Sunday, March 14. 2010Dissent Poetry Corner: Whitey on the MoonTrackbacks
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I've been thinking about this one a lot over the last couple of days. I really like it. Re-run it again on July 20th.
It's a tough nut to crack.
Personally, I think it would be too easy to say it's as simple as accusing the space program of being somehow just for 'whites' (even the 60's space program, mind you), being anti-science or anti-government (both of which the space program represents, then and now), or something which attempts to eradicate the moon landing as the accomplishment it was — rather, I think the song puts the moon landing in perspective (and at the same time, future proposed Lunar and Martian missions) and denying the 'great leap for mankind' notion. While the moon landing may have been that, it's potency as a symbol of human advancement is heavily undermined by the (continuing) social, political, and economic injustice of the society (-ies?) that accomplished that feat.
Of course there's another, strictly metaphorical level to "on the moon" as well, i.e. "in total aloof disregard". And remember the Kramdens? Ralph and Alice? "One of these days Alice, straight to the Moon!" as in, he'll hit her in the face so hard that that's where she'll land.
As all good poetry should be, a performed version:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PtBy_ppG4hY&feature=fvw |
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