Welcome to the Rebellion: A New Hope In Radical Politics
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About this ebook
What does it mean that our most popular modern myth is a radical left story about fighting corporate authoritarianism? From its roots in the 1960s new left, Star Wars still speaks to millions of people today. By design, the saga mirrors our own time and politics. A real empire of corporate domination has arisen within weakened and corrupted republics. Now it threatens our existence on a planetary scale. But, the popularity of Star Wars also suggests that if we tell the right stories, we can Welcome to the Rebellion many more people to fight for a better world...
Michael Harris
Michael Harris grew up in Dunsmuir, Calif., served with the 1st Air Cavalry Division in Vietnam, has a B.A. in English from the University of Oregon, an M.A.T. from Harvard and an M.F.A. in creative writing from the University of Iowa Writers' Workshop, and worked as a reporter and editor for several West Coast newspapers, including the Los Angeles Times. He and his family live in Long Beach. He is the author of "The Chieu Hoi Saloon" (PM Press, 2010) and "Canyon: Two Dunsmuir Stories," both available on Amazon.
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Welcome to the Rebellion - Michael Harris
What people are saying about
Welcome to the Rebellion
"In Welcome to the Rebellion, Harris explains how George Lucas’ modern myth is rooted in radical political resistance against corporate authoritarianism with a message more relevant today than in the 1970s when it was conceived. He reveals the underlying political message of the Star Wars saga and its radical message which makes it more than a popcorn film, it’s a document for resistance."
Jason Ward – Owner and Editor-in-chief of MakingStarWars.net
‘For all of us who love Star Wars, for all of us who love humanity and our planet, for all of us who yearn to be part of the Rebel Alliance, this book is for you. Harris has given us this incredible resource to study, so that we can learn the ways of the Force, understand the very real and violent Empire of structural inequality and systems of supremacy we are up against today, and learn about the values and commitments of the also very real Rebel Alliance. Get this book, full of brilliant lessons and insights, study it, share it with others, and let it help us be the Rebels and Jedis for collective liberation that the world so desperately needs.’
Chris Crass – Author of Towards Collective Liberation and Towards the Other America,
social justice educator and member of the Rebel Alliance
Welcome to The Rebellion
A New Hope in Radical Politics
Welcome to The Rebellion
A New Hope in Radical Politics
Michael Harris
Winchester, UK
Washington, USA
First published by Zero Books, 2020
Zero Books is an imprint of John Hunt Publishing Ltd., No. 3 East St., Alresford,
Hampshire SO24 9EE, UK
www.johnhuntpublishing.com
www.zero-books.net
For distributor details and how to order please visit the ‘Ordering’ section on our website.
© Michael Harris 2019
Cover image: Louie dela Cruz
ISBN: 978 1 78904 367 9
978 1 78904 368 6 (ebook)
Library of Congress Control Number: 2019905180
All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in critical articles or reviews, no part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without prior written permission from the publishers.
The rights of Michael Harris as author have been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
Design: Stuart Davies
UK: Printed and bound by CPI Group (UK) Ltd, Croydon, CR0 4YY
US: Printed and bound by Thomson-Shore, 7300 West Joy Road, Dexter, MI 48130
We operate a distinctive and ethical publishing philosophy in all areas of our business, from our global network of authors to production and worldwide distribution.
Contents
Cover
Half Title
Title
Copyright
Contents
Prologue: The Rebellion Is Spreading, and I Want to Be on the Side I Believe In
How a deleted scene suggests a more radical Star Wars than often we recognize.
Episode I: Many of the Truths We Cling to Depend Greatly on Our Own Point of View
A revolt is underway against elites, but it’s coming from the right. The left needs to remember how to tell rebellion stories, including by drawing on popular culture.
Episode II: Rebellions Are Built on Hope
Far from being an escapist fantasy, Star Wars is a fable rooted in the 1960s American new left, intended as a beacon of new hope to rebels everywhere.
Episode III: Nothing Will Stand in Our Way
Star Wars’ Empire mirrors the corruption of republics and the rise of authoritarianism in our own world. Challenged by a spreading rebellion, empire had to strike back.
Episode IV: The Death Star Will Be in Range in Five Minutes
Star Wars’ Rebels acted because they had to. We too now have no choice but to rebel against an oppressive, exploitative, crisis-ridden, planet-destroying system.
