,” used profane language, and asked the clerk, menacingly, “What are you gonna do about it?” Dorian Johnson told me that, before entering the market, he and Brown “never talked about stealing things.” Johnson claimed that they were instead immersed in a discussion “about the Bible and God—how you’re supposed to be as a human going through life.” After Brown stole the cigarillos and they left the store, they resumed this conversation. Johnson also claimed that he didn’t even acknowledge that the theft had taken place, because he didn’t want to rub Brown

“the wrong way.” He told me, “I was being a real good friend and staying with him, even though I know he committed a crime,” and added, “It wasn’t like he robbed the store—like he held it at gunpoint or anything—so I didn’t think the guy was really gonna call the police.”

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he most thorough account of what happened next comes from the Justice Department’s report on the incident, which is eighty-six pages long. Wilson was heading west on Canfield Drive, his window open, in his department-issued Chevrolet Tahoe. He spotted Brown and Johnson, and called out to them to use the sidewalk. According to Wilson, Brown replied, “Fuck what you have to say.” ( Johnson denies that Brown said this, and claims that Wilson told them, “Get the fuck on the sidewalk.”) Wilson surmised that Brown and Johnson were the robbery suspects, based on the descriptions offered on the radio and the cigarillos in Brown’s hands. After calling for backup, Wilson parked his vehicle at an angle, barricading the roadway. According to Kevin Ahlbrand, the president of the Missouri Fraternal Order of Police, parking a police car in this manner is a common maneuver—a car in the street offers a cop protection in the event of a gunfight. Jonathan Fenderson, who is a professor of African-American studies at Washington University, in St. Louis, told me that young black men are inclined to see the police as an “occupying force.” Intentionally or not, Wilson’s decision to blockade the street sent a message: You will defer to the power that I exhibit, or I am going to force you back into place. After stopping his car, Wilson tried to open his door, but Brown blocked his way. It is impossible to know what Brown and Wilson then said to each other—or why the situation escalated so quickly. I asked Wilson repeatedly to discuss this moment with me, but he declined, noting that Brown’s parents are pursuing a civil lawsuit, and that he didn’t need details “in print that they’re going to try and spin.” According to Wilson and several witnesses deemed credible by the Justice Department, Brown reached into the Tahoe’s open window, grabbed Wilson, and punched him. This narrative, the

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report says, is supported by bruising on Wilson’s jaw and samples of Brown’s DNA found on Wilson’s collar, shirt, and pants. It’s not known why Brown did this, and many have speculated that Wilson provoked Brown somehow. At this point, Wilson told investigators, his training kicked in and he reviewed his options. He did not carry a Taser, so the weapons at his disposal were mace, a retractable baton, and his gun. The only one readily accessible, Wilson said, was the gun. When he unholstered it, he told investigators, Brown reached for it. He told the grand jury that Brown said to him, “You are too much of a pussy to shoot me.” In the ensuing struggle, Wilson shot Brown in the hand. This sequence of events has factual support. Brown’s DNA was detected on the inside of the driver’s-side door, and soot from the gun’s muzzle was found in Brown’s wound, indicating that his hand was within inches of the weapon when it fired. It was the first time that Wilson had used his gun in the line of duty. Wilson told the grand jury that Brown, upon being shot, had “the most intense, aggressive face,” and looked “like a demon.” Brown retreated, running east. Wilson chased him. Brown ran at least a hundred and eighty feet down Canfield Drive—his blood was found in the roadway—and then headed back toward Wilson. According to the Justice Department, eyewitnesses claiming that Brown raised his hands in surrender proved unreliable. (One of these witnesses, Dorian Johnson, continues to insist that Brown’s hands were raised.) Witnesses deemed credible offered varying accounts of Brown’s movement—“charging,” “slow motion,” “running”—but concurred that he was approaching Wilson. According to Wilson, he repeatedly ordered Brown to stop and get on the ground. Brown, who was unarmed, kept moving. At one point, Wilson told investigators, Brown put his right hand into his waistband, as if reaching for a weapon. Sometime after the chase began, Wilson shot ten bullets at Brown. A few missed him, but he was hit in the chest, the forehead, and the arm. Autopsy reports indicate that, contrary to initial media reports, no bullets hit Brown in the back. It is possible that Wilson fired some of the errant bullets before Brown turned around, and the Justice Depart52

ment report says that “the autopsy results alone do not indicate the direction Brown was facing when he received two wounds to his right arm.” Yet the report repeatedly underscores that eyewitness accounts describing Brown being shot from behind were unreliable. Academics have studied whether cops exhibit racial bias when deciding whether to pull the trigger. Joshua Correll, at the University of Colorado Boulder, has done more than twenty studies on this topic. In 2000, Correll created a video game in which participants view images of armed and unarmed men—some black, some white. Participants must make rapid decisions about whether to shoot. Initially, Correll tested civilians—college students, mainly—and found that they were quicker to shoot black suspects than white suspects. They also were more likely to shoot unarmed suspects when those suspects were black. When Correll had police officers do the test, the results were more ambiguous. Officers, like civilians, were significantly quicker to shoot black suspects than white suspects; but cops showed no bias when shooting unarmed suspects by mistake. Correll believes that this is a result of the training that cops receive. Wilson told the grand jury that when Brown was hit by the bullets he “looked like he was almost bulking up to run through the shots, like it was making him mad that I’m shooting at him.” This testimony has inspired much debate. In November, Melissa Harris-Perry, the commentator on MSNBC, noted that Wilson’s use of language—much like his use of the word “demon”—was dehumanizing, and conformed to the “myth

of the black brute incapable of pain himself bent on inflicting pain on others.” She added, “Americans long have had difficulty in understanding, acknowledging, and having empathy for the pain of black men.” Brown collapsed after being shot. At 12:05 P.M., an ambulance—carrying the infant Wilson had assisted—came across the scene, and a paramedic pronounced Brown dead. The body remained on the hot asphalt for four hours. Hundreds of

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angry residents gathered, some shouting, “Let’s kill the police!” Ferguson officials say that this volatility slowed down the processing of Brown’s body, but the delay struck many onlookers as deeply insulting. As one local told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, “You’ll never make anyone black believe that a white kid would have laid in the street for four hours.” Sabrina Webb, one of Brown’s cousins, lived on Canfield Drive, across from the scene of the shooting. She was at work when the shooting occurred. Her roommate called to report that someone had just been shot dead. Webb rushed home. She couldn’t get down Canfield Drive in her car, so she parked on a nearby street and ran the rest of the way. She pushed through onlookers and discovered that the victim was her cousin. Brown was three years younger than she was, and they had seen each other the previous week. “We were just happy,” she says. “Like normal kids.” Now his dead body was lying on the street. “That’s going to always stay on my mind,” she told me. “Always. It’s nothing you can get rid of.”

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t the Ferguson police station, Barb Wilson wondered why her husband hadn’t showed up for lunch. Then, she told me, “he just walked in and was, like, ‘I just killed somebody.’ ” Barb noticed that Wilson’s “face was flushed and red— it didn’t look right.” She decided that he needed space and, not knowing what else to do, took care of some paperwork. Wilson went to the hospital with his superiors, and debriefed them while he was examined for injuries. He returned to the station, and he and Barb headed home. “Neither one of us knew what the reaction was going to be the next day,” Wilson said. “You know, a typical police shooting is: you get about a week to a week and a half off, you see a shrink, you go through your Internal Affairs interviews. And then you come back.” Barb told me, “I didn’t think it would be a big weight on his shoulders. This is kind of what we signed up for.” Later that night, however, they turned on the television and watched live coverage of unrest in Ferguson. Barb recalled, “We stayed up all night watching, like, ‘Oh, my God—what’s going on? What are they doing?’ ” Barb’s younger son, who was then six, asked why there were images on television


of Ferguson burning. Wilson told me, “I said, ‘Well, I had to shoot somebody.’ And he goes, ‘Well, why did you shoot him? Was he a bad guy?’ I said, ‘Yeah, he was a bad guy.’ ” Soon after the shooting, Wilson called Mike McCarthy and gave him an account of what had happened. “I never questioned it,” McCarthy told me. Around the same time, he was involved in a shootout with an armed suspect, and he knew that such experiences were chaotic. McCarthy, who was moonlighting as a policeman in a North County town, answered a call about a domestic disturbance. He showed me a video of the incident. When McCarthy arrived on the scene, a black man in his twenties opened fire on him and another officer. The other cop was hit. The shooter sped off in his car. McCarthy got back into his car, letting out a strange, adrenaline-filled whoop. “After I got shot at, I had one thing on my mind, and that was getting that son of a bitch,” McCarthy told me. He pursued the shooter. “Then it hit me—‘I have to go back.’ ” He returned to his colleague. Fortunately, the officer was unhurt; the bullet had been stopped by the Taser on his utility belt. McCarthy’s story made clear that even a seasoned veteran could forget protocol while under duress. He said of Wilson’s troubles, “It just tore me up, because here you had a young kid who was doing nothing more than his job—and was doing a job that I encouraged him and taught him how to do.” McCarthy sympathized with some of the underlying rage that fuelled the protests—and the riots—but he was adamant that the shooting had nothing to do with race. A few days after the shooting, the Wilsons, worried that their address was about to be leaked online, fled to the house of a relative: “We ran through the house, grabbed all our guns, and put some bags together.” Wilson contemplated leaving St. Louis for good, then reconsidered. He told me, “At least here I’d know where I’m welcome and not welcome.”

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n August 9th, as events unfolded in Ferguson, Rasheen Aldridge was working at an Alamo rental-car office at the St. Louis Airport. From the parking lot, he had a clear view of Interstate 70.

“Today’s flight is overbooked. Is there someone who would accept a free travel voucher in return for teaching us how to correctly book a flight?”

“I saw, like, forty police cars heading toward Ferguson,” he recalled. On the Internet, he found an image of Brown’s body in the street. Aldridge, who was twenty at the time, had grown up in the impoverished Fifth Ward of St. Louis, but he was a homebody and spent little time on the streets. In kindergarten, Aldridge had entered the county’s desegregation program, and attended school in an affluent suburb. Many of his friends were white and Jewish. His childhood was quite different from Michael Brown’s, and perhaps for this reason he was drawn to Ferguson. On August 11th, he drove there with a friend. Aldridge talked with residents, gathering firsthand accounts of what had happened. A few days later, he returned and watched, horrified, as looters ransacked a store. He and several others formed a raggedy line of defense. Some looters walked away, Aldridge says; others didn’t. “Some called us house niggers,” he said, his voice cracking. In subsequent weeks, Aldridge returned often to Ferguson, participating in protests that he hoped would peacefully bring change. Initially, he gave the police the benefit of the doubt. Then officers started firing tear gas into the crowds and, occasionally, calling protesters “niggers.” Aldridge heard the media reports that Brown’s hands had been raised and that Wilson had shot him in the back. It was

Dorian Johnson who had first made these allegations, and they helped inspire the now famous rallying cry “Hands Up, Don’t Shoot.” Although Johnson’s story proved to be at odds with the Justice Department’s findings, the narrative had taken hold—and, for many Americans, it has endured. In part, this is because Johnson’s story was eminently plausible. Within the past year alone, the media has highlighted many examples of police brutality in which the facts strongly resemble the type of story that Johnson told—from the fatal choking of Eric Garner, on Staten Island, to the fatal shootings of Walter Scott, in North Charleston, South Carolina, and Samuel Dubose, in Cincinnati. Aldridge told me that, based on what he had heard and read, he believed that Brown was in “surrender mode” when Wilson shot him. When we spoke, he admitted that he had not yet read the Justice Department’s report on the shooting. It was hard not to notice a parallel: both Aldridge and Wilson had turned to the report that buttressed their own world view. It was as if the two Justice Department reports had come to present opposing realities. Legitimate questions linger about the shooting. If Brown was unprovoked, why did he reach into the police car and punch Wilson in the face? Why did Wilson fire ten shots? A young activist in Ferguson, Clifton Kinnie, said, “The story doesn’t make sense. Black

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youth don’t fight police—we run.” Kinnie recounted a story of walking toward a park, with his younger brother. A police officer pulled up in his car and told them to get on the ground. Kinnie complied and told his brother to do the same. The officer was apparently searching for some suspects. Kinnie still recalls how aggressive the officer was, “coming at us as if we were grown men.” This was in 2005, when Kinnie was eight years old. Kinnie’s cynical view of the police was bolstered by the Justice Department’s conclusions about the city of Ferguson. If the police generally acted in a racist and abusive manner, why give Wilson the benefit of the doubt? In May, I posed this question to Brittany Ferrell and Alexis Templeton—a charismatic black couple who are two of the most visible activists in Ferguson. Templeton said that the two Justice Department reports “pretty much contradict one another,” adding, “You have to say, Damn, if the Ferguson Police Department is racist, and Wilson works in the Ferguson Police Department, that means he might be racist, too.” She said, “They need to open up and relook at this case.” Ferrell said, “The system is going to do whatever it has to do to protect itself. And if that means protecting Darren Wilson, the officer who represents that system, they’re going to do that.”

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ne afternoon this spring, Ferrell and Templeton joined a protest in Ferguson. At the time, people were marching in Baltimore over the death of Freddie Gray, and the mood in Ferguson was tense. About a hundred protesters gathered outside a church, then proceeded onto the street. They chanted, “Indict!

Convict! Send that killer cop to jail! The whole damn system is guilty as hell!” The plan was to shut down the intersection of West Florissant and Chambers Road for four minutes, in symbolic homage to the four hours that Brown’s body lay in the street. When the protesters reached the intersection, they marched in front of oncoming cars. Horns honked, and an irate motorist yelled, “Get out of the street so people can get to work!” One car drove onto the elevated median and made a reckless U-turn. Another driver tried to force his way through the protesters, at considerable speed, and nearly hit one of them. The police never showed up. Several squad cars remained parked just down the street, in an empty lot. Some locals told me that the Ferguson police often decided not to engage these days. Weeks later, one white resident told me, bitterly, that the cops had their “hands tied” and couldn’t police “the way they should.” On one occasion, he said, he called the police about a possible break-in at a neighbor’s house, and an officer advised him to arm himself. Mike McCarthy also lamented the situation: “I don’t think the cops in Ferguson can do a whole lot of policing these days.”The Justice Department’s exposé may have had a constraining effect, but it’s also true that the city’s leadership is in flux. A week after the report came out, the police chief, the city manager, and the municipal judge all resigned. (The city recently named Andre Anderson, who is black, its interim police chief. His first goal, he announced, was “simply to build trust.”) Late in the evening on April 28th, violence broke out in Ferguson, and a store was looted. That night, I met up with

“Once you learn, though, you’ll never forget.”

