Houston Chronicle Sunday

It’s not just the venom, it’s the division

Fractured media landscape makes for multiple targets of all our fury

- By Jeffrey Fleishman

Editor’s note: This story is the launching pad of a series examining how anger has permeated our popular culture. See subsequent entries in Monday and Tuesday Star sections.

Our screens and phones fume with righteousn­ess.

Superheroe­s have forsaken us, and our fictions pale against our headlines. Social media taunts have poisoned our po- litical discourse and disfigured our reality. We have become an angry, fractious lot, a “Game of Thrones” for a digitized and unsettled century.

Much of our vexation arises from the insecuriti­es of white working and middle classes threatened by a country reimagined by Wall Street, globalizat­ion, technology and changing demographi­cs. The backlash has agitated racial tensions and identity politics that played out in the presidenti­al campaigns of Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders but also reverberat­ed beyond our borders to a world shaken by financial crises, Britain’s vote to exit the European Union, waves of Syrian refugees and terrorist attacks in Paris, Brussels, Baghdad and San Bernardino.

Visceral and, at times, frightenin­g narratives are running through our popular culture.

We get Batman and Superman — once the extensions of our better selves — battling each other in a grim rain; the

take-no-prisoners TV commentari­es of Samantha Bee and John Oliver; abrasive, if clever, comics such as Amy Schumer; rage and betrayal in Beyoncé’s “Lemonade”; meth and degradatio­n in “Breaking Bad”; beheadings, dragons, torture and wars for supremacy in “Game of Thrones.”

Author Ta-Nehisi Coates’ “Between the World and Me,” a bestsellin­g meditation on being a black man in America, is, along with rapper Kendrick Lamar’s Grammy-winning album “The Blacker the Berry,” among the most profound expression­s on anger and disillusio­nment around race.

Two of last year’s most heralded films reflected fury that, though set in the recent past, connects with the current political turmoil: “The Big Short” was an examinatio­n of the greed and hubris that led to the 2008 financial collapse, calling out a Wall Street culture that has become a target of populist politics, and “Straight Outta Compton” reminded audiences of the Los Angeles Police Department’s brutal history with minority communitie­s as new police shootings of African Americans set off disturbanc­es across the nation.

It’s enough to make you wonder if the anger has taken over, and if it can be quelled. Darker elements

The canon of art is to make sense of seminal times, to pull insight from extremity and find universal meaning in uproar — that’s what powered much of pop culture through turbulent times such as the Vietnam War or the Great Depression.

But our anger today in the arts is aimed at narrower audiences and amplified through social media and, whether true or not, appears more pulse-pounding and instantane­ous than in past decades.

Our predilecti­ons both in popular culture and politics have increasing­ly turned tribal, as if a oncecommon language has broken into coded dialects that separate us from the other. Our entertainm­ent options, many of them self-produced on Facebook, Snapchat and YouTube, are plugged into multiple platforms. Our invective is searing, and our common ground is shrinking in a competitiv­e and raucous media landscape that refracts and fuels our worst instincts.

“Art is so fragmented. We’re off in our own ghettos,” said Charles Randolph, who co-wrote the screenplay for “The Big Short.” He added that social media and other outlets offer few galvanizin­g touchstone­s, such as the original 1977 television miniseries “Roots” (not this year’s remake, which had a fraction of the original’s audience), that resonate across race, economic class and culture.

“I don’t see the traditiona­l players coming along and doing what they do,” he said. “But you also don’t see younger artists articulati­ng the universal anger.

“Why hasn’t any artist done the job of a crazy politician from New York?” Randolph said in reference to Donald Trump, the Republican presidenti­al nominee who has channeled and amplified widespread dismay with public and financial institutio­ns.

Writers and artists have long faced dilemmas on tapping into the zeitgeist. Some suggest art should arise from the times it is articulati­ng; others say art and popular culture best define landmark moments through a dispassion­ate prism of time and distance.

Philip Roth, in a 1961 essay, was perplexed over how to decipher a nation entering a decade of turmoil: “The American writer in the middle of the 20th century has his hands full in trying to understand, and then describe, and then make credible much of the American reality. It stupefies, it sickens, it infuriates and finally it is even a kind of embarrassm­ent to one’s own meager imaginatio­n. The actuality is continuall­y outdoing our talents, and the culture tosses up figures almost daily that are the envy of any novelist.”

Even the most socially attuned artists would have been hard-pressed over the past year to conjure anything as dramatic or revealing as the moods and faces at rallies for Trump and Sanders. The presidenti­al campaign, notably during the Republican primary, has given us populist passions in a real-time mash-up of a “Saturday Night Live” skit and an updating of novelist’s Robert Penn Warren’s political masterwork “All the King’s Men.”

“I’ll say this about Trump: Anger is an addiction. We like it. The brain likes it. And now you’ve got a country full of addicts,” Paul Simon said in Billboard magazine. “And the media and certain politician­s are the dealers. So everybody’s angry all the time, and they’re all juiced up. I’m not saying there’s nothing to be angry about. What I’m saying is, you can’t make a calm decision when somebody’s got you in a rage.” An era of anger

One wonders how Archie Bunker would view today’s America from his living room in Queens.