Episode V: That’s How We’re Gonna Win. Not Fighting What We Hate, but Saving What We Love
We need a new story, the most important we’ve ever told, about an anti-empirist struggle for a free, pluralist, democratic, humane world.
Episode VI: There Has Been an Awakening. Have You Felt It?
A new, new left, led by young people and demonstrating these values, should give us hope, but needs to come together in a broad, radical, popular rebel alliance.
Epilogue: The Rebellion Is Reborn Today
...and every day.
Endnotes
Hello There
Cover
Half Title
Title
Copyright
Contents
Prologue: The Rebellion Is Spreading, and I Want to Be on the Side I Believe In
Episode I: Many of the Truths We Cling to Depend Greatly on Our Own Point of View
Episode II: Rebellions Are Built on Hope
Episode III: Nothing Will Stand in Our Way
Episode IV: The Death Star Will Be in Range in Five Minutes
Episode V: That’s How We’re Gonna Win. Not Fighting What We Hate, but Saving What We Love
Episode VI: There Has Been an Awakening. Have You Felt It?
Epilogue: The Rebellion Is Reborn Today
...and every day.
Endnotes
Hello There
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Guide
Cover
Half Title
Title
Copyright
Contents
Start of Content
Epilogue: The Rebellion Is Reborn Today
...and every day.
Endnotes
Hello There
Previous Titles
A Future for Planning: Taking Responsibility for Twenty-First Century Challenges (Abingdon: Routledge, 2019). ISBN: 9781138708808
Disclaimer
Neither this book nor its contents are endorsed or approved by or affiliated in any way with George Lucas, Lucasfilm Ltd., or The Walt Disney Company. The opinions contained herein are those of the author only. Star Wars is a registered trademark of Lucasfilm Ltd. and The Walt Disney Company.
Prologue: The Rebellion Is Spreading, and I Want to Be on the Side I Believe In
The deleted scene is in two parts and only lasts around 4 minutes in total, but it suggests a more radical Star Wars than we often recognize.¹
It begins with Luke Skywalker in the Tatooine desert repairing a moisture vaporator.² He notices something high up in space. Through his binoculars he sees tiny glinting explosions. He rushes to Tosche Station in Anchorhead, where a group of young people are lounging around. Luke is surprised to find his best friend, Biggs Darklighter, and greets him warmly. Biggs is on leave from the Imperial Academy.³
Luke’s friends follow him outside to see the battle, but it has already ended. Luke is ridiculed for imagining it. Biggs remarks that the Rebellion is a long way from here. One of the others doubts that the Empire would ever fight to save their system.
But in the second part of the scene, Biggs pulls Luke aside and shares a secret. He has made some friends at the Academy.
He is going to jump ship and defect to the Rebel Alliance. Luke almost explodes with excitement: The Rebellion!?!
Biggs encourages his friend to come with him, but Luke can’t. He has to help his aunt and uncle on their farm. Luke and Biggs part, hoping one day to meet again.⁴
The scene would have been intercut with the famous opening sequence in which a massive Star Destroyer chases down a Rebel blockade runner, stormtroopers blast their way onto the ship, and through the smoke steps the evil Darth Vader.⁵ It was cut because it slowed the pace of the movie, but I knew this small bit of backstory since as a young fan I’d read the excellent 1976 novelization Star Wars: From the Adventures of Luke Skywalker (Soon to be a spectacular motion picture from Twentieth Century Fox!
), ghost written by Alan Dean Foster.
The scene humanizes Luke earlier than in the released film. He’s less a blank hero architype, more an awkward young man, torn between the chores of home and the call of heroism. A galactic civil war is raging, yet he can only watch from the sidelines.
But it also suggests that Luke and Biggs, and by implication many others across the galaxy, are more politicized than we might assume. Biggs explains that, I’m not going to wait around for the Empire to draft me into service,
a clear reference to the draft to serve in the war in Vietnam. As we’ll see, Star Wars is very much informed by the protest movements of the 1960s. More than this, the saga is essentially a political story that continues to encompass today’s conflicts.⁶ Luke and Biggs don’t seem like radicals, just regular young people, but this is clearly not the first time they’ve discussed rebelling: It’s what we always talked about, Luke.
Trying to persuade his friend to join him, Biggs emphasizes Imperial expansionism: What good is your uncle’s work if the Empire takes it over? You know they’ve already started to nationalize commerce in the central systems. It won’t be long before your uncle’s just a tenant, slaving for the greater glory of the Empire.
