What Kurt Vonnegut’s “Slaughterhouse-Five” Tells Us Now


June 13, 2019

I first read “Slaughterhouse-Five” in 1972, three years after it was published and three years before I published my own first novel. I was twenty-five years old. 1972 was the year of inching slowly toward the Paris Peace Accords, which were supposed to end the war in Vietnam, though the final, ignominious American withdrawal—the helicopters airlifting people from the roof of the American Embassy in Saigon—would not take place until three years later, at which point, by way of a small footnote to history, I had become a published writer.

I mention Vietnam because, although “Slaughterhouse-Five” is a book about the Second World War, Vietnam is also a presence in its pages, and people’s feelings about Vietnam have a good deal to do with the novel’s huge success. Eight years earlier, in 1961, Joseph Heller had published “Catch-22” and President John F. Kennedy began the escalation of the United States’ involvement in the conflict in Vietnam. “Catch-22,” like “Slaughterhouse-Five,” was a novel about the Second World War that caught the imagination of readers who were thinking a lot about another war. In those days, I was living in Britain, which did not send soldiers to fight in Indochina but whose government did support the American war effort, and so, when I was at university, and afterward, I, too, was involved with thinking about and protesting against that war. I did not read “Catch-22” in 1961, because I was only fourteen years old. As a matter of fact, I read both “Slaughterhouse-Five” and “Catch-22” in the same year, a decade later, and the two books together had a great effect on my young mind.

It hadn’t occurred to me until I read them that antiwar novels could be funny as well as serious. “Catch-22” is crazy funny, slapstick funny. It sees war as insane and the desire to escape combat as the only sane position. Its tone of voice is deadpan farce. “Slaughterhouse-Five” is different. There is much comedy in it, as there was in everything Kurt Vonnegut wrote, but it does not see war as farcical. It sees war as a tragedy so great that perhaps only the mask of comedy allows one to look it in the eye. Vonnegut is a sad-faced comedian. If Heller was Charlie Chaplin, then Vonnegut was Buster Keaton. His predominant tone of voice is melancholy, the tone of voice of a man who has been present for a great horror and lived to tell the tale. The two books do, however, have this in common: they are both portraits of a world that has lost its mind, in which children are sent out to do men’s work and die.

As a prisoner of war, age twenty-two, which is to say three years younger than I was when I read his story, Vonnegut was in the famously beautiful city of Dresden, locked up with other Americans in Schlachthof-Fünf, where pigs had been slaughtered before the war, and was therefore an accidental witness to one of the greatest slaughters of human beings in history, the firebombing of Dresden, in February of 1945, which flattened the whole city and killed almost everyone in it.

So it goes.

I had not remembered, until I reread “Slaughterhouse-Five,” that that famous phrase “So it goes” is used only and always as a comment on death. Sometimes a phrase from a novel or a play or a film can catch the imagination so powerfully—even when misquoted—that it lifts off from the page and acquires an independent life of its own. “Come up and see me sometime” and “Play it again, Sam” are misquotations of this type. Something of this sort has also happened to the phrase “So it goes.” The trouble is that when this kind of liftoff happens to a phrase its original context is lost. I suspect that many people who have not read Vonnegut are familiar with the phrase, but they, and also, I suspect, many people who have read Vonnegut, think of it as a kind of resigned commentary on life. Life rarely turns out in the way the living hope for, and “So it goes” has become one of the ways in which we verbally shrug our shoulders and accept what life gives us. But that is not its purpose in “Slaughterhouse-Five.” “So it goes” is not a way of accepting life but, rather, of facing death. It occurs in the text almost every single time someone dies, and only when death is evoked.

It is also deeply ironic. Beneath the apparent resignation is a sadness for which there are no words. This is the manner of the entire novel, and it has led to the novel being, in many cases, misunderstood. I am not suggesting that “Slaughterhouse-Five” has been poorly treated. Its reception was largely positive, it has sold an enormous number of copies, the Modern Library ranked it eighteenth on its list of the hundred best English-language novels of the twentieth century, and it is also on a similar list issued by Time magazine. However, there are those who have accused it of the sin of “quietism,” of a resigned acceptance, even, according to Anthony Burgess, an “evasion” of the worst things in the world. One of the reasons for this is the phrase “So it goes,” and it is clear to me from these critiques that the British novelist Julian Barnes wasright when he wrote in his book “A History of the World in 10 ½ Chapters” that “Irony may be defined as what people miss.”

