Conservatives And The Culture Wars

There’s a lot of talk among conservatives these days about the culture. The late, great Andrew Breitbart knew that political victories would always be fleeting, but cultural changes have a tendency to stick around. Worse, as the culture goes so goes the politics. The subject of culture, specifically pop culture, in American politics and society is being debated in conservative circles but the discussions, while often interesting, tend to be somewhat circular. For starters, nobody can really agree with what needs to be done. There are a lot of slogans about “taking back the culture” but those slogans are misplaced. The culture was never really conservative. We can not “take it back” though we can certainly make impressions upon it.

There was no Golden Age of Conservative Culture. There have been huge stars who wore their conservatism on their sleeves, most notably John Wayne and Jimmy Stewart. The brilliant director John Ford was an unabashed conservative. Today first-rate actors like the mighty Robert Duvall, Nick Searcy, Jon Voight, and Vince Vaughn are out of the political closet. Hollywood used to produce many films that celebrated America and patriotism, particularly during World War Two. In the early 1940s, Hollywood was “doing its part”, as they say, by making war films that showed America in the best possible light. Compare that to the Hollywood films that were released during the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, where the Americans are routinely portrayed as evil, insane, or incompetent. The Hurt Locker won the Best Picture award a few years ago for its portrayal of an American bomb squad leader in Iraq who acted out of a perverse love of the risk of death. Less successful, the movie White House Down featured the military-industrial complex (those people who make the tanks) as terrorists. Today, the Liam Neeson action film Non-Stop has, as its main villain, a 9/11 family member and former soldier who become terrorists because they don’t think America has been proactive enough in stopping more terrorist attacks.

It’s certainly true that pop culture is distinctly Left wing when it ventures into political realms. But Progressivism has always been at the core of the creative arts. Was Hollywood conservative in the 1940s?

The clip is from 1948’s State Of The Union, directed by Frank Capra and starring Spencer Tracy as an industrialist (a Republican, no less!) who runs for President. The clip is too brief, and I wasn’t able to find the entire thing, but it gives a taste. The entire speech reads like it came straight out of the Communist Manifesto or Obama’s last State of the Union speech; it’s a litany of liberal pipe dreams. Free healthcare, affordable housing, you name it. No tax cuts, please, we need the government to provide. And this from the director Frank Capra, long known as a conservative Republican despite the Leftist tilt of classics like It’s A Wonderful Life and Mr. Smith Goes To Washington.

It seems to me that conservatives need to understand that we will probably never be the dominant force in the culture. But there are still ways to win cultural battles, and there are ways not to win cultural battles.

The way to achieve victories in the culture war is to engage the enemy. Listen to the music, watch the television shows, go to the movies. When you find examples of Leftist rhetoric, don’t scream for boycotts that never work. Engage the enemy. Talk about the culture, offer arguments against the culture, be a happy warrior. This is the lesson of Andrew Breitbart, and is being carried on by his acolytes like Chris and Dana Loesch, John Nolte, and Ben Shapiro. Don’t shrink away from the Left; fight them happily. When Jon Stewart mocks conservatives, mock Jon Stewart. Point out who he is and what his agenda is, because most people don’t know that he even has an agenda. Get his beliefs out in the open. Give serious examples of the arguments he downplays with sarcasm and scorn. Many people in this country do not follow politics closely. They get their politics from the likes of Stewart, Stephen Colbert, David Letterman, Jimmy Fallon, and Jimmy Kimmel. They are hearing one side of the argument, and contempt for the other side. You can point out why Letterman’s joke wasn’t funny, or why Colbert’s interview was skewed, but only if you know what they’re saying.

Conservatives should not only talk about the culture, they should create it. Conservative themes resonate deeply when they’re done well. Too often, they’re done poorly. I’m sure the members of the band Madison Rising are great guys, but their songs are Nickelback-worthy anthems full of sloganeering. “In The Days That Reagan Ruled”? “Right To Bear”? “Where Was The Media Then”? I’m conservative and even I don’t want to hear these songs. You never see a liberal band writing a song called “Barack Obama Is A Great President” or “Hillary Is My Honey”. Nobody wants to be hit with a brick, whether it comes from a liberal or conservative. For some reason conservative artists feel that they need to make conservative art. They don’t. They need to make good art. Their conservatism will bleed through into the music or movies, but nobody will care if the music or movie stinks. Create your art with no agenda other than creating great art. If you let your heart and soul come through your art, your conservatism will come through as well. If your art is good it will find an audience. It may be a small audience, but if it touches one person who spreads the word, you are reaching out and engaging in the culture. You don’t have to be bigger than the Beatles to make an impact. Think global but act local is a slogan that actually applies here.

But too many conservatives are doing the exact opposite. Read through the comments at Breitbart’s Big Hollywood site and you’ll see it. Conservatives are actively boasting that they will never go to another movie until Hollywood starts making pro-faith, pro-family movies. The contempt for Hollywood’s Leftists is not only palpable, it crosses the line into outright ugliness. The comments on a recent post about HBO’s “it” girl, Lena Dunham, descended into the most adolescent name-calling you can imagine. Dunham, a talented writer and avowed Lefty, was called “a pig”, “a sow”, “ugly”, “fat”, and “retarded” among many other epithets. She was mercilessly mocked for her appearance, her weight, her tattoos, and her willingness to shed her clothes on the show Girls, which she created, writes, and stars in. Nobody in the comments actually engaged with Dunham, her ideas, the culture she promotes, her writing ability, her acting, or anything else that was actually important. Several comments boasted about refusing to watch any show with her in it. A few years back, in response to a post about an anti-Bush statement made by Paul McCartney, commenters responded with a slew of “I will never listen to the Beatles again” diatribes. How does that win the culture wars? It makes you sound like cultural idiots.

