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The Grand Immoderation of Studs Terkel
When Studs Terkel was in the seventh grade, his teacher, Miss Henrietta Boone, asked the smart young whippersnapper who he was supporting in the presidential election of 1924.
"Are you for Calvin Coolidge or John W. Davis?" Miss Boone inquired, mentioning the names of the Republican and Democratic nominees.
Terkel, who had already imbibed the radicalism of Chicago's labor left, was for neither of the major party candidates. Rather, he favored the third-party contender who was campaigning against imperialism abroad and Wall Street at home.
"Innocently--or was I damnably perverse even then?--I piped, 'Fightin' Bob La Follette,'" Terkel recalled eight decades later, mentioning the name of the progressive senator from Wisconsin who earned his support that year. "She was startled, poor dear. Why have I always upset such gentle hearts? Why couldn't I have been my cute little button self and said the right thing: 'Keep Cool with Coolidge.'"
Studs could be cute, and damnably perverse.
But the Pultizer Prize-winning author, pioneering radio personality, battler against Joe McCarthy and McCarthyism, raconteur, rabble-rouser and grand old man of the American left, who died Friday at age 96, never pulled his punches when it came to politics.
Early in 2002, as George Bush was scheming in 2002 to exploit the fear of terrorism in order to steer the United States toward a new career of empire, I wrote an article for The Nation about the lonely dissents of Ohio Congressman Dennis Kucinich.
Studs responded, as he had to La Follette's call eighty years earlier:
"When I finished reading John Nichols's exhilarating communiqué from California ("Kucinich Rocks the Boat," March 25), the bells began to ring," he wrote for The Nation. "In his speech to the Southern California Americans for Democratic Action, criticizing Bush's conduct of the war on terrorism, Dennis Kucinich set the crowd on its ear--one standing ovation after another. Sure, they were all liberals, but what counted was the response on the Internet. The Cleveland Congressman's e-mail box was stuffed to overflowing with 20,000-plus enthusiastic letters. Among them was the call: Kucinich for President."
"Kucinich is the man to light the fire," Studs declared. "Amen."
As it turned out, Kucinich didn't get any closer to the presidency than did La Follette.
Studs was disappointed, but undaunted.
Politics was never a game for Studs. It was the work of a lifetime. He wrote brilliant books about the lives of working people not merely because their stories were fascinating but because he wanted to get a conversation started about class in America.
He wrote about "the good fight" of World War II because he wanted to remind new generations of Americans that this country had once united to battle fascism.
And he kept his sense of humor and his optimism, even when those around him despaired.
Not long after the invasion of Iraq, when President Bush was still enjoying the ill-gotten high approval ratings of his "Mission Accomplished" moment, Studs explained to me that one of the benefits of his advancing years was his pronounced loss of hearing.
"My bad hearing leads me to higher truths," he quipped. "For instance, terms like 'embedded journalist' come through to me as in-bed with journalist. My problem with the media right now is that we've got too many in-bed-with-journalists and not enough of the skeptical, questioning, challenging journalists who will hold George Bush and his boys accountable."
For Studs, who had made his name as an incisive radio interviewer, the increasing consolidation of radio station ownership, and the homogenization that went with it, was deeply troubling. But Studs was not only concerned about the sector of media he knew best.
"Information, news, ideas--that's the juice that gets a democracy going. When a few corporations control all the juice, they decide how the democracy works. Or how it won't work. I don't worry that much about people doing the right thing if they have the facts about what their government is up to. But if they don't get the facts, the whole thing falls apart," said the man who had spent most of his life interviewing Americans regarding their work, their ideals, their politics and, in his last years, their optimism about the prospect of making a better world.
As far as Studs was concerned, the run-up to the war in Iraq provided a perfect example of how things fall apart when the media fails to do its job. While TV news anchors pinned on flag pins and conducted fawning interviews with members of the Bush administration, the senior member of the US Senate, West Virginia Democrat Robert Byrd, was virtually ignored as he questioned the rush to war.
"Senator Byrd has been fantastic. He's the one guy who said 'bugger off' when Bush came around trying to sell the idea of this war. I think he's the one guy who really stood up for our kids in the military, when he said he did not want them going off and invading a country that was no threat to us," Studs said. "But Byrd got no headlines. You hardly ever saw him on television. I think that if he had, we might not be in this war today. That's an example of what happens when the big media companies just give us the administration's version of the news."
Long before others dared do so, the man who immortalized the generation of Americans who fought "the good war" of the 1940s termed the Iraq War "a quagmire for America."
"We were the most honored country in the world at the end of World War II," he noted. "Now we're the most loathed country. We need a media that asks: 'What the hell are we doing there?' "
Studs was delighted when, in 2004, a young Chicago state senator with whom he had marched on picket lines, was elected to the US Senate on an anti-war "what-the-hell-are-we-doing-there?" platform.
He followed Barack Obama's campaign for the presidency with enthusiasm. The old civil rights campaigner wanted to see an African-American elected president in his lifetime.
