Lovecraft’s racism a tough issue at NecronomiCon Providence


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Robert Price
Robert Price

At the opening ceremonies of this year’s NecronomiCon Providence, held at the First Baptist Church, Biblical scholar and Lovecraft expert Robert Price ended his talk with a reference to the H.P. Lovecraft story “The Horror at Red Hook,” exposing the difficulty if not impossibility of celebrating Lovecraft, the writer of weird fiction, while distancing oneself from Lovecraft, racist.

In his short talk Price noted Lovecraft’s role as metaphorical prophet, claiming that Lovecraft accurately foresaw the modern rise of atheism and the rejection of religion in the West. Price praised this rise of rationalism but warned, “as rationalism ascends here, it declines there. And Lovecraft foresaw that too and very clearly.”

Price continued:

If we can manage to look past [Lovecraft’s] racism, we will manage to see something deeper and quite valid. Lovecraft envisioned not only the threat that science posed to our anthropomorphic smugness, but also the ineluctable advance of the hordes on non-western anti-rationalism to consume a decadent, euro-centric west.

“Superstition, barbarism and fanaticism would sooner or later devour us. It appears now that we’re in the midst of this very assault. The blood lust of jihadists threatens Western Civilization and the effete senescent West seems all too eager to go gently into that endless night. Our centers of learning have converted to power politics and an affirmative action epistemology cynically redefining truth as ideology. Logic is undermined by the new axiom of the ad hominem. If white males formulated logic, then logic must be regarded as an instrument of oppression.

“Lovecraft was wrong about many things, but not, I think, this one. It’s the real life horror of Red Hook.”

Putting aside the problematic idea that white males are under threat from a new age of political correctness that rejects logic and his irrelevant attack on affirmative action, Price alarmingly used one of Lovecraft’s most potent and vituperative pieces of racist writing, “The Horror at Red Hook” to make his points about jihadist Islam.

“The Horror at Red Hook” was written by Lovecraft during one of the lowest periods of his life, during his brief marriage to Sonia Greene and his three year stay in New York. Lovecraft hated New York, because it was filled with non-white people. “Whenever we found ourselves in the racially mixed crowds which characterize New York, Howard would become livid with rage,” his wife wrote, “He seemed almost to lose his mind.”

In his story, Lovecraft describes one character as, and I apologize in advance, “an Arab with a hatefully negroid mouth.” This is simply the most obvious example of the racism in the story, since the entire piece is obsessed with the idea of miscegenation and steeped in white supremacy.

I wrote to Robert Price to ask him about his comments. Price seemed to think the problem was a politically correct reaction to his criticism of Jihadism.

“I still don’t know what was so controversial about what I said,” wrote Price, “and no one who found it controversial told me why they did. What is controversial about lamenting the outrages of Jihadism? Is someone accusing me of ‘Islamophobia’? I didn’t even use the word ‘Islam.’ Islam and Jihadism are not the same thing. To criticize Jihad is not to criticize Islam, and it is the one who clucks about ‘Islamophobia’ who is conflating the two, not me. I do not blame all Muslims for Jihadism, but some refuse to condemn Jihad because they think that would implicate all Muslims. Not me.”

Niels Hobbs, the organizer of NecronomiCon Providence, spoke eloquently about difficulties of holding an event celebrating Lovecraft the writer of weird fiction as separate from Lovecraft, the writer of racist rants. At the panel discussion, “Racism and Lovecraft,” Hobbs stated the problem in stark terms, saying, “If there’s ever going to be another NecronomiCon, if there’s going to be a good, positive future for weird fiction… we need to embrace these things and talk about them and move forward, see how we can use these things to grow and make a positive, diverse and active community that still acknowledges Lovecraft as one of the people that started it.”

Regarding Price’s Red Hook reference, Hobbs said, “I’ve kind of been bombarded all day from the blow back from the things that happened at the First Baptist Church on Thursday night, which, for those of you who were there I actually really want to personally apologize to you for some of the things that were said that I am deeply hurt by, actually, myself. And they are not things that we believe as organizers, by any means. And it’s not the kind of community that we want to have as people that want to be an entrance point for everybody that’s interested in weird fiction and people that enjoy Lovecraft of all backgrounds…   If I can thank Bob Price for one thing, I will thank him for this, for laying it out there that this still an issue in this country. I don’t think any of us, if we even remotely watch the news, can avoid the fact that racism is a problem in this country right now.”