Kurt Vonnegut is a deeply ironic writer who has sometimes been read as if he were not. The misreading goes beyond “So it goes,” and has a good deal to do with the inhabitants of the planet of Tralfamadore. As it happens, I am a great fan of Tralfamadorians, who look like toilet plungers, beginning with their mechanical emissary Salo, who, in an earlier Vonnegut novel, “The Sirens of Titan,” was marooned on Titan, a moon of the planet Saturn, needing a replacement part for his spaceship. And now comes the classic Vonnegut subject of free will, expressed as a comic science-fiction device. We learn in “The Sirens of Titan” that human history has been manipulated by Tralfamadorians to persuade the human race to build large messages to Salo, and to get our primitive ancestors to develop a civilization capable of doing so. Stonehenge and the Great Wall of China were some of the messages from Tralfamadore. Stonehenge read, “Replacement part being rushed with all possible speed.” The Great Wall of China said, “Be patient. We haven’t forgotten about you.” The Kremlin meant “You will be on your way before you know it.” And the Palace of the League of Nations, in Geneva, meant “Pack up your things and be ready to leave on short notice.”

Tralfamadorians, we learn in “Slaughterhouse-Five,” perceive time differently. They see that the past, present, and future all exist simultaneously and forever and are simply there, fixed, eternally. When the main character of the novel, Billy Pilgrim, who is kidnapped and taken to Tralfamadore, “comes unstuck in time” and begins to experience chronology the way Tralfamadorians do, he understands why his captors find comical the notion of free will.

It seems obvious, at least to this reader, that there is a mischievous ironic intelligence at work here, that there is no reason for us to assume that the rejection of free will by aliens resembling toilet plungers is a rejection also made by their creator. It is perfectly possible, perhaps even sensible, to read Billy Pilgrim’s entire Tralfamadorian experience as a fantastic, traumatic disorder brought about by his wartime experiences—as “not real.” Vonnegut leaves that question open, as a good writer should. That openness is the space in which the reader is allowed to make up his or her own mind.

To read Vonnegut is to know that he was repeatedly drawn to the investigation of free will, of what it might be and how it might or might not function, and that he came at the subject from many different angles. Many of his ruminations were presented in the form of works by his fictional alter ego, Kilgore Trout.

I love Kilgore Trout as deeply as I love the inhabitants of the planet Tralfamadore. I even own a copy of the novel “Venus on the Half-Shell,” in which the writer Philip José Farmer took a Trout story written by Vonnegut and expanded it to novel length. “Venus on the Half-Shell” is about the accidental destruction of the earth by incompetent universal bureaucrats, and the attempt by the sole surviving human being to seek answers to the so-called Ultimate Question. In this way, Kilgore Trout inspired Douglas Adams’s celebrated book “The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy,” in which, you may recall, the earth was demolished by Vogons to make room for an interstellar bypass, and the sole surviving man, Arthur Dent, went in search of answers. Finally, the supercomputer Deep Thought revealed that the answer to life, the universe, and everything was, and is, “42.” The problem remains: What is the question?

In Vonnegut’s novel “Breakfast of Champions,” we learn about another Kilgore Trout story, “Now It Can Be Told,” written in the form of a letter from the Creator of the Universe addressed to the reader of the story. The Creator explains that the whole of life itself has been a long experiment. The nature of the experiment was this: to introduce into an otherwise wholly deterministic universe one single person who is granted free will, to see what use he makes of it, in a reality in which every other living thing was, is, and always will be a programmed machine. Everyone in the whole of history has been a robot, and the single individual with free will’s mother and father and everyone he knows are also robots, and so, by the way, is Sammy Davis, Jr. The individual with free will, God explains, is you, the reader of the story, and so God would like to offer you an apology for any discomfort you have endured. The end.

It’s worth adding one further detail. Throughout the many works by Kurt Vonnegut in which Kilgore Trout appears, he is consistently described as the worst writer in the world, whose books are utter failures, and who is completely and even contemptuously ignored. We are asked to see him simultaneously as a genius and a fool. This is not accidental. His creator, Kurt Vonnegut, was at once the most intellectual of playful fantasists and the most playfully fantastic of intellectuals. He had a horror of people who took things too seriously and was simultaneously obsessed with the consideration of the most serious things, things both philosophical (like free will) and lethal (like the firebombing of Dresden). This is the paradox out of which his dark ironies grow. Nobody who futzed around so often and in so many ways with the idea of free will, or who cared so profoundly about the dead, could be described as a fatalist, or a quietist, or resigned. His books argue about ideas of freedom and mourn the dead, from their first pages to their last.

