The Lost Generation
The Lost Generation
The Lost Generation
What is it?
The Lost Generation is a term used to describe a group of American writers who were
rebelling against what America had become by the 1900’s. At this point in time, America
had become a great place to, “go into some area of business”. However, the Lost
Generation writers felt that America was not such a success story because the country
was devoid of a cosmopolitan culture. Their solution to this issue was to pack up their
bags and travel to Europe’s cosmopolitan cultures, such as Paris and London. Here they
expected to find literary freedom and a cosmopolitan way of life. A cosmopolitan culture
is one which includes and values a variety of backgrounds and cultures. In the 1920's the
White
Anglo Saxon Protestant work ethic was the only culture that was considered valued by
the majority of Americans. It was
because of ethics such as this which made the cosmopolitan culture of Paris so alluring.
American Literature went through a profound change in the post WWI era. Up until
this point, American writers were
still expected to use the rigid Victorian styles of the 19th Century. The lost generation
writers were above, or apart from,
American society, not only in geographic terms, but also in their style of writing and
subjects they chose to write about.
Although they were unhappy with American culture, the writers were instrumental in
changing their country's style of
T.S. Eliot was born into a prominent New England family. His education consisted of
Harvard University, the Sorbonne,
and the University of Oxford. Eliot was a disciple of the author/editor Ezra Pound who
will be discussed later. His
permanent residence became London, because Eliot found London more appealing due to
its cultural tradition. Eliot's studies
and interests stemmed from anthropology, mythology, and religion. His works ranged
from subjects such as religion, serenity,
the Italian poet Dante, English metaphysical poets, and Elizabethan dramatists. His
poetry has no fixed verse, form, or
regular pattern, with an occasional rhyme scheme. Eliot's most celebrated work "The
Wasteland" is a long poem, which
construes his views of the modern society, in comparison of the past. Eliot gave Ezra
Pound the poem to edit, and pound and
his wife cut through the poem, often emitting large portions that they felt irrelevant. In
"The Wasteland" Eliot incorporates
many footnotes. Some critics claimed it was Eliot's egocentrism that allowed him to do
this, because he felt smarter than the
average person did, and they would need the footnote to decode his writings. Others said
he was crazy (he did suffer a
nervous breakdown while writing "The Wasteland." Eliot was an essential figure in the
modernistic times, and his methods of
literary analysis, such as he develops in the work "Sacred Wood" influenced literary
criticism for future writers.
Ezra Pound
Ezra Pound was born in Idaho, and at an early age moved to Pennsylvania with his
family. His education consisted of
Hamilton College, and the University of Pennsylvania where he meets literary figures
such as William Carlos Williams, and
Hilda Doolittle. Hilda Doolittle, Pound, and Richard Aldington published an anthology
based on their famous teashop
conversations called "Des Imgistes: An Anthology." Pound had this published to help
further his friend's careers. He entitled
the book in French because he felt that they owed a debt to French literature. Pound was
an instructor in Romance
Languages at Wabash College. Pound's friendship with various authors and poets helped
establish the birth of modernism
with regards to French, English, and American literature. Pound later moved to Europe,
as he found nothing of interest in
America. It was in Europe that Pound met T.S. Eliot. His course of readings in Europe
had a profound effect on his
writings. In addition to the Romance Languages, Pound studied Chinese. Pound felt a
greater admiration to French and
Chinese past histories than he did for American and British. Ezra Pound had a penetrating
impact on literature. Not only did
he write his own highly acclaimed works; he helped others to achieve the same
recognition.
Gertrude Stein
Gertrude Stein was born into an affluent family, which enabled her to spend a
considerable amount of time in Europe.
Having such a diverse background, Stein did not know the conventional life that many
Americans lived. Her areas of study
include Radcliffe College, where she studied with the philosopher William James. To
further her education, Stein attended
Johns Hopkins Medical School, but she did not have the drive to finish her degree. Stein
used her knowledge of medicine and
philosophy (particularly what she learned from James about stream of consciousness) and
incorporated them into her
writings. Stein then went off to Europe, and with her brother Leo, set up a salon which
was visited by such figures as
Picasso, Henri Matisse, Sherwood Anderson, and Ernest Hemingway. With influences
such as Picasso, Stein explored
Stein's first and most celebrated work was "Three Lives"- where she tried to establish
new verb forms, and a way to enable
the reader's consciousness to be able to study the workings of another mind. Dialogue
was a main focus, because dialogue
allowed the reader to understand the perceptions of the characters, while allowing the
reader to understand the perceptions
of the self. Freud was also an influence, as seen in Stein's attempt to get into ones
conscious and unconscious mind while
Poor Lena had no power to be strong in such trouble. She did not know how to yield her
sickness nor endure. She lost all her little sense of being in her suffering. She was so
scared, and then at her best, Lena, who was patient, sweet, and quiet, had not self-control,
nor any active courage.
Ernest Hemingway
Hemingway is probably one of the most celebrated authors of his time. Hemingway is
well known for his fiction. His
take on fiction is something invented or imagined. Main topics were centralized around
his love of embellishment of the
facts. Hemingway did not have the education as many other writers of his time, rebelling
against his parents attempts to send
him to colleges. His idea of education did not consist of lectures, and research papers, but
of life experiences, and his love of
reading. Hemingway's readings centered around Russian writers such as Tolstoy and
Turgrnev, Tolstoy was a primary
influence in Hemingway's writings. WWI also had a profound impact on him as well, as
he was an ambulance driver during
the war. He hated the abstract, especially abstract words such as honor, glory, and
courage. Hemingway held strong to old
beliefs, and symbolism, as he used symbolism to depict the Protestant religion he could
not accept. He used observation and
description in his works, rather than rhetoric views. The concept of war fascinated
Hemingway, as well as the experiences
one could endure in a lifetime. One of the most famous works, "Farewell to Arms"
depicted the uselessness for words such
as honor and glory, because they were not the first things in a soldier's mind as he walked
onto the battlefield. Hemingway's
works were raw, and dilled with the notion that one could be inside the characters mind,
the concrete, and not around in the
From the time he had gotten down off the train and the baggage man had thrown his pack
out of the open car door things had been different. Seney was burned, he knew that. He
hiked along the road, sweating in the sun, climbing to cross the range of hills that
separated the railway from the pure plains.
The term "lost generation" was coined by Gertrude Stein, a lost generation writer
herself, after World War I. It was
between the first and second World Wars, that these writers spent their time abroad. "In
the 1930's, the forces of politics
This temporary emigration of American talent into cosmopolitan cities such as Paris,
is significant to American culture in
two parts.
One, because it aided in the desire for a cosmopolitan culture to be established and to
exist in America.
Two, because when American Culture became more defined, European and other
countries began to recognize a
THE LOST
GENERATION:
AMERICAN WRITERS OF
THE 1920'S
Ernest Hemingway F. Scott Fitzgerald Gertrude Stein
During the 1920's a group of writers known as "The Lost Generation" gained
popularity. The term "the lost generation" was coined by Gertrude Stein who is
rumored to have heard her auto-mechanic while in France to have said that his
young workers were, "une generation perdue". This refered to the young
workers' poor auto-mechanic repair skills. Gertrude Stein would take this
phrase and use it to describe the people of the 1920's who rejected American
post World War I values. The three best known writers among The Lost
Generation are F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway and John Dos Passos.
Others among the list are: Sherwood Anderson, Kay Boyle, Hart Crane, Ford
Maddox Ford and Zelda Fitzgerald. Ernest Hemingway, perhaps the leading
literary figure of the decade, would take Stein's phrase, and use it as an
epigraph for his first novel, The Sun Also Rises. Because of this novel's
popularity, the term, "The Lost Generation" is the enduring term that has stayed
associated with writers of the 1920's.
Beat Generation
The so-called Beat Generation was a whole bunch of people, of all different nationalities,
who came to the conclusion that society sucked. -- Amiri Baraka
But yet, but yet, woe, woe unto those who think that the Beat Generation means crime,
delinquency, immorality, amorality ... woe unto those who attack it on the grounds that
they simply don’t understand history and the yearning of human souls ... woe in fact unto
those who those who make evil movies about the Beat Generation where innocent
housewives are raped by beatniks! ... woe unto those who spit on the Beat Generation,
the wind’ll blow it back. -- Jack Kerouac
Nobody knows whether we were catalysts or invented something, or just the froth riding
on a wave of its own. We were all three, I suppose. -- Allen Ginsberg
The term 'beat generation' was introduced by Jack Kerouac sometime around 1948 to
describe his social circle.
The Beat Generation, also known as the beat movement, were a group of American
writers who emerged in the 1950s. Among its most influential members were Gary
Snyder, the radical poet Allen Ginsberg, William Burroughs and Jack Kerouac.
Jack Kerouac was the acknowledged leader and spokesman for the Beat Generation.
What could be loosely described as the underlying philosophy was visionary
enlightenment, Zen Buddhism, Amerindian culture. The Beat Generation were centred
around the artist colonies of North Beach (San Francisco), Venice West (Los Angeles)
and Greenwich Village (New York City). The Beat Generation rejected the prevailing
academic attitude to poetry, feeling that poetry should be brought to the people. Readings
would take place in the Coexistence Bagel Shop and Lawrence Ferlinghetti's City Lights
Bookstore in San Francisco, often to the accompaniment of Jazz. A common theme that
linked them all together was a rejection of the prevailing American middle-class values,
the purposelessness of modern society and the need for withdrawal and protest.
The major Beat writings include Jack Kerouac's On the Road, Allen Ginsberg's Howl, and
William Burroughs' Naked Lunch. Both Howl and Naked Lunch became the focus of
obscenity trials in the United States that helped to liberalize what could be legally
published.
Allen Ginsberg said some essential effects of Beat Generation artistic movement could be
characterized in the following terms:
Bob Dylan, The Beatles were heavily influenced by the Beat Generation. Members like
Allen Ginsberg were influential in the anti-war movement. Others who were influenced
include: Jefferson Airplane, Joan Baez, Country Joe and the Fish, Crosby Stills Nash and
Young. The Beat Generation were followed by the hippies, anti-war movement, which
led to the environmental movement, deep ecology and Earth First!
The Beat Generation inspired the Black Mountain poets, so named as they wrote for the
Black Mountain Review. The Black Mountain poets were a loose group of poets who
coalesced around Robert Creeley, Robert Duncan and Charles Olson while they were
teaching at Black Mountain College, North Carolina. Their style was typified by a move
away from the structured poetry of T S Eliot to a freer, looser style. The essay 'Projective
Verse' by Charles Olson became the group manifesto. Creeley edited the Black Mountain
Review, which featured the work of William Carlos Williams, Paul Blackburn, Denise
Levertov, Allen Ginsberg, Gary Snyder. Much of the group's early work was published in
Origin.
The Beats were in turn influenced by William Blake, Walt Whitman and Henry David
Thoreau.
The term 'deep ecology' was coined by its founder and leading guru, the Norwegian philosopher Arne
Naess. Deep ecology is the philosophy of environmental ethics, the spirituality of Gaia. Deep ecology leads
to direct action.
Literature ~ Allen Ginsberg ~ Jack Kerouac ~ Gary Snyder ~ Henry David Thoreau ~
Walt Whitman
The beat generation was one of the largest cultural movements of the twentieth century. What started
off as a literary phenomenon soon progressed to a life-changing attitude for thousands of people
around the world. It embraced originality and individuality in the way people thought and acted. The
beat generation threw out the old rules of literature, music, sex and religion, and its effects are still felt
in the world today.
Most people regard the writer Jack Kerouac as the king of the beats. It was Kerouac who coined the
phrase beat, by proclaiming that his was a beat generation. By this he meant downbeat, but also
beatific and beautiful. Kerouac and poet Alan Ginsberg, along with the writer William Burroughs,
formed the nucleus of the beat generation - a group of people who broke the mold and changed writing
forever.
Kerouac and his group scoured Times Square in New York, looking for new experiences. They sought
out drugs, girls, booze, crazy people and crazy situations. Kerouac was the author of the bible of the
beat generation, On the Road, published in 1957, the tale of two free spirits seeking adventure while
riding across, and questioning, the heart of America. It was his spontaneous prose that turned the
book into a breathless roller coaster ride that still inspires people today.
The ethos of the beat generation had influence across all of the arts. It seemed as if, at the time, the
young were breaking free of the old constraints. Marlon Brando and James Dean were ripping through
film screens. Jazz musicians such as Charlie Parker and Dizzie Gillespie were playing their music
without barriers. Lenny Bruce was questioning racism and sexuality through his comedy routines.
Artists such as Jackson Pollock were exploding onto the canvas and ripping apart the Old Masters.
The beat generation was really a response to the Second World War that had just ended. Questions
arose about the old way of life and social rules that people were supposed to adhere to. A lot of the
questions that the beats asked were greeted with court trials and the attempted banning of their
material. Ginsberg’s and Burrough’s literature was subject to bans. One of Ginsberg’s most famous
poems, Howl, still cannot be played on daytime American radio.
The beat generation was not questioning society, authority and its rules just for the sake of it. As Dylan
sang, the times they are a changing. People were crying out for something new at the time. There was
a new sense of freedom after the war, and the beat generation led the way in exploring it.
By the late 1960s, the beat generation had all but imploded. Stick-on beatnik beards were being sold
in shops, and the hippies had arrived to take on the mantle of the beats. Kerouac died in 1969 after
disassociating himself from the beats. Ginsberg, Burroughs, Neil Cassady, Gregory Corso and many
other writers and leading lights, male and female, from the era are gone.
The legacy that the beat generation gave to the world is not just found in books. On the Road is still
one of the most popular books of all time, but it is the free thinking, always questioning credo that the
beats will be remembered for. If one person is still questioning an unfair rule or daring to create an
original thought, that is where the spirit of the beat generation lives on.
Frances Marshall; Quentin; Julian; Duncan; Clive; Beatrice Mayor. In front Roger
Fry and Raymond Mortimer
Triangular relationships with a gay twist were common within the Bloomsbury circle.
Strachey was gay, but in the early days of Bloomsbury, he proposed marriage to
Virginia Stephen (Woolf). In the 1920s, he lived in platonic bliss with surrealist
painter Dora Carrington. When they both fell in love with the same man, Carrington
married the object of their mutual desire, and the three set up housekeeping
together. The cross-dressing Carrington had affairs with women, confiding to a friend
that she had "more ecstasy" with female lovers than with men - "and no shame."
Bloomsbury group
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Bloomsbury group name given to the literary group that made the Bloomsbury
area of London the center of its activities from 1904 to World War II. It included
Lytton Strachey , Virginia Woolf , Leonard Woolf, E. M. Forster , Vita Sackville-
West , Roger Fry , Clive Bell , and John Maynard Keynes . The group began as a
social clique: a few recent Cambridge graduates and their closest friends would
assemble on Thursday nights for drinks and conversation. Its members were
committed to a rejection of what they felt were the strictures and taboos of
Victorianism on religious, artistic, social, and sexual matters. They remained a
fairly tight-knit group for many years; recent biographers have detailed their
tangled personal relations. By the 1920s Bloomsbury's reputation as a cultural
circle was fully established to the extent that its mannerisms were parodied and
Bloomsbury became a widely used term connoting an insular, snobbish
aestheticism. Unique in the brilliance, variety, and output of its members, the
group has remained the focus of widespread scholarly and popular interest.
The Bloomsbury Group is a name given to a loose collection of writers, artists, and
intellectuals who came together during the period 1905-06 at the home of Virginia Woolf
and her sister Vanessa Bell. Following the death of their father, they set up home in
Gordon Square, Bloomsbury, in central London, close to the British Museum.
The group included Virginia Woolf (writer) and her husband Leonard Woolf (writer and
later political figure); her sister Vanessa Bell (artist) and her husband Clive Bell; the artist
and critic Roger Fry; the novelist E.M.Forster and poet T.S.Eliot; economist John
Maynard Keynes and philosopher Bertrand Russell; the writers Gerald Brenan, Lytton
Strachey, and Vita Sackville-West; artists Duncan Grant and Dora Carrington.
4. Modernism &
Postmodernism
In the latter half of the 20th century there has been mounting
evidence of the failure of the Modernist enterprise. Progressive
modernism is riddled with doubt about the continued viability of the
notion of progress. Conservative modernism, in the United States at
least, has fallen prey in the political realm to the influences of the
Church in the form of the so-called religious right which in recent years
especially has seriously undermined the very constitutional foundations
of the whole American experiment.
From the history outlined is this essay, it should be clear that modernist
culture is Western in its orientation, capitalist in its determining
economic tendency, bourgeois in its class character, white in its racial
complexion, and masculine in its dominant gender.
What about art? It could be argued that several forms of art have been
"post-modern" since the First World War. If the mass slaughter of the
Great War, achieved through the advances made in science and
technology, was the result of the modernist commitment to "progress,"
then one might begin to question the value of the modernist enterprise.
After the Second World War, however, such optimism in the future was
difficult to sustain. And to make things worse, with the advent of the
Cold War and the constant threat of nuclear destruction, any sort of
future looked doubtful.
Having rejected the past many years ago, and now with the future no
longer the goal of artistic effort, many artists turned with visible distress
to the present and focused their attention on contemporary popular
culture.
What was happening in effect, though, was that modernist art itself was
under attack as a bourgeois ideal; a sort of nihilistic neo-Dada which I
would identify as Postmodern.
Americans of the "Roaring Twenties" fell in love with other modern entertainments. Most
people went to the movies once a week. Although Prohibition -- a nationwide ban on the
production, transport, and sale of alcohol instituted through the 18th Amendment to the
U.S. Constitution -- began in 1919, underground "speakeasies" and nightclubs
proliferated, featuring jazz music, cocktails, and daring modes of dress and dance.
Dancing, moviegoing, automobile touring, and radio were national crazes. American
women, in particular, felt liberated. Many had left farms and villages for homefront duty
in American cities during World War I, and had become resolutely modern. They cut their
hair short ("bobbed"), wore short "flapper" dresses, and gloried in the right to vote
assured by the 19th Amendment to the Constitution, passed in 1920. They boldly spoke
their mind and took public roles in society.
Western youths were rebelling, angry and disillusioned with the savage war, the older
generation they held responsible, and difficult postwar economic conditions that,
ironically, allowed Americans with dollars -- like writers F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest
Hemingway, Gertrude Stein, and Ezra Pound -- to live abroad handsomely on very little
money. Intellectual currents, particularly Freudian psychology and to a lesser extent
Marxism (like the earlier Darwinian theory of evolution), implied a "godless" world view
and contributed to the breakdown of traditional values. Americans abroad absorbed these
views and brought them back to the United States where they took root, firing the
imagination of young writers and artists. William Faulkner, for example, a 20th-century
American novelist, employed Freudian elements in all his works, as did virtually all
serious American fiction writers after World War I.
Numerous novels, notably Hemingway's The Sun Also Rises (1926) and Fitzgerald's This
Side of Paradise (1920), evoke the extravagance and disillusionment of the lost
generation. In T.S. Eliot's influential long poem The Waste Land (1922), Western
civilization is symbolized by a bleak desert in desperate need of rain (spiritual renewal).
The world depression of the 1930s affected most of the population of the United States.
Workers lost their jobs, and factories shut down; businesses and banks failed; farmers,
unable to harvest, transport, or sell their crops, could not pay their debts and lost their
farms. Midwestern droughts turned the "breadbasket" of America into a dust bowl. Many
farmers left the Midwest for California in search of jobs, as vividly described in John
Steinbeck's The Grapes of Wrath (1939). At the peak of the Depression, one-third of all
Americans were out of work. Soup kitchens, shanty towns, and armies of hobos --
unemployed men illegally riding freight trains -- became part of national life. Many saw
the Depression as a punishment for sins of excessive materialism and loose living. The
dust storms that blackened the midwestern sky, they believed, constituted an Old
Testament judgment: the "whirlwind by day and the darkness at noon."
The Depression turned the world upside down. The United States had preached a gospel
of business in the 1920s; now, many Americans supported a more active role for
government in the New Deal programs of President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Federal
money created jobs in public works, conservation, and rural electrification. Artists and
intellectuals were paid to create murals and state handbooks. These remedies helped, but
only the industrial build-up of World War II renewed prosperity. After Japan attacked the
United States at Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, disused shipyards and factories came
to bustling life mass-producing ships, airplanes, jeeps, and supplies. War production and
experimentation led to new technologies, including the nuclear bomb. Witnessing the first
experimental nuclear blast, Robert Oppenheimer, leader of an international team of
nuclear scientists, prophetically quoted a Hindu poem: "I am become Death, the shatterer
of worlds."
MODERNISM
The large cultural wave of Modernism, which gradually emerged in Europe and the
United States in the early years of the 20th century, expressed a sense of modern life
through art as a sharp break from the past, as well as from Western civilization's classical
traditions. Modern life seemed radically different from traditional life -- more scientific,
faster, more technological, and more mechanized. Modernism embraced these changes.
Photography began to assume the status of a fine art allied with the latest scientific
developments. The photographer Alfred Stieglitz opened a salon in New York City, and
by 1908 he was showing the latest European works, including pieces by Picasso and
other European friends of Gertrude Stein. Stieglitz's salon influenced numerous writers
and artists, including William Carlos Williams, who was one of the most influential
American poets of the 20th century. Williams cultivated a photographic clarity of image;
his aesthetic dictum was "no ideas but in things."
Vision and viewpoint became an essential aspect of the modernist novel as well. No
longer was it sufficient to write a straightforward third-person narrative or (worse yet) use
a pointlessly intrusive narrator. The way the story was told became as important as the
story itself.
Henry James, William Faulkner, and many other American writers experimented with
fictional points of view (some are still doing so). James often restricted the information in
the novel to what a single character would have known. Faulkner's novel The Sound and
the Fury (1929) breaks up the narrative into four sections, each giving the viewpoint of a
different character (including a mentally retarded boy).
To analyze such modernist novels and poetry, a school of "new criticism" arose in the
United States, with a new critical vocabulary. New critics hunted the "epiphany"
(moment in which a character suddenly sees the transcendent truth of a situation, a term
derived from a holy saint's appearance to mortals); they "examined" and "clarified" a
work, hoping to "shed light" upon it through their "insights."
Pound's interests and reading were universal. His adaptations and brilliant, if sometimes
flawed, translations introduced new literary possibilities from many cultures to modern
writers. His life-work was The Cantos, which he wrote and published until his death.
They contain brilliant passages, but their allusions to works of literature and art from
many eras and cultures make them difficult. Pound's poetry is best known for its clear,
visual images, fresh rhythms, and muscular, intelligent, unusual lines, such as, in Canto
LXXXI, "The ant's a centaur in his dragon world," or in poems inspired by Japanese
haiku, such as "In a Station of the Metro" (1916):
As a critic, Eliot is best remembered for his formulation of the "objective correlative,"
which he described, in The Sacred Wood, as a means of expressing emotion through "a
set of objects, a situation, a chain of events" that would be the "formula" of that particular
emotion. Poems such as "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" (1915) embody this
approach, when the ineffectual, elderly Prufrock thinks to himself that he has "measured
out his life in coffee spoons," using coffee spoons to reflect a humdrum existence and a
wasted lifetime.
The famous beginning of Eliot's "Prufrock" invites the reader into tawdry alleys that, like
modern life, offer no answers to the questions of life:
Similar imagery pervades The Waste Land (1922), which echoes Dante's Inferno to evoke
London's thronged streets around the time of World War I:
Unreal City,
Under the brown fog of a winter dawn,
A crowd flowed over London Bridge, so many
I had not thought death had undone so many... (I, 60-63)
Eliot's other major poems include "Gerontion" (1920), which uses an elderly man to
symbolize the decrepitude of Western society; "The Hollow Men" (1925), a moving dirge
for the death of the spirit of contemporary humanity; Ash-Wednesday (1930), in which he
turns explicitly toward the Church of England for meaning in human life; and Four
Quartets (1943), a complex, highly subjective, experimental meditation on transcendent
subjects such as time, the nature of self, and spiritual awareness. His poetry, especially
his daring, innovative early work, has influenced generations.
Stevens's poetry dwells upon themes of the imagination, the necessity for aesthetic form,
and the belief that the order of art corresponds with an order in nature. His vocabulary is
rich and various: He paints lush tropical scenes but also manages dry, humorous, and
ironic vignettes.
Some of Stevens's poems draw upon popular culture, while others poke fun at
sophisticated society or soar into an intellectual heaven. He is known for his exuberant
word play: "Soon, with a noise like tambourines / Came her attendant Byzantines."
Stevens's work is full of surprising insights. Sometimes he plays tricks on the reader, as in
"Disillusionment of Ten O'Clock" (1931):
This poem seems to complain about unimaginative lives (plain white nightgowns), but
actually conjures up vivid images in the reader's mind. At the end a drunken sailor,
oblivious to the proprieties, does "catch tigers" -- at least in his dream. The poem shows
that the human imagination -- of reader or sailor -- will always find a creative outlet.
So much depends
upon
a red wheel
barrow
He termed his work "objectivist" to suggest the importance of concrete, visual objects.
His work often captured the spontaneous, emotive pattern of experience, and influenced
the "Beat" writing of the early 1950s.
Like Eliot and Pound, Williams tried his hand at the epic form, but while their epics
employ literary allusions directed to a small number of highly educated readers, Williams
instead writes for a more general audience. Though he studied abroad, he elected to live
in the United States. His epic, Paterson (five vols., 1946-58), celebrates his hometown of
Paterson, New Jersey, as seen by an autobiographical "Dr. Paterson." In it, Williams
juxtaposed lyric passages, prose, letters, autobiography, newspaper accounts, and
historical facts. The layout's ample white space suggests the open road theme of
American literature and gives a sense of new vistas even open to the poor people who
picnic in the public park on Sundays. Like Whitman's persona in Leaves of Grass, Dr.
Paterson moves freely among the working people.
-late spring,
a Sunday afternoon!
