Storming the Gates of Paradise Read Online Free Page B

Storming the Gates of Paradise
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bold as that of any renamed outlaw. Reagan went from the Midwest to Hollywood; Bush is a product of East Coast privilege, even if he did go to flat, dry Midlands, Texas, to cultivate his insularity and a failed oil business.
    Maybe the seductive whisper of these empty places says that you don’t have to work things out, don’t have to come home, don’t have to be reasonable; you can always move on, start over, step outside the social. To think of a figure in this vast western space of the Great Basin is to see a solitary on an empty stage, and the space seems to be about the most literal definition of freedom: space in which nothing impedes will or act. The Bonneville Salt Flats—a dry lake bed in northern Utah—where some of the world’s land speed records have been set, and Nevada’s Black Rock Desert dry lake bed, where more speed records were set and the bacchanalian Burning Man festival takes place every September, seem to have realized this definition in the most obvious ways: speeding cars, naked, hallucinating, tattooed love freaks partying down. And, of course, the U.S. military training for foreign adventures. (In the first Gulf War, the commanders referred to the unconquered portions of Iraq as “Indian Territory.”)
    Easy though all this is to deplore on moral grounds, the place is seductive. There’s a sense for me that all this is home, that every hour, every mile, is coming home, that this isolated condition of driving on an empty highway from one range to another is home, is some kind of true and essential condition of self, because I am myself an American, and something of a westerner. There’s a bumper sticker that says, “I love my country but I fear my government,” and, more than most nations, the United States has imagined itself as geography, as landscape and territory first, and this I too love.
    A year ago, I was at a dinner in Amsterdam when the question came up of whether each of us loved his or her country. The German shuddered, the Dutch were equivocal, the Tory said he was “comfortable” with Britain, the expatriate American said no. And I said yes. Driving across the arid lands, the red lands, I wondered what it was I loved. The places, the sagebrush basins, the rivers digging themselves deep canyons through arid lands, the incomparable cloud formations of summer monsoons, the way the underside of clouds turns the same blue as the underside of a great blue heron’s wings when the storm is about to break.
    Beyond that, for anything you can say about the United States, you can also say the opposite: we’re rootless except that we’re also the Hopi, who haven’t moved in several centuries; we’re violent except that we’re also the Franciscansnonviolently resisting nuclear weapons out here; we’re consumers except that this West is studded with visionary environmentalists; and on and on. This country seems singularly dialectical, for its evils tend to generate their opposites. And the landscape of the West seems like the stage on which such dramas are played out, a space without boundaries, in which anything can be realized, a moral ground, out here where your shadow can stretch hundreds of feet just before sunset, where you loom large, and lonely.
     
The Postmodern Old West, or The Precession of Cowboys and Indians
[1996]
I. COWBOYS, OR WALKING INTO THE PICTURE
    The most breathtaking moment in the
Road Runner
cartoon show came when Wile E. Coyote set a trap for Road Runner. The trap poised on a mesa’s edge was a billboard-like image extending the mesa’s dead-end road into a different landscape, so that the coyote’s prey would crash through the paper image and fall to its death. But the indomitable bird ran straight into the picture and vanished up its road. Representation had become habitable space, and it was no coincidence that the landscape represented was the arid terrain of the Southwest. In much the same way, Ike Clanton escaped the Earp brothers’ assault at

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