Around the same time that I first read “Slaughterhouse-Five” and “Catch-22,” I also read another novel about a similar subject. That novel was “War and Peace,” which is longer than Heller’s book and Vonnegut’s book combined and isn’t funny at all. On that first reading of Tolstoy’s masterpiece, my twenty-five-year-old self thought, in summary: Loved peace, hated war. I was absorbed by the stories of Natasha Rostov, Prince Andrei, and Pierre Bezukhov, and found the extremely long descriptions of fighting, especially of the Battle of Borodino, pretty boring, to be frank. When I reread “War and Peace” perhaps thirty years later, I discovered that I felt exactly the opposite. The description of men at war, I thought, had never been bettered, and the greatness of the novel was to be found in those descriptions, and not in the somewhat more conventional stories of the leading characters. Loved war, hated peace.

Rereading “Slaughterhouse-Five,” I also found my valuation of the text changing. That younger self was strongly drawn to fantasy and science fiction, and sought out magazines called things like Galaxyand Astounding and Amazing, and was drawn to the work not only of the crossover giants, like Kurt Vonnegut and Ray Bradbury and Isaac Asimov and Ursula K. Le Guin and Arthur C. Clarke, but also to Mary Shelley and Virginia Woolf, whose “Frankenstein” and “Orlando,” respectively, are honorary members of the canon, as well as to the hardcore genre masters, such as James Blish, Frederik Pohl, C. M. Kornbluth, Clifford D. Simak, Katherine MacLean, Zenna Henderson, and L. Sprague de Camp. That young man, faced with Vonnegut’s masterpiece, responded most strongly to the sci-fi aspects of the book. To read it again has been to discover the humane beauty of the non-sci-fi parts, which make up most of the book.

The truth is that “Slaughterhouse-Five” is a great realist novel. Its first sentence is “All this happened, more or less.” In that nonfictional first chapter, Vonnegut tells us how hard the book was to write, how hard it was for him to deal with war. He tells us that his characters were real people, though he has changed all the names. “One guy I knew really was shot in Dresden for taking a teapot that wasn’t his. Another guy I knew really did threaten to have his personal enemies killed by hired gunmen after the war.” And later, when his characters, the ones with the changed names, arrive at Schlachthof-Fünf—Slaughterhouse Five, whose name he has not changed—he reminds us that he’s there with them, suffering right along with them:

Billy looked inside the latrine. The wailing was coming from in there . . . an American near Billy wailed that he had excreted everything but his brains. Moments later he said, “There they go, there they go.” He meant his brains.

That was I. That was me. That was the author of this book.

At one point Vonnegut quotes a conversation he had with a filmmaker called Harrison Starr, who would achieve a kind of modest renown as the executive producer of Michelangelo Antonioni’s movie about American hippies, “Zabriskie Point,” which was a huge commercial flop.

[Harrison Starr] raised his eyebrows and inquired, “Is it an anti-war book?”

“Yes,” I said. “I guess.”

“You know what I say to people when I hear they’re writing anti-war books?”

“No. What do you say, Harrison Starr?”

“I say, why don’t you write an anti-glacier book instead?”

What he meant, of course, was that there would always be wars, that they were as easy to stop as glaciers. I believe that, too.

Vonnegut’s novel is about that, about the inevitability of human violence, and about what it does to the not particularly violent human beings who get caught up in it. He knows that most human beings are not particularly violent. Or not more violent than children are. Give a child a machine gun, and he may well use it. Which does not mean that children are particularly violent.

The Second World War, as Vonnegut reminds us, was a children’s crusade.

Billy Pilgrim is an adult to whom Vonnegut gives the innocence of a child. He is not particularly violent. He does nothing awful in the war or in his prewar or postwar life, or in his life on the planet Tralfamadore. He seems deranged, and is mostly thought of as crazy, or as a near-simpleton. But he has a characteristic in common with many of the characters Vonnegut wrote throughout his career, and it is this characteristic that allows us to care for him, and therefore to feel the horror that he feels.

Billy Pilgrim is lovable.

If he were not lovable, the book would be unbearable. One of the great questions that faces all writers who have to deal with atrocity is, is it possible to do it? Are there things so powerful, so dreadful, that they are beyond the power of literature to describe? Every writer who faced the challenge of writing about the Second World War—and the Vietnam War, in fact—has had to think about that question. All of them decided they needed to come at the atrocity at an angle, so to speak, not to face it head on, because to do that would be unbearable.