I wrote to Hobbs about Price’s comments. Hobbs replied, “I tried really hard to look past what Price said and give it the very best light I could, but given his unnecessary (at best) comments on affirmative action, etc… to have it end with his Red Hook comment – a VERY clear reference to anyone who’s familiar with Lovecraft – more than washed away any hopes I’d had for this merely being an oddly and unfortunately placed commentary on violent Islamic extremism.” (ellipse included)

Writers and fans of weird fiction and science fiction have been grappling in recent years with an influx of diversity, including women, LGBTQ and people of color venturing into genres traditionally dominated by white males. Two recent controversies are of note.

First are the recent discussions surrounding the “Howies,” the World Fantasy Award statuette given every year for achievements in weird fiction. Because of Lovecraft’s racism, many feel the award, modeled after Lovecraft’s likeness, should be changed, especially since it puts writers and creators of color in the unfortunate position of receiving an award in the likeness of a man who lived his entire life believing he was genetically and culturally their superior. An online petition sought to have Lovecraft’s likeness replaced with Octavia Butler’s, a pioneering black woman science fiction writer. (For more on this read HP Lovecraft’s Madness by Phenderson Djèlí Clark)

The second recent controversy concerns the Hugo Awards, given by fans for excellence in science fiction writing. This year a group of mostly white, mostly male fans called the Sad Puppies tried to counter the recent trends that seems to favor giving the coveted science fiction awards to “women, gays and lesbians, and people of color” by stacking the nomination slate. The efforts of the Sad Puppies failed spectacularly, as all their nominees lost to, “No Award.”

Lovecraft once famously asserted, “I am Providence” and after his death a group of fans raised the money to put these words on his tombstone, but Lovecraft is not the Providence I know and love.

The Providence I love is filled with all kinds of people, representing a spectrum of beauty that was unknown to Lovecraft, whose imagination, praised as being so expansive and creative, was curiously and tragically constrained when it came to his views on race and sex.

Weird fiction and Providence will forever be associated with Lovecraft, but the future of the genre and the city need not be constrained by this man or his racism, antisemitism and misogyny. The world is changing, for the better. This is not a white male world anymore, its a human world, and white males are just a small part of it.

I look forward to the next iteration of NecronomiCon Providence, (if that’s what the organizers decide to call it), as it becomes ever more diverse and sets the tone and the standard for all such literary events in the future.

Patreon

The Old One – the horror beneath Providence


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Following is a brief history of my research into various events in the history of the City of Providence. While I realize that these incidents seem disconnected in isolation, when taken as a whole, they paint a real and imminent danger to the citizens of our town. As I explain to my many readers, listeners and followers, this story is true, and some of it really happened.
—Mark Binder, Summer, 2013

c_xingThe Narragansett Indians called it “Clths Slaaag,” which Rhode Island’s founder Roger Williams translated as “The Old One.”

Roger Williams joked about it in his diary journal.

“After a sparse meal of fish and corn, Cannonicus, the Sachem, warned me not to build my home on the hill. He said that was where ‘The Old One,’ a horrific monster, lived and fed. His vivid description reminded me of the demonic stories told by Popish priests to cow the superstitious. Most probably a rabid bear.”

Roger Williams was wrong. Seventeen years later, his second son, Elijah mysteriously vanished and was discovered three days later at the mouth of a cave concealed by a fallen apple tree. The boy’s hair and skin had turned white. Three fingers on his left hand were gone, as if they had been gnawed off. Elijah had lost his mind and never spoke again.

Roger Williams’ heart was broken. He spent much of the rest of his life abroad in England. A scrap of paper with a crude drawing of an anchor

In 1860 when his bones were dug from the family plot to be re-interred beneath his statue in Prospect Park, the popular story was that an apple tree had eaten through his corpse, and the roots had taken the shape of his leg bones. The truth was much darker.

In his diary, Stephen Randall, a witness wrote,

“The stench that emitted from the opened grave was beyond imagining. There lay Roger Williams, looking as well-preserved as the day he was interred. Yet his eyes were open, his mouth peeled back baring his teeth in a rictus of horror. When Elder Brown bent down to close the poor man’s eyes, the body disintegrated into thousands of wriggling worms. Those who were present fled, and when we returned all that remained were the roots of the apple tree, looking strangely like a leg bone.”

Moses Brown discovered the mangled corpse of a slave girl in the basement of his East Side Home in 1773. No one knew who she was or how she had died,

Brown wrote,

“The corpse’s condition was appalling. Her back was scarred with lines that John said betrayed the excessive use of a lash, but reminded me of both the jagged tares rendered by an animal’s claw and the infected ruin of a child caught in a wave of jellyfish tentacles.”

A short time later, Moses Brown freed his slaves and began working for abolition.

Edgar Allen Poe, the author, was the next to write of the thing that lived beneath the Hill. In the margin of the original manuscript for the famous poem, “The Raven”

Poe wrote in a crabbed hand,

“Only in the form of a black bird I can indicate the monstrosity. I have tried again and again to describe the Old One, but language fails me, and the words I use seem unnatural and unreal.”

