Sultan Knish
New York City has been invaded, its buildings blown up and its citizens
slaughtered hundreds of times. The invaders come every summer,
descending from the sky and under the earth. Sometimes they aliens or
gods or monsters. They are, however, never Muslims.
Every summer, for 10 dollars you can see a fantasy version of September
11 reenacted with invading enemies who deserve no mercy and receive
none. They come in swarms, buildings fall, people run for cover and then
they are beaten back and banished. And then, as summer fades, we pause
for that obligatory week in which attention must be paid to
commemorating the attacks of September 11 while seeing no connection
between the discharges of tension through fictional victories used as an
escape mechanism from a war that we dare not fight.
The Dark Knight, the previous Batman film, contained an elaborate
analogy to the War on Terror, a shadow version of the real war fought
out by men in costumes proving that it was possible to release a
big-budget movie supportive of the War on Terror so long as it was
dressed up in the right costume.
Since then, and before, New York City has been attacked by meteors, ice
ages, mythical skeletons, more costumed criminals, the year 2012, and
every possible imaginary scenario that can be dreamed up. It just hasn't
been attacked by Muslims because that's something that doesn't happen
in movies. Only in real life.
The actual enemy rarely shows up in movies. There have been more movies
made attacking the War on Terror than movies showing American soldiers
and law enforcement officers fighting terrorists. After ten years of war
there have hardly been any movies made about the war in Afghanistan and
the most watched movie about the War in Iraq began with an anti-war
quote, just so no one made any mistakes about where everyone involved
stood. And all of these are a drop in the bucket.
Our cinematic world is a relentless barrage of anxieties; week after
week, movie theater screens light up with depictions of civilization
collapsing into chaos, overrun by hordes of zombies and monsters, our
cities torn down, buildings burning, police and military forces helpless
in the face of the enemy. These collective anxieties are packaged up
and exported to audiences at home and around the world who sit watching
our unacknowledged fears of invasion and collapse play out in movie
theaters.
A culture's art, no matter how tawdry it may seem, is also its dreams.
They are the stories we tell, and they are full of conscious and
unconscious meanings. Legends are created by a culture to battle its
unspoken fears. Its great hunters and warriors, whether born of a god,
risen from the sea or wearing a cape take a society's terrors and defeat
them in a story that is reenacted over and over again to bring courage
to the people and remind that all obstacles may be overcome with a
strong spirit.
No matter how degenerate a culture may be, its people still need such
legends because they still have fears that need calming. The more
troubled the time, the more they have need of such legends and the more
they may even escape into them to find comfort against the coming of the
long night.
The Islamic invasion is only dealt with through such legends where the
enemy is reduced to metaphors, as the Soviet Union and the threat of
Communism were in earlier generations. In earlier generations, we saw
the Nazi on screen, and he is still a reliable villain, but the
Communist is a more elusive fellow and the Islamist is more likely to
show up in British movies than in American ones. Instead, the Communist
became subsumed in stories of pod people and zombies, in depersonalized
bombs falling from the sky and enemies with accents but no ideology.
Even brainwashing was distanced as a technological trick in the
Manchurian Candidate rather than an ideological practice.
If Communists occasionally showed up in movies, Islamists are as rare as
white elephants. There is plenty of work for Muslim actors portraying
unjustly accused men being persecuted by bigoted and ignorant law
enforcement officers. But there is hardly any work for them portraying
terrorists. Much as negative portrayals of Communists was Red-Baiting,
negative portrayals of Muslims is Islamophobia. And it is better to be
afraid of imaginary things than real ones.
Progressives insist that Muslim terrorists are a figment of our
imagination, and they replace them with figments of their imagination.
Even while a true invasion is underway, they give us imaginary ones to
transpose real threats onto fictional threats.
Our political institutions, like our movies, prefer to deal with
fictional threats as well. The CDC has issued an emergency preparedness
plan for a zombie attack. It's easier to prepare disaster plans for
something that won't happen than to prepare them for an Islamic
biological warfare attack which might happen, but must not be spoken
about.
The world we live in is stranger than fiction. It is a place where
imaginary threats are constantly discussed but talk of real threats is
silenced. No one complains when the NYPD releases a Zombie Patrol Guide,
but a furor ensues when it investigates terror-linked mosques. The more
imaginary a threat is, the safer it is to tackle it because there is no
Zombie Rights organization to sue, whine and conduct interfaith rallies
complaining that zombies are people too.