McCarthy, in Jennings. On his police scanner, there were multiple reports of gunshots. “They are getting ready to switch over to Code 2000,” McCarthy told me. “A riot code.” A voice on the scanner then announced, “I have the air unit en route to your location.” The problems in Ferguson, McCarthy told me, were rooted in a vast historical legacy of injustice: “No matter what we do, we cannot right our wrongs to the African-American community.” But police had to do their job—and he, for one, couldn’t see himself leaving North County. “I don’t think I’d be effective,” he said. “It’s not what I know.” I asked him if, by the same logic, a man with the background of Darren Wilson would be inherently less effective in North County. McCarthy bristled. “Watch what you’re using for the definition of ‘effective,’ ” he said. “I can do my job down there, but you’re not getting the maximum use of my resources.” What would be lost? The ability to communicate easily, he replied. I reminded him that he considered communication to be the most important skill in law enforcement. Wasn’t Wilson’s confrontation with Brown, on some level, about communication? Would an encounter with Brown really have played out in the same manner for McCarthy? He insisted that he would have acted just as Wilson had. I then asked him to consider the initial moment of contact, when Wilson and Brown were still talking. “It might not have escalated to that point,” McCarthy conceded, uneasily. Later, he added, “There is likelihood that it could’ve avoided that confrontation—the escalation of that confrontation.” But he felt that such speculation was pointless. Reverend Starsky Wilson is the cochair of the Ferguson Commission, whose members have been asked by Missouri’s governor, Jay Nixon, to study what factors might have contributed to the rioting. In Reverend Wilson’s view, the moment when Darren Wilson first spoke with Michael Brown was enormously consequential. “It frames the engagement and it sets a tone for the relationship,” he told me. But this moment couldn’t be isolated from all the mistakes that came before it. In places like Ferguson, police officers needed to spend more time in the schools, getting to know disadvantaged students, and they had to treat more


residents as allies. He urged me to consider what might have happened if Wilson had known Brown, or Brown’s grandmother, and was able to say, “Does Miss Jenny know you’re out here?” Such a question, Reverend Wilson said, has a more potent moral authority.

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ne afternoon this spring, I accompanied Darren and Barb Wilson to a park near their house, where they watched Barb’s younger son practice baseball. Darren wore shades and a baseball cap, and we stayed in the Wilsons’ S.U.V. Wilson says that, after the grand jury cleared him, he wanted to rejoin Ferguson’s police force. But he was told that his presence would put other officers at risk. “They put that on me,” Wilson said. He worked for two weeks at a boot store, stocking inventory, but quit when reporters started calling the store. “No matter what I do, they try to get a story off of it,” he told me. After the shooting, Barb was reluctant to return to the streets of Ferguson, for fear of being identified as Wilson’s wife. The department recently offered her a job as a dispatcher—with a substantial pay cut. Barb decided to retire early. In the car, she turned to Darren and said, “I just want that lottery ticket we bought in Piedmont to be a winner.” I asked Wilson what he would do if the Ferguson police force offered him his job back. He seemed startled. “I would—um—” “I would not allow him,” Barb said. “I would want to do it for a day,” Darren said, finally, to show people that he was not “defeated.” In our many discussions, Wilson rarely spoke of Michael Brown. Twice, I asked him if he had reflected on what kind of person Brown was. The first time I asked, it was early May, and Brown’s parents had just filed their civil lawsuit against him. “You do realize that his parents are suing me?” he said. “So I have to think about him.” He went on, “Do I think about who he was as a person? Not really, because it doesn’t matter at this point. Do I think he had the best upbringing? No. Not at all.” His tone was striking, given Wilson’s own turbulent childhood. Six weeks later, Wilson told me that he had never really had a chance to contemplate who Brown was, because he had

been preoccupied by the maelstrom that followed the shooting. I asked him if he thought Brown was truly a “bad guy,” or just a kid who had got himself into a bad situation. “I only knew him for those forty-five seconds in which he was trying to kill me, so I don’t know,” Wilson said. Barb also said that she rarely thought about Brown. But she thought about a woman named Stephanie Edwards, whom she knew well. Edwards was the mother of Louis Head, Brown’s stepfather. Be-

fore becoming a cop, Barb had worked with Edwards at a grocery store. Barb says that they talked every day for roughly ten years, learning minute details of each other’s lives, but they didn’t keep in touch when Barb became a cop. After the shooting, Edwards joined the protests, appearing at a rally wearing a T-shirt emblazoned with Brown’s face. “We are tired of police brutality,” she told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. “I came out for justice.” Barb wonders what would happen if she and Edwards crossed paths again. Barb assumes that much of the world assumes that she is a racist, but clings to the idea that Edwards knows better: “I know that she knows, in her heart, that I am not like that.” (Edwards could not be reached for comment.) One recent afternoon, I met with Sabrina Webb, Michael Brown’s cousin, on Canfield Drive, at the spot where Brown was killed. A makeshift memorial was in place: a pile of wilted flowers and sunscorched Teddy bears. She recalled that, when she left her apartment the day after the shooting, “you could still see brain matter on the street.” She moved out soon afterward. Webb was still angry that Wilson had offered condolences only after the grand jury gave its decision. Wilson was interviewed by George Stephanopoulos, of ABC, and he said of Brown’s parents, “I’m sorry that their son lost his life. It wasn’t the intention of that day. It’s what occurred that day, and there’s nothing you can say that’s going to make a parent feel better.” Wilson also reaffirmed,

“I did my job that day.” I asked Webb how she felt about Wilson. “Anger and hatred,” she said. “There’s no forgiveness.” Michael Brown, Sr., also feels “resentment” toward Wilson, and feels that nothing, not even Wilson’s going to jail, can rectify what happened. When we spoke of the day of the shooting, I asked him what he believed had happened at Ferguson Market and Liquor. “That’s just out of character,” he said. He also insisted that the video didn’t “show all the facts,” though he wouldn’t elaborate. His son, he said, “was an average kid that did teenage things and had fun and tried to live his life.” Brown, Sr., said that two images of his son never leave his consciousness. One is from the last time he saw him smiling. It was on August 1st, the day that Brown graduated. They went out to eat. “He had on a nice tie,” Brown, Sr., recalled, quietly. The other memory is of his son lying on the ground, dead. Since the shooting, gun sales in Ferguson have spiked, and there is little sense of reconciliation. The sixteen members of the Ferguson Commission have been charged with proposing policy reforms. Rasheen Aldridge, the activist, who is a member of the commission, told me that last August he believed that Wilson deserved the death penalty. Since then, his views have softened: “I can’t hold hatred in me for too long.” He still can’t decide what kind of punishment Wilson deserves. “I want to be, like, ‘He needs to go to jail.’ But then there’s also that other side of me that understands everything. He is probably in prison, in a way.” At one point, I asked Wilson if he missed walking outside and going to restaurants. He told me that he still ate out, but only at certain places. “We try to go somewhere—how do I say this correctly?—with like-minded individuals,” he said. “You know. Where it’s not a mixing pot.” Wilson has received several thousand letters from supporters, and he has written thank-you notes to almost all of his correspondents. Many of the letters are from police officers. Some are from kids. One card reads, “Thanks for protecting us!” Wilson proudly showed me a drawer, in his living room, which contained dozens of police-department patches from cops expressing their support. None of those cops, however, had offered him a job. 

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LETTER FROM EGYPT

LEARNING TO SPEAK LINGERIE Chinese merchants and the inroads of globalization. BY PETER HESSLER

he city of Asyut sits in the heart of Upper Egypt, at a crescent-shaped bend in the Nile River, where the western bank is home to a university, a train station, approximately four hundred thousand people, and three shops in which Chinese migrants sell racy lingerie to locals. These shops are not hard to find. The first time I visited Asyut, I hailed a cab at the entrance of the city and asked the driver if he knew of any Chinese people in town. Without hesitation, he drove along the Nile Corniche, turned through a series of alleyways, and pointed to a sign that said, in Arabic, “Chinese Lingerie.” The two other shops, China Star and Noma China, are less than a block away. All three are owned by natives of Zhejiang province, in southeastern China, and they sell similar products, many of which are inexpensive, garishly colored, and profoundly impractical. There are buttless body stockings, and nightgowns that cover only one breast, and G-strings accessorized with feathers. There are seethrough tops decorated with plastic gold coins that dangle from chains. Brand names include Laugh Girl, Shady Tex Lingerie, Hot Love Italy Design, and Sexy Fashion Reticulation Alluring. Upper Egypt is the most conservative part of the country. Virtually all Muslim women there wear the head scarf, and it’s not uncommon for them to dress in the niqab, the black garment that covers everything but the eyes. In most towns, there’s no tourism to speak of, and very little industry; Asyut is the poorest governorate in Egypt. Apart from small groups of Syrians who occasionally pass through in travelling market fairs, it’s all but unimaginable for a foreigner to do business there. And yet I found Chinese lingerie dealers scattered throughout the region. In Beni Suef, at an open-air market called the Syrian Fair, two Chinese underwear salesmen had somehow embedded with 56

the Syrians who were hawking cheap clothes and trinkets. Minya, the next city to the south, had a Chinese Lingerie Corner in a mall whose entrance featured a Koranic verse that warned against jealousy. In the remote town of Mallawi, a Chinese husband and wife were selling thongs and nightgowns across the street from the ruins of the Mallawi Museum, which, not long before the Chinese arrived, had been looted and set afire by a mob of Islamists. All told, along a three-hundred-mile stretch, I found twenty-six Chinese lingerie dealers: four in Sohag, twelve in Asyut, two in Mallawi, six in Minya, and two in Beni Suef. It was like mapping the territory of large predator cats: in the Nile Valley, clusters of Chinese lingerie dealers tend to appear at intervals of thirty to fifty miles, and the size of each cluster varies according to the local population. Cairo is big enough to support dozens. Dong Weiping, a businessman who owns a lingerie factory in the capital, told me that he has more than forty relatives in Egypt, all of them selling his products. Other Chinese people supply the countless underwear shops that are run by Egyptians. For the Chinese dealers, this is their window into Egypt, and they live on lingerie time. Days start late, and nights run long; they ignore the Spring Festival and sell briskly after sundown during Ramadan. Winter is better than summer. Mother’s Day is made for lingerie. But nothing compares with Valentine’s Day, so this year I celebrated the holiday by saying goodbye to my wife, driving four hours to Asyut, and watching people buy underwear at the China Star shop until almost midnight.

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hina Star is situated next to the Ibn al-Khattab Mosque, and not long before the first call sounded for sunset prayer a sheikh arrived at the shop. He was tall and fat, with strong,

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INSTITUTE

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Chen Yaying and Liu Jun, who go by


the names Kiki and John, in their lingerie store in Asyut, with their Egyptian assistant Rahma Medhat. PHOTOGRAPH BY RENA EFFENDI


“Leave the bottle.”

• dark features, and he wore a brilliant blue galabiya, a carefully wrapped turban, and a pair of heavy silk scarves. He was followed by two large women in niqabs. The sheikh planted himself at the entrance of the shop while the women searched purposefully through the racks and the rows of mannequins. Periodically, one of them would hold up an item, and the sheikh would register his opinion with a wave of his hand. Valentine’s Day is one of the few times of the year when most China Star customers are male. Usually, it’s only women in the shop, and often they buy the lightweight, form-fitting dresses that Chinese dealers refer to as suiyi, or “casual clothes.” No Upper Egyptian woman would wear such garments in public, but it’s acceptable at home. This is one reason that the market for clothing is so profitable: Egyptian women need two separate wardrobes, for their public and their private lives. Usually, they also acquire a third line of clothing, which is designed to be sexy. The two women in niqabs quickly found two items that the sheikh approved of: matching sets of thongs and skimpy, transparent nightgowns, one in red and the other in blue. The sheikh began to bargain with 58

• Chen Yaying, who runs the shop with her husband, Liu Jun. In Egypt, they go by the names Kiki and John, and both are tiny—Kiki barely reached the sheikh’s chest. She’s twenty-four years old but could pass for a bookish teenager; she wears rectangular glasses and a loose ponytail. “This is Chinese!” she said, in heavily accented Arabic, holding up the garments. “Good quality!” She dropped the total price to a hundred and sixty pounds, a little more than twenty dollars, but the sheikh offered one-fifty. It was still unclear what his relationship was with the two women in niqabs. When we chatted, he said that he monitors mosques for the Ministry of Religious Endowments. He wasn’t bothered when I mentioned Valentine’s Day—some devout Muslims believe that the holiday should not be celebrated. But I couldn’t find a tactful way to learn more about the women. In Upper Egypt, it’s not appropriate to ask a man too directly about his wife, especially if she’s wearing a niqab. Whenever I’ve got to know a man whose wife wears the garment, he usually explains that it’s supposed to prevent other men from thinking about her. For a Westerner, though, it often has the opposite effect. I can’t pick up basic information—

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how old somebody is, what expression she has on her face—and inevitably my imagination starts to fill in the gaps. Were both these women the sheikh’s wives? Was one to be dressed in red, and the other in blue, for Valentine’s Day? The sheikh and Kiki were still separated by ten pounds when the second call to prayer sounded. “I have to go,” he said, and handed Kiki his money. “I’m a sheikh! I have to pray.” But Kiki slapped him lightly on the arm with the cash. “Ten more!” she said sternly. The sheikh’s eyes widened in mock surprise, and then, with a flourish, he turned to face Mecca, closed his eyes, and held out his hands in the posture of prayer. Standing in the middle of the lingerie shop, he began to recite, “Subhan’allah wal’hamdulillah . . .” “Fine, fine!” Kiki said, and rushed off to deal with other customers. The sheikh smiled as he left, the women trailing behind him. Later in the evening, Kiki told me that she thought one of the women was the sheikh’s mother. From my perspective, this changed the narrative significantly but didn’t make it any less interesting. Kiki, though, had nothing more to say about it: as far as she was concerned, the story had ended the moment the sale was made.

