The essential Ellen Willis

Ellen Willis

Book - 2014

"Out of the Vinyl Deeps, published in 2011, introduced a new generation to the incisive, witty, and merciless voice of Ellen Willis through her pioneering rock music criticism. In the years that followed, Willis's daring insights went beyond popular music, taking on such issues as pornography, religion, feminism, war, and drugs. The Essential Ellen Willis gathers writings that span forty years and are both deeply engaged with the times in which they were first published and yet remain fresh and relevant amid today's seemingly intractable political and cultural battles. Whether addressing the women's movement, sex and abortion, race and class, or war and terrorism, Willis brought to each a distinctive attitude--passionate... yet ironic, clear-sighted yet hopeful. Offering a compelling and cohesive narrative of Willis's liberationist "transcendence politics," the essays--among them previously unpublished and uncollected pieces--are organized by decade from the 1960s to the 2000s, with each section introduced by young writers who share Willis's intellectual bravery, curiosity, and lucidity: Irin Carmon, Spencer Ackerman, Cord Jefferson, Ann Friedman, and Sara Marcus. The Essential Ellen Willis concludes with excerpts from Willis's unfinished book about politics and the cultural unconscious, introduced by her longtime partner, Stanley Aronowitz. An invaluable reckoning of American society since the 1960s, this volume is a testament to an iconoclastic and fiercely original voice. "--

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Subjects
Published
Minneapolis : University of Minnesota Press [2014]
Language
English
Main Author
Ellen Willis (author)
Other Authors
Spencer Ackerman (contributor), Stanley Aronowitz (editor of compilation), Irin Carmon, Ann Friedman, Cord Jefferson, Sara Marcus, 1977-, Nona Willis Aronowitz, 1984-
Physical Description
xv, 513 pages, 12 pages of unnumbered plates : illustrations ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9780816681204
9780816681211
  • Transcendence / Nona Willis Aronowitz
  • The sixties : up from radicalism
  • Up from radicalism : a feminist journal (US Magazine, 1969)
  • Dylan (Cheetah, 1967)
  • The cultural revolution saved from drowning (The New Yorker, September 1969)
  • Women and the myth of consumerism (Ramparts, 1970)
  • Talk of the town : hearing (The New Yorker, February 1969)
  • The seventies : exile on Main Street
  • Beginning to see the light (Village Voice, 1977)
  • Janis Joplin (Rolling Stone Illustrated History of Rock 'n' Roll, 1980)
  • Classical and baroque sex in everyday life (Village Voice, May 1979)
  • Memoirs of a non-prom queen (Rolling Stone, August 1976)
  • The trial of Arline Hunt (Rolling Stone, 1975)
  • Abortion : is a woman a person? (Village Voice, March and April 1979)
  • Feminism, moralism, and pornography (Village Voice, October and November 1979)
  • The family : love it or leave it (Village Voice, September 1979)
  • Tom Wolfe's failed optimism (Village Voice, 1977)
  • The velvet underground (Stranded, by Greil Marcus, 1979)
  • Next year in Jerusalem (Rolling Stone, April 1977)
  • The eighties : coming down again
  • Toward a feminist sexual revolution (Social Text, Fall 1982)
  • Lust horizons : is the women's movement pro-sex? (Village Voice, June 1981)
  • The last unmarried person in America (Village Voice, July 1981)
  • Teenage sex : a modesty proposal (Village Voice, October 1986)
  • Sisters under the skin? : confronting race and sex (Village Voice Literary Supplement, June 1982)
  • Radical feminism and feminist radicalism (Social Text, Summer 1984)
  • Escape from New York (Village Voice, July 1981)
  • oming down again : after the age of excess (Village Voice, January 1989)
  • The drug war : from vision to vice (Village Voice, April 1986)
  • The drug war : hell no, I won't go (Village Voice, September 1989)
  • The diaper manifesto : we need a child-rearing movement (Village Voice, July 1986)
  • To Emma, with love (Village Voice, December 1989)
  • The nineties : decade of denial
  • Selections from Decade of denial (Don't Think, Smile!, 2000)
  • Ending poor people as we know them (Village Voice, December 1994)
  • What we don't talk about when we talk about The bell curve (Don't Think, Smile!, 2000)
  • Rodney King's revenge (Don't Think, Smile!, 2000)
  • Million man mirage (Village Voice, November 1995)
  • Monica and Barbara and primal concerns (The New York Times, March 1999)
  • Villains and victims (Don't Think, Smile!, 2000)
  • 'Tis pity he's a whore (Don't Think, Smile!, 2000)
  • Is motherhood moonlighting? (Newsday, March 1991)
  • Say it loud : out of wedlock and proud (Newsday, February 1994)
  • Bring in the noise (The Nation, April 1996)
  • Intellectual work in the culture of austerity (Don't Think, Smile!, 2000)
  • The aughts : our politics, ourselves
  • Why I'm not for peace (Radical Society, April 2002)
  • Confronting the contradictions (Dissent, Summer 2003)
  • The mass psychology of terrorism (Implicating Empire, edited by Stanley Aronowitz, Heather Gautney, and Clyde W. Barrow, 2003)
  • Dreaming of war (The Nation, September 2001)
  • Freedom from religion (The Nation, February 2001)
  • Our mobsters, ourselves (The Nation, March 2001)
  • Is there still a Jewish question? : why I'm an anti-anti-Zionist (Wrestling with Zion / edited by Tony Kushner and Alisa Solomon, 2003)
  • Ghosts, fantasies, and hope (Dissent, Fall 2005)
  • Escape from freedom : what's the matter with Tom Frank? (and the lefties who love him) (Situations, 2006)
  • Three elegies for Susan Sontag (New Politics, Summer 2005)
  • Selections from "The cultural unconscious in American politics : why we need a Freudian left".
Review by New York Times Review

