Submersion Journalism: Reporting in the Radical First Person from
Harper's Magazine
Edited by Bill Wasik
The New Press
336 pages, $26.95
WHATEVER THE VARYING merits of this patchwork of articles, they at
least offer views of the unfamiliar. There is an interval
with the
rambunctious junior auxiliary of the "Family," a mostly secret
religious organization that has attracted many federal officials; a trip
with an organization that carries bride-seeking American men to Ukraine;
and the work of an ostensibly arts-oriented group that commits fanciful
vandalism at the Queens Museum in New York. In almost every piece, the
writer is a participant, either disguised or in the open. Under
treatment herself, Barbara Ehrenreich tells of her encounter with the
breast-cancer culture of stuffed animals and good cheer that has grown
up around the illness, and will have none of it. The young Willem Marx
gets himself deeply involved in the Pentagon's system for feeding
purportedly good news to the Iraqi media. Daringly, Ken Silverstein runs
a scam that gets high-powered D.C. lobbying firms to trot out their
wares on behalf of Turkmenistan--a beleaguered nation with which, of
course, Silverstein has no connection whatsoever. The collection could
have done with more annotation: What was the impact of these stories?
What happened afterward? Not a clue.
JAMES BOYLAN is the founding editor of the Columbia Journalism
Review and professor emeritus of journalism and history at the
University of Massachusetts--Amherst.