Günter Grass, in “The Tin Drum,” used surrealism as his angle of entry. His character Oskar Matzerath, who stops growing because he can’t face the adult reality of his time, is one kind of fabulist being that allows the author to enter the horror. And little Oskar with his tin drum, drumming the beats of history, is, like Billy Pilgrim who has come unstuck in time, lovable. He is also, as the first sentence of “The Tin Drum” tells us, an inmate in a lunatic asylum. From opposite sides, German and American, these two deranged child-men give us our finest portraits of the great derangement of their time. Vonnegut, like Grass, combines the surrealism that has become the reality of his characters’ time with a detached, almost stunned tenderness that makes the reader feel fondly toward them, even as they stumble incompetently through life.

It may be impossible to stop wars, just as it’s impossible to stop glaciers, but it’s still worth finding the form and the language that reminds us what they are and calls them by their true names. That is what realism is.

“Slaughterhouse-Five” is also a novel humane enough to allow, at the end of the horror that is its subject, for the possibility of hope. Its final passage describes the end of the war and the liberation of the prisoners, who include Billy Pilgrim and Vonnegut himself. “And somewhere in there it was springtime,” Vonnegut writes, and in the last moment of the book, birds, once again, begin to sing. This cheerfulness in spite of everything is Vonnegut’s characteristic note. It may be, as I’ve suggested, a cheerfulness beneath which much pain is hidden. But it is cheerfulness nonetheless. Vonnegut’s prose, even when dealing with the dreadful, whistles a happy tune.

Fifty years after its first publication, seventy-four years after Kurt Vonnegut was inside Slaughterhouse-Five during the firebombing of Dresden, what does his great novel have to say to us?

It doesn’t tell us how to stop wars.

It tells us that wars are hell, but we knew that already.

It tells us that most human beings are not so bad, except for the ones who are, and that’s valuable information. It tells us that human nature is the one great constant of life on earth, and it beautifully and truthfully shows us human nature neither at its best nor at its worst but how it mostly is, most of the time, even when the times are terrible.

It doesn’t tell us how to get to the planet Tralfamadore, but it does tell us how to communicate with its inhabitants. All we have to do is build something big, like the Pyramids or the Great Wall of China. Maybe the wall that some individual whom I will not name is planning to build between the United States and Mexico will be read as an urgent message on Tralfamadore. The person who wants to build the wall will not know what the message means, of course. He is a pawn, being manipulated by a power greater than his to send the message in this time of great emergency.

I hope the message reads, “Help.”

This piece was adapted from a lecture delivered in April, in Indianapolis, to mark the fiftieth anniversary of “Slaughterhouse-Five.”

A Story Within The Music: Sneaking Around

A New segment that I wanted to start in my Storytelling Blog. Where I will put on a link to one of my songs, there will be a story that will follow with it. This is a story that the song is telling me and I wanted to share it with everyone. And to get some feedback from it. So here we go with the first selection:

In a tall building in a city of corrosion, and power, and greed rules everything a woman is mysteriously walking around an office building. This office is one of the top Fortune 500 companies in the world. This woman knows that there is some wrong doing going on within these walls of her environment. But everyone that she talks to and tries to get on her side something mysteriously happens to them. So on her own she has to find out whats going on here. She sneaks in the tall dark and mysterious building without security knowing that she is even there. She finds the stairs in the building and runs up them quickly, but also silently as she could. Now she has made to the floor that she works on, now getting in the next part of the mission. So she hides in the shadows until one of the security guards goes in, when that happens she quickly run in behind the guard without him even knowing she is there. She knows the guards that work in this building and knows where all the security cameras are, and all the hidden spots for these cameras as well. She knows getting caught by the camera wasn’t going to happen. Again she hides, and wait for the guard to leave, while the guard was leaving the room, he stopped for a moment for known reason by the woman. So she sneaks up behind the guard and knocks him out with his own flashlight that she picks up on the floor that he had dropped. Sneaking Around Music Please my advice if you can play the song while you read this post and let me what you think.

by Morris Hayes Jr/Dj D2uece

Sneaking Around Music

5 books that will help advance your career

5 books that will help advance your career Time management is so 2010. The new game in town? Attention management. By Julie D. Andrews, LearnVest | May 22, 2014

Read your way to the top.
Read your way to the top. (Thinkstock)
No matter which rung you occupy on the corporate ladder, there’s always farther to climb — more skills to sharpen, bosses to impress, raises to earn.

In the never-ending quest for professional improvement, you may find accelerated success by enrolling in workshops, picking the brain of your favorite mentor — or simply devouring an insightful, strategy-packed career book.

But how do you know which tomes are truly helpful and worth your time?

