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Convention Bending

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Iowa Focus

In Alice in Wonderland there is a “caucus-race” which involves all concerned running around in a circle until eventually everyone is declared the winner.

With this allusion, Lewis Carroll gently satirizes the futility of the political process—which is topical as the US focuses on the US caucuses, which begin today in Iowa.

By punning this notion of convention bending, and perhaps  prompted by Carroll’s circuit of mockery, I return from this detour to an altogether less raucous Iowa focus: The Aesthetic Movement.

By the time it reached Iowa, The Aesthetic Movement had already selected its candidate: Oscar Wilde—no stranger himself to bending conventions—who lectured four times in the state.

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You could be forgiven for thinking that Iowa’s claim to fame is being the only US state with an abbreviation consisting of two vowels (IA).

But that would be to overlook not only the politically significant caucuses of the wild west, but the historically significant locuses of the westward Wilde, for he lectured in Iowa on his way to California, and three more times there on his way back.

These lectures are documented on my web site as follows:

SIOUX CITY: March 20, 1882

DES MOINES: April 26, 1882

IOWA CITY: April 27, 1882

CEDAR RAPIDS: April 28, 1882

For the record, previously published itineraries of Wilde’s tour show him lecturing in Fremont, Iowa. In fact, Wilde lectured in Fremont, Nebraska. Similarly, Wilde did not lecture in Rock Island, Iowa; Rock Island is in Illinois.

I shall continue to verify Wilde’s tour, which, fittingly like the political process, ends in November. Until then, when it becomes a thing of the past, I shall take the advice of the similarly erstwhile Dodo who announced Alice’s caucus-race in Wonderland by saying: I move that the meeting adjourn for the immediate adoption of more energetic remedies.

© John Cooper, 2016.

5 thoughts on “Convention Bending

  1. Thanks for reminding me of the circus-like political process. And then there was the political cartoonist Thomas Nast who (taking the lead of the savvy Andrew Jackson who managed to spin John Adams campaign slur of him being a jackass, into the virtues of being a donkey) popularized the political symbols we have today – Nast also being the same guy who turned a more serious Saint Nicolas into a jolly Santa.

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