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New
Jersey is America's secret treasure-house of culture.
If
that strikes you as a proposition out of an absurdist play, consider
a sampling of the gifted figures who have either come from Jersey or
made a home there: Bruce Springsteen (N.J.'s state songbird); Frank
Sinatra, Frankie Valli; Walt Whitman, William Carlos Williams, Allen
Ginsberg; the painters George Inness and John Marin; the
photographer Alfred Stieglitz; Stephen Crane, Philip Roth, Junot
Díaz; and David Chase, creator of "The Sopranos."
California? Too much fantasy, too much hazardous sunlight and too
much obsession with software and hard bodies. New York City? Too
much reality, too little sunlight and too much obsession, period.
Everywhere in between? Riches, to be sure, but no place has New
Jersey's tightly packed diversity, its quick changes from urban to
country, from mountains to coast, from gritty to gorgeous.
Of
course, think "New Jersey" and cultural epicenter doesn't
immediately spring to mind. Instead, the name summons up unsparing
caricature: grime, gangsters, pollution, ugly highways, Byzantine
shopping malls, Saharan parking lots and a level of culture
somewhere between troglodyte and troll.
Even
the nickname "Garden State" seems to be something like a defensive
reaction meant to fend off ridicule. In 1954, when the state
legislature passed a bill adding the sobriquet to license plates,
garbage disposal had long been a crisis in Jersey. Not only did the
tiny state lack sufficient space for discarding its waste, but it
had become a dumping-ground for garbage from other states. Gov.
Robert Meyner vetoed the bill, writing, "I do not believe that the
average citizen of New Jersey regards his state as more peculiarly
identifiable with gardening for farming than any of its other
industries or occupations." The state legislature promptly overrode
his veto, and the rest is license-plate history.
New
Jersey's small size has a lot to do with both its much-inflated
deficiencies and its virtues. A lot is packed into limited
territory. Urban squalor is squeezed up against dairy farms;
picturesque villages right out of a New England landscape are a
sneeze away from sulfurous factories and malodorous highways. For a
lot of people, caricature of the state's deficiencies is an
efficient way to reduce its multifaceted nature to a clear meaning.
![[representatives of the garden state]](hidden_state_of_culture_wsj_1-24-09_files/image001.jpg)
Everett Collection (Cruise, Suburbia); Getty Images (15)
![[jersey key]](hidden_state_of_culture_wsj_1-24-09_files/image002.jpg)
Representatives of the Garden State:
1. James Gandolfini in 'The Sopranos' 2. William Carlos Williams 3.
Philip Roth 4. Giovanni Ribisi of the movie 'SubUrbia' 5. Walt
Whitman 6. writer Amiri Baraka 7, 8. Steven Van Zandt and Tony
Sirico in 'The Sopranos' 9. Bruce Springsteen 10. Jack Nicholson 11.
Allen Ginsberg 12, 13. Aaron Burr and Alexander Hamilton 14. Frank
Sinatra 15. writer- performer Eric Bogosian, whose 'SubUrbia' is set
in New Jersey 16. Tom Cruise 17, 18. Steve Zahn and director Richard
Linklater of 'SubUrbia' 19. writer-director Todd Solondz
The
jumble of contrasts is, on the contrary, the source of Jersey's
remarkable harvest of talent. It drives certain people to either
build a unified artistic sensibility out of the divisions around
them, or to create art unhindered by a narrow identity.
At
the same time, you can refine Jersey's countless dimensions into two
polarized elements: industrial and pastoral. The struggle for
dominance between them is at the heart of the American drama -- the
Civil War, for example, or the urban/agrarian friction that has
shaped the schism between liberal and conservative to this day. It
could be that Jersey is so representative of America's original
strife that dismissing the state as a crude and unlovely place is a
good way to sweep certain national anxieties under the rug.
But
New Jersey's fractured personality is the very reason for its
(hidden) cultural preeminence. After all, no less than one-fifth of
this heavily industrialized and densely populated state is taken up
by the Pine Barrens, a gigantic primeval forest of pine and oak
buried like the unconscious in southern Jersey. Even in Newark's
black ghetto, the young writer Leroi Jones (Amiri Baraka) could
imagine that "the invisible mountains of New Jersey linger where I
was born." Paul Robeson -- Phi Beta Kappa scholar, athlete,
law-school graduate, actor, singer -- might not have thrived in a
less faceted place.
