How male was the “American Century”?

Writing for The Guardian, in preparation for a new BBC radio series on U.S. literature called “Capturing America” (soon to debut, I guess), Mark Lawson ponders the influence of the generation of American novelists who reached adulthood during World War II, who ascended to fame in the 1950s and ’60s, and who held their star-posts until recently, until old age and death caught up: Mailer, Heller, Bellow, Roth, Updike, Salinger, and others.  Lawson provides a pretty good overview–and I stress “overview” (it is after all a newspaper article)–of the last half-century of American letters, and his understanding of the current core debate among critics and scholars (How accurate is it to frame a cadre of mostly male, mostly white writers as the leaders of national literary culture?) is nuanced.  Viz.,

This triumphalist but nostalgic position holds that these writers took advantage of their nation’s geopolitical power – and a media culture and bookstore customer-base which regarded serious writers ­seriously – to create a superpower of the pen to match the financial and military clout of the US during what became known as the American century.

The counter-argument is that this army of old soldiers was very male and masculine and white in its concerns – tempered only by a grudging, late admission to the halls of fame of writers such as Toni Morrison and Joyce Carol Oates – and that the standard narrative of 20th-century American literature is partial and distorted. This case is made persuasively in Elaine Showalter’s recent book: A Jury of Her Peers: American Women Writers from Anne Bradstreet to Annie Proulx.

Literary history is impossibly messy and almost always contentious (celebrating some people means not celebrating others, or at least not celebrating them as much), and so this debate is unwinnable, really.  But even if you don’t believe that Bellow, et al. constitute the “greatest generation” of American writers (and personally I don’t even think there is such a thing as any “greatest generation,” not ever), it is hard to write off the achievement of books like Herzog and The Catcher in the Rye, and you will probably find Lawson’s apercu fair and sophisticated, which is impressive, given the short format he’s working in.

He also works in the usual worries about The Death of Serious Literature–

Updike, in [his] last interview, reflected on having twice been pictured on the cover of Time magazine, part of the nation’s honours system, to mark the publication of Couples in 1968 and Rabbit Is Rich in 1982. Now, the novelist who takes that prize is Dan Brown. And so the changing of the guard in American fiction is arguably not just generational but cultural: the large, interested readership who lined their shelves with Updike’s Rabbit Quartet, Bellow’s Herzog, Mailer’s The Naked and the Dead, Roth’s Portnoy’s Complaint and other bestsellers of serious literary merit had perhaps migrated to the quick-read thriller and the confessional memoir.

–without sounding like a hysterical pessimist.  Literature will keep getting written, and, as long as our educational system doesn’t totally collapse (50/50 odds?) people, at least some people, will keep reading it:

. . . intelligent literary culture will adapt to the new conditions of the marketplace and may be revived, as the country always has been, by immigration. The Jewish-American, Irish-American, ­African-American and European-­American writers of the great postwar generations may be followed by authors who are, say, Indian-American (Jhumpa Lahiri, left, with Unaccustomed Earth), Dominican-American (Junot Díaz’s The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao) or Korean-American (Chang-rae Lee, whose novel The Surrendered, published this spring, extends the nation’s rich war literature by treating the ­Korean war from an Asian perspective). With these books and others, a new phase is beginning.

Kinda pat, but true.  And by the way, if you haven’t done so yet, you really, really need to read Oscar Wao.  Diaz is the troof.  Happy reading,

-TGR

Saturday quick reads

As you bask in the sun or rest from shoveling snow . . .

– I am usually wary of essays that start with things like “Posterity hasn’t had much trouble knowing what to do with Emily Dickinson” (really?  I’ve read a lot of feminist criticism, and it seems like the opposite is truer), but hey, it’s about Emily Dickinson.

The Economist with a trifle on music.

– How should you teach The Merchant of Venice to contemporary college students?  A reflection on Shylock, the historically contingent nature of reading, and the pleasures of education from a university professor.

– Do you like no-fi Boards of Canada dancehall pop?  Yeah?  Well then get on Washed Out.  He rules.