But he also wanted the Democrat to remember his roots as, dare we say it, a community activist. "Obama can't be a moderate!" Studs said in one of his last interviews. "He's got to remember where he comes from! Obama, he has got to be pushed!"
In particular, the man who well recalled the first 100 days of Franklin Roosevelt's presidency wanted to make sure that Obama was pressed to promote a new New Deal.
"I'd ask Obama, do you plan to follow up on the program of the New Deal of FDR? I'd tell him, 'Don't fool around on a few issues, such as health care. We've got bigger work to do! Read FDR's second inaugural address!'" he told a Chicago reporter. "The free market has to be regulated. And the New Deal did that and they provided jobs. The government has to. The WPA provided jobs. We have got to get back to that. We need more reg-u-la-tion."
The truth is that we need more Studs Terkels.
There will never be another quite like him.
But as Americans of good will ponder the notion of forging a change we believe in, we would be wise not merely to recall but to emulate the disdain for moderation, the enduring progressive faith and the delighted determination to speak truth to power -- from the days when he was talking up La Follette to the days when he was talking up Obama -- that defined the politics and the life of Studs Terkel.

17 Comments so far
Show All"I always love to quote Albert Einstein because nobody dares contradict him." - Studs Terkel
R.I.P.
Thank-You Studs. Been a fan since I read "Working" as a kid, and will always be a fan. Say Hi to Woody for us.
Studs was always my man!
Next Tuesday will not determine whether the American people are ready for radical social change.
American hopes for Obama are based upon leadership that is open to the public plea for radical social change. This though is totally dependant upon a renewed democracy in America. If Obama wins, it will be up to the "Obama movement" and the American people to demand and monitor such a renewed democracy. Radical change can only come from below, there has never been any other way. Everything is possible and plans for lobbying and broad civic activism are now being set to do so. As John Nichols says, it will require a "disdain for moderation".
This is not all B.S. and naivety as this new vision is not attributed entirely to Barack Obama's "audacity of hope". It must be attributed to an emerging higher consciousness, a new awareness on the part of all of humankind that we must all work for a more just, sustainable and compassionate world.
This shift in global consciousness is the evolutionary destiny of humankind and whether the American people are ready for it at this time is the big question. Of course it looks insurmountable with the present powers that be. But it may be the beginning.
Sioux Rose
Ready or not, the alternative road is so despairing and despicable, it would seem that a great many will opt for the ill-defined (at this point in time for them, consciousness-wise) OTHER.
An uncommon man for all seasons. I wish Studs' likeness could be added to Mt. Rushmore!
Someone rich (and very liberal) ought to endow a chair at a major university and call it the Terkel Chair of Immoderate Journalism. God knows we need it.
Sioux Rose
Good one, Adele...
"Community organizers like Obama know what's going on. If they remember. The important thing is memory. You know in this country, we all have Alzheimer's. Obama has got to remember his days as an organizer. It all comes back to the neighborhood. Well I hope the election is a landslide for Obama." - Studs Terkel
.One more voice and a lifted shot glass in memory of Studs Terkel. He said about his inimitable interviewing techniques that he ,"just let folks sing".....
.
We see things, not as they are, but as we are.
Anais Nin
He will be missed. I grew up in Chicago, and Studs always held a place of high respect and esteem; no matter the crowd. He was not afraid to tell it like it was. Studs was an institution...and they don't make 'em like that anymore. Sigh. Bye, Studs ~ May You Rest In Peace.
… ditto …
He lives on as a masterful inquiry into who we really are in the hardest of times, and as one of my heros and internalized voices of unbreechable integrity and honor of humankind's diversity, power, and beauty.
Namaste
Sioux Rose
Word has it he's partying with Molly Ivins on the other side right about now... imagine the stories they can share from THAT front line!
Another great one that will be missed. He understood that elections are a political beginning, not an end.
For decades, the local and even regional elections never get paid attention to. If you people want folks ala Follette, Kucinich, Paul, Nader, Mckinney, etc ... then you had better focus on increasing local turnout first. Everything starts local and if you keep allowing abysmal turnouts as low as 10%, then this is the kind of mess you'll get at the federal level. Howard Dean knows that very well. We could learn from him.
So long, Studs. I have listened to him on WFMT and read his books for longer than i care to remember and I'm sorry that the one time I had a chance to meet the man in person, at a function put on, if I recall correctly, by the Chicago Journalism Review back in the '70s, I didn't cross the room and introduce myself. (I also managed to miss him at the old O'Rourke's on North Ave. back in his drinking days.)
Well, now he's gone and it's a shame so many took him for granted, as I did, when he was with us -- it just seemed he'd go on forever.
BTW, he was absolutely right about Obama emulating FDR, both in the Second Inaugural address and in carrying out FDR's Economic Bill of Rights. Here's a link to the EBR, delivered in 1944 during the 'good war.'
http://worldpolicy.org/projects/globalrights/econrights/fdr-econbill.html
But Studs was more than a political partisan, so very much more (although he certainly was unappologetic and emphatic about his politics). Studs at his very best was the human embodiment of Aaron Copeland's famous work "Fanfare for the Common Man".
