By Touraj Daryaee and Warren Soward,
California State University, Fullerton
I have been following reactions to
the movie ‘300’ and to my article which appeared on Payvand and in the Orange County Register. Of course
each of these venues has their own constituency and so reactions have been
somewhat different, to say the least. I am still quite disturbed by the
intentions of the film. In fact, it is these scholarly pursuits that make me dig
a bit deeper, past the slogans and moralistic hyperbolae. I see now that the
reason that I reacted to ‘300’ needs some explanation, in order that our friends
understand why this is not just a
movie.
Yes, Zack Snyder’s ‘300’ is just a
movie, based on a graphic novel, a form of comic book, by Frank Miller. But
let’s talk about some of the people involved in making the film. Who is Frank
Miller? Oh, he writes comic books. Do you accept the premise that one’s
political ideology and worldview affects her or his creative work? If you say
no, there is no need for you to read another word of this article and please
either get an education or just head to the beach. Otherwise, if you feel that
intent might be important, let’s see how Mr. Miller, Mr. Snyder, and their
consultants see the world and the “others,” i.e., the people of the
Middle East.
Thanks to a friend, I was able to
obtain the transcripts of a recent interview with Frank Miller, made on January
24, 2007, about President Bush’s State of the Union address. Let me give you his
responses and thoughts on the current state of affairs in the world (I’ve
highlighted the important words):
(National Public Radio – NPR):
Frank, what’s the state of the union?
Frank Miller: Well. I don’t really
find myself worrying about the state of the union as I do the state of the
home-front. It seems to me quite obvious that our country and the entire
Western World is up against an existential foe that knows exactly what it
wants … and we’re behaving like a collapsing empire…
NPR: A lot of people would say what
America has done abroad has led to
the doubts and even the hatred of its own citizens.
Frank Miller: Well, okay, then let’s
finally talk about the enemy. For some reason, nobody seems to be talking
about who we’re up against, and the sixth century barbarism that they
actually represent. These people saw peoples’ heads off. They enslave women,
they genitally mutilate their daughters, they do not behave by any cultural
norms that are sensible to us. I’m speaking into a microphone that never
could have been a product of their culture, and I’m living in a city
where three thousand of my neighbors were killed by thieves of airplanes they
never could have built.
NPR: As you look at people around
you, though, why do you think they’re so, as you would put it, self-absorbed,
even whiny?
Frank Miller: Well, I’d say it’s for
the same reason the Athenians and Romans were. We’ve got it a little good
right now. Where I would fault President Bush the most, was that in the wake of
9/11, he motivated our military, but he didn’t call the nation into a state
of war…”
Of course, I know that there are
people who hate Islam and all that it represents, but from certain American
perspectives, such as the one espoused by Frank Miller, if you live in that part
of the world, be you Arab, Persian, or any other, you are on the side of those
who have attacked the U.S. on 9/11. Is anyone telling me
that the movie has not then consciously portrayed the Persian army of king
Xerxes like the Taliban terrorists and the Iraqi insurgents who use IEDs to kill
American soldiers?
What about Zack Snyder? I see him as
more of a man making a buck, something that the movie industry aims at anyway.
By all accounts he is successful. I very much liked his Sin City. I thought it was good. He also
gave an interview which was, in short, about whether we should change the world
“Persian” to “Zoroastrian” because of the current issues and to avoid offending
anyone. An interviewer mentioned that, before the movie was finished, it had
been observed that Leonidas, the king of the Spartans, came off like George
Bush. Snyder replied that he hadn’t thought much about it and if Leonidas did
sound like Bush, all the better.
Oh, still would you say, ‘umm it’s
just a movie, man, get over it?’ Frank Miller is just doing a comic book and
Zack Snyder is making a fun movie? So, has anyone read the book 300:
The Art of the Film? Does anyone know who has written the
forward to it? Since I deal with “absurdities,” and I just can’t take
things lightly, I searched for the name of the person who has helped turn “just”
comic book into to “just” a movie. The name of that person is Victor Davis
Hanson. Who is he, you might ask? He is a professor of Classics (Greek and
Latin) at California State University, Fresno and is an “expert” on the “Western” way
of war, whatever that means (for criticisms see Western Courier). So why was a historian of Greek
warfare asked to write the forward to a book about its making? So next time
someone tells you, ‘oh there is no real historical substance to the film,’ ask
them why it was necessary for an ancient historian to attempt to lend
intellectual legitimacy to it.
But for me, what is much more
troubling is who Victor Davis Hanson
is, and what he stands for. Beside his work on Greek agriculture and warfare, he
does other things. Mr. Hanson is also a Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institute,
Stanford
University. If you do not
already know about the “great” Hoover Institute, then do some searching and ask
people in academia about it. Ummm, and what does Dr. Hanson do in his spare time
when he is not writing about Greek techniques of warfare and how they saved
Western Civilization from the Barbarians (people like me)? Well, he writes, not
on ancient history, but on current events for William Buckley’s National
Review Online and other “conservative” (today they are called
Neo-conservative) news outlets, as well as his website (http://www.victorhanson.com/). He has several
interesting books which I suggest you look at, such as An Autumn of
War: What America Learned from September 11 and
the War on Terrorism (2002). President Bush and Vice President Cheney have
met him and are enamored by his views (see Boston Globe). In fact Hanson’s An Autumn of
War is one of Cheney's favorite recent books. In October 2002, during the
run-up to the Iraq invasion, Cheney invited Hanson
to the vice president's mansion for a meeting followed by dinner. Cheney said
little but asked many questions (see Washington Post). So Hanson provides the intellectual
force behind Cheney’s views (http://www.deanesmay.com/archives/004567.html
).
