The Uses of Benjamin DeMott (Part 2)

Benjamin DeMott’s enquiry into the 9/11 Commission’s groupthink amounted to a culmination of one persistent strain in his close imagining. He often felt compelled to act as a witness when America’s leadership class found themselves in cultural fire-fights. One defining moment here was his experience watching helplessly as the white gentility suppressed the film Seventeen, … Read more

In Our Time

Barack Obama gave the following speech last month at the Take Back America Conference. Thank you. Thank you Roger Hickey and Bob Borosage for bringing us all together today and thank you for your leadership in the cause of a more progressive America. My friends, we meet here today at a time where we find … Read more

There Are No Accidents

Many of us watched with horror the national spectacle that unfolded to commemorate the death of 92-year-old Rosa Parks on October 24, 2005. The first woman to lie in state at the Nation’s capital (and the 31st person overall since 1852), Parks who died in Detroit had first been flown to Montgomery for a service … Read more

The Perils of Political Maternalism

Now that Cindy Sheehan has taken up attacking all who disagree with her, including Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D.-N.Y.), Democratic commentators are singing a different tune. Where once Sheehan was a sympathetic mother rightly demanding a meeting with President Bush—presumably in order to call him a “spewer of filth” to his face—now she is guilty … Read more

Just Say No!

Last week Barack Obama spoke on Rosa Parks’ legacy in his weekly “podcast.” While Obama’s talk was relatively informal, his comments are still worth considering. Here’s a transcript of his remarks… Two nights ago I received the news of the loss of a genuine American hero. As many of you now know, Rosa Parks died … Read more

Indispensable Men

A 70’s piece on The Uses of James Baldwin by Benjamin DeMott takes on a new resonance after a viewing of No Direction Home. Baldwin figures in the Dylan documentary because he was a presence in Greenwich Village during the 50s and 60s, but these two bohemian culture heroes shared more than a social context … Read more