Nicholas
Reid reflects in essay form on general matters and ideas related to
literature, history, popular culture and the arts, or just life in general. You are free to agree
or disagree with him.
LOSING OUR INNOCENCE – AGAIN
Not to put too fine a point on it,
but hitting the nail on the head, I think that, moving forward, we should all
be aware of cliché.
It’s an insidious thing, innit? No
sooner is a phrase coined than it becomes, first a commonplace, and then a
tiresome, space-filling tag for lazy journalists and the people who mimic them.
Consider “moving forward”, for
example, now used by people who don’t know how to say “in the future” or some such.
The war on cliché should be
unending, because cliché does indeed cloud and dull thought. Just a month or
two back, I had a go at one current and perfidious cliché in the post The Right Side of History (which also
took a swipe at the disingenuous “starting
a conversation”). Now another of the little blighters gnaws at me. It’s the
one, beloved by journalists, about losing one’s innocence.
Recently I saw a news item about a
crime that had been committed in Tauranga. The report said that the crime meant
the city of Tauranga had “lost its
innocence”. Really? Does this mean that all the adult inhabitants of
Tauranga were hitherto naïve people who did not know that serious crimes can
happen in both small and large cities – not to mention rural areas? Did they
really “lose their innocence”?
In my mind, I started reviewing all
the times I have heard this phrase about losing innocence. According to some of
its publicity, the film Once Upon a Time
in Hollywood told us that with the Manson murders, 1960s hippiedom and the
age of flower power “lost its innocence”.
But half a mo. Did the (American) 1960s really “lose their innocence” with Manson? I thought the 1960s had already “lost their innocence” with nightly news
reports on TV about race riots and how the Vietnam War was going. At least so I
was told by a number of pop historians. But then again, others said that
America “lost its innocence” when JFK
was shot. Or could it have been in the McCarthy era? Or maybe when the first
atomic bomb was dropped? Or whenever, because each of these events or eras has
been designated by somebody as a loss of innocence.
And let’s forget about America for a
while. Didn’t the British army “lose its
innocence” on the Somme in 1916? In the same war, didn’t readers of British
newspapers “lose their innocence” when
they stopped believing the cheery things war correspondents were writing, and
scanned the lists of the dead instead? As for Australians and New Zealanders,
apparently they “lost their innocence”
at Gallipoli. Or maybe they lost it when they first encountered barbed wire
used to foil cavalry attacks in the Boer War. Again, I have heard the cliché
phrase used in relation to all these things.
So, to your obvious exasperation, I
could going on banging away at this very simple point. When something
overwhelming, reprehensible or shocking occurs, in comes the cliché–monger to
tell us that an age of innocence is over. Surely, by this stage, all thinking
adults are aware that the world is a potentially dangerous place; that people
are capable of doing monstrous things; that while we may be shocked, we should
not really be surprised when we hear of crime, deceit and abuse.
I suppose if there was really a time
when human beings lost their innocence, it would have been in the Garden of
Eden – or if you do not like the Biblical image, it would have been when homo
sapiens first enmerged as such, and became aware of human limitations. I’m
happy to use the term Original Sin. Perhaps you’re not, but when I unpack the
term you might agree with me. As I see it, Original Sin means our human
capacity to do wrong or mess things up or finds excuses for our bad behaviour
and then go ahead and do it.
None of which is new and none of
which should surprise us. As for “losing
innocence” – it will be experienced by children as they grow-up, and
perhaps by those teenagers who think that the world can be improved in one easy
and immediate step. But if you are a functioning adult, real innocence should
have gone with adolescence.
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