"With an host of furious fancies whereof I am commander, with a burning
spear and a horse of air to the wilderness I wander," Tom O'Bedlam
sings. "By a knight of ghosts and shadows I summoned am to tourney. Ten
leagues beyond the wide world’s end – Methinks it is no journey."
We are led now by Bedlamites, feigned madmen running a society of
feigned madness where it is fashionable to fight zombies and
unfashionable to fight Muslim terrorists. A society in which a 100
million dollar movie that depicts Abraham Lincoln fighting vampires was
just released. And if it isn't vampires or zombies, then it's monsters
or aliens. We need our phantom enemies to fight and defeat; the knights
of ghosts and shadows who call us to battle beyond the wide world's end
of reality to avoid fighting the all-too-real terrorists of the Jihad.
To fight ghosts and shadows, zombies, aliens and vampires, is no journey
at all. It can be done at home or at the movie theater. The lights go
down and sound blares, adrenalin levels spike and pupils dilate, and,
when the two hours are complete, the experience of confronting and
surviving danger has been burned in and all the appropriate chemicals
are swirling around in the body. While outside the terror grows.
More than ever, we are glutted on a feast of false victories against
false enemies, while the true enemy remains nameless. While moviegoers
in Times Square consumed cinematic fantasies about invaders from outer
space, a real life invader from Pakistan, Faisal Shahzad, was plotting
to set off a car bomb. Like so many invaders from outer space, Faisal
Shahzad was able to blend in with the locals while plotting to destroy
everything around him.
In movies, invaders from outer space escape notice because no one
believes in aliens, but in real life invaders from Pakistan, Egypt and
Saudi Arabia escape attention because it's unfashionable to believe in
Islamic invaders, no matter how many times they have struck in the past.
36 percent of Americans polled believe that aliens have visited earth
and 55 percent believe that most Muslims in this country are patriotic
citizens. It is still unknown how many believe that little green men in
UFO's are also patriots and wave the red, white and blue in between
bouts of cattle mutilation.
Reality isn't a consensus, but responding to it is. If enough people
stop believing in gravity or if acknowledging gravity as an invention of
a bunch of dead white men becomes politically incorrect, then the rate
at which objects fall will remain unchanged but the rate at which people
jump from buildings expecting to fly will increase. If we don't believe
in Muslim terrorists, they will still go on blowing themselves up and
taking us with them, but our authorities will courageously go on
ignoring them while jokingly issuing zombie warnings.
And yet reality can't be ignored. The very act of ignoring it builds up
unacknowledged tensions that must be discharged. The average citizen
working through those anxieties sits in a darkened room watching the end
of days unfold, sees his cities fall and society plowed under and steps
out of the air-conditioned theater into the warm sunshine feeling a
temporary lifting of unspoken fears.
With the dollar low, debt high, terror everywhere and freedom nowhere;
anxiety isn't hard to come by and even harder to escape. Most of the
anxieties are the work of a political and cultural elite that likes to
think that it is best fit to govern, when it is actually every bit as
inept as the worst Ottoman and Imperial Chinese bureaucracies. It is
especially dangerous to speak out against inept elites, because the
inept kind are also the most insecure. Instead the anxieties must be
sublimated, spoken of only in fantasy critiques of inept governments,
corrupt cities, rampaging invaders and bold criminals who can only be
restrained by assertive individuals.
Art is more than aesthetics, it is the stories that a culture tells
itself, it is the loves and hates, the hopes and fears, the bright
dashes of color and the oppressive tones of shadow, it is the note that
lifts and then sinks reenacting the drama of life. It is the space where
even the unspoken things can be spoken indirectly. It is a place where
hunters slay fell beasts, maidens drown themselves for love and where
the tribe reminds itself of its strengths and fears. It is a place of
many lies concealing a few dangerous truths. The dangerous truth that
our culture's art conceals and reveals is the truth that we are at war.
H.G. Wells' "War of the Worlds" begins by drawing a picture of a
complacent world of men who give little thought of what might be out
there, who pay no attention to the
"envious eyes" of the invaders that "slowly and surely drew their plans
against us". We are aware and unaware of being at war, of passing men
and women on the street who are slowly and surely drawing up their own
plans against us. In the movie theater, we revisit that terrible
knowledge that we are engaged in a war with no natural end under a
hundred disguises. We recreate September 11 in our ten-dollar
nickelodeons every summer and look to the sky. But it isn't aliens we
are watching for. It's planes.
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