Providence (14 page)

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Authors: Daniel Quinn

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People in this city wouldn’t get as much “done” as people in New York City, wouldn’t have as sharp a competitive edge, but they’d have a hell of a lot more fun and they’d find out what it’s like to live like human beings instead of workers—and they wouldn’t pay a nickel in school taxes. It would be costly in terms of time, of course, but how many hours does the average worker spend right now paying for a system that doesn’t work?

Joe Hagan, another SRA alumnus, had been hired as editorial vice president at The Society for Visual Education, which had recently been acquired by the Singer Corporation. SVE had traditionally specialized in audio-visual materials—filmstrips, cassettes, overhead projectuals, and so on. In addition to continuing this supplementary line of materials, Joe wanted to start a new line of multimedia systems designed to support basal curriculum objectives. To give you an example of the difference, the AV side of the company might produce a series of six filmstrips on six key judicial decisions of current importance—
Miranda, Roe
v.
Wade,
and so on—which a school might buy for its
AV library and which social studies teachers at various levels might use in any number of contexts. The systems Joe had in mind would be multimedia programs designed to supplement basal school programs. For example, all first-grade teachers have a pretty well-defined set of objectives to meet in mathematics. The materials they’re given to work with are almost always printed: textbooks and workbooks. The guides that accompany these materials suggest a myriad of things that’ll help: activities, games, and practice materials they can assemble cheaply. Lots of companies offer supplementary materials of various kinds that teachers can buy, often with their own money, but what Joe had in mind was to assemble a complete and completely coordinated supplemental package: filmstrips to introduce basic concepts, taped lessons to reinforce the concepts, games to provide practice with essential skills, and so on. Joe offered me the job of overseeing the development of this product line, with the title of editorial director, and I leaped at it. This was work I was born to do. I understand media and their instructional uses and in the years to follow was surprised to discover how rare a knack this is.

What Joe was offering me was more than work I was born to do. At last I was going to be in a position to decisively affect materials being put into schools by a major educational publisher. And there was more. Joe had accepted his vice presidency with the understanding that the presidency would be his when the present president retired in three years. It was highly likely that, unless I screwed up, I would then move up into Joe’s job.

The next three years were tremendously exciting times.
I was doing the best work I’d ever done and was trying to create an environment in which others could do the best work they’d ever done. The products being developed under my direction were a tremendous success—among the most successful in the history of the business, according to Joe. Naturally this was too good to go on for long.

Joe was a bit like me—he had the silly notion that what counts in business is achievement. He had plenty of that to show for his time at SVE; he’d doubled the company’s income in three years. But what counts (and is rewarded) in big corporate business is standing in well with the right people, and this Joe had badly neglected, so that when the president retired, the folks at Singer decided they wanted one of their own sort to take that job. For the man they promoted from corporate headquarters, it was just a convenient stepping-stone to greater things. He stayed barely long enough to fire Joe Hagan and install his own editorial vice president (not me, of course).

One day after he’d been in the saddle for about three months, the new president took me aside for a little talk about the stuff I was putting out. “You’re making it too good,” he told me gravely. “You don’t have to make it so good, because it’s just for kids, and kids can’t tell the difference.”

“You’re making the stuff too good,” the president told me gravely.

I replied in some fashion or other and walked away. This was not an expression of mere philistinism and ignorance on his part. It was an insult to my intelligence. This smoke screen of talk was in
fact transparent: He intended to cut my budget, which meant that I would not be
able
to make the products so excessively good. This cut in expenses would produce a pretty little jump in profits, which would make him look good with the folks at the head office. A few days later I sent round my letter of resignation. I could easily have stayed and put up with it (and within two or three years probably been rewarded with a vice presidency), but there are times when one must be a fool for the sake of making a foolish gesture.

I didn’t leave bitterly. In fact, I left very well, with a contract to write twelve filmstrips for twenty thousand dollars, almost certainly the highest fee ever paid for a work-for-hire in that medium and industry. It was clearly a sort of golden handshake, though why they thought they owed me one is a mystery. The filmstrips would take about a month to write and storyboard—not bad money for those days (or even these).

This gave us time to set up Daniel Quinn & Associates, a development house, devoted to creating products for educational publishers to publish as their own. It’s a feasible business for an aggressive entrepreneur. For someone like me, who is nothing like an aggressive entrepreneur, it’s just a sure way to go broke. Nevertheless we did some good things, Rennie and I. Some were still being marketed ten years later. Some are still being marketed today.

One project that was a lot of fun was a set of thirty “read-along” books (books to be read while listening to a taped reading or dramatization of the text) for a publisher in Florida. The objective of the series was to give students the experience of reading as an
enjoyable
activity. (A typically
subversive Quinn notion; school people get nervous when their charges start having
fun;
school is supposed to be serious, unpleasant business.) Accordingly, half the series was devoted to genre fiction, which is what most people read for fun: science fiction, mystery, suspense, and even horror. In writing these books, I discovered that (thanks to experience and reading) fiction was no longer a mystery to me.

This project was followed by a lull, which is to say we were out of work. While our sales rep was out trying to find customers for products I’d conceived, I had some time to fiddle with the pieces of a puzzle I’d been shuffling around for the past fifteen years. At this point, I didn’t have any idea how they fit together or what they added up to.

When people ask me about the origins of
Ishmael
I usually talk about one or another of the pieces of the puzzle I was exploring.

