3 4 6 8 Working Together: Sweet Sixteen African American Indian Traditions Civil Discourse VA Festival of the Book Museums Network Sustaining Agriculture The Newsletter of the Virginia Foundation for the Humanities Summer 2010 The Humanities: Asking UltimateBY ROBERTA CULBERTSON Questions any of my favorite poets are soldiers. War distills life to its essence: there, the nature of ‘humanity’ is made clear in the language of ultimates: truth, right, duty, even beauty, and certainly love. Soldiers know this. To ask questions of or about the humanities, I always think it is well to start with war. MI have read Brian Turner’s Aeneid, which begins (in David “Curfew” many times (see p. 2). West’s translation): “I sing of Turner has served in the current arms and of the man, fated to war in Iraq, the one not yet in be an exile....” It is the story the history books. of Aeneas, a refugee from the Before their histories final battle of Troy. there is always the poetry of The Aeneid is largely wars. Each tells the same story a primer of war and its differently. Poetry describes the human consequences. Piece experience of war. War poetry by anguished piece, Virgil whipsaws between intense love constructs war: loyalty, family, and the most terrible gore, death, suffering, betrayal, fate, between aching beauty and the the games of the gods and the mundane made holy. “White gods’ limitations—intertwine birds rose from the Tigris:” we and conflict to shape not can see them, hear their wings only victory and loss but the above the ancient river. Only fortunes of every soldier. Each two lines before, we turned soldier’s actions return to him away from Sgt. Gutierrez com- in many ways—failure, loss, forting a grieving man who guilt, rage, regret, and confu- is likely crying as most never sion. Even so, despite the have. Poetry holds the heat and horror, Virgil says, there is also contradictions, and shows the what must be done, often in way life crystallizes when death blood, but what and why? is close and somehow hungry. In Aeneas’s world, war is Now I am reading the Continued on page 2 Photograph by US Marine Corps Lance Cpl. Albert F. Hunt, Surviving War Virginia Foundation The Humanities: for the Humanities 145 Ednam Drive Charlottesville, VA 22903-4629 Asking Ultimate Questions (434) 924-3296 Continued from cover fax (434) 296-4714 VirginiaFoundation.org not only about will, and hardly about conflict: it is tions we must ask, and routes we must take when we [email protected] about destiny, obedience, great error, and duty. Unfor- forego the answers. tunately, it is generally put in service of the human The humanities teach that there are no simple emotions of jealousy, anger, and pride—a paradox that questions, no easy answers but many wrong ones, Robert C. Vaughan, III , PRESIDENT leads from trivialities to the highest callings and sac- no convenient truths, no way to be human except by ADVANCEMENT rifices. Aeneas carries his father from the burning city living with contradiction and incompleteness. This is PROGRAM ASSOCIatE Lynda Myers, of Troy because of a beauty contest and a stolen bride. not an easy truth, but it is one the VFH has embraced DIGITAL INITIATIVES Many times the characters stop to ask why—and their since its beginning. Matthew Gibson, DIRECTOR/MANAGING EDITOR ENCYCLOPEDIA VIRGINIA best solution is to assume the gods are as venal as they. The VFH Virginia Indian Heritage Pro- Peter Hedlund, PROGRAMMER Neither Virgil nor Turner gives us answers to gram looks at questions raised during centuries of Tori Talbot, ASSIstant EDITOR Brendan Wolfe, ASSOCIatE EDITOR war: they know the questions are more important, oppression by people who considered themselves DOCUMENTS COMPASS and likely answerable only by each of us alone. The “civilized.” VA Folklife programs raise questions Sue H. Perdue, PROGRAM DIRECTOR study of poetry and other humanities disciplines about the simplistic lines drawn between rural and Holly C. Shulman, FOUNDING DIRECTOR draws us to an awed awareness of our own complex- urban, past and present. Virginia Festival of the GRANTS AND PUBLIC PROGRAMS DIRECTOR ity, and our own paradoxical simplicity. Why are we Book authors like Christopher Hedges present David Bearinger, Carolyn Cades, PROGRAM ASSOCIatE like this? Why does horror come from such pettiness difficult realities in the controversially titled War PROGRAM ASSOCIatE Jeanne Siler, as jealousy—and how can it call forth heroism and is a Force that Gives Us Meaning. Over and over at VIRGINIA FOLKLIFE PROGRAM Jon Lohman, PROGRAM DIRECTOR loyalty? What is my responsibility as the gears of the VFH, our grants, fellowships, radio programs, vIRGINIA INDIAN HERITAGE PROGRAM human perfidy and greatness grind together? There is history books and more rediscover and report that Karenne Wood, PROGRAM DIRECTOR the fundamental humanities question: why? nothing is easy though every people has tried to MEDIA PROGRAMS The humanities now, more than ever: in the make it so. Perhaps the fall