Enter: LearnVest. We read five career page-turners for you, chatted with the authors, and mined the best tips you can apply to your own career strategy — starting today.

1. The book: The Up Side of Down: Why Failing Well Is the Key to Success
By Megan McArdle

According to Bloomberg View columnist Megan McArdle, failure has significant power to lead us to success — if you know how to harness it. Citing business, economic, and psychological research, she argues that the professional skill we should all be cultivating is the art of bouncing back.

McArdle’s big tip: Relinquish your fear of failure.

What that means: When we expect that professional failures can — and will — occur, we give ourselves permission to take a leap or two. And if a soul-crushing failure strikes as a result, you can skip the shock-paralysis mode — because you were already expecting a few bumps in the road — and quickly change your course.

So diagnose and assess failures early, then accept them — and move on. “Realize you are not a failure — you are a person who has failed,” McArdle says. “Failure is how we learn and can set us up for the next achievement.”

Her advice in action: Even some of the most recognizable, successful people floundered before they ultimately got it right. And while you may not ever experience large-scale failure, the takeaway is the same. So next time you hit a professional snag — you miss a deadline, bomb the presentation, or are late to an important shareholder meeting — allow yourself to feel bad for just a minute … then spring into action: Take responsibility for your mistake, come up with a recovery plan — and then use the experience as fuel for your future successes.

2. The book: How to be a Productivity Ninja: Worry Less, Achieve More and Love What You Do
By Graham Allcott

Go-getters, listen up: Time management is so 2010. The new game in town? Attention management.

That’s according to Graham Allcott, founder of Think Productive, a training firm in the U.K. that has advised staffers at companies ranging from eBay and Heineken to GlaxoSmithKline on how to fine-tune productivity at every corporate level.

Here’s the gist: With so many trifling tasks grasping for our attention during the typical workday, it’s easy to lose sight of the macro view of your career. Allcott’s principles aim to help professionals refocus on the bigger picture in order to master key projects that’ll lead them to greater achievement.

Allcott’s big tip: Go off the grid.

What that means: One of his signature strategies outlined in the book is called “stealth and camouflage.” Basically, Allcott says, the best way to be more productive at work is to dip under the radar.

“Be willing to disconnect from phone, email, text, social media, even your office environment, when there’s a bigger goal in sight that you want to achieve,” Allcott says.

His advice in action: We know what you’re thinking: much easier said than done.

But Allcott isn’t suggesting you complete your important work projects in a remote cabin in the woods with no cell-phone service or access to Facebook. Instead, make a conscious effort to protect your attention span by actively fighting typical office distractions.

For example, send phone calls to voice mail when they’re likely to be less important than the task you’re working on, set strict boundaries for signing off email, social media, or instant messenger programs when you’re under the gun, and book time on your own calendar for creative thinking, forward planning, and review. (Allcott also suggests making your calendar settings private, as more persistent coworkers may try to schedule over meetings called “personal thinking time.”)

If you have a little flexibility, spend time working away from your desk when you can — at home, in cafés, in a meeting room, or outside. You’ll be less tempted to devote time to putting out little fires that occur throughout the day — and more productive on the projects most likely to get you noticed.

3. The book: Body of Work: Finding the Thread That Ties Your Story Together
By Pamela Slim

Veteran business coach Pamela Slim says there’s no such thing as a textbook career trajectory anymore. Increasingly, many of us are following more unconventional routes — an amalgam of corporate posts, start-up work, freelance projects, and even side gigs.

“Work is inherently unstable nowadays, and it’s not going back to the way it was,” Slim says. “We need a new way to think about careers.”

Slim’s solution? Craft a narrative that weaves together your diverse skill set and varied successes — an explanation of who you are and what you can do.

Slim’s big tip: Think back on your career accomplishments and identify what common threads tie them together.

What that means: This, Slim says, is your body of work — and your ability to craft a powerful one is what will ultimately determine your ongoing employability.

“[You’ll find work now] because you have clarity on where you’ve been and where you’re going. The story component is key. You need to drive the story, set context and constantly reposition yourself,” she says.

Her advice in action: Are you looking to take a career leap, but aren’t sure what next step complements your body of work? Slim says to start by “naming your ingredients” — and make sure they’re integrated into your work.

That’s exactly what David Batstone, a sustainable business professor, journalist, and business investor in San Francisco, did. After reading a news story where he learned the owner of his favorite Indian restaurant was involved in a human-trafficking ring, Batstone, a longtime human-rights activist, was inspired to combine his varied career paths into a single focal point.

