[Fresh Ink] [Review] Dickstein's Cultural History of the Great
Depression
Richard Menec
menecraj at shaw.ca
Wed Sep 2 23:00:48 CDT 2009
http://www.bookforum.com/inprint/016_03/4323
Sept/Oct/Nov 2009
Crash Course
A vivid account of the populist arts of the '30s offers lessons for today
Joan Richardson
Morris Dickstein's Dancing in the Dark: A Cultural History of the Great
Depression is a sweeping, stirring, disturbing, and more than occasionally
thrilling account of a period unsettlingly like our own. Citing Franklin
Delano Roosevelt's second inaugural address, in 1937, when the nation had
come to understand "the need to find through government the instrument of
our united purpose to solve for the individual the ever-rising problems of a
complex civilization," Dickstein observes: "This was the New Deal message
that was rediscovered during the financial meltdown of 2008, after decades
of free-market ideology." He goes on to quote a passage that serves equally
well in underlining Barack Obama's attempt to change "not only the role of
government but the relation between individuals and their society":
Old truths have been relearned; untruths have been unlearned. We have always
known that heedless self-interest was bad morals; we know now that it is bad
economics. . . . This new understanding undermines the old admiration of
worldly success as such. We are beginning to abandon our tolerance of the
abuse of power by those who betray for profit the elementary decencies of
life.
Framed by the similarity between that moment and the present, Dickstein's
bracing volume is a morality tale for our time and place, "this new yet
unapproachable America," in Ralph Waldo Emerson's phrase, ever aspiring with
what Obama terms "the audacity of hope" to become "a more perfect union."
Dickstein's is no ordinary account, playing "the flat historic scale," to
borrow from Wallace Stevens. Nor is it, as he comments in his introductory
chapter, cultural history "as soft history, an exploration of what falls
between the cracks: sensibility, moral feelings, dreams, relationships, all
of them hard to objectify." "My subject here," he announces, "is at once
concrete-the books, the films of an era: the stories they told, the fears
and hopes they expressed-and yet intangible, the look, the mood, the feel of
the historical moment." Dancing in the Dark is, in its expansiveness, like a
Wagnerian music drama, the motif of its title scored symphonically through
seventeen chapters parsed into four parts, developed thematically against a
unifying chronological backdrop: "Discovering Poverty," "Success and
Failure," "The Culture of Elegance," "The Search for Community."
While this story concerns the 1930s, its compass extends backward and
forward and beyond our shores, revealing the decade's origins and
influences. As Dickstein notes, "the Depression did not begin suddenly with
the 1929 Crash but developed like a rolling swell over a lengthy period." Of
the "artists with the pen, the brush, or the camera" reporting on and
translating the feel of the '30s, he writes, "They gave us an exemplary
lesson in the relation between artistic expression and social purpose. Their
responses should resonate with us again today." Within this address to the
era's populism, exemplified differently in, say, Frank Capra's biting
fairy-tale parodies and Woody Guthrie's proletarian folk songs, Dickstein
refers back to the origins of American populism in the 1890s-Jacob Riis's
How the Other Half Lives and William Dean Howells's A Hazard of New
Fortunes, for example-and then carries us into the 1960s, as Bob Dylan's
voice revivifies the spirit of Guthrie, the troubadour "Shakespeare in
overalls," singing songs by, for, and of "the people."
In his incisive analyses of innumerable works and affiliations (the Group
Theatre, the Partisan Review crowd, the Federal Writers' Project, and the
Federal Art Project, to name a few), Dickstein textures his descriptions
with observations made by other critics, biographers, and historians, both
of the period and outside it, both American and European. The range of
reference and the varying points of view make for stimulating reading. In
discussing populism, for instance, Dickstein offers Richard Hofstadter's
reflection in 1955 on literary theorist Kenneth Burke, who "got into hot
water" at "the first Writers' Congress, in 1935, dominated by the
Communists," for "urging the substitution of the broader term 'the people'
for divisive phrases like 'the masses,' 'workers,' or 'proletariat.'"
