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Trilogy of Books for a Culture of Peace Strategy | 2007-2009 |
Stories Midterm Report on Culture of Peace - 2005 Youth Report on Culture of Peace - 2006 A trilogy of books for a new strategy Final Report on Culture of Peace - 2010 Struggling with the United Nations * * * The Culture of Peace News Network continued Missions for the Culture of Peace Travels with Lindsay in the USA Vacations with Lindsay in the Caribbean |
Although the Internet and speaking initiatives continued into this stage beyond those of 2001-2006, I had begun to realize that more was needed. For years I had promised on my personal website to write a world history of the war/peace dialectic. By 2007 I was ready to work on it and by February 2008 I had completed a manuscript. It received a new title, reflecting the conclusion to which the work had driven me: "The State is War: Make Peace without It". In fact what I found in the course of my study and reflection was that the state had progressively monopolized war and its culture during the course of its 5000 year history and we have arrived at the point that the state has literally BECOME the culture of war. Hence there is no choice if we are to progress to a culture of peace except to replace the state with something new. That something, I had become convinced, was a United Nations that was run by representatives of local governments instead of Member States. This was such a radical idea that when I sought to find others with the same idea, I could point only to passages in the works of Johan Galtung, and I could find no other precedents. Just how radical it was became clear when I tried to publish the book. It met nothing but resistance. I sent letters to 50 of the most recognized literary agents in the USA and received nothing but rejections. I sent the manuscript to Syracuse University Press which had already published a series of books with similar topics, including Elise Bouldings book on the culture of peace. It was reviewed by a well-known progressive sociologist who had always supported the work of the Seville Statement on Violence. His review was negative, and the director of the Press explained to me that I would not be able to publish such a book with any university press because it did not conform to any discipline but was inter-disciplinary in scope, so any reviewer would shoot it down from the perspective of his own discipline. Then I sent inquiries to progressive book publishers directly and again receive no encouragement. In February of 2008, frustrated with the response to The State is War, I decided to write a utopian novella that would imagine that the strategy had worked and we had arrived at a culture of peace with the UN being run by representatives of local governments. As a literary device, I made it the diary of an old man, more or less autobiographical, who was dying somewhat on the model of Thomas Mann's Death in Venice. I called it "I have seen the promised land."
In May of 2008, still frustrated and seeking still another way to put forward my ideas, I embarked on an Internet game that would cover the same ground. To do this, I decided PERL would be too difficult, so I immersed myself in XHTML and PHP, learning these techniques in order to make the game interactive. Within a month I had finished it and put it on line at culture-of-peace-game.org. Now, with a bit more distance from the writing process, I decided to cut the "big book" into two books, "The History of the Culture of War" and "World Peace through the Town Hall." Fed up with negative reviews I self-published them in the spring of 2009 at the Createspace.com division of Amazon books. I bought copies of my own books and gave them out or sold them to friends and acquaintances, but they did not sell on line. In the first six months, total book sales on line amounted to 24 books, more or less 8 of each. I sent out a dozen sets of review copies, but again, after six months, there was not yet a single review. Especially frustrating were two years worth of frequent email correspondence with Herbert Blumberg of the journal Peace and Conflict, during which time he said he was unable to find anyone willing to review the books. My frustration was expressed during this time in the page poem, "the prophet".
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Stages
1986-1992
1992-1997 |