Using his “ingredients” — his roles as a journalist, investor, professor, activist, father, and husband, plus his other related skills and values — Batstone co-founded Not for Sale, a nonprofit that fights human slavery.

“For Batstone, it was having multiple, disparate dots to bring together that allowed him to discover and clobber his next big project — the cumulative one that would make the most impactful, positive changes to date in his professional life,” Slim says.

4. The book: Springboard: Launching Your Personal Search for Success
By G. Richard Shell

G. Richard Shell, a Wharton professor and creator of the popular course, “The Literature of Success: Historical and Ethical Perspectives,” wants you to know one thing: The formula for success is not one-size-fits-all.

This may seem like an unlikely stance, considering he teaches at one of the most prestigious business schools in the country. But Shell argues that taking your time to define what success means to you, personally, will ultimately lead to more fulfillment, happiness, and, yes, success.

Shell’s big tip: Follow your capabilities, or the things you do “a bit better than others.”

What that means: Approach your career from the inside out — considering who you are, fundamentally, when making professional decisions.

Understanding what motivates you and what you like to do will help you better weed out corporate climates, cultures, and job descriptions that aren’t a fit — and won’t bring you happiness. Then you can focus on aligning your job prospects with the work and environments where you’ll contribute and achieve the most satisfaction.

After all, if you don’t do this for yourself, no one else will either.

“School teaches skills whether students are good at them or not,” Shell says, likening it to a one-size-fits-all culinary experience where little attention is given to what type of cuisine you should cook. “So you end up with many dissatisfied workers who think they made the wrong career choice.”

His advice in action: Not sure what’s in your basket of capabilities? Shell suggests tuning into what tasks and projects give you the greatest sense of gratification on completion — activities you gravitate toward because they’re interesting and enjoyable.

Julia Child, widely recognized as the first celebrity chef, summed it up perfectly when she said: “The more I cook, the more I like to cook.”

Consider what you like to do a little more each time you do it — and do it.

5. The book: Get a Job!: How I Found a Job When Jobs Are Hard to Find — and So Can You
By Dan Quillen

When Dan Quillen was laid off in 2011, he called on his H.R. background to help him land an interview for every four résumés he submitted — a response rate that was 19 percent higher than peers’ in his networking groups.

How’d he do it? Hint: Social-media savvy played a big role in getting his résumé more visibility. Among the lessons in his book, Quillen details why using social media is an organic, far-reaching, and imperative strategy to nabbing the job you want.

Quillen’s big tip: Social channels are a must for job searches (unless you have time to waste).

What that means: It can be embarrassing to admit you’re job hunting — especially if it’s the result of a layoff. But the sooner and faster you get the word out that your services are available for hire, the better.

Advice in action: Broadcast as widely as possible that you’re looking for a new position. Use LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter — any and all social networks that make sense for you — to cast your social-networking net wide, Quillen says.

Join groups, from college alumni to those of current or past employees at companies where you’d like to work — and participate actively. This provides an opportunity to expand your networking beyond those who are geographically close enough for you to meet with in person.

“You never know what corner of the social-networking universe may hide your dream job and who may spread the word about it,” says Quillen.

And if a case of embarrassment strikes, recall: Most employees receive a referral bonus for bringing in solid candidates — and that’d be you.

This story was originally published on LearnVest. LearnVest is a program for your money. Read their stories and use their tools at LearnVest.com.