Like Williams, Cummings also used colloquial language, sharp imagery, and words from
popular culture. Like Williams, he took creative liberties with layout. His poem "in Just
--" (1920) invites the reader to fill in the missing ideas:
in Just --
Although American prose between the wars experimented with viewpoint and form,
Americans wrote more realistically, on the whole, than did Europeans. Novelist Ernest
Hemingway wrote of war, hunting, and other masculine pursuits in a stripped, plain style;
William Faulkner set his powerful southern novels spanning generations and cultures
firmly in Mississippi heat and dust; and Sinclair Lewis delineated bourgeois lives with
ironic clarity.
The importance of facing reality became a dominant theme in the 1920s and 1930s:
Writers such as F. Scott Fitzgerald and the playwright Eugene O'Neill repeatedly
portrayed the tragedy awaiting those who live in flimsy dreams.
His first novel, This Side of Paradise (1920), became a best-seller, and at 24 they
married. Neither of them was able to withstand the stresses of success and fame, and they
squandered their money. They moved to France to economize in 1924 and returned seven
years later. Zelda became mentally unstable and had to be institutionalized; Fitzgerald
himself became an alcoholic and died young as a movie screenwriter.
Fitzgerald's secure place in American literature rests primarily on his novel The Great
Gatsby (1925), a brilliantly written, economically structured story about the American
dream of the self-made man. The protagonist, the mysterious Jay Gatsby, discovers the
devastating cost of success in terms of personal fulfillment and love. Other fine works
include Tender Is the Night (1934), about a young psychiatrist whose life is doomed by
his marriage to an unstable woman, and some stories in the collections Flappers and
Philosophers (1920), Tales of the Jazz Age (1922), and All the Sad Young Men (1926).
More than any other writer, Fitzgerald captured the glittering, desperate life of the 1920s;
This Side of Paradise was heralded as the voice of modern American youth. His second
novel, The Beautiful and the Damned (1922), continued his exploration of the self-
destructive extravagance of his times.
Fitzgerald's special qualities include a dazzling style perfectly suited to his theme of
seductive glamour. A famous section from The Great Gatsby masterfully summarizes a
long passage of time: "There was music from my neighbor's house through the summer
nights. In his blue gardens men and girls came and went like moths among the
whisperings and the champagne and the stars."
Ernest Hemingway (1899-1961)
Few writers have lived as colorfully as Ernest Hemingway, whose career could have
come out of one his adventurous novels. Like Fitzgerald, Dreiser, and many other fine
novelists of the 20th century, Hemingway came from the U.S. Midwest. Born in Illinois,
Hemingway spent childhood vacations in Michigan on hunting and fishing trips. He
volunteered for an ambulance unit in France during World War I, but was wounded and
hospitalized for six months. After the war, as a war correspondent based in Paris, he met
expatriate American writers Sherwood Anderson, Ezra Pound, F. Scott Fitzgerald, and
Gertrude Stein. Stein, in particular, influenced his spare style.
After his novel The Sun Also Rises (1926) brought him fame, he covered the Spanish
Civil War, World War II, and the fighting in China in the 1940s. On a safari in Africa, he
was badly injured when his small plane crashed; still, he continued to enjoy hunting and
sport fishing, activities that inspired some of his best work. The Old Man and the Sea
(1952), a short poetic novel about a poor, old fisherman who heroically catches a huge
fish devoured by sharks, won him the Pulitzer Prize in 1953; the next year he received the
Nobel Prize. Discouraged by a troubled family background, illness, and the belief that he
was losing his gift for writing, Hemingway shot himself to death in 1961.
Hemingway is arguably the most popular American novelist of this century. His
sympathies are basically apolitical and humanistic, and in this sense he is universal. His
simple style makes his novels easy to comprehend, and they are often set in exotic
surroundings. A believer in the "cult of experience," Hemingway often involved his
characters in dangerous situations in order to reveal their inner natures; in his later works,
the danger sometimes becomes an occasion for masculine assertion.
Like Fitzgerald, Hemingway became a spokesperson for his generation. But instead of
painting its fatal glamour as did Fitzgerald, who never fought in World War I,
Hemingway wrote of war, death, and the "lost generation" of cynical survivors. His
characters are not dreamers but tough bullfighters, soldiers, and athletes. If intellectual,
they are deeply scarred and disillusioned.
His hallmark is a clean style devoid of unnecessary words. Often he uses understatement:
In A Farewell to Arms (1929) the heroine dies in childbirth saying "I'm not a bit afraid.
It's just a dirty trick." He once compared his writing to icebergs: "There is seven-eighths
of it under water for every part that shows."
Hemingway's fine ear for dialogue and exact description shows in his excellent short
stories, such as "The Snows of Kilimanjaro" and "The Short Happy Life of Francis
Macomber." Critical opinion, in fact, generally holds his short stories equal or superior to
his novels. His best novels include The Sun Also Rises, about the demoralized life of
expatriates after World War I; A Farewell to Arms, about the tragic love affair of an
American soldier and an English nurse during the war; For Whom the Bell Tolls (1940),
set during the Spanish Civil War; and The Old Man and the Sea.
William Faulkner (1897-1962)
Born to an old southern family, William Harrison Faulkner was raised in Oxford,
Mississippi, where he lived most of his life. Faulkner created an entire imaginative
landscape, Yoknapatawpha County, mentioned in numerous novels, along with several
families with interconnections extending back for generations. Yoknapatawpha County,
with its capital, "Jefferson," is closely modeled on Oxford, Mississippi, and its
surroundings. Faulkner re-creates the history of the land and the various races -- Indian,
African-American, Euro-American, and various mixtures -- who have lived on it. An
innovative writer, Faulkner experimented brilliantly with narrative chronology, different
points of view and voices (including those of outcasts, children, and illiterates), and a rich
and demanding baroque style built of extremely long sentences full of complicated
subordinate parts.
The best of Faulkner's novels include The Sound and the Fury (1929) and As I Lay Dying
(1930), two modernist works experimenting with viewpoint and voice to probe southern
families under the stress of losing a family member; Light in August (1932), about
complex and violent relations between a white woman and a black man; and Absalom,
Absalom! (1936), perhaps his finest, about the rise of a self-made plantation owner and
his tragic fall through racial prejudice and a failure to love.
Most of these novels use different characters to tell parts of the story and demonstrate
how meaning resides in the manner of telling, as much as in the subject at hand. The use
of various viewpoints makes Faulkner more self-referential, or "reflexive," than
Hemingway or Fitzgerald; each novel reflects upon itself, while it simultaneously unfolds
a story of universal interest. Faulkner's themes are southern tradition, family, community,
the land, history and the past, race, and the passions of ambition and love. He also created
three novels focusing on the rise of a degenerate family, the Snopes clan: The Hamlet
(1940), The Town (1957), and The Mansion (1959).
Since the 1890s, an undercurrent of social protest had coursed through American
literature, welling up in the naturalism of Stephen Crane and Theodore Dreiser and in the
clear messages of the muckraking novelists. Later socially engaged authors included
Sinclair Lewis, John Steinbeck, John Dos Passos, Richard Wright, and the dramatist
Clifford Odets. They were linked to the 1930s in their concern for the welfare of the
common citizen and their focus on groups of people -- the professions, as in Sinclair
Lewis's archetypal Arrowsmith (a physician) or Babbitt (a local businessman); families,
as in Steinbeck's The Grapes of Wrath; or urban masses, as Dos Passos accomplishes
through his 11 major characters in his U.S.A. trilogy.
Lewis's other major novels include Babbitt (1922). George Babbitt is an ordinary
businessman living and working in Zenith, an ordinary American town. Babbitt is moral
and enterprising, and a believer in business as the new scientific approach to modern life.
Becoming restless, he seeks fulfillment but is disillusioned by an affair with a bohemian
woman, returns to his wife, and accepts his lot. The novel added a new word to the
American language -- "babbittry," meaning narrow-minded, complacent, bourgeois ways.
Elmer Gantry (1927) exposes revivalist religion in the United States, while Cass
Timberlane (1945) studies the stresses that develop within the marriage of an older judge
and his young wife.
Dos Passos's new techniques included "newsreel" sections taken from contemporary
headlines, popular songs, and advertisements, as well as "biographies" briefly setting
forth the lives of important Americans of the period, such as inventor Thomas Edison,
labor organizer Eugene Debs, film star Rudolph Valentino, financier J.P. Morgan, and
sociologist Thorstein Veblen. Both the newsreels and biographies lend Dos Passos's
novels a documentary value; a third technique, the "camera eye," consists of stream of
consciousness prose poems that offer a subjective response to the events described in the
books.
Steinbeck, a Californian, set much of his writing in the Salinas Valley near San Francisco.
His best known work is the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel The Grapes of Wrath (1939),
which follows the travails of a poor Oklahoma family that loses its farm during the
Depression and travels to California to seek work. Family members suffer conditions of
feudal oppression by rich landowners. Other works set in California include Tortilla Flat
(1935), Of Mice and Men (1937), Cannery Row (1945), and East of Eden (1952).
Steinbeck combines realism with a primitivist romanticism that finds virtue in poor
farmers who live close to the land. His fiction demonstrates the vulnerability of such
people, who can be uprooted by droughts and are the first to suffer in periods of political
unrest and economic depression.
During the exuberant 1920s, Harlem, the black community situated uptown in New York
City, sparkled with passion and creativity. The sounds of its black American jazz swept
the United States by storm, and jazz musicians and composers like Duke Ellington
became stars beloved across the United States and overseas. Bessie Smith and other blues
singers presented frank, sensual, wry lyrics raw with emotion. Black spirituals became
widely appreciated as uniquely beautiful religious music. Ethel Waters, the black actress,
triumphed on the stage, and black American dance and art flourished with music and
drama.
Among the rich variety of talent in Harlem, many visions coexisted. Carl Van Vechten's
sympathetic 1926 novel of Harlem gives some idea of the complex and bittersweet life of
black America in the face of economic and social inequality.
The poet Countee Cullen (1903-1946), a native of Harlem who was briefly married to
W.E.B. Du Bois's daughter, wrote accomplished rhymed poetry, in accepted forms, which
was much admired by whites. He believed that a poet should not allow race to dictate the
subject matter and style of a poem. On the other end of the spectrum were African-
Americans who rejected the United States in favor of Marcus Garvey's "Back to Africa"
movement. Somewhere in between lies the work of Jean Toomer.
The social criticism and realism of Sherwood Anderson, Theodore Dreiser, and Sinclair
Lewis especially inspired Wright. During the 1930s, he joined the Communist party; in
the 1940s, he moved to France, where he knew Gertrude Stein and Jean-Paul Sartre and
became an anti-Communist. His outspoken writing blazed a path for subsequent African-
American novelists.
His work includes Uncle Tom's Children (1938), a book of short stories, and the powerful
and relentless novel Native Son (1940), in which Bigger Thomas, an uneducated black
youth, mistakenly kills his white employer's daughter, gruesomely burns the body, and
murders his black girlfriend -- fearing she will betray him. Although some African-
Americans have criticized Wright for portraying a black character as a murderer, Wright's
novel was a necessary and overdue expression of the racial inequality that has been the
subject of so much debate in the United States.
Hurston also spent time in Haiti, studying voodoo and collecting Caribbean folklore that
was anthologized in Tell My Horse (1938). Her natural command of colloquial English
puts her in the great tradition of Mark Twain. Her writing sparkles with colorful language
and comic -- or tragic -- stories from the African- American oral tradition.
Hurston was an impressive novelist. Her most important work, Their Eyes Were Watching
God (1937), is a moving, fresh depiction of a beautiful mulatto woman's maturation and
renewed happiness as she moves through three marriages. The novel vividly evokes the
lives of African-Americans working the land in the rural South. A harbinger of the
women's movement, Hurston inspired and influenced such contemporary writers as Alice
Walker and Toni Morrison through books such as her autobiography, Dust Tracks on a
Road (1942).
From the Civil War into the 20th century, the southern United States had remained a
political and economic backwater ridden with racism and superstition, but, at the same
time, blessed with rich folkways and a strong sense of pride and tradition. It had a
somewhat unfair reputation for being a cultural desert of provincialism and ignorance.
Ironically, the most significant 20th-century regional literary movement was that of the
Fugitives -- led by poet-critic-theoretician John Crowe Ransom, poet Allen Tate, and
novelist-poet-essayist Robert Penn Warren. This southern literary school rejected
"northern" urban, commercial values, which they felt had taken over America. The
Fugitives called for a return to the land and to American traditions that could be found in
the South. The movement took its name from a literary magazine, The Fugitive,
published from 1922 to 1925 at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee, and with
which Ransom, Tate, and Warren were all associated.
These three major Fugitive writers were also associated with New Criticism, an approach
to understanding literature through close readings and attentiveness to formal patterns (of
imagery, metaphors, metrics, sounds, and symbols) and their suggested meanings.
Ransom, leading theorist of the southern renaissance between the wars, published a book,
The New Criticism (1941), on this method, which offered an alternative to previous extra-
literary methods of criticism based on history and biography. New Criticism became the
dominant American critical approach in the 1940s and 1950s because it proved to be
well-suited to modernist writers such as Eliot and could absorb Freudian theory
(especially its structural categories such as id, ego, and superego) and approaches
drawing on mythic patterns.
American drama imitated English and European theater until well into the 20th century.
Often, plays from England or translated from European languages dominated theater
seasons. An inadequate copyright law that failed to protect and promote American
dramatists worked against genuinely original drama. So did the "star system," in which
actors and actresses, rather than the actual plays, were given most acclaim. Americans
flocked to see European actors who toured theaters in the United States. In addition,
imported drama, like imported wine, enjoyed higher status than indigenous productions.
During the 19th century, melodramas with exemplary democratic figures and clear
contrasts between good and evil had been popular. Plays about social problems such as
slavery also drew large audiences; sometimes these plays were adaptations of novels like
Uncle Tom's Cabin . Not until the 20th century would serious plays attempt aesthetic
innovation. Popular culture showed vital developments, however, especially in vaudeville
(popular variety theater involving skits, clowning, music, and the like). Minstrel shows,
based on African-American music and folkways -- performed by white characters using
"blackface" makeup -- also developed original forms and expressions.
O'Neill continued to explore the Freudian pressures of love and dominance within
families in a trilogy of plays collectively entitled Mourning Becomes Electra (1931),
based on the classical Oedipus trilogy by Sophocles. His later plays include the
acknowledged masterpieces The Iceman Cometh (1946), a stark work on the theme of
death, and Long Day's Journey Into Night (1956) -- a powerful, extended autobiography
in dramatic form focusing on his own family and their physical and psychological
deterioration, as witnessed in the course of one night. This work was part of a cycle of
plays O'Neill was working on at the time of his death.
O'Neill redefined the theater by abandoning traditional divisions into acts and scenes
(Strange Interlude has nine acts, and Mourning Becomes Electra takes nine hours to
perform); using masks such as those found in Asian and ancient Greek theater;
introducing Shakespearean monologues and Greek choruses; and producing special
effects through lighting and sound. He is generally acknowledged to have been America's
foremost dramatist. In 1936 he received the Nobel Prize for Literature -- the first
American playwright to be so honored.
Our Town conveys positive American values. It has all the elements of sentimentality and
nostalgia -- the archetypal traditional small country town, the kindly parents and
mischievous children, the young lovers. Still, the innovative elements such as ghosts,
voices from the audience, and daring time shifts keep the play engaging. It is, in effect, a
play about life and death in which the dead are reborn, at least for the moment.
Clifford Odets (1906-1963)
Clifford Odets, a master of social drama,
came from an Eastern European, Jewish
immigrant background. Raised in New
York City, he became one of the original
acting members of the Group Theater
directed by Harold Clurman, Lee
Strasberg, and Cheryl Crawford, which Robert Lowell (© Sylvia Plath (© AP
was committed to producing only native AP Images) Images)
American dramas.
American Poetry,
1945-1990: The
Anti-Tradition John Ashbery (© AP Nikki Giovanni (©
Images) AP Images)
TTraditional forms and ideas no longer
seemed to provide meaning to many
American poets in the second half of the
20th century. Events after World War II
produced for many writers a sense of
history as discontinuous: Each act,
emotion, and moment was seen as unique.
Style and form now seemed provisional,
makeshift, reflexive of the process of
The break from tradition gathered momentum during the 1957 obscenity trial of Allen
Ginsberg's poem Howl. When the San Francisco customs office seized the book, its
publisher, Lawrence Ferlinghetti's City Lights, brought a lawsuit. During that notorious
court case, famous critics defended Howl's passionate social criticism on the basis of the
poem's redeeming literary merit. Howl's triumph over the censors helped propel the
rebellious Beat poets -- especially Ginsberg and his friends Jack Kerouac and William
Burroughs -- to fame.
It is not hard to find historical causes for this dissociated sensibility in the United States.
World War II itself, the rise of anonymity and consumerism in a mass urban society, the
protest movements of the 1960s, the decade-long Vietnam conflict, the Cold War,
environmental threats -- the catalog of shocks to American culture is long and varied. The
change that most transformed American society, however, was the rise of the mass media
and mass culture. First radio, then movies, and later an all-powerful, ubiquitous television
presence changed American life at its roots. From a private, literate, elite culture based on
the book and reading, the United States became a media culture attuned to the voice on
the radio, the music of compact discs and cassettes, film, and the images on the television
screen.
American poetry was directly influenced by the mass media and electronic technology.
Films, videotapes, and tape recordings of poetry readings and interviews with poets
became available, and new inexpensive photographic methods of printing encouraged
young poets to self-publish and young editors to begin literary magazines -- of which
there were more than 2,000 by 1990.
At the same time, Americans became uncomfortably aware that technology, so useful as a
tool, could be used to manipulate the culture. To Americans seeking alternatives, poetry
seemed more relevant than before: It offered people a way to express subjective life and
articulate the impact of technology and mass society on the individual.
A host of styles, some regional, some associated with famous schools or poets, vied for
attention; post-World War II American poetry was decentralized, richly varied, and
difficult to summarize. For the sake of discussion, however, it can be arranged along a
spectrum, producing three overlapping camps -- the traditional on one end, the
idiosyncratic in the middle, and the experimental on the other end. Traditional poets have
maintained or revitalized poetic traditions. Idiosyncratic poets have used both traditional
and innovative techniques in creating unique voices. Experimental poets have courted
new cultural styles.
Traditionalism
Traditional writers include acknowledged masters of established forms and diction who
wrote with a readily recognizable craft, often using rhyme or a set metrical pattern. Often
they were from the U.S. eastern seaboard or the southern part of the country, and taught
in colleges and universities. Richard Eberhart and Richard Wilbur; the older Fugitive
poets John Crowe Ransom, Allen Tate, and Robert Penn Warren; such accomplished
younger poets as John Hollander and Richard Howard; and the early Robert Lowell are
examples. In the years after World War II, they became established and were frequently
anthologized.
The previous chapter discussed the refinement, respect for nature, and profoundly
conservative values of the Fugitives. These qualities grace much poetry oriented to
traditional modes. Traditionalist poets were generally precise, realistic, and witty; many,
like Richard Wilbur (1921- ), were influenced by British metaphysical poets brought to
favor by T.S. Eliot. Wilbur's most famous poem, "A World Without Objects Is a Sensible
Emptiness" (1950), takes its title from Thomas Traherne, a 17th century English
metaphysical poet. Its vivid opening illustrates the clarity some poets found within rhyme
and formal regularity:
Traditional poets, unlike many experimentalists who distrusted "too poetic" diction,
welcomed resounding poetic lines. Robert Penn Warren (1905-1989) ended one poem
with the words: "To love so well the world that we may believe, in the end, in God."
Allen Tate (1899-1979) ended a poem: "Sentinel of the grave who counts us all!"
Traditional poets also at times used a somewhat rhetorical diction of obsolete or odd
words, using many adjectives (for example, "sepulchral owl") and inversions, in which
the natural, spoken word order of English is altered unnaturally. Sometimes the effect is
noble, as in the line by Warren; other times, the poetry seems stilted and out of touch with
real emotions, as in Tate's line: "Fatuously touched the hems of the hierophants."
Obvious fluency and verbal pyrotechnics by some poets, including Merrill and John
Ashbery, made them successful in traditional terms, although they redefined poetry in
radically innovative ways. Stylistic gracefulness made some poets seem more traditional
than they were, as in the case of Randall Jarrell (1914-1965) and A.R. Ammons (1926-
2001). Ammons created intense dialogues between humanity and nature; Jarrell stepped
into the trapped consciousness of the dispossessed -- women, children, doomed soldiers,
as in "The Death of the Ball Turret Gunner" (1945):
Although many traditional poets used rhyme, not all rhymed poetry was traditional in
subject or tone. Poet Gwendolyn Brooks (1917-2000) wrote of the difficulties of living --
let alone writing -- in urban slums. Her "Kitchenette Building" (1945) asks how
Many poets, including Brooks, Adrienne Rich, Richard Wilbur, Robert Lowell, and
Robert Penn Warren, began writing traditionally, using rhyme and meters, but abandoned
these in the 1960s under the pressure of public events and a gradual trend toward open
forms.
Lowell fits the mold of the academic writer: white, male, Protestant by birth, well
educated, and linked with the political and social establishment. He was a descendant of
the respected Boston Brahmin family that included the famous 19th-century poet James
Russell Lowell and a 20th-century president of Harvard University.
Robert Lowell found an identity outside his elite background, however. He left Harvard
to attend Kenyon College in Ohio, where he rejected his Puritan ancestry and converted
to Catholicism. Jailed for a year as a conscientious objector in World War II, he later
publicly protested the Vietnam conflict.
Lowell's early books, Land of Unlikeness (1944) and Lord Weary's Castle (1946), which
won a Pulitzer Prize, revealed great control of traditional forms and styles, strong feeling,
and an intensely personal yet historical vision. The violence and specificity of the early
work is overpowering in poems like "Children of Light" (1946), a harsh condemnation of
the Puritans who killed Indians and whose descendants burned surplus grain instead of
shipping it to hungry people. Lowell writes: "Our fathers wrung their bread from stocks
and stones / And fenced their gardens with the Redman's bones."
Lowell's next book, The Mills of the Kavanaughs (1951), contains moving dramatic
monologues in which members of his family reveal their tenderness and failings. As
always, his style mixes the human with the majestic. Often he uses traditional rhyme, but
his colloquialism disguises it until it seems like background melody. It was experimental
poetry, however, that gave Lowell his breakthrough into a creative individual idiom.
On a reading tour in the mid-1950s, Lowell heard some of the new experimental poetry
for the first time. Allen Ginsberg's Howl and Gary Snyder's Myths and Texts, still
unpublished, were being read and chanted, sometimes to jazz accompaniment, in coffee
houses in North Beach, a section of San Francisco. Lowell felt that next to these, his own
accomplished poems were too stilted, rhetorical, and encased in convention; when
reading them aloud, he made spontaneous revisions toward a more colloquial diction.
"My own poems seemed like prehistoric monsters dragged down into a bog and death by
their ponderous armor," he wrote later. "I was reciting what I no longer felt."
At this point Lowell, like many poets after him, accepted the challenge of learning from
the rival tradition in America -- the school of William Carlos Williams. "It's as if no poet
except Williams had really seen America or heard its language," Lowell wrote in 1962.
Henceforth, Lowell changed his writing drastically, using the "quick changes of tone,
atmosphere, and speed" that Lowell most appreciated in Williams.
Lowell dropped many of his obscure allusions; his rhymes became integral to the
experience within the poem instead of superimposed on it. The stanzaic structure, too,
collapsed; new improvisational forms arose. In Life Studies (1959), he initiated
confessional poetry, a new mode in which he bared his most tormenting personal
problems with great honesty and intensity. In essence, he not only discovered his
individuality but celebrated it in its most difficult and private manifestations. He
transformed himself into a contemporary, at home with the self, the fragmentary, and the
form as process.
Lowell's transformation, a watershed for poetry after the war, opened the way for many
younger writers. In For the Union Dead (1964), Notebook 1967-68 (1969), and later
books, he continued his autobiographical explorations and technical innovations, drawing
upon his experience of psychoanalysis. Lowell's confessional poetry has been particularly
influential. Works by John Berryman, Anne Sexton, and Sylvia Plath (the last two his
students), to mention only a few, are impossible to imagine without Lowell.
Idiosyncratic Poets
Poets who developed unique styles drawing on tradition but extending it into new realms
with a distinctively contemporary flavor, in addition to Plath and Sexton, include John
Berryman, Theodore Roethke, Richard Hugo, Philip Levine, James Dickey, Elizabeth
Bishop, and Adrienne Rich.
Beneath the fairy-tale success festered unresolved psychological problems evoked in her
highly readable novel The Bell Jar (1963). Some of these problems were personal, while
others arose from her sense of repressive attitudes toward women in the 1950s. Among
these were the beliefs -- shared by many women themselves -- that women should not
show anger or ambitiously pursue a career, and instead find fulfillment in tending their
husbands and children. Professionally successful women like Plath felt that they lived a
contradiction.
Plath's storybook life crumbled when she and Hughes separated and she cared for the
young children in a London apartment during a winter of extreme cold. Ill, isolated, and
in despair, Plath worked against the clock to produce a series of stunning poems before
she committed suicide by gassing herself in her kitchen. These poems were collected in
the volume Ariel (1965), two years after her death. Robert Lowell, who wrote the
introduction, noted her poetry's rapid development from the time she and Anne Sexton
had attended his poetry classes in 1958.
Plath's early poetry is well crafted and traditional, but her late poems exhibit a desperate
bravura and proto-feminist cry of anguish. In "The Applicant" (1966), Plath exposes the
emptiness in the current role of wife (who is reduced to an inanimate "it"):
Plath dares to use a nursery rhyme language, a brutal directness. She has a knack for
using bold images from popular culture. Of a baby she writes, "Love set you going like a
fat gold watch." In "Daddy," she imagines her father as the Dracula of cinema: "There's a
stake in your fat black heart / And the villagers never liked you."
