Author Archives: CharlieClaywell

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About CharlieClaywell

I have been a writer for years, mainly as a reporter, but I have always enjoyed history, especially non-mainstream stories buried inside old documents. My blog mostly centers around those stories. On occasion, though, I deviate and talk about my dog, vintage toys and what it's like to be middle-aged.

The Company Men Examines Cost of Corporate Committment

The Company Men (2010) starring Ben Affleck, Chris Cooper, Kevin Costner, Craig T. Nelson and Tommy Lee Jones follows the lives of three men who become victims of downsizing during the economic crisis which mirrors the recent Great Recession. All three men are forced to redefine themselves and come to terms with what it means to be successful in a society where the only measuring stick is money and power.

One of the characters, Gene McClary, (Tommy Lee Jones) helped start the company — with his college buddy, James Salinger (Craig T. Nelson) — that eventually dismisses him.

But, before he is handed his pink slip McClary tries hard to be the voice of reason inside a company that is struggling to stay afloat. McClary, who questions the ethics of the layoffs, personally takes on the fight to keep 60-year-old Phil Woodward (Chris Cooper) employed — and temporarily succeeds as Woodward takes on the work of several employees to remain with the company.

But it only postpones the inevitible.

Each of the three men — McClary, Bobby Walker (Ben Affleck) and Woodward — undergo their own unique set of obstacles and redefining moments as they try to find their way back inside the world of work. The movie centers mostly on Walker who is forced to come to terms with his new life. Walker learns to redefine himself and the definition of success, slowly and steadily as he first loses his Porche, then his house and eventually his self identity.

The movie dips into the well of corporate responsibility and the inequity of wages mostly through the eyes of Walker’s brother-in-law Jack Dolan (Kevin Costner). Dolan is a salt of the earth type construction worker who despises the idea of CEOs earning 700 times more than their employees. True to his type, Dolan is also the one that offers Walker a job despite the economic hardship it causes him. The job serves as the catalyst for Walker’s rebirth.

Some viewers will be put off by the commonly-used white male, greed-infested CEO, but at its core the movie does hit upon a uniquely American phenomenon. The paradox of how a Christian-based society (with its economy guided by the All-Knowing) easily and quickly disposes of its employees during hard times — feeling no ethical responsibility toward the individuals who made them successful during good times.

If you have worked in a less-than-perfect corporation that used layoffs to improve profitability — the movie’s accuracy in depicting the downsizing process will feel uncanny.

Rated 4 out of 5.

Categories: American Workplace, movies | Tags: , ,

Books I’ve Read: This Republic of Suffering

Although it is a subject matter that I would not normally tackle, I found This Republic of Suffering: Death and the American Civil War by Drew Gilpin Faust to be extremely interesting.

Drawing on records from the military, family histories and benevolent organizations, Faust recreates the impact the War had on the American psyche. When the War commenced, the concept of death was neatly packaged in the idea of the Good Death.

But the battlefield and disease that took so many of America’s men were not conducive to the concept of dying at home, with family and with a clear Christian conscience. So as families and the country struggled with the sheer volume of death the War created, family members were further burden with the realization that their loved one most likely did not die the Good Death.

Faust also points out how industries like embalming rose up out of the need for American families to see the deceased.

What I found most intriguing, is the sheer volume of work and manpower required to account for all the dead. That is:

  • To make sure the deceased had a name and not just a serial number
  • The incredibly difficult job of identifying and re-interring soldiers, and
  • How the War inadvertently created the need for, and implementation of, National Cemeteries.

Possibly the most disturbing fact the book reveals is the desecration of graves — from both sides of the conflict — once the War ended.

Written in a scholarly fashion — with ample footnotes — the book is definitely not a quick read. But if you are interested in American history and, in particular the Civil War, you will find the book engaging.

Definitely a 5-star book because it is so well researched and because it offers such a poignant look at how soldiers were treated once they were dead.

Categories: American History, Books I have read, Civil War History | Tags:

Man who helps Faulkner get published forgotten & overlooked

The man who helped Hemmingway and Faulkner get published was born in Preble County, Ohio.

The man who helped Hemingway and Faulkner get published was born in Preble County, Ohio.

Rich in History

One of Preble County’s most significant contributions to American literature is Sherwood Anderson — a man history seems to have forgotten and replaced with the men he helped get published.

He is also one of the county’s best kept secrets.

I’ve lived in the county most of my life and I was in my 30s before I learned Anderson was born in Camden — a small village at the southern end of the county. He was the third of seven children born to Irwin Anderson, a former Union soldier, and Emma Jane (Smith) Anderson.

He wasn’t here long — which is probably why so few know about his connection to the county.

The Anderson family left Preble County before Sherwood’s first birthday. The small one-story, wood framed home where he was born still exists (and is currently lived in). A small rock in the front yard designates his birthplace.

Three things I have always found interesting about him are: his relative obscurity, his ‘day of awakening’ and how he died.

Lost in History

Even though Anderson was reponsible for helping both Faulkner and Hemingway get published, his works and contribution seem to be unknown and under-appreciated. His signature piece, Winesburg, Ohio though, should be required reading. The book is a series of interrelated short stories based on the fictional town of Winesburg (based loosely on Clyde, another Ohio town he lived in). Commenting on the book in 1932, Anderson said,

The book is, of course, in no sense a burlesque, but it is an effort to treat the lives of simply ordinary people in an American middle western town with sympathy and understanding… These people are all like Wing Biddlebaum, people who had not succeeded in life, but decent people nevertheless.

Wing is the central character in the chapter Hands.

Wing Biddlebaum talked much with his hands. The slender expressive fingers, forever active, forever striving to conceal themselves in his pockets or behind his back, came forth and became the piston rods of his machinery of expression.

With Winesburg, Ohio, Anderson became one of the first American writers to use modern psychological insights.

Day of Mythic Proportion

Nov. 28, 1912 is the day of awakening in Anderson’s life. In one version of his autobiography, this was the day he deserted his wife, their three children and his business to pursue his creative work. In other versions of the story, it was the day he had a nervous breakdown, wandered the streets and was hospitalized. What really happened is up for debate, but regardless sometime around that time period he did moved into his creative work and leave behind his ‘normal’ businessman’s life.

Cause of Death

One of the most unusual things about his life — was his death.

The official cause of his death is peritonitis — inflammation of the peritoneum, the thin tissue that lines the inner wall of the abdomen and covers most of the abdominal organs. Anderson was on a cruise through South America with his fourth wife (20 years his junior) when he became ill. He was taken to a Panama hospital where he died on March 8, 1941.

An autospy after his death revealed he had swallowed a toothpick, possibly on the cruise, which had punctured the peritoneum, causing an infection that led to his death. He was 64.

The inscription on his tombstone in Virginia says, “Life, not death, is the great adventure.”

Books and Influence

Sherwood Anderson

Sherwood Anderson

Besides mentoring Faulkner and working with Hemingway, Anderson also influenced other American writers like Thomas Wolfe and John Steinbeck. Anderson’s first book, Windy McPherson’s Son was published in 1916, followed by Marching Men in 1917. Winesburg was released in 1919 and his only best seller, Dark Laughter, was published in 1925.

Categories: 8th congressional district, American History