-TGR

Sex, please

Did you know that The Weekly Standard has female writers?  I know, weird, right?  Anyway, one of them, Charlotte Allen, has just written an interesting, if belated, essay on the recent phenomenon of Pick-Up Artists viz the bigger question of what the (mostly heterosexual part of ) the dating/sex/love/relationship landscape looks like in 2010 America.  Preview: not so great.  Allen makes an extremely sensible point most feminist critics of people/phenomena like Tucker Max, Neil Strauss, and roissy in dc are loathe to bring up: these guys might be assholes, but goddamn are they popular with young men AND a lot of young women.  Something big and not necessarily pleasant is happening to American sexual culture, and just writing off these guys and their fellow travelers won’t explain or contest or stop anything.

In sum, while the piece is occasionally reductive, and I sometimes can’t tell whether the author is celebrating or bemoaning the present state of things (or both), it’s still punchy and entertaining and, for TWS, surprisingly reluctant to blame left-wing ideologies for everything.  A recommended read.

-TGR

Was J.D. Salinger a Sex Monster . . . ?

. . . who abused women with his sex desires!?  This is the case Mikki Halpin lays out in a Salon.com essay that is light on particular evidence and heavy on the hate.  As she has it,

. . . I think there is another, more insidious reason that the literary establishment is so invested in the fictional, reclusive Salinger. It is a convenient cudgel with which to silence any discussion of Salinger’s personal life, particularly any revelation of unsavory truths about one of America’s most revered authors. Both Joyce Maynard and Salinger’s daughter Margaret were vilified for violating the great man’s privacy when they wrote about their own experiences with him and exposed his predatory, controlling relationships with women. Instead of exploring the insights these revelations might bring to readings of Salinger’s work (not to mention the women’s right to tell their own stories), critics dismissed their books as exploitative, attention-seeking stunts.

Well, Maynard was a publicity hound / groupie and a bad writer.  And if you’re going to assert that putative events from the man’s personal life can enrich our experience of his work, then you had better offer at least a brief example of such literary analysis.

Read the piece in full if you want, but be warned: it’s mostly boilerplate about Cruel Male Artists (Salinger is somehow guilty by association with, uh, Picasso) and vague aspersions about what Salinger was “really” like.   You will run into cant phrases like “troubled past” and  “unsavory truths.”  And the title is even ungrammatical (it should be history WITH women, not OF women–jeez).    Ultimately it seems like the big old man had a pretty normal romantic life, full of fuck-ups and stupidity and loss, just like anyone else’s.  For Halpin, though, this is all evidence of a deeper depravity–that of the Male Egotist.  Blurg.  Maybe try critiquing his actual books next time, and cool it with the hazy biographical attacks.  Ad hominem is boring.  Halpin is usually a solid, funny cultural observer, but this piece falls flat, stylistically and substantively.

-TGR

The Selected Wallace Stevens, finally

I should have written about this months ago.  Laziness got in the way, as usual.  But–ladies and gentlemen!–there is finally, finally, finally a Selected Wallace Stevens, edited by John N. Serio (one of the better academic poetry scholars around today) and coming in at an unusually robust (for a Selected anything) 352 pages, which is nevertheless much slimmer than the 500+ page Collected that was released just before the poet’s death in 1955 and about which little besides the cover and font has changed since.

Granted, you should still own the Collected, because any reader will find at least some fault with the inclusions and excisions made by an editor (even if that editor is the poet him/herself).  Whenever you can get more poems by a great poet, do it.  (Personally I find it comforting to have every poem in my library arsenal.)  But Serio has done a fine job of selecting both canonical and lesser-known pieces.  He clearly understood that the stuff in the Norton anthologies hardly begins to encompass or even suggest the immensity of Stevens’ achievement, and so he has included quiet gems like “Botanist on Alp (No. 1)” and “The Bed of Old John Zeller.”

The main appeal of any such selection is that it’s simply easier to lug around.  It won’t cause your messenger bag to bulge out weirdly or give you a shoulder sprain.  It is an everyday book.  And Stevens was a shaman of the everyday.  He found and exfoliated the utter weirdness of putatively ordinary things like ferns and glasses of water; that’s why having a volume you can peruse on the bus or in the dentist’s waiting room is so fitting.  Hats off to Professor Serio, whose Introduction to the edition you can read here.  It’s quite good, although the poems remain the reason for bothering with it.