Sexton's confessional poetry is more autobiographical than Plath's and lacks the
craftedness Plath's earlier poems exhibit. Sexton's poems appeal powerfully to the
emotions, however. They thrust taboo subjects into close focus. Often they daringly
introduce female topics such as childbearing, the female body, or marriage seen from a
woman's point of view. In poems like "Her Kind" (1960), Sexton identifies with a witch
burned at the stake:
The titles of her works indicate their concern with madness and death. They include To
Bedlam and Part Way Back (1960), Live or Die (1966), and the posthumous book The
Awful Rowing Toward God (1975).
Like his contemporary, Theodore Roethke, Berryman developed a supple, playful, but
profound style enlivened by phrases from folklore, children's rhymes, clich 鳬 and slang.
Berryman writes, of Henry, "He stared at ruin. Ruin stared straight back." Elsewhere, he
wittily writes, "Oho alas alas / When will indifference come, I moan and rave."
Hugo wrote nostalgic, confessional poems in bold iambics about shabby, forgotten small
towns in his part of the United States; he wrote of shame, failure, and rare moments of
acceptance through human relationships. He focused the reader's attention on minute,
seemingly inconsequential details in order to make more significant points. "What Thou
Lovest Well, Remains American" (1975) ends with a person carrying memories of his old
hometown as if they were food:
In one poem, Levine likens himself to a fox who survives in a dangerous world of hunters
through his courage and cunning. In terms of his rhythmic pattern, he has traveled a path
from traditional meters in his early works to a freer, more open line in his later poetry as
he expresses his lonely protest against the evils of the contemporary world.
As a novelist and poet, Dickey was often concerned with strenuous effort, "outdoing,
desperately / Outdoing what is required." He yearned for revitalizing contact with the
world -- a contact he sought in nature (animals, the wild), sexuality, and physical
exertion. Dickey's novel Deliverance (1970), set in a southern wilderness river canyon,
explores the struggle for survival and the dark side of male bonding. When filmed with
the poet himself playing a southern sheriff, the novel and film increased his renown.
While Selected Poems (l998) includes later work, Dickey's reputation rests largely on his
early collection Poems 1957-1967 (1967).
With Moore, Bishop may be placed in a "cool" female poetic tradition harking back to
Emily Dickinson, in comparison with the "hot" poems of Plath, Sexton, and Adrienne
Rich. Though Rich began by writing poems in traditional form and meter, her works,
particularly those written after she became an ardent feminist in the 1980s, embody
strong emotions.
Rich's special genius is the metaphor, as in her extraordinary work "Diving Into the
Wreck" (1973), evoking a woman's search for identity in terms of diving down to a
wrecked ship. Rich's poem "The Roofwalker" (1961), dedicated to poet Denise Levertov,
imagines poetry writing, for women, as a dangerous craft. Like men building a roof, she
feels "exposed, larger than life,/ and due to break my neck."
Experimental Poetry
The force behind Robert Lowell's mature achievement and much of contemporary poetry
lies in the experimentation begun in the 1950s by a number of poets. They may be
divided into five loose schools, identified by Donald Allen in The New American Poetry,
1945-1960 (1960), the first anthology to present the work of poets who were previously
neglected by the critical and academic communities.
Inspired by jazz and abstract expressionist painting, most of the experimental writers are
a generation younger than Lowell. They have tended to be bohemian, counterculture
intellectuals who disassociated themselves from universities and outspokenly criticized
"bourgeois" American society. Their poetry is daring, original, and sometimes shocking.
In its search for new values, it claims affinity with the archaic world of myth, legend, and
traditional societies such as those of the American Indian. The forms are looser, more
spontaneous, organic; they arise from the subject matter and the feeling of the poet as the
poem is written, and from the natural pauses of the spoken language. As Allen Ginsberg
noted in "Improvised Poetics," "first thought best thought."
The Black Mountain School
The Black Mountain School centered around Black Mountain College, an experimental
liberal arts college in Asheville, North Carolina, where poets Charles Olson, Robert
Duncan, and Robert Creeley taught in the early 1950s. Ed Dorn, Joel Oppenheimer, and
Jonathan Williams studied there, and Paul Blackburn, Larry Eigner, and Denise Levertov
published work in the school's magazines Origin and Black Mountain Review. The Black
Mountain School is linked with Charles Olson's theory of "projective verse," which
insisted on an open form based on the spontaneity of the breath pause in speech and the
typewriter line in writing.
Robert Creeley (1926-2005), who writes with a terse, minimalist style, was one of the
major Black Mountain poets. In "The Warning" (1955), Creeley imagines the violent,
loving imagination:
Love is dead in us
if we forget
the virtues of an amulet
and quick surprise
San Francisco poets include Jack Spicer, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Robert Duncan, Phil
Whalen, Lew Welch, Gary Snyder, Kenneth Rexroth, Joanne Kyger, and Diane diPrima.
Many of these poets identify with working people. Their poetry is often simple,
accessible, and optimistic.
At its best, as seen in the work of Gary Snyder (1930- ), San Francisco poetry evokes the
delicate balance of the individual and the cosmos. In Snyder's "Above Pate Valley"
(1955), the poet describes working on a trail crew in the mountains and finding obsidian
arrowhead flakes from vanished Indian tribes:
Beat Poets
The San Franciso School blends into the next grouping -- the Beat poets, who emerged in
the 1950s. The term beat variously suggests musical downbeats, as in jazz; angelical
beatitude or blessedness; and "beat up" -- tired or hurt. The Beats (beatniks) were inspired
by jazz, Eastern religion, and the wandering life. These were all depicted in the famous
novel by Jack Kerouac On the Road, a sensation when it was published in l957. An
account of a 1947 cross-country car trip, the novel was written in three hectic weeks on a
single roll of paper in what Kerouac called "spontaneous bop prose." The wild,
improvisational style, hipster-mystic characters, and rejection of authority and convention
fired the imaginations of young readers and helped usher in the freewheeling
counterculture of the 1960s.
Most of the important Beats migrated to San Francisco from America's East Coast,
gaining their initial national recognition in California. The charismatic Allen Ginsberg
(1926-1997) became the group's chief spokesperson. The son of a poet father and an
eccentric mother committed to Communism, Ginsberg attended Columbia University,
where he became fast friends with fellow students Kerouac (1922-1969) and William
Burroughs (1914-1997), whose violent, nightmarish novels about the underworld of
heroin addiction include The Naked Lunch (1959). These three were the nucleus of the
Beat movement.
Other figures included publisher Lawrence Ferlinghetti (1919- ), whose bookstore, City
Lights, established in San Francisco's North Beach in 1951, became a gathering place.
One of the best educated of the mid-20th century poets (he received a doctorate from the
Sorbonne), Ferlinghetti's thoughtful, humorous, political poetry included A Coney Island
of the Mind (1958); Endless Life (1981) is the title of his selected poems.
Gregory Corso (1930-2001), a petty criminal whose talent was nurtured by the Beats, is
remembered for volumes of humorous poems, such as the often-anthologized "Marriage."
A gifted poet, translator, and original critic, as seen in his insightful American Poetry in
the Twentieth Century (1971), Kenneth Rexroth (1905-1982) played the role of elder
statesman to the anti-tradition. A labor organizer from Indiana, he saw the Beats as a West
Coast alternative to the East Coast literary establishment. He encouraged the Beats with
his example and influence.
Beat poetry is oral, repetitive, and immensely effective in readings, largely because it
developed out of poetry readings in underground clubs. Some might correctly see it as a
great-grandparent of the rap music that became prevalent in the 1990s. Beat poetry was
the most anti-establishment form of literature in the United States, but beneath its
shocking words lies a love of country. The poetry is a cry of pain and rage at what the
poets see as the loss of America's innocence and the tragic waste of its human and
material resources.
The major figures of the New York School -- John Ashbery, Frank O'Hara, and Kenneth
Koch -- met while they were undergraduates at Harvard University. They are
quintessentially urban, cool, nonreligious, witty with a poignant, pastel sophistication.
Their poems are fast moving, full of urban detail, incongruity, and an almost palpable
sense of suspended belief.
New York City is the fine arts center of America and the birthplace of abstract
expressionism, a major inspiration of this poetry. Most of the poets worked as art
reviewers or museum curators, or collaborated with painters. Perhaps because of their
feeling for abstract art, which distrusts figurative shapes and obvious meanings, their
work is often difficult to comprehend, as in the later work of John Ashbery (1927- ),
perhaps the most critically esteemed poet of the late 20th century.
Ashbery's fluid poems record thoughts and emotions as they wash over the mind too
swiftly for direct articulation. His profound, long poem, Self-Portrait in a Convex Mirror
(1975), which won three major prizes, glides from thought to thought, often reflecting
back on itself:
A ship
Flying unknown colors has
entered the harbor.
You are allowing extraneous
matters
To break up your day...
Although T.S. Eliot, Wallace Stevens, and Ezra Pound had introduced symbolist
techniques into American poetry in the 1920s, surrealism, the major force in European
poetry and thought in Europe during and after World War II, did not take root in the
United States. Not until the 1960s did surrealism (along with existentialism) become
domesticated in America under the stress of the Vietnam conflict.
During the 1960s, many American writers -- W.S. Merwin, Robert Bly, Charles Simic,
Charles Wright, and Mark Strand, among others -- turned to French and especially
Spanish surrealism for its pure emotion, its archetypal images, and its models of anti-
rational, existential unrest.
Surrealists like Merwin tend to be epigrammatic, as in lines such as: "The gods are what
has failed to become of us / If you find you no longer believe enlarge the temple."
Bly's political surrealism criticized values that he felt played a part in the Vietnam War in
poems like "The Teeth Mother Naked at Last."
The more pervasive surrealist influence has been quieter and more contemplative, like the
poem Charles Wright describes in "The New Poem" (1973):
Literature in the United States, as in most other countries, was long evaluated on
standards that often overlooked women's contributions. Yet there are many women poets
of distinction in American writing. Not all are feminists, nor do their subjects invariably
voice women's concerns. Also, regional, political, and racial differences have shaped their
work. Among distinguished women poets are Amy Clampitt, Rita Dove, Louise Gl?orie
Graham, Carolyn Kizer, Maxine Kumin, Denise Levertov, Audre Lorde, Gjertrud
Schnackenberg, May Swenson, and Mona Van Duyn.
Before the 1960s, most women poets had adhered to an androgynous ideal, believing that
gender made no difference in artistic excellence. This gender-blind position was, in
effect, an early form of feminism that allowed women to argue for equal rights. By the
late l960s, American women -- many active in the civil rights struggle and protests
against the Vietnam conflict, or influenced by the counterculture -- had begun to
recognize their own marginalization. Betty Friedan's outspoken The Feminine Mystique
(1963), published in the year Sylvia Plath committed suicide, decried women's low status.
Another landmark book, Kate Millett's Sexual Politics (1969), made a case that male
writings revealed a pervasive misogyny, or contempt for women.
In the l970s, a second wave of feminist criticism emerged following the founding of the
National Organization for Women (NOW) in l966. Elaine Showalter's A Literature of
Their Own (1977) identified a major tradition of British and American women authors.
Sandra Gilbert and Susan Gubar's The Madwoman in the Attic (l979) traced misogyny in
English classics, exploring its impact on works by women, such as Charlotte Bront 맳
Jane Eyre. In that novel, a wife is driven mad by her husband's ill treatment and is
imprisoned in the attic; Gilbert and Gubar compare women's muffled voices in literature
to this suppressed female figure.
Feminist critics of the second wave challenged the accepted canon of great works on the
basis that aesthetic standards were not timeless and universal but rather arbitrary, culture
bound, and patriarchal. Feminism became in the 1970s a driving force for equal rights,
not only in literature but in the larger culture as well. Gilbert and Gubar's The Norton
Anthology of Literature by Women (1985) facilitated the study of women's literature, and
a women's tradition came into focus.
Other influential woman poets before Sylvia Plath and Anne Sexton include Amy Lowell
(1874-1925), whose works have great sensuous beauty. She edited influential Imagist
anthologies and introduced modern French poetry and Chinese poetry in translation to the
English-speaking literary world. Her work celebrated love, longing, and the spiritual
aspect of human and natural beauty. H.D. (1886-1961), a friend of Ezra Pound and
William Carlos Williams who had been psychoanalyzed by Sigmund Freud, wrote
crystalline poems inspired by nature and by the Greek classics and experimental drama.
Her mystical poetry celebrates goddesses. The contributions of Lowell and H.D., and
those of other women poets of the early 20th century such as Edna St. Vincent Millay, are
only now being fully acknowledged.
Multiethnic Poets
The second half of the 20th century witnessed a renaissance in multiethnic literature that
has continued into the 21st century. In the 1960s, following the lead of African
Americans, ethnic writers in the United States began to command public attention. The
1970s saw the founding of ethnic studies programs in universities.
Minority poetry shares the variety and occasionally the anger of women's writing. It has
flowered in works by Latino and Chicano Americans such as Gary Soto, Alberto Rios,
and Lorna Dee Cervantes; in Native Americans such as Leslie Marmon Silko, Simon
Ortiz, and Louise Erdrich; in African-American writers such as Amiri Baraka (LeRoi
Jones), Michael S. Harper, Rita Dove, Maya Angelou, and Nikki Giovanni; and in Asian-
American poets such as Cathy Song, Lawson Inada, and Janice Mirikitani.
Chicano/Latino Poetry
Spanish-influenced poetry encompasses works by many diverse groups. Among these are
Mexican Americans, known since the 1950s as Chicanos, who have lived for many
generations in the southwestern U.S. states annexed from Mexico in the Mexican-
American War ending in 1848.
Among Spanish Caribbean populations, Cuban Americans and Puerto Ricans maintain
vital and distinctive literary traditions. For example, the Cuban-American genius for
comedy sets it apart from the elegiac lyricism of Chicano writers such as Rudolfo Anaya.
New immigrants from Mexico, Central and South America, and Spain constantly
replenish and enlarge this literary realm.
Chicano, or Mexican-American, poetry has a rich oral tradition in the corrido, or ballad,
form. Seminal works stress traditional strengths of the Mexican community and the
discrimination it has sometimes met with among whites. Sometimes the poets blend
Spanish and English words in a poetic fusion, as in the poetry of Alurista and Gloria
Anzald?heir poetry is much influenced by oral tradition and is very powerful when read
aloud.
Some poets have written largely in Spanish, in a tradition going back to the earliest epic
written in the present-day United States -- Gaspar Pérez de Villagrá’s Historia de la
Nueva México, commemorating the 1598 battle between invading Spaniards and the
Pueblo Indians at Acoma, New Mexico.
Many Chicano writers have found sustenance in their ancient Mexican roots. Thinking of
the grandeur of Mexico, Lorna Dee Cervantes (1954- ) writes that "an epic corrido"
chants through her veins, while Luis Omar Salinas (1937- ) feels himself to be "an Aztec
angel."
Much Chicano poetry is highly personal, dealing with feelings and family or members of
the community. Gary Soto (1952- ) writes out of the ancient tradition of honoring
departed ancestors, but these words, written in 1981, describe the multicultural situation
of Americans today:
In the 1980s, Chicano poetry achieved a new prominence, and works by Cervantes, Soto,
and Alberto Rios were widely anthologized.
Native-American Poetry
Native Americans have written fine poetry, most likely because a tradition of shamanistic
song plays a vital role in their cultural heritage. Their work has excelled in vivid, living
evocations of the natural world, which become almost mystical at times. Indian poets
have also voiced a tragic sense of irrevocable loss of their rich heritage.
Simon Ortiz (1941- ), an Acoma Pueblo, bases many of his hard-hitting poems on history,
exploring the contradictions of being an indigenous American in the United States today.
His poetry challenges Anglo readers because it often reminds them of the injustice and
violence at one time done to Native Americans. His poems envision racial harmony based
on a deepened understanding.
In "Star Quilt," Roberta Hill Whiteman (1947- ), a member of the Oneida tribe, imagines
a multicultural future like a "star quilt, sewn from dawn light," while Leslie Marmon
Silko (1948- ), who is part Laguna Pueblo, uses colloquial language and traditional
stories to fashion haunting, lyrical poems. In "In Cold Storm Light" (1981), Silko
achieves a haiku-like resonance:
Louise Erdrich (1954- ), like Silko also a novelist, creates powerful dramatic monologues
that work like compressed dramas. They unsparingly depict families coping with
alcoholism, unemployment, and poverty on the Chippewa reservation.
In Erdrich's "Family Reunion" (1984), a drunken, abusive uncle returns from years in the
city. As he suffers from a heart disease, the abused niece, who is the speaker, remembers
how this uncle had killed a large turtle years before by stuffing it with a firecracker. The
end of the poem links Uncle Ray with the turtle he has victimized:
African-American Poetry
Black Americans have produced many poems of great beauty with a considerable range
of themes and tones. African-American literature is the most developed ethnic writing in
America and is extremely diverse. Amiri Baraka (1934- ), the best-known African-
American poet of the 1960s and 1970s, has also written plays and taken an active role in
politics. The writings of Maya Angelou (1928- ) encompass various literary forms,
including poetry, drama, and her well-known memoir, I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings
(1969).
Rita Dove (1952- ) was named poet laureate of the United States for 1993-1995. Dove, a
writer of fiction and drama as well, won the 1987 Pulitzer Prize for Thomas and Beulah
(1986), in which she celebrates her grandparents through a series of lyric poems. She has
said that she wrote the work to reveal the rich inner lives of poor people.
Michael S. Harper (1938- ) has similarly written poems revealing the complex lives of
African Americans faced with discrimination and violence. His dense, allusive poems
often deal with crowded, dramatic scenes of war or urban life. They make use of surgical
images in an attempt to heal. His "Clan Meeting: Births and Nations: A Blood Song"
(1971), which likens cooking to surgery ("splicing the meats with fluids"), begins "we
reconstruct lives in the intensive / care unit, pieced together in a buffet." The poem ends
by splicing together images of the hospital, racism in the early American film Birth of a
Nation, the Ku Klux Klan, film editing, and x-ray technology:
History, jazz, and popular culture have inspired many African Americans, from Harper (a
college professor) to West Coast publisher and poet Ishmael Reed (1938- ), known for
spearheading multicultural writing through the Before Columbus Foundation and a series
of magazines such as Yardbird, Quilt, and Konch.
Asian-American Poetry
Like poetry by Chicano and Latino writers, Asian-American poetry is exceedingly varied.
Americans of Japanese, Chinese, and Filipino descent may often have lived in the United
States for eight generations, while Americans of Korean, Thai, and Vietnamese heritage
are likely to be fairly recent immigrants. Each group has grown out of a distinctive
linguistic, historical, and cultural tradition.
Asian-American poets have drawn on many sources, from Chinese opera to Zen
Buddhism, and Asian literary traditions, particularly Zen, have inspired numerous non-
Asian poets, as can be seen in the 1991 anthology Beneath a Single Moon: Buddhism in
Contemporary American Poetry. Asian-American poets span a spectrum, from the
iconoclastic posture taken by Frank Chin (1940- ), co-editor of Aiiieeeee! (an early
anthology of Asian-American literature), to the generous use of tradition by writers such
as Maxine Hong Kingston (1940- ). Janice Mirikitani (1942- ), a sansei (third-generation
Japanese American), evokes Japanese-American history and has edited several
anthologies, such as Third World Women (1973); Time To Greez! Incantations From the
Third World (1975); and Ayumi: A Japanese American Anthology (1980).
The lyrical Picture Bride (1983) of Chinese-American Cathy Song (1955- ) also
dramatizes history through the lives of her family. Many Asian-American poets explore
cultural diversity. In Song's "The Vegetable Air" (1988), a shabby town with cows in the
plaza, a Chinese restaurant, and a Coca-Cola sign hung askew becomes an emblem of
rootless multicultural contemporary life made bearable by art, in this case an opera on
cassette:
At the end of the 20th century, directions in American poetry included the Language
Poets loosely associated with Temblor magazine and Douglas Messerli, editor of
"Language" Poetries: An Anthology (1987). Among them: Bruce Andrews, Lyn Hejinian,
Bob Perelman, and Barrett Watten, author of Total Syntax (1985), a collection of essays.
These poets stretch language to reveal its potential for ambiguity, fragmentation, and self-
assertion within chaos. Ironic and postmodern, they reject "meta-narratives" -- ideologies,
dogmas, conventions -- and doubt the existence of transcendent reality. Michael Palmer
writes:
Viewing art and literary criticism as inherently ideological, they oppose modernism's
closed forms, hierarchies, ideas of epiphany and transcendence, categories of genre and
canonical texts or accepted literary works. Instead they propose open forms and
multicultural texts. They appropriate images from popular culture and the media, and
refashion them. Like performance poetry, language poems often resist interpretation and
invite participation.
Ethnic performance poetry entered the mainstream with rap music, while across the
United States over the last decade, poetry slams -- open poetry reading contests that are
held in alternative art galleries and literary bookstores -- have become inexpensive, high-
spirited, participatory entertainments.
At the opposite end of the theoretical spectrum are the self-styled New Formalists, who
champion a return to form, rhyme, and meter. All groups are responding to the same
problem -- a perceived middle-brow complacency with the status quo, a careful and
overly polished sound, often the product of poetry workshops, and an overemphasis on
the personal lyric as opposed to the public gesture.
The Formal School is associated with Story Line Press; Dana Gioia, the poet who became
chairman of the National Endowment for the Arts in 2003; Philip Dacey and David Jauss,
poets and editors of Strong Measures: Contemporary American Poetry in Traditional
Forms (1986); Brad Leithauser; and Gjertrud Schnackenberg. Robert Richman's The
Direction of Poetry: An Anthology of Rhymed and Metered Verse Written in the English
Language Since 1975 is a 1988 anthology. Though these poets have been accused of
retreating to 19th-century themes, they often draw on contemporary stances and images,
along with musical languages and traditional, closed forms.
Later, Joseph Heller cast World War II in satirical and absurdist terms (Catch-22, 1961),
arguing that war is laced with insanity. Thomas Pynchon presented an involuted, brilliant
case parodying and displacing different versions of reality (Gravity's Rainbow, 1973).
Kurt Vonnegut, Jr., became one of the shining lights of the counterculture during the early
1970s following publication of Slaughterhouse-Five: or, The Children's Crusade (1969),
his antiwar novel about the firebombing of Dresden, Germany, by Allied forces during
World War II (which Vonnegut witnessed on the ground as a prisoner of war).
The 1940s saw the flourishing of a new contingent of writers, including poet-novelist-
essayist Robert Penn Warren, dramatists Arthur Miller, Lillian Hellman, and Tennessee
Williams, and short story writers Katherine Anne Porter and Eudora Welty. All but Miller
were from the South. All explored the fate of the individual within the family or
community and focused on the balance between personal growth and responsibility to the
group.
Death of a Salesman, a landmark work, still is only one of a number of dramas Miller
wrote over several decades, including All My Sons (1947) and The Crucible (1953). Both
are political -- one contemporary and the other set in colonial times. The first deals with a
manufacturer who knowingly allows defective parts to be shipped to airplane firms
during World War II, resulting in the death of several American airmen. The Crucible
depicts the Salem (Massachusetts) witchcraft trials of the 17th century in which Puritan
settlers were wrongfully executed as supposed witches. Its message, though -- that "witch
hunts" directed at innocent people are anathema in a democracy -- was relevant to the era
in which the play was staged, the early 1950s, when an anti-Communist crusade led by
U.S. Senator Joseph McCarthy and others ruined the lives of innocent people. Partly in
response to The Crucible, Miller was called before the House (of Representatives) Un-
American Activities Committee in 1956 and asked to provide the names of persons who
might have Communist sympathies. Because of his refusal to do so, Miller was charged
with contempt of Congress, a charge that was overturned on appeal.
A later Miller play, Incident at Vichy (1964), dealt with the Holocaust -- the destruction of
much of European Jewry at the hands of the Nazis and their collaborators. In The Price
(1968), two brothers struggle to free themselves from the burdens of the past. Other of
Miller's dramas include two one-act plays, Fame (1970) and The Reason Why (1970). His
essays are collected in Echoes Down the Corridor (2000); his autobiography, Timebends:
A Life, appeared in 1987.
For many years, Hellman had a close personal relationship with the remarkable
scriptwriter Dashiell Hammett, whose streetwise detective character, Sam Spade,
fascinated Depression-era Americans. Hammett invented the quintessentially American
hard-boiled detective novel: The Maltese Falcon (l930); The Thin Man (1934).
Hellman, like Arthur Miller, had refused to "name names" for the House Un-American
Activities Committee, and she and Hammett were blacklisted (refused employment in the
American entertainment industry) for a time. These events are recounted in Hellman's
memoir, Scoundrel Time (1976).
Porter's nuances owe much to the stories of the New Zealand-born story writer Katherine
Mansfield. Porter's story collections include Flowering Judas (1930), Noon Wine (1937),
Pale Horse, Pale Rider (1939), The Leaning Tower (1944), and Collected Stories (1965).
In the early 1960s, she produced a long, allegorical novel with a timeless theme -- the
responsibility of humans for each other. Titled Ship of Fools (1962), it was set in the late
1930s aboard a passenger liner carrying members of the German upper class and German
refugees alike from the Nazi nation.
Not a prolific writer, Porter nonetheless influenced generations of authors, among them
her southern colleagues Eudora Welty and Flannery O'Connor.
Despite violence in her work, Welty's wit was essentially humane and affirmative, as, for
example, in her frequently anthologized story "Why I Live at the P.O." (1941), in which a
stubborn and independent daughter moves out of her house to live in a tiny post office.
Her collections of stories include The Wide Net (1943), The Golden Apples (1949), The
Bride of the Innisfallen (1955), and Moon Lake (1980). Welty also wrote novels such as
Delta Wedding (1946), which is focused on a plantation family in modern times, and The
Optimist's Daughter (1972).
