Friday, June 8, 2012

Callenbach Considered

Ernest Callenbach passed on a couple of months ago.

I first encountered his writing in a college introductory philosophy course.   The professor was a committed environmental activist, a devotee of “deep ecology.”  So, instead of reading the works of Plato, Spinoza, or Sartre, we were assigned less hoary tomes such as The Monkey Wrench Gang by Edward Abbey and Steps to Inner Peace by Peace Pilgrim.  These weren’t bad books to read, but they weren’t what I signed up for. 

Adolescent wiseass that I was, I seldom passed up an opportunity to make snarky comments or ask loaded questions impugning the professor’s beliefs.  My bad attitude toward the class made me not fully appreciate its highlights, such as the time Norwegian philosopher Arne Næss guest lectured.  But the one thing I remember most from this class I took more than twenty-five years ago was gritting my teeth through Ecotopia Emerging by Ernest Callenbach.

Ecotopia Emerging, published in 1981, is the prequel to Callenbach’s earlier novel Ecotopia (1975).  The premise of both books is that northern California, Oregon, and Washington have seceded from the United States to create a self-isolated green society.  In certain respects the novels were quite prescient.  Some of Callenbach’s predictions have come to pass, such as widespread recycling, car-free zones in some cities and planned greenbelts in others, as well as a developing trend toward more sustainable forms of transportation and agriculture.  On a darker note, the eco-anarchism embraced by his characters is a premonition of the ELF and other spectral manifestations of the environmentalist movement.

Mr. Callenbach has a deserved reputation as an environmentalist elder statesman whose principles are aptly summed in his final published essay.  I’ve retained a certain ambivalence about his best known writings.  As literature, as with so many works of fiction meant to explicate a philosophic or ideological stance, they simply don’t hold up.  Probably my main objection to both the Ecotopia novels, then and now, is their flakiness.  Callenbach’s utopia is constructed from an amalgam of green sci fi tech, New Age spiritualism, and 1960s free love.  Ecotopia often says more about Callenbach’s personal biases and private fantasies than it does any realistic vision for the future. 

Moreover, the novels betray a decided lack of political correctness by today’s standards.  An aspect I find simultaneously amusing and cringe-inducing is the promiscuous, syncretic appropriation of Native American cultural motifs by Ecotopia’s blissful natives.  Callenbach occasionally indulged in ethnic stereotyping, as seen in his description of urban enclaves dubbed "Soul City" whose inhabitants seem to have been lifted directly from an early Seventies blaxploitation movie.  His answers to such perennial social ills as violence are positively risible. In a memorable episode from the first novel, two men, decked out in war paint and drugged on psychedelics, square off in hand-to-hand combat, after which the winner carries off a maiden spectator as his prize.  This is supposed to be Ecotopia’s placebo for war and aggressive team sports.  Clearly, Callenbach was not above objectifying minorities or women to illustrate his ideal world.  

While the novels’ shortcomings often get in the way of the message, many of Callenbach’s ideas are nonetheless worth serious consideration.  For instance, Ecotopia’s correctional system is just that: Instead of large, industrial-style prisons, we see small numbers of offenders housed in the community, with their partners or family members if they so desire, gainfully employed in regular jobs but otherwise confined until their sentences are up.  Another attractive aspect of Ecotopian life is its freedom from electronic media and a return to more traditional amusements as music, poetry, and storytelling.  Ecotopia's city planning precepts are a harbinger of contemporary New Urbanism, with housing, schools, and shops contained within communitarian, kid-friendly neighborhoods. 

But by far the strongest theoretical element is Ecotopia’s social, political, and economic decentralization.  Capitalism hasn’t disappeared entirely; instead, small enterprises make up the economy’s backbone.  Worker self-management prevails, and even small family businesses must allow hired employees to take part in management decisions and profit sharing.  Because big corporations no longer exist, this obviates the need for a large state bureaucracy to regulate (and protect) them.  Ecotopia is politically devolved with as many policies made at the community level as practicable.   I’m very sympathetic to the idea of subsidiarity as social order and this element alone makes Ecotopia appealing (if only in an abstract sense).

Its virtues notwithstanding, there are better alternatives to Callenbach’s fictional paradise on earth.  The primary flaw of the Ecotopia novels is that they are too simplistic.  Callenbach to the contrary, we cannot simply compost, meditate, and screw our way to a just and equitable world.  For me, a more realistic view of an environmentally sustainable future can be found in the novel Pacific Edge, part of the Three Californias trilogy by Kim Stanley Robinson.  (Robinson, incidentally, is the editor of the anthology Future Primitive: The New Ecotopias.)  The world of Pacific Edge is much different from and yet quite the same as that of the present day.  People have mostly embraced environmentalist principles and green technology, but many contemporary evils persist: Avaricious developers clash with anti-growth activists before town councils and zoning boards, the profit motive continues to conflict with human need, and politics remain the art of compromise. 

Robinson’s future is more plausible because it accounts for the truth that progress is almost always evolutionary, with few instances of punctuational change.  Even the swiftest, most violent revolutions do not produce the rapid degree of sociopolitical change that Callenbach appears to propose in the Ecotopia series.  Whatever victories are won by the green movement, rest assured they will be incremental and none of us know what the end state will look like.  But change must be imagined to be realized.  The lesson of Ernest Callenbach’s writing is that dreams of even an imperfect future are better than accepting an even more flawed present.





© 2012 The Unassuming Scholar

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