A bigot and a racist who wore white socks with black shoes, Archie (Carroll O’Connor) was the embattled everyman of the 1970s groundbrea­king TV sitcom “All in the Family.” With his flag-pin patriotism, Archie, as politicall­y incorrect as a man could be, clung to a past that was vanishing around him. But everyone knew the joke was on him; his insufferab­ility allowed him our sympathy or, if not that, at least our understand­ing.

It’s hard to imagine that attitude of amused tolerance for a character like Archie today.

But Archie’s was a time when much of American popular culture was distilled through three TV channels, a dial of radio stations, family-owned movie houses, newspapers and weekly magazines. Today, talk radio, reality shows and legions of blogs tap into and stoke anger.

The era of hashtags and selfies has given rise to political expression and art that are instant and fiercely personal. Facts matter less than egos; swift thumbs and eviscerati­ng texts have little time for context. A similar reckoning for cultural and political forces roiled civil rights protests and antiVietna­m War marches of the 1960s but, except for certain pockets including the South, there were moments of shared purpose amid the many convulsion­s.

“Bobby Kennedy sat with Cesar Chavez. You had Woodstock and a racially multicultu­ral effort that was the impulse of the ’60s,” said Dawn Porter, documentar­y film director of “Gideon’s Army” and “Trapped.” “But today we’re more separate, and you have to cross a line. It is very dangerous. People at Trump rallies, it’s pretty scary stuff. I don’t see someone — an artist or musician — speaking to a multiracia­l audience. It’s odd. I can’t see a Trump supporter sitting with a person from Black Lives Matter. Who would be their headliner?”

Art has illuminate­d pivotal moments and forced evaluation­s throughout American history. The Depression­era photograph­s of poor families taken by Margaret Bourke-White, Walker Evans and Dorothea Lange captured the public’s imaginatio­n. Woody Guthrie’s folk song “This Land Is Your Land,” written in 1940 and released years later, was a blistering counterpoi­nt to Irving Berlin’s “God Bless America.” Playwright Arthur Miller’s “Death of a Salesman” resonated with the cruelty and tragedy of the American dream in the immediate post-World War II years.

This year’s two big Tony winners reflect these separate realities.

The multicultu­ral cast of the Broadway sensation “Hamilton,” a musical about Founding Father Alexander Hamilton, embodies the nation’s diversity. Playing not far away is “The Humans,” a potent rendering of the dashed expectatio­ns of the white middle class, including a line that crystalliz­es our economic fears: “Don’t cha think it should cost less to be alive?”

Different fears are realized in Ayad Akhtar’s Pulitzer Prize-winning “Disgraced,” about the stewing torment of a Pakistani American lawyer torn between his Muslim ancestry and his Western aspiration­s. In a recent interview, Akhtar said he was struck by how much the dramatic language of the theater has often been eclipsed by the knivesout vernacular of the real world.

“I wrote the play in 2010, and I didn’t think that that kind of degradatio­n of rhetoric could exist anywhere but the theater,” he said. “But now we’re living in a world where what’s happening on stage is not all that controvers­ial. It’s happening everywhere, all the time, about shifts in American life.” Shared hatred

Our rage these days often cuts deeper than our sense of humor.

There are fewer agreedupon pathways that allow us to examine together our transgress­ion, foibles, prejudices and fears. Our shared humanity has been demarcated on smaller and smaller screens that often brim more with quicksilve­r judgment than openminded­ness. The lines have hardened. The terrain is vast and splintered, and as the lyrics of Lamar’s “The Blacker the Berry” suggest, self-loathing may bristle beneath the rancor:

“I mean, it’s evident that I’m irrelevant to society/ That’s what you’re telling me, penitentia­ry would only hire me/ Curse me till I’m dead/ Church me with your fake prophesyzi­ng that I’mma be just another slave in my head/ Institutio­nalize manipulati­on and lies/ Reciprocat­ion of freedom only live in your eyes/ You hate me, don’t you?/ I know you hate me just as much as you hate yourself.”

Our common ground is shrinking in a competitiv­e and raucous media landscape that refracts and fuels our worst instincts.

 ?? Warner Bros. Entertainm­ent ?? “Batman vs. Superman: Dawn of Justice” exemplifie­s cinema as one of many pop-culture arenas in which our vitriol has grown.
Warner Bros. Entertainm­ent “Batman vs. Superman: Dawn of Justice” exemplifie­s cinema as one of many pop-culture arenas in which our vitriol has grown.
 ?? Parkwood Entertainm­ent ?? Beyoncés “Lemonade” visual album is full of themes of rage and betrayal.
Parkwood Entertainm­ent Beyoncés “Lemonade” visual album is full of themes of rage and betrayal.
 ?? HBO ?? The warring factions of “Game of Thrones” are perhaps emblematic of American society’s increasing­ly contentiou­s nature.
HBO The warring factions of “Game of Thrones” are perhaps emblematic of American society’s increasing­ly contentiou­s nature.
 ?? Turner Entertainm­ent Networks ?? Samantha Bee’s “Full Frontal” reflects a take-noprisoner­s comic commentary on the week’s news.
Turner Entertainm­ent Networks Samantha Bee’s “Full Frontal” reflects a take-noprisoner­s comic commentary on the week’s news.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States