The 1950s
The 1950s saw the delayed impact of modernization and technology in everyday life. Not
only did World War II defeat fascism, it brought the United States out of the Depression,
and the 1950s provided most Americans with time to enjoy long-awaited material
prosperity. Business, especially in the corporate world, seemed to offer the good life
(usually in the suburbs), with its real and symbolic marks of success -- house, car,
television, and home appliances.
Yet loneliness at the top was a dominant theme for many writers; the faceless corporate
man became a cultural stereotype in Sloan Wilson's best-selling novel The Man in the
Gray Flannel Suit (1955). Generalized American alienation came under the scrutiny of
sociologist David Riesman in The Lonely Crowd (1950).
Other popular, more or less scientific studies followed, ranging from Vance Packard's The
Hidden Persuaders (1957) and The Status Seekers (1959) to William Whyte's The
Organization Man (1956) and C. Wright Mills's more intellectual formulations -- White
Collar (1951) and The Power Elite (1956). Economist and academician John Kenneth
Galbraith contributed The Affluent Society (1958).
Most of these works supported the 1950s assumption that all Americans shared a
common lifestyle. The studies spoke in general terms, criticizing citizens for losing
frontier individualism and becoming too conformist (for example, Riesman and Mills) or
advising people to become members of the "New Class" that technology and leisure time
created (as seen in Galbraith's works).
The 1950s in literary terms actually was a decade of subtle and pervasive unease. Novels
by John O'Hara, John Cheever, and John Updike explore the stress lurking in the shadows
of seeming satisfaction. Some of the best work portrays men who fail in the struggle to
succeed, as in Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman and Saul Bellow's novella Seize the
Day. African-American Lorraine Hansberry (1930-1965) revealed racism as a continuing
undercurrent in her moving 1959 play A Raisin in the Sun, in which a black family
encounters a threatening "welcome committee" when it tries to move into a white
neighborhood.
Some writers went further by focusing on characters who dropped out of mainstream
society, as did J.D. Salinger in The Catcher in the Rye, Ralph Ellison in Invisible Man,
and Jack Kerouac in On the Road. And in the waning days of the decade, Philip Roth
arrived with a series of short stories reflecting a certain alienation from his Jewish
heritage (Goodbye, Columbus). His psychological ruminations provided fodder for
fiction, and later autobiography, into the new millennium.
The fiction of American-Jewish writers Bellow, Bernard Malamud, and Isaac Bashevis
Singer -- among others prominent in the 1950s and the years following -- are also worthy,
compelling additions to the compendium of American literature. The output of these three
authors is most noted for its humor, ethical concern, and portraits of Jewish communities
in the Old and New Worlds.
Baldwin, the oldest of nine children born to a Harlem, New York, family, was the foster
son of a minister. As a youth, Baldwin occasionally preached in the church. This
experience helped shape the compelling, oral quality of his prose, most clearly seen in his
excellent essays such as "Letter From a Region of My Mind," from the collection The
Fire Next Time (1963). In this work, he argued movingly for an end to separation between
the races.
Baldwin's first novel, the autobiographical Go Tell It on the Mountain (1953), is probably
his best known. It is the story of a 14-year-old boy who seeks self-knowledge and
religious faith as he wrestles with issues of Christian conversion in a storefront church.
Other important Baldwin works include Another Country (1962) and Nobody Knows My
Name (1961), a collection of passionate personal essays about racism, the role of the
artist, and literature.
The novel is Invisible Man (1952), the story of a black man who lives a subterranean
existence in a cellar brightly illuminated by electricity stolen from a utility company. The
book recounts his grotesque, disenchanting experiences. When he wins a scholarship to
an all-black college, he is humiliated by whites; when he gets to the college, he witnesses
the school's president spurning black American concerns. Life is corrupt outside college,
too. For example, even religion is no consolation: A preacher turns out to be a criminal.
The novel indicts society for failing to provide its citizens -- black and white -- with
viable ideals and institutions for realizing them. It embodies a powerful racial theme
because the "invisible man" is invisible not in himself but because others, blinded by
prejudice, cannot see him for who he is.
Sometimes violence arises out of prejudice, as in "The Displaced Person" (1955), about
an immigrant killed by ignorant country people who are threatened by his hard work and
strange ways. Often, cruel events simply happen to the characters, as in "Good Country
People" (1955), the story of a girl seduced by a man who steals her artificial leg.
The black humor of O'Connor links her with Nathanael West and Joseph Heller. Her
works include short story collections A Good Man Is Hard To Find (1955), and
Everything That Rises Must Converge (1965); the novel The Violent Bear It Away (1960);
and a volume of letters, The Habit of Being (1979). The Complete Stories came out in
1971.
Bellow's early, somewhat grim existentialist novels include Dangling Man (1944), a
Kafkaesque study of a man waiting to be drafted into the army, and The Victim (1947),
about relations between Jews and Gentiles. In the 1950s, his vision became more comic:
He used a series of energetic and adventurous first-person narrators in The Adventures of
Augie March (1953) -- the study of a Huck Finn-like urban entrepreneur who becomes a
black marketeer in Europe -- and in Henderson the Rain King (1959), a brilliant and
exuberant serio-comic novel about a middle-aged millionaire whose unsatisfied
ambitions drive him to Africa.
Bellow's later works include Herzog (1964), about the troubled life of a neurotic English
professor who specializes in the idea of the romantic self; Mr. Sammler's Planet (1970);
Humboldt's Gift (1975); and the autobiographical The Dean's December (1982).
In the late 1980s, Bellow wrote two novellas in which elderly protagonists search for
ultimate verities, Something To Remember Me By (1991) and The Actual (1997). His
novel Ravelstein (2000) is a veiled account of the life of Bellow's friend Alan Bloom, the
best-selling author of The Closing of the American Mind (1987), a conservative attack on
the academy for a perceived erosion of standards in American cultural life.
Bellow's Seize the Day (1956) is a brilliant novella centered on a failed businessman,
Tommy Wilhelm, who is so consumed by feelings of inadequacy that he becomes totally
inadequate -- a failure with women, jobs, machines, and the commodities market, where
he loses all his money. Wilhelm is an example of the schlemiel of Jewish folklore -- one
to whom unlucky things inevitably happen.
Malamud's first published work was The Natural (1952), a combination of realism and
fantasy set in the mythic world of professional baseball. Other novels include A New Life
(1961), The Fixer (1966), Pictures of Fidelman (1969), and The Tenants (1971).
Malamud also was a prolific master of short fiction. Through his stories in collections
such as The Magic Barrel (1958), Idiots First (1963), and Rembrandt's Hat (1973), he
conveyed -- more than any other American-born writer -- a sense of the Jewish present
and past, the real and the surreal, fact and legend.
Malamud's monumental work -- for which he was awarded the Pulitzer Prize and
National Book Award -- is The Fixer. Set in Russia around the turn of the 20th century, it
is a thinly veiled look at an actual case of blood libel -- the infamous 1913 trial of Mendel
Beiliss, a dark, anti-Semitic blotch on modern history. As in many of his writings,
Malamud underscores the suffering of his hero, Yakob Bok, and the struggle against all
odds to endure.
Singer's writings served as bookends for the Holocaust. On the one hand, he described --
in novels such as The Manor (1967) and The Estate (1969), set in 19th-century Russia,
and The Family Moskat (1950), focused on a Polish-Jewish family between the world
wars -- the world of European Jewry that no longer exists. Complementing these works
were his writings set after the war, such as Enemies, A Love Story (1972), whose
protagonists were survivors of the Holocaust seeking to create new lives for themselves.
Nabokov is an important writer for his stylistic subtlety, deft satire, and ingenious
innovations in form, which have inspired such novelists as John Barth. Nabokov was
aware of his role as a mediator between the Russian and American literary worlds; he
wrote a book on Gogol and translated Pushkin's Eugene Onegin. His daring, somewhat
expressionist subjects helped introduce 20th-century European currents into the
essentially realist American fictional tradition. Nabokov's tone, partly satirical and partly
nostalgic, also suggested a new serio-comic emotional register made use of by writers
such as Thomas Pynchon, who combines the opposing notes of wit and fear.
A wry melancholy and never quite quenched but seemingly hopeless desire for passion or
metaphysical certainty lurks in the shadows of Cheever's finely drawn, Chekhovian tales,
collected in The Way Some People Live (1943), The Housebreaker of Shady Hill (1958),
Some People, Places, and Things That Will Not Appear in My Next Novel (1961), The
Brigadier and the Golf Widow (1964), and The World of Apples (1973). His titles reveal
his characteristic nonchalance, playfulness, and irreverence, and hint at his subject matter.
Cheever also published several novels -- The Wapshot Scandal (1964), Bullet Park
(1969), and Falconer (1977) -- the last of which was largely autobiographical.
Updike is best known for his five Rabbit books, depictions of the life of a man -- Harry
"Rabbit" Angstrom -- through the ebbs and flows of his existence across four decades of
American social and political history. Rabbit, Run (1960) is a mirror of the 1950s, with
Angstrom an aimless, disaffected young husband. Rabbit Redux (1971) -- spotlighting the
counterculture of the 1960s -- finds Angstrom still without a clear goal or purpose or
viable escape route from the banal. In Rabbit Is Rich (1981), Harry has become a
prosperous businessman during the 1970s, as the Vietnam era wanes. The final novel,
Rabbit at Rest (1990), glimpses Angstrom's reconciliation with life, before his death from
a heart attack, against the backdrop of the 1980s. In Updike's 1995 novella Rabbit
Remembered, his adult children recall Rabbit.
Among Updike's other novels are The Centaur (1963), Couples (1968), A Month of
Sundays (1975), Roger's Version (1986), and S. (l988). Updike creates an alter ego -- a
writer whose fame ironically threatens to silence him -- in another series of novels: Bech:
A Book (l970), Bech Is Back (1982), and Bech at Bay (1998).
Updike possesses the most brilliant style of any writer today, and his short stories offer
scintillating examples of its range and inventiveness. Collections include The Same Door
(1959), The Music School (1966), Museums and Women (1972), Too Far To Go (1979),
and Problems (1979). He has also written several volumes of poetry and essays.
When asked what he would like to be, Caulfield answers "the catcher in the rye,"
misquoting a poem by Robert Burns. In his vision, he is a modern version of a white
knight, the sole preserver of innocence. He imagines a big field of rye so tall that a group
of young children cannot see where they are running as they play their games. He is the
only big person there. "I'm standing on the edge of some crazy cliff. What I have to do, I
have to catch everybody if they start to go over the cliff." The fall over the cliff is equated
with the loss of childhood innocence -- a persistent theme of the era
Other works by this reclusive, spare writer include Nine Stories (1953), Franny and
Zooey (1961), and Raise High the Roof Beam, Carpenters (1963), a collection of stories
from The New Yorker magazine. Since the appearance of one story in 1965, Salinger --
who lives in New Hampshire -- has been absent from the American literary scene.
Kerouac's best-known novel, On the Road (1957), describes beatniks wandering through
America seeking an idealistic dream of communal life and beauty. The Dharma Bums
(1958) also focuses on peripatetic counterculture intellectuals and their infatuation with
Zen Buddhism. Kerouac also penned a book of poetry, Mexico City Blues (1959), and
volumes about his life with such beatniks as experimental novelist William Burroughs
and poet Allen Ginsberg.
The Turbulent But Creative 1960s
The alienation and stress underlying the 1950s found outward expression in the 1960s in
the United States in the civil rights movement, feminism, antiwar protests, minority
activism, and the arrival of a counterculture whose effects are still being worked through
American society. Notable political and social works of the era include the speeches of
civil rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., the early writings of feminist leader Betty
Friedan (The Feminine Mystique), and Norman Mailer's The Armies of the Night (1968),
about a 1967 antiwar march.
The 1960s were marked by a blurring of the line between fiction and fact, novels and
reportage that has carried through the present day. Novelist Truman Capote (1924-1984)
-- who had dazzled readers as an enfant terrible of the late 1940s and 1950s in such
works as Breakfast at Tiffany's (1958) -- stunned audiences with In Cold Blood (1965), a
riveting analysis of a brutal mass murder in the American heartland that read like a work
of detective fiction.
At the same time, the New Journalism emerged -- volumes of nonfiction that combined
journalism with techniques of fiction, or that frequently played with the facts, reshaping
them to add to the drama and immediacy of the story being reported. In The Electric
Kool-Aid Acid Test (1968), Tom Wolfe (1931- ) celebrated the counterculture wanderlust
of novelist Ken Kesey (1935-2001); Radical Chic & Mau-Mauing the Flak Catchers
(1970) ridiculed many aspects of left-wing activism. Wolfe later wrote an exuberant and
insightful history of the initial phase of the U.S. space program, The Right Stuff (1979),
and a novel, The Bonfire of the Vanities (1987), a panoramic portrayal of American
society in the 1980s.
As the 1960s evolved, literature flowed with the turbulence of the era. An ironic, comic
vision also came into view, reflected in the fabulism of several writers. Examples include
Ken Kesey's darkly comic One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (1962), a novel about life in
a mental hospital in which the wardens are more disturbed than the inmates, and the
whimsical, fantastic Trout Fishing in America (1967) by Richard Brautigan (1935-1984).
The comical and fantastic yielded a new mode, half comic and half metaphysical, in
Thomas Pynchon's paranoid, brilliant V and The Crying of Lot 49, John Barth's Giles
Goat-Boy, and the grotesque short stories of Donald Barthelme (1931-1989), whose first
collection, Come Back, Dr. Caligari, was published in 1964.
This new mode came to be called metafiction -- self-conscious or reflexive fiction that
calls attention to its own technique. Such "fiction about fiction" emphasizes language and
style, and departs from the conventions of realism such as rounded characters, a
believable plot enabling a character's development, and appropriate settings. In
metafiction, the writer's style attracts the reader's attention. The true subject is not the
characters, but rather the writer's own consciousness.
Critics of the time commonly grouped Pynchon, Barth, and Barthelme as metafictionists,
along with William Gaddis (1922-1998), whose long novel JR (l975), about a young boy
who builds up a phony business empire from junk bonds, eerily forecasts Wall Street
excesses to come. His shorter, more accessible Carpenter's Gothic (1985) combines
romance with menace. Gaddis is often linked with midwestern philosopher/novelist
William Gass (1924- ), best known for his early, thoughtful novel Omensetter's Luck
(1966), and for stories collected in In the Heart of the Heart of the Country (1968).
Robert Coover (1932- ) is another metafiction writer. His collection of stories Pricksongs
& Descants (1969) plays with plots familiar from folktales and popular culture, while his
novel The Public Burning (1977) deconstructs the execution of Julius and Ethel
Rosenberg, who were convicted of espionage.
All of Pynchon's fiction is similarly structured. A vast plot is unknown to at least one of
the main characters, whose task it then becomes to render order out of chaos and decipher
the world. This project, exactly the job of the traditional artist, devolves also upon the
reader, who must follow along and watch for clues and meanings. This paranoid vision is
extended across continents and time itself, for Pynchon employs the metaphor of entropy,
the gradual running down of the universe. The masterful use of popular culture --
particularly science fiction and detective fiction -- is evident in his works.
Pynchon's work V (1963) is loosely structured around Benny Profane -- a failure who
engages in pointless wanderings and various weird enterprises -- and his opposite, the
educated Herbert Stencil, who seeks a mysterious female spy, V (alternatively Venus,
Virgin, Void). The Crying of Lot 49 (1966), a short work, deals with a secret system
associated with the U.S. Postal Service. Gravity's Rainbow (1973) takes place during
World War II in London, when rockets were falling on the city, and concerns a farcical
yet symbolic search for Nazis and other disguised figures.
In Pynchon's comic novel Vineland (l990), set in northern California, shadowy forces
within federal agencies endanger individuals. In the novel Mason & Dixon (1997), partly
set in the wilderness of 1765, two English explorers survey the line that would come to
divide the North and South in the United States. Again, Pynchon sees power wielded
unjustly. Dixon asks: "No matter where...we go, shall we find all the World Tyrants and
Slaves?" Despite its range, the violence, comedy, and flair for innovation in his work
inexorably link Pynchon with the 1960s.
Realism is the enemy for Barth, the author of Lost in the Funhouse (1968), 14 stories that
constantly refer to the processes of writing and reading. Barth's intent is to alert the reader
to the artificial nature of reading and writing and to prevent him or her from being drawn
into the story as if it were real. To explode the illusion of realism, Barth uses a panoply of
reflexive devices to remind his audience that they are reading.
Barth's earlier works, like Saul Bellow's, were questioning and existential, and took up
the 1950s themes of escape and wandering. In The Floating Opera (1956), a man
considers suicide. The End of the Road (1958) concerns a complex love affair. Works of
the 1960s became more comical and less realistic. The Sot-Weed Factor (1960) parodies
an 18th-century picaresque style, while Giles Goat-Boy (1966) is a parody of the world
seen as a university.
Chimera (1972) retells tales from Greek mythology, and Letters (1979) uses Barth
himself as a character, as Norman Mailer does in The Armies of the Night. In Sabbatical:
A Romance (1982), Barth uses the popular fiction motif of the spy; this is the story of a
woman college professor and her husband, a retired secret agent turned novelist. Later
novels -- The Tidewater Tales (1987), The Last Voyage of Somebody the Sailor (1991),
and Once Upon a Time: A Floating Opera (1994) reveal Barth's "passionate virtuosity"
(his own phrase) in negotiating the chaotic, oceanic world with the bright rigging of
language.
Mailer is the reverse of a writer like John Barth, for whom the subject is not as important
as the way it is handled. Unlike the invisible Thomas Pynchon, Mailer constantly courts
and demands attention.
A novelist, essayist, sometime politician, literary activist, and occasional actor, Mailer is
always on the scene. From such New Journalism exercises as Miami and the Siege of
Chicago (1968), an analysis of the 1968 U.S. presidential conventions, and his
compelling study about the execution of a condemned murderer, The Executioner's Song
(1979), Mailer has turned to writing such ambitious, if flawed, novels as Ancient
Evenings (1983), set in the Egypt of antiquity, and Harlot's Ghost (1991), revolving
around the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency.
Roth's first book, Goodbye, Columbus (1959), satirized provincial Jewish suburbanites.
In his best-known novel, the outrageous, best-selling Portnoy's Complaint (1969), a New
York City administrator regales his taciturn psychoanalyst with off-color stories of his
boyhood.
Although The Great American Novel (1973) delves into baseball lore, most of Roth's
novels remain resolutely, even defiantly, autobiographical. In My Life As a Man (1974),
under the stress of divorce, a man resorts to creating an alter-ego, Nathan Zuckerman,
whose stories constitute one pole of the narrative, the other pole being the different kinds
of readers' responses. Zuckerman seemingly takes over in a series of subsequent novels.
The most successful is probably the first, The Ghost Writer (1979). It is told by
Zuckerman as a young writer criticized by Jewish elders for fanning anti-Semitism. In
Zuckerman Bound (1985), a novel has made Zuckerman rich but notorious. In The
Counterlife (1986), the fifth Zuckerman novel, stories vie with stories, as Nathan's
supposed life is contrasted with other imaginable lives. Roth's memoir The Facts (1988)
twists the screw further; in it, Zuckerman criticizes Roth's own narrative style.
Roth continues wavering on the border between fact and fiction in Patrimony: A True
Story (1991), a memoir about the death of his father. His recent novels include American
Pastoral (1997), in which a daughter's 1960s radicalism wounds a father, and The Human
Stain (2000), about a professor whose career is ruined by a racial misunderstanding based
on language.
Roth is a profound analyst of Jewish strengths and weaknesses. His characterizations are
nuanced; his protagonists are complex, individualized, and deeply human. Roth's series
of autobiographical novels about a writer recalls John Updike's recent Bech series, and it
is master-stylist Updike with whom Roth -- widely admired for his supple, ingenious
style -- is most often compared.
Despite its brilliance and wit, some readers find Roth's work self-absorbed. Still, his
vigorous accomplishment over almost 50 years has earned him a place among the most
distinguished of American novelists.
Southern Writers
Southern writing of the l960s tended, like the then still largely agrarian southern region,
to adhere to time-honored traditions. It remained rooted in realism and an ethical, if not
religious, vision during this decade of radical change. Recurring southern themes include
family, the family home, history, the land, religion, guilt, identity, death, and the search
for redemptive meaning in life. Like William Faulkner and Thomas Wolfe (Look
Homeward, Angel, 1929), who inspired the "southern renaissance" in literature, many
southern writers of the 1960s were scholars and elaborate stylists, revering the written
word as a link with traditions rooted in the classical world.
Many have been influential teachers. Kentucky-born Caroline Gordon (1895-1981), who
married southern poet Allen Tate, was a respected professor of writing. She set her novels
in her native Kentucky. Truman Capote was born in New Orleans and spent part of his
childhood in small towns in Louisiana and Alabama, the settings for many of his early
works in the elegant, decadent, southern gothic vein.
African-American writing professor Ernest Gaines (1933- ), also born in New Orleans,
set many of his moving, thoughtful works in the largely black rural bayou country of
Louisiana. Perhaps his best known novel, The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman
(1971), reflects on the sweep of time from the end of the Civil War in 1865 up to 1960.
Concerned with human issues deeper than skin color, Gaines handles racial relations
subtly.
Reynolds Price (1933- ), a long-time professor at Duke University, was born in North
Carolina, which furnishes the scenes for many of his works, such as A Long and Happy
Life (1961). Like William Faulkner and Robert Penn Warren, he peoples his southern
terrain with interlinked families close to their roots and broods on the passing of time and
the imperative to expiate ancient wrongs. His meditative, poetic style recalls the classical
literary tradition of the old South. Partially paralyzed due to cancer, Price has explored
physical suffering in The Promise of Rest (1995) about a father tending his son who is
dying of AIDS. His highly regarded novel Kate Vaiden (1986) reveals his ability to evoke
a woman's life.
By the mid-1970s, an era of consolidation had begun. The Vietnam conflict was over,
followed soon afterward by U.S. recognition of the People's Republic of China and
America's bicentennial celebration. Soon the 1980s -- the "Me Decade" in Tom Wolfe's
phrase -- ensued, in which individuals tended to focus more on personal concerns than on
larger social issues.
In literature, old currents remained, but the force behind pure experimentation dwindled.
New novelists like John Gardner, John Irving (The World According to Garp, 1978), Paul
Theroux (The Mosquito Coast, 1981), William Kennedy (Ironweed, 1983), and Alice
Walker (The Color Purple, 1982) surfaced with stylistically brilliant novels to portray
moving human dramas. Concern with setting, character, and themes associated with
realism returned, along with renewed interest in history, as in works by E.L. Doctorow.
Realism, abandoned by experimental writers in the 1960s, also crept back, often mingled
with bold original elements -- a daring structure like a novel within a novel, as in John
Gardner's October Light, or black American dialect as in Alice Walker's The Color
Purple. Minority literature began to flourish. Drama shifted from realism to more
cinematic, kinetic techniques. At the same time, however, the Me Decade was reflected in
such brash new talents as Jay McInerney (Bright Lights, Big City, 1984), Bret Easton
Ellis (Less Than Zero, 1985), and Tama Janowitz (Slaves of New York, 1986).
Later Doctorow novels are the autobiographical World's Fair (1985), about an eight-year-
old boy growing up in the Depression of the 1930s; Billy Bathgate (l989), about Dutch
Schultz, a real New York gangster; and The Waterworks (1994), set in New York during
the 1870s. City of God (2000) -- the title referencing St. Augustine -- turns to New York
in the present. A Christian cleric's consciousness interweaves the city's generalized
poverty, crime, and loneliness with stories of people whose lives touch his. The book
hints at Doctorow's abiding belief that writing -- a form of witnessing -- is a mode of
human survival.
Doctorow's techniques are eclectic. His stylistic exuberance and formal inventiveness
link him with metafiction writers like Thomas Pynchon and John Barth, but his novels
remain rooted in realism and history. His use of real people and events links him with the
New Journalism of the l960s and with Norman Mailer, Truman Capote, and Tom Wolfe,
while his use of fictional memoir, as in World's Fair, looks forward to writers like
Maxine Hong Kingston and the flowering of the memoir in the 1990s.
The Faulknerian treatment, including dark southern gothic themes, flashbacks, and
stream of consciousness monologues, brought Styron fame that turned to controversy
when he published his Pulitzer Prize-winning The Confessions of Nat Turner (1967). This
novel re-creates the most violent slave uprising in U.S. history, as seen through the eyes
of its leader. The book came out at the height of the "black power" movement, and,
unsurprisingly, the depiction of Nat Turner drew sharp criticism from many African-
American observers, although some came to Styron's defense.
Styron's fascination with individual human acts set against backdrops of larger racial
injustice continues in Sophie's Choice (1979), another tour de force about the doom of a
lovely woman -- the topic that Edgar Allan Poe, the presiding spirit of southern writers,
found the most moving of all possible subjects. In this novel, a beautiful Polish woman
who has survived Auschwitz is defeated by its remembered agonies, summed up in the
moment she was made to choose which one of her children would live and which one
would die. The book makes complex parallels between the racism of the South and the
Holocaust.
More recently Styron, like many other writers, turned to the memoir form. His short
account of his near-suicidal depression, Darkness Visible: A Memoir of Madness (1990),
recalls the terrible undertow that his own doomed characters must have felt. In the
autobiographical fictions in A Tidewater Morning (1993), the shimmering, oppressively
hot Virginia coast where he grew up mirrors and extends the speaker's shifting
consciousness.
A prolific and popular novelist, Gardner used a realistic approach but employed
innovative techniques -- such as flashbacks, stories within stories, retellings of myths,
and contrasting stories -- to bring out the truth of a human situation. His strengths are
characterization (particularly his sympathetic portraits of ordinary people) and colorful
style. Major works include The Resurrection (1966), The Sunlight Dialogues (1972),
Nickel Mountain (1973), October Light (1976), and Mickelsson's Ghosts (1982).