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hinese dealers rarely speculate about their Egyptian customers, even the ones they see frequently. Kiki told me that some local women visit two or three times a month, and they acquire more than a hundred sets of the nightgowns and panties, so China Star changes its stock every two months. When I pressed the Chinese to analyze the demand, they often said that it’s because Egyptian men like sex, and because there are so many restrictions on public attire. “If you never have a chance to look nice, it’s hard on you, psychologically,” Chen Huantai, another dealer in Asyut, told me. “And they have to wear so many clothes when they’re outside, so they have these other things to look prettier at home.” But on the whole this subject doesn’t interest Chinese dealers. Few of them are well educated, and they don’t perceive themselves as being engaged in a cultural exchange. On issues of


religion, they are truly agnostic: they seem to have no preconceptions or received ideas, and they evaluate any faith strictly on the basis of direct personal experience. “The ones with the crosses— are they Muslim?” one Chinese dealer asked me. He had been living for four years in Minya, a town with sectarian strife so serious that several Coptic Christian churches had been damaged by mobs armed with Molotov cocktails. During one of our conversations, I realized that he was under the impression that women who wear head scarves are adherents of a different religion from that of those who wear the niqab. It was logical: he noticed contrasts in dress and behavior, and so he assumed that they believe in different things; a monolithic label like “Islam” meant nothing to him. In general, Chinese dealers prefer Egyptian Muslims to Christians. This is partly because Muslims are more faithful consumers of lingerie, but it’s also because they’re easier to negotiate with. The Copts are a financially successful minority, and they have a reputation for bargaining aggressively. This is what matters most to Chinese dealers—for them, religion is essentially another business proposition. Initially, I wondered how the lingerie dealers can succeed despite having so little curiosity about their larger cultural environment. The poorest place in which I found any Chinese was Mallawi, where a dealer named Ye Da invited me to his decrepit apartment for lunch, only to discover that he had bought camel meat by mistake at the butcher’s. He and his wife had moved to Mallawi shortly after it experienced some of the worst political violence in Upper Egypt, in August, 2013, when riots resulted in eighteen deaths. The couple’s home contained a single book, which was subtitled, in Chinese, “You Are Your Own Best Doctor.” They spoke almost no Arabic or English. They didn’t have a Chinese-Arabic dictionary, phrasebook, or language textbook—in fact, I’ve never met a lingerie dealer who owns any of these things. Unlike Mandarin, Arabic is inflected for gender, and Chinese dealers, who learn the language strictly by ear, often pick up speech patterns from female customers. I’ve come to think of it as

the lingerie dialect, and there’s something disarming about these Chinese men speaking in the feminine voice. In the lingerie dialect, one important phrase is “I have this in a wider size.” Chinese dealers use this phrase a lot. Egyptians tend to be big, and they’re often good-humored and charismatic, like the sheikh in China Star. In contrast, the diminutive, more serious Chinese have a way of receding from the center of a scene. These differences seem perfectly matched for the exchange of lingerie. The Chinese dealers are small, and they know little, and they care even less—all of these qualities help put Egyptian customers at ease. The shops often employ young local women as assistants, who in many cases can barely communicate with their bosses. Nevertheless, these women tend to be fiercely loyal to the Chinese. In Upper Egypt, it’s unusual for a woman to work, and a few of the assistants seem to be engaged in acts of rebellion. At China Star, Kiki and John are currently assisted by an eighteenyear-old named Rahma Medhat, who wears the head scarf but also has tattoos on both hands, including one of a skull and crossbones. She had this done at a Coptic church. In Egypt, Christians traditionally have a cross tattooed onto their right hand or wrist, and the church is often the only place in town with a tattoo gun. For a Muslim, it makes the act of getting a tat-

too even more outrageous—Rahma told me, with evident satisfaction, that her parents had been furious. They had also opposed her working in the lingerie shop, where she had replaced another young woman who had had family problems of her own. John told me that he had never fully understood the situation, but he had noticed bruises on the young woman’s face and arms, and one day her father came and beat her on the sidewalk in front of China Star. Most assistants, though, have been driven to work because of difficult economic circumstances. At the Chinese Lingerie Corner, in Minya, a twenty-seven-year-old woman named Rasha Abdel Rahman told me that she had started working almost a decade ago, after her mother died and her father was crippled in an auto accident. Rasha has four sisters, and she’s been able to earn the money necessary to help three of them get married. In the past, she worked for another Chinese dealer, and she told me that she would never accept employment from an Egyptian. In her opinion, the Chinese are direct and honest, and she appreciates their remove from local gossip networks. “They keep their secrets,” she said. Rasha told me that local men can’t sell lingerie as effectively as Chinese men. “I can’t describe how they do it,” she said, speaking through a translator. “But they can look at the item and

“Want to know how many steps we took?”


give it to the woman, and that’s it. An Egyptian man would look at the item, and then look at the woman, and then he might make a joke or laugh about it.” Rasha spoke of her previous Chinese boss fondly. “He didn’t have anything in mind while he was selling,” she said. “When you buy something, you feel the thoughts of the person selling it. And with the Chinese their brains don’t go thinking about women’s bodies.”

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he most important word in the lingerie dialect is arusa, or “bride.” The Chinese pronounce it alusa, and they use it constantly; in many Cairo neighborhoods, there are Chinese who go door-to-door with sacks of dresses and underwear, calling out “Alusa! Alusa! ” In Chinese shops, owners use it as a form of address for any potential customer. To locals, it sounds flattering and a little funny: “Beautiful blide! Look at this, blide! What do you want, blide?” On Valentine’s Day, not long after the sheikh left, a genuine arusa walked into China Star. She was nineteen years old, and the wedding was scheduled for later in the year. The arusa was accompanied by her fiancé, her mother, and her sixteen-year-old brother. Kiki began picking items off the racks. “Alusa, do you want this?” she said, producing a box labelled “Net Ladystocking Spring Butterfly.” First, the arusa studied the Ladystocking, which was then passed to the fiancé, then to the mother, and finally to the younger brother. The box featured two photographs, front and rear, of a Slavic-looking model who stood beside a bookshelf of leather-bound volumes in high heels, a neck-to-ankle lace bodysuit, a G-string, and a vacant expression. The brother studied the box for a long time. It went into a pile for approved items. In an Egyptian marriage, the groom is expected to buy an apartment and furniture, while the arusa acquires small appliances, kitchenware, and clothing, including lingerie. The market has boomed since 2009, when a trade agreement with China made it easier to import clothes, and lingerie shops suddenly became more prominent in Egyptian cities. Dong Weiping, one of the biggest dealers in Cairo, told me

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that he imports ten shipping containers of women’s underwear every year, in addition to the items that he makes in his Egyptian factory. At China Star, the arusa and her family spent more than an hour picking out twenty-five nightgown-and-panty sets, ten pairs of underwear, ten brassieres, and one Ladystocking. The mother paid the equivalent of three hundred and sixty dollars, and she told me that they planned to make two or three more shopping trips before the wedding. At one point, the group broke into spontaneous applause when Kiki produced a nightgown. “What do you think?” she said, holding up another transparent top with a pink G-string. “W ’allahy, laziz!” the fiancé said. “By God, it’s beautiful!” He worked as a lawyer in Asyut, and the arusa studied law at the university. She was well spoken and pretty, although she wore shapeless jeans and a heavy green coat. Her head scarf was wrapped tightly under the chin in a conservative style. They impressed me as a traditional, provincial middle-class family, and nothing seemed awkward about this shopping expedition. If anything, the mood was innocent and joyous, and the arusa didn’t appear the least bit embarrassed. I was certain that even the most self-confident American woman would be mortified by the idea of shopping for lingerie with her fiancé, her mother, and her teen-age brother, not to mention doing this in the presence of two Chinese shop owners, their assistant, and a foreign journalist. But I had witnessed similar scenes at other shops in Upper Egypt, where an arusa is almost always accompanied by family members or friends, and the ritual seems largely disconnected from sex in people’s minds. And there’s something about the status of an arusa that demands an audience. Chinese dealers sometimes tell me that Egyptian women buy this stuff because they dance for their husbands at night, a theory that I suspect has more to do with movie images of belly dancing than it does with actual behavior. But it may be true in a more figurative sense. Whenever I see an arusa shopping for lingerie with friends or family, I have the feeling that the woman is on display, and preparing for

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a future role. At China Star, I asked the mother if her daughter would work as a lawyer after the wedding. “Of course not!” she said. “She’ll stay at home.” She spoke proudly, the same way that I often hear Egyptian men tell me that their wives spend their days in the house. In Egyptian Arabic, another meaning of arusa is “doll”— children use this word for the toys that they dress and undress.

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n Asyut, the small Chinese community was pioneered by Kiki’s parents, Lin Xianfei and Chen Caimei. Lin grew up on a half-acre farm in Zhejiang, where poverty forced him to leave school after the fifth grade. In the nineteen-nineties, he found modest success as a small-time trader of clothes in Beijing, and then, in 2001, he heard that some people from his home town had gone to Egypt to seek their fortunes. He studied a map and decided that he would settle in Asyut, because he believed it to be the most populous city in Upper Egypt. (In fact, Luxor is bigger.) “I knew I’d be the only Chinese person there, so the opportunity would be better,” Lin told me. In Asyut, he set up a stall in a ma’rad, a kind of open-air market, and initially he sold three products that he had carried in his luggage: neckties, pearls, and underwear. He didn’t worry about whether Upper Egyptians actually wanted these things—the key factor was size. “They were easy to pack in a suitcase,” he explained. Lin quickly realized that people in Asyut cared little for pearls and they did not wear neckties with galabiya. But they liked women’s underwear, so he began to specialize, and soon his wife came over from China to help. In Cairo and northern Egypt, the network of Chinese lingerie importers and producers quickly grew, and eventually Lin and Chen rented a storefront in Asyut. They invited a relative and a friend to open the two other shops in town. While Lin and Chen were building their small lingerie empire, they noticed that there was a lot of garbage sitting in open piles around Asyut. They were not the first people to make this observation. But they were the first to respond by importing a


polyethylene-terephthalate bottle-flake washing production line, which is manufactured in Jiangsu province, and which allows an entrepreneur to grind up plastic bottles, wash and dry the regrind at high temperatures, and sell it as recycled material. “I saw that it was just lying around, so I decided that I could recycle it and make money,” Lin told me. He and his wife had no experience in the industry, but in 2007 they established the first plastic-bottle recycling facility in Upper Egypt. Their plant is in a small industrial zone in the desert west of Asyut, where it currently employs thirty people and grinds up about four tons of plastic every day. Lin and Chen sell the processed material to Chinese people in Cairo, who use it to manufacture thread. This thread is then sold to entrepreneurs in the Egyptian garment industry, including a number of Chinese. It’s possible that a bottle tossed onto the side of the road in Asyut will pass through three stages of Chinese processing before returning to town in the form of lingerie, also to be sold by Chinese. Lin told me that the factory makes between fifty thousand and two hundred thousand dollars a year in profits, and this success inspired an Egyptian businessman in Asyut to poach some of Lin’s technicians and open a second recycling plant, earlier this year. Nevertheless, Lin and Chen’s business continues to thrive, although they still live in a bare apartment above the factory floor, amid the roar of machinery. Lin is in his early fifties and looks a decade older, with the tired eyes and troubled stomach of a Chinese businessman who has shared a lot of heavy meals and drink with associates. He rarely says much about local culture, but once, when I asked casually what he considered to be the biggest problem in Egypt, the forcefulness of his response surprised me. “Inequality between men and women,” he said immediately. “Here the women just stay home and sleep. If they want to develop, the first thing they need to do is solve this problem. That’s what China did after the revolution. It’s a waste of talent here. Look at my family—you see how my wife works. We couldn’t have the factory

without her. And my daughter runs the shop. If they were Egyptian, they wouldn’t be doing that.” A couple of months later, when I made another visit to Asyut, Chen was running the plant because her husband had travelled to China to see doctors about his stomach. One afternoon, I stood at the factory gate while two young men from a nearby village delivered a truckload of plastic bottles in huge burlap sacks. One of the men was named Omar, and he told me that he had started scavenging five years ago, at the age of twelve, because the Chinese had opened the factory. Now he partners with a truck owner to haul the plastic, and they subcontract to local children who collect bottles on their behalf. Omar said that he usually earns at least a hundred pounds a day—around thirteen dollars—which is double the local day wage for a la-

borer. While we were talking, Chen burst out of the factory gate. She wore a flowered apron that said “My Playmate,” and her face was a picture of pure rage. “Why are you bringing water?” she screamed. She hurled a couple of one-litre bottles at Omar and his companion, who scurried behind the truck. “You’re bad!” she shouted, in broken Arabic. “Ali Baba, you Ali Baba! I’m angry, angry, angry! This isn’t clean! Not clean!” Chen had discovered the full bottles at the bottom of a sack of empties: the recyclers were trying to tip the scales. She kept screaming—you Ali Baba!—and finally I understood that she was referring to the forty thieves of “The Arabian Nights.” I had never heard anybody in Egypt use “Ali Baba” in this way, but it’s part of Chen’s own recycling dialect. Omar stayed out

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of range until she stalked back inside the gate. “By God, I hope a car hits her!” Omar said. “She threw bricks at us once.” A factory foreman named Mohammed Abdul Rahim said something to the effect that Omar deserved to be pelted with whatever he hid in the bottom of his sacks. “I’m not the one doing this!” Omar said. “The little kids do it—the kids who collect the bottles.” “He knows what he’s doing,” Mohammed said to me. He explained that invariably some foreign object was hidden in the sacks, and just as invariably Chen or Lin discovered it. After a while, Chen reappeared in the “My Playmate” apron to engage in another round of Ali Baba abuse, and then she finally sat down and negotiated heatedly with the bottle collectors for a price per kilo. The total for the truckload came to eight hundred and one pounds, a little more than a hundred dollars. When Omar’s partner insisted on receiving the last pound, Chen slammed the coin on the table like a rejected mah-jongg tile. The young man made a show of searching through the bills to find a fifty that he claimed was too tattered to accept. “Muslim money!” Chen shouted, but she replaced it. The moment the bottle collectors were gone, her anger evaporated—here at the factory, she seemed to have adapted to a certain Egyptian theatrical quality. She wore her hair pulled back in a bun, and she had the broad, weathered face of a peasant, as well as the reflexive modesty. Once, when I mentioned that she had been brave to move to a place like Asyut, she brushed aside the compliment and said that she was simply ignorant. “I can’t read,” she said. “I can write my name, but it looks awful. I didn’t go to school at all, not for one day.” On Fridays, when the plant closes for the weekend, Chen and Lin drive into Asyut and spend time with Kiki and John, who have a two-year-old daughter. Once, I was in town when the child was suffering from a nasty-looking abscess on her eyelid, and John asked me to accompany them to a nearby hospital, to help translate. The doctor’s diagnosis was an infection, and he said that it had probably developed because of 62

HEAVEN IS A HEAVY HOUSE: AXE, DRAWKNIFE, AUGER, CROSSCUT SAW

You fell the trees, You limb them, peel them, And skid them out. You raise a heavy house With heavy rooms, A heavy loft. A heavy wet snow Falls in May, Snows you in For five days. That snow makes new grass heavy, And heavy with flowers. There is a heaven And you are alone in it— Not even a voice To talk to yourself in— unclean conditions. John remarked that this was the first time that his daughter had seen a doctor since she was born. Nobody in the family seems intimidated by life in Asyut, and they don’t consider themselves successful; Chen and Lin often say that their factory is just a lowlevel industry. But, whenever I visit, I can’t help thinking: Here in Egypt, home to eighty-five million people, where Western development workers and billions of dollars of foreign aid have poured in for decades, the first plastic-recycling center in the south is a thriving business that employs thirty people, reimburses

others for reducing landfill waste, and earns a significant profit. So why was it established by two lingerie-fuelled Chinese migrants, one of them illiterate and the other with a fifth-grade education?

