«--Previous Post | Blog Index | Next Post--»
Wilberforce Be With You: The Christian Right Claims Amazing Grace

Yesterday was the 200th anniversary of Britain's abolition of slavery. But since Hollywood doesn't release new titles on Thursday, it's waiting until today to launch Amazing Grace, a new movie about 18th-century British abolitionist William Wilberforce. The flick, directed by Michael Apted (creator of the mesmerizing 7-Up documentary series) and produced by the studio that did The Chronicles of Narnia, is getting enthusiastic advance reviews. But nowhere is the film more highly anticipated than among conservative Christians, who see parallels between Wilberforce's moral battle and their faith-based campaign against sex trafficking. But Wilberforce's unlikely victory is also viewed as a metaphor for the Christian right's struggle to remake the culture. Presidential hopeful Sam Brownback was dubbed a "Wilberforce Republican" by the Economist, and has eagerly accepted the title. And check out this email appeal I recently received from Ted Baehr, who runs MovieGuide, an evangelical movie review site:
One man, William Wilberforce, was used by God to abolish the slave trade in England and bring about a reformation of manners.
Imagine what you and I can do together to redeem the media and save our culture! [...]
Because of Wilberforce's willingness to serve the Lord, a Victorian society where women and children were safe and where the Church was addressing social evils in creative ways saved a nation that was quickly falling into rampant paganism.
[...] you can help us bring about a moral reform in our nation that will set the captives free from the bondage and slavery of corrupt media.
This is the chance for the Church in our era to address social evils in creative ways!
Wilberforce has officially been recruited as a culture warrior. (BTW, MovieGuide gives Amazing Grace four stars, though it warns viewers that it contains "female cleavage.")
Of course, Wilberforce's story doesn't just resonate with religious conservatives. His against-the-odds struggle for social justice plucks liberal heartstrings as well—ours included. For a progressive interpretation of British abolitionism, see Mother Jones co-founder Adam Hochshild's most recent book, Bury the Chains, which argues that the anti-slavery movement was "the first great human-rights campaign." As Hochschild explained when I interviewed him:
In a time that feels politically grim, especially for anyone in the U.S. who cares about social justice, I hope people will take heart from a story of folks who started a campaign at a time when it looked even grimmer. The idea of ending slavery seemed totally utopian, crackpot, wildly too idealistic. But they succeeded. And they succeeded in 50 years, in the lifespan of some people [...] They went through some very grim times, one of them being the long wartime period like the one we’re seeing now. Wartime is bad news for progressives, and it was the same thing [during the Napoleonic wars]. So I guess to the extent that it’s possible for a book like this to have any effect, I would just like to see it have the effect of making people working for justice today feel heartened and to know that any big struggle will always be a long one with many setbacks.
I don't see anyone calling themselves "Wilberforce Democrats" any time soon, but that's no reason to let the right lay exlcusive claim to the legacy of abolitionism, or even Amazing Grace. So take a break from your usual pagan film fare and see if it lives up to the hype. (And for you history buffs/Afropop fans, it's your chance to see Youssou N'Dour's silver screen debut as Olaudah Equiano.)
Comments
read Peter Linebaugh's excellent review on this movie: Whitewashing the Slave Trade - An Amazing Disgrace
http://www.counterpunch.org/linebaugh02282007.html
exerpt:
'This movie is part of the self-congratulation of the English ruling class excusing itself for the most odious and reprehensible crimes in history. This self-congratulation is accomplished with all the charm that money can buy, with cute production values of costume, scenery, English character acting, and camera work. If you want to see how that self-congratulation works, go to the movie and watch the gentry and the politicians, row upon row of them, wearing their powdered, white wigs clapping their fair, uncalloused hands: you'll hear the sound of humanitarian hypocrisy.'
Read Joanne Laurier's excellent review of Amazing Grace and rebuttal of some of the points made by Linebaugh and friends.
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2007/mar2007/grac-m02.shtml
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2007/mar2007/amaz-m08.shtml
Excerpt: "I noted in my review that Wilberforce was not a social revolutionary. He was, however, a bourgeois representative of progressive thought. The claims of various radicals regarding Wilberforce are well summarized by AA, based on a review of the film by Peter Linebaugh from Counterpunch. They fundamentally constitute a repudiation of the Enlightenment."
Posted by: VFPDissident on 03/22/07 at 4:02 PM Respond
What an insightful post.
Posted by: Wilbur on 07/18/07 at 5:29 PM Respond
Launched today? I saw this movie last summer at the local theater. Historically inaccurate (the movie portrays Wilberforce wanting a ban on slavery and immediate emancipation - when in fact Wilberforce considered that too radical, and it was pushed through only after Wilberforce became so ill he had to leave Parliament), and histrionic (Griffud literally falls to the ground in most of the big emotional scenes), this movie gives us the great man theory of cornball. It's also careful not to mention that most of the primary abolitionists were not evangelicals - they were quakers and anglicans. The fine actor Robert Carlyle portrays Thomas Clarkson as a loopy, long-haired anarchist. I left the theater wanting my money back.
Posted by: bookish on 03/17/08 at 5:38 PM Respond
Sorry, the date at the top of the page is today's; and I didn't notice that the posts were dated from last year...
Posted by: bookish on 03/17/08 at 5:49 PM Respond
ARCHIVE
RECENT COMMENTS
Hillary Clinton's Music Strikes a Minor Chord (4)
Sam wrote:
What was the orchestral music used, does anyone know? It w...
[more]
Slang White People Like (63)
skoob wrote:
I wish I wasn't more than a month late to this posting. M...
[more]
New (Leaked) Music: The Verve - Forth (2)
Just my opinion wrote:
Maybe you should just listen and stop trying to analyze......
[more]
Did Facebook Just Endorse Obama? (1)
Bacon wrote:
It won't get as much press coverage, but a cave painting e...
[more]
What's Up With That Tropic Thunder Controversy? (37)
movie junkie wrote:
Robert Downey Jr. cracks me up... he's got a knack for not...
[more]
Why Former Addicts Dread Addiction Memoirs (17)
Lara Berk wrote:
Glad you've overcome your addictions and I totally agree t...
[more]
My Outside Lands Experience: Worth the Fog and Trouble (5)
KM wrote:
The festival was foggy and a bit soggy and beer saturated,...
[more]
Outside Lands: Radiohead Makes History (3)
Justin wrote:
Wow cool this new Rolling Stone site is awesome. So tired...
[more]
New Snickers Ad Encourages Drive-By Shootings of Unmanly Men (13)
GVC wrote:
Definitely made me Snicker!
And no, I didn't feel any un...
[more]
2008 Conventions: Who's Performing? (2)
yo wrote:
Uh... yeah, the Bosstones are still around... just because...
[more]
Movable Type 3.33


Posted by: Circe on 02/28/07 at 11:51 AM Respond