Malvina Reynolds: Poetess of Protest

Citizen JournalistBy Nick Gier, New West Unfiltered 5-19-09

Malvina Reynolds: The Poetess of Protest

By Nick Gier (nickgier@roadrunner.com)

Little boxes on the hillside,
Little boxes all the same.
There's a green one and a pink one
And a blue one and a yellow one,
And they're all made out of ticky tacky
And they all look just the same.

Malvina Milder Reynolds was born to Jewish immigrant parents in San Francisco in 1900. Because her parents spoke out against America's involvement in World War I, she was denied a high school diploma. Reynolds' teachers still managed to get her into UC Berkeley where she went all the way to a Ph.D. in Romance philology.

It is important to remember that at the turn of the century an American's right to protest was severely restricted. Many striking workers were shot by Pinkerton detectives, and the governor of Illinois blamed the Haymarket Riot of 1886 on these hired guns.

The Molokans, Russian pacifists who protested World War I on religious grounds, were put in solitary confinement in Leavenworth. As historian Raymond F. Gregory writes: "They were manacled nine hours a day in a standing position and forbidden to read, write, or even speak."

Reynolds finished her doctorate in 1939, but as a woman, Jew, and socialist she found it difficult to get a college teaching position. She worked in a bomber factory instead and enjoyed writing articles about being a working woman.

After the war she started writing songs and turned out over 500 before she died in 1978. In December 1966 her song "Morningtown Ride," in a recording by The Seekers, reached the top five in the United Kingdom.

The most famous song, however, was "Little Boxes," a piece that resonated with millions who felt constricted and alienated by the conformity of an increasingly monotone society.

Except for the fact that the fear is now deflation rather than inflation, Reynolds was prescient in her song "The World in Their Pocket": "There's inflation and pollution/everything's been bought on credit/in this rotten institution/and they waste the gentle people/cuz the system has no soul."

Reynolds was born at the end of the Gilded Age, but economic inequality is even worse today. In 1894 John D. Rockefeller made $1.25 million per year, 7,000 times the average American's salary, but hedge fund manager James Simons now makes 38,000 times more than today's average worker.

Since the election of Ronald Reagan inflation adjusted salaries for ordinary Americans have risen only slightly and workers have not been rewarded for their productivity, still the highest in the world.

The song "It Isn't Nice" was banned in Japan for fairly mild lines such as "We have tried negotiations/and the three-man picket line/now our new ways aren't nice when we deal with men of ice/but if that is freedom's price/we don't mind." Reynolds had become the Poetess of Protest and her fans cheered.

In addition to six albums of music for adults, Reynolds also released three albums of children's songs. "Magic Penny" is the most famous of these with memorable lines such as "love is something if you give it away" and "let's go dancing til the break of day."

The Children's Music Network created the Magic Penney Award in her honor. The award is a "tribute to people in our community who have dedicated their lives to empowering children through music." Reynolds was given the first award posthumously in 1999.

One her children's songs "It's Up To You" begins with "You might have been born a ladybug, you might have been born a bat," but ends with "You were born a being with a mind and a voice, and the power of choice." That freedom includes the choice to withdraw one's labor and to refuse to go to war.

I am not a pacifist nor am I a socialist, but I admire this gutsy lady for playing her role in keeping American freedoms alive and well.

Nick Gier taught philosophy at the University of Idaho for 31 years. Read or listen to all of his columns at www.NickGier.com [End of article]
Comment By Jay Larry Lundeen, 5-20-09

A fine benediction to a unique and caring woman. Yet oddly, paradoxically, this treatise contradicts Mr. Gier's recent musing that Homo sapiens have any "uniqueness" from the rest of the animal kingdom. To glorify a woman who wrote "You were born a being with a mind and a voice, and the power of choice" (as compared to a ladybug or a bat) is to undermine his own bold supposition of the non-elevation of humans above other fauna.

"Everyone takes the limits of his own vision for the limits of the world."
- Arthur Schopenhauer

Comment By Nancy Schimmel, 6-19-09

Malvina's daughter checking in with a small correction to an otherwise good article: During WWII, Malvina worked in a bomb casing factory, not a bomber factory. In other words, she worked on an assembly line, she wasn't a riveter.
She was not a pacifist , but she was a socialist.
I am writing a biography of her, and blogging about that and other things at http://web.mac.com/nancyschimmel/iWeb/Site/Blog/Blog.html

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