⁷ In the novelization, Biggs goes further: You should have heard some of the stories I’ve heard, Luke, some of the outrages I’ve learned about. The Empire may have been great and beautiful at one time, but the people in charge now… it’s rotten, Luke, rotten.
⁸
Of course, the Empire does soon come for Luke, searching for two squabbling droids that are carrying secret plans for the ultimate weapon…
This book is about how a real empire of authoritarianism and corporate domination has now come for us. It rose to power within weakened and corrupted republics. It promised order and security, but relies on domination and fear, and now threatens our existence on a planetary scale.
But it’s also about hope. Empire is more vulnerable than we often assume. The rebellion is all around us, and it is spreading. It is a struggle for freedom and democracy, and for peace and justice. In the face of multiplying crises, it is a rebellion that can no longer wait, and which will force us to take sides.
To win, we need to tell popular stories about the need to stand against empire. We need to believe that many more people are ready to join the rebellion than we are often told. And among other things, we need to claim popular culture to do it.
It means something that our most popular modern myth is a radical left story about fighting fascism. Contrary to postmodern cultural pessimism, the continuing popularity of stories such as Star Wars suggests the potential for a popular radical politics which is anti-authoritarian, pluralist, participatory, democratic and humane. From its roots in the 1960s new left, Star Wars still speaks to so many people today, including new generations of fans. It indicates a widespread desire to reject nihilism and despair, and to struggle against oppression and for liberation.
Yes, it’s a space fantasy, but even so, go with it and the Star Wars saga can be used to illuminate the dark times in which we live. It also suggests that if we tell the right stories, we can welcome many more people to the rebellion and the fight for a better world.
Episode I
Many of the Truths We Cling to Depend Greatly on Our Own Point of View
It’s Not a Story the Jedi Would Tell You
A rebellion is underway against elites and their greedy global order. It is amassing support from ordinary people, who feel marginalized and unheard. In a way they haven’t felt for a long time, people feel an increasing sense of power and belonging. They are back at the center of the story, and elites fear them.
The problem is of course that they are part of a regressive revolt, a revolution led by the right: by Donald Trump in the United States, the hard Brexiteers in the UK, the hard right across Europe and autocrats across the world.
People are being conned. The programs and policies being driven through by the right will benefit only the already rich and powerful. Nonetheless, the story people have been told – of their subjugation and defeat, and their revolt and rise to victory – speaks to them. Our economic system increasingly says to people, you are nobody.
These stories tell people that they matter.
But how is it that such a story, which should naturally be owned by the left, has been seized by the right, and what do we need to do to reclaim the rebellion story?
Some might say that this demonstrates the inherent deceptiveness of stories, and people’s credulity.¹ We need to counter stories with facts, re-assert notions of truth and disregard those who are prepared to believe what their own eyes should tell them isn’t so. On its own, this would be a mistake; indeed, it is one the left has been making for some time. It has led to many defeats and much suffering. It is a mistake we have made because we don’t believe in stories.
What I Told You Was True...From a Certain Point of View
Star Wars is about many of the things that we’ll discuss in this book: freedom, democracy, oppression, exploitation, hope and rebellion. But the first thing Star Wars is about is stories and their power to shape politics.
The story that Obi-Wan Kenobi tells Luke about his father in A New Hope (a brave warrior betrayed by Darth Vader) is designed to set him on a path to joining the struggle against the Empire. It’s a different story from the one Luke was told by his uncle to keep him toiling away on their homestead. In The Empire Strikes Back, Vader counters with yet another version of the story, actually the most accurate one, in an attempt to corrupt his increasingly powerful son. In Return of the Jedi, C-3PO uses his god-like status among the Ewoks to recount the story of the Rebellion and to recruit them in a military attack on an Imperial target. The whole of the prequel trilogy is really about the power of stories to manufacture chaos and confusion so that people accept authoritarianism. In Revenge of the Sith, Senator Palpatine/Darth Sidious tells Anakin Skywalker the tragedy of Darth Plagueis The Wise in order to manipulate him to the dark side. And Star Wars was originally conceived as a story within a story, an historical
narrative taken from the Journal of the Whills, hence the famous ‘A long time ago...’ opening text.
None of these stories are the whole truth, but neither are they completely untrue. They all have truths in them, even when they are selective and told for a specific purpose. Similarly, the rebellion versus elites
story that