Dwight Macdonald: sunburned by ideas
Transcription
Dwight Macdonald: sunburned by ideas
Dwight Macdonald: sunburned by ideas by Joseph Epstein At a rg80 symposium at Skidmore College set in mrotion by a normally portentous essay by George Steiner about the death of culture in America, Dwight Macdonald, long established as a slashing critic of popLar cuilture and politics, sitting on a panel on "Film and Theatre in Anerica,' seemed to have little of interest to say. He was seventy-four years old and a fairly serious boozer who had written almost nothing of interest for more than a decade. He seemed the intellcctual equiivalenit of the boxer who has taken way too many shots to the head. His death by congestive heart failure was tvo years away. Reacting against the tendency in the discussion to take a-Lrrent-day mo-ies and plays seriously, Macdonald emitted- one almost hears him muttering -a remark that could stand as the epigraph for hlis long career in intellectual journalism: "LVOThe1e I say 'no' I'm always right and -when I say 'yes' I'm almost alwvavs wrong" Dwight Macdonald was the intellectual par excellence, whichi is to say without any specialized knowledge he was prepared to comment on everthing, boisterously and always with what seemed an unwavering confidence. He was the pure type of the amateur, and gloried in the status. And why not? "What's wrong with leing an amateur," one easily imagines him saying. "Look wvhere the professionals have got us." Perhiaps this is too mucl in the spirit of put-down. But then this was also Macdonald's reigning spirit, and possibly it is con- tagious. Answering a reader wvho accused him of taking a sniide tone in an article 011 the Ford Foundation in The Nrew Yorker in I954, he put the blame for the article's tone on himself, writing: "after all, I've done a lot of 'snide' writing in my time, [anid] am indeed rather an SOB, on paper at lcast?' I once greatly admired D-wight Macdonald, and I esteemed precisely that uinforgiving, relentless SOB side of him above all. As a graduate of Mencken University. with a major in what I took to be anti-BS and a minor in radical politics, I thought Macdonald, when I first came across his writing in the late 195oS, ncxt in succession to 1H. L. Mencken himsclf. To read Macdonald on t-he barbarity of General George S. P'atton, the goofy gadgetrv of Mortimer J. Adler's Syntopicon to the Great Books, the depredations upon the King James Bible committed by its new English translators w^as to hear melodious bells go off and have the sky fill with firewvorks. Macdonald got away with muclh that ,he did through style. The trick of this style was to be sharp and intimate simultaneously. He wrote to a correspondent that the secret to successfiUl lecturing was to speak as if talking to no more than three or four people, and he seemed to write the same way. His general tone was that of the unconnable addressing the already highly skeptical. He never condescended to his readers, assuming that they were on his intellectual level. The Newv Criterion NToPember 2001 2 25 Dwighlt Macdoniald by Joscpb Fpstein Lucc's inew mnagazilne, devoted to chroniicling the high romance of in;dustry an:id commerce. He spoke well of Luce personally- thoulgh often m1ockin1g h£im, once referring to him as "Il I aLce"8-but Timec Inc. was a persistent force for evil in the culture drama that played in Macdonald's hcad. "For fourteen years." he wrote of his frienld James Agee, "like ana elephant learning to deplcoy a parasol, Agec devoted his prodigioLus gifts to Lucean journialism:' Born in 1906, the soTn of a father who was Feeling lirmself stifled by working for a lawyer and a n other with s(ocial pretenFortune, Macdonald, with twvo Yale classsions, Dwight iMacdonald was by backmates, Frecd Dlupee and George L. K. Morground upper-middle class. He was a prep ris, began, as a moonlghting venture, a school boy (Exeter) and an Ivy League iman magazirie calledMvisrelany, a bimonthly that (Yale), whose first job out of school was in lasted niearly tvo years. Througzh Dupee he the executive training program at Macy's. wvas put in touch with Philip RLahv and WilYet straight out of the gate he was a rebel, liam Phillips, who had recently removed the antagonizer division. At Exeter, at fourteen, nagazine Partisan Revien', out from unider he and a frienid formed a group called The Stalinist sway of the John Reed Club, the Hedonists, vhose motto was "epater tes and -were lookinig for financial supporters to baurgeois." Altlhough as a young man he keep it alive. Along with Dupee anid Morris, held many of the prejudices of his social dass-racism, anti-Semitism-a strong be- Macdonald became one of the magazine's five principal editors. lief in religion was not among themi. "LiterMacdoonald had been driftirg leftward. ature and knowledge, wisdom and wnder"Marx goes to the heart of t'he problem;" he standing, intellect, call it what y0ou will, is wrote to a college classmate ini I936. To the my religion:" These woyuld be the gods he samne man he wrote: "I'm growing more worshipped ail his life. and more intolerant of those who stand-or "I have a prose mind,' the young Dwight rath-er squat-in the way of radical progress, Macdonald wrote in college. "1 want to the mrore I