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’ve never met Chinese people in Egypt who express an interest in changing the country. They often talk about what they perceive to be weaknesses—a lack of work ethic among the people, a lack of system in the govern-

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ment—but the tone is different from that of many Westerners. There’s little frustration; the Chinese seem to accept that this is simply the way things are. There’s also no guilt, because China has no colonial history in the region, and its government engages with both Israel and Palestine. Chinese entrepreneurs often speak fondly of the friendliness of Egyptians and their willingness to help strangers, two qualities that the Chinese believe to be rare in their own country. They almost never seem disappointed by the Egyptian revolution. This is not because they believe that the Arab Spring has turned out well but because they had no faith in it in the first place. In 2012, when Mohamed Morsi was elected President after the revolution, his first state visit was to China. The following year, he was removed in a military coup, and his successor, Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, also quickly made a trip to China. There’s no indication that the abrupt change in leadership disturbed the Chinese government. One evening in Cairo, I met with a diplomat from another Asian country and described my experiences with Chinese lingerie dealers in Upper Egypt. She said that their behavior and outlook reminded her of what she observed as a diplomat. “The Chinese will sell people anything they like,” she said. “They don’t ask any


in ways similar to those of Western governments. In Cairo, the Chinese have set up a Confucius Institute, which is supposed to advance Chinese language and values, but the scale is modest, and Egyptian religious authorities tend to be resistant to such endeavors.

Just swerving memories Of hope and fear So lethally ephemeral— A girl playing guitar And horses in the yard. You wait for the horse

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That comes to your gate With a bullet hole in his forehead. He doesn’t want anything. He stares at you, Then wheels and gallops away, Leaving you In the heavy house You made from life. A heavy wet snow. It’s like the floor of the sky Fell out. —James Galvin questions. They don’t care what you do with what they sell you. They won’t ask whether the Egyptians are going to hold elections, or repress people, or throw journalists into jail. They don’t care.” She continued, “The Americans think, If everybody is like me, they’re less likely to attack me. The Chinese don’t think like that. They don’t try to make the world be like them.” She continued, “Their strategy is to make economic linkages, so if you break these economic linkages it’s going to hurt you as much as it hurts them.” For the past twenty years, China has created such connections throughout Africa. In “China’s Second Continent,” published in 2014, Howard French estimates that a million Chinese live on the continent, and China does more than twice as much trade with Africa as the United States does. French observes that in many places the Chinese are essentially stepping into old colonial patterns of resource extraction, which causes resentment among locals. But in Egypt the terms are different. The country has few natural resources that the Chinese need: last year, Egyptian exports to China were roughly a tenth the value of Chinese imports, and the trade gap is widening. Direct investment is low—China is only the twentieth-largest investor in Egypt, and

the number of Chinese in the country is estimated to be around ten thousand. Nevertheless, Egypt plays a disproportionately large political role in the Middle East, which provides China with half its oil, and much Chinese trade to Europe passes through the Suez Canal. In addition, Egyptian universities are home to approximately two thousand Chinese students, most of them Muslim. The Chinese government is concerned that these students will acquire radical religious ideas, which is another reason that they feel they have a stake in Egypt’s stability and prosperity. And so Chinese statecraft in Egypt calls for something more strategic and principled than simple economic pragmatism. China is currently doubling the size of its Cairo Embassy, and officials realize that the failure of U.S. policies in the Middle East creates an opportunity for China to increase its stature. But the process of identifying values and goals in the abstract doesn’t seem to come naturally to the Chinese government. “To be honest, I think that even within China they don’t know what kind of ideology they’re going after,” the Asian diplomat told me. Even if the Chinese had some idea that they want to promote, they lack the soft-power tools of neighbors like Japan and South Korea, which fund development work

ithout a clear strategy, China has turned to a basic instinct of the Deng Xiaoping era: When in doubt, build factories. At a place in the desert called Ain Sokhna, not far from where the Red Sea meets the Suez Canal, a Chinese state-owned company called TEDA has constructed the China-Egypt Suez Economic and Trade Cooperation Zone.The motto is “Cooperation Makes the World Better,” and the zone consists of six square kilometres of virgin desert that have been carved into a grid of straight, wide streets. It’s surrounded by wasteland—the nearest city of any size is Suez, an hour away—but the zone has a Tianjin Road, a Chongqing Road, and a Shanghai Road. Worker dormitories have been constructed, along with yards for piling up empty shipping containers, whose bright colors are visible for miles across the desert, like stacks of Legos melting in the sun. There’s one Chinese restaurant, one Chinese market, and one Chinese barber. The Chinese tend to be fastidious about hair, and wherever migrants gather, even in the desert near the Red Sea, a barber is sure to materialize. The TEDA zone looks as if it could have been uprooted from almost any small Chinese city. Such transplants are springing up all around the world: earlier this year, the government announced that it plans to build a hundred and eighteen economic zones in fifty countries. The Chinese want to encourage domestic industry to move abroad, in part as a way of dealing with diminishing natural resources in China. The TEDA zone offers subsidized rent and utilities to entrepreneurs, and more than fifty companies have become tenants. The majority are Chinese, and they tend to be small; a couple are owned by former lingerie dealers. But almost every Chinese boss whom I talked to complained about the same problem: they can’t find good workers, especially good female workers. “I just can’t hire men,” Xu Xin, who

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had started a cell-phone factory, told me bluntly. After many years with Motorola in China, Xu had come to Egypt in the hope of producing inexpensive phones for the local market. “This work requires discipline,” he said. “A cell phone has more than a hundred parts, and, if you make one mistake, then the whole thing doesn’t work. The men here in Egypt are too restless; they like to move around. They can’t focus.” He had wanted to hire women, but he quickly discovered that he was limited to those who are unmarried. Turnover was high: most workers quit whenever they got engaged or married. Even worse, Xu discovered that young Egyptian women can’t live in dormitories, because it’s considered inappropriate to be away from their parents at night. Female employees have to be bused in and out of Suez, which adds more than three hours to the workday.

This prevented Xu from running multiple shifts on his assembly lines, and after a year he shut down the plant. Others are struggling with the same problem. I met Wang Weiqiang, who had built a profitable business in eastern China producing the white ghotra head coverings worn by Saudis and other Gulf Arabs. After more than a decade, Wang decided to start an operation in Egypt. “I have very good-quality Egyptian cotton here,” he said. “My machinery is very modern. My investment is more than a million dollars for the factory here. But during these two years I’ve lost a lot. It’s all the problem of labor—the mentality of the workers. Our factory needs to run twenty-four hours a day; it’s not just for one shift. In order to do this in Egypt, we have to hire male workers, and the men are really lazy.” He continued, “Now I reject ninety per cent

of the men who apply. I use only girls and women. They are very good workers. But the problem is that they will work only during the daytime.” He intends to introduce greater mechanization in hopes of maximizing the short workday. “It drives me crazy,” he said. More than two decades ago, at the start of the economic boom in China, bosses hired young women because they could be paid less and controlled more easily than men. But it soon became clear that, in a society that traditionally had undervalued women, they were more motivated, and over the years their role and reputation began to change. Nowadays, there’s still a significant gender gap at the upper levels—women are badly underrepresented on Chinese corporate boards and powerful government bodies. But among the working classes women have a great deal of economic clout, and it’s common to meet rural Chinese who say that they prefer to have daughters, a sentiment that was rare in the past. Egypt also has the kind of disparity that can motivate women to work harder than men, but traditions are much more deeply entrenched. In December, 2013, TEDA announced that it would almost double the size of the development zone, but it’s hard to imagine who will fill all that space, since only a sixth of the current area is occupied. In the meantime, the place feels lifeless, without the hum of a real Chinese factory town. It’s especially dead in the evening—no sounds of nightshift machinery, no packs of laughing young workers in uniform. Along the edges of the industrial park, the sand drifts across empty streets; on one road, I counted two hundred and thirty-two street lights that weren’t working. Egypt is full of grandiose and misguided projects in the desert, both ancient and modern, and TEDA is one of the strangest: a lost Chinese factory town in the Sahara, where Ozymandian dreams have been foiled by a simple failure to get women out of their homes.

A “Will he know what this is about?”

t Ain Sokhna, I got to know a young boss named Wu Zhicheng, who produces inexpensive plastic dishware for the Egyptian market. He employs about twenty women on his assembly line, although the turnover is high—usually,


workers stay for only a few months before they get engaged or married. In the past, Wu managed factories in China, where he observed that young rural women often come to work out of a vague desire to get away from their families and villages. After taking that first step, they enter new communities in factories and dormitories, where their ideas might mature into a more coherent desire to be independent and successful. But Wu said that the starting point for Egyptian women workers is different. “They aren’t trying to escape something, like the girls in China,” he told me. “Here they’re doing it just for the money.” A number of Wu’s factory workers are saving money specifically so that they can buy things like lingerie and enter a traditional marriage. “I’m supposed to get married this year,” Soad Abdel Hamid, a twenty-four-year-old who operates a plastic press on the assembly line, told me. “But it seems that I won’t, because I haven’t finished buying my stuff.” She said that marriages often get delayed or even broken off if somebody can’t purchase the expected objects. She plans to quit work after she marries, which is true of every employee I talked to, except for two. Even these two exceptions can’t be considered opponents of traditional values. One is a woman in her fifties named Fatma Mohammed Mahmoud, who is the only married woman in the factory. She told me that for years she’s wanted to get divorced, but her husband, who refuses to support her financially, will not agree to end the marriage. Since 2000, Egyptian women have had the right to initiate divorce, but Fatma has decided against it. “My siblings tell me not to, because for our traditions it’s considered bad,” she said. “We’re from Upper Egypt. The minds are closed.” Fatma has only one co-worker who also insists that she will continue to work after marriage, a young woman named Esma. Previously, she had a better job, handling inventory at a factory near her home in Suez, where her fiancé was also employed. But they broke up, and Esma’s father forced her to quit the job because it’s inappropriate for a young woman to work in the same place as her ex-fiancé. “As Egyptians, when your parents give you an order, you have to follow it,” she told me. So now she rides a

bus for four hours a day in order to work a job with less pay and less potential. Wu’s conclusion about Egyptian women workers is simple: as long as they lack a basic desire to escape the familiar, it’s unlikely that they will change anything fundamental about their lives. He sees Egypt in similar terms. “It would have been better if they hadn’t removed Mubarak,” he told me. I often hear such comments from Chinese entrepreneurs, and to a West-

erner they sound cynical, because the assumption is that any outsider wants to see Egypt reformed. But in certain ways the perspective of the Chinese may be clearer, because they see Egypt for what it is, not for what they hope it might become. During the revolution of 2011, Westerners usually believed that they were witnessing the rise of a powerful social movement, whereas the Chinese in Egypt tended to perceive the collapse of a weak state. For Chinese entrepreneurs, the contact is so local and pragmatic that they aren’t obsessed with national political movements or religious trends. They rarely talk about politics or the Muslim Brotherhood, but the issue of women’s status often comes up, because it profoundly affects any activity in Egypt. Some Chinese, like the lingerie dealers, have found clever ways to profit from the gender issue, while other entrepreneurs have struggled because their factory zone was planned without consideration of this basic feature of Egyptian society. And, from the Chinese perspective, the fundamental issue in Egypt is not politics, or religion, or militarism—it’s family. Husbands and wives, parents and children: in Egypt, these relationships haven’t been changed at all by the Arab Spring, and until that happens there is no point in talking about a revolution.