No matter whether you are reading "Division Street: America", (my own personal favorite) "Hard Times", "Working", or "The Good War" what you are reading is the alternative history of the rest of us--stripped of elitist hype, propaganda and lies. Studs embodied Amy Goodman's mantra "going where the silence is" long before Democracy Now came of age.
Our children and grandchildren need to be familiar with Terkel, Zinn, Ronald Takaki, and Seymore Hersch so they are not deceived about American history especially in the 20th century.
Poet
Poet, I don't think you have to worry; if, as the polls suggest, Obama's election pushes us in the direction of the liberal 'Age of Reason' traditions upon which this country was founded -- traditions that highly prized truth, learning, history, science, and skepticism of government power -- Zinn, Hersh, Studs Terkel, et al, will be taught in our classrooms in the succeeding generations.
I just wish Studs had lived long enough to see the change.
Back around 1985, I sent Studs Terkel a letter. In it, I told Studs how much his work meant to me; personally as well as in my teaching.
With my letter, I enclosed a cigar. A fancy one.
Studs wrote back and told me it was the nicest letter he ever received; and that he read it to his wife, who said: "You gotta keep that one!"
He also said that if I was ever in Chicago that: "I gotta buy you lunch or dinner."
As for the cigar, Studs wrote back that he sliced it up and smoked it in two sessions.
For all these years, over 20 years now, I either didn't have the dough or else didn’t have the time to go to Chicago; but every year I sent Studs a book on his birthday. And always about Chicago. A book I carefully selected from the Chicago section of my local antiquarian bookstore.
While Studs was preparing his book “Race,” he wrote to me and said that he was trying to find an Italian-American who would offer their perspective on race relations in the United States. ... “But then," Studs wrote, "I thought, why not you. We could do it over the phone. I have all the equipment. You, me and the FBI!”
Studs never got back to me on that one. I like to think it’s because he never was very good with “equipment.”
There really isn’t one word to describe Studs Terkel, so I’ll have to use quite a few. ... Delightful. Energetic. Exuberant. Funny. Joyful. Simpatico. Brilliant. Enthusiastic. *Involved.* ... Yeah, involved. ...
In one of his books, I forget which one, Studs interviewed a 90-year-old black man who, together with Studs, was on a train headed for the famous 1963 “March on Washington,” the one in which Martin Luther King, Jr. gave his famous “I Have a Dream” speech.
At 90 and no doubt frail in health, the man said to Studs -- my wife said I could stay home and watch this thing on tv. But I told her, no, I want to be part of this. I want to be *in* it! ... That, I think, describes Studs to a tee: he was *in* it!
When Studs was interviewing Arthur Miller on WFMT back in 1988, he said to Miller: “You are what the French call *engage* (accent mark over the e) -- engaged -- the engaged person being the involved person, the engaged person being the *alive* person.
Not only was Studs alive with energy and exuberance, he was also, hands-down, the most well-read person on the face of the planet. Studs not only *read* every book published, he also *interviewed* every author worth interviewing!
Once when I wrote Studs I suggested that the tapes of his WFMT radio programs be put on the Internet so that all of us could listen to them -- rather than where I believe they are now, the Smithsonian. Hopefully, some day they’ll be accessible to all of us via the Internet.
I always thought that one immutable law of nature was that Studs would make it to 100. Damn the Fates that he didn’t. But, you know what: he gave it one helluva shot. He left it all on the field, baby. "Ecco homo!" (Behold, the man!)
I recall about 6 or 7 years ago, Studs was on C-SPAN. It was a program that ran for three hours straight, no commercials, just Studs and the moderator. And Studs was telling story after story, offering insight after insight. … Talking about Bughouse Square, Eddie Gaedel, Murray the Camel and the waitress who waited on him. And, oh my word, so many wondrous things! ...
And towards the end of the interview, the interviewer (who, needless to say, was hardly able to get a word in edgewise for the entire program) said: "Well, Studs, we only have about 15 minutes left." To which Studs, fresh as a daisy, replied: "15 minutes! Is that all? Gee, I was just getting warmed up!"
Leonardo da Vinci once defined education as "seeing the world with fresh eyes." That’s what Studs means to me and how I will always remember him. He showed us the world. And with fresh eyes.
I remember once I was listening to an interview Studs did with Vittorio da Sica, and they were were talking about “The Bicycle Thief” -- with Studs blurting out to da Sica “I saw it 12 times!” ... Studs introduced the interview by saying that "The Bicycle Thief" was a movie that had influenced his life in ways he couldn’t even begin to explain. And you know, that’s how I feel about Studs’ work (what he called his “mission”) -- he's influenced my life in ways I can't even begin to explain. He wasn’t just "liebermeister," master of his work; he was more than that, much more -- he was my teacher.
I just plain love the guy.
Oh, by the way, you may have heard that Studs Terkel died recently. Forget about it. It'll never happen. His books, the audio and video we have access to -- all the things that remind us of his passion as well as his compassion -- comrade, just don’t believe it. The man lives!