I understand the mentality. Why support, with my hard-earned dollars, actors, musicians, and writers who hate everything I stand for? But there’s a difference between refusing to see Non-Stop because it’s blatant Leftist agitprop and refusing to see Schindler’s List because it stars the actor from Non-Stop. I agree completely with most conservatives that Sean Penn is an absolutely odious human being. He’s also a truly gifted actor. Will I go see a movie about Hugo Chavez that stars Penn? No. Would I go see a non-political film with Penn in the lead? Sure, if it’s good.

Big Hollywood guru John Nolte often discusses the “Left wing sucker punches” in films. It’s that moment when a character suddenly makes a Sarah Palin joke or spouts some anti-Tea Party rhetoric in a film that is otherwise apolitical. Conservatives can only make inroads to the heart of the culture when we confront these moments, as Nolte does. It doesn’t mean we have to spend our money or go to movies that are blatant exercises in Left wing buffoonery (like, say, Brian DePalma’s Rendition). But we will never be able to punch back against the Left if we withdraw. See the movies, listen to the music, watch the television show; then argue the merits with your families and friends. Point out the Progressive fallacies and sucker punches so that they are out in the open, and happily argue why those moments are wrong. Drag the Leftist agenda into the light and destroy it. You may not hurt the box office of the movie, but you will make people think about what they’ve seen. Progressive messages work because they are presented with no counter argument, and for far too many people it sinks in because the rest of the movie is so enjoyable, or because the song has a great melody. By pointing out these messages, by discussing them, and by arguing with facts and logic why they are wrong, you’ll be returning fire in the culture war and making your voice heard.

Conservatives need to seed the culture, not cede it.

4 Responses to Conservatives And The Culture Wars

  1. Clampdown, I got to this via one “blaknsam’s” comment on the NRO Glenn Beck article. Can’t say I’m impressed by Beck’s turn, but you makes some good points here. I’d be a tad more critical of Nolte and the Big guys–in their own way they’ve fostered some of the conservative patterns of culture-dismissal that you rightly criticize here.

    You might check out my Carl’s Rock Songbook, housed at The First Things blog First Thoughts. It’s the kind of conservative cultural engagement that you’re calling for, and an introduction to it is here: http://www.firstthings.com/blogs/firstthoughts/2014/01/a-first-thoughts-introduction-to-carls-rock-songbook

    I hope you do check out some of the songbook posts, and if you try, just be aware that the First Things search engines are unpredictable–the archive now “works,” but not every post of mine is easily found.

    • blaknsam says:

      You wrote a post about The Zombies “A Rose For Emily”? That’s really cool. I’m Blaknsam, by the way.

  2. Blaknsam, your post hits me deep where my heart is. My husband was an actor, a successful actor, who got to Hollywood and had to take his stint as a Paratrooper off his resume because Hollywood hates the military.

    I think you are wrong to say we cannot retake the culture. I don’t think anybody can actually own the culture, because culture is always, by its very nature, a meritocracy.

    Liberals seem to have it now, but Hollywood is on life support and if Broadway dies again, it will make cats jealous. But, Liberals have effectively shut conservatives out of the culture for the last 30 yrs. or so, and the lack of fresh ideas is killing liberal Hollywood at the box office. All they can do to bring the ticket buyers into the theater is be bigger, louder, and 3D. All their themes have been done to death. People are bored with liberals and their preachy ideas. Really, only technology keeps their head barely above water in the moollah department.

    However, it is my impression that conservatives were more than willing to lead from behind in pop culture. I have a feeling they regard artists as not quite pure enough to be true conservatives.

    But your example of STATE OF THE UNION is so very true. Except I have a surprise for you. I just watched WOMAN OF THE YEAR with my son who is 27. He’d never seen it. He loved it. Loved that Spencer Tracy’s character was brash and unapologetic about being American. Funnily enough, it is a VERY POLITICALLY INCORRECT movie as far as feminism and many other issues go. It would never get made today, much less by two of Hollywood’s greatest stars. You must watch it and tell me what you think.

    My email is wister87@gmail.com Also, I’m trying to publicize the book I wrote about my husband’s life. If you would be interested in reviewing it, I can send you a copy in a word format.My blog about tom is thomasorourkeactor.blogspot.com

    But, whatever, it’s great to find someone else who cares about these things and for Heaven’s Sake….GETS IT!!!!

    • Blaknsam says:

      Thank you for the kind comments, Marcy. I recall seeing your husband in various movies and shows, particularly United 93 and Law and Order.

      When I say that we cannot retake the culture it is only because I believe that the culture was never ours in the first place. You can’t retake something you never had. And as long as conservatives are operating at such an incredible disadvantage in terms of numbers, clout, and prestige in the arts, taking it over will not happen. We need to burrow in and spread the message. It will take a lot of time.

      I’m familiar with the litany of complaints about movies today, and share many of your opinions. But there are also excellent films being released. From Lincoln to Lone Survivor, from The Lord of the Rings trilogy to 12 Years A Slave, Hollywood can still be a “dream factory” when they put story ahead of message. I have something of a “love/hate” attitude to Hollywood: I absolutely love the idea of a bunch of creative people working together to tell stories and make art, but I hate the loathsome reality of drink, drugs, decadence and grasping for money and fame.

      As for Woman of the Year, I’ve seen it many times. Always loved Spencer Tracy and Katherine Hepburn. How could you not? Cheers.

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