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We Went for Pogo
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10321 |
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Book World
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12 / 1986 |
2,018 Words |
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David Hallman David Hallman teaches English at James Madison University |
What a wonderful balm it is in middle age to discover that a largely misspent youth was not totally wasted. Coming of age with Walt Kelly's Pogo during the Eisenhower fifties was, for many of us, more than a formative experience; it gave us, either directly or obliquely, a perspective on the world at large that we would never quite shed. Life was serious, but not too; it was funny if we could only look beyond our acne and inhibitions; and, most important, we ourselves were as ridiculous and dignified as a motley crew of Georgia swamp animals who celebrated an annual "World Serious" in the fall but who also managed to observe their yearly Christmas cheer with a roust of insane carols. For us, if Pogo was never elected to the White House, well he should have been. The strip was one of the high watermarks of American popular culture.
Comic strips need a context. While they are not original to the New World, they seem somehow as naturally American as Broadway musicals, tough-guy detectives, and Hollywood westerns. A critic once wrote that America lacked a myth to unite the country. We had no Arthurian legend, no Faust story, no Aeneid to celebrate our country, no Roland to sing. Our Revolutionary War was locked in Longfellow; the War Between the Status summarized a great American experience, but that story was really a link to the European past; the western expansion was perhaps our most native experience, but that has been turned into a John Wayne movie. But if our cultural experience is fragmented--is Hollywood or Wall Street a symbol for America? Nashville or Beacon Hill? Television wrestling or the Metropolitan Opera?--there are still the occasional ties that bind. For my generation, there were several: rock music, which I rejected out of hand; J.D. Salinger and Jack Kerouac, neither of whom spoke to me; and, of course, the
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