TALKING
HEADS Processed World is losing two of our most important editors,
co-founders both--Lucius Cabins and Maxine Holz. They are leaving to
strike new creative ground for themselves. The rest of us uneasily wonder
how we're going to fill the gap. Maxine pushed to keep the magazine
intellectually vital. Her attendance at meetings always charged up the
discussion. Her articles--on pornography and sex workers, workplace
actions, child care--have been on the cutting edge of the issues that
Processed World is all about. Lucius has been our unpaid staffperson
all these years--dealing with the mail, typesetting 30 to 100 percent
of every issue, taking care of thousands of administrative details as
well as contributing toughly analytical articles, offering cogent opinions
at editorial meetings, shaping the graphics of the magazine... Their
departure raises structural problems for us, since a lot of tasks they
took care of will have to be shared. Processed World goes
travelling Lured by a friend who edits a local left journal, and harboring visions
of new subscriptions and positive interactions with devoted readers,
I arranged to have a table at a recent leftist "scholars"
conference in New York. It turned out to be a weekend of playing shop
to an aisle of brain-dead academics. I managed to sneak away to a couple
of the "cultural" workshops. It was interesting to see the
same people who advocated listening to "marginal" voices,
fusing art with political practice, stressing the subjective, the polyvalent,
etc., completely not "get' Processed World. I would have
worried, except for the several people from "lower stations"
who understood us on sight. You know you're doing something right when
you go out into the street and the people there have a fuller understanding
of what you're trying to do than the Official Interpreters. However,
I did enjoy meeting some of the New Yorkers who contribute to the magazine
and would have liked to pursue more substantial contact. I wish I had
been less beaten by the ennui of the conference. Dissection Lab Let's take a rusty scalpel and cut into our Medical issue to see
what's there. Lucius Cabins and Louis Michaelson lead off with The
Health Epidemic, an examination of the non-sensical boom of the
medical industry juxtaposed to a national preoccupation with health. This issue squirms with numerous Tales of Toil. Nausea swells in
Jay Clemens' Blood, Sweat and Soap, a look at the squishy insides
of a hospital laundry room. Moving
down the digestive tract, we locate another cause of ill health in Work
Sickness at the Health Factory by Summer Brenner. Brenner straightforwardly
describes the occupational stress that leads to one disease after another,
ironically in the employ of one of the country's largest health care
providers. This issue is further denounced in Stress: A Social Disease,
a reprint of a 1983 Nasty Secretaries Liberation Front leaflet--a short,
informative wave of anger. Bob McGlynn does a time and motion study of
patient as worker in Medical Merry-Go-Round in the centerfold.
The plight of the "medically indigent" is examined in An
Uninsured Tail by Willie the Rat, who also suggests worthwhile precautions
to take if you're not paying your $70 a month to Blue Cross. Would
You, Have You, Did You is about the use of medical monitoring equipment--lie
detector machines--to authoritarian ends. Emerging at the other end,
Derailed from the Fast Track recounts one woman's circuit from
free spirit to tech writer to free spirit. Wrangles over fiction have been causing a lot of lesions and fractures
in PW. Ana Logue's review of W. D. Wetherell's The Man Who
Loved Levittown provoked the most disagreement since the short story
Wenda in issue 18. Some members of the collective felt that Ana
was undeservedly harsh on our contributors. But Ana deplores what she
considers the limited vision of much of our fiction submissions. She
uses the review to call for stories that "capture the horror and
the humanity of the people behind the beige curtain." All in all, though, this issue shows enhanced vital signs. All three
fiction selections are diagnosed as fictive distopias--but benign. Debth
is a grimly funny vision of a future where one class of people sells
body parts to earn pin money and another class buys them for status
symbols. Softcore is an unsettling account of a doctor's encounter
with a mysterious new disease. Moral Data, Inc. tells of a time
when even art is evaluated in terms of computerized quantification rather
than human response. So, patient, after your choice of one last enema,
blood test, or spinal tap, you shall be released. Mark Leger Processed World's Topic Wish List: We thought we'd publish this list in the hope that some of you readers
would like to submit articles for future issues. This list reflects
what may become the basis for future theme issues. NEXT ISSUE: Militarism/National Security/"Defense" --Nurse and Doctor Tales of Toil, reactions to this issue, analyses
of medical/technology issues we neglected here, etc. --Mental Health Industry --Urbanism/City Planning, transportation, "urban village"
new exurban habitat, etc. --Ecology, esp. Green radicalism, deforestation, etc. --Travel and Leisure (including e.g., service workers' Tales of Toil,
working in the tourist industry, alienated leisure time, tourism and
cultural "imperialism" etc.) --And of course we're interested in many other topics too, feel free
to suggest themes... SUBSCRIBERS! If your label says 20 after your name, your subscription
lapses with this issue--PLEASE RENEW NOW! If your label has a number
less than 20, this issue is your last free copy--renew if you want to
keep getting PW! Thanks! PROCESSED WORLD, 41 Sutter St. #1829, San Francisco, CA 94104, USA |
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back cover of Processed World #20, by Doug Pray