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- ESSAY, Page 96Metaphors of the World, Unite!By Lance Morrow
-
-
- Forty-eight intellectuals from around the world recently
- assembled to help celebrate the sesquicentennial of Boston
- University by trying to find a metaphor for the age in which we
- live. It was an elegant game, but also inadvertently right for an
- age of television and drugs, in which the world is reduced to a
- sound bite or a capsule, a quick fix of meaning.
-
- "Postmodern Age" has always been an empty description, and
- "Postindustrial Age" was a phrase about as interesting as a
- suburban tract. They are not metaphors anyway, but little black
- flags of aftermath. An age that is "post"-anything is, by
- definition, confused and dangerously overextended, like Wile E.
- Coyote after he has left the cartoon plane of solid rock and
- freezes in thin air, then tries to tiptoe back along a line of
- space before gravity notices and takes him down to a little poof!
- in the canyon far below.
-
- The metaphysics of the possibilities can flare and darken. The
- Holocaust and other catastrophes of the 20th century invite the
- term post-apocalyptic. But a world veering toward the 21st century
- sometimes has an edgy intuition that it is "pre-apocalyptic." Last
- summer Francis Fukuyama, a State Department planner, resolved the
- matter peacefully. He published an article proclaiming the "end of
- history," a result of the worldwide triumph of Western liberal
- democracy. Hence this is the posthistoric age, a fourth dimension
- in which the human pageant terminates in a fuzz of meaningless
- well-being. Intellectuals sometimes nurture a spectacular
- narcissism about the significance of the age they grace.
-
- Is there one brilliant, compact image that captures the era of
- Gorbachev and the greenhouse effect, of global communications and
- AIDS, of mass famine and corporate imperialisms, of space
- exploration and the world's seas awash in plastic? The Age of
- Leisure and the Age of the Refugee coexist with the Age of Clones
- and the Age of the Deal. Time is fractured in the contemporaneous.
- We inhabit not one age but many ages simultaneously, from the
- Bronze to the Space. Did the Ayatullah Khomeini live in the same
- millennium as, say, Los Angeles?
-
- The era's label should be at least binary, like Dickens' "the
- best of times, the worst of times," again no metaphor. It is a
- fallacy to think there is one theme. Like all ages, it is a time
- of angels and moping dogs -- after Ralph Waldo Emerson's lines: "It
- seems as if heaven had sent its insane angels into our world as to
- an asylum, and here they will break out in their native music and
- utter at intervals the words they have heard in heaven; then the
- mad fit returns and they mope and wallow like dogs."
-
- In Boston, Historian Hugh Thomas (Lord Thomas of Swynnerton)
- said the world now is a "tessellated pavement without cement." He
- was quoting something Edmund Burke said about Charles Townshend,
- a brilliant but erratic 18th century British statesman. Not bad,
- but somewhat mandarin. The audience had to remember, or look up,
- tessellation, which is a mosaic of small pieces of marble, glass
- or tile. This age, thinks Lord Thomas, is a mosaic of fragments,
- with nothing to hold them together. Is it an age of brilliant
- incoherence? Yes. It is also an age of incoherent stupidity.
-
- One might put the mosaic in motion by thinking of this as the
- age of the hand-held TV channel changer. The electronic worldmind
- (and such a thing is coming into being, a global mass conformed by
- what passes through its billion eyes into the collective brain) has
- a short attention span and dreams brief dreams. When history
- vaporizes itself this way -- its events streaming off instantly
- into electrons fired into space and then recombining mysteriously
- in human living rooms and minds around the world -- then people
- face a surreal pluralism of realities. The small world that the
- astronauts showed us from space is also, down here, a psychotically
- tessellated overload of images. The planet reaches for the channel
- changer, a restless mind-altering instrument. Like drugs, it turns
- human consciousness into a landscape that is passive, agitated and
- insatiable -- a fatal configuration.
-
- Historians can speak of the Enlightenment or the Baroque Era
- or La Belle Epoque and not fear that they are describing
- developments in only a fraction of the world. Now the metaphor must
- be global. There is no figure of speech so powerful or acrobatic
- that it can cover such a drama, the world that looks like the
- product of a shattered mind, without some immense event (an
- invasion by aliens perhaps) that overrides all else. Michael
- Harrington once called this the Accidental Century. Intellectuals
- sometimes ignore the role of inadvertence. "The fecundity of the
- unexpected," Proudhon said, "far exceeds the statesman's prudence."
- If scientists ever perform the alchemy of cold fusion, the age will
- have a name, and the future of the world will be immeasurably
- altered.
-
- Metaphors for the age tend to be emotional and subjective, as
- poetry is. Perspective, passion and experience choose the words.
- Betty Friedan, saturated with the history of feminism's Long March
- and where it began, speaks of amazing freedom, as if that were the
- song of the past 20 years. Others are haunted by the obliteration
- of artistic form, of moral values and all traditional stabilities.
- Some know that by now humankind has exhausted its capacity to
- surprise itself in the doing of evil.
-
- Language takes its life from life, and gives it back to life
- as myth, as metaphor, something that has a counterlife of its own.
- In a world of blindingly accelerating change, language can no
- longer fashion its metaphors fast enough to stabilize people with
- a spiritual counterlife, and so self-knowledge may deteriorate to
- a moral blur, like the snow of electrons on a television screen.
- In some sense the world is plunging on without benefit of metaphor,
- a dangerous loss. The eyes do not have time to adjust to either the
- light or the dark.