learn about the conservative Write serious criticism:' At irst, though, he businesses that run this country and the was swept away by the vigor of businessmen, more I see of the injustices done people whoim he found "wvere keenier, more effiunder this horrible cap-italist svstem.' Earlier cient, more sure of their power than any college prof I ever knexw' Upon discovering hle hie had noted that "my greatest vice is nmy easily aroused indignation-also, I suppose, had n10 mind for bush ess, he took up a n0oone of m-.y greatest strengtlhs. I cani work up tion he found in readiing Spengler: that there ndigiiationi quicker thian a fat tena mora i and w'ere MAen of Truths and Men of Action, xvork up a swTeat? Over the can player nis then he was clearny among the formner. Even would improve, if not his similes his vears ideolar, vet he liked to have an idea-not temperamenit. made. he ogy-in support of at y move By the time he was thirty, Macdonald was Macdonald's next step was to a job at formied, in-tellectually and emotionally. filily a Yale through got he Time nagazine, which he was anti-Stalinist and antiPolitically, two the of onLuce, Henry classmate. anti-capitalist, In the 1936 also vet statist and a Yalie, hirnself was Ti7te, fo'unders of he voted for Earl electoion, al president a farn as functioned Yale years many for candiidate. For a Communist tihe Browder, Macdonald Inc. Time, for sorts of team few years he was a member of the 'Trotskyite began by writing finan-ie and businiess stories, and soon was transferred to Foaurtue, WNorker Party. But he had only to join a A brilliant counterpuncher, specializing in mockery of his opponents, he wrote unshapely essays in whiclh the best thingias were often to be found in ungainly asterisk footnotes. His witticisms seemned truth-bearin-g. 'IThe first sentence of his article on the Ford Founidation ran: "The Ford Foundation is a large body of money completely surrounded by people who want somce 26 The New Criterion November 2001 Dwight Macdonald byJoseph Fpstein group to find it objectionable and thus left A vorazl r7 anper is fiLled with amusing and the Workers Party in 194i. Trotsky himself interesting material, some of it unknown to had referred to him as a "Macdonaldist?" (In me, -who has long felt glutted with accounts an article left in his dictaphone mnachine of the New York Intellectuals. I knew that before his death, he describcd a -Macdonald Macdonald's wvife Nancy had served as buspiece as "very muddled and stupid?') lM7aciness manager-the unkniowin soldicr of donald always took the high road-that most little magazines-of Partisan Revieiv, "morat indignation" again-preferrinig clarbut I dtidn't know that for a good spell ity over complexity in politics and keeping a much of the daily dr-udgery of briniginig out palette restricted to two colors, black and the magazine fell to the Macdonalds, in white, with very little interest in gray shadwhose Tenth Street Village apartment it wvas iings or texture of any sort. His un-willingactually produced. At one point Macdonald ness to grant America tlhe least virtue led wished to do aw,ay with Dupee and William himn to m--ake somne impressively idiotic Philips as members of the editorial board statemen-ts, notable among them:`"vuropc and replace them with Harold Rosenberg hlas its Hitiers, but we ha.e our Rotarians?" and Clement Greenberg. Macdoniald felt He settlcd into a lifelong bumptiousness. that the magazine, bogged dowIn in "Raiv's His ton1e and spirit were heavily polemical. cautiotus negativistic policies," had becomc This was not helped by his drinking, which n0 noore than a periodical anthology, did not tend to make himn more courtly. The publishing the best things scnt to it, which ultimate art form of the Partisan Review mav have had its uses, "but it's not the sort crowd may have been the go-scrcw-yourself of magazine I would want to give any large letter, which they were a-ways sending one amount of titne to right now' another: choice examples of Macdonald's What Macdonal3d xvanted was a more use of the form are found in A Moral directly political magazine thanl Partisan Temper, a new collection put together by his Review. He was hinmself becoming evcr more biographer Michael Wreszin.1 These were radicalized. He had turned into a mad letter letters written not to disable but to maiam. wvriter, sending off littlc blasts to John In a milder varianit on the form, Deimore Dewey, James B. Conway, Freda Kirchswey, Schwartz wrote to Macdonald: and othcrs, among them a letter to Ediund Wilson upbraiding him for not publicly atI alxvavs defend vou among academnics and the tacking Malcohn Cowley for his Stalinism gelnteel (two of your curse words . . . ) by and Van WVck Brooks for his iisistenIIce on sayving: Yes anitagonism for its owni sake is hfis patriotism from American wnriters. appetite and neur-osis, and none of his political Finally, in July of 1943, Macdonald repredictions come true, but he is a master of signed from PartisanRevieew, remarking that expository. prosc . .. and he opens himself up "the divergence is mainly political.' He also to all kinds of being and beinigs, Open House had cultural objections to the drift of the Macdonald ought to be his name. journal. He felt that in