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t the end of last year, the Chinese suddenly decided to build four amusement parks in the factory zone. Across the street from the International Drilling Material Manufactur-

ing Co., Ltd., which makes pipes, TEDA constructed something called Dinosaur World. It features large electricpowered models of creatures like Tyrannosaurus and Allosaurus, although the prehistoric theme has been stretched to include some anachronisms: a pirateship ride, a spaceship ride, and a Skyride, which is decorated with happy frogs. A couple of entrepreneurs in the zone told me they suspected that somebody in the Chinese amusement industry was dumping over-produced goods. No TEDA official would speak to me on the record, but one employee explained that the company wants to generate publicity that will make it easier to attract factory workers. “This way, people will come for the park, and while they’re here they’ll learn about the development zone,” he said, hopefully. On the last weekend in March, TEDA invited everybody in the zone to attend a free test run of the amusement parks. It was a hot, windy day, and sand in the air kept most people away from Water World, which has been built next to some half-empty worker dorms. The other two parks are Candy World and Auto World, whose gokarts and bumper cars were particularly popular with the factory bosses. There was Wu Zhicheng, who manufactures plastic dishware, and Wang Weiqiang, who makes head coverings for Saudis, and Zhang Binghua, who once sold lingerie and now produces thread. A dozen high-ranking TEDA officials also showed up, all of them in dark suits, their knees cramped against the steering wheels of the child-size vehicles. Many of these cadres had flown in from Tianjin. The Chinese rammed each other in bumper cars and spun around the go-kart track, and then they got back in line and did it again. The interior of Auto World had been remodelled so successfully that there was no sign that this two-story building once housed the cell-phone factory that went out of business for lack of female workers. Across the street, all the electric dinosaurs came to life. They opened their jaws, and roared through tinny speakers, and moved their limbs spasmodically, as if shocked to find themselves in the middle of the desert. 

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FICTION

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ILLUSTRATION BY ZOHAR LAZAR


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hat if you had a child? If you had a child, your life would be about more than getting through the various holiday rushes, and wondering exactly how insane Mrs. Witters in Accounts Payable is going to be on any given day. It’d be about procuring tiny shoes and pull toys and dental checkups; it’d be about paying into a college fund. The unextraordinary house to which you return nightly? It’d be someone’s future ur-house. It’d be the place that someone would remember, decades hence, as a seat of comfort and succor, its rooms rendered larger and grander, exalted, by memory. This sofa, those lamps, purchased in a hurry, deemed good enough for now (they seem to be here still, years later)—they’d be legendary to someone. Imagine reaching the point at which you want a child more than you can remember ever wanting anything else. Having a child is not, however, anything like ordering a pizza. Even less so if you’re a malformed, dwarfish man whose occupation, were you forced to name one, would be . . . What would you call yourself? A goblin? An imp? Adoption agencies are reluctant about doctors and lawyers if they’re single and over forty. So go ahead. Apply to adopt an infant as a two-hundred-year-old gnome. You are driven slightly insane—you try to talk yourself down; it works some nights better than others—by the fact that, for so much of the population, children simply . . . appear. Bing bang boom. A single act of love and, nine months later, this flowering, as mindless and senseless as a crocus bursting out of a bulb. It’s one thing to envy wealth and beauty and other gifts that seem to have been granted to others, but not to you, by obscure but undeniable givers. It’s another thing entirely to yearn for what’s so readily available to any drunk and barmaid who link up for three minutes in a dark corner of any dank and scrofulous pub.

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ou listen carefully, then, when you hear the rumor. Some impoverished miller—a man whose business is going under (the small-mill owners, the ones who grind by hand, are vanishing; their flour and meal cost twice as much as the big-brand products, which are free of the gritty bits that can find their way into a

sack of flour no matter how careful you are), a man who has no health insurance or investments or pension plan (he’s needed every cent just to keep the mill open)—that man has told the King that his daughter can spin straw into gold. The miller must have felt driven to it. He must have thought he needed a claim that outrageous to attract the attention of the King. You suppose (as an aspiring parent yourself, you prefer to think of other parents as un-deranged) he is hoping that if he can get his daughter into the palace, if he can figure out a way for her to meet the King, for the King to see the pale grace of the girl’s neck and her shy smile, and hear the sweet clarinet tone of her soft but surprisingly sonorous voice, the King will be so smitten (doesn’t every father believe his daughter to be irresistible?) that he’ll forget about the absurd straw-into-gold story. The miller is apparently unable to imagine all the pale-necked, shyly smiling girls the King has met already. Like most fathers, he finds it inconceivable that his daughter may not be singular; that she may be lovely and funny and smart but not so exceptionally so as to obliterate all the other contending girls. The miller, poor, foolish, doting father that he is, never expected his daughter to be locked into a room full of straw and commanded to spin it all into gold by morning, any more than most fathers expect their daughters to be unsought after by boys, or rejected by colleges, or abused by the men they eventually marry. Such notions rarely appear on the spectrum of paternal possibility. It gets worse. The King, who really hates being duped, announces, from the doorway of the cellar room filled with straw, that if the girl hasn’t spun it all into gold by morning he’ll have her executed. What? Wait a minute. . . . The miller starts to confess, to beg forgiveness. He was joking; no, he was sinfully proud. He wanted his daughter to meet the King. He was worried about her future. I mean, Your Majesty, you can’t be thinking of killing her. . . . The King gives the miller a glacial look, has a guard escort him away, and withdraws, locking the door behind him. Here’s where you come in. You’re descended from a long line of

minor wizards. Your people have, for generations, been able to summon rain, exorcise poltergeists, find lost wedding rings. No one in the family, not in the past few centuries, at any rate, has thought of making a living at it. It’s not . . . respectable. It smells of desperation. And—as is the way with spells and conjurings— it’s not a hundred per cent reliable. It’s an art, not a science. Who wants to refund a farmer’s money as he stands destitute in his still parched fields? Who wants to say, “I’m sorry, it works most of the time,” to the elderly couple who still hear cackles of laughter coming from under their mattress, whose cutlery still jumps up from the dinner table and flies around the room? When you hear the story about the girl who can supposedly spin straw into gold (it’s the talk of the kingdom), you don’t immediately think, This might be a way for me to get a child. That would be too many steps down the line for most people, and you, though you have a potent heart and ferocity of intention, are not a particularly serious thinker. You work more from instinct. It’s instinct, then, that tells you, Help this girl and good may come of it. Maybe simply because you, and you alone, have something to offer her. You who’ve never before had much to offer any of the girls who passed by, leaving traces of perfume in their wake, a quickening of the air they so recently occupied. Spinning straw into gold is beyond your current capabilities, but not necessarily impossible to learn. There are ancient texts. There’s your Aunt Farfalee, who is older than some of the texts but still alive, as far as you know, and the only truly gifted member of your ragtag cohort, who are generally more prone to make rats speak in Flemish, or to summon beetles out of other people’s Christmas pies.

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astles are easy to penetrate. Most people don’t know that; most people think of them as fortified, impregnable. Castles, however, have been remodelled and revised, over and over, by countless generations. There was the child-king who insisted on secret passageways, with peepholes that opened through the eyes of the ancestral portraits. There was the paranoid king who

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had escape tunnels dug, miles of them, opening out into woods, country lanes, and graveyards. So when you materialize in the chamber full of straw it has nothing to do with magic. The girl, though, is surprised and impressed. Already you’ve got credibility. And at first glance you see why the miller thought his gamble might work. She’s a true beauty, slightly unorthodox, in the way of most great beauties. Her skin is as smooth and poreless as palepink china, her nose ever so slightly longer than it should be, her brown-black eyes wide-set, sable-lashed, all but quivering with curiosity, with depths. She stares at you. She doesn’t speak. Her life, since this morning, has become so strange to her (she who yesterday was sewing grain sacks and sweeping stray corn kernels from the floor) that the sudden appearance of a twisted and stub-footed man, just under four feet tall, with a chin as long as a turnip, seems merely another in the new string of impossibilities. You tell her you’re there to help. She nods her thanks. You get to work. It doesn’t go well, at first. The straw, run through the spinning wheel, comes out simply as straw, shredded and bent. You refuse to panic, though. You repeat, silently, the spell taught to you by Aunt Farfalee (who is by now no bigger than a badger, with blank white eyes and fingers as thin and stiff as icicles). You concentrate—belief is crucial. One of the reasons that ordinary people are incapable of magic is a simple dearth of conviction. And, eventually . . . yes. The first few stalks are only touched with gold, like eroded relics, but the next are more gold than straw, and, soon enough, the wheel is spitting out strand upon strand of pure golden straw, not the hard yellow of some gold but a yellow suffused with pink, ever so slightly incandescent in the torch-lit room. You both—you and the girl—watch, enraptured, as the piles of straw dwindle and the golden strands skitter onto the limestone floor. It’s the closest you’ve come yet to love, to lovemaking—you at the spinning wheel and the girl behind you (she forgetfully puts her gentle hand on your shoulder), watching in shared astonishment as the straw is spun into gold. 68

When it’s all finished, she says, “My lord.” You’re not sure whether she’s referring to you or to God. “Glad to be of service,” you answer. “I should go now.” “Let me give you something.” “No need.” But still she takes a strand of beads from her neck and holds them out to you. They’re garnets, cheap, probably dyed, though in this room, at this moment, with all that golden straw emanating its faint light, they’re as potently red-black as heart’s blood. She says, “My father gave me these for my eighteenth birthday.” She drapes the necklace over your head. An awkward moment occurs when the beads catch on your chin, but the girl lifts them off, and her fingertips brush against your face. The strand of beads falls onto your chest. Onto the declivity where, were you a normal man, your chest would be. “Thank you,” she says. You bow and depart. She sees you slipping away through the secret door, devoid of hinges or knob, one of many commissioned by the long-dead paranoid king. “That’s not magic,” she says, laughing. “No,” you answer. “But magic is sometimes all about knowing where the secret door is and how to open it.” With that, you’re gone.

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ou hear about it the next day, as you walk along the outskirts of town, wearing the strand of garnets under your stained woollen shirt.

The girl pulled it off. She spun the straw into gold. The King’s response? Do it again tonight, in a bigger room, with twice as much straw. He’s joking, right? He’s not joking. This, after all, is the King who passed the law about putting trousers on cats and dogs, who made laughing too loudly a punishable crime. According to rumor, he was abused by his father, the last King. But that’s

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the story people always tell, isn’t it, when they want to explain inexplicable behavior?

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ou do it again that night. The spinning is effortless by now. As you spin, you perform little comic flourishes for the girl. You spin for a while one-handed. You spin with your back to the wheel. You spin with your eyes closed. She laughs and claps her hands. This time, when you’ve finished, she gives you a ring. It, too, is cheap—silver, with a speck of diamond sunk into it. She says, “This was my mother’s.” She slips it onto your pinkie. It fits, just barely. You stand for a moment staring at your hand, which is not by any standards a pretty sight, with its knobbed knuckles and thick, yellowed nails. But here it is, your hand, with her ring on one of its fingers. You slip away without speaking. You’re afraid that anything you say would be embarrassingly earnest.

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he next day . . . Right. One last roomful of straw, twice the size again. The King insists on this third and final act of alchemy. He believes, it seems, that value resides in threes, which would explain the three garish and unnecessary towers he’s had plunked onto the castle walls, the three advisers to whom he never listens, the three annual parades in celebration of nothing in particular beyond the King himself. And . . . If the girl pulls it off one more time, the King has announced, he’ll marry her, make her his queen. That’s the reward? Marriage to a man who’d have had you decapitated if you failed to produce not just one but three miracles? Surely the girl will refuse. You go to the castle one more time and do it again. It should be routine by now, the sight of the golden straw piling up, the fiery gleam of it, but somehow repetition hasn’t rendered it commonplace. It is (or so you imagine) a little like being in love, like wondering anew, every morning, at the outwardly unremarkable fact that your lover is there, in bed beside you, about to open her eyes, and that your



“I got that one for being a good boy.”

• face will be the first thing she sees. When you’ve finished, she says, “I’m afraid I have nothing more to give you.” You pause. You’re shocked to realize that you want something more from her. You’ve told yourself, the past two nights, that the necklace and the ring are marvels, but extraneous acts of gratitude, that you’d have done what you did for nothing more than the sight of her thankful face. It’s surprising, then, that on this final night you don’t want to leave unrewarded. That you desire, with upsetting urgency, another token, a talisman, a further piece of evidence. Maybe it’s because you know you won’t see her again. You say, “You aren’t going to marry him, are you?” She looks down at the floor, which is littered with stray strands of gold. She says, “I’d be queen.” “But you’d be married to him, the man who was going to kill you if you didn’t produce the goods.” She lifts her head and looks at you. 70

• “My father could live in the palace with me.” “And yet. You can’t marry a monster.” “My father would live in the castle. The King’s physicians would attend to him. He’s ill—grain dust gets into your lungs.” You’re as surprised as she is when you hear yourself say, “Promise me your firstborn child, then.” She stares at you, dumbfounded, by way of an answer. You’ve said it, though. You may as well forge on. “Let me raise your first child,” you say. “I’ll be a good father. I’ll teach the child magic. I’ll teach the child generosity and forgiveness.The King isn’t going to do much along those lines, don’t you think?” “If I refuse,” she says, “will you expose me?” Oh. You don’t want to descend to blackmail. You wish she hadn’t posed the question, and you have no idea how to an-

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swer. You’d never expose her. But you’re so sure of your ability to rescue the still unconceived child, who, without your help, will be abused by his father (don’t men who’ve been abused always do the same to their children?) and become another punishing and capricious king, who’ll demand meaningless parades and still gaudier towers and God knows what else. She interprets your silence as a yes. Yes, you’ll turn her in if she doesn’t promise the child to you. She says, “All right, then. I promise to give you my firstborn child.” You could take it back. You could tell her that you were kidding, that you’d never take a woman’s child. But you find—surprise—that you like this capitulation from her, this helpless compliance, from the most recent embodiment of all the girls over all the years who’ve given you nothing, not even a curious glance. Welcome to the darker side of love. You leave, again without speaking. This time, though, it’s not for fear of embarrassment. This time it’s because you’re greedy and ashamed; it’s because you want the child, you need the child, and yet you can’t bear to be yourself at this moment; you can’t stand there any longer enjoying your mastery over her.