Gardner's fictional patterns suggest the curative powers of fellowship, duty, and family
obligations, and in this sense Gardner was a profoundly traditional and conservative
author. He endeavored to demonstrate that certain values and acts lead to fulfilling lives.
His book On Moral Fiction (1978) calls for novels that embody ethical values rather than
dazzle with empty technical innovation. The book created a furor, largely because
Gardner bluntly criticized important living authors -- especially writers of metafiction --
for failing to reflect ethical concerns. Gardner argued for a warm, human, ultimately
more realistic and socially engaged fiction, such as that of Joyce Carol Oates and Toni
Morrison.
Morrison's richly woven fiction has gained her international acclaim. In compelling,
large-spirited novels, she treats the complex identities of black people in a universal
manner. In her early work The Bluest Eye (1970), a strong-willed young black girl tells
the story of Pecola Breedlove, who is driven mad by an abusive father. Pecola believes
that her dark eyes have magically become blue and that they will make her lovable.
Morrison has said that she was creating her own sense of identity as a writer through this
novel: "I was Pecola, Claudia, everybody."
Sula (1973) describes the strong friendship of two women. Morrison paints African-
American women as unique, fully individual characters rather than as stereotypes.
Morrison's Song of Solomon (1977) has won several awards. It follows a black man,
Milkman Dead, and his complex relations with his family and community. In Tar Baby
(1981) Morrison deals with black and white relations. Beloved (1987) is the wrenching
story of a woman who murders her children rather than allow them to live as slaves. It
employs the dreamlike techniques of magical realism in depicting a mysterious figure,
Beloved, who returns to live with the mother who has slit her throat.
Jazz (1992), set in 1920s Harlem, is a story of love and murder; in Paradise (1998),
males of the all-black Oklahoma town of Ruby kill neighbors from an all-women's
settlement. Morrison reveals that exclusion, whether by sex or race, however appealing it
may seem, leads ultimately not to paradise but to a hell of human devising.
In her accessible nonfiction book Playing in the Dark: Whiteness and the Literary
Imagination (1992), Morrison discerns a defining current of racial consciousness in
American literature. Morrison has suggested that though her novels are consummate
works of art, they contain political meanings: "I am not interested in indulging myself in
some private exercise of my imagination...yes, the work must be political." In 1993,
Morrison won the Nobel Prize for Literature.
A "womanist" writer, as Walker calls herself, she has long been associated with feminism,
presenting black existence from the female perspective. Like Toni Morrison, Jamaica
Kincaid, the late Toni Cade Bambara, and other accomplished contemporary black
novelists, Walker uses heightened, lyrical realism to center on the dreams and failures of
accessible, credible people. Her work underscores the quest for dignity in human life. A
fine stylist, particularly in her epistolary dialect novel The Color Purple, her work seeks
to educate. In this she resembles the black American novelist Ishmael Reed, whose satires
expose social problems and racial issues.
Walker's The Color Purple is the story of the love between two poor black sisters that
survives a separation over years, interwoven with the story of how, during that same
period, the shy, ugly, and uneducated sister discovers her inner strength through the
support of a female friend. The theme of the support women give each other recalls Maya
Angelou's autobiography, I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, which celebrates the
mother-daughter connection, and the work of white feminists such as Adrienne Rich. The
Color Purple portrays men as basically unaware of the needs and reality of women.
Although many critics find Walker's work too didactic or ideological, a large general
readership appreciates her bold explorations of African-American womanhood. Her
novels shed light on festering issues such as the harsh legacy of sharecropping (The Third
Life of Grange Copeland, 1970) and female circumcision (Possessing the Secret Joy,
1992).
Jewish-American writers like Saul Bellow, Bernard Malamud, Isaac Bashevis Singer,
Arthur Miller, Philip Roth, and Norman Mailer were the first since the 19th-century
abolitionists and African-American writers of slave narratives to address ethnic prejudice
and the plight of the outsider. They explored new ways of projecting an awareness that
was both American and specific to a subculture. In this, they opened the door for the
flowering of multiethnic writing in the decades to come.
The close of the 1980s and the beginnings of the 1990s saw minority writing become a
major fixture on the American literary landscape. This is true in drama as well as in
prose. The late August Wilson (1945-2005) wrote an acclaimed cycle of plays about the
20th-century black experience that stands alongside the work of novelists Alice Walker,
John Edgar Wideman, and Toni Morrison. Scholars such as Lawrence Levine (The
Opening of the American Mind: Canons, Culture and History, 1996) and Ronald Takaki
(A Different Mirror: A History of Multicultural America, 1993) provide invaluable
context for understanding multiethnic literature and its meanings.
Asian Americans also took their place on the scene. Maxine Hong Kingston, author of
The Woman Warrior (1976), carved out a place for her fellow Asian Americans. Among
them is Amy Tan (1952- ), whose luminous novels of Chinese life transposed to post-
World War II America (The Joy Luck Club, 1989, and The Kitchen God's Wife, 1991)
captivated readers. David Henry Hwang (1957- ), a California-born son of Chinese
immigrants, made his mark in drama, with plays such as F.O.B. (1981) and M. Butterfly
(1986).
A relatively new group on the literary horizon were the Latino-American writers,
including the Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist Oscar Hijuelos, the Cuban-born author of
The Mambo Kings Play Songs of Love (1989). Leading writers of Mexican-American
descent include Sandra Cisneros (Woman Hollering Creek and Other Stories, 1991); and
Rudolfo Anaya, author of the poetic novel Bless Me, Ultima (1972).
Native-American fiction flowered. Most often the authors evoked the loss of traditional
life based in nature, the stressful attempt to adapt to modern life, and their struggles with
poverty, unemployment, and alcoholism. The Pulitzer Prize-winning House Made of
Dawn (1968), by N. Scott Momaday (1934- ), and his poetic The Way to Rainy Mountain
(1969) evoke the beauty and despair of Kiowa Indian life. Of mixed Pueblo descent,
Leslie Marmon Silko wrote the critically esteemed novel Ceremony (1977), which gained
a large general audience. Like Momaday's works, hers is a "chant novel" structured on
Native-American healing rituals.
Blackfoot poet and novelist James Welch (1940-2003) detailed the struggles of Native
Americans in his slender, nearly flawless novels Winter in the Blood (1974), The Death
of Jim Loney (1979), Fools Crow (1986), and The Indian Lawyer (1990). Louise Erdrich,
part Chippewa, has written a powerful series of novels inaugurated by Love Medicine
(1984) that capture the tangled lives of dysfunctional reservation families with a poignant
blend of stoicism and humor.
American Drama
After World War I, popular and lucrative musicals had increasingly dominated the
Broadway theatrical scene. Serious theater retreated to smaller, less expensive theaters
"off Broadway" or outside New York City.
This situation repeated itself after World War II. American drama had languished in the
l950s, constrained by the Cold War and McCarthyism. The energy of the l960s revived it.
The off-off-Broadway movement presented an innovative alternative to commercialized
popular theater.
Many of the major dramatists after 1960 produced their work in small venues. Freed from
the need to make enough money to pay for expensive playhouses, they were newly
inspired by European existentialism and the so-called Theater of the Absurd associated
with European playwrights Samuel Beckett, Jean Genet, and Eugene Ionesco, as well as
by Harold Pinter. The best dramatists became innovative and even surreal, rejecting
realistic theater to attack superficial social conventions.
Loss of identity and consequent struggles for power to fill the void propel Albee's plays,
such as Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf (l962). In this controversial drama, made into a
film starring Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton, an unhappily married couple's shared
fantasy -- that they have a child, that their lives have meaning -- is violently exposed as
an untruth.
Albee has continued to produce distinguished work over several decades, including Tiny
Alice (l964); A Delicate Balance (l966); Seascape (l975); Marriage Play (1987); and
Three Tall Women (1991), which follows the main character, who resembles Albee's
overbearing adoptive mother, through three stages of life.
By 1965, Baraka had started the Black Arts Repertory Theater in Harlem, the black
section of New York City. He portrayed black nationalist views of racism in disturbing
plays such as Dutchman (1964), in which a white woman flirts with and eventually kills a
younger black man on a New York City subway. The realistic first half of the play
sparkles with witty dialogue and subtle characterization. The shocking ending risks
melodrama to dramatize racial misunderstanding and the victimization of the black male
protagonist.
Of almost 50 works for stage and screen, Shepard's most esteemed are three interrelated
plays evoking love and violence in the family: Curse of the Starving Class (1976),
Buried Child (1978), and True West (1980), his best-known work. In True West, two
middle-aged brothers, an educated screenwriter and a drifting thief, compete to write a
true-to-life western play for a rich, urban movie producer. Each thinking he needs what
the other has -- success, freedom -- the two brothers change places in an atmosphere of
increasing violence fueled by alcohol. The play registers Shepard's concern with loss of
freedom, authenticity, and autonomy in American life. It dramatizes the vanishing frontier
(the drifter) and the American imagination (the writer), seduced by money, the media, and
commercial forces, personified by the producer.
In his writing process, Shepard tries to re-create a zone of freedom by allowing his
characters to act in unpredictable, spontaneous, sometimes illogical ways. The most
famous example comes from True West. In a gesture meant to suggest lawless freedom,
the distraught writer steals numerous toasters. Totally unrealistic yet oddly believable on
an emotional level, the scene works as comedy, absurd drama, and irony.
Shepard lets his characters guide his writing, rather than beginning with a pre-planned
plot, and his plays are fresh and lifelike. His surrealistic flair and experimentalism link
him with Edward Albee, but his plays are earthier and funnier, and his characters are
drawn more realistically. They convey a bold West Coast consciousness and make
comments on America in their use of landscape motifs and specific settings and contexts.
Poets themselves struggle to make sense of the flood of poetry. It is possible to envision a
continuum, with poetry of the speaking, subjective self on one end, poetry of the world
on the other, and a large middle range in which self and world merge.
Poetry of the speaking self tends to focus on vivid expression and exploration of deep,
often buried, emotion. It is psychological and intense, and its settings are secondary. In
the last half of the 20th century, the most influential poet of this sort was Robert Lowell,
whose descents into his own psyche and his disturbed family background inspired
confessional writing.
Poetry of the world, on the other hand, tends to build up meaning from narrative drive,
detail, and context. It sets careful scenes. One of the most influential poets of the world
was Elizabeth Bishop, generally considered the finest American woman poet of later 20th
century.
Robert Lowell and Elizabeth Bishop were life-long friends; both taught at Harvard
University. Like Walt Whitman and Emily Dickinson in the 19th century, Lowell and
Bishop are presiding generative spirits for later poets. And although they shared a kindred
vision, their approaches were polar opposites. Lowell's knotty, subjective, rhetorical
poetry wrests meaning from self-presentation and heightened language, while Bishop
offers, instead, detailed landscapes in a deceptively simple prosaic style. Only on
rereading does her precision and depth make itself felt.
Most poets hover somewhere between the two poles. Ultimately, great poetry -- whether
of the self or the world -- overcomes such divisions; the self and the world becoming
mirrors of each other. Nevertheless, for purposes of discussion, the two may be
provisionally distinguished.
Poetry of self tends toward direct address or monologue. At its most intense, it states a
condition of soul. The settings, though present, do not play definitive roles. This poetry
may be psychological or spiritual, aspiring to a timeless realm. It may also, however,
undercut spiritual certainty by referring all meaning back to language. Within this large
grouping, therefore, one may find somewhat romantic, expressive poetry, but also
language-based poems that question the very concepts of identity and meaning, seeing
these as constructs.
Balancing these concerns, John Ashbery has said that he is interested in "the experience
of experience," or what filters through his consciousness, rather than what actually
happened. His "Soonest Mended" (1970) depicts a reality "out there" lying loose and
seemingly simple, but lethal as a floor on which wheat and chaff (like human lives, or
Walt Whitman's leaves of grass) are winnowed:
The enigmatic, classically trained W.S. Merwin (1927- ) continues to produce volumes of
haunting subjective poetry. Merwin's poem "The River of Bees" (1967) ends:
The word "only" ironically underscores how difficult it is to live fully as human beings, a
nobler pursuit than mere survival. Both Ashbery and Merwin, precursors of the current
generation of poets of self, characteristically write monologues detached from explicit
contexts or narratives. Merwin's haunting existential lyrics plumb psychological depths,
while Ashbery's unexpected use of words from many registers of human endeavor --
psychology, farming, philosophy -- looks forward to the Language School.
Recent poets of self have pushed more deeply into a phenomenological awareness of
consciousness played out moment by moment. For Ann Lauterbach (1942- ), the poem is
an extension of the mind in action; she has said that her poetry is "an act of self-
construction, the voice its threshold." Language poet Lyn Hejinian (1941- ) expresses the
movement of consciousness in her autobiographical prose poem My Life (1987), which
employs disjunction, surprising leaps, and chance intersections: "I picture an idea at the
moment I come to it, our collision." Rae Armantrout (1947- ) uses silences and subtle,
oblique associative clusters; the title poem of her volume Necromance (1991) warns that
"emphatic / precision / is revealed as / hostility." Another experimental poet, Leslie
Scalapino (1947- ), writes poems as an "examination of the mind in the process of
whatever it's creating."
Graham's work is suffused with cosmopolitan references, and she sees the history of the
United States as a part of a larger international engagement over time. The title poem in
her Pulitzer Prize-winning collection The Dream of the Unified Field: Selected Poems,
1974-1994 (1995) addresses this complex and changing history. The poem brings
together disparate elements in large-gestured free association -- the poet's walk through
the white flecks of a snowstorm to return a friend's black dance leotard, a flock of black
starlings (birds that drive out native species), a single black crow (a protagonist of
Native-American oral tradition) evoked as "one ink-streak on the early evening snowlit
scene."
These sense impressions summon up the poet's childhood memories of Europe and her
black-garbed dance teacher, and broaden out into the history of the New World.
Christopher Columbus's contact with Native Americans on a white sandy beach is likened
to the poet's white snowstorm: "He thought he saw Indians fleeing through the white
before the ship," and "In the white swirl, he placed a large cross."
All these elements are subordinated to the moving mind that contains them and that
constantly questions itself. This mind, or "unified field" (a set of theories in physics that
attempt to relate all forces in the universe), is likened to the snowstorm of the beginning:
Graham focuses on the mind as a portal of meaning and distortion, both a part of the
world and a separate vantage point. As in a film's montage, her voice threads together
disparate visions and experiences. Swarm (2000) deepens Graham's metaphysical bent,
emotional depth, and urgency.
At its furthest extreme, poetry of self obliterates the self if it lacks a counterbalancing
sensibility. The next stage may be a poetry of various voices or fictive selves, breaking
the monolithic idea of self into fragments and characters. The dramatic monologues of
Robert Browning are 19th-century antecedents. The fictive "I" feels solid but does not
involve the actual author, whose self remains offstage.
This strain of poetry often takes subjects from myth and popular culture, typically seeing
modern relationships as redefinitions or versions of older patterns. Among contemporary
poets of voice or monologue are Brigit Pegeen Kelly, Alberto Rios, and the Canadian
poet Margaret Atwood.
Usually, the poetry of voice is written in the first person, but the third person can make a
similar impact if the viewpoint is clearly that of the characters, as in Rita Dove's Thomas
and Beulah. In this volume, Dove intertwines biography and history to dramatize her
grandparents' lives. Like many African Americans in the early 20th century, they fled
poverty and racism in the rural South for work in the urban North. Dove endows their
humble lives with dignity. Thomas's first job, as a laborer on the third shift, requires him
to live in a barracks and share a mattress with two men he never meets. His work is "a
narrow grief," but music lifts his spirits like a beautiful woman (forecasting Beulah,
whom he has not yet met). When Thomas sings
Each of Glück's books attempts new techniques, making it difficult to summarize her
work. Her early volumes, such as The House on Marshland (l975) and The Triumph of
Achilles (1985), handle autobiographical material at a psychic distance, while in later
books she is more direct. Meadowlands (1996) employs comic wit and references to the
Odyssey to depict a failing marriage.
In Glück's memorable The Wild Iris (1992), different kinds of flowers utter short
metaphysical monologues. The book's title poem, an exploration of resurrection, could be
an epigraph for Glück's work as a whole. The wild iris, a gorgeous deep blue flower
growing from a bulb that lies dormant all winter, says: "It is terrible to survive / as
consciousness / buried in the dark earth." Like Jorie Graham's vision of the self merged in
the snowstorm, Glück's poem ends with a vision of world and self merged -- this time in
the water of life, blue on blue:
Like Graham, Glück merges the self into the world through a fluid imagery of water.
While Graham's frozen water -- snow -- resembles sand, the earth ground up at the sea's
edge, Glück's blue fresh water -- signifying her heart -- merges with the salt sea of the
world.
A number of poets -- these are not groups, but nationwide tendencies -- find deep
inspiration in specific landscapes. Instances are Robert Hass's lyrical evocations of
Northern California, Mark Jarman's Southern California coastlines and memories of
surfing, Tess Gallagher's poems set in the Pacific Northwest, and Simon Ortiz's and
Jimmy Santiago Baca's poems emanating from southwestern landscapes. Each subregion
has inspired poetry: C.D. (Carolyn) Wright's hardscrabble upper South is far from Yusef
Komunyakaa's humid Louisiana Gulf.
Poetry of place is not based on landscape description; rather, the land, and its history, is a
generative force implicated in the way its people, including the poet, live and think. The
land is felt as what D.H. Lawrence called a "spirit of place."
Wright's intense poetry offers moments of spiritual insight rescued, or rather constructed,
from the ravages of time and circumstance. A purposeful awkwardness -- seen in his
unexpected turns of colloquial phrase and preference for long, broken lines with odd
numbers of syllables -- endows his poems with a burnished grace, like that of gnarled old
farm tools polished with the wear of hands. This hand-made, earned, sometimes wry
quality makes Wright's poems feel contemporary and prevents them from seeming
pretentious.
The disparity between transcendent vision and human frailty lies at the heart of Wright's
vision. He is drawn to grand themes -- stars, constellations, history -- on the one hand,
and to tiny tactile elements -- fingers, hairs -- on the other. His title poem "Chickamauga"
relies on the reader's knowledge: Chickamauga, Georgia, on September 19 and 20, 1862,
was the scene of a decisive battle in the U.S. Civil War between the North and the South.
The South failed to destroy the Union (northern) army and opened a way for the North's
scorched-earth invasion of the South via Atlanta, Georgia.
"Chickamauga" can be read as a meditation on landscape, but it is also an elegiac lament
and the poet's ars poetica. It begins with a simple observation: "Dove-twirl in the tall
grass." This seeming idyll is the moment just before a hunter shoots; the slain soldiers,
never mentioned in the poem, have been forgotten, mowed down like doves or grass. The
"conked magnolia tree" undercuts the romantic "midnight and magnolia" stereotype of
the antebellum-plantation South. The poem merges present and past in a powerful epitaph
for lost worlds and ideals.
The poem sees history as a construct, a "code with no message." Each individual exists in
itself, unknowable outside its own terms and time, "not the mask but the face
underneath." Death is inevitable for us as for the fallen soldiers, the Old South, and the
caught fish. Nevertheless, poetry offers a partial consolation: Our articulated discontent
may yield a measure of immortality.
An even more grounded strain of poetry locates the poetic subject in a matrix of
belonging -- to family, community, and changing traditions. Often the traditions called
into play are ethnic or international.
A few poets, such as Sharon Olds (1942- ), expose their own unhealed wounds, resorting
to the confessional mode, but most contemporary poets write with an affection that,
however rueful, is nonetheless genuine. Stephen Dunn (1939- ) is an example: In his
poems, relationships are a means of knowing. In some poets, respect for family and
community carries with it a sense of affirmation, if not an explicitly devotional
sensibility. This is not a conservative poetry; often it confronts change, loss, and struggle
with the powers of ethnic or non-Western literary tradition.
Lucille Clifton (1936- ) finds solace in the black community. Her colloquial language and
strong faith are a potent combination. The moving elegies to his mother of Agha Shahid
Ali (1949-2001) draw on a dazzling array of classical Middle Eastern poetic forms,
intertwining his mother's life with the suffering of his family's native Kashmir.
Lee is sensuous, filial -- he movingly depicts his family and his father's decline -- and
outspoken in his commitment to the spiritual dimensions of poetry. His most influential
poem, "Persimmons" (1986), from his book Rose, evokes his Asian background through
the persimmon, a fruit little known in the United States. Fruits and flowers are traditional
subjects of Chinese art and poetry, but unusual in the West. The poem contains a pointed
yet humorous critique of a provincial schoolteacher Lee encountered in the United States
who presumes to understand persimmons and language.
Lee's poem "Irises" (1986), from the same volume, suggests that we drift through a
"dream of life" but, like the iris, "waken dying--violet becoming blue, growing / black,
black." The poem and its handling of color resonate with Glück's wild iris.
The title poem of The City in Which I Love You announces Lee's affirmative entrance into
a larger community of poetry. It ends:
Yet another strain of intensely lyrical, image-driven poetry celebrates beauty despite, or
in the midst of, modern life in all its suffering and confusion. Many poets could be
included here -- Joy Harjo (1951- ), Sandra McPherson (1943- ), Henri Cole (1965- ) -- as
the strains of poetry are overlapping, not mutually exclusive.
Some of the finest contemporary poets use imagery not as decoration, but to explore new
subjects and terrain. Harjo imagines horses as a way of retrieving her Native-American
heritage, while McPherson and Cole create images that seem to come alive.
It is possible to enjoy Doty by following his evolving ideas of community. In "A Little
Rabbit Dead in the Grass" from Source (2001), a dead rabbit provokes a philosophical
meditation. This particular rabbit, like a poem, is important in itself and as a text, an
"artfully crafted thing" on whose brow "some trace / of thought seems written." The next
poem in Source, "Fish R Us," likens the human community to a bag of fish in a pet store
tank, "each fry / about the size of this line." Like people, or ideas, the fish want freedom:
They "want to swim forward," but for now they "pulse in their golden ball." The sense of
a shared organic connection with others is carried throughout the volume. The third
poem, "At the Gym," envisions the imprint of sweaty heads on exercise equipment as
"some halo / the living made together."
Doty finds in Walt Whitman a personal and poetic guide. Doty has also written
memorably of the tragic AIDS epidemic. His works include My Alexandria (l993),
Atlantis (l995), and his vivid memoir Firebird (1999). Still Life With Oysters and Lemon
(2001) is a recent collection.
Doty's poems are both reflexive (referencing themselves as art) and responsive to the
outer world. He sees the imperfect yet vital body, especially the skin, as the margin -- a
kind of text -- where internal and external meet, as in his short poem, also from Source,
about getting a tattoo, "To the Engraver of My Skin."
Spiritually attuned contemporary U.S. poets include Arthur Sze (1950- ), who is said to
have a Zen-like sensibility. His poems offer literal and seemingly simple observations
that are also meditations, such as these lines from "Throwing Salt on a Path" (1987):
"Shrimp smoking over a fire. Ah, / the light of a star never stops, but travels." Shoveling
snow, he notes: "The salt now clears a path in the snow, expands the edges of the
universe."
Hirshfield's poetry manifests what she calls the "mind of indirection" in her book about
writing poetry, Nine Gates: Entering the Mind of Poetry (1997). This orientation draws
on a reverence for nature, an economy of language, and a Buddhist sense of
impermanence. Her own "poetry of indirection" works by nuance, association (often to
seasons and weathers, evocative of world views and moods), and natural imagery.
Hirshfield's poem "Mule Heart," from her poetry collection The Lives of the Heart
(1997), vividly evokes a mule without ever mentioning it. Hirshfield drew on her
memory of a mule used to carry loads up steep hills on the Greek island of Santorini to
write this poem, which she has called a kind of recipe for getting through a difficult time.
The poem conjures the reader to take heart. This humble mule has its own beauty (bridle
bells) and strength.
The New World riveted the attention of Americans during the revolutionary era of the late
1700s, when Philip Freneau made a point of celebrating flora and fauna native to the
Americas as a way of forging an American identity. Transcendentalism and agrarianism
focused on America's relation to nature in the 19th and early 20th centuries.
For Oliver, no natural fact is too humble to afford insights, or what Emerson called
"spiritual facts," as in her poem "The Black Snake" (1979). Though the speaker, as a
driver of an automobile, is implicated in the snake's demise, she stops and removes the
snake's body from the road -- an act of respect. She recognizes the often vilified snake,
with its negative associations with the biblical book of Genesis and death, as a "dead
brother," and she appreciates his gleaming beauty. The snake teaches her death, but also a
new genesis and delight in life, and she drives on, thinking about the "light at the center
of every cell" that entices all created life "forward / happily all spring" -- always unaware
of where we will meet our end. This carpe diem is an invitation to a more rooted,
celebratory awareness.
On the spectrum from poetry of self to poetry of the world, wit -- including humor, a
sense of the incongruous, and flights of fancy -- lies close to world. Wit depends on the
intersection of two or more frames of reference and on acute discrimination; this is a
worldly poetry.
Poetry of wit locates the poetic occasion in everyday life raised to a humorous,
surrealistic, or allegorical pitch. Usually the language is colloquial so that the fantastic
situations have the heft of reality. Older masters of this vein are Charles Simic and Mark
Strand; among younger poets, its practitioners include Stephen Dobyns and Mark
Halliday.
The everyday language, humor, surprising action, and exaggeration of this poetry makes
it unusually accessible, though the best of this work only gives up its secrets on repeated
rereading.
Collins's is a domesticated form of surrealism. His best poems, too long to reproduce
here, quickly propel the imagination up a stairway of increasingly surrealistic situations,
at the end offering an emotional landing, a mood one can rest on, if temporarily, like a
final modulation in music. The short poem "The Dead," from Sailing Alone Around the
Room: New and Selected Poems (2001), gives some sense of Collins's fanciful flight and
gentle settling down, as if a bird had come to rest.
