After five years
of living in the United States, I responded to the call of nostalgia and tumultuous
historical change that has in the late eighties swept Central and Eastern
Europe. Hence I packed my stuff, boxed up my books, kissed my American friends
goodbye and in February 1992 returned to Ljubljana, my home town.
God, was I in for a surprise! In this Central
European city, the capital of Slovenia, a new pocket-size state that emerged
almost without bloodshed out of the ashes of a sadly dismembered Yugoslavia,
nothing was as it used to be. If cultural shock implies a dramatic encounter
with values radically different from the ones with which one has grown up,
then this term aptly describes my homecoming after a long absence.
A more lucid mind, I surmise, would have most
likely expected this shock in advance. After all, what happened in the summer
of 1991 in Slovenia was a unique, radical, and absolutely historical event:
the birth of a nation-state!
In the summer 1991, true enough, I was at home.
Instead of basking in the sun, however, I donned a bullet-proof vest and as
a field interpreter glued myself to the cameraman of the CNN crew that covered
the first open military conflict on the European soil since World War II.
In the Ten-Day War that followed the Slovenian
declaration of independence on June 26, 1991 lightly armed Slovenian militiamen
fought against the Serb-led Yugoslav federal army, the third largest standing
army in Europe. These unforgettable moments will doubtless stick in my mind
forever. I saw burned houses, dead bodies, confused horses, crying children,
pillaged stores. I sensed determination in the eyes of young Slovenian fighters
who came in from behind the ploughs and out of the corporate offices to defend
a country under assault, I witnessed short but fierce guerilla shootouts on
the city streets, I stood speechless at the sight of the federal army's pullout
after its entirely unexpected yet convincing defeat.
Soon after the last soldier in an olive-grey
Yugoslav uniform left, however, I had to return to New York to resume
my academic and professional duties. That's why I did not fully experience
cultural, political, diplomatic and economic blossoming in the wake of
war. The breath-taking speed with which the rosebud of Slovenian life
style propelled itself into a full-blown rose was impossible to monitor
from the other side of the Atlantic. Television networks are hardly a
substitute for non-partisan media, let alone for a first-hand experience.
Small wonder then that upon my return a
year and a half after the fatal war I felt not unlike Adam at the end
of Milton's Paradise Lost: "Depressed, lost and at home!".
It could not have been any other way, though.
In the last few years I have made considerable efforts to make myself at home
in three different social, political, and cultural systems: In 1988 I left
the late communism of Slovenia, the most advanced republic in the Yugoslav
federation, for the late capitalism of America. 1992 saw my return to the
primitive capitalism of independent Slovenia. If I was somewhat creativelly
restricted in the first system, and was growing critical of the second one,
then I certainly cannot be enthusiastic about the third either.
Alfred Schutz, a noted Austrian-American social
thinker, developed in his New York exile a theory of the homecomer, a man
who returns home only to find that both he and his home have changed during
his absence. Schutz's theory is a required reading in the graduate seminars
in American social studies. I have done my reading but have never really believed
that a theory about the bifurcation of past and present experiences of home,
deepened by long periods of living abroad, would transcend the ephemeral status
of an academic footnote.
These homecomer's anxieties, however, have since
my return slowly worked their way into my heart. I, too, have seen that what
characterizes a homecomer is the fact the he views his homeland in the light
in which living memories of the past mingle with new experiences gained abroad.
These views, however, cannot always be successfully translated into the language
spoken at home.
My homecomer's anxieties were given distinct
shape when I wandered the winding streets of the old city quarter and
bumped into a friend from college. He took me to a glitzy cafe that has
replaced a state-run dive in one of the back streets below the medieval
castle.
Quite a guy, this friend of mine. A graduate
in philosophy and comparative literature at the University of Ljubljana,
he used to be a passionate reader, wrote poems and was a regular at literary
readings. He was smart and engaging, quick to comment on controversial
disputes between dissidents and authorities in which I actively participated
as the chief editor of the radical student weekly, Tribuna. He
was at home in the republic of res publica, public issues.
But this is all long-gone history now. Today,
he is a top-notch manager for an advertising agency. He smiled constantly,
a proverbial Rolex on his wrist, the way he casually dropped the name of a
well-known model he was sleeping with, politicians he was on a first-name
basis with, etc. Everything about this young man revealed a self-confident
person who knew what he wanted and how to get it.
Our talk was truly uncanny. It was as if
I stared at a character straight out of Tom Wolfe's notorious novel The
Bonfire of the Vanities, which celebrates the "age of greed" in the
vapid American 1980s. The novel has not yet been translated into Slovenian,
yet it seems to find its real-life correspondences all over urban settings
in my new country.
In discussing our past years over hot cappuccino,
my newly minted manager didn't pause a bit when I asked him what had led him
so far afield from his first love, philosophy. He leaned back in his chair,
took a sip and snapped: "I didn't abandon the world of ideas. I need to have
original concepts in my office, too. And business is such a virgin field!
Anything is possible now. Besides," he winked at me, "that's where the power
is!"