Dickstein goes on to paint the full backdrop of the Communist movement's
tactical reversal from doctrinaire Marxism to an alignment with the Popular
Front, so that by 1936 "Burke's terminology was in" and "the editors of
Partisan Review, who were still Marxists, were castigated for still pursuing
an interest in something so divisive as the proletarian novel, rather than
more popular works with a liberal or progressive tinge." In delineating
Guthrie's gift, Dickstein-who began his career studying the
Romantics-perceptively observes, "He had what the great German poet Schiller
describes (in his essay 'On Naïve and Sentimental Poetry') as a spontaneous
rather than a self-conscious imagination; that helped make him so prolific."
Dancing in the Dark is enlivened by the author's account of his own profound
engagement with the period: John Steinbeck's writing, for example,
"enchanted [him] early on" with its "elemental . . . sensuous simplicity"-a
feeling renewed "with nostalgia" when he lived in California during the
summer of 1973 and visited Monterey and Cannery Row. These personal asides
are never intrusive, and unlike Alfred Kazin's Starting Out in the Thirties,
this is not a memoir. (Dickstein was born in 1940, on February 23, the day,
he notes, that Guthrie "dashed off 'This Land' as an angry response to the
patriotic rhetoric of Irving Berlin's 'God Bless America.'" It's significant
that the concert at the Lincoln Memorial on the Sunday preceding Obama's
inauguration included Guthrie's song.) Rather, these periodic reminiscences
produce in this survey a rhythm that reinforces the theme-that our present
has been shaped in myriad ways by the cultural work of the Great Depression.
If, as Dickstein notes, "the relation of the observer to the thing observed"
was the source of James Agee's rich style, it also informs his own practice
here; his critical sensibility has been shaped by the works he discusses.
For instance, his recuperation, as equals of Steinbeck and Nathanael West,
of the immigrant novelists Michael Gold and Henry Roth (the latter of whom
Dickstein interviewed more than twenty years ago, in the fall of 1987, in
gathering the material he would spin into this book) is poignantly informed
by the reciprocal relation he details between his own family history and the
fictions woven by Gold and Roth.
Thrilling perceptions punctuate the book, some capturing in one or two
sentences the essence of an artist's contribution. About Gold, who drew on
the poverty and misery of his family's immigrant experience not only for the
1930 novel Jews Without Money but also to sustain a cultural critique
stretching into the late 1950s, Dickstein remarks that the author's
"childhood lasted him a lifetime; the New York slums of the turn of the
century became his imaginative capital, his obsession, the ground of his
religious attachment to the Revolution." He further notes that "Gold was the
missing link between the plebeian Whitman, whom he idolized, and the
youthful Allen Ginsberg, who must have read him as a Young Communist in the
1930s or early 1940s."
More elaborate insights draw terms of comparison from other cultural frames
of reference, thereby contextualizing American experience within an expanded
historical field. A good example is Dickstein's description of the hero of
West's 1933 novel, Miss Lonelyhearts: "Having lost his cynicism he has lost
his fix on life. The discrete chapters of the book are like the Stations of
the Cross. Having taken a kind of Dantean journey and gazed into the well of
human misery, he has lost the ability to take pleasure in the ordinary
world." Dickstein's critique encourages us to return to these works, newly
equipped with his discerning perceptions. His deft descriptions of movie
scenes (from John Ford's The Grapes of Wrath, Orson Welles's Citizen Kane,
and Howard Hawks's Bringing Up Baby, among others), plays (Clifford Odets's
Awake and Sing!), and photographs (by Margaret Bourke-White, Walker Evans,
Edwin Rosskam, and more) bring them into vivid focus. Of Dorothea Lange's
famous 1936 "Migrant Mother," Dickstein writes, "Like migrants in other
Lange photographs, she is all angles, a zig-zag of intersecting lines."
Dickstein makes us feel the fear, anger, and despair disturbing the American
dream, while demonstrating, through abundant examples, how the work of
imagination transforms these tribulations into scenes of instruction. The
story Dancing in the Dark tells is not only instructive but exhilarating.
Joan Richardson is a professor of English, comparative literature, and
American studies at the Graduate Center, City University of New York.
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