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he royal wedding takes place. Suddenly this common girl, this miller’s daughter, is a celebrity; her face emblazons everything from banners to souvenir coffee mugs. And she looks like a queen. Her glowy pallor, her dark intelligent eyes, are every bit as royal-looking as they need to be. A year later, when the little boy is born, you go to the palace. You’ve thought of letting it pass—of course you have—but, after those months of sleepless musing over the life ahead, your return to the solitude and hopelessness in which you’ve lived for the past year (while people have tried to sell you key chains and medallions with the girl’s face on them, assuming, as well they might, that you’re just another customer, you, who wear the string of garnets under your shirt, the silver ring on your finger) . . . you can’t let it pass. Until those nights of spinning, no girl ever let you get close enough for you to realize that you’re possessed of wit and


allure and compassion, that you’d be coveted, you’d be sought after, if you were just . . . Neither Aunt Farfalee nor the oldest and most revered of the texts has anything to say about transforming gnomes into straight-spined, striking men. Aunt Farfalee told you, in the low, rattling sigh that was once her voice, that magic has its limits, that the flesh has, over centuries, proved consistently vulnerable to afflictions but never, not even for the most potent of wizards, subject to improvement. You go to the palace. It’s not hard to get an audience with the King and Queen. One of the traditions, a custom so old and entrenched that even this King doesn’t dare abolish it, is the weekly Wednesday audience, at which any citizen who wishes to can appear in the throne room and register a complaint. You are not the first in line. You wait as a corpulent young woman reports that a coven of witches in her district is causing the goats to walk on their hind legs and saunter into her house as if they owned the place. You wait as an old man objects to the new tax being levied on every denizen who lives past the age of eighty, which is the King’s way of claiming for himself what would otherwise be passed along to his subjects’ heirs. As you stand in line, you see that the Queen has noticed you. She looks entirely natural on the throne, every bit as much as she does on banners and mugs and key chains. She has noticed you, but nothing has changed in her expression. She listens, with the customary feigned attention, to the woman whose goats are sitting down to dinner with the family, to the man who doesn’t want his fortune sucked away before he dies. It’s widely known that these audiences with the King and Queen never produce results of any kind. Still, people want to come and be heard. As you wait, you notice the girl’s father, the miller (the former miller), seated among the members of court, in a tricorne hat and an ermine collar. He regards the line of assembled supplicants with a dowager aunt’s indignity and an expression of sentimental piety—the recently bankrupt man who gambled with his daughter’s life and, thanks to you, won.

When your turn arrives, you bow to Queen and King. The King nods his traditional, absent-minded acknowledgment. His head might have been carved from marble. His eyes are ice blue under the rim of his gem-encrusted crown. He might already be, in life, the stone likeness of himself that will top his sarcophagus. You say, “My Queen, I think you know what I’ve come for.” The King looks disapprovingly at his wife. His face bears no hint of a question. He skips over the possibility of innocence. He wonders only what, exactly, it is that she has done. The Queen nods. You can’t tell what’s going through her mind. Apparently, she has learned, during the past year, how to evince an expression of royal opacity, something she did not possess when you were spinning the straw into gold for her. She says, “Please reconsider.” You’re not about to reconsider. You might have considered reconsidering before you found yourself in the presence of these two, this tyrannical and ignorant monarch and the girl who agreed to marry him. You tell her that a promise was made. You leave it at that. She glances over at the King, and can’t conceal a moment of miller’s-daughter nervousness. She turns to you again. She says, “This is awkward, isn’t it?” You waver. You’re assaulted by conflicting emotions. You understand the position she’s in. You care for her. You’re in love with her. It’s probably the hopeless ferocity of your love that impels you to stand firm, to refuse her refusal— she who has, on the one hand, succeeded spectacularly and, on the other, consented to what must be, at best, a chilly and brutal marriage. You can’t simply relent and walk back out of the room. You can’t bring yourself to be so debased. She doesn’t care for you, after all. You’re someone who did her a favor once. She doesn’t even know your name. With that thought, you decide to offer a compromise. You tell her, in the general spirit of her husband’s fixation on threes, that she has three days to guess your name. If she can accomplish that, if she can guess your name THE NEW YORKER, AUGUST 10 & 17, 2015

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within the next three days, the deal’s off. If she can’t . . . You do not, of course, say this aloud, but if she can’t you’ll raise the child in a forest glade. You’ll teach him the botanical names of the trees, and the secret names of the animals. You’ll instruct him in the arts of mercy and patience. And you’ll see, in the boy, certain of her aspects—the great dark pools of her eyes, maybe, or her slightly exaggerated, aristocratic nose. The Queen nods in agreement. The King scowls. He can’t, however, ask questions, not here, not with his subjects lined up before him. He can’t appear to be baffled, underinformed, misused. You bow again and, as straight-backed as your torqued spine will allow, you stride out of the throne room.

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ou’ll never know what went on between Queen and King once they were alone together. You hope that she confessed everything and insisted that a vow, once made, cannot be broken. You even go so far as to imagine that she defended you for your offer of a possible reprieve. You suspect, though, that she still feels endangered, that she can’t be sure her husband will forgive her for allowing him to believe that she herself spun the straw into gold. Having produced a male heir, she has now, after all, rendered herself dispensable. And so, when confronted, she probably came up with . . . some tale of spells and curses, some fabrication in which you, a hobgoblin, are entirely to blame. You wish you could feel more purely angry about that possibility. You wish you didn’t sympathize, not even a little, with her in the predicament she’s created for herself. This, then, is love. This is the experience from which you’ve felt exiled for so long. This rage mixed with empathy, this simultaneous desire for admiration and victory. You wish you found it more unpleasant. Or, at any rate, you wish you found it as unpleasant as it actually is.

T

he Queen sends messengers out all over the kingdom, in an attempt to track down your name. You know how futile that is. You live in a cottage carved into a tree, so deep in the woods that no

hiker or wanderer has ever passed by. You have no friends, and your relatives live not only far away but in residences at least as obscure as your own (consider Aunt Farfalee’s tiny grotto, reachable only by swimming fifty feet under water). You’re not registered anywhere. You’ve never signed anything. You return to the castle the next day, and the next. The King scowls murderously (what story has he been told?) as the Queen runs through a gamut of guesses. Althalos? Borin? Cassius? Cedric? Destrain? Fendrel? Hadrian? Gavin? Gregory? Lief? Merek? Rowan? Rulf? Sadon? Tybalt? Xalvador? Zane? No no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no and no. It’s looking good. But then, on the night of the second day, you make your fatal mistake. You’ll ask yourself, afterward, Why did I build a fire in front of the cottage tree and do that little song and dance? It seems harmless at the time, and you are so happy, so sure. You find yourself sitting alone in your parlor, thinking of where the cradle should go, wondering who’ll teach you how to fold a diaper, picturing the child’s face as he looks up at you and says, “Father.” It’s too much, just sitting inside like that, by yourself. It’s too little. You hurry out into the blackness of the forest night, amid the chirruping of the insects and the far-off hoots of the owls. You build a fire. You grant yourself a pint of ale, and then you grant yourself another. And, almost against your will, it seems that you’re dancing around the fire. It seems that you’ve made up a song: Tonight I brew, tomorrow I bake, And then the Queen’s child I will take. For little knows the royal dame . . .

How likely is it that the youngest of the Queen’s messengers, the one most desperate for advancement, the one who’s been threatened with dismissal (he’s too fervent and dramatic in his delivery of messages, he bows too low, he’s getting on the King’s nerves) . . . how likely is it that that particular young hustler, knowing every inch of the civilized kingdom to have been scoured already, every door knocked on, will think to go out into the woods that night, wondering if he’s


wasting precious time but hoping that maybe, just maybe, the little man lives off the grid? How likely is it that he’ll see your fire, creep through the bracken, and listen to the ditty you’re singing?

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ou return, triumphant, to the castle on the third and final afternoon. You are for the first time in your life a figure of power, of threat. Finally, you cannot be ignored or dismissed. The Queen appears to be flustered. She says, “Well, then, this is my last chance.” You have the courtesy to refrain from answering. She says, “Is it Brom?” No. “Is it Leofrick?” No. “Is it Ulric?” No. Then there is a moment—a millimoment, the tiniest imaginable fraction of time—when the Queen thinks of giving her baby to you. You see it in her face. There’s a moment when she knows that she could rescue you as you once rescued her, when she imagines throwing it all away and going off with you and her child. She does not, could not, love you, but she remembers standing in the room on that first night, when the straw started turning to gold, when she understood that an impossible situation had been met with an impossible result, when she unthinkingly laid her hand on the sackclothcovered gnarls of your shoulder, and she thinks (whoosh, by the time you’ve read whoosh, she’s no longer thinking it) that she could leave her heartless husband, she could live in the woods with you and the child. . . . Whoosh. The King shoots her an arctic glare. She looks at you, her dark eyes avid and level, her neck arched and her shoulders flung back. She speaks your name. It’s not possible. The King grins a conquering, predatory grin. The Queen turns away. The world, which was about to transform itself, changes back again.The world reveals itself to be nothing more than you, about to scuttle out of the throne room, hurry through town, and return

to the empty little house that’s always there, that’s always been there, waiting for you. You stamp your right foot. You stamp it so hard, with such enchantmentcompelled force, that it goes right through the marble floor, sinks to your ankle. You stamp your left foot. Same thing. You are standing now, trembling, insane with fury and disappointment, ankle-deep in the royal floor. The Queen keeps her face averted. The King emits a peal of laughter that sounds like defeat itself. And, with that, you split in half. It’s the strangest sensation imaginable. It’s as if some strip of invisible tape that’s been holding you together, from mid-forehead to crotch, had suddenly been stripped away. It’s no more painful than pulling off a bandage. And then you fall onto your knees, and you’re looking at yourself, twice, both of you pitched forward, blinking in astonishment at a self who is blinking in astonishment at you, who are blinking in astonishment at him, who is blinking in astonishment at you. . . . The Queen silently summons two of the guards, who pull you in two pieces from the floor in which you’ve become mired, who carry you, one half apiece, out of the room. They take you all the way back to your place in the woods and leave you there. There are two of you now. Neither is sufficient unto himself, but you learn, over time, to join your two halves together and hobble around. There are limits to what you can do, though you’re able to get from place to place. Each half, naturally, requires the coöperation of the other, and you find yourself getting snappish with yourself; you find yourself cursing yourself for your clumsiness, your overeagerness, your lack of consideration for your other half. You feel it doubly. Still, you go on. Still, you step in tandem, make your careful way up and down the stairs, admonishing, warning, each of you urging the other to slow down, or speed up, or wait a second. What else can you do? Each would be helpless without the other. Each would be stranded, laid flat, abandoned, bereft. ♦

newyorker.com Michael Cunningham on this week’s fiction. THE NEW YORKER, AUGUST 10 & 17, 2015

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THE CURRENT CINEMA

LONG RUNS “Mission: Impossible—Rogue Nation,” “The End of the Tour,” and “Best of Enemies.” BY ANTHONY LANE

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ow impossible can a mission be, if it is successfully completed five times? The big-screen franchise that began in 1996 has now reached “Mission: Impossible—Rogue Nation,” directed by Christopher McQuarrie. Some things have held firm along the way, not least a resolute belief that the globe is made for trotting. The new film kicks off in Belarus and whisks us to Cuba, Virginia, Paris, Vienna, Casablanca, and London, where our hero, Ethan Hunt (Tom Cruise), pulls off his most amazing stunt to date by finding a functioning phone booth near Piccadilly Circus. Cruise is in excellent fettle, relaxing like a high-wire artist into the tensest of predicaments, and securing his status as the Dorian Gray of action movies. So what if his portrait decays with age in a vault at Paramount Pictures, as long as he preserves the smooth, unfading cockiness of youth? Ethan works, as ever, for the I.M.F.: the Impossible Mission Force, not the International Monetary Fund, though it’s easy to imagine Christine Lagarde as his controller, immaculate in pearls, calmly instructing him to break into Greece and steal back the German cash. The hitch, for Ethan, is that Hunley (Alec Baldwin), the director of the C.I.A., argues that the I.M.F. is both unreliable and spent. It is accused, by a congressional committee, of “wanton brinkmanship”—a nice description of this genre of movie—and promptly shut down. Needless to say, circumstances lead Hunley not just to change his tune 74

but to sing the praises of Ethan as “the living manifestation of destiny.” Around me, people howled at that line. Ungrateful beasts. How often do you get to hear Alec Baldwin sound like Ayn Rand? You could read the whole film as a reactionary plea for less transparency— for agents toiling so far below the surface of civil society, on our behalf, that we should not insult them with petty requests that they remain accountable. Conversely, you could wind up, like me, so suckered by the tentacles of the plot that its ethical implications pass you by. However stateless and lawless Ethan may be, once he’s disavowed by the C.I.A., he is far from friendless. Pals like Luther (Ving Rhames), Benji (Simon Pegg), and Brandt ( Jeremy Renner) are on hand to guide his search for the Syndicate. This is a shadowy outfit—again, the open or sunlit variety is unthinkable—that is busy destabilizing the world order. Its principal is Solomon Lane (Sean Harris), who has a soft rasp in his voice and a finger in every nasty pie. “Only Lane knows what’s going to happen,” we are told. In my dreams. What this means is that we dart from one improbable set piece to the next: a performance of “Turandot” attended by a surplus of assassins; the cracking of an underwater security system, breachable only by a free diver with capacious lungs; and a motorbike chase that gives Cruise, leaning sideways at speed, the chance to buff his kneecaps on the curving road. These arias of suspense are conducted

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uthor tours should not be confused with the rock-and-roll variety. Where bands face a baying throng in a cavernous stadium, writers drone through random chunks of their work at the rear of provincial bookstores, signing copies in the faint hope that the newly enhanced volumes will not appear on eBay before breakfast. It took courage, therefore, for James Ponsoldt to direct a movie called “The End of the Tour,” which hits a dramatic peak when a novelist declines to answer questions after his reading. Mind you, the novelist is David Foster Wallace ( Jason Segel)—the creator of “Infinite Jest,” and the nearest thing to a rock legend that literature has tossed up in recent decades. Complete with bandanna, he even looked the part, and, since his death, in 2008, the clamor has only swelled. Jesse Eisenberg plays David Lipsky—a lesser talent than Wallace, and both men know it. (Nobody seethes as well as Eisenberg, who frowns at the smallest hint of a slight.) Lipsky is commissioned by Rolling Stone to write a

FRANÇOIS AVRIL

THE CRITICS

in lavish style by McQuarrie, and it’s no surprise that they exhaust his powers of invention, leaving the climax of the story to limp home. The Puccini sequence comes perilously early in the tale, yet it’s a gorgeous highlight, teeming with trills of visual wit, and McQuarrie uses the occasion to bow, as he should, to Hitchcock’s “The Man Who Knew Too Much.” In a similar tribute, Ilsa Faust (Rebecca Ferguson), a British spy, is on hand to greet Ethan and Benji when they arrive in Casablanca. As fans of Ingrid Bergman can confirm, nobody should go there without meeting a beautiful woman named Ilsa, preferably one whose loyalty is so mutable that men can hardly keep up. This particular Ilsa is forever switching from Lane to the good guys and back again, pausing only to save Ethan’s skin and to prove, in the process, that, murky though the film’s geopolitics may be, its gender politics are a blast. And the moral is: when in distress, call a damsel. Of the many heists and grabs that litter the movie, none is as blatant as the deft, irrepressible manner in which Ferguson, displaying a light smile and a brisk way with a knife, steals the show. Poor Tom Cruise. He can’t even steal a kiss.