"I LOVE ELLEN WILLIS," a friend told me upon hearing there would be an anthology collecting the work of the cultural critic, who was also The New Yorker's first pop music writer. "She makes me feel less embarrassed to enjoy the Who." What is embarrassing about the Who? Guitars bashed, exploding drum kits. Come to think of it, guitars, period. Songs that are insistently melodic, which signals a fundamental optimism, which is to say a terminal uncoolness. Anthems about their generation, which celebrate the fiction of collective transcendence, of freedom achieved through rock music. The Who is everything about the '60s that we now like to repudiate as laughably naïve - everything about the '60s that inspired Willis, a Bronx-born, Queens-raised Barnard grad, to leave her first marriage, become a writer and fight for a sexual revolution. The Who thrilled her because, as she wrote in 1969 (the same year she formed, with Shulamith Firestone, the radical feminist group Redstockings), "they are no longer kids, but they have not forgotten." "The Essential Ellen Willis," which gathers 40 years of her work, carries the sound of a feminist who never forgot the ideals of the '60s, and who never stopped arguing for what those years gave her and others. (Willis died in 2006.) "The valorization of too much allowed me, for the first time in my life, to have something like enough," she recalled in 1989, in an article for The Village Voice. The collection is edited by Willis's daughter, Nona Willis Aronowitz, and divided by decade; it begins with a 1969 essay on Willis's awakening to feminism and concludes with excerpts from an unfinished book exploring the "cultural unconscious in American politics." In between, there is relentlessly rigorous thinking on Janis Joplin, Bell Hooks, child care, Bill Clinton, "The Sopranos," and Sept. 11. To emphasize Willis's continuing importance, her daughter, who was born in 1984, chose "Willis-like" writers of her own generation - Ann Friedman, Irin Carmon, Spencer Ackerman, Cord Jefferson, and Sara Marcus - to contribute prefaces for each decade. They rightfully note that Willis's critiques remain depressingly relevant. (Take this sentence, written in 1979, in an essay on the rise of family values: "The pursuit of ecstasy - in freedom of the imagination and a sense of communal possibility as much as in sex, drugs, or rock and roll - was no longer our inalienable right. Babies, however, were a socially acceptable source of joy.") But their prefaces are nearly indistinguishable from one another in sentiment and tone, and there's a striking difference between those pages and the penetrative depth of Willis's thinking - the result of a painstakingly slow writing process and scrupulous self-questioning that gave her work moral and intellectual authority. That disparity may lead one to wonder if such thinking is even possible at a time when discourse is shaped by the Internet, which demands self-congratulatory clique-building and fresh outrage every hour on the hour. No one sounded like Willis then, and no one sounds like her now: wry, playful, humble, genuinely searching, intellectually formidable. Though Willis admitted she had an addiction to being right, that didn't mean she had an addiction to being correct. She couldn't quite get with the left's reflexive anti-Americanism and its preoccupation with postmodern theories that emphasized difference, which kept the left unhelpfully divided against itself. Nor was she vehemently anticapitalist; consumerism provided a little power and pleasure in a culture that didn't give anyone much of either. But who gets to define freedom? For Willis, this was the essential question, and those on the left were ceding precious ground if they continued to let the right talk as if conservatives had trademarked the concept. She was committed to calling out the way Americans preferred to further entrench themselves in anxiety and denial rather than live as if they really did believe in the pursuit of happiness they mouthed off about back in 1776. The year she died, Willis wrote: "If an ambivalent public hears only one side