Unbounded Aspirations | Films: The West |
Music: Trout, Enjoying Opera | Chapter & Verse |
Off the Shelf | Open Book |
Television has foreshortened our concept of history to the last 50
years, argues Bill McKibben '82 in his book The Age of Missing Information.
Whatever happened before 1945, whatever history was not recorded on film
or video, seems somehow less real than events of the television age, he
suggests. The ascendent visual media have come to define, for millions of
viewers, what the Roman Empire or the court of Louis XIV or the Roaring
Twenties were really like.
Thus, TV producers have inherited a major responsibility. The eight-part
television series The West, which airs on PBS stations September 15 to 19
and 22 to 24, takes this charge seriously and does its homework with care.
Directed and coproduced by Stephen Ives '81, the 12-and-a-half-hour documentary
offers a fresh account of the American West. Thankfully, the series avoids
clichés like Manifest Destiny and the "Wild West"; instead,
the narrative roots itself in illustrative human stories. As a result, The
West is a welcome counterweight to the shopworn myths of old-time textbooks
and movie Westerns.
Much of the saga could be called "How the West Was Seized." Episodes
unblinkingly document the government's genocidal war against Native American
nations and the endless, disheartening series of betrayals through breached
treaties. Other minorities-Hispanic, African American, Chinese-also come
into play, not only as key actors, but also as narrators: Ives interviews
contemporary writers and scholars from the very racial and ethnic groups
whose sobering histories they recount.
An american history concentrator at Harvard, Ives worked for seven years
with Ken Burns, creator of the popular Public Broadcasting System documentaries
The Civil War and Baseball. Burns is the executive producer
this time around, and his fingerprints are all over The West. There are
the slow zooms in and pans across old sepia-tone photographs; the white-on-black
subtitles; the many colorful quotations from old letters and diaries read
by celebrities (including the ubiquitous George Plimpton '48); the antique
maps with lines bleeding forward to trace an army's route; the aerial landscape
shots during voice-overs; and the languid pace, evocative of the era.
But The Civil War had built-in drama and coherence: a military conflict
filled with colorful personalities and events, confined to a four-year period.
In contrast, The West sprawls over everything west of the Mississippi
from Lewis and Clark to World War I-and then some. Faced with this staggering
enormity, Ives wisely chose to tell a few stories well. He focuses on such
recognized figures as Sitting Bull, Mark Twain, and Brigham Young. But he
also follows the stories of commoners like William Swain-a New York farmer
who went west with the Gold Rush in 1849 and returned a year later, wiser
but no richer. The result is televised history that avoids the Disney version.
The West speaks in many accents, and so comes close to looking and
sounding like America.