Following his failed courtship of Sarah Helen Power (Whitman), Poe spent weeks wandering up and down Benefit Street in a laudanum-induced haze. Many say that he never recovered.

The most direct references to the creature came from Howard Phillips Lovecraft, who is still famous for his horrific tales of the Necronomicon and “The Great Old Ones” with unpronounceable names. Lovecraft lived most of his life on Providence’s East Side, at the tip of a triangle between the land near where Elijah Williams was discovered, and the basement of Moses’s Brown’s house.

“…that cellar in our childhood house was my constant nightmare,” Lovecraft wrote to his brother Peter near the end of his life. “While you and Emily laughed and played, I peered into the darkness. I fear that soul-destroying blackness corrupted me somehow.”

East Side Railroad Tunnel
East Side Railroad Tunnel

More recently, on May 1, 1993, a party thrown by a group of Rhode Island School of Design Students in an abandoned train tunnel ended in horror.

The Providence Journal reported that, “After the tear gas and pepper spray cleared, police found thirteen naked students, their backs bleeding as if they had been struck with a whip. One girl was dead. Police have no suspects, but report the probability of drug abuse.”
(See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_Side_Railroad_Tunnel)

In 2003, when more than 30 house cats were reported missing, the Providence Journal attributed the disappearances to a coyote roaming the neighborhood, yet suggested that “small pets and children remain inside after dark.” In 2009, three homeless men who had been reportedly sleeping under a nearby bridge were also declared missing, by the police, but “presumed to have left the state.:

An article in an alternative The Agenda suggested in 2006 that the changing landscape of the City was bringing the horror to the surface.

“The rivers have been uncovered, a highway is shifting, and a billion dollar project has dug underground sewage overflow tanks beneath the hills where Roger Williams once planted his crops. What else have the construction crews dug up?”
The Agenda

Shortly afterwards, the sidewalk behind the First Baptist Church in America on Benefit Street began to disintegrate and cave in. It took several years to effect the repairs on the sidewalk and fence behind the First Baptist Church.

A city contractor reported in a brief memo that has since gone missing, “…every time we tried to fill it, the sinkhole beneath Benefit Street would fill with slimy brown ichor. We finally had to lay in rebar and cement in layers going down fifteen feet. It is possible that the missing day worker fell in and wasn’t noticed, but I doubt it.”

Even now, week after week, at WaterFire in Providence bonfires are lit in the river and haunting music is played while tens of thousands of people wander through the smoke as an ancient ceremony is reborn and recreated.

Less than six months ago, the mutilated body of a missing Brown University student was found in at the site of an old Narragansett burial ground. The details were hushed up, photographs of his corpse were deleted and television cameras were kept far from the scene.

When asked to comment bout the rumors that these and the other events documented in this article were the work of the Old One, the Mayor refused to answer. “This was clearly the work of a sick human being,” he said. “We have far more pressing problems in this city in terms of education and infrastructure. Don’t bother me about this nonsense.”

Have the shifting lands disturbed the creature? Are the fires and the people drawing the monster closer, bringing it nearer and nearer to the surface?

It is hard to tell with all the noise. But if you listen carefully, as you wander the darkened streets of Providence late at night, perhaps you will hear a sound, a soft and slurping sound, as if a moistened finger was caressing the cartilage next to your ear.

If you hear this sound, do not stop. Do not turn around. Do not scream. It feeds on fear and despair.

Enjoy your breath. It may be your last.

cthulhu

———————–

Mark Binder’s latest books are works of fiction: Cinderella Spinderella – an illustrated ebook for families coming September 2013, and The Brothers Schlemiel

NecronomiCon slithers into Providence Thursday


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New_Convention_PosterThursday evening kicks off a four day festival celebrating Providence Rhode Island’s most famous and fantastical author, H.P. Lovecraft in the aptly named “NecronomiCon.

Lovecraft, for those who don’t know, was a horror fiction writer virtually unknown in his time but now regarded as a master of the form. He lived in Providence nearly all his life, and died in 1937.

The festival begins Thursday, August 22nd at 5:30pm at the First Baptist Church, “Lovecraft’s favorite landmark referred to as ‘The Finest Georgian Steeple in America’ in [his short story] ‘The Call of Cthulhu.'” The keynote is to be delivered by Lovecraftian scholar S.T. Joshi and there will be some words from both Mayor Angel Taveras and the church’s official historian Stan Lemons.

There are other events, some requiring tickets and some open to the public. For a full listing of events and to purchase tickets check out the website.