Darkness in August

http://birnbaum.themorningnews.org/2010/08/05/darkness-in-august.php

8/5/10

More than a few people have expressed to me some inchoate feeling that, yes, August is upon us. This seems to be an expression of discomfort with the rapidity with which the current season is falling away. And in my view, a minor symptom of a larger distemper which is, perhaps, a basic constituent of our existence. I.e., difficulty with managing time's passage.

Some 40-something years ago, as an arrogant and passionate foe of American imperialism and a fierce demonstrator for racial equality, I was part of a demonstration that sat in Roosevelt University President Rolf Weil's office to protest the university's failure to grant tenure to historian Staughton Lynd (son of sociologists Helen and Robert Lynd of Middletown fame)­this was on the heels of the university demurring to acquire the Roosevelt papers that historian (and John Updike's roommate at Harvard) Christopher Lasch (The Culture of Narcissism) wanted to bring to the university bearing that president's name. Lasch then went across town (so to speak) to Northwestern University, and the rest, of course, is history…

I, of course, digress. The occasion for this voyage in the way-back machine is the publication of Adelphi University mentor Carl Mirra's The Admirable Radical: Staughton Lynd and Cold War Dissent 1945-1970 (Kent University Press). From Howard Zinn's foreword:

This is but a brief account of Staughton Lynd's journey through academia and the world, joining his intelligence to contribute to the world wide struggle for peace and justice. He is a radical historian, a radical lawyer, a radical citizen. I have admired him enormously ever since I first met him…before he became my colleague at Spelman College. He and Alice [Lynd's wife] are exemplars of strength and gentleness in the quest for a better world. I am proud to call him my friend and happy that he is now the subject of Carl Mirra's biography. As one who entered the academic world after military service, I feel a special affinity for someone like Carl Mirra who has come to the academy after being trained as a marine. I admire his moral courage for his refusal to fight in the First Gulf War. It seems to me that he experience gives a special dimension to his intellectual curiosity and his passionate interest in documenting Staughton's life.

So much for the passage of time.

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