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Title: Tales from the Underground
Author: Fergal Finnegan
Date: 10 March 2007
Language: en
Topics: clandestinity, Ireland, book review, Red & Black Revolution
Source: Retrieved on 15th November 2021 from http://www.wsm.ie/c/ramor-ryans-clandestines-pirate-journals
Notes: Published in Red & Black Revolution No. 12.

Fergal Finnegan

Tales from the Underground

At this point in time it is a rare and welcome event when a book by an

Irish activist is published and rarer still when a book by an Irish

anti-capitalist writer receives widespread praise and acclaim.

“Clandestines: the Pirate journals of an Irish Exile”, which has

received a slew of positive reviews following it’s publication in the US

by AK Press, is just such a rarity, and as it is being launched in

Ireland this week means readers here will soon be able to make their own

appraisal of the book.Although this is Ramor Ryan’s first full length

book many readers may have already come across Ryan’s articles and

essays before as the author is relatively well known and his work is

included in probably two of the most notable collections of

anti-capitalist writing of recent years- the Verso Press publication :

“We are Everywhere” and Softskull Press’s “Confronting Capitalism”.

“......the only thing that works is memory. Collective memory, but also

even the tiniest, most insignificant memory of a personal kind. I

suspect, in fact, that one can barely survive without the other, that

legend cannot be constructed without anecdote” — Paco Ignacio Taibo II

Clandestines consists of a series of stories and reflections culled from

Ryan’s experience of over twenty years of activism. The result is an

entertaining and readable mixture of memoir, political essay, travelogue

and literature. Clandestines then is not your standard political tract

but rather a form of political picaresque documenting Ryan’s adventures

as a wayward radical with an uncanny ability to find himself in

interesting and often tricky situations everywhere from the mountains of

Kurdistan to jungles of Chiapas. Ryan has certainly been around the

block and the book includes a number of eyewitness accounts of events of

major political and historical importance such as the massacre of

mourners at a Republican funeral in Belfast by Michael Stone in 1988 and

the electoral defeat of the Sandinistas in 1990.

However, Ryan is at his best when he is observing the everyday and the

marginal rather than the epic and grandiose and much of the book is

taken up with Ryan’s descriptions of various encounters with people at

the edges of history. These memorable character sketches, by turns

affectionate and exasperated, often ironic and occasionally derisive,

fill and enliven the pages of Clandestines. Ryan wanders amongst this

motley crew-the generous and riotously joyful Berlin squatters, the

Zapatista peasants, the disaffected Cubans, a drunk Croatian war

veteran, the Central American gang members, a charismatic Venezuelan

punk singer, the self indulgent hippies at a Rainbow Gathering and a

host of others- observing, conspiring, joking and drinking and

ultimately turning these encounters into a series of amusing and

interesting tales without ever stretching the reader’s credulity too

far.

But Clandestines is more than a series of anecdotes about the “wretched

of the earth” and eccentrics from the activist milieu. In the most

impressive sections of the book, like the chapter on life in a dismal

Guatemalan backwater, Ryan manages to interweave these colourful and

finely observed character portraits with a political analysis that

outlines the sort of historical and social pressures that can shape,

embolden or even crush the lives he describes.

Obviously enough this sort of writing is made possible by a libertarian

sensibility that combines Utopian hope with a keen awareness of human

frailty. In all of these essays we find an unresolved and creative

tension between Ryan’s attraction towards political romanticism that is

tempered, undercut and sometimes completely usurped by an intelligent

scepticism. This tension is one of main sources of the book’s constant

ironies, pathos and humour but it does also mean that the reader is

occasionally left with the impression that the author is sometimes

uneasy with some of his own political rhetoric. On the other hand there

are some sections in the book in which Ryan’s storytelling is disturbed

and subsumed by political analysis and in one particular chapter, on the

Milltown massacre, this certainly undermines the quality and impact of

the piece. However, for the most part Ryan gets the balance between

right and this dynamic tension means the writing never degenerates into

political liturgy or a disconnected series of anecdotes.

Despite the fact that Clandestines is a profoundly political book Ryan

swerves away from answering in a systematic way the political questions

that his varied experiences have thrown up. And these are pertinent and

difficult questions for the anti-capitalist movement: for instance how

should libertarians relate to national liberation struggles, how do we

forge meaningful grassroots democracy, what is to be taken and what is

to be dispensed with from the Marxist tradition, and most consistently

Ryan’s poses questions about how solidarity is built between activists

from the global north and those struggling in the global south. These

issues are explored but left unresolved however it would be a mistake to

believe this is because Ryan is either naive or unreflective. He clearly

marks these issues over the course of his essays and understands their

significance. Neither can this be attributed to a lack of interest in

political theory as Clandestines is clearly influenced by the work of,

amongst others, the radical historians Galeano, Linebaugh and Federici,

the situationist theorist Vaneigem and of course the whimsical and

passionate writings Sub-Commandante Marcos of the EZLN. It is also

obvious from his analysis of Latin American politics and his critique of

Kurdish Marxist guerillas that he has absorbed the best of libertarian

thought right into his bones. Nonetheless, Ryan chooses to avoid neat

and easy answers as he crisscrosses the Atlantic marking historical

transitions, observing and organising, and chasing hope in the face of a

whirlwind of neoliberal and imperialist destruction.

All the same, or perhaps because of this refusal, Ryan’s singular

account of an unusual activist life paradoxically serves as a metaphor

for the anti-capitalist movement as a whole in all its contradictions.

Ryan’s tales trace the patterns of globalisation from below and his

search for new political communities, his desire to sustain hope, his

discovery of a new world in the making in a forgotten corner of Mexico,

his questioning of how we can fruitfully anchor our own life stories

within grand historical narratives, his suspicion of easy answers, even

his celebration of glorious and seedy marginality makes him, despite his

steadfast refusal of such roles, something close to an anti-capitalist

Everyman.

If, for the most part, even Clandestines little imperfections are

interesting the book does deserve unequivocal criticism in one small

regard. Although Clandestines is quite nicely produced with evocative

black and white photos and hand drawn maps it does suffer somewhat from

poor quality editing-there are quite a few typos, the occasional

repetition and most seriously of all a certain unevenness in parts of

the book that could of been simply remedied by some simple revisions or

minor excisions.

That said Clandestines is a lively, humorous and, at times, a touching

book. At his best Ryan captures both the poetry of everyday moments and

the roar of history and, to use a phrase from the book describing one of

his acquaintances, Ryan as a writer often “embodies what is seductive

about the rebel milieu-smart, vigorous and passionately committed to

some great mysterious ideal”