Poetry inspired by history is in some ways the most difficult and ambitious of all. In this
vein, poets venture into the world with a lower-case "i," open to all that has shaped them.
The faith of these poets is in experience.
An older poet working in this vein is Michael S. Harper, who interweaves African-
American history with his family's experiences in a form of montage. Frank Bidart has
similarly merged political events such as the assassination of U.S. President John F.
Kennedy with personal life. Ed Hirsch, Gjertrud Schnackenberg, and Rita Dove imbue
some of their finest poems with similarly irreducible memories of their personal pasts,
centering on touchstone moments.
The title poem from The Figured Wheel is among Pinsky's finest works, but it is difficult
to excerpt. The brief poem "The Want Bone," suggested by the jaw of a shark seen on a
friend's mantel, displays Pinsky's technical brilliance (internal rhymes like "limber grin,"
slant rhymes as in "together" and "pleasure," and polysyllables pattering lightly against a
drum-firm iambic line). The poem begins by describing the shark as the "tongue of the
waves" and ends with its singing -- from the realm of the dead -- a paean of endless
desire. The ego or self may be critiqued here: It is a pointless hunger, an O or zero, and its
satisfaction a hopeless illusion.
On the furthest extreme of the poetic spectrum lies poetry of the world, presided over by
the spirit of Elizabeth Bishop. This is a downbeat, or outcast, poetry that at first reading
seems anti-poetical. It may seem too prosaic, too caught up with mere incidentals, to
count for anything lasting. The hesitant delivery is the opposite of oracular, and the
subject at first seems lost or merely descriptive. Nevertheless, the best of this poetry cuts
through multiple perspectives, questions the very notion of personal identity, and
understands suffering from an ethical perspective.
Older poets writing in this manner are Richard Hugo, Gwendolyn Brooks, and Phil
Levine. Contemporary voices such as Ellen Bryant Voigt and Yusef Komunyakaa have
been influenced by their almost naturalistic vision, and they are drawn to violence and its
far-reaching shadow.
Cyber-Poetry
At the extreme end of the poetic spectrum, cyber-poetry is a new worldly poetry. For
many young American adults, the book is secondary to the computer monitor, and
reading a spoken human language comes after exposure to binary codes.
Computer-based literature has taken shape since the early 1990s; with the advent of the
World Wide Web, some experimental poetry has shifted its focus to a paperless, virtual,
global realm.
Recurring motifs in cyber-poetry include
self-reflexive critiques of technologically
driven work; computer icons, graphics,
and hypertext links festoon vast webs of
relationships, while dimensional layers --
animation, sonics, hyperlinked texts --
proliferate in multiple directions,
sometimes created by multiple and
unknown authors. Don DeLillo (© AP Richard Ford (© AP
Images) Images)
Outlets for this work come and go; they
have included the CD-ROM poetry
magazines The Little Magazine,
Cyberpoetry, Java Poetry, New River,
Parallel, and many others. Writing From
the New Coast: Technique (1993), an
influential gathering of poetic statements
accompanied by a collection of poems
edited by Juliana Spahr and Peter Gizzi,
helped catalyze experimental poetry in the
electronic age. It celebrates irreducible
multiplicity and the primacy of historical
context, attacking the very notions of Larry McMurtry (© Sandra Cisneros (©
identity and universality as repressive AP Images) AP Images)
bourgeois constructs.
American
Literature
The United States is one of the most
diverse nations in the world. Its dynamic
population of about 300 million boasts
Literature in the United States today is likewise dazzlingly diverse, exciting, and
evolving. New voices have arisen from many quarters, challenging old ideas and adapting
literary traditions to suit changing conditions of the national life. Social and economic
advances have enabled previously underrepresented groups to express themselves more
fully, while technological innovations have created a fast-moving public forum. Reading
clubs proliferate, and book fairs, literary festivals, and "poetry slams" (events where
youthful poets compete in performing their poetry) attract enthusiastic audiences.
Selection of a new work for a book club can launch an unknown writer into the limelight
overnight.
On a typical Sunday the list of best-selling books in the New York Times Book Review
testifies to the extraordinary diversity of the current American literary scene. In January,
2006, for example, the list of paperback best-sellers included "genre" fiction -- steamy
romances by Nora Roberts, a new thriller by John Grisham, murder mysteries --
alongside nonfiction science books by the anthropologist Jared Diamond, popular
sociology by The New Yorker magazine writer Malcolm Gladwell, and accounts of drug
rehabilitation and crime. In the last category was a reprint of Truman Capote's
groundbreaking In Cold Blood, a 1965 "nonfiction novel" that blurs the distinction
between high literature and journalism and had recently been made into a film.
Books by non-American authors and books on international themes were also prominent
on the list. Afghan-American Khaled Hosseini's searing novel, The Kite Runner, tells of
childhood friends in Kabul separated by the rule of the Taliban, while Azar Nafisi's
memoir, Reading Lolita in Teheran, poignantly recalls teaching great works of Western
literature to young women in Iran. A third novel, Arthur Golden's Memoirs of a Geisha
(made into a movie), recounts a Japanese woman's life during World War II.
In addition, the best-seller list reveals the popularity of religious themes. According to
Publishers Weekly, 2001 was the first year that Christian-themed books topped the sales
lists in both fiction and nonfiction. Among the hardcover best-sellers of that exemplary
Sunday in 2006, we find Dan Brown's novel The DaVinci Code and Anne Rice's tale
Christ the Lord: Out of Egypt.
Beyond the Times' best-seller list, chain bookstores offer separate sections for major
religions including Christianity, Islam, Judaism, Buddhism, and sometimes Hinduism.
In the Women's Literature section of bookstores one finds works by a "Third Wave" of
feminists, a movement that usually refers to young women in their 20s and 30s who have
grown up in an era of widely accepted social equality in the United States. Third Wave
feminists feel sufficiently empowered to emphasize the individuality of choices women
make. Often associated in the popular mind with a return to tradition and child-rearing,
lipstick, and "feminine" styles, these young women have reclaimed the word "girl" --
some decline to call themselves feminist. What is often called "chick lit" is a flourishing
offshoot. Bridget Jones's Diary by the British writer Helen Fielding and Candace
Bushnell's Sex and the City featuring urban single women with romance in mind have
spawned a popular genre among young women.
Nonfiction writers also examine the phenomenon of post-feminism. The Mommy Myth
(2004) by Susan Douglas and Meredith Michaels analyzes the role of the media in the
"mommy wars," while Jennifer Baumgardner and Amy Richards' lively ManifestA:
Young Women, Feminism, and the Future (2000) discusses women's activism in the age of
the Internet. Caitlin Flanagan, a magazine writer who calls herself an "anti-feminist,"
explores conflicts between domestic life and professional life for women. Her 2004 essay
in The Atlantic, "How Serfdom Saved the Women's Movement," an account of how
professional women depend on immigrant women of a lower class for their childcare,
triggered an enormous debate.
It is clear that American literature at the turn of the 21st century has become democratic
and heterogeneous. Regionalism has flowered, and international, or "global," writers
refract U.S. culture through foreign perspectives. Multiethnic writing continues to mine
rich veins, and as each ethnic literature matures, it creates its own traditions. Creative
nonfiction and memoir have flourished. The short story genre has gained luster, and the
"short" short story has taken root. A new generation of playwrights continues the
American tradition of exploring current social issues on stage. There is not space here in
this brief survey to do justice to the glittering diversity of American literature today.
Instead, one must consider general developments and representative figures.
Postmodernism
Don DeLillo's White Noise, structured in 40 sections like video clips, highlights the
dilemmas of representation: "Were people this dumb before television?" one character
wonders. David Foster Wallace's gargantuan (1,000 pages, 900 footnotes) Infinite Jest
mixes up wheelchair-bound terrorists, drug addicts, and futuristic descriptions of a
country like the United States. In Galatea 2.2, Richard Powers interweaves sophisticated
technology with private lives.
Influenced by Thomas Pynchon, postmodern authors fabricate complex plots that demand
imaginative leaps. Often they flatten historical depth into one dimension; William
Vollmann's novels slide between vastly different times and places as easily as a computer
mouse moves between texts.
Creative Nonfiction: Memoir and Autobiography
Many writers hunger for open, less canonical genres as vehicles for their postmodern
visions. The rise of global, multiethnic, and women's literature -- works in which writers
reflect on experiences shaped by culture, color, and gender -- has endowed autobiography
and memoir with special allure. While the boundaries of the terms are debated, a memoir
is typically shorter or more limited in scope, while an autobiography makes some attempt
at a comprehensive overview of the writer's life.
Postmodern fragmentation has rendered problematic for many writers the idea of a
finished self that can be articulated successfully in one sweep. Many turn to the memoir
in their struggles to ground an authentic self. What constitutes authenticity, and to what
extent the writer is allowed to embroider upon his or her memories of experience in
works of nonfiction, are hotly contested subjects of writers' conferences.
It took an outsider from the Pacific Northwest -- a gritty realist in the tradition of Ernest
Hemingway -- to revitalize the genre. Raymond Carver (l938-l988) had studied under the
late novelist John Gardner, absorbing Gardner's passion for accessible artistry fused with
moral vision. Carver rose above alcoholism and harsh poverty to become the most
influential story writer in the United States. In his collections Will You Please Be Quiet,
Please? (l976), What We Talk About When We Talk About Love (l981), Cathedral (l983),
and Where I'm Calling From (l988), Carver follows confused working people through
dead-end jobs, alcoholic binges, and rented rooms with an understated, minimalist style
of writing that carries tremendous impact.
Linked with Carver is novelist and story writer Ann Beattie (1947- ), whose middle-class
characters often lead aimless lives. Her stories reference political events and popular
songs, and offer distilled glimpses of life decade by decade in the changing United States.
Recent collections are Park City (l998) and Perfect Recall (2001).
Inspired by Carver and Beattie, writers crafted impressive neorealist story collections in
the mid-l980s, including Amy Hempel's Reasons to Live (1985), David Leavitt's Family
Dancing (l984), Richard Ford's Rock Springs (l987), Bobbie Ann Mason's Shiloh and
Other Stories (1982), and Lorrie Moore's Self-Help (l985). Other noteworthy figures
include the late Andre Dubus, author of Dancing After Hours (l996), and the prolific John
Updike, whose recent story collections include The Afterlife and Other Stories (l994).
Today, as is discussed later in this chapter, writers with ethnic and global roots are
informing the story genre with non-Western and tribal approaches, and storytelling has
commanded critical and popular attention. The versatile, primal tale is the basis of several
hybridized forms: novels that are constructed of interlinking short stories or vignettes,
and creative nonfictions that interweave history and personal history with fiction.
In short short stories, there is little space to develop a character. Rather, the element of
plot is central: A crisis occurs, and a sketched-in character simply has to react. Authors
deploy clever narrative or linguistic patterns; in some cases, the short short resembles a
prose poem.
Supporters claim that short shorts' "reduced geographies" mirror postmodern conditions
in which borders seem closer together. They find elegant simplicity in these brief fictions.
Detractors see short shorts as a symptom of cultural decay, a general loss of reading
ability, and a limited attention span. In any event, short shorts have found a certain niche:
They are easy to forward in an e-mail, and they lend themselves to electronic distribution.
They make manageable in-class readings and models for writing assignments.
Drama
Contemporary drama mingles realism with fantasy in postmodern works that fuse the
personal and the political. The exuberant Tony Kushner (l956- ) has won acclaim for his
prize-winning Angels in America plays, which vividly render the AIDS epidemic and the
psychic cost of closeted homosexuality in the 1980s and 1990s. Part One: Millennium
Approaches (1991) and its companion piece, Part Two: Perestroika (1992), together last
seven hours. Combining comedy, melodrama, political commentary, and special effects,
they interweave various plots and marginalized characters.
Women dramatists have attained particular success in recent years. Prominent among
them is Beth Henley (1952- ), from Mississippi, known for her portraits of southern
women. Henley gained national recognition for her Crimes of the Heart (l978), which
was made into a film in l986, a warm play about three eccentric sisters whose affection
helps them survive disappointment and despair. Later plays, including The Miss
Firecracker Contest (1980), The Wake of Jamey Foster (l982), The Debutante Ball
(l985), and The Lucky Spot (l986), explore southern forms of socializing -- beauty
contests, funerals, coming-out parties, and dance halls.
Wendy Wasserstein (1950-2006), from New York, wrote early comedies including When
Dinah Shore Ruled the Earth (l975), a parody of beauty contests. She is best known for
The Heidi Chronicles (l988), about a successful woman professor who confesses to deep
unhappiness and adopts a baby. Wasserstein continued exploring women's aspirations in
The Sisters Rosensweig (l991), An American Daughter (1997), and Old Money (2000).
Regionalism
A pervasive regionalist sensibility has gained strength in American literature in the past
two decades. Decentralization expresses the postmodern U.S. condition, a trend most
evident in fiction writing; no longer does any one viewpoint or code successfully express
the nation. No one city defines artistic movements, as New York City once did. Vital arts
communities have arisen in many cities, and electronic technology has de-centered
literary life.
As economic shifts and social change redefine America, a yearning for tradition has set
in. The most sustaining and distinctively American myths partake of the land, and writers
are turning to the Civil War South, the Wild West of the rancher, the rooted life of the
midwestern farmer, the southwestern tribal homeland, and other localized realms where
the real and the mythic mingle. Of course, more than one region has inspired many
writers; they are included here in regions formative to their vision or characteristic of
their mature work.
The Northeast
The scenic Northeast, region of lengthy winters, dense deciduous forests, and low rugged
mountain chains, was the first English-speaking colonial area, and it retains the feel of
England. Boston, Massachusetts, is the cultural powerhouse, boasting research
institutions and scores of universities. Many New England writers depict characters that
continue the Puritan legacy, embodying the middle-class Protestant work ethic and
progressive commitment to social reform. In the rural areas, small, independent farmers
struggle to survive in the world of global marketing.
Novelist Joyce Carol Oates sets many of her gothic works in upstate New York. Richard
Russo (1949- ), in his appealing Empire Falls (2001), evokes life in a dying mill town in
Maine, the state where Stephen King (1947- ) locates his popular horror novels.
The bittersweet fictions of Massachusetts-based Sue Miller (1943- ), such as The Good
Mother (1986), examine counterculture lifestyles in Cambridge, a city known for cultural
and social diversity, intellectual vitality, and technological innovation. Another writer
from Massachusetts, Anita Diamant (1951- ), earned popular acclaim with The Red Tent
(1997), a feminist historical novel based on the biblical story of Dinah.
Russell Banks (1940- ), from poor, rural New Hampshire, has turned from experimental
writing to more realistic works, such as Affliction (1989), his novel about working-class
New Hampshire characters. For Banks, acknowledging one's roots is a fundamental part
of one's identity. In Affliction, the narrator scorns people who have "gone to Florida,
Arizona, and California, bought a trailer or a condo, turned their skin to leather playing
shuffleboard all day and waited to die." Banks's recent works include Cloudsplitter
(1998), a historical novel about the 19th-century abolitionist John Brown.
The striking stylist Annie Proulx (1935- ) crafts stories of struggling northern New
Englanders in Heart Songs (1988). Her best novel, The Shipping News (1993), is set even
further north, in Newfoundland, Canada. Proulx has also spent years in the West, and one
of her short stories inspired the 2006 movie "Brokeback Mountain."
William Kennedy (1928- ) has written a dense and entwined cycle of novels set in
Albany, in northern New York State, including his acclaimed Ironweed. The title of his
insider's history of Albany gives some idea of his gritty, colloquial style and teeming cast
of often unsavory characters: O Albany! Improbable City of Political Wizards, Fearless
Ethnics, Spectacular Aristocrats, Splendid Nobodies, and Underrated Scoundrels (1983).
Kennedy has been hailed as an elder statesman of a small Irish-American literary
movement that includes the late Mary McCarthy, Mary Gordon, Alice McDermott, and
Frank McCourt.
Three writers who studied at Brown University in Rhode Island around the same time and
took classes with British writer Angela Carter are often mentioned as the nucleus of a
"next generation." Donald Antrim (1959- ) satirizes academic life in The Hundred
Brothers (1997), set in an enormous library from which one can see homeless people.
Rick Moody (1961- ) is best known for his novel The Ice Storm (1994). The novels of
Jeffrey Eugenides (1960- ) include Middlesex (2002), which narrates the experience of a
hermaphrodite. Impressive stylists with off-center visions bordering on the absurd,
Antrim, Moody, and Eugenides carry further the opposite traditions of John Updike and
Thomas Pynchon. Often linked with these three younger novelists is the exuberant
postmodernist David Foster Wallace (1962- ). Wallace, who was born in Ithaca, New
York, gained acclaim for his complex serio-comic novel The Broom of the System (1987)
and the pop culture-saturated stories in Girl With Curious Hair (1989).
The Mid-Atlantic
The fertile Mid-Atlantic states, dominated by New York City with its great harbor, remain
a gateway for waves of immigrants. Today the region's varied economy encompasses
finance, commerce, and shipping, as well as advertising and fashion. New York City is
the home of the publishing industry, as well as prestigious art galleries and museums.
Don DeLillo (1936- ), from New York City, began as an advertising writer, and his novels
explore consumerism among their many themes. Americana (1971) concludes: "To
consume in America is not to buy, it is to dream." DeLillo's protagonists seek identities
based on images. White Noise (1985) concerns Jack Gladney and his family, whose
experience is mediated by various texts, especially advertisements. One passage suggests
DeLillo's style: "...the emptiness, the sense of cosmic darkness. Mastercard, Visa,
American Express." Fragments of advertisements that drift unattached through the book
emerge from Gladney's media-parroting subconscious, generating the subliminal white
noise of the title. DeLillo's later novels include politics and historical figures: Libra
(1988) envisions the assassination of President John F. Kennedy as an explosion of
frustrated consumerism; Underworld (1997) spins a web of interconnections between a
baseball game and a nuclear bomb in Kazakhstan.
New York City hosts many groups of writers with shared interests. Jewish women include
noted essayist Cynthia Ozick (1928- ), who hails from the Bronx, the setting of her novel
The Puttermesser Papers (l997). Her haunting novel The Shawl (1989) gives a young
mother's viewpoint on the Holocaust. The droll, conversational Collected Stories (l994)
of Grace Paley (1922- ) capture the syncopated rhythms of the city.
Younger writers associated with life in the fast lane are Jay McInerney (1955- ), whose
Story of My Life (1988) is set in the drug-driven youth culture of the boom-time 1980s,
and satirist Tama Janowitz (1957- ). Their portraits of loneliness and addiction in the
anonymous hard-driving city recall the works of John Cheever.
Nearby suburbs claim the imaginations of still other writers. Mary Gordon (1949- ) sets
many of her female-centered works in her birthplace, Long Island, as does Alice
McDermott (l953- ), whose novel Charming Billy (1998) dissects the failed promise of an
alcoholic.
Mid-Atlantic domestic realists include Richard Bausch (1945- ), from Baltimore, author
of In the Night Season (1998) and the stories in Someone to Watch Over Me (l999).
Bausch writes of fragmented families, as does Anne Tyler (1941- ), also from Baltimore,
whose eccentric characters negotiate disorganized, isolated lives. A master of detail and
understated wit, Tyler writes in spare, quiet language. Her best-known novels include
Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant (1982) and The Accidental Tourist (1985), which was
made into a film in l988. The Amateur Marriage (2004) sets a divorce against a panorama
of American life over 60 years.
African Americans have made distinctive contributions. Feminist essayist and poet Audre
Lorde's autobiographical Zami: A New Spelling of My Name (l982) is an earthy account
of a black woman's experience in the United States. Bebe Moore Campbell (l950- ), from
Philadelphia, writes feisty domestic novels including Your Blues Ain't Like Mine (l992).
Gloria Naylor (l950- ), from New York City, explores different women's lives in The
Women of Brewster Place (1982), the novel that made her name.
David Bradley (1950- ), also from Pennsylvania, set his historical novel The Chaneysville
Incident (l981) on the "underground railroad," a network of citizens who provided
opportunity and assistance for southern black slaves to find freedom in the North at the
time of the U.S. Civil War.
Trey Ellis (1962 - ) has written the novels Platitudes (1988), Home Repairs (1993), and
Right Here, Right Now (1999), screenplays including "The Tuskegee Airmen" (1995), and
a l989 essay "The New Black Aesthetic" discerning a new multiethnic sensibility among
the younger generation.
Writers from Washington, D.C., four hours' drive south from New York City, include Ann
Beattie (1947- ), whose short stories were mentioned earlier. Her slice-of-life novels
include Picturing Will (1989), Another You (l995), and My Life, Starring Dara Falcon
(1997).
America's capital city is home to many political novelists. Ward Just (1935- ) sets his
novels in Washington's swirling military, political, and intellectual circles. Christopher
Buckley (1952- ) spikes his humorous political satire with local details; his Little Green
Men (1999) is a spoof about official responses to aliens from outer space. Michael
Chabon (1963- ), who grew up in the Washington suburbs but later moved to California,
depicts youths on the dazzling brink of adulthood in The Mysteries of Pittsburgh (1988);
his novel inspired by a comic book, The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay
(2000), mixes glamour and craft in the manner of F. Scott Fitzgerald.
The South
The South comprises disparate regions in the southeastern United States, from the cool
Appalachian Mountain chain and the broad Mississippi River valley to the steamy
cypress bayous of the Gulf Coast. Cotton and the plantation culture of slavery made the
South the richest section in the country before the U.S. Civil War (1860-1865). But after
the war, the region sank into poverty and isolation that lasted a century. Today, the South
is part of what is called the Sun Belt, the fastest growing part of the United States.
The most traditional of the regions, the South is proud of its distinctive heritage.
Enduring themes include family, land, history, religion, and race. Much southern writing
has a depth and humanity arising from the devastating losses of the Civil War and soul
searching over the region's legacy of slavery.
The South, with its rich oral tradition, has nourished many women storytellers. In the
upper South, Bobbie Ann Mason (1940- ) from Kentucky, writes of the changes wrought
by mass culture. In her most famous story, "Shiloh" (1982), a couple must change their
relationship or separate as housing subdivisions spread "across western Kentucky like an
oil slick." Mason's acclaimed short novel In Country (1985) depicts the effects of the
Vietnam War by focusing on an innocent young girl whose father died in the conflict.
Lee Smith (1944- ) brings the people of the Appalachian Mountains into poignant focus,
drawing on the well of American folk music in her novel The Devil's Dream (l992). Jayne
Anne Phillips (1952- ) writes stories of misfits -- Black Tickets (1979) -- and a novel,
Machine Dreams (1984), set in the hardscrabble mountains of West Virginia.
The novels of Jill McCorkle (1958- ) capture her North Carolina background. Her
mystery-enshrouded love story Carolina Moon (1996) explores a years-old suicide in a
coastal village where relentless waves erode the foundations from derelict beach houses.
The lush native South Carolina of Dorothy Allison (1949- ) features in her tough
autobiographical novel Bastard Out of Carolina (1992), seen through the eyes of a dirt-
poor, illegitimate 12-year-old tomboy nicknamed Bone. Mississippian Ellen Gilchrist
(1935- ) sets most of her colloquial Collected Stories (2000) in small hamlets along the
Mississippi River and in New Orleans, Louisiana.
Southern novelists mining male experience include the acclaimed Cormac McCarthy
(l933- ), whose early novels such as Suttree (1979) are archetypically southern tales of
dark emotional depths, ignorance, and poverty, set against the green hills and valleys of
eastern Tennessee. In l974, McCarthy moved to El Paso, Texas, and began to plumb
western landscapes and traditions. Blood Meridian: Or the Evening of Redness in the
West (1985) is an unsparing vision of The Kid, a 14-year-old from Tennessee who
becomes a cold-hearted killer in Mexico in the 1840s. McCarthy's best-selling epic
Border Trilogy -- All the Pretty Horses (1992), The Crossing (1994), and Cities of the
Plain (1998) -- invests the desert between Texas and Mexico with mythic grandeur.
Other noted authors are North Carolinian Charles Frazier (1950- ), author of the Civil
War novel Cold Mountain (1997); Georgia-born Pat Conroy (1945- ), author of The
Great Santini (1976) and Beach Music (1995); and Mississippi novelist Barry Hannah
(1942- ), known for his violent plots and risk-taking style.
A very different Mississippi-born writer is Richard Ford (1944- ), who began writing in a
Faulknerian vein but is best known for his subtle novel set in New Jersey, The
Sportswriter (1986), and its sequel, Independence Day (l995). The latter is about Frank
Bascombe, a dreamy, evasive drifter who loses all the things that give his life meaning --
a son, his dream of writing fiction, his marriage, lovers and friends, and his job.
Bascombe is sensitive and intelligent -- his choices, he says, are made "to deflect the pain
of terrible regret" -- and his emptiness, along with the anonymous malls and bald new
housing developments that he endlessly cruises through, mutely testify to Ford's vision of
a national malaise.
Many African-American writers hail from the South, including Ernest Gaines from
Louisiana, Alice Walker from Georgia, and Florida-born Zora Neale Hurston, whose
1937 novel, Their Eyes Were Watching God, is considered to be the first feminist novel
by an African American. Hurston, who died in the 1960s, underwent a critical revival in
the 1990s. Ishmael Reed, born in Tennessee, set Mumbo Jumbo (1972) in New Orleans.
Margaret Walker (1915-1998), from Alabama, authored the novel Jubilee (1966) and
essays On Being Female, Black, and Free (1997).
Story writer James Alan McPherson (l943- ), from Georgia, depicts working-class people
in Elbow Room (1977); A Region Not Home: Reflections From Exile (2000), whose title
reflects his move to Iowa, is a memoir. Chicago-born ZZ Packer (1973- ), McPherson's
student at the Iowa Writers' Workshop, was raised in the South, studied in the mid-
Atlantic, and now lives in California. Her first work, a volume of stories titled Drinking
Coffee Elsewhere (2003), has made her a rising star. Prolific feminist writer bell hooks
(born Gloria Watkins in Kentucky in 1952) gained fame for cultural critiques including
Black Looks: Race and Representation (l992) and autobiographies beginning with Bone
Black: Memories of a Girlhood (1996).
