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- <text id=91TT1515>
- <title>
- July 08, 1991: Bang the Drum Quickly
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- July 08, 1991 Who Are We?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BOOKS, Page 58
- Bang the Drum Quickly
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Sam Keen, author of the best-selling Fire in the Belly, is the
- latest preacher to hit the male-consciousness circuit
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Stengel
- </p>
- <p> The men's movement is a misnomer. It is neither political
- like the civil rights movement nor activist like the women's
- movement. It is a convenient catchphrase for something that is
- bubbling up around the country--men attending
- consciousness-raising seminars, men tramping off for weekends
- in the woods, men crying, men laughing, men drumming--which
- suggest that the state of American guyness is kind of shaky.
- </p>
- <p> These activities do constitute a kind of movement, but it
- is a spiritual one. The white-haired guru of this
- transformation is the poet Robert Bly, whose book Iron John has
- been on the best-seller list for more than seven months. Bly and
- his fellow wise men believe that since the Industrial
- Revolution, when fathers left the home to work in offices and
- factories, boys have been raised by women and co-opted by a
- female view of masculinity. Later, the women's movement came
- along, creating an epidemic of what Bly calls "soft males," men
- who lacked fierceness, decisiveness and a clear sense of what
- being a man means. The requiem of the movement is that modern
- man feels an inexpressible sense of loss, but its battle cry is
- that boys will be boys, and that's a damn good thing.
- </p>
- <p> The latest addition to the maleness canon is Sam Keen's
- Fire in the Belly (Bantam; 272 pages; $19.95), which is
- beginning what may be a long residence on the best-seller lists.
- While Bly provides the pragmatic poetry of contemporary manhood,
- Keen offers some poetic pragmatism. His book does not so much
- compete with Bly's as complement it, offering the yin of
- personal experience to Bly's yang of mythological precedent.
- </p>
- <p> Fire in the Belly is that rare thing: a literate and
- lyrical self-help book. Like Bly, who uses a Grimm brothers'
- myth as his framework, Keen takes up the ancient theme that each
- man is on a spiritual journey, a quest for the grail of
- manhood. Bly's book is an original song of the road, a literary
- Walkman piping background music for the journey. Keen attempts
- to provide a rough road map for the trip, advising the spiritual
- traveler how to avoid the dead ends of combative machismo and
- the blind alleys of romantic obsession.
- </p>
- <p> Keen's book arises from his belief that men have lost a
- unifying vision of masculinity, and are "involved in a night
- battle in a jungle against an unseen foe." That foe is not woman
- (or WOMAN, as Keen puts it, in one of the book's annoying New
- Age constructions), but man's unconscious bondage to women.
- Modern man, he suggests, easily won his Oedipal battle: the boy
- snags Mom because Dad is preoccupied at the office and she's
- hankering for a little affection. This Oedipal victory ties men
- to women in an unhealthy way, and Keen believes a man has to
- leave the world of women, and define himself on his own, before
- he can rejoin it.
- </p>
- <p> The women's movement helped create what now seems to be a
- vanishing species--the Sensitive Guy. He's become scarce
- because most men could never emulate Alan Alda, and most women--oh, mercurial creatures!--now seem to think they turned men
- into wimps. Keen, like Bly, suggests that men can be sensitive
- without becoming worm-boys. Whereas Bly sketches out how a man
- can be sensitive and fierce, Keen calls for a rebirth of wonder
- and empathy among men.
- </p>
- <p> On his answering machine at his 60-acre ranch in Sonoma
- County, Calif., Keen sings Cole Porter's Don't Fence Me In. Keen
- grew up in Alabama, Tennessee and Delaware ("more Huck Finn
- than Holden Caulfield," he says in his high-pitched foghorn of
- a voice) and has a doctorate in philosophy of religion from
- Princeton. His thesis concerned the idea of mystery. "I've
- always been interested in talking clearly about things that can
- never really be known," he says.
- </p>
- <p> In the late 1960s, Keen left academia and eventually moved
- to Northern California, becoming a contributing editor to
- Psychology Today. Over the past 20 years he has been conducting
- seminars on personal mythology. Fire in the Belly is his 12th
- book, and he regards it as another effort in his lifelong
- exploration of modern mythology, in this case, the mythology of
- manhood.
- </p>
- <p> Like Bly and most of the other men's-movement figures,
- Keen is a kind of hairy-chested Jungian, having adapted Jung's
- scholarly theories of the inner journey to the American guy's
- daily struggle. Both Bly and Keen are also spiritual disciples
- of Joseph Campbell (Keen and Campbell often conducted seminars
- together), and all three are linked to that great facilitator
- in the satellite-dotted sky Bill Moyers. Moyers has conducted
- PBS interviews with Campbell, Keen and Bly, giving each of their
- books a video assist onto the best-seller list. What Oprah is
- to books like Men Who Hate Women & the Women Who Love Them,
- Moyers is to intellectual fare like Campbell's Hero with a
- Thousand Faces.
- </p>
- <p> Keen attributes the success of his book to his sense that
- we are in an epochal moment in history. "All the metaphors of
- Western culture are beginning to change," he says. "The warrior
- metaphor has shaped men's lives for hundreds of years. That is
- changing, but it will take another hundred years. The code we
- have to break is that of the warrior psyche." Keen, like Bly,
- regards the recent gulf war as a return to old and discredited
- metaphors, more a problem of George Bush's unresolved male
- identity than geopolitics. Man, he says, must become a
- custodian, not a conqueror, of the planet.
- </p>
- <p> In conversation, Keen recalls how he wrestled
- competitively in graduate school, and that his matches were
- aggressive, never hostile. Aggression, he says, is focused
- energy, not enmity. He wants men to be able to be aggressive
- without being hostile. That is the focused if occasionally fuzzy
- mission of his book. Fire in the Belly is as much about being
- human as being a man.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-