-TGR

The Vancouver Experiment

Ever wonder what would happen to the United States’ ghastly drug-addiction problem if we (or rather, the relevant authorities) treated it like a medical, psychological, and sociological conundrum instead of a criminal blight?  If we tried to treat and manage addiction instead of giving addicts long prison sentences?  If we didn’t spend hundreds of billions of dollars and decades of man-hours on draconian law enforcement that has led to little besides cheaper, more abundant narcotics?  If we looked at the problem–and as cautiously pro-drug as I am, I realize it is a capital-p Problem on a whole lot of personal and sociocultural and medical levels–and said, “Hey, we’ve been pursuing one strategy for 40 years, and it hasn’t worked at all; maybe we should try something else”?

Western Europe and Canada have been taking saner, less punitive approaches for some time now.  All sorts of crazy liberal public-health stuff, like needle exchanges and free rehab (instead of years in prison) and aggressive disease testing and treatment.  These more “lenient” (read: less insane, anti-factual, and cruel) strategies have led to–gasp–lower addiction rates, fewer overdoses, radically diminished rates of HIV and Hep-C infection, and less  violent crime (on the part of both addicts desperate for money for a fix & the networks of international thugs who supply the product).  For a good look at how such policies are playing out, read Matthew Powers’ “The Vancouver Experiment,” a multi-part report from the ‘couve that Slate is publishing this week.  Without pretending that anyone has found a magical cure for drug abuse and the misery and loneliness that both causes and attends it, Powers does a superb job of demonstrating what happens when government begins forming policy around, you know, facts, instead of hysterical, ignorant fear.

-TGR

Boredom

In his Pensees, Pascal maintains that our experience of boredom–especially our efforts to minimize or avoid it–is one of the core elements of our humanity. It afflicts kings as much as paupers, and it’s both terrible and potentially redemptive; the specter of being bored scares the daylights out of most of us, but it also motivates a good percentage of our higher achievements. What is Ulysses if not, among other things, a 700-plus-page defense against the weird complex of frustration, longing, low-grade agony, fatigue, and nerves that we call “boredom”? (Ironic, then, that in mounting this defense the novel focuses on precisely the sorts of daily activities–running errands, buying lunch, having lecherous thoughts, walking around–that are themselves 1.) potentially very boring and 2.) minor bulwarks against boredom.) Same goes for lots of other books. I just happen to be sitting across the room from my copies of Joyce’s novels.

With all that in mind, check out this affectionate, covertly sad essay from the most recent New York Times Sunday Book Review (yes, they still do one). Written by Jennifer Schuessler, “Our Boredom, Ourselves” is organized around ruminations on how reading and thinking about books are acts which are bound up with the question of what exactly boredom is and what exactly it feels like and why exactly it keeps happening to most of us.

We read, and write, in large part to avoid it. At the same time, few experiences carry more risk of active boredom than picking up a book. Boring people can, paradoxically, prove interesting. As they prattle on, you step back mentally and start to catalog the irritating timbre of the offending voice, the reliance on cliché, the almost comic repetitiousness — in short, you begin constructing a story. But a boring book, especially a boring novel, is just boring. A library is an enormous repository of information, entertainment, the best that has been thought and said. It is also probably the densest concentration of potential boredom on earth.

Did any of you know that Dickens was the first person to employ “boredom” as a noun? I didn’t.  Especially fitting, I guess, that he introduces that usage in Bleak House, which is arguably (read: TGR’s opinion) the most entertaining (and profuse) meditation on confusion and existential torpidity in English literature.

And if you still find yourself un-bored by boredom, consider buying the aphoristic anthology Ennui to Go: The Art of Boredom, which seems entertaining and has a great cover and is available on Amazon for a dollar (used).

As John Berryman remarks in one of his Dream Songs, Life, friends, is boring–we must not say so. Yet we keep saying so.

Hitchens on Racism in North Korea

He might have gone halfway off the rails during the Iraq War debates, and I’ve never thought much of him as a book reviewer, but Christopher Hitchens still has the intellectual and linguistic tools to be very, very funny from time to time.  Funny, that is, in the classical sense, the comedic as a serious critical mode.  Witness his new Slate.com opinion piece about racial ideology inside the ghoulish North Korean regime.  The title alone should tempt you: “A Nation of Racist Dwarves.” Bonus points for spotting H.’s favorite adjectives (e.g. “despicable,” “fatuous,” “pathological”).

-TGR