The fallacy in his historical
outlook is clear by such statement as:
“The phrase ‘300 Spartans’ evokes not
only the ancient battle of Thermopylae, but also the larger idea of fighting for
freedom against all odds — a notion subsequently to be enshrined through some
2,500 years of Western civilization” (http://www.victorhanson.com/articles/hanson101106.html
).
So he not only provides a skewed
portrayal of ancient history, he is also consulted by the so-called
compassionate conservatives for purposes of skewing present-day matters of the
Middle East!
Dr. Hanson’s other book, Between
War and Peace: Lesson from Afghanistan to Iraq (2004) includes such
interesting essays as: “Don Rumsfeld, A Radical for Our Time,” “History Isn’t on
the Palestinians’ Side,” and “Misunderstanding America: We’re Not the Ones with
the Problems,” and he has also written on other things such as Why the West
Has Won? (2002); Ripples of Battle:
How Wars of the past Still Determine how We Fight, how We Live, and how We
Think
(2004).
Even more troubling to me is yet
another side of Victor Davis Hanson’s writing, that which has to do with seeing
the non-Anglo immigrants as contaminating the pure center of Western
Civilization, the U.S.A. He is the author of
Mexifornia:
A State of Becoming (2004) and with this book he became
an instant hero of the anti-immigrant movement in the U.S. To quote
one reviewer, “He (Hanson) argues that ‘cultural relativism’ and
‘multiculturalism’ – which
contend that all cultures possess inherent
value – ‘have escaped from the university
and circulate like an airborne
toxin in the popular culture’ (p. 6)
(review online by Walter A. Ewing, The American Immigration Law Foundation)
(bold words mine).
For Hanson, all cultures are not equal and should not be appreciated. And not only is he
in a state of panic about the Mexican immigration attacking the
America which he once knew, but
others are not so welcome either. One of my students, after reading Hanson’s
chapter in a book called What if? hypothesizing an alternative history in
which the Persians won the battle of Salamis in 480 BCE, and which suggested that,
as a result, freedom and democracy would not be alive today? My student had
asked the author, “Do you think I am an uncivilized person because I am coming
from an Iranian civilization?” and he was answered by Hanson that, “If you are
from that civilization, I think you are uncivilized, but I think you are part of
Western civilization now.”
Dear readers, these are the people
behind the book and the movie “300.” You can not say that such
individuals have been just writing a
comic book and just making a movie
with the aid of a ethnocentric historian.
I hope that that my “absurdities”
have become a bit more clear, and I also hope that it is clear that ‘300’ is not
“just, ummm, a film, man,” but that it is informed by an pseudo-intellectual
force that is behind many of these types of projects which portray the ancient
Persians as the epitome of the modern enemy of the United States. For Hanson,
what is unfortunate is that the war between the Greeks and the Persians is still
not over but rather has been carrying on for the past 2,500 years. A very sad
mindset, indeed. Once we allow this type of stereotyping to continue to bombard
the American viewing audience, many whose main mode of learning is visual, you
will generate an even more negative view of “others” and also of us
Persians/Iranians in the United States. It is these subtleties
that I believe are most dangerous to us as immigrants living in the
U.S.
When you allow books to appear,
without criticism, which call for the “encampment” of Muslims in the United
States (Michelle Malkin,
In Defense of Internment: The Case for 'Racial Profiling' in World
War II and the War on Terror (2004, selling over 100,000 copies)
or for stopping immigration from the Middle East by the same author,
Invasion:
How America Still Welcomes Terrorists, Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to
Our Shores
(2004, selling almost 300,000 copies), combined with films
portraying the Persians attacking Western values, killing their women and
children, hanging them on trees, and crucifying their heroes, I warn you, we
will be discriminated against even more. If one does not criticize and
articulate the phobia and hatred of these people, then it is easy to
end
up in a concentration camp somewhere in Nevada or Arizona, because the popular
culture has prepared the population of this nation for seeing all of us, be we
Arab, Persian, Turk, Muslim, Jewish, Bahai or Zoroastrian, as the head-covered,
turban-wearing lunatics who want to destroy the American way of life, freedom,
and democracy.
What we need is an articulation of
Iranian history in an intelligent and coherent fashion, one that is not wrapped
in nationalist language. The Irish and others had a very tough time when they
immigrated to the United
States in the nineteenth century. There were
signs outside bars and other places stating no dogs and no Irish were allowed,
and now it may be our turn if we do not stand up. When was the last time a
Persian or Iranian was shown in a positive light in Hollywood? Lunacy on
either side does not help our cause, but confronting racism, Iran-bashing, and
the bashing of the ancient Persians, which ‘300’ has done in many ways, has
changed my aim in life. It has certainly enlisted me to spend part of my time
writing not just articles for academic journals which are read by maybe fifty
people, but rather on a wider scale for the American and English-speaking
population to understand that in the sixth century BCE, Peloponnesus (Greece
which indeed was and is a great civilization) was not the only place on earth
that had a culture, and that Persians, among others, contributed enormously to
this World
Civilization (that is what needs to be
emphasized) who brought to the world such things as backgammon, chess, and polo,
the Persian rugs which the world cherishes, the Persian cats that they are
willing to pay so much for, and that it was Persians such as Razi who found the
medicinal use of alcohol, and, Khawrazmi who formulated algebra and algorithm
(the word algorithm derives from his name). Somebody should ask Frank Miller how
his microphone could work and his planes could fly if it wasn’t for some of
these contributions from Persian civilization.
|
 Touraj Daryaee
Professor of History at
Cal. State Fullerton |
 Warren Soward
Graduate
Student studying Persian History at Cal. State Fullerton
|
... Payvand News - 4/5/07 ...