One was the mystery of how and why we happened to mislay the first three million years of human life. This mystery was composed of several different puzzles. For example, why doesn’t human history begin with the birth of humanity?…

Ah. Well, of course. That’s just my point. History is
defined
so as to begin at a certain arbitrary point, and what came before isn’t defined in its own terms but only in terms of its beforeness. It’s not history, it’s a separate special thing called
prehistory
 …

No, that’s not quite what I’m getting at. Look, let’s do this. Let’s take all the names you know of literary and dramatic forms of the past and abolish them. I want you
to expunge from your memory words like
epic, ballad, saga, tragedy, ode, mystery play, allegory, fable, biography,
and
essay.
I want you to gather them up in your mind and erase them. Okay. Now I’m going to give you a much improved way of thinking about this whole matter of human communications. Television came into being in the late 1940s, as you know. Well, before that there was a long, undifferentiated period of
pre-television.
So, just as you have history and prehistory, now you have television and pre-television.

The key word here is
undifferentiated.
That’s what prehistory is. History, by contrast, is a teeming mass of highly differentiated material: movements, leaders, technological and social developments, and so on. Prehistory is simply the great undifferentiated nothingness that existed before history—
our
history—began. This is the universal understanding of how it was. Prehistory was
there;
it went on for a long, long, long time. We all know that. But if you’re going to write a text on
history,
if you’re going to teach a class on
history,
then you’re going to start with something called
the agricultural revolution,
about ten thousand years ago. That,
by definition,
is the beginning of history. For some strange reason, human history doesn’t begin with the birth of our species but rather with the birth of a
technology.
Why? How did this very odd state of affairs come to be?

It took me several years to figure it out. When the people of our culture began to have the leisure to wonder about human origins, it never occurred to them to wonder if man had been born anything but an agriculturalist and a civilization-builder. Indeed, why would they? As far
as they knew (or could imagine), man was
innately
a farmer and city builder the way that bees are innately honey-gatherers and hive-builders. Thus, for them, agriculture, man, and history all began at the same time, just a few thousand years ago. When Darwin and his followers came along with evidence that man had been born millions of years ago, not thousands, the elegance of this scheme was spoiled, but historians didn’t care to give it up. They were used to teaching the story of man as beginning just a few thousand years ago, with the development of agriculture, and they wanted to go on teaching it that way. What difference did it make that man had been around for millions of years? Clearly he wasn’t doing anything during this time that was worthy of the notice of
historians.
The historians therefore washed their hands of it and turned it over to archaeologists to think about. Historians stuck to history, and they stuck to their ancient definition of it as beginning just a few thousand years ago, with the very special agricultural revolution that marks the birth of our culture.

When Darwin came along, the elegance of the ancient scheme of history was spoiled, but historians didn’t care to give it up.

In his autobiography, Malcolm X said that at one point the role of the white race in human history came to him with great clarity: The white race is Satan. I was very struck with this way of thinking about things, though I knew that his identification was not a good mythological fit. Satan is inherently an outsider—the common enemy
of mankind, to be hated and feared as much by white people as by any other. His objectives are spiritual and otherworldly, totally unlike those of the white race. We didn’t go to Africa to turn the natives into sinners, we went there to turn them into slaves. Satan isn’t interested in wealth, territory, or temporal power—and the white race is interested in almost nothing else. Nevertheless, I had the feeling that Malcolm was onto something.

A few years before, I’d had an illuminating conversation with a young black man I met at a private sale of African art. He’d come to the sale more or less out of curiosity and didn’t know what to make of the things he was seeing. He was startled when I told him most of them were fakes—fakes in the sense that they’d been made for export rather than for tribal use. In effect, they were just a fair grade of tourist goods. He asked how I knew this, and I had to think about it. How
did
I know it? There’s a profound difference between a piece of work that is strange to our eyes but fresh and beautiful and lively, and a piece of work that is strange to our eyes but crudely wrought and ugly and lifeless. He’d come expecting to see “primitive art” and it all looked equally “primitive” to him, and I had to show him how to see it in a new way—how to see it the way the artist saw it, how to “think primitive.” I was in the odd position of revealing to him the values of his own heritage, which white culture had taught him to despise.

One thing led to another. Finally, deciding I could be trusted with this secret, he confessed to me that he didn’t really understand how
all this
had come about and how it fit together. He knew, of course, that there were prehistoric
times and Stone Age peoples, but … where had it all started and how had it gotten to be like this? Talking to him—and he was not an uneducated person—I realized that this uncertainty about the fundamental outlines of the human story must be very widespread. I couldn’t imagine—can’t imagine—anything sadder than a whole sapient, conscious race of people being unable to pass on to their children even the crudest understanding of their own origins.

When people ask about the origins of
Ishmael,
I tell this story, as I tell the story of Malcolm identifying the white race as Satan. I tell this one as well. At that time Erich von Däniken was minting money with a book called
Chariots of the Gods?,
in which he proposed that alien astronauts were responsible not only for building the pyramids and all the wonders of the ancient world but for producing the human race itself, by kindly condescending to interbreed with our apelike ancestors. It isn’t enough to say that only very gullible people would swallow such nonsense; profound ignorance is required as well. The gullible millions who swallowed von Däniken’s proposal would not have swallowed the proposal that alien astronauts were responsible for building the
Queen Mary
and Hoover Dam.

It would be a wonderfully rewarding task to produce a telling of the human story that would dispel the lie that human life was meaningless except for the last half one percent of it.

It seemed to me it would be a wonderfully rewarding
task to produce a telling of the human story that would be a healing of that story. A telling that would dispel the lie that human life was meaningless except for the last half of one percent of it. A telling that would enable that young African American to perceive our
common
roots in the human story. A telling that would show why our ancestors needed no help from ersatz gods in UFOs to become human or to produce wonders that are still wonders today.

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