Experimental poet and scholar of slave narratives (Freeing the Soul, l999), Harryette
Mullen (1953- ) writes multivocal poetry collections such as Muse & Drudge (1995).
Novelist and story writer Percival Everett (1956- ), who was originally from Georgia,
writes subtle, open-ended fiction; recent volumes are Frenzy (l997) and Glyph (1999).
The Midwest
The vast plains of America's midsection -- much of it between the Rocky Mountains and
the Mississippi River -- scorch in summer and freeze in scouring winter storms. The area
was opened up with the completion of the Erie Canal in 1825, attracting Northern
European settlers eager for land. Early 20th-century writers with roots in the Midwest
include Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Sinclair Lewis, and Theodore Dreiser.
Midwestern fiction is grounded in realism. The domestic novel has flourished in recent
years, portraying webs of relationships between kin, the local community, and the
environment. Agribusiness and development threaten family farms in some parts of the
region, and some novels sound the death knell of farming as a way of life.
Domestic novelists include Jane Smiley (1949- ), whose A Thousand Acres (1991) is a
contemporary, feminist version of the King Lear story. The lost kingdom is a large family
farm held for four generations, and the forces that undermine it are a concatenation of the
personal and the political. Kent Haruf (1943- ) creates stronger characters in his sweeping
novel of the prairie, Plainsong (1999).
Michael Cunningham (1952- ), from Ohio, began as a domestic novelist in A Home at the
End of the World (1990). The Hours (1998), made into a movie, brilliantly interweaves
Virginia Woolf's Mrs. Dalloway with two women's lives in different eras. Stuart Dybek
(1942- ) has written sparkling story collections including I Sailed With Magellan (2003),
about his childhood on the South Side of Chicago.
Younger urban novelists include Jonathan Franzen (1959- ), who was born in Missouri
and raised in Illinois. Franzen's best-selling panoramic novel The Corrections (2001) --
titled for a downturn in the stock market -- evokes midwestern family life over several
generations. The novel chronicles the physical and mental deterioration of a patriarch
suffering from Parkinson's disease; as in Smiley's A Thousand Acres, the entire family is
affected. Franzen pits individuals against large conspiracies in The Twenty-Seventh City
(1988) and Strong Motion (1992). Some critics link Franzen with Don DeLillo, Thomas
Pynchon, and David Foster Wallace as a writer of conspiracy novels.
Robert Olen Butler (1945- ), born in Illinois and a veteran of the Vietnam War, writes
about Vietnamese refugees in Louisiana in their own voices in A Good Scent From a
Strange Mountain (1992). His stories in Tabloid Dreams (1996) -- inspired by zany news
headlines -- were enlarged into the humorous novel Mr. Spaceman (2000), in which a
space alien learns English from watching television and abducts a bus full of tourists in
order to interview them on his spaceship.
Native-American authors from the region include part-Chippewa Louise Erdrich, who
has set a series of novels in her native North Dakota. Gerald Vizenor (1935- ) gives a
comic, postmodern portrait of contemporary Native-American life in Darkness at Saint
Louis Bearheart (1978) and Griever: An American Monkey King in China (1987).
Vizenor's Chancers (2000) deals with skeletons buried outside of their homelands.
Popular Syrian-American novelist Mona Simpson (1957- ), who was born in Wisconsin,
is the author of Anywhere But Here (1986), a look at mother-daughter relationships.
One writer has cast a long shadow over western writing, much as William Faulkner did in
the South. Wallace Stegner (1909-1993) records the passing of the western wilderness. In
his masterpiece Angle of Repose (1971), a historian imagines his educated grandparents'
move to the "wild" West. His last book surveys his life in the West as a writer: Where the
Bluebird Sings to the Lemonade Springs (1992). For a quarter century, Stegner directed
Stanford University's writing program; his list of students reads like a "who's who" of
western writing: Raymond Carver, Ken Kesey, Thomas McGuane, Larry McMurtry, N.
Scott Momaday, Tillie Olsen, and Robert Stone. Stegner also influenced the
contemporary Montana school of writers associated with McGuane, Jim Harrison, and
some works of Richard Ford, as well as Texas writers like McMurtry.
Novelist Thomas McGuane (1939- ) typically depicts one man going alone into a wild
area, where he engages in an escalating conflict. His works include The Sporting Club
(1968) and The Bushwacked Piano (1971), in which the hero travels from Michigan to
Montana on a demented mission of courtship. McGuane's enthusiasm for hunting and
fishing has led critics to compare him with Ernest Hemingway. Michigan-born Jim
Harrison (1937- ), like McGuane, spent many years living on a ranch. In his first novel,
Wolf: A False Memoir (1971), a man seeks to view a wolf in the wild in hopes of
changing his life. His later, more pessimistic fiction includes Legends of the Fall (1979)
and The Road Home (1998).
In Richard Ford's Montana novel Wildlife (1990), the desolate landscape counterpoints a
family's breakup. Story writer, eco-critic, and nature essayist Rick Bass (1958- ), born in
Texas and educated as a petroleum geologist, writes of elemental confrontations between
outdoorsmen and nature in his story collection In the Loyal Mountains (1995) and the
novel Where the Sea Used To Be (1998).
Texan Larry McMurtry (1936- ) draws on his ranch childhood in Horseman, Pass By
(1961), made into the movie Hud in 1963, an unsentimental portrait of the rancher's
world. Leaving Cheyenne (1963) and its successor, The Last Picture Show (1966), which
was also made into a film, evoke the fading of a way of life in Texas small towns.
McMurtry's best-known work is Lonesome Dove (1985), an archetypal western epic
novel about a cattle drive in the 1870s that became a successful television miniseries. His
recent works include Comanche Moon (1997).
The West of multiethnic writers is less heroic and often more forward looking. One of the
best-known Chicana writers is Sandra Cisneros (1954- ). Born in Chicago, Cisneros has
lived in Mexico and Texas; she focuses on the large cultural border between Mexico and
the United States as a creative, contradictory zone in which Mexican-American women
must reinvent themselves. Her best-selling The House on Mango Street (1984), a series of
interlocking vignettes told from a young girl's viewpoint, blazed the trail for other Latina
writers and introduced readers to the vital Chicago barrio. Cisneros extended her
vignettes of Chicana women's lives in Woman Hollering Creek (1991). Pat Mora (1942- )
offers a Chicana view in Nepantla: Essays From the Land in the Middle (1993), which
addresses issues of cultural conservation
Native Americans from the region include the late James Welch, whose The Heartsong of
Charging Elk (2000) imagines a young Sioux who survives the Battle of Little Bighorn
and makes a life in France. Linda Hogan (l947- ), from Colorado and of Chickasaw
heritage, reflects on Native-American women and nature in novels including Mean Spirit
(1990), about the oil rush on Indian lands in the 1920s, and Power (1998), in which an
Indian woman discovers her own inner natural resources.
The Southwest
For centuries, the desert Southwest developed under Spanish rule, and much of the
population continues to speak Spanish, while some Native-American tribes reside on
ancestral lands. Rainfall is unreliable, and agriculture has always been precarious in the
region. Today, massive irrigation projects have boosted agricultural production, and air
conditioning attracts more and more people to sprawling cities like Salt Lake City in Utah
and Phoenix in Arizona.
In a region where the desert ecology is so fragile, it is not surprising that there are many
environmentally oriented writers. The activist Edward Abbey (1927-1989) celebrated the
desert wilderness of Utah in Desert Solitaire: A Season in the Wilderness (1968).
Trained as a biologist, Barbara Kingsolver (1955- ) offers a woman's viewpoint on the
Southwest in her popular trilogy set in Arizona: The Bean Trees (1988), featuring Taylor
Greer, a tomboyish young woman who takes in a Cherokee child; Animal Dreams (1990);
and Pigs in Heaven (1993). The Poisonwood Bible (1998) concerns a missionary family
in Africa. Kingsolver addresses political themes unapologetically, admitting, "I want to
change the world."
The Southwest is home to the greatest number of Native-American writers, whose works
reveal rich mythical storytelling, a spiritual treatment of nature, and deep respect for the
spoken word. The most important fictional theme is healing, understood as restoration of
harmony. Other topics include poverty, unemployment, alcoholism, and white crimes
against Indians.
Numerous Mexican-American writers reside in the Southwest, as they have for centuries.
Distinctive concerns include the Spanish language, the Catholic tradition, folkloric forms,
and, in recent years, race and gender inequality, generational conflict, and political
activism. The culture is strongly patriarchal, but new female Chicana voices have arisen.
The poetic nonfiction book Borderlands/La Frontera: The New Mestiza (1987), by Gloria
Anzaldúa (1942- ), passionately imagines a hybrid feminine consciousness of the
borderlands made up of strands from Mexican, Native-American, and Anglo cultures.
Also noteworthy is New Mexican writer Denise Chavez (1948- ), author of the story
collection The Last of the Menu Girls (l986). Her Face of an Angel (1994), about a
waitress who has been working on a manual for waitresses for 30 years, has been called
an authentically Latino novel in English.
California Literature
California could be a country all its own with its enormous multiethnic population and
huge economy. The state is known for spawning social experiments, youth movements
(the Beats, hippies, techies), and new technologies (the "dot-coms" of Silicon Valley) that
can have unexpected consequences.
Northern California, centered on San Francisco, enjoys a liberal, even utopian literary
tradition seen in Jack London and John Steinbeck. It is home to hundreds of writers,
including Native American Gerald Vizenor, Chicana Lorna Dee Cervantes, African
Americans Alice Walker and Ishmael Reed, and internationally minded writers like
Norman Rush (1933- ), whose novel Mating (1991) draws on his years in Africa.
Northern California houses a rich tradition of Asian-American writing, whose
characteristic themes include family and gender roles, the conflict between generations,
and the search for identity. Maxine Hong Kingston helped kindle the renaissance of
Asian-American writing, at the same time popularizing the fictionalized memoir genre.
Another Asian-American writer from California is novelist Amy Tan, whose best-selling
The Joy Luck Club became a hit film in 1993. Its interlinked story-like chapters delineate
the different fates of four mother-and-daughter pairs. Tan's novels spanning historical
China and today's United States include The Hundred Secret Senses (1995), about half-
sisters, and The Bonesetter's Daughter (2001), about a daughter's care for her mother. The
refreshing, witty Gish Jen (1955- ), whose parents emigrated from Shanghai, authored the
lively novels Typical American (1991) and Mona in the Promised Land (1996).
Japanese-American writers include Karen Tei Yamashita (1951- ), born and raised in
California, whose nine-year stay in Brazil inspired Through the Arc of the Rain Forest
(1990) and Brazil-Maru (1992). Her Tropic of Orange (1997) evokes polyglot Los
Angeles. Japanese-American fiction writers build on the early work of Toshio Mori,
Hisaye Yamamoto, and Janice Mirikitani.
Southern California literature has a very different tradition associated with the newer city
of Los Angeles, built by boosters and land developers despite the obvious problem of
lack of water resources. Los Angeles was from the start a commercial enterprise; it is not
surprising that Hollywood and Disneyland are some of its best-known legacies to the
world. As if to counterbalance its shiny facade, a dystopian strain of Southern California
writing has flourished, inaugurated by Nathanael West's Hollywood novel, The Day of
the Locust (1939).
Loneliness and alienation stalk the creations of Gina Berriault (1926-1999), whose
characters eke out stunted lives lived in rented rooms in Women in Their Beds (1996).
Joan Didion (1934- ) evokes the free-floating anxiety of California in her brilliant essays
Slouching Towards Bethlehem (1968). In 2003, Didion penned Where I Was From, a
narrative account of how her family moved west with the frontier and settled in
California. Another Angelino, Dennis Cooper (1953- ), writes cool novels about an
underworld of numb, alienated men.
Thomas Pynchon best captured the strange combination of ease and unease that is Los
Angeles in his novel about a vast conspiracy of outcasts, The Crying of Lot 49. Pynchon
inspired the prolific postmodernist William Vollmann (l959- ), who has gained popularity
with youthful, counterculture readers for his long, surrealistic meta-narratives such as the
multivolume "Seven Dreams: A Book of North American Landscapes," inaugurated with
The Ice-Shirt (1990), about Vikings, and fantasies like You Bright and Risen Angels: A
Cartoon (1987), about a war between virtual humans and insects.
The Latin-American diaspora has influenced Helena Maria Viramontes (1954- ), born and
raised in the barrio of East Los Angeles. Her works portray that city as a magnet for a
vast and growing number of Spanish-speaking immigrants, particularly Mexicans and
Central Americans fleeing poverty and warfare. In powerful stories such as "The Cariboo
Café" (1984), she interweaves Anglos, refugees from death squads, and illegal
immigrants who come to the United States in search of work.
The Northwest
In recent decades, the mountainous, densely forested Northwest, centered around Seattle
in the state of Washington, has emerged as a cultural center known for liberal views and a
passionate appreciation of nature. Its most influential recent writer was Raymond Carver.
David Guterson (1956- ), born in Seattle, gained a wide readership when his novel Snow
Falling on Cedars (1994) was made into a movie. Set in Washington's remote, misty San
Juan Islands after World War II, it concerns a Japanese American accused of a murder. In
Guterson's moving novel East of the Mountains (1999), a heart surgeon dying of cancer
goes back to the land of his youth to commit suicide, but discovers reasons to live. The
penetrating novel Housekeeping (1980) by Marilynne Robinson (1944- ) sees this wild,
difficult territory through female eyes. In her luminous, long-awaited second novel,
Gilead (2004), an upright elderly preacher facing death writes a family history for his
young son that looks back as far as the Civil War.
Although she has lived in many regions, Annie Dillard (1945- ) has made the Northwest
her own in her crystalline works such as the brilliant poetic essay entitled "Holy the
Firm" (1994), prompted by the burning of a neighbor child. Her description of the Pacific
Northwest evokes both a real and spiritual landscape: "I came here to study hard things --
rock mountain and salt sea -- and to temper my spirit on their edges." Akin to Henry
David Thoreau and Ralph Waldo Emerson, Dillard seeks enlightenment in nature.
Dillard's striking essay collection is Pilgrim at Tinker Creek (1974). Her one novel, The
Living (1992), celebrates early pioneer families beset by disease, drowning, poisonous
fumes, gigantic falling trees, and burning wood houses as they imperceptibly assimilate
with indigenous tribes, Chinese immigrants, and newcomers from the East.
WWriters from the English-speaking Caribbean islands have been shaped by the British
literary curriculum and colonial rule, but in recent years their focus has shifted from
London to New York and Toronto. Themes include the beauty of the islands, the innate
wisdom of their people, and aspects of immigration and exile -- the breakup of family,
culture shock, changed gender roles, and assimilation.
Two forerunners merit mention. Paule Marshall (1929- ), born in Brooklyn, is not
technically a global writer, but she vividly recalls her experiences as the child of
Barbadian immigrants in Brooklyn in Brown Girl, Brownstones (1959). Dominican
novelist Jean Rhys (1894-1979) penned Wide Sargasso Sea (1966), a haunting and poetic
refiguring of Charlotte Brontë's Jane Eyre. Rhys lived most of her life in Europe, but her
book was championed by American feminists for whom the "madwoman in the attic" had
become an iconic figure of repressed female selfhood.
Rhys's work opened the way for the angrier voice of Jamaica Kincaid (1949- ), from
Antigua, whose unsparing autobiographical works include the novels Annie John (1985),
Lucy (1990), and The Autobiography of My Mother (1996). Born in Haiti but educated in
the United States, Edwidge Danticat (l969- ) came to attention with her stories Krik?
Krak! (1995), entitled for a phrase used by storytellers from the Haitian oral tradition.
Danticat evokes her nation's tragic past in her historical novel The Farming of the Bones
(1998).
Many Latin American writers diverge from the views common among Chicano writers
with roots in Mexico, who have tended to be romantic, nativist, and left wing in their
politics. In contrast, Cuban-American writing tends to be cosmopolitan, comic, and
politically conservative. Gustavo Pérez Firmat's memoir, Next Year in Cuba: A Chronicle
of Coming of Age in America (1995), celebrates baseball as much as Havana. The title is
ironic: "Next year in Cuba" is a phrase of Cuban exiles clinging to their vision of a
triumphant return. The Pérez Family (1990), by Christine Bell (1951- ), warmly portrays
confused Cuban families -- at least half of them named Pérez -- in exile in Miami. Recent
works of novelist Oscar Hijuelos (1951- ) include The Fourteen Sisters of Emilio Montez
O'Brien (1993), about Cuban Irish Americans, and Mr. Ives' Christmas (1995), the story
of a man whose son has died.
Writers with Puerto Rican roots include Nicholasa Mohr (1938- ), whose Rituals of
Survival: A Woman's Portfolio (1985) presents the lives of six Puerto Rican women, and
Rosario Ferré (1938- ), author of The Youngest Doll (1991). Among the younger writers
is Judith Ortiz Cofer (1952- ), author of Silent Dancing: A Partial Remembrance of a
Puerto Rican Childhood (1990) and The Latin Deli (1993), which combines poetry with
stories. Poet and essayist Aurora Levins Morales (1954- ) writes of Puerto Rico from a
cosmopolitan Jewish viewpoint.
The best-known writer with roots in the Dominican Republic is Julia Alvarez (1950- ). In
How the García Girls Lost Their Accents (1991), upper-class Dominican women struggle
to adapt to New York City. !Yo! (1997) returns to the García sisters, exploring identity
through the stories of 16 characters. Junot Diaz (1948- ) offers a much harsher vision in
the story collection Drown (1996), about young men in the slums of New Jersey and the
Dominican Republic.
Major Latin American writers who first became prominent in the United States in the
1960s -- Argentina's Jorge Luis Borges, Colombia's Gabriel García Márquez, Chile's
Pablo Neruda, and Brazil's Jorge Amado -- introduced U.S. authors to magical realism,
surrealism, a hemispheric sensibility, and an appreciation of indigenous cultures. Since
that first wave of popularity, women and writers of color have found audiences, among
them Chilean-born novelist Isabel Allende (1942- ). The niece of Chilean president
Salvador Allende, who was assassinated in 1973, Isabel Allende memorialized her
country's bloody history in La casa de los espíritus (l982), translated as The House of the
Spirits (1985). Later novels (written and published first in Spanish) include Eva Luna
(1987) and Daughter of Fortune (1999), set in the California gold rush of 1849. Allende's
evocative style and woman-centered vision have gained her a wide readership in the
United States.
Many writers from the Indian subcontinent have made their home in the United States in
recent years. Bharati Mukherjee (1940- ) has written an acclaimed story collection, The
Middleman and Other Stories (1988); her novel Jasmine (1989) tells the story of an
illegal immigrant woman. Mukherjee was raised in Calcutta; her novel The Holder of the
World (1993) imagines passionate adventures in 17th-century India for characters in
Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter. Leave It to Me (1997) follows the nomadic
struggles of a girl abandoned in India who seeks her roots. Mukherjee's haunting story
"The Management of Grief" (1988), about the aftermath of a terrorist bombing of a plane,
has taken on new resonance since September 11, 2001.
Indian-born Meena Alexander (1951- ), of Syrian heritage, was raised in North Africa;
she reflects on her experience in her memoir Fault Lines (1993). Poet and story writer
Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni (1956- ), born in India, has written the sensuous, women-
centered novels The Mistress of Spices (1997) and Sister of My Heart (1999), as well as
story collections including The Unknown Errors of Our Lives (2001).
Jhumpa Lahiri (1967- ) focuses on the younger generation's conflicts and assimilation in
Interpreter of Maladies: Stories of Bengal, Boston, and Beyond (1999) and her novel The
Namesake (2003). Lahiri draws on her experience: Her Bengali parents were raised in
India, and she was born in London but raised in the United States.
Southeast Asian-American authors, especially those from Korea and the Philippines, have
found strong voices in the last decade. Among recent Korean-American writers, pre-
eminent is Chang-rae Lee (1965- ). Born in Seoul, Korea, Lee's remarkable novel Native
Speaker (1995) interweaves public ideals, betrayal, and private despair. His moving
second novel, A Gesture Life (1999), explores the long shadow of a wartime atrocity --
the Japanese use of Korean "comfort women."
Theresa Hak Kyung Cha (1951-1982), born in Korea, blends photographs, videos, and
historical documents in her experimental Dictee (l982) to memorialize the suffering of
Koreans under Japanese occupying forces. Malaysian-American poet Shirley Geok-lin
Lim, of ethnic Chinese descent, has written a challenging memoir, Among the White
Moon Faces (l996). Her autobiographical novel is Joss and Gold (2001), while her
stories are collected in Two Dreams (l997).
The newest voices come from the Arab-American community. Lebanese-born Joseph
Geha (1944- ) has set his stories in Through and Through (1990) in Toledo, Ohio;
Jordanian-American Diana Abu-Jaber (1959- ), born in New York, has written the novel
Arabian Jazz (1993).
Poet and playwright Elmaz Abinader (1954- ), is author of a memoir, Children of the
Roojme: A Family's Journey From Lebanon (1991). In "Just Off Main Street" (2002),
Abinader has written of her bicultural childhood in 1960s small-town Pennsylvania:
"...my family scenes filled me with joy and belonging, but I knew none of it could be
shared on the other side of that door."
American literature has traversed an extended, winding path from pre-colonial days to
contemporary times. Society, history, technology all have had telling impact on it.
Ultimately, though, there is a constant -- humanity, with all its radiance and its
malevolence, its tradition and its promise.
Glossary
Abolitionism:
An active movement to end slavery in the U.S. North before the Civil War in the 1860s.
Allusion:
An implied or indirect reference in a literary text to another text.
Beatnik:
The artistic and literary rebellion against established society of the 1950s and early 1960s
associated with Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg, and others. "Beat" suggests holiness
("beatification") and suffering ("beaten down").
Boston Brahmins:
Influential and respected 19th-century New England writers who maintained the genteel
tradition of upper-class values.
Calvinism:
A strict theological doctrine of the French Protestant church reformer John Calvin (1509-
1564) and the basis of Puritan society. Calvin held that all humans were born sinful and
only God's grace (not the church) could save a person from hell.
Canon:
An accepted or sanctioned body of literary works considered to be permanently
established and of high quality.
Captivity narrative:
An account of capture by Native-American tribes, such as those created by writers Mary
Rowlandson and John Williams in colonial times.
Character writing:
A popular 17th- and 18th-century literary sketch of a character who represents a group or
type.
Chekhovian:
Similar in style to the works of the Russian author Anton Pavlovitch Chekhov. Chekhov
(1860-1904), one of the major short story writers and dramatists of modern times, is
known for both his humorous one-act plays and his full-length tragedies.
Civil War:
The war (1861-1865) between the northern U.S. states, which remained in the Union, and
the southern states, which seceded and formed the Confederacy. The victory of the North
ended slavery and preserved the Union.
Conceit:
An extended metaphor. The term is used to characterize aspects of Renaissance
metaphysical poetry in England and colonial poetry, such as that of Anne Bradstreet, in
colonial America.
Cowboy poetry:
Verse based on oral tradition, and often rhymed or metered, that celebrates the traditions
of the western U.S. cattle culture. Its subjects include nature, history, folklore, family,
friends, and work. Cowboy poetry has its antecedents in the ballad style of England and
the Appalachian South.
Domestic novel:
A novel about home life and family that often emphasizes the personalities and attributes
of its characters over the plot. Many domestic novels of the 19th and early 20th centuries
employed a certain amount of sentimentality -- usually a blend of pathos and humor.
Enlightenment:
An 18th-century movement that focused on the ideals of good sense, benevolence, and a
belief in liberty, justice, and equality as the natural rights of man.
Existentialism:
A philosophical movement embracing the view that the suffering individual must create
meaning in an unknowable, chaotic, and seemingly empty universe.
Expressionism:
A post-World War I artistic movement, of German origin, that distorted appearances to
communicate inner emotional states.
Fabulist:
A creator or writer of fables (short narratives with a moral, typically featuring animals as
characters) or of supernatural stories incorporating elements of myth and legend.
Faulknerian:
In a style reminiscent of William Faulkner (1897-1962), one of America's major 20th-
century novelists, who chronicled the decline and decay of the aristocratic South. Unlike
earlier regionalists who wrote about local color, Faulkner created literary works that are
complex in form and often violent and tragic in content.
Faust:
A literary character who sells his soul to the devil in order to become all-knowing, or
godlike; protagonist of plays by English Renaissance dramatist Christopher Marlowe
(1564-1593) and German Romantic writer Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832).
Feminism:
The view, articulated in the 19th century, that women are inherently equal to men and
deserve equal rights and opportunities. More recently, feminism is a social and political
movement that took hold in the United States in the late 1960s and soon spread globally.
Fugitives:
Poets who collaborated in The Fugitive, a magazine published between 1922 and 1928 in
Nashville, Tennessee. The collaborators, including such luminaries as John Crowe
Ransom, Robert Penn Warren, and Allen Tate, rejected "northern" urban, commercial
values, which they felt had taken over America, and called for a return to the land and to
American traditions that could be found in the South.
Genre:
A category of literary forms (novel, lyric poem, epic, for example).
Global literature:
Contemporary writing from the many cultures of the world. Selections include literature
ascribed to various religious, ideological, and ethnic groups within and across geographic
boundaries.
Hartford Wits:
A patriotic but conservative late 18th-century literary circle centered at Yale College in
Connecticut (also known as the Connecticut Wits).
Hip-hop poetry:
Poetry that is written on a page but performed for an audience. Hip-hop poetry, with its
roots in African-American rhetorical tradition, stresses rhythm, improvisation, free
association, rhymes, and the use of hybrid language.
