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The
Great Days chronicles
the life of August Russ who
is being groomed for
leadership in a cult compound in the Arizona
desert. After a series of traumatic events shake August’s faith, he
flees in
horror to face the hostility of the outside world. A guilty conscience
and the
unsolved mystery of those events eventually lead August back to the
compound
where he rises to power in lieu of an increasingly ill founder.
Disturbed by
his own authority, August struggles to redeem the movement and
understand
himself before the ramifications of his choices undermine him
completely.
What we call cults are as old as
culture. They are not traps out there in the wilderness, but
cul-de-sacs of our
own behavior. Betrayal is the center of a cult experience. Not that we
have
been taken advantage of by a messiah, but that we have been taken
advantage of
by a person who has no special powers, a person who is just like us. I
wanted
to look unflinchingly at the complicity of these betrayals, the
relationship
between power taken and power granted, and the ingenious methods we
have for
abdicating our own agency. The Great Days
is an examination of the windows of vulnerability we all share.
Most of the important questions
about cults have been answered — the mysteries that held us in morbid
fascination explained. Whereas we once asked, “What kind of people are
they?”
now we know that ‘they’ are no different from ‘us.’
We once asked, “How can they
believe such outrageous things?” but it turns out that we are all
familiar with
mind control. It has been demonstrated that the tools of manipulative
persuasion can be diluted with lemon scent and used in soap
commercials. Brain
washing is the extreme version of the mass manipulation we experience
daily. To
keep a population from rebelling one need only: restrict information,
create a
“with us or against us” atmosphere, discourage dissent, replace
dialogue with
sound-bites and slogans, and fabricate a sinister enemy to inspire
vigilance.
This allows an authority to convince a population to shave their heads,
kill
themselves, or wage specious wars against weaker nations. August’s
naiveté is
our own.
Some questions, however, do not
yet have satisfactory answers. How do benevolent intentions become
destructive?
How does a group of kind people, marching toward paradise, arrive in
hell?
Where does the corruption begin? These questions haunted me and
saturate The Great Days.
Cults earn their title through
behaviors which are uncannily homogeneous, creating the illusion of
complete
unanimity. But underneath the illusion every member has secret doubts,
longings
and urges. I wanted to explode the myth of the collective mind. In
order to
reveal an individual experience I had to follow August closely, so
closely that
a reader may feel claustrophobic. His prison is emotional and to tell
the truth
of this story I asked the reader to join him in his disorientation.
The Great Days
is a dark trip; we follow August through his
dizzying loss of faith, through temptation and suffering. We watch him
nearly
destroyed so often that ‘nearly-destroyed’ seems his natural state. If
he
undergoes enlightenment it is only through a rough disillusionment. He
moves
from follower to leader to pariah, but he is above all, a survivor.
Thank you for reading,
Eli
Brown
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