Wallace Stegner famously said that California is like the rest of America, only more so. But when did he say it, and in what context? Yesterday I tracked down the original quote, which appeared in an editorial Stegner wrote for a special Golden State edition of Saturday Review magazine in 1967.
The references to Max Rafferty, Ronald Reagan, and Gary Snyder may seem dated, but in many ways the essay describes the California we know today:
If the history of America is the history of an established culture painfully adapting itself to a new environment, and being constantly checked, confused, challenged, or overcome by new immigrations, then the history of California is American history in extremis.
Like the rest of America, California is unformed, innovative, ahistorical, hedonistic, acquisitive, and energetic – only more so. Its version of the Good Life, its sports, pleasures, and comforts, are increasingly copied by the envious elsewhere. It creates an art and literature as nervous, permissive, and superficial as itself. It has its own intensified version of the Brain Drain, borrowing both ideas and the men who generate them.
It borrows from everywhere – in nothing is it so American….
The hippie aberration, which anyone with a sense of history has to see as a newer, younger variety of romantic bohemianism, is only one response – an overpublicized one – to California’s extreme permissiveness. It is common for immigrants to try to mold themselves to the new conditions, with a desperate yearning to be in, to belong. But when the new condition is as unstable as a dust devil or a strobe-light happening, then many immigrants are going to be thrown back on the conventional and the known. The more experimental and permissive the moral, artistic, political, and social Left, the more the Right backs up in its ruts, high-centering itself on attitudes hallowed by the example of Ulysses S. Grant and Mrs. Grundy….
It will be tragic if social order and stability are imposed by the Raffertys, the Reagans, and the lockjaw right of Orange County. It could be equally unfortunate if the Gary Snyders succeed in their aim of leaving not one value of the old order standing. In the experimental society everything is permitted, but not everything works. When that discovery is made, the society has tempered innovationism with tradition, even convention.
Meantime, California is a state in which it is at times almost intolerable to live. I know people who are moving out rather than rear their children here. Yet other places, by comparison, seem lesser, smaller, duller, less promising, less exciting. For this is indeed where the future will be made – is already being made, with all the noise, smog, greed, energy, frequent wrong-headedness, and occasional greatness of spirit that are so American and so quintessentially Californian.


14 comments
May 29, 2010 at 4:07 pm
bitchphd
I will say that I’m damn glad my southern CA-raised son had a few formative years in Canada and is now going to a hippie school, because yeah: the values of so. Ca are appalling. (But the weather is awesome.)
May 29, 2010 at 4:19 pm
eric
It will be tragic if social order and stability are imposed by the Raffertys, the Reagans, and the lockjaw right of Orange County
Didn’t California actually have social order and stability, imposed if you like, by Kerr et al.? Then this ilk imposed a tax and education policy that decreased social order and stability, didn’t they?
May 29, 2010 at 4:34 pm
Cosma Shalizi
Yet other places, by comparison, seem lesser, smaller, duller, less promising, less exciting.
I wish this still didn’t ring true.
May 30, 2010 at 12:19 am
mralarm
Stegner writes so beautifully. I mean, really:
“But when the new condition is as unstable as a dust devil or a strobe-light happening, then many immigrants are going to be thrown back on the conventional and the known.”
Awesome.
Thanks so much for this really amazing post. Have you read Joan Didion’s book, Where I was From? She’s great on the meaning of California in the American imagination, and she captures the strangeness and beauty of the place so well.
ps, love the blog
May 30, 2010 at 2:47 am
kid bitzer
the same line caught my eye, cosma, but my reaction was, “how sad that this is no longer true.” i worry that the ferment and surprise are found now in shanghai and bombay.
and gary snyder is a strange emblem of california: he’s a product of the northwest:
“born in San Francisco…moved to King County, Washington[4], when he was two years old. There they tended dairy cows, kept laying hens, had a small orchard, and made cedar-wood shingles,[5][6] until moving to Portland, Oregon ten years later….