Hudibras:
A mock-heroic satire by English writer Samuel Butler (1612-1680). Hudibras was
imitated by early American revolutionary-era satirists.
Iambic:
A metrical foot consisting of one short syllable followed by one long syllable, or of one
unstressed syllable followed by one stressed syllable.
Image:
Concrete representation of an object, or something seen.
Imagists:
A group of mainly American poets, including Ezra Pound and Amy Lowell, who used
sharp visual images and colloquial speech; active from 1912 to 1914.
Irony:
A meaning, often contradictory, concealed behind the apparent meaning of a word or
phrase.
Kafkaesque:
Reminiscent of the style of Czech-born novelist and short story writer Franz Kafka
(1883-1924). Kafka's works portray the oppressiveness of modern life, and his characters
frequently find themselves in threatening situations for which there is no explanation and
from which there is no escape.
Knickerbocker School:
New York City-based writers of the early 1800s who imitated English and European
literary fashions.
Language poetry:
Poetry that stretches language to reveal its potential for ambiguity, fragmentation, and
self-assertion within chaos. Language poets favor open forms and multicultural texts;
they appropriate images from popular culture and the media, and refashion them.
McCarthy era:
The period of the Cold War (late 1940s and early 1950s) during which U.S. Senator
Joseph McCarthy pursued American citizens whom he and his followers suspected of
being members or former members of, or sympathizers with, the Communist party. His
efforts included the creation of "blacklists" in various professions -- rosters of people who
were excluded from working in those fields. McCarthy ultimately was denounced by his
Senate colleagues.
Metafiction:
Fiction that emphasizes the nature of fiction, the techniques and conventions used to
write it, and the role of the author.
Metaphysical poetry:
Intricate type of 17th-century English poetry employing wit and unexpected images.
Middle Colonies:
The present-day U.S. mid-Atlantic states -- New York, New Jersey, Maryland,
Pennsylvania, and Delaware -- known originally for commercial activities centered
around New York City and Philadelphia.
Midwest:
The central area of the United States, from the Ohio River to the Rocky Mountains,
including the Prairie and Great Plains regions (also known as the Middle West).
Minimalism:
A writing style, exemplified in the works of Raymond Carver, that is characterized by
spareness and simplicity.
Mock-epic:
A parody using epic form (also known as mock-heroic).
Modernism:
An international cultural movement after World War I expressing disillusionment with
tradition and interest in new technologies and visions.
Motif:
A recurring element, such as an image, theme, or type of incident.
Muckrakers:
American journalists and novelists (1900-1912) whose spotlight on corruption in business
and government led to social reform.
Multicultural:
The creative interchange of numerous ethnic and racial subcultures.
Myth:
A legendary narrative, usually of gods and heroes, or a theme that expresses the ideology
of a culture.
Naturalism:
A late 19th- and early 20th-century literary approach of French origin that vividly
depicted social problems and viewed human beings as helpless victims of larger social
and economic forces.
Neoclassicism:
An 18th-century artistic movement, associated with the Enlightenment, drawing on
classical models and emphasizing reason, harmony, and restraint.
New England:
The region of the United States comprising the present-day northeastern states of Maine,
Vermont, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut and noted for
its early industrialization and intellectual life. Traditionally, New England is the home of
the shrewd, independent, thrifty "Yankee" trader.
New Journalism:
A style of writing made popular in the United States in the 1960s by Tom Wolfe, Truman
Capote, and Norman Mailer, who used the techniques of story-telling and
characterization of fiction writers in creating nonfiction works.
Objectivist:
A mid-20th-century poetic movement, associated with William Carlos Williams, stressing
images and colloquial speech.
Old Norse:
The ancient Norwegian language of the sagas, virtually identical to modern Icelandic.
Oral tradition:
Transmission by word of mouth; tradition passed down through generations; verbal folk
tradition.
Plains Region:
The middle region of the United States that slopes eastward from the Rocky Mountains to
the Prairie.
Poet Laureate:
An individual appointed as a consultant in poetry to the U.S. Library of Congress for a
term of generally one year. During his or her term, the Poet Laureate seeks to raise the
national consciousness to a greater appreciation of poetry.
Poetry slam:
A spoken-word poetry competition.
Postmodernism:
A media-influenced aesthetic sensibility of the late 20th century characterized by open-
endedness and collage. Postmodernism questions the foundations of cultural and artistic
forms through self-referential irony and the juxtaposition of elements from popular
culture and electronic technology.
Prairie:
The level, unforested farm region of the midwestern United States.
Primitivism:
A belief that nature provides truer and more healthful models than does culture. An
example is the myth of the "noble savage."
Puritans:
English religious and political reformers who fled their native land in search of religious
freedom, and who settled and colonized New England in the 17th century.
Reformation:
A northern European political and religious movement of the 15th through 17th centuries
that attempted to reform Catholicism; eventually gave rise to Protestantism.
Reflexive:
Self-referential. A literary work is reflexive when it refers to itself.
Regional writing:
Writing that explores the customs and landscape of a region of the United States.
Revolutionary War:
The War of Independence, 1775-1783, fought by the American colonies against Great
Britain.
Romance:
Emotionally heightened, symbolic American novels associated with the Romantic period.
Romanticism:
An early 19th-century movement that elevated the individual, the passions, and the inner
life. Romanticism, a reaction against neoclassicism, stressed strong emotion, imagination,
freedom from classical correctness in art forms, and rebellion against social conventions.
Saga:
An ancient Scandinavian narrative of historical or mythical events.
Self-help book:
A book telling readers how to improve their lives through their own efforts. The self-help
book has been a popular American genre from the mid-19th century to the present.
Separatists:
A strict Puritan sect of the 16th and 17th centuries that preferred to separate from the
Church of England rather than reform. Many of those who first settled America were
separatists.
Slave narrative:
The first black literary prose genre in the United States, featuring accounts of the lives of
African Americans under slavery.
South:
A region of the United States comprising the states of Alabama, Arkansas, Florida,
Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, North Carolina, South Carolina,
Tennessee, Virginia, and West Virginia, as well as eastern Texas.
Surrealism:
A European literary and artistic movement that uses illogical, dreamlike images and
events to suggest the unconscious.
Syllabic versification:
Poetic meter based on the number of syllables in a line.
Synthesis:
A blending of two senses; used by Edgar Allan Poe and others to suggest hidden
correspondences and create exotic effects.
Tall tale:
A humorous, exaggerated story common on the American frontier, often focusing on
cases of superhuman strength.
Theme:
An abstract idea embodied in a literary work.
Tory:
A wealthy pro-English faction in America at the time of the Revolutionary War in the late
1700s.
Transcendentalism:
A broad, philosophical movement in New England during the Romantic era (peaking
between 1835 and 1845). It stressed the role of divinity in nature and the individual's
intuition, and exalted feeling over reason.
Trickster:
A cunning character of tribal folk narratives (for example those of African Americans and
Native Americans) who breaks cultural codes of behavior; often a culture hero.
Vision song:
A poetic song that members of some Native-American tribes created when purifying
themselves through solitary fasting and meditation.
At the opening ceremony of The Art of This Century Museum on 57th St. in Manhattan,
Peggy Guggenheim, the founder, was wearing one earring by Yves Tanguy, the surrealist,
and another by Alexander Calder, the abstractionist. She explained to her guests that this
showed her neutrality in the conflict between the often hostile schools of Abstractionism
and Surrealism. That was in 1941, yet soon after, Peggy's gallery and museum became a
center for abstract expressionism, under the newly coined term Modernism.
Since then, neither the Guggenheim, nor any other major player in the American art
establishment, has bothered to show any neutrality. In fact, in 1941, Surrealism was
declared dead and has been described as such in all art history books since that time.
Therefore, the hundreds of artists working in this style who are originally from, or live in,
the United States, have received no attention from critics, galleries or museums. This has
left them outside the reach of three generations of Americans who, by and large, are
unaware of the work done by surrealists during the second half of the century.
Michael S. Bell, a specialist in American Art, researched the surrealist phenomena while
he was assistant curator at the Museum of Modern Art in San Francisco. His research led
him to the conclusion that:
In the Beginning
One group of artists, however, did not embrace this new art that threw away all which
centuries of artists had learned and passed on about the craft of art. The Surrealist
movement gained momentum after the Dada movement. It was lead by Andre Breton, a
French doctor who had fought in the trenches during the First World War. The artists in
the movement researched and studied the works of Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung. Some
of the artists in the group expressed themselves in the abstract tradition, while others,
expressed themselves in the symbolic tradition.
Michael S. Bell, through his research, realized that these two forms of expression formed
two distinct trends of surrealism with marked differences. One could be qualified as
Automatism, the other, as Veristic Surrealism. "Automatism" explains Mr. Bell, "is a
form of abstraction. It has been the only type of surrealism accepted by critical reviewers
after the war."
Basically, two different interpretations of the works of Freud and Jung divided the two
groups. For the purpose of personal analysis, Jung had talked about not judging the
images of the subconscious, but simply accepting them as they came into consciousness
so they could be analyzed. This was termed Automatism.
The Automatists
When psychology talked about Automatism, these artists interpreted it as referring
to a suppression of consciousness in favor of the subconscious. This group, being
more focused on feeling and less analytical, understood Automatism to be the
automatic way in which the images of the subconscious reach the conscience.
They believed these images should not be burdened with "meaning."
Faithful to this interpretation, the Automatists saw the academic discipline of art
as intolerant of the free expression of feeling, and felt form, which had dominated
the history of art, was a culprit in that intolerance. They believed abstractionism
was the only way to bring to life the images of the subconscious. Coming from
the Dada tradition, these artists also linked scandal, insult and irreverence toward
the elite's with freedom. They continued to believe that lack of form was a way to
rebel against them.
Veristic Surrealists, saw academic discipline and form as the means to represent
the images of the subconscious with veracity; as a way to freeze images that, if
unrecorded, would easily dissolve once again into the unknown. They hoped to
find a way to follow the images of the subconscious until the conscience could
understand their meaning. The language of the subconscious is the image, and the
consciousness had to learn to decode that language so it could translate it into its
own language of words.
Later, Veristic Surrealism branched out into three other groups (see Research on
Surrealism In America).
Every profession has its own history in which the accumulation of knowledge is the basis
to push the frontiers into the unknown. Dali and Picasso are two masters who stand at the
vanguard of two opposite approaches to art in the Twentieth Century: To use that
accumulated knowledge and build upon it, or to discard it.
Dali embraced all the science of painting as a way to study the psyche through
subconscious images. He called this process the Paranoiac Critical Method. As any
paranoiac, the artist should allow these images to reach the conscience, and then do what
the paranoiac cannot do: Freeze them on canvas to give consciousness the opportunity to
comprehend their meaning. Later on, he expanded the process into the Oniric-Critical
Method, in which the artist pays attention to his dreams, freezing them through art, and
analyzing them as well. As Freud said, "A dream that is not interpreted is like a letter that
is not opened."
Picasso took the opposite approach to art. He inherited the gusto for ugliness, scandal and
chaos of the Dada movement and the automatic surrealists. Picasso rejected the craft to
become "primitive," deciding that the ingenuity of childhood is the basis of art. To him
this meant that the less the artist is preoccupied with his craft the better his art. To Dali,
however, the "ingenuity of childhood" meant keeping an open mind and maintaining the
curiosity and excitement of the child throughout one's life, not painting as a child.
For the automatists the approach to the mystery of Nature is to never become conscious
of the mystery, for the surrealists it is to learn from it. The Picasso camp, won the "faith"
of society. The Dali camp would have to secure a dialog with the public to be able to
show the individual the "surrealist way of life" or the "path of individuation" as Jung
called it.
The Veristic Surrealist quest is none other than the one described by Breton as, "The
cause of freedom and the transformation of man's consciousness." In the works of
surrealists we find the legacy of Bosch, Brueguel, William Blake, the Symbolic painters
of the Nineteenth Century, the perennial questioning of philosophy, the search of
psychology, and the spirit of mysticism. It is work based on the desire to permit the forces
that created the world to illuminate our vision, allowing us to consciously develop our
human potential.
The Veristic surrealists of today recognize the difficulties that their movement has faced
during the second half of the Twentieth Century as it attempted to become a major
cultural force, like modernism had. The United States, a country in which the business
community never had to share its power with the aristocracy, wholeheartedly embraced
abstraction and modernism. They shared the belief of abstract artists that the chaos of
action painting and automatism were expressions of freedom, and that form, subjugation
and inhibition walked hand in hand.
The American art establishment looked at the image of form with mistrust until the
advent of Pop Art, which glorified the imperialism of commerce, advertisement and
marketing. Later, Photorealism which glorified modern life, was accepted. With these
two movements Realism entered the cultural picture again (see Art Through the Ages).
Therefore, the only historical artistic expression still in want of recognition as a cultural
force in the Twentieth Century, is Veristic Surrealism.
Because it was ignored and rejected by the new academy of modernism, Veristic
Surrealism in its evolution has become a new art. A new art that in the words of Donald
Kuspit, "Must first show that it has democratic appeal–appeal to those generally
unschooled in art or not professionally interested in it. Then it must suffer a period of
aristocratic rejection by those schooled in an accepted and thereby 'traditional' form of
art–those with a vested interest in a known art and concerned with protecting it at all
costs."
Contemporary Veristic Surrealists have worked for the past fifty years in silent seclusion.
A renaissance of this art form will provide the world with new eternal aesthetic pleasures
and reawaken the use of meaningful expression in art, so that it can once again have a
dialogue with the public.
It would take fifty years for artists born after the Second World War to discover how right
this method is for helping us all understand the architecture of the psyche. Those who
have understood the method, who have faithfully followed the images of the
subconscious and, with patience, painted and analyzed them, have a lot to teach us about
the make up and interaction of the three planes of the Spiritual, the psychological, and the
physical.
The spiritual hunger of the age that also gave rise to a new
evangelical Christianity gave rise, in the educated centers in
New England and around Boston, to an intuitive, experiential,
passionate, more-than-just-rational perspective. God gave
humankind the gift of intuition, the gift of insight, the gift of
inspiration. Why waste such a gift?
Transcendental Forerunners
Introduction
Emerson wrote Nature, the little book which is the base text of American Transcendentalism,
after over ten years of extensive reading. Kenneth Cameron spent much of his scholarly life
collecting and publishing these intellectual sources of Emerson's thought, most notably in
Young Emerson's Transcendental Vision, through his Transcendental Books press in
Hartford, Connecticut. His massive collections, listed in his Bibliography on
Transcendentalism or the American Renaissance [formerly Transcendentalism and
American Renaissance Bibliography], bring together manuscripts and reprints by
Transcendentalists, newspaper articles, lists of library reading and key passages from those
readings, and much else. Many of these materials are useful and illuminating, though usually
fragmented and presented with little context, critique, or ordering. One might think of them
as a massive, unlinked hypertext, useful primarily when linked to the context of
Transcendentalism as a way of understanding the works and the people.
The Transcendentalists, Emerson in particular, read widely and appropriated ideas freely
and eclectically from their reading. Emerson and Thoreau both kept notebooks in which they
recorded choice passages, and those are increasingly available to scholars for study. When
they drew on these ideas in their works, sometimes they explored them in some depth, as
Emerson did in his essays on Montaigne and Swedenborg; more often we find the ideas
greatly modified and pulled together into the fabric of their own ideas, with little attribution.
Margaret Fuller was particularly interested in German literature, translating and writing
Dial essays on Goethe and Bettina von Arnim [see Arnheim's book on her correspondence
with Goethe]. The study of their reading and how they used it has attracted many scholars,
primarily in academic source studies. Joel Myerson's The Transcendentalists: a Review of
Research and Criticism is the best source for finding many of those.
Platonism and Neo-Platonism. Emerson acknowledged his great debt to the thought of Plato
in two essays in Representative Men, "Plato; or the Philosopher" and "Plato: New Readings."
Nature is grounded in Platonism [see Harrison introduction ], especially Neo-Platonism,
as embodied in the writing of the Cambridge Neo-Platonists such as Ralph Cudworth.
The transcendentalists were all dedicated, life-long readers. Emerson, Thoreau, and Alcott
were especially attracted to Oriental philosophy and religion, reading in translations
available to them and copying favorite passages (from Confucius, Laws of Menu, Hinduism,
Buddhism, and more) into their personal notebooks and from there into the Dial, their prose
and poetry [see Emerson's Hamatreya, Saadi, and Brahma, for example.] Tracking these
influences can be difficult, as David Ch'en's essay on Thoreau and Taoism shows. See also
East Meets West: Oriental Seeds in Occidental Soil. by Swami B. G. Narasingha and Satyaraja
dasa (Steven Rosen).
There were also profound influences from American thought and literature. Foremost may
have been the eloquent sermons of Reverend William Ellery Channing of Boston, which
anticipated much of Transcendentalism, in particular its philosophy and opposition to
slavery.
Transcendental Legacy
Literature
Other writers would deliberately take their direction away from transcendentalism, toward
realism and "anti-transcendentalism" or what Michael Hoffman calls "negative
Romanticism"; Edgar Allan Poe, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Herman Melville found
extraordinarily creative ways to object to many aspects of their transcendental
contemporaries, even as they incorporated others. Few American writers since have been
completely free of the influence of Emerson and Thoreau, whether in reaction or imitation.
Books can and have been written on this subject, and this is only an introduction. Perhaps
the most visible manifestation of transcendental ideas and form today is in the developing
genre of nature writing. With its roots firmly in a world-view adapted from Emerson's
Nature and the literary inspiration of Thoreau's Walden in particular, this interdisciplinary
yet literary genre has evolved under the pens of numerous writers, from John Muir and John
Burroughs to writers as diverse as Annie Dillard, Aldo Leopold, Rachel Carson, Loren
Eiseley, Ed Abbey, Gary Snyder, Barbara Kingsolver--and the list expands every year. ASLE
[Association for the Study of Literature and the Environment] is a great doorway into the
genre and Web resources on it.
Transcendentalism
The Transcendentalist movement which began flourishing in the early 19th century
America, especially in New England, was based on some of the concepts of
Transcendental Philosophy but did not strictly follow it. In America "transcendentalism"
was mostly used in a literary form having a semireligious nature.
The formation of the movement was in 1836 with the establishment of the Transcendental
Club of Boston, Massachusetts. The early transcendentalists included the essayist and
poet Ralph Waldo Emerson, the feminist, social reformer, and author Margaret Fuller, a
minister Theodore Parker, and the naturalist and author Henry David Thoreau.
The club's specific beliefs or theories do not seem to have been concretely stated. Their
transcendentalism seemed to be more of a combination of intellectual, aesthetic, and
spiritual attributes. James Freemen Clarke, a member, later said, "We are called like-
minded because no two of us think alike." This might have been a facetious statement,
but it was not groundless.
Although the club as a whole held no specific doctrine, there was an anonymous
pamphlet written mostly likely by Charles Mayo Ellis (1818-1878), which was entitled
An Essay on Transcendentalism, that stated the most commonly held principles of the
group. "Transcendentalism... maintains that man has ideas, that come not through the five
senses, or the powers of reasoning, but are either the result of direct revelation from God,
his immediate inspiration, or his immanent presence in the spiritual world," and "it
asserts that man has something besides the body of flesh, a spiritual body, with senses to
perceive what is true, and right and beautiful, and a natural love for these, as the body for
its food."
The transcendentalists' concept of a spiritual, inner body within the physical body of man
was termed the oversoul, the conscience, or borrowing from the Quakers, the inner light.
"Their emphasis on the innate worth of the individual was thought as a logical spiritual
extension of the political principles set forth in the Declaration of Independence."
The vigorous seedbed in New England for transcendentalism during the early half of the
19th century was among Unitarian ministers who were disappointed in Unitarianism at
that time. Emerson was among them since he had resigned the ministry of the Second
Church of Boston in 1832 because he felt uncomfortable administrating Communion.
Emerson, like others, rejected the narrow definition which the term "Christian" implied
when referring to God. They preferred the term "theist" which seemed to then a more
universal designation of the divinity.
This coincided with the premise of the American transcendentalists who opposed
Unitarianism because it was based on the sensationalism of John Locke which "insisted
that only that knowledge which could be demonstrated to the senses was valid." Emerson
claimed this amounted to "'a cold intellectualism' that seemed to destroy the validity of
man's conscience."
Emerson and his friends were searching for a philosophy with a more broad moral and
aesthetic appeal. This they discovered in the philosophy of Immanuel Kant and the
German transcendentalists of the 18th century. Such philosophy entered America through
the writings and translations of Thomas Carlyle and Samuel Taylor Coleridge whose Aids
to Reflection, translated by James Marsh in 1829, was very influential.
These German influences were not the only sources from which American
transcendentalism grew. The early American transcendentalists were very selective in the
evolution of their philosophy and borrowed ideas from their extensively widespread
readings. Such works included Oriental writings such as the Bhagavad Gita of Hinduism
and the Sayings of Confucius. Other writings included those of French authors Madame
de Stael, Victor Cousin, and Francois M. C. Fourier; those of Emanuel Swendenborg; and
those of the Cambridge Platonists and the 17th century metaphysical English writers.
The American transcendentalists seemed to reject the narrow orthodox Christian concept
of God. Theirs was a broader view of seeing God in his creation, and not only as the
Creator. Emerson who helped form a major portion of the philosophy did not want to
escape from the physical world into the spiritual, but have an union of both. He wrote, "It
is better...to look upon external beauty as Michelangelo did, as 'the frail and weary weed,
in which God dresses the soul, which he had called into time.'"
Some have referred to transcendentalism as an ideal theory. They placed it over common
faith with the advantage that "it presents the world in precisely that view which is most
desirable to the mind...From the ideal view, the mind (Emerson writes "soul") does not
concern itself with the trivia of the Christian disputes over miracles, persons (was Jesus
divine?), or 'niceties of [higher] criticism.' It is sufficient to look upon the visible world as
"one vast picture, which God paints on the instant eternity, for the contemplation of the
soul.'"
The first step to the formation of the Transcendentalist Club led first to the Hedge Club. It
was in 1836 when Emerson, George Ripley, Frederic Henry Hedge with some friends
were attending the bicentennial celebration of their alma mater, Harvard College, they
found their own discussions of a new philosophy more interesting than the bicentennial
activities. So they went to the Willard Hotel of Boston.
When their discussions proved stimulating they decided to meet regularly in private
homes to further their talks and planning. These meetings usually coincided with Hedge's
visits to Boston from his pastorate in Bangor, Maine. Thus the group became known as
"the Hedge Club." The club remained informal, electing no officers and having no
constitution. Its membership varied from meeting to meeting for several years.
The group or Club, whatever the name, never produced any monumental achievements
although in showed its influence on many causes of the times. One might think the lack
of achievements was possibly because the membership was so loosely net and most
members were too independently minded. It published three periodicals of which the Dial
was the most successful.
Members of the group started two communal living projects, both of which were not
successful. The first was called Brook Farm, in West Roxbury a suburb of Boston, was
mainly the idea of George Ripley. His plan for the community was to bring together all
types of artists who could work together to jointly build more financial security that
would permit them to continue their art work more easily than working independently in
the ordinary world. This community never received sufficient personal and financial
backing to succeed, after several years it turned to Fourierism and then collapsed. The
second project was Fruitlands in Harvard, Massachusetts which met a similar fate.
The transcendentalists are usually associated with Concord, Massachusetts, but none of
the members except Thoreau lived there. The town, however, became a literary colony.
Emerson moved there in 1834 partly because he inherited property there and later was
followed by writers like Bronson Alcott, Ellery Channing, and Sanborn who wished to be
near him.
Many of the transcendentalists were active in the lyceum movement in the 19th century.
This movement gave them a platform from which to espouse their views as well as
supplementing their income. Emerson gave over 100 lectures around Concord and many
more from Maine to California. Practically everything he wrote was given from a lectern
before published. Thoreau gave lectures too but was never as popular as Emerson.
Margaret Fuller and Bronson Alcott preferred to give their views within discussion
groups.
Examples of the spirit of transcendentalism can be seen continuing into the 20th century.
Walt Whitman claimed transcendentalism lid him in the writing of Leaves of Grass; more
than likely, Emily Dickinson could have said the same about her poetry. Nathaniel
Hawthorne, although never fully accepting the principles of transcendentalism, was
profoundly affected by it. So was Charles William Elliot who traced the inspiration for
his elective system in collegiate education to Emerson; as was John Dewey with his
progressive education.
Others influenced by the philosophy were Mary Eddy Baker, founder of the Christian
Science Church. She was especially influenced by Bronson Alcott. Early leaders of the
British Labour Party, who with the help of the philosophies of Thoreau and Mohandas
Gandhi, helped formed the anti-Nazi resistance movement during World War II.
During the 1960s the civil rights movement in the United States led by Dr. Martin Luther
King acknowledged that many of its civil disobedience policies came from Thoreau's
writing on the subject. A.G.H.
American Transcendentalism
For much more information than can be contained on this brief page, see
Lawrence Buell's Literary Transcendentalism and other works from the
selected bibliographies on Henry David Thoreau, and Ralph Waldo Emerson.
Overview American transcendentalism was an important movement
in philosophy and literature that flourished during the early
to middle years of the nineteenth century (about 1836-
1860). It began as a reform movement in the Unitarian
church, extending the views of William Ellery Channing on
an indwelling God and the significance of intuitive thought.
It was based on "a monism holding to the unity of the world
and God, and the immanence of God in the world" (Oxford
Companion to American Literature 770). For the
transcendentalists, the soul of each individual is identical
with the soul of the world and contains what the world contains.
Reviewing the "Divinity School Address," Brownson said that we are told "to
obey our instincts" and to scorn to imitate even Jesus. But "How shall we
determine which are our higher instincts and which our lower instincts? We do
not perceive that he gives us any instructions on this point. . . . We are to act
out ourselves. Now, why is not the sensualist as moral as the spiritualist,
providing he acts out himself?"