from grace is the dis- Andrew Wyndham, DIRECTOR Lydia Wilson, PROGRAM ASSOCIatE realm of violence studies it is a most pressing truth. covery of chaos. Perhaps each generation faces the “WITH GOOD REASon” RADIO SHOW We need to see the patterns, to read Virgil and Turner fall again, and then has to ask why. Sarah McConnell, PRODUCER AND HOST and Sassoon and Heller and Homer together, weaving Today, more than ever, always, the humanities. Thomas Pearce, ASSOCIatE PRODUCER Nancy King, FEatuRE PRODUCER back and forth, to be sure we grasp our full humanity, Pass it on. Pass out the books. Listen to the poets. Elliot Majerczyk, ASSOCIatE PRODUCER and the inhumanity it bears within it. There are ques- Don’t settle for less. “backSTory” RADIO SHOW Tony Field, PRODUCER RESEARCH ASSIstant Catherine Moore, PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT Sheryl Hayes, SPECIAL ASSIstant TO PRESIDENT CHIEF OPERatING OFFICER Curfew Kevin McFadden, Gail Shirley-Warren, BUSINESS MANAGER The wrong is not in the religion; FISCAL ASSIstant Cary Ferguson, The wrong is in us. WEBMASTER Trey Mitchell —Saier T. RECEPTIONISTS At dusk, bats fly out by the hundreds. Judy Moody Jeannie Palin Water snakes glide in the ponding basins RESEARCH AND EDUCATION behind the rubbled palaces. The mosques Roberta Culbertson, DIRECTOR call their faithful in, welcoming PROGRAM DIRECTOR, Hilary Holladay, fELLOWSHIP PROGRAM the moonlight as prayer. Ann White Spencer, PROGRAM ASSOCIatE VIRGINIA CENTER FOR THE BOOK Today, policemen sunbathed on traffic islands Susan Coleman, DIRECTOR and children helped their mothers VIRGINIA FESTIVAL OF THE BOOK string clothes to the line, a slight breeze PROGRAM DIRECTOR Nancy Damon, filling them with heat. NEWSLETTER STAFF David Bearinger, ADVISORY EDITOR Carolyn Cades, staff WRITER There were no bombs, no panic in the streets. Kevin McFadden, CO-EDITOR Sgt. Gutierrez didn’t comfort an injured man DISTRIBUTION MANAGER Lynda Myers, who cupped pieces of his friend’s brain Ann White Spencer, CO-EDITOR Lydia Wilson, TEXT/WEB EDITOR in his hands; instead, today, white birds rose from the Tigris. The Virginia Foundation for the Humanities Newsletter is published three times a year. The VFH is an independent, nonprofit, tax- Brian Turner exempt organization. (from Here, Bullet, Alice James Books, 2005) Photograph by Hernán Lautaro Navarrete © Tough Times Companion III 2 Summer 2010 Ring the bells that still can ring Forget your perfect offering There is a crack in everything Tough Times Companion III is a That’s how the compendium of poems, photographs, essays, and fiction by the famous and the light gets in. unknown. Tough Times offers those in difficult straits—illness, unemployment, Leonard Cohen abuse, grief—a humanities-based source of comfort: the words of others reaching excerpt from Anthem Photograph by US Army Spc. Charles W. Gill, Surviving War across time and space to stand in witness. Working Together: Civil Discourse BY the Honorable Robert BrinK (VFH Board, House of Delegates – 48th District) onvening in Virginia’s Capitol Equally harmful is the scorched-earth narrow information building, designed by Thomas Jef- nature of contemporary political campaigns. channel: ferson, seems to inspire a sense of Campaign consultants are paid handsomely “If you’re civic responsibility in the members for their advice, and more often than not their someone who only of the General Assembly. The chambers them- advice is to go negative on an opponent— reads the editorial Cselves, steeped in tradition, send a message of because it “works.” Everything about the page of The New York Times, try glancing at common purpose: regardless of ideological opponent is fair game: not just the public the page of The Wall Street Journal once in or regional differences, we are there to work (policy positions) but the personal (motives awhile. If you’re a fan of Glenn Beck or Rush together. And, by and large, we do. As a rule, and personal lives) as well. The scars of a Limbaugh, try reading a few columns on the members of the House and Senate show brutal campaign often heal slowly: the suc- the Huffington Post website. It may make an attitude of mutual respect despite differing cessful politician who survives a months-long your blood boil; your mind may not often opinions—the essence of civility. ordeal in which his integrity and character be changed. But the practice of listening But in Richmond and in legislative bod- are impugned may understandably find the to opposing views is essential for effective ies across the nation, the civility that fosters transition to working with his opponents in an citizenship. So too is the practice of engaging cooperative effort is threatened by powerful atmosphere of mutual regard a difficult one. in different experiences with different kinds forces that inject acrimony and mistrust into Finally, the erosion of civility may of people.” public discourse and deepen partisan divides.
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