THIS BLOG AND THE HTTP://WWW.HANDKE.SCRIPTMANIA.COM PROJECT ARE DEVOTED TO THE GREAT WORK AND PERSON OF THE AUSTRO-GERMANIC-SLOVENIAN AUTHOR PETER HANDKE DISCUSSION SPILLS OVER TO http://handke-watch.blogspot.com/ http://www.artscritic.blogspot.com [the Milosevic controversy summarized] link to slideshowhttp://picasaweb.google.com/mikerol/POSTED?authkey=YeKkFSE3-Js#

Saturday, April 07, 2007

Scott Abbott's, a Handke Translator's, letter to The American Scholar

Michael McDonald opens his essay on Peter Handke by calling him “The Apologist” (The American Scholar, Spring 2007). He points out that the Austrian writer appeared at the funeral of Serbian dictator Slobodan Milosevic. Then he poses a question: “Should we forgive him?” The answer for McDonald and others more interested in controversy than in thinking, is obviously no.
As the translator of Mr. Handke’s A Journey to the Rivers: Justice for Serbia (Viking, 1997), a book at the heart of the debate McDonald discusses, and as author of half-a-dozen articles about Handke’s work, I don’t even recognize the “Peter Handke” McDonald vilifies. He has given readers of this journal a conveniently evil creature of his own heated imagination. I hope he doesn’t use this evidence to justify going to war with Austria.
A century ago, Gustave Flaubert collected examples of clichéd ideas in France, calling his work The Dictionary of Accepted Ideas (translated for New Directions by Jacques Barzun). The entry for “America,” for instance, reads “If it weren’t for the discovery of America, we should not be suffering from syphilis and phylloxera. Exalt it all the same, especially if you’ve never been there.” And the accepted way to respond to the name “Machiavelli”? – “Though you have not read him, consider him a scoundrel.”
Michael McDonald considers Peter Handke a scoundrel without having read him. Consider a couple of entries from the catalogue of accepted ideas that make up his “argument”:
Milosevic, “a man most disinterested observers believe to have been responsible for a series of wars that claimed the lives of more than 200,000 people during his 13 years in power.”
Milosevic, “the ‘Butcher of the Balkans’”
Justice for Serbia, “part political harangue and part travelogue”
Handke, “has never abandoned his bedrock faith that language is merely a set of debilitating fictions used to mask reality.”
The “essay” is a naïve catalogue of such popular ideas, asserted as common sense, even in the face of obvious contradictions like the one that has Handke believing that language is only debilitating while attacking him for his argument (in language) that Serbia, like Croatia and Bosnia and Kosovo and Montenegro, ought to be dealt with justly.
McDonald is unable to think that the civil war that destroyed Yugoslavia had multiple perpetrators, including Milosovic, Izetbegovic (Head of Muslim Bosnia), and Tudjman (head of Croatia) – (accepted ideas necessarily simplify, and who can remember that many foreign syllables anyway?).
McDonald proves that Milosevic was alone guilty by reminding us that people called him the tellingly alliterative “Butcher of the Balkans.”
McDonald denigrates the beautifully provocative Journey to the Rivers: Justice for Serbia with words that better describe his own blunt thinking: “political harangue.” Compare, for instance, the following self-reflexive, self-doubting sentences from the end of Handke’s book with McDonald’s rigid and certain prose:
But isn’t it, finally, irresponsible, I thought there at the Drina and continue to think it here, to offer the small sufferings in Serbia, the bit of freezing there, the bit of loneliness, the trivialities like snow flakes, caps, cream cheese, while over the border a great suffering prevails, that of Sarajevo, of Tuzla, of Srebrenica, of Bihać, compared to which the Serbian boo-boos are nothing? Yes, with each sentence I too have asked myself whether such a writing isn’t obscene, ought even to be tabooed, forbidden -- which made the writing journey adventurous in a different way, dangerous, often very depressing (believe me), and I learned what “between Scylla and Charybdis” means. Didn’t the one who described the small deprivations (gaps between teeth) help to water down, to suppress, to conceal the great ones?
Finally, to be sure, I thought each time: but that=s not the point. My work is of a different sort. To record the evil facts, that=s good. But something else is needed for a peace, something not less important than the facts.
Michael McDonald does not record the evil facts, nor does he provide readers of The American Scholar with ideas that promote peace. He wants Peter Handke to be and to remain punished.
When Günther Grass, whom McDonald champions as a moral counterweight to the guilty Handke, supported Germany’s actions against Serbia during the wars, some Serbs decided to burn the copies of Grass’s books they had collected and read before the war. Peter Handke suggested that they keep the books, that they wrestle with the ideas, that they respect the work of a fine novelist.
Grass’s ideas are important. As are Handke’s. McDonald’s are a disgrace.
Scott Abbott
Woodland Hills, Utah

Sunday, April 01, 2007

LETTER TO PHI BETA KAPPA MEMBERS RE AMERICAN SCHOLAR

# 5 SENDING OF 6.
Dear Phi Beta Kappans:
Your preamble states that:
"The ideal Phi Beta Kappan has demonstrated intellectual integrity, tolerance for other views." It is in light of this standard that I want to call your attention to a heinous short fall, a travesty of travesties, an assassination of character and work that appears, of all unexpected places, in the Spring 07 issue of The American Scholar where it takes the form of a most primitive and meretricious attack - both political and literary - by a certain Michael McDonald, counsel for "The American Interest," on the by no means infallible but uniquely great writer Peter Handke; a political attack based on Handke's "being soft on Milosevic", a literary attack based on a single paragraph whose function within the [1974] novel "A Moment of True Feeling" that the assassin has not read.
It is my feeling that an editor who allows publication of a travesty such as Michael McDonald's ought to be forced to resign, he has lost all credibility and scholarly standing. McDonald is of little concern to me; he is one of those uniquely vile beings, albeit an untalented member of this species, that began - under the conditions such as they are - to appear in droves in all walks and works of life in the early 80s, that entire range from "Diego Cortez", Adam Gopnik [a talented member], Milken, Newt Gingrich, Stephen Schwartz to name just a few representatives of this class.

Below you will find links to my open letter to Editor Wilson. The three-part letter [A-B-C] and my detailed critique, in entirety, can be found at:
http://www.handke-discussion.blogspot.com

Below the letter in its entirety A-B-C

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MICHAEL ROLOFF http://www.facebook.com/mike.roloff1?ref=name exMember Seattle Psychoanalytic Institute and Society this LYNX will LEAP you to all my HANDKE project sites and BLOGS: http://www.roloff.freehosting.net/index.html "MAY THE FOGGY DEW BEDIAMONDIZE YOUR HOOSPRINGS!" {J. Joyce} "Sryde Lyde Myde Vorworde Vorhorde Vorborde" [von Alvensleben] contact via my website http://www.roloff.freehosting.net/index.html