of a question, the conservative side, passionately argued ... and they perceive that the putative spokespeople for feminism and liberalism are actually uncomfortable about advancing their views - the passionate arguers will carry the day." We are still in desperate need of a passionate argument for a less punitive, more pleasurable life. If the culture were to believe, as Willis did, that sexual satisfaction was a human need rather than a hard-won holiday, a woman's right to exist as both sexual being and rational creature might no longer remain at the mercy of election cycles and judicial prejudice. WRITING ABOUT STEVIE WONDER, Willis noticed that he had "the power to make optimism ... marvelously credible." So does she. But her hope was never starry-eyed. See the last lines of an essay on the Velvet Underground. "I believe that we are all, openly or secretly, struggling against one or another kind of nihilism," she wrote. "I believe that body and spirit are not really separate, though it often seems that way. I believe that redemption is never impossible and always equivocal. But I guess that I just don't know." The self-described optimist and utopian was also a self-described lover of irony, one who could look back at her '60s self and appraise it drolly: "As the noted feminist Mick Jagger was to put it a couple of years later, American girls want everything - and I was no exception." Her visions were rooted in a reflection on what she called the concrete realities of daily life, on our limitations and insecurities. She once wrote that the reason she preferred Lou Reed and Iggy Pop to David Bowie was that Bowie didn't seem quite real. Or, as she explained, "Real to me, that is - which in rock and roll is the only fantasy that counts." For Willis, if your revolutionary thinking didn't accurately reflect reality, it couldn't change reality. In her version of liberation, sexual revolutionaries aren't smug, performative hedonists who play out their fantasies in villas on Mustique; they wonder instead how thin the line is between courage and delusion while drinking coffee alone in their apartments or sitting on benches outside the Laundromat. And rock writers don't turn their prose up to 11 to compete with the bands they're covering, or get so bound up in the role of gnomic wizard that they can't just shrug their shoulders and say, as Willis did, well, I was wrong about the Ramones; they admit to communing with what she called "the screaming teenager" inside. To Willis, acknowledging the real meant acknowledging that we are minds connected to bodies, and that what may not seem real at all - the unconscious and the psyche - are very powerful forces. Nearly every piece is a reminder that the culture we live in, even when we don't profess its prevailing beliefs, has an effect on the psyche; that we internalize expectations even when we think we're free; that we need to gather in groups to change our minds and the minds of others, because otherwise we stand alone in our pain and confusion, thinking that we're the problem. One of the book's best essays is about a trip to Israel, when Willis immersed herself in the Orthodox Judaism her brother had given his life over to. In it Willis portrays herself, often comically, as both stiffnecked and nearly seduced by the promise of silencing her own struggles. "Find out what you're living for, Ellen!" a rabbi says to her during that journey. "Clarity or death!" Each sentence in this collection bears the mark of a writer haunted by the notion that without a constant search for clarity on what mattered most to her, she would never realize the life - or love, or society - she hoped for. If we persist in thinking that the members of her generation deceived themselves when they believed they were beginning to see the light, we deserve every bit of darkness that is blinding us now. For those of us who would rather not get fooled again, we have these 513 pages as a guide. CARLENE BAUER is the author of the novel "Frances and Bernard" and the memoir "Not That Kind of Girl."

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [July 20, 2014]