Some things have held firm throughout the “Mission: Impossible” films, not least a resolute belief that the globe is made for trotting. ILLUSTRATION BY R. KIKUO JOHNSON

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profile of Wallace. This entails a trip to Illinois and a snowy stay at Wallace’s house, after which the two men set off on the tour. Very little occurs, and you can sense the movie stretching and creaking to fill the available space. Minor incidents, like a tiff over a rental car, are built up into showdowns. Thank heavens for Joan Cusack, who plays the tour escort in Minneapolis, proudly pointing out the statue of Mary Tyler Moore, and declaring, as she bids a breezy farewell to Wallace, “I may have to buy your book and read it!” Anybody hoping that “The End of the Tour” would mirror the formal dazzle of Wallace’s fiction, doubling back on itself like the frantically probing encounters in his 1999 collection, “Brief Interviews with Hideous Men,” will be disappointed. Yet the film, despite its flatness, is worth exploring, just as the writer’s unremarkable home is picked apart by Lipsky, who prowls around like a cop, noting the contents of the bathroom cabinet and the photograph of Updike on the wall. Then, there’s Segel, who doesn’t just map the outer contours of Wallace (note the arms shyly crossed, as if in self-protection) but gradually starts to delve down. Is his nature as sweet as it first appears, or is he, in the Shavian phrase of one acquaintance, “pleasantly unpleasant”? Is his dependence on junk—he gorges on a banquet of “Falcon Crest,” “Magnum, P.I.,” and “Charlie’s Angels,” and invites Lipsky to dine on Diet Pepsi and Twizzlers—a heedless addiction or a loving embrace of Americana? Is he a regular guy or, as Lipsky suspects, a deeply irregular one striking an anxious pose? “I don’t think writers are much smarter than other people,” Wallace says. “I think they’re more compelling in their stupidity.” Ouch. At the end, we see him dancing, badly and happily, as if trying, for a few precious minutes, to shake all the words out of his mind.

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nother time, another two-hander, although, in this case, the hands are more evenly matched. “Best of Enemies” is a documentary about Gore Vidal and William F. Buckley, Jr., who, in 1968, were invited by ABC—then the lowliest of the networks—to lock horns during the Republican and Democratic conventions. There were ten 76

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bouts in all, with Howard K. Smith as the referee, and, from the opening minutes, it was clear that the contestants were bound together by a loathing that was stronger than death. Vidal, the more complacent, was also the greater pro, preparing for battle by hiring a researcher and arriving armed with quotations and venomous facts to wield against his foe. Some of his zingers, ad hominem and supposedly ad hoc, were rehearsed beforehand, and it shows. “He’s always to the right, and almost always in the wrong,” he said of Buckley, on air. The latter chose to wing it, and was never more attentive than when he seemed to be at ease. I spent half the movie trying to pin down whom he reminded me of, with those bluegray eyes, as pale as a winter sea. When he threw his head back and bared his teeth in a harrowing grin, I got it: seven years ahead of schedule, he looked like the poster for “Jaws.” The rum thing about “Best of Enemies,” directed by Morgan Neville and Robert Gordon, is that it keeps interrupting the footage of the debates— veering away to more recent commentators, and spoiling the flavor of the original feud. Now that TV punditry has roughened into a rant, do we not deserve to see more of its lordly apogee? Maybe so, except that Vidal vs. Buckley—or, as I prefer to think of it, Alien vs. Predator—has not improved with age. Which combatant you cleave to is beside the point, since both of them teeter on the brink of the insufferable. The long drawl of their vowels, however shapely, bespeaks a patrician fatigue that has passed into history, and is welcome to stay there. Each man was too bent on outsmarting the other to obey their nominal brief, which was to assess the tremors that unnerved the convention halls and convulsed the nation beyond. For a better reckoning of 1968, you need a better writer—Norman Mailer, unloved by Buckley and Vidal alike, whose “Miami and the Siege of Chicago” covered the same events. Next to his fervid look at the sinews of power, as they sweat and flex, “Best of Enemies” is barely more than a skit. 

newyorker.com Richard Brody blogs about movies.


BRIEFLY NOTED SPECTACLE, by Pamela Newkirk (Amistad). In 1906, Ota Benga,

a Congolese man, was put on display at the Bronx Zoo as a “pygmy,” often caged and left in the company of an orangutan. Benga had been brought to New York by a missionary and adventurer who claimed (falsely) to have saved him from cannibals; for three weeks, visitors gawked at, and often taunted, the star attraction. Ten years later, having led a lonely and desultory life in America, Benga committed suicide by shooting himself in the chest. Newkirk’s account of this shocking and shameful story is forceful, though Benga’s voice is unfortunately absent. He never wrote about his experience and gave no interviews, so he remains, inevitably, a mysterious figure. ENCOUNTERS, by George Braziller (Braziller). The heyday of small publishers may have run its course, or given way to the Web, but it is worth recalling the time of Barney Rosset, at Grove; James Laughlin, at New Directions; and Braziller, who has published this charming memoir just short of his hundredth birthday. Braziller served in the war and then published writers as disparate as Janet Frame, Henri Alleg, Nathalie Sarraute, and Orhan Pahmuk. The book is made up of brief chapters––glimpses into a life of integrity and taste, of war, commerce, and literature. There’s also a nifty scene with Marilyn Monroe. Braziller retired when he was ninety-four, handing the reins to his sons. It’s clear that he did so with some regret: his work and the people he met were sources of abiding pleasure. A CURE FOR SUICIDE, by Jesse Ball (Pantheon). Ball’s disorienting novel takes its time revealing the scope of its philosophical concerns, but it rewards patience. Much of the action occurs in exchanges between a man identified as “the claimant,” who appears to have lost his memory, and a woman identified as “the examiner,” who is helping him relearn the fundamentals of human behavior. Halting, stripped-down dialogue, evoking the blank spaces in the claimant’s mind, forces the reader to scramble for purchase. Patterns emerge— the claimant has disturbing dreams and keeps meeting a woman with whom he seems to have had a relationship. When the novel unveils some of its secrets, the result is unexpectedly moving.

Rebecca Makkai (Viking). Ricocheting from the war-torn twentieth century to the reality-showrich present day, the stories in this impressive collection feature characters buffeted by fate—or is it mere happenstance? The death of a circus elephant shapes generations of a small town; a passing remark ruins a plotted-out life. Our sense of history is probed, too, not without humor—Bach appears in a Manhattan living room one day, a spot of comfort in one woman’s post-9/11 life. In a series of shorter pieces, the author relates nuggets of family history and legend, including a story about young women in Budapest who used greasepaint to transform themselves into old women, in order to be spared at least one of war’s ugly realities.

MUSIC FOR WARTIME, by

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ON TELEVISION

CLONE CLUB The eighties flashbacks of “Halt and Catch Fire” and “Deutschland 83.” BY EMILY NUSSBAUM

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n 1983, when I was a teen-ager, my brother told me that you could reach a BBS—an early online community— through our phone line, using a modem. I dialled in, and was met by that digital shrieking sound, the now nostalgic “handshake.” The sysop greeted me with a message in neon-green letters, something like “Hello, friend.” Unnerved, I signed off, and didn’t go online again until college. “Halt and Catch Fire,” an AMC drama about the battle to create the first portable computer, takes place during that period, back when the pinging, whirring devices that have come to dominate our lives were still revolu-

tionary and potentially frightening. The show is now completing its second season, which has been such a startling upgrade of the first that it begs for technological metaphors. Early on, the characters discuss the Doherty Threshold, a concept they describe as the speed at which a computer responds to the user’s fingertips: slower than four hundred milliseconds, and users will get frustrated and quit; faster, and they’ll be hooked. “Halt” ’s first season never quite hit the television equivalent of the Doherty Threshold: it was ambitious but jankily paced, decently cast but not quite good enough to recommend to strangers. Watching the show

“Halt and Catch Fire” is a platform for a fascinating, buried period of digital history. 78

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improve has provided its own drama, one that’s not uncommon in this new era of TV-making, as creators struggle to innovate, working from the older models of prestige cable. From the start, “Halt and Catch Fire” was hurt by several factors, including that impossible-to-remember title. (It’s a computer command that causes a processor to overload, shutting down the machine.) The pilot felt like a wishful mashup, using elements scavenged from reruns. There was a Don Draper-ish salesman, Joe MacMillan (Lee Pace), who had a tormented family history, a closet full of Armani suits, and a gift for gassy monologues. There was a Walter White-like failed scientist, Gordon Clark (Scoot McNairy), emasculated by his sighing wife. There was a chick coder, Cameron Howe (Mackenzie Davis), a bleached-blond punkette straight out of “The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo” (or possibly Aimee Mann circa “Voices Carry”). In Dallas, these three rebels teamed up to build a new computer— or, actually, to improve on a prototype that Joe ripped off from his former employer, I.B.M. The entire enterprise felt surreally self-referential: a show about reverse-engineering a stolen computer was itself reverse-engineered from the stolen archetypes of better dramas. And yet as “Halt and Catch Fire” proceeded it began to insert fixes, scene by scene, as if it were a product that had shipped too early, downloading updates to improve usability. It started to explore the rich, strange prehistory of today’s Silicon Valley gold rush, sketching out the culture clash among engineers and coders, silver-tongued marketers and crusty old-tech investors. The show looked lovely, washed out and green-gray, as if the nineteeneighties took place after a rainstorm (even if the camera was often tilted, for no good reason, at a paranoiac fortyfive-degree angle). For nostalgists, it offered the sensual pleasures of clunky beige consoles and pounding punk songs. There were moments of selfserious melodrama: Cameron brainstorming in lipstick on a mirror; Joe revealing his chest, covered in scars. But there was also a sense of excitement as the team struggled to solve technical problems—to make the laptop light enough, to design a compressed ILLUSTRATION BY SACHIN TENG


motherboard, to code an operating system from scratch. And the writers gradually gave Donna (Kerry Bishé), Gordon’s nagging wife, a meaningful role. By the final episodes of Season 1, there was a legitimate thrill in seeing the team launch their compromised clone of a computer, the Cardiff Giant, at a Las Vegas expo. The episodes also featured an imaginative re-creation of a historic event, as tech geeks gathered in a hotel suite, lit by candles, to witness the début of the Apple Macintosh, gazing in awe as if gathered around the Nativity. Season 2 jumps forward fourteen months, wrenching the ensemble into a new hierarchy. Joe is no longer the main character; he’s been sidelined and humbled, and the focus is now on Cameron and Donna, a former engineer herself, who have teamed up to run a small company called Mutiny, which starts out in gaming but evolves into a developer of chat rooms and discussion boards, with echoes of Compuserve and Prodigy. The gender switch isn’t entirely radical: this is still a show about a rulebreaker and a rule-follower debating digital philosophy. But the watchful, stubborn Donna, in her pastel corporate outfits, is a fresh type for TV, and the women’s chemistry is looser, releasing the show from the burdens of its gloomy forerunners. Meanwhile, Donna and Gordon’s marriage feels layered, no longer a cartoon of a genius husband and a henpecking supermom.The shambling house that serves as Mutiny’s office—all schlubby guy geeks, bickering and playing paintball—is a fun place to hang out. Even that tilted camera seems less a pretension and more an endearingly dorky trademark. It’s not that the show is revelatory art—a plot about Gordon receiving a diagnosis of brain damage verges on bathos. But it doesn’t need to be. It’s effective doing what it does best, which is to be a platform for a fascinating, buried period of history. Along the way, we get oddly profound meditations on the nature of originality in the digital age, nested within relationship talk. In one great scene, Cameron and her new boyfriend argue over whether she should copy-protect their new game. Leaving code exposed is the only way to operate, he argues, amazed that she’d see it otherwise; they learned from stolen

code—they even met through stolen code, when he hacked her game and improved it. That’s how anything creative gets stronger. But Cameron tells him that she isn’t willing to lose her money, or her credit, yet again. It can’t be a coincidence that these are the very issues that haunt modern television. The medium is surging creatively, but it’s in a stage of economic chaos, reaching the viewer by many routes, through cables and antennae, over computers and tablets, sold via iTunes, remixed on YouTube, and traded, to the distress of producers, on BitTorrent. (To quote a retro P.S.A., “Don’t copy that floppy!”) I caught up on “Halt and Catch Fire” on my phone, streaming on Amazon, as I lay in bed with earbuds in, which would have been impossible only three years ago. There’s no way to talk about television as art without talking about television as technology: the kind of beauty we get is inevitably shaped by the way it’s delivered.

