TT WW EE NN TT II EE TT HH -- CC EE NN TT UU RR YY AA MM EE RR II CC AA NN CC UU LLTT UU RR EE American Culture in the 1970s Will Kaufman American Culture in the 1970s Twentieth-Century American Culture Series Editor: Martin Halliwell,Professor of American Studies, University ofLeicester This series provides accessible but challenging studies of American culture in the twentieth century. Each title covers a specific decade and offers a clear overview of its dominant cultural forms and influential texts, discussing their historical impact and cultural legacy. Collectively the series reframes the notion of ‘decade studies’ through the prism of cultural production and rethinks the ways in which decades are usually periodised. Broad contextual approaches to the particular decade are combined with focused case studies, dealing with themes of modernity, commerce, freedom, power, resistance, community, race, class, gender, sexuality, internationalism, technology, war and popular culture. American Culture in the 1910s Mark Whalan American Culture in the 1920s Susan Currell American Culture in the 1930s David Eldridge American Culture in the 1940s JacquelineFoertsch American Culture in the 1950s Martin Halliwell American Culture in the 1960s Sharon Monteith American Culture in the 1970s Will Kaufman American Culture in the 1980s Graham Thompson American Culture in the 1990s Colin Harrison American Culture in the 1970s Will Kaufman Edinburgh University Press In memory of my mother, Vickie Kaufman, and for my brothers, Mikeand Steve, survivors of theseventies © Will Kaufman, 2009 Edinburgh University Press Ltd 22 George Square, Edinburgh www.euppublishing.com Typeset in 11/13 pt Stempel Garamond by Servis Filmsetting Ltd, Stockport, Cheshire, and printed and bound in Great Britain by CPI Antony Rowe, Chippenham and Eastbourne A CIP record for this book is available from the British Library ISBN 978 0 7486 2142 2(hardback) ISBN 978 0 7486 2143 9(paperback) The right of Will Kaufman to be identified as author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. Published with the support of the Edinburgh University Scholarly Publishing Initiatives Fund. Contents List of Figures vi List of Case Studies vii Acknowledgements viii Chronology of 1970s American Culture xi Introduction: The Intellectual Context 1 1. Fiction and Poetry 27 2. Television and Drama 55 3. Film and Visual Culture 81 4. Popular Music and Style 113 5. Public Space and Spectacle 139 Conclusion: Rethinking the 1970s 167 Notes 182 Bibliography 208 Index 225 Figures I.1 Seventies Pad (c.1975) 6 1.1 Toni Morrison, author of Song of Solomon(1977) 52 2.1 The cast of M*A*S*H (1975) 59 2.2 Sammy Davis Jr and Carroll O’Connor in All in the Family(1972) 64 3.1 Mark Hammill as Luke Skywalker in Star Wars(1977) 95 3.2 Diane Arbus teaching at the Rhode Island School of Design (1970) 111 4.1 Bruce Springsteen (1980) 127 4.2 New York Dolls (1974) 129 4.3 Donna Summer with Gerald and Betty Ford at Disco Dinner Benefit (1979) 134 5.1 World Trade Center under construction (1971) 142 5.2 Protesters in front of Capitol, Washington DC (1971) 148 5.3 Richard Nixon receives the gift of a hard hat (1970) 154 5.4 President Carter and Ronald Reagan shake hands during debates (1980) 164 C.1 That Seventies Show(1998) 171 Case Studies Introduction The Culture of Narcissism(1978) 7 Orientalism(1978) 13 Our Bodies, Ourselves(1973) 19 1. Fiction and Poetry Language Poetry 33 Will You Please Be Quiet, Please?(1976) 37 Song of Solomon(1977) 48 2. Television and Drama M*A*S*H(1972–83) 57 All in the Family(1971–9) 61 David Mamet 73 3. Film and Visual Culture Taxi Driver(1976) 84 Star Wars(1977) 91 Diane Arbus 108 4. Popular Music and Style The Eagles 118 Bruce Springsteen 123 Disco 131 5. Public Space and Spectacle Learning from Las Vegas(1972) 143 Vietnam: Protest and Counter-protest 149 The Town Hall Debate (1971) 159 Acknowledgements When Martin Halliwell cornered me at an American Studies confer- ence and asked me to contribute a book on the 1970s to his ‘Twentieth- Century American Culture’ series, I positively blanched. ‘Come on,’ he said. ‘You know the references.’ I’m still not sure what he meant. The seventies wasn’t really my area, professionally – I was much more at home in the nineteenth century (the Civil War, Mark Twain) or, at the very latest, the 1930s (Woody Guthrie). My scholarly work on the seventies was limited to a few articles and chapters on Kurt Vonnegut and anti-Nixon satire. So, even now, I wonder if what Martin really meant was: ‘Come on. You were there.’ If you can remember the 1960s, so the joke goes, you can’t have been there. Well, I can certainly remember the seventies, and not always fondly. I entered my teens in 1971 – not a period of unalloyed happiness for many people. My mother was recently widowed, a low- paid secretary trying to support three boys through a string of job losses against a backdrop of high inflation and high unemployment: the previously unheard-of combination called ‘stagflation’. For a brief period my mother had a paid job in the local office of the anti-war pressure group, SANE; consequently, I often found myself in the midst of turbulent demonstrations in the waning years of the Vietnam War, including the May Day march on Washington in 1971. The war was Nixon’s, the battered economy was Carter’s, and the comedy was Gerald Ford’s (courtesy of Chevy Chase on Saturday Night Live). In my home town of Montclair, New Jersey, I was in the first class of chil- dren to be bussed across town to a school that neither of my older brothers knew anything about and for reasons I only barely under- stood. After gym class one day in 1974, the locker room reverberated to the wild chants of ‘Ali! Ali! Ali!’ I watched Anita Bryant get hit in the face with a pie on national television. The girl next door asked me Acknowledgements ix what I thought of this guy Springsteen’s new album, the one with the song about Rosalita on it. From Montclair Heights I watched the two skeletons of the World Trade Center gradually rise and overtake the Empire State Building, feeling vaguely affronted by the change to a familiar and beloved skyline. These and other ‘references’ have unavoidably fed into the writing of this book. I didn’t understand their significance at the time. This is where the scholarship has come in. I am grateful, first of all, to Martin Halliwell and to Nicola Ramsey at Edinburgh University Press for the opportunity to contribute this book and for their willing assistance throughout its composition. A number of colleagues and friends have pointed me to valuable mater- ial or honed my impressions through discussion. I’m grateful to Sämi Ludwig for his thoughts (and his work) on Toni Morrison; to Lynn Breeze for reminding me of the significance of the Last Whole Earth Catalog; to Nigel Wells for his gift of Sam Shepard’s Rolling Thunder Logbook; to Nick Selby for material on the Language poets; to Donald Morse for presenting me with his authoritative study of Kurt Vonnegut; and to Zoltán Abádi-Nagy for sharing his critical wisdom about Vonnegut, Robert Coover and other seventies writers during a delightful drive across the Hungarian countryside. I am especially grateful to have received from the hand of Kasia Boddy a copy of her masterful Boxing: A Cultural History which illuminated so much about Norman Mailer and the Ali–Foreman ‘Rumble in the Jungle’. My friends and, respectively, present and former colleagues, Jan Wardle and Heidi Macpherson, were always there when the work seemed to get on top of me. I appreciate the conference funding awarded by my department and faculty at the University of Central Lancashire. Finally, to my dear wife Sarah and our ace sons, Reuben and Theo . . . well, you know.
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