In response to my naive question of whether
he has recently read an interesting book he might recommend to me, a perplexed
homecomer, he just shook his head. The young man, who used to follow contemporary
French fiction and was an avid reader of British book reviews, thought
it unnecessary to elaborate the obvious: "Who cares about things that
no longer matter!"
His answer and attitude are not exceptional.
Rather, they are the rule. Needless to say, not all managers have liberal
arts degrees and passion for ideas like my friend. But like all fledgling
members of this bizarre class that has grown desperately vacuous if not entirely
fatigued in the United States, yuppies in a Central European vein exercise
the same gut-felt pleasure in making money and the same relentless drive to
climb the corporate ladder. This is only natural. Until the fall of communist
regimes, these pleasures represented a forbidden fruit to those who did not
belong to the nomenklatura, the top ranking party officers.
However, a demonstrated indifference toward
cultural affairs, language and literature, these fragile, yet deeply relevant
building blocks of an identity for the Slovenian nation that has historically
lacked political institutions of its own, reveals much more than just a striving
toward a membership in "a new affluent society". This indifference admittedly
oils the machinery of Slovenian economic growth for it does not distract the
focus or divest the public energy.
At the same time, however, it points up to the
distressing, yet essentially sobering fact that culture is no longer the privileged
forum of truth, justice and beauty as it was commonly viewed in the past.
Thus, by extension, it ceased to provide an undisputed basis for the articulation
of national identity. My older brothers-in-pen, writers and essayists, traditionally
very respected spokesmen of the people and hence long accustomed to public
attention, predictably grumble and complain. They feel that literati are unjustly
marginalized.
As for me, I must admit that I understand their
grievances. On the face of it, they are right. Yet, that writers of Slovenia
(and, I am sure, of Central European cultures at large) have emerged today
as a "disinherited party", is paradoxically the result of the writers' own
doing: their moral stance, civil disobedience and political dissent. As individuals
who struggled for freedom and against totalitarian limits to human spirit,
they were defeated by their own success. Freedom of choice also implies a
freedom not to choose to listen to the writers' voices any longer.
Thus, as much as I empathize with the wounded
writers's pride and deep disappointment in credit not being given where credit
was due, I did take time to contemplate the new situation and do some soul-searching.
It wasn't easy. One needs to be brutally honest with oneself.
It became evident to me that the larger
cultural and social scene is now undergoing a process of forming those
elective affinities that could not come to pass before Slovenian independence.
When the armchairs of power were still occupied by card-carrying communists,
the Writers Union, Slovenian P.E.N. Center, cultural magazines, and other
auxiliary agencies of what could be safely called a nascent civil society
represented a kind of umbrella institution.
The cultural umbrella offered a protection
for the best and brightest minds who articulated the people's hopes and
national interests in the most appealing way. The literary magazines such
as Perspectives in the sixties and Nova Revija in the eighties
were instrumental in giving public voice to the writers' historical responsibility.
The latter inspired writers even to the point of hammering out a draft
of a new constitution by which they masterfully challenged the ruling
party's grip on power in the late eighties.
Hence it should come as no surprise that
culture served as an outlet for those groups and individuals (dissident
politicians, social science experts, etc.) who needed cultural license
only as a kind of smoke screen behind which they semi-legally carried
on their specific activities.
After the communists stepped down from the throne,
such social mimicry was no longer necessary, veiled operations lost their
rationale and a cultural cover up became redundant. Having emerged from the
cultural closet, as it were, these individuals in pursuit of their specific
ambitions left culture and its institutions behind.
The shift of focus from culture to state
politics and the business world that took place after the communists and
allowed other parties in 1989 should not be regarded, however, as a "betrayal"
or "conformism", as the critical public opinion in Slovenia sometimes
has it. It is, instead, a natural and logical process wherein creative
potential is arranged along the whole spectrum of human action.
That culture ceased to be a privileged platform
from which to bring moral judgments to bear no writer can take lightly, myself
included. Life in an ivory tower would not appeal to us, veterans of passionate
public debates. Swear as we may that we only want to be writers and nothing
else, we all subconsciously indulged in the difficult yet rewarding role history
assigned us to play.
The role of revered shaman and people's spokesman
who tells the stories about historical taboos, repressed memory, about individual
solitude and social resistance, is over. The curtains are being drawn, the
performance of writers in the public arena is coming to an end. Imagine: a
poem carrying the hidden hope of a people, a novel in which an aesthetic statement
is pregnant with ethical claims that are publicly respected as such . .. all
this seems to be gone, gone forever with the winds of independence.
The social meaning of the writer's vocation
has by all accounts irreversibly changed. If the writer no longer runs the
risk of going to prison for what he publishes, then his word lacks the moral
weight it carried before. As long as the writers' search for an answer to
the question about ex Oriente lux, "the light from the East", is answered
in a readers's happy singing about the craving for ex Occidente luxus, "luxurious
goods from the West", the writers have only one chance left.
Writers need to abandon, I suggest, the endless
discussions about socialism with a human face and its radical criticism. Rather,
we need to focus on the human face alone. In other words, a political theme
no longer provides a desired historical and thus aesthetic alibi. The question
about whether freedom will know how to sing the way slaves sang about it,
if I may paraphrase late Serbian poet Branko Miljkovic, thus remains a rhetorical
question.
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