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here’s a scene in the German spy series “Deutschland 83,” on Sundance, that encapsulates the year in which it is set. In West Germany, an East German named Martin stumbles upon a man selling black-market electronics. The man offers him options: Does he want a TV set? A Walkman, maybe? “What’s a Walkman?” Martin asks, baffled. Anyone who lived through this period will understand the look on his face as he hits Play: infatuation and awe, the kind of emotion that Cole Porter called “rapture serene.” Like “Halt and Catch Fire,”“Deutschland 83” bears a resemblance to a more ambitious cable show: “The Americans,” FX’s series about Russian spies, starring Keri Russell and Matthew Rhys, which just finished a bleak and astonishing third season. But, if “Deutschland 83” doesn’t have quite that show’s depth, it has other charms. It’s a slinky thriller, well scored, well paced, cast with beautiful faces, and nearly as aesthetically aspirational as “Mad Men” ever was, if you’re in the mood to fantasize about being a chain-smoking German spy in green leather gloves. It’s gorgeous and it’s good enough. The show begins with a moment that was also featured in “The Americans”: Ronald Reagan’s “evil empire”

speech. “Turn on the TV,” an East German intelligence officer named Lenora Rausch (Maria Schrader, crisp and glamorous) barks at her boss, as she watches Reagan, live, on her small black-andwhite screen. The U.S. is about to place Pershing missiles in West Germany; each side is terrified that the other will launch an attack. To get intel on NATO, Lenora pressures her nephew Martin ( Jonas Nay), a border guard, into service as a spy, masquerading as the assistant to a West German general. Like “Halt and Catch Fire,” “Deutschland 83” works as a simplified conduit for historical events that have dimmed in memory, even for those who lived through them. For the first few episodes, it treats these issues with relative sophistication, as Martin is deputized to steal state secrets. (To the alarm of his handlers, he finds that they’ve been encoded on newfangled floppy disks.) Under his new identity, Moritz, Martin becomes enmeshed in his boss’s family, which includes a sexy hippie daughter, Yvonne (Lisa Tomaschewsky), and a peacenik son, Alex, who, on the strength of Ludwig Trepte’s warm performance, quickly grows into the show’s most complex character. The longer the series goes on, unfortunately, the more absurd its twists become, landing Moritz at the center of world-historical events, like some Zelig of mutually assured destruction. But absurdity isn’t a deal-breaker. The eighties synth pop, from “99 Luftballons” to “China Girl,” soars and soothes. (And, as so many cable dramas do, the show spells things out in song lyrics. It was not strictly necessary to play the song “Jeopardy” when one character’s love was in jeopardy.) Lively scenes are set in the rising West German peace movement, which has been infiltrated by East German spies. “Go on, give each other back rubs while the world goes up in a mushroom cloud,” Alex complains, disenchanted with both sides. Still, one can’t escape the sense that the show might have been a bit more chewy if it had taken fewer shortcuts. Had it done so—had it felt a little less optimized for escapist viewers— it might also be a bit harder to watch, challenging enough to risk discomfort, even alienation. It would be “The Americans.” 

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RENEGADES Rare works by Harry Partch and Ethel Smyth. BY ALEX ROSS

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arry Partch, the rigorous wild man of American music, wrote, in 1935, “This isn’t Germany, and this isn’t the eighteenth century, and I’m trying to give myself, and others, a good basis for a new and great music of the people.” Partch was arguing, with his usual pugnacity, against the Germanic tradition and against American dependence on that tradition. His urge to break with the past led him, at the height of the Depression, to assume a hobo life, travelling the rails and notating hobo songs. He emerged with an incorrigibly radical musical language, at once intricate in method and rugged in manner. Partch wrote, “In the early days of presenting my music, the mere men-

tion of the words Bach or Beethoven, twin gods of classical musicians, turned on a faucet of revolt in me.” Partch, who died in 1974, might have been astonished to see that a German group—Musikfabrik, a virtuoso new-music ensemble based in Cologne—has lately become his chief international advocate. Two years ago, at the Ruhrtriennale festival, Musikfabrik revived Partch’s 1969 music-theatre piece “Delusion of the Fury,” in a staging by Heiner Goebbels. The production then travelled to various European cities; last month, it arrived at City Center, in New York, under the aegis of the Lincoln Center Festival. The program booklet gave thanks to, among others,

Partch’s “Delusion of the Fury” progresses from eerie whispers to a colossal cathedral roar. 80

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the German Federal Cultural Foundation, the Arts Foundation of North Rhine-Westphalia, and the GoetheInstitut. Behold the advantages of belonging to a culture that still venerates Bach and Beethoven: Germany spends lavishly on the arts, and Partch has been a surprising beneficiary. I last heard Partch’s music live in 2005, when the Kasser Theatre, in Montclair, New Jersey, presented the composer’s mystically transporting adaptation of William Butler Yeats’s “King Oedipus.” At the time, Montclair State University held the remarkable array of bespoke instruments—strings, keyboards, and percussion—that Partch had devised for his music. (The collection has since gone to the University of Washington.) Until Musikfabrik entered the picture, Partch’s major scores could be performed only when that collection was made available. A few years ago, Thomas Meixner, a frequent Musikfabrik collaborator, undertook the arduous task of making replicas of the instruments, some twenty-five in all. Partch wished to restore music to a bardic, ritualistic state: melodies are molded to the speaking voice, rhythms to the movement of the body. He required new instruments because of his decision to discard the standard equal-tempered scale—with its division of the octave into twelve equal intervals—in favor of a scale of forty-three tones, which sounds weird to Western ears but is familiar to those brought up in non-Western traditions. The instruments produce voluptuous and varied timbres, from the twangling of the zitherlike Harmonic Canon to the deep Jurassic boom of the Marimba Eroica, which has planks as long as eight feet. All are marshalled into cannily paced musical narratives; “Delusion of the Fury” progresses from eerie nocturnal whispers to a colossal cathedral roar of organs, gongs, and massed voices. “Delusion of the Fury” fuses two tales: one based on a Japanese Noh play about a warrior confronting the ghost of one of his victims, the other on an ancient Ethiopian story about an altercation between a vagabond and an old woman. Goebbels followed the traditional plots but introduced occasionally jarring contemporary touches: the dispute in the Ethiopian part is adjudicated by a ILLUSTRATION BY ALVARO TAPIA HIDALGO

REFERENCE: KLAUS RUDOLPH

MUSICAL EVENTS


mockup of Colonel Sanders, the Kentucky Fried Chicken founder. Partch’s great sonic enchantment made the disparate elements cohere, and the Musikfabrik performers, often undertaking assignments outside their areas of expertise (singing and acting as well as playing unusual instruments), delivered a performance of fervent, go-for-broke, soul-gladdening power.

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he next weekend, Bard College presented something even rarer— Ethel Smyth’s 1906 opera, “The Wreckers.” Here was another renegade, not least in matters of sexual desire; Partch explored the gay-hobo subculture, and Smyth was open about her lesbian affections. There, however, the resemblance ends. Smyth, a Londoner, was a majestic Victorian eccentric who, despite her vehement feminist views, cultivated the highest social classes, including Victoria herself. Smyth’s music is conservative in profile, grounded in Romantic rhetoric. Nonetheless, it has an unsettled potency, and deserves to be heard more often than it is. The Bard production was the American stage première of “The Wreckers”; the only other known staging of any of her operas in this country was in 1903, when the Met performed her one-act “Der Wald.” To get a picture of Smyth, you need only pick up the later novels and diaries of Virginia Woolf, who befriended her in the nineteen-thirties. Smyth provided inspiration for Rose Pargiter, the militant suffragette in “The Years,” and for Miss La Trobe, the avant-garde spinster in “Between the Acts,” who perplexes her fellow-villagers with a

surreal pageant of English history. Woolf found Smyth overbearing, as did many people, but envied the older woman’s political outspokenness. (“Her speech rollicking & direct: mine too compressed & allusive.”) Woolf found “The Wreckers” to be “vigorous & even beautiful; & active & absurd & extreme; & youthful”—a fair summary of the work. The opera’s story concerns the vicious practice, not unknown on the Cornish coast in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, of luring ships onto rocks and plundering their contents. Often, the wreckers found ways to justify this activity on religious grounds; from that twisted logic, Smyth and her librettist, Henry Brewster, spun a tale of criminal fanaticism in which villagers persecute a young fisherman who attempts to warn passing vessels. The fisherman, Mark, is in love with the pastor’s wife, Thirza. In the finale, the two are condemned to death, and drown in a coastal cave as the tide rises. The score is an uneven creation, at times conventional and at times craggily inspired. It lacks the kind of uninhibited lyricism that makes an aria soar, and the love duet between Mark and Thirza in Act II grinds on. Furthermore, Brewster originally wrote the libretto in French, with an eye toward a Monte Carlo production, which never came about; Smyth later translated it into creaky English. (“Twixt ye and me, o murd’rers, / God be judge!”) But her choral writing packs a mighty punch, as the villagers declaim violent unison lines over propulsive ostinatos that look back to “Boris Godunov” and ahead to

“Peter Grimes,” another tale of an outcast fisherman. (“The Wreckers” had a revival at Sadler’s Wells, in London, in 1939, just before Britten left for America.) In the end, the gale force of Smyth’s musical personality banishes doubts. Leon Botstein, who has long served both as Bard’s president and as its resident conductor, has repeatedly won the gratitude of adventurous New Yorkarea operagoers by reviving such neglected treasures as Blitzstein’s “Regina,” Schreker’s “Der Ferne Klang,” and Meyerbeer’s “Les Huguenots.” Botstein’s account of “The Wreckers,” with the American Symphony in the pit, went over with rough-edged passion. Neal Cooper nearly conquered the taxing tenor role of Mark, and Katharine Goeldner fully mastered the high-lying mezzo role of Thirza, giving heat to that undercooked duet. The production, directed by Thaddeus Strassberger and designed by Erhard Rom, skirted the subversive undertones of the scenario—one senses an allegory of capitalism run amok—but offered thrilling images, including a fire suitable for “Götterdämmerung.” The inventive young Strassberger deserves a shot at the Met, which has all but exhausted its supply of Tony-winning directors who know little about opera. As for Smyth, perhaps she will one day get another chance on the Met stage. In the 2016-17 season, when the Met presents Kaija Saariaho’s “L’Amour de Loin,” she will at least lose a dubious distinction that would have enraged her—that of being the only female composer ever to be performed by the world’s biggest opera company. 

THE NEW YORKER IS A REGISTERED TRADEMARK OF ADVANCE MAGAZINE PUBLISHERS INC. COPYRIGHT ©2015 CONDÉ NAST. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. PRINTED IN THE U.S.A. VOLUME XCI, NO. 23, August 10 & 17, 2015. THE NEW YORKER (ISSN 0028792X) is published weekly (except for five combined issues: February 23 & March 2, June 8 & 15, July 6 & 13, August 10 & 17, and December 21 & 28) by Condé Nast, which is a division of Advance Magazine Publishers Inc. PRINCIPAL OFFICE: Condé Nast, 1 World Trade Center, New York, NY 10007. Elizabeth Hughes, publisher, chief revenue officer; Beth Lusko, associate publisher advertising; James Guilfoyle, director of finance and business operations; Fabio Bertoni, general counsel. Condé Nast: S. I. Newhouse, Jr., chairman; Charles H. Townsend, chief executive officer; Robert A. Sauerberg, Jr., president; David E. Geithner, chief financial officer; Jill Bright, chief administrative officer. Periodicals postage paid at New York, NY, and at additional mailing offices. Canadian Goods and Services Tax Registration No. 123242885-RT0001. POSTMASTER: SEND ADDRESS CHANGES TO THE NEW YORKER, P.O. Box 37684, Boone, IA 50037 0684. FOR SUBSCRIPTIONS, ADDRESS CHANGES, ADJUSTMENTS, OR BACK ISSUE INQUIRIES: Please write to The New Yorker, P.O. Box 37684, Boone, IA 50037 0684, call (800) 825-2510, or e-mail subscriptions@newyorker.com. Please give both new and old addresses as printed on most recent label. Subscribers: If the Post Office alerts us that your magazine is undeliverable, we have no further obligation unless we receive a corrected address within one year. If during your subscription term or up to one year after the magazine becomes undeliverable, you are ever dissatisfied with your subscription, let us know. You will receive a full refund on all unmailed issues. First copy of new subscription will be mailed within four weeks after receipt of order. For advertising inquiries, please call Beth Lusko at (212) 286-4454. For submission guidelines, please refer to our Web site, www. newyorker.com. Address all editorial, business, and production correspondence to The New Yorker, 1 World Trade Center, New York, NY 10007. For cover reprints, please call (800) 897-8666, or e-mail covers@cartoonbank.com. For permissions and reprint requests, please call (212) 630-5656 or fax requests to (212) 630-5883. No part of this periodical may be reproduced without the consent of The New Yorker. The New Yorker’s name and logo, and the various titles and headings herein, are trademarks of Advance Magazine Publishers Inc. Visit us online at www.newyorker.com. To subscribe to other Condé Nast magazines, visit www.condenet.com. Occasionally, we make our subscriber list available to carefully screened companies that offer products and services that we believe would interest our readers. If you do not want to receive these offers and/or information, please advise us at P.O. Box 37684, Boone, IA 50037 0684 or call (800) 825-2510. THE NEW YORKER IS NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR THE RETURN OR LOSS OF, OR FOR DAMAGE OR ANY OTHER INJURY TO, UNSOLICITED MANUSCRIPTS, UNSOLICITED ART WORK (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, DRAWINGS, PHOTOGRAPHS, AND TRANSPARENCIES), OR ANY OTHER UNSOLICITED MATERIALS. THOSE SUBMITTING MANUSCRIPTS, PHOTOGRAPHS, ART WORK, OR OTHER MATERIALS FOR CONSIDERATION SHOULD NOT SEND ORIGINALS, UNLESS SPECIFICALLY REQUESTED TO DO SO BY THE NEW YORKER IN WRITING.

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CARTOON CAPTION CONTEST

Each week, we provide a cartoon in need of a caption. You, the reader, submit a caption, we choose three finalists, and you vote for your favorite. Caption submissions for this week’s cartoon, by Danny Shanahan, must be received by Sunday, August 16th. The finalists in the July 27th contest appear below. We will announce the winner, and the finalists in this week’s contest, in the August 31st issue. The winner receives a signed print of the cartoon. Any resident of the United States, Canada (except Quebec), Australia, the United Kingdom, or the Republic of Ireland age eighteen or over can enter or vote. To do so, and to read the complete rules, visit contest.newyorker.com. THE WINNING CAPTION

THE FINALISTS

“When did you first realize you were really a woman?” Shelly Goldstein, Santa Monica, Calif. “I recommend a day of rest.” Shaw Patton, Tallahassee, Fla.

“ Your profile said you liked surprises.” Matthew LaPine, Kenosha, Wis.

“ You know, you have the power to change how you feel.” Tom Lockard, San Francisco, Calif. THIS WEEK’S CONTEST




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