Also during his ten childhood years in Washington, Snyder became aware of the presence of the Coast Salish people and developed an interest in the Native American peoples in general and their traditional relationship with nature.[3]
In 1942, following his parents’ divorce, Snyder moved to Portland, Oregon with his mother and his younger sister, Anthea…Their mother, Lois Snyder Hennessey (born Wilkey),[10] worked during this period as a reporter for The Oregonian. One of Gary’s boyhood jobs was as a newspaper copy boy, also at the Oregonian.[8] Also, during his teen years, he attended Lincoln High School,[8] worked as a camp counselor, and went mountain climbing with the Mazamas youth group….In 1947, he started attending Reed College on a scholarship.[3] Here he met, and for a time roomed with Carl Proujan, Philip Whalen and Lew Welch. At Reed, Snyder published his first poems in a student journal. …While attending Reed, Snyder did folklore research on the Warm Springs Indian Reservation in central Oregon.[14] He graduated with a dual degree in anthropology and literature in 1951.[15] He spent the following few summers working as a timber scaler at Warm Springs, developing relationships with its people that were less rooted in academia.[14] This experience formed the basis for some of his earliest published poems (including “A Berry Feast”),[3] later collected in the book The Back Country….Snyder worked for two summers in the North Cascades in Washington as a fire lookout, on Crater Mountain in 1952 and Sourdough Mountain (both locations on the upper Skagit River) in 1953.”
(snipped from wiki)
no brian wilson he.
May 30, 2010 at 10:22 pm
joel hanes
Stegner didn’t understand the 60′s; his All the Little Live Things is IMHO his weakest work by far.
This from me, the Stegner fan, who either likes or loves nearly everything else he wrote. Those of you historians who have not yet read Beyond the Hundredth Meridian have missed a treat.
May 30, 2010 at 11:24 pm
David
Gary Snyder is a fine emblem for California. He’s lived outside of Grass Valley since the late 1960s and is a professor emeritus in the UC Davis English department. Much of his writing is about the Sierra and the Central Valley. We claim him without reservation.
It makes less sense to present him as the overturner of all values as Stegner suggests. His Buddhist training and his interest in Native American beliefs kept him tied to tradition in a way that separated him from the more permissive of the Beats or hippies.
My guess is that Snyder stood in for a certain thematic concern of Stegner’s. His Angle of Repose (1971) was set in Grass Valley and the narrator at times comments on a hippie commune beyond the edge of town. Snyder’s property was the obvious model. Casting Snyder as the emblem of drugs and free love allowed for the contrast between the Gold Rush and 1960s Californias. That that wasn’t who Snyder really was fits with Joel’s suggestion that Stegner never got the 60′s.
May 31, 2010 at 10:07 am
TF Smith
Did anyone “get” the ’60s? I was there (more or less) and I didn’t get it…
I was reading Grace Palladino’s “Teenagers” recently and thought “um, maybe…”
I don’t know if it has been done, but a “Parallel Lives” comparing the generation that came of age during WW I (FDR, Truman, Marshall, Eisenhower) vis a vis those who came of age in WW II (JFK, LBJ, Johnson, Westmoreland) might make for interesting reading…
A study of civil rights leaders (women and AA) along the same generational lines could be interesting, as well. Phillip Randolph and MLK, for example; dunno who the equivalent in the women’s movement would be…
May 31, 2010 at 2:02 pm
joel hanes
Did anyone “get” the ’60s?
Hmmm. I’d maybe nominate Stewart Brand, Ed Sanders, Frank Zappa, Pink Floyd, It’s A Beautiful Day, and Firesign Theatre.
May 31, 2010 at 2:43 pm
TF Smith
(Semi-) pop culture product from a bunch of (mostly) white men? Really? Seems pretty exclusive… no props for Betty Friedan et al?
On the Parallel Lives track, how about Alice Paul and Gloria Steinem?
Also, interesting the concept of “’60s California” being symbolized by Grass Valley, to anyone…
I’d think San Jose-Palo Alto-Cupertino in Norcal and Canoga Park-Downey-Redondo Beach in Socal…
May 31, 2010 at 3:31 pm
joel hanes
Feminism was the 70s.
May 31, 2010 at 7:26 pm
Western Dave
The Feminine Mystique was published in 1963, the Pill was 1960, redstocking manifesto was 1969. Joel still doesn’t get the 60s.
May 31, 2010 at 10:57 pm
M. Carey
Rather than the Southern Bay Area, I nominate the north Marin and Sonoma coastal hills as the archetype high stone of say 1967-71.
June 1, 2010 at 7:33 am
TF Smith
I was going for the economic impact – which, it can be argued, makes more of a cultural impact than even the cultural “capitals”…
Interesting stat I caught flipping the channels last night, I think on the BofA “America” series; something like 300,000 PCs in the US in 1980, 30 million in 1990…