BEN STILLER, SHEPARD FAIREY CELEBRATE AMERICANS FOR THE ARTS AT CIPRIANI

BEN STILLER, SHEPARD FAIREY CELEBRATE AMERICANS FOR THE ARTS AT CIPRIANI

BY Hilary Elkins POSTED 10/24/14
PS Arts chairman Joshua Tanzer with Stiller and Koons. COURTESY JOE SCHILDHORN/BFA
P.S. ARTS chairman Joshua Tanzer with Stiller and Koons.
COURTESY JOE SCHILDHORN/BFA
“There’s Frank Stella right there!” Nora Halpern said giddily as the iconic 78-year-old abstract impressionist wandered through the crowd gathering at New York City’s Cipriani 42nd Street on Monday night. Halpern, an art historian and curator by training, is now the vice president for leadership alliances at Americans for the Arts, the powerhouse advocacy outfit that has been promoting the arts and art education since 1960.
The crowd of 350 had gathered for the organizations’s National Arts Awards gala. Large-scale sculptor Richard Serra, philanthropists Vicki & Roger Sant, and Detroit art maven Madeleine H. Berman were among the evening’s honorees. Halpern, who’d been chatting with the Grammy-award winning bagpipe player Cristina Pato, has been finding the “advocacy side of my life,” she said. Currently, she’s working on the issues of artists’ rights and K-12 arts education. “This morning, we launched an initiative about core curriculum in K-12 education and we’re demanding that the arts be a part of it. It hasn’t been redrafted in twenty years.”
Maria Bell, the evening’s event chair, and president-at-large of the California-based children and arts philanthropy group P.S. ARTS, punched up the issues further. “I am the product of a public school education,” the Rodarte-clad philanthropist said. “I was lucky enough to have art in my [curriculum] and it changed my life.”
Bell recently stepped down as chair of the board of the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles. “I grew up in California so I couldn’t understand how they could cut all of those programs out of schools [in the 1907s and ‘80s].” She nodded to the nearby graphic designer activist, Shepard Fairey, to illustrate the second issue of the moment. “And everything about Shephard says everything about why an organization like [Americans for the Arts] matters. He is somebody who has really bumped up against ‘What are the rights of artists to do what they do?’ I think what he and other street artists show is that art is everywhere.”
Fairey reached a pop cultural apex back in 2008 when he created President Obama’s “Hope” poster. His rendering of a glowing orange monkey pod tree served as the backdrop for this event. As the gala’s featured artist, he’d produced fifty signed prints to commemorate the night.
“I did a residency at the Makiki Heights Contemporary Art Museum in Honolulu and there was a monkey pod tree on the grounds,” Fairey said. “I noticed that in Hawaii the symbols of natural beauty are abused as propaganda for the tourists. I liked the idea of making a piece that celebrated the beauty of the tree but also stylized it in a propagandistic way. I’m a big fan of provocative duality.” The poet Paul Muldoon and his wife quickly posed for photographs across the room.
Comedian Ben Stiller presented the Jeff Koons-designed Rabbit Balloon Award to the organization PS Arts. “Koons is working with MIT,” Stiller joked, “to build the world’s largest particle collider with marshmellows. He just hasn’t figured out how to make it sexual.”
Former senator Chris Dodd, the policy head for Americans for the Arts and head of the Motion Picture Association of American, was just about to dig into his fluffy mozzarella and tomato salad, but not before chiming in on what he sees as a key issue in the growth and sustenance of the arts: “Copyright. This year for the very first time in the history of the country, the Bureau of Labor statistics undertook a calculation of what the economic benefit of culture is. Turns out it adds about three points to the GDP. But there’s a global effort on the part of some to create further and further exceptions to the rights of creators and innovators. I’m very worried.”
Senator Dodd arched an eyebrow: “That the appetite for information, while legitimate, grows at their expense.”
Update, October 27: An earlier version of the post incorrectly stated that Americans for the Arts created the National Endowment for the Arts nearly 50 years ago. It was created by an act of Congress.
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Why is tech writing so bad?

Why is tech writing so bad?
by Alex
Tech filler
“Technology” is a strange word. Its Greek root, techné, means “art” or “excellence,” and its usage in English is scarce until at least the 20th century. Its rise in popular discourse during the second Industrial Revolution, the movement that produced inventions such as the phonograph, makes sense. However, what’s usually glossed over is that “technology,” as a word, is filler, distracting us from the the reshaping of society from above.

What does it even mean to say that “technology changed everything” or to assign so much agency to vague, well, technological concepts such as “big data” or “the Internet of Things?” The vast discourse on technology is the best possible example of what Georg Lukacs called “reification,” the act of instilling human activities with the characteristics of things, creating what Lukacs himself called “a ‘phantom-objectivity,’ an autonomy that seems so strictly rational and all-embracing as to conceal every trace of its fundamental nature: the relationship between people.”

When I see “technology” in a sentence, I move pretty quickly past it and don’t think much about it. If I do, though, it’s like I rounded a corner and saw a forked roads leading into three turnabouts – the generality is crushing. Are we talking strictly about the actions of hardware, software, and networks? Are these actions autonomous? What if we just assigned all of these machinations to the category of “machinery and artisanal crafts” and spoke of the great, world-changing, liberating power of “powerful industrial machinery”? It doesn’t have the same ring to it, does it?

Words and classes
The history of words to talk about all of the basic concepts that undergird “tech writing” – the category that would seemingly include everyone from TechCrunch to PC World to Daring Fireball to this blog – is the history of taking words that belonged to the blue-collar working classes and reassigning them to the white-collar management classes. Take “software,” for instance. It derives from “hardware,” which once referred primarily to small metal goods. As early as the 18th century, one could talk about a “hardware store” as a place to buy metals.

