A "community driven" effort.
The
Grub Street stage production of The Literary Cultural District Public
Hearing has come and gone after a single
performance at Boston Public Library’s Rabb Lecture Hall. The one-act farce,
co-produced by the Arts & Culture Committee of the Boston City Council, was
written by Eve Bridburg and directed by Michelle Wu. Playing the Stage Manager,
newcomer Larry Lindner turned in a harried, defensive performance – clearly
someone with professional credentials was needed in this part – while Christopher
Castellani and Henriette Lazaridis Power appeared listless and dispirited in
their supporting roles as The Writer and The Audio-Book. This left it up to Ayanna
Pressley, in her key role as The Politician, to pick up the slack, which she
did admirably. Pressley’s ambitious interpretation gave us one of those public
officials who really know the ABCs of their profession – Always Be Campaigning.
But even her nimble and rolling delivery couldn’t rescue a production that
seemed sabotaged from the start by its haplessly scattershot script, as if Ms
Bridburg had all along envisioned nothing more than a one-night engagement in
an almost empty hall . . .
A bit of theater:
It’s no exaggeration to say that the May 6 public hearing for the Literary Cultural District was never meant to be more than that. This is why the
project’s chief organizer, Grub Street, did nothing to publicize it. Or more
precisely, the publicity was as much a mere formality as the hearing itself was
supposed to be. Five hours before it was scheduled to start, Grub Street
condescended to mention it with a terse Facebook post and a tweet.
Grub Street
director Eve Bridburg defended her decision on Facebook, claiming, “Back in April, we
notified more than 50 media outlets and 74 other literary and civic
organizations. We hope to get a great turnout.” If this is true, then she was
grievously let down by these 124 organizations because not a single one of them made so much as a peep about the hearing either. Nor did any of the other organizations of the
LCD coalition, such as The Drum or
the Boston Book Festival. The only public notifications were the ones that were
mandatory – the official City Council posting and the BPL listing.
Grub Street
didn’t even avail itself of its own extensive email list. They could easily
have included an item about the hearing in the weekly newsletter, the Grub Street Rag, or they could have emailed a separate notification, as they
also do from time to time. Evidently their professed desire for a “great
turnout” was not especially ardent.
The Rabb Lecture
Hall at the Boston Public Library can accommodate 350 people, but for the LCD
hearing it was “filled” to only a tenth of its capacity, around 30-35 people.
And that’s being charitable, as this number includes those who had to be there,
such as the city workers operating the video and sound equipment, plus a couple
of party crashers – myself and my co-conspirator, Catherine – who only knew about
the hearing because they had gone looking for it (my testimony here). Most of
the rest of those present were invitees, lined up beforehand by Grub Street to
chime in according to the pre-approved script.
The
irregularities continued once the meeting got under way. Arts & Culture Committee chair Michelle Wu
might have wielded the gavel, but it was her colleague, Ayanna Pressley, who
was both the meeting’s official sponsor and its presiding spirit. Councilor
Pressley opened the proceedings by commending the “robust coalition” that was
“leading the charge” for the LCD, while also pointing out to the echoing
chamber and 320 empty seats that the effort was “community driven.”
The irregularity
here is that Councilor Pressley also happens to occupy a seat on Grub Street’s
“Literary Council.” Moreover, she’s a very recent addition to that group, appearing
for the first time in the Spring of 2013 – in other words when the discussions
for the LCD had to have been already under way in order to secure the $42,5000 “planning
grant” that they received from the Massachusetts Cultural Council (MCC) in Fall
2013.1 Out of the 38
individuals on the Literary Board, Councilor Pressley is the only one with no
professional connection to the literary world; the others are mostly writers,
with some agents and editors. I applaud Grub’s decision to have different
voices, perspectives, and backgrounds represented on the Literary Board,
including even “extra-literary” perspectives – but why then only this single one,
and with this particular timing?
I don’t have
access to the answers, of course, and therefore will only observe that it at
least gives the appearance of possible corruption and conflict of interest, of
a quid pro quo in which the city councilor is gifted an honorific and a line on
her CV in return for helping to lubricate the legislative process for certain
projects.2 Councilor
Pressley is routinely spoken of as a future star in our political firmament,
destined for higher office. A ceremonial seat on a literary board of merely
advisory capacity may not seem like much, but it is indeed something – culture nowadays
is a form of capital, and cultural capital confers prestige for a certain sector
of voters, and, much more crucially, of donors.
Now for strike
three, which wasn’t really brought home to me until the testimony of Dan Currie.
His perspective is significant because he served on the working team putting
together the application that will shortly be submitted by the LCD coalition to
the Massachusetts Cultural Council. Currie’s remarks were highly critical of
the coalition’s leadership – its “Executive Partners” as they have dubbed
themselves – and called for a process that was more transparent, open, and
inclusive than what he had seen so far.
