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- <text id=92TT0535>
- <title>
- Mar. 09, 1992: A Cheap and Easy Target
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Mar. 09, 1992 Fighting the Backlash Against Feminism
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CULTURE, Page 72
- A Cheap and Easy Target
- </hdr><body>
- <p>The downfall of the arts endowment was caused by a bungling
- cultural community, not just election pressures
- </p>
- <p>By William A. Henry III--With reporting by Ann Blackman/
- Washington and Daniel S. Levy/New York
- </p>
- <p> The cost of the National Endowment for the Arts amounts
- to about 69 cents--not dollars, just pocket change--per
- U.S. citizen per year. Its share of total public spending is so
- small that in the short form of the federal budget, it is
- rounded off to zero. Of the nearly 90,000 NEA grants awarded
- over the past quarter-century, at most a few dozen have sparked
- any significant public controversy--and the cumulative cost
- of all those was less than a cent a person, at a time when
- people often won't stoop to pick up a penny from the street.
- </p>
- <p> Yet despite this fiscal insignificance and the innocuous,
- even noble, nature of almost everything it underwrites, the NEA
- has become one of the most controversial agencies of
- government. A target for President Reagan on the theory that
- merit ought to be defined by the populist mechanism of the box
- office, it spent the past decade spiraling downward from dreams
- of expansion to danger of demise. Artists and administrators who
- benefit from the NEA's money and imprimatur concede they have
- blown the political debate. They allowed the right wing to
- misrepresent culture as a hotbed of the unpatriotic, the
- irreligious, the sexually permissive and perverse. "We have let
- the extremes dictate the battlefield," says Milton Rhodes,
- president of the American Council for the Arts.
- </p>
- <p> Anti-NEA invective has hit a nerve and thus proved a
- fund-raising tool for Senator Jesse Helms and other
- conservatives. Last week it became a rallying point for
- presidential candidate Patrick Buchanan. Assailing Tongues
- Untied, a PBS documentary by a gay black who received $5,000
- from the NEA via two intermediate agencies, a Buchanan TV ad
- intoned, "This so-called art has glorified homosexuality,
- exploited children and perverted the image of Jesus Christ."
- </p>
- <p> It is a measure of how much arts leaders misjudged the
- effectiveness of such tactics that after two years of denouncing
- NEA chairman John Frohnmayer as a sellout for his attempts to
- placate the right wing, last week they were mourning his forced
- resignation and envisioning his heir as sure to be worse. Says
- Jack O'Brien, artistic director of San Diego's Old Globe
- Theater: "If President Bush got a message in New Hampshire, we
- did too." A chilling sign for arts leaders is that some liberals
- now join in doubting whether government should finance ideas.
- It was the talk of Washington cultural circles last week that
- ABC correspondents Sam Donaldson and Cokie Roberts endorsed
- abolishing the agency on David Brinkley's Sunday news show.
- </p>
- <p> In two turbulent years, Frohnmayer enraged artists by
- suspending a few grants on political or sexual grounds and by
- requiring all recipients to certify in writing that their work
- was not obscene, a term even the U.S. Supreme Court has trouble
- defining. He then irked conservatives by dropping the
- certification and reinstating some taboo artists. He tried to
- appease two sides utterly uninterested in compromise--one
- ablaze with the First Amendment, the other afire with populist
- indignation at forcing citizens to support unwelcome ideas. He
- was also contending with congressional demagoguery and, inside
- the agency, with a deputy and potential successor, Anne-Imelda
- Radice, widely regarded as a watchdog for the right.
- </p>
- <p> In the melee, artists belatedly realized, they were lured
- into arguing the free-speech rights of a fringe few rather than
- the central value of culture in defining a society. Says Andre
- Bishop, artistic director of New York City's Lincoln Center
- Theater: "We have been between a rock and a hard place. Rallying
- behind endangered groups produced a big problem. Not rallying
- behind them is unthinkable."
- </p>
- <p> Ostensibly the struggle has been about a handful of works
- meant by their creators to challenge and shock. Underlying these
- confrontations is a philosophical battle over the nature of
- government. The rationale for withholding NEA monies because
- some substantial segment of the population finds a work
- objectionable (while another substantial segment applauds) is,
- in essence, the same as the rationale for withholding funding
- for abortion or even abortion counseling. The idea is that after
- electing leaders and paying taxes, a citizen still ought to
- retain a moral veto.
- </p>
- <p> This can be viewed as a healthy vestige of New England
- town meetings. But it can also be seen as part of the unhealthy
- wider erosion of consensus. Rather than a pluralist tolerance
- in which one seeks only to ensure that one's side is heard,
- anti-NEA campaigners seem to seek a monopoly in which no other
- values can be affirmed by government. Says Robert Dugan, public
- affairs director of the National Association of Evangelicals,
- which represents 45,000 churches: "Unless the President can get
- someone who will stand up to the arts community and be firm with
- the liberal elite, the end will come. The NEA asked for it by
- rubbing our noses in it."
- </p>
- <p> What their noses were being rubbed in was a reminder that
- in a heterogeneous society there are other, often antagonistic,
- points of view--with equal entitlement to respect. It is
- ironic that the NEA battle has been so much misunderstood by
- artIt is not about money or common sense, but about symbols--and thus its intensity affirms the true importance of culture.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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