Then, too, there is the particular way Jersey is positioned next to
New York. Unlike Long Island and Connecticut, from where you have to
drive through New York City's boroughs or Westchester to get to
Manhattan, you go from Jersey straight into the glittering towers of
Gotham, which confront you dramatically no matter what approach you
take from the Garden State. For New Jerseyans, Gotham exists as
ever-present aspiration, temptation and either haunting or
competitive contrast. That could be why you find Queen Latifah's
wild, river-spanning energy in Philip Roth's antic intensity and
vice versa. And perhaps why Dionne Warwick sings "Promises,
Promises" with such robust pathos. "Things that I promised myself
fell apart..."
So
why all the antipathy toward a place that is also the first colony
to ratify the Bill of Rights, that contains numerous beautiful towns
and villages, that boasts an ocean, mountains and a vast forest
among its natural wonders, and that has more horses per square mile
than any other state?
The
glee that New Yorkers take in belittling their neighbors to the west
is especially energetic. There are two reasons for this. First,
people living in New York City are convinced that without New Jersey
blocking their view, they would be able to see the rest of the
country. Second, New Jerseyan Aaron Burr killed New Yorker Alexander
Hamilton in a duel, the tragic consequence of negative remarks that
Hamilton made behind Burr's back at a dinner party (probably
something like: "Burr, that moron from New Jersey"). That Hamilton
was gunned down on a Weehawken, N.J., cliff overlooking Manhattan's
spectacular streets -- and not, say, on Fifth Avenue -- only added
insult to injury. New Yorkers have a long memory.
But
these local grievances do not explain why New Jersey's worth eludes
the rest of the country. Angus Kress Gillespie, a professor of
American Studies at Rutgers University, accounts for the national
scorn in two words: "The Turnpike."
The
New Jersey Turnpike, that is, a 148-mile, 4- to 12-lane monstrosity
that snakes from the state's southeast corner north to the George
Washington Bridge through some of the meanest terrain in the
civilized world: macadam deserts; belching smokestacks that make
Gary, Ind., look like a Scottish pasture; trucks roaring on every
side of you as though you were strapped to the bottom of a Boeing
737 during takeoff; strip malls that go on and on like the laughter
of a lunatic.
Because it is the very essence of America's ugly industrialized and
commercialized underside, the New Jersey Turnpike has impressed
itself on the national imagination more than any other element of
the Garden State. Bruce Springsteen's genius has been precisely to
take that negative image and infuse it with positive energy.
"Springsteen has made the Turnpike's blighted landscape a source of
almost cinematic drama," said Jim Cullen, the author of "Born in the
USA: Bruce Springsteen and the American Tradition." "He transformed
it into the vivid setting of riveting journeys that finally matter
more than the city glimmering across the Hudson."
Springsteen's isn't the only artistic vision that has drawn a
universal meaning out of the Garden State's more sordid particulars.
Mr. Chase, the genius behind "The Sopranos," chose Essex County as
the setting for his extraordinary tale of lust, greed, vanity and
pride among a group of small-time gangsters, thus bestowing on the
third state the mythic timelessness that Thomas Hardy once conferred
upon the English heath.
Mr.
Chase himself was born in Mount Vernon, N.Y., and grew up in two New
Jersey towns including North Caldwell, N.J., the very environs where
Tony Soprano and his colleagues live and do business. As a child
during the late '40s and early '50s, he made regular car trips with
his family to visit his grandmother in Westchester. To his young
eyes, New Jersey's half industrial, half naturally wild landscape
was "a magical vision of a huge mystery," he said. Gazing out at it,
he was "completely transfixed."
The
mystery was, specifically, the Meadowlands, a 28-square-mile swath
of marshland in northeastern New Jersey, a stone's throw from
Manhattan. At the time when Mr. Chase ogled it from the backseat of
his family's car, the teeming swamp had not yet become the giant
landfill it is today. Industrialized pockets vied for space with
rivers, rushes and wildlife. Even as a teenager, taking the bus into
the city to film school from his parents' home in North Caldwell,
Mr. Chase remembers looking out over the "rivers like glass, the
miles after miles of reeds in the water, and the factories" and
thinking, "this is America, strong and big. The brute beauty of the
factories, the winking airports, made me feel alive."
Call
this sense of enchantment an outgrowth of the "Parkway," as opposed
to the "Turnpike," dimension of the state.