Something similar, on a much broader scale, has gone on with the term “Internet.” As I explained in my entry on “Space Quest 6: The Spinal Frontier,” the entire discourse about “the Internet” is a retroactive reorganization of many separate traditions, spanning hardware, software, and networking, that once went by disparate names. Even the act of using “the Internet” was once similarly variable: it could be called “going into cyberspace” or “using virtual reality” well through the 1990s. Grouping everything under the banner of the “Internet” has had the desired effect of making changes affecting fields as diverse as education (via online learning) and transportation (via services like Lyft and Uber) seem inevitable.

It is reification writ large, as tight origin story compiled after the fact to create that very “phantom-objectivity” that Lukacs talked about. Likewise, “technology” itself, as a word, is a mini history on how mundane physical activities – building computers, setting up assembly lines – were reimagined to be on par with the high arts of antiquity. Leo Marx wrote, in his paper “Technology: The Emergence of a Hazardous Concept”:

“Whereas the term mechanic (or industrial, or practical) arts calls to mind men with soiled hands tinkering at workbenches, technology conjures clean, well-educated, white male technicians in control booths watching dials, instrument panels, or computer monitors. Whereas the mechanic arts belong to the mundane world of work, physicality, and practicality – of humdrum handicrafts and artisanal skills – technology belongs on the higher social and intellectual plane of book learning, scientific research, and the university. This dispassionate word, with its synthetic patina, its lack of a physical or sensory referent, its aura of sanitized, bloodless – indeed, disembodied – cerebration and precision, has eased the induction of what had been the mechanic arts – now practiced by engineers – into the precincts of the finer arts and higher learning.”

Making it, writing it
I love this passage since it captures so much of how the the rise of technology firms has been about word games and the institution of engineers and venture capitalists as, crucially, creators (the obsession with creation really spills out when one looks at the Maker movement that goes hand-in-hand with so much of Silicon Valley) and heirs to the traditions of straight male-dominated industry. Debbie Chacra did a great job out outlining the real shape of the Maker movement in a piece for “The Atlantic,” arguing that “artifiacts” – anything physical that could be sold for gain or accrue some sort of monetary value, seemingly on its own – were more important than people in today’s economic systems, especially people who performed traditionally female tasks like educating or caregiving.

Tech writing, vague as it is, exists in this uncomfortable context in which anything not associated with coding or anything “technical” is deemed less important – to businesses, to shareholders, to whomever is important for now but may be forgotten tomorrow – that what is more easily viewed (I mean this literally) as work that came from a predictable process (software from coding is the best example). Writers in this field have to continually prop up a huge concept – technology – that carries the baggage of decades of trying to be elevated to the status of fine arts like….good writing!

Talking about the agency of concepts is common, and tech writers – or anyone dabbling in writing about technology – have to play so many ridiculous games to cater to readers who long ago became lost in the reification of “technology” as an unstoppable force. Take this sentence, which I recently found via Justin Singer’s Tumblr:

“Big Dating unbundles monogamy and sex. It offers to maximize episodes of intimacy while minimizing the risk of rejection or FOMO [fear of missing out].”

Bleh. This passage is easy to make fun of, but its structure is so indicative of tech writing at large. There’s the capitalized concept (“Big Dating”) that is acting, via a buzzwordy verb (“unbundling” – what was the “bundle” in the first place? but “disrupt” is still the all-time champion in this vein) on The World As A Whole. Then there’s the shareholder language (“maximize”/”minimize”/”risk”) that speaks to the neoliberal economic ideas – most of them terrible – that have been the intellectual lifeblood of the tech industry as well as the governments that feebly regulate it (the weakening of political will is one reason Marx saw technology as a “hazardous” concept).

Aristotle and wrap-up
When I dipped my toes into Aristotle’s “On Interpretation” earlier, I talked about how he defined nouns as “sounds.” I then wondered if so much bad writing was the result of trying to write things that would sound absurd in speech (i.e., as sounds).

Tech writing in particular has this sort of not-real quality to it that makes it sound so silly when read aloud. It’s always trying to reify and create vast, unstoppable forces that aren’t even physically perceptible. Writing about “the Internet of Things” or “Big Dating” is to basically dress up everyday and unnovel concepts like networked devices and dating services in dramatic language.

You may as well have someone try to describe an sandstorm or flood to you as it were the result of a phantom-objective, all-powerful godlike force. Wait, that’s, like, 99 percent of religion right there. Well, when writing about “technology,” you’re always writing someone else’s scriptures, with all the opacity and word-gaming that that entails – who wants to read most of that?
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