OPEN SOURCE: Postnational American Literature, from Moby Dick to Joseph O'Neill
From: Radio Open Source with Christopher Lydon
Length: 00:58:54
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Piece Description
Chris is in conversation here first with the Dartmouth analyst of novels and dreams, Donald Pease, then with the novelist Joseph O'Neill, the post 9-11 novelist of cricket-in-New-York. Both guests look to the Caribbean prophet of post-colonialism and Melville commentator, the late great C. L. R. James (1901 – 1989).
Don Pease offers a modern key into Melville, one that turns on seeing that the hero of his masterwork is not the narrator and only survivor Ishmael — that was “the Cold War reading.” Neither do the feckless New England mates Starbuck, Stubb and Flask come close to checking the mad totalitarian Ahab or saving the ship or the day. Rather it’s the motley, polyglot sailors and whale hunters, Melville’s “mariners, renegades and castaways,” who sense what’s going on and stand for an alternative. It’s the crew from every nation and corner of the world who are victims of the tale and the only heroes in it. They’re not just the most skillful seamen but “the most generous and magnificent human beings on board,” in C. L. R. James words. Above all it’s the South Sea pagan Queequeg who embodies the universal ideals of skill, brotherhood, courage, heart.
Melville drew on that first and deepest dream of America, as a global utopia of transnationals — America as a trans-nation before it was a nation. Kansan-Kenyan-Hawaiian Barack Obama mined the same dream as a candidate. I was struck in the moment by how boldly, beamingly he put forth the basic premise in his campaign digression to Berlin in July ‘08, where a vast crowd cheered his self-introduction “as a citizen,” he said, “a proud citizen of the United States, and a fellow citizen of the world.” He was drawing on the dream of his father, whose father had been a cook and house servant to the British, until America “answered his prayer for a better life.” Obama was holding up a renewed dream of America not as world’s policeman, much less world ruler, but as the world’s story.
Obama’s opposition picks up on the transnational theme, too, and turns it upside down. The rabid right feeds fantasies that Obama wasn’t even born here, that he’s a closet Muslim, an immigrant without papers, and/or a “soft terrorist,” a European implant or maybe a space alien. But the taunts surely say less about Obama than about the failed, fear-stricken voices that are reduced to nutbag versions of nativism and neo-imperialism.
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Everybody knows by now that Joseph O'Neill's Netherland has been Mr. Obama’s bedtime reading this spring. This is said to mean that our president is not all-wonk, that he still has a writer’s appetite for imaginative prose. To me it’s downright strange that nobody goes on to ask: but why this book? and what might it mean to him? These are the questions I’m chasing down here with the author.
The affinities between O’Neill and O’Bama are delicious. O’Neill, like the president a fine amateur athlete, had been playing cricket on Staten Island less than 48 hours before we met in Boston. Like the president, O’Neill is a hybrid of two cultures: his father comes of a family of IRA tough guys from West Cork; his mother is the daughter of a Syrian-Christian-Turkish hotel keeper on the Eastern Mediterranean port town, Mersin, in Turkey. O’Neill grew up mainly in The Hague in Holland. He went to mainly English schools and has a law degree from Cambridge. O’Neill’s great work of non-fiction, Blood-Dark Track, a “family history,” could have been subtitled Dreams, and Nightmares, from my Grandfathers. At a White House ceremony recently, O’Neill told me that not the least of what he shared with the president was a raging urge to step outside for a cigarette.
In the near background of our conversation is the immortal Trinidadian cricket aficionado C. L. R. James (1901 – 1989) and his autobiographical masterpiece, Beyond a Boundary. People keep commenting on Joseph O’Neill’s debt to F. Scott Fitgerald and The Great Gatsby for this novel about a climber and halfway gangster, Netherland’s Trinidadian-American Chuck Ramkissoon, who dreams a new American dream and ends up, like Gatsby, literally dead in the water. But O’Neill is in much deeper debt to C. L. R. James for his cricket vision.
James was an inspiring writer in the pan-African liberationist movements of the 1930s and after. He was a fierce anti-imperialist and, contrarily, an ardent champion of pre-imperial English culture (he had virtually memorized Thackeray’s Vanity Fair in his teens) and most especially of cricket, the country sport that the Empire took to the colonies. “Cricket is much more than a game for Mr. James,” as Neville Cardus of the Guardian put it; “it is a way of life.”
Broadcast History
Debut! Never aired, aside from podcast.
Timing and Cues
Billboard: 00:00 - 00:59 In cue: "I'm Christopher Lydon, listening for variations ..." Out cue: " ...next, on Open Source."
Music for News Break: 1:00 - 5:59
Segment 1: 6:00 - 18:59
In cue: "I'm Christopher Lydon, this is Open Source ..."
Out cue: "...Donald Pease of Dartmouth on open Source. We'll be right back."
Music Break 1: 19:00 - 19:59
Segment 2: 20:00 - 38:59
In cue: " I'm Christopher Lydon, this Open Source, an American conversation with global attitude..."
Out cue: "...we'll be back with the novelist Joseph O'Neill on the cricket revival in New York. It's a sort of lesson on America after 911. This is Open Source."
Music Break 2: 39:00- 39:59
Segment 3: 40:00 - 58:59
In cue: "I'm Christopher Lydon, this is Open Source, a global conversation from the Watson Institute..."
Out cue: "... radio open source dot org, I'm Christopher Lydon, thank you for joining the conversation." [MUSIC HIT]