The
Garden State Parkway, that is, a 173-mile meandering highway
stretching from the southernmost tip of New Jersey at its coastline
to its northern border with New York state -- a winding road with
capacious lanes; a broad, verdant, tree-filled island running down
(much of) its middle; wooded boundaries; limited entrances to
prevent congestion; bans on trucks, billboards and any kind of
commerce along its way; gentle curves designed to keep drivers from
being lulled to sleep; and -- naturally, in the home state of
Sinatra and Springsteen -- "singing shoulders" that make the wheels
rumble if a drowsy motorist starts to drift from the road.
The
Garden State Parkway is something like the fulfillment of the modern
dream of harmony between nature and technology -- where rivers like
glass meet winking airports. If the car is one big part of America's
soul -- Springsteen: "The girls comb their hair in rearview
mirrors/And the boys try to look so hard" -- then the Turnpike and
the Parkway reflect two basic aspects of American existence: our
unflinching approach to the practical facts of life, and our
irrepressible romantic tendency to try to transform them.
In
his epic poem, "Paterson," William Carlos Williams spoke for the
factual Turnpike when he famously wrote: "No ideas but in things."
Williams' fellow Patersonian and disciple, the Parkway mystic Allen
Ginsberg, took the side of Parkway romanticism when he referred in
his epic poem, "Howl," to "nowhere Zen New Jersey" ("nowhere" being
a compliment for Ginsberg). No wonder Philip Roth called his memoir
of growing up in Newark "The Facts" -- and then proceeded to
undermine them.
Most
of the greatest Jersey cultural figures combine Turnpike and Parkway
characteristics, as if New Jersey embodied those two aspects of
American life long before the construction of its asymmetrical
arteries.
George Inness, America's first great landscape painter, made
pictures that were both more immediate and real than those of his
predecessors, and at the same time more personal and introspective.
Alfred Stieglitz, born in Hoboken, pushed realism in photography to
new limits, even as he was perfecting a hazy, impressionistic style.
In his novel "The Red Badge of Courage," Stephen Crane -- Newark,
Port Jervis, Asbury Park -- pulled off the near-impossible feat of
using dreamlike language to make war shockingly actual.
When
Marlon Brando -- whose breakthrough film, "On the Waterfront," took
place in Hoboken -- started to run out of steam in the '60s,
Neptune, N.J.-born Jack Nicholson came to the rescue of American
film. The young Mr. Nicholson was tenaciously Turnpike in his
abrasive explosions, and profoundly Parkway in his dreamy
outcastness. From there, realism in American acting had two places
to go: Parkway calmness and integrity (Meryl Streep, Bernards High,
class of 1967); or Turnpike disorientation and bizarreness (Tom
Cruise, Glen Ridge High, class of 1980).
"Integrity," in fact, is a word you hear a lot when people talk
about Springsteen's music or Mr. Chase's artistic vision. Maybe it's
because New Jersey politics is known to have a certain Turnpike
quality that an idealistic, Parkway conception of integrity looms
large in New Jersey's collective imagination.
Among other things, integrity in Jersey terms means not judging by
appearances. Frankie Valli: "Ahh, ah-ah-ah-ahh (Rag doll, ooh)/I
love you just the way you are." Springsteen: "You ain't a beauty,
but hey you're alright/Oh and that's alright with me."
No
wonder Tony Soprano can't stop thinking that redemption is right
around the corner, though his temperament keeps him right where he
is, stuck in his own nature.
Seeking something like a unifying vision of New Jersey, I asked Mr.
Cullen what he thought Springsteen, the Turnpike alchemist, might
ask Tony Soprano, the Turnpike product who is also haunted by ducks,
bears and other forms of Parkway nature. "I understand you," Mr.
Cullen said, "I sympathize with you, I kinda even like you. But your
fatal embrace of your sickness is killing what you love."
And
what question does Mr. Chase imagine that his creation -- sprung
partly from his boyhood desire to plumb the mystery hidden in the
lights and rushes of the Meadowlands -- might pose to the state's
epic warbler, if Tony were to meet Bruce in some warp of space and
time? "He'd ask him for concert tickets," Mr. Chase said.
Lee
Siegel's most recent book is "Against the Machine: Being Human in
the Age of the Electronic Mob."
Corrections & Amplifications
David Chase, creator of "The Sopranos," was born in Mount Vernon,
N.Y., and grew up in two New Jersey towns. This article erroneously
said that Mr. Chase was born in North Caldwell, N.J.
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source: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123275571425511845.html |