Dan Currie
speaks with some authority here, because he was instrumental in shepherding an
earlier Boston literary site through the official process to become a city
landmark. It’s thanks to his efforts that we now have an Edgar Allan Poe
walking tour, a Poe Square at Boylston and Charles Streets, and soon a public
statue of Poe Returning to Boston that
actually looks dynamic, interesting, and flat-out cool instead of like the
usual bronzed dogshit. Yet a monument of presumably more conventional cut had
been the first choice of the project’s other leaders; it was only because Currie
had insisted on a more democratic process, soliciting greater public
participation and feedback than the officially required minimum, that a genuinely
popular result was achieved.
By contrast, the
LCD coalition’s “Executive Partners” are doing the opposite, barely fulfilling
even the letter of the law, let alone its spirit. This is especially the case
when it comes to their third strike: the scandalous decision to not release a
list of the district’s “assets” for public scrutiny and discussion before the application
is submitted to the Massachusetts Cultural Council. “Assets” is the MCC’s unlovely
and revealingly commercial term for the sites and properties that are supposed
to anchor a proposed cultural district – cultural attractions, of course, but
also business venues that might be associated, however tangentially, with the
cultural theme. In the Literary Cultural District’s case, such “assets” would
include specifically literary landmarks such as the Thoreau, Alcott, and
Hawthorne residences on Pinckney Street, but also businesses such as hotels,
bars, and restaurants with any vaguely literary connection (Malcolm Lowry
barfed here!), and of course organizations like Grub Street itself.
Instead, all
that was revealed at the public hearing was an empty map. The borders
delineated a quite large swath of Boston real estate, from downtown in the east
to Copley Square and beyond in the west, and from Beacon Hill in the north to
Washington Street in the south – with an elbow poking into the rapidly
gentrifying Chinatown. There were no markers for any literary sites on the map,
no key, and no list. The whole rationale for creating this district in the
first place was missing, excluded from consideration.
Of all the
irregularities, this was definitely the weirdest. The excuse for it, related by
the visibly nervous Larry Lindner, was that there wasn’t time to get “bogged down” in “details” or tied up in
endless debates about which sites should or shouldn’t be included in the
district (yes, Larry, democracy can be messy and inconvenient). Moreover, Lindner
further stammered, the list could change any time, sites could be added at any
point, and even the boundaries of the map itself could change, so it didn’t
really matter right now, did it?
In her closing
remarks Councilor Pressley came to Lindner’s aid by affirming that this was
going to be a “nimble and rolling process” and then repeating it several times
to make sure we all got it: “a nimble and rolling process, a nimble and rolling
process . . .” Although intended to reassure, it raises the question of just who is getting rolled here.
Councilor
Pressley also thanked Councilor Wu for “expediting” the scheduling of the
hearing itself. Along with Lindner’s anxiety about getting “bogged down,” this
contributed to the impression that the process is being rushed for some undisclosed
reason. Originally (in 2013) the Grub-led coalition had been awarded a two-year
planning grant, with talk that the district itself might be unveiled “sometime
in 2015.” Now we’re being told that the christening might take place before the
end of this year.
Why the rush?
What is being kept from the public? And what is being committed in the name of
writers, who have a responsibility to be good stewards of the language, and
speak the truth?
Three strikes against the LCD public
hearing:
Strike 1:
Not publicized
Strike 2:
Not impartial
Strike 3:
Not informed
You’re
out!
_____________________________________________
1 The Massachusetts Cultural Council (MCC) is the state agency
that, among other things, administers cultural districts within the
Commonwealth.
2 This is additionally ironic when we remember Ayanna
Pressley’s vote to expel Chuck Turner from the city council in 2010. Turner, member
of the Green-Rainbow Party and a longtime Boston activist, was about as close
as we might have come to a genuine ‘people’s’ representative in city government
in our time – that is, until he was framed by the FBI for allegedly accepting
gifts in return for political favors.
1 comment:
I asked to speak at the LCD meeting and was allowed to. My "testimony" was;
I expressed concern that writers' would not be helped by the LCD, since financial outcome will be primarily to increase tourism for businesses; taxbreaks for businesses may also follow (see result of Gloucester becoming a CD). I expressed skepticism that increased revenue for business would trickle-down to writers.
I noted that Boston has emerged from the developer-friendly Menino era as America's 4th most unequal city. Boston needs affordable housing, not the increase in real estate values that an LCD might bring.
Will the LCD help writers by increasing their pride in being a Boston-based writer? So writers are being asked to live a little further on a good feeling.
Having trouble making ends meet while being an artist? But Boston has an LCD! Be happy.
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