its cultural coverage the magazine "has become rather academic," Macdonald slhot back: "In future, do me a where he favored "a more infornmal, disrcfavor and either keep siienit or join the spectable, and chance-taking magazine, with Enemyv" and xvent on to chide Schwartz for a broader and less exclusive 'literary' apnot aving "the guts to spea out on any- proach?' He clailned that lis w^as the only thing.' Marxist point of view on the editorial board. But the true stumbling point was disA Moral Tepiiperc The Loemers of Dnfrht acdmnald, agreement about the right position to take edited bv Michael Wreszin; IVan R. Dcee, 480 on 7World WAar iI. Macdonald was against pages, $3s. sidinig -with the Allies in the war. His MarxThe New Criterion November 200i 27 Dwight Macdo)nald by joseph Epstein ist outlook, combinied with a newly burgeoning pacificism, persuaded him that the war was little more than one among capitalist imperial powers, cxcluding the Soviet Union, which, as an anti-Stalitnist, he viewed as a totalitarian, nation. He thought the war a mistake because it didn't confront the issue of social class and wasn't reallv a xvar about democracy. He xvas an advocate of what was then known as a "Third Camp' position, between fascism and Stalinisni, which would be truly rcvolutionary socialism. Only an intellectual, as Orwell said in another connection, could be so stupid. All an intellectual has, it sometimes seems, is his integrity. This he guards as a Boston virgin guards her chastity. What integrity me ans for most intellectuals is proper alignment of their opinions. Perfect consistency bestoxvs that condition devoutly to be sought, ideological purity, "Ideas arnd principles were what was important to Dwight, not the politics-nor the historical context,' wrote Michael Wrcszin in his biography. He is correct in saying that Macdonald did not tailor his writing "to fit an eftc&tive political agenda?' What mattered more for him was establishing a right alignment of opiniion such that he couild never be accused of contradiction, inconsistency, imppurityGod forfend, selling out. No little magazinc was perhaps more pure than Politics, which Macdonald and his wife founded soon after their departuLre from PartisanReview. I had not come into culttLral consciousness in time to read Politics, but I do recall buving in i962 a remainderedR copv of Meemoir of a Revolutionist-latcr, irn papcrback, retitled Politics Past-wvhich contained much of Macdonald's political writing from the magazine. Even his stylishness catnot survive what now seems the aridity ofi most of the subject matter: political journalism disappears faster than passion in a brothel oni the equator. One can only wonider in bemused astonishment at the perversitv of political thinking that, in May 1947, can lead an intelligent person to write: "If we admit there are only two alternatives in world 28 TIhc New Criterion lNovlember zooi and if we find it imfromii the standpoint of our own values and hopes, to choose cither, wlhere are we?" In need, I'd say, of a mental gyroscope. Yet thcre xvas soinething gallant, even heroic about the one-inan (and wife) stand entailedi in putting out Politics. Macdonald did it on the savings from his relatively lucrative salary at Foeine and his wife's small trust fund, which brought in $4000 a year. He stayed on the case of his contributors, whom he could't have been paying very much, to produce quality prose. He tells the young Irving Howe thalt an article he wrote for thenmagazine on Walter Reuther is "lousy.? Hc eliminated straight literary criticisn from the magazine and gave great prominence to popular culture, wlhich politics, USA or USSR, possible, he viewed as helping to barbarize the country. He took potshots at SULch "lib-labs" and "Stalinoids ' as he called them, as Heniry Steele Commager, Carey McWilliams, and I. F. Stone. He published the odd, sometimes important piece that might not have found a place elsewhere: Simonte W"Teil on The riia; Bruno Bettelheim on the coIn- centration camps in Germany. Paul Good1mnan, l)aniel Bell, C. Wright Mills were among the American conitributors to the magazine; Andrea Caffi, Victor Serge, and Macdonald's dear friend Nicola Chiaromonlte were the leading European contributors. But at the heart of cvertlhing was Macdoniald, a three-armed Italian policemen, directing the heavy traffic in competing ideologies, isms, aund political schisms. "Negativism remained Dwight's single wcapon;' his biographer wrote, "a purity in Politics and in politics, too, that had its comforts but offered little in the way of genuine political activism?' Brutal in argument tlhough lhe could be, foolish about other's peoplc's reactions to hitm though he was ("What I don't know about human relations?' he confessed during the tumult of leaving hlis first for his second wvife), confident though he was that he was in possessiorn of the truth, there was, in his private life, more give, nmore of a sense of J)wight Macdonald byjoseph Epstein fairness and largeness of spirit to Dwight Macdonald than his hard-edged writing conveved. HIe could command objectivity; he didn't always take thin-gs personallyX Although his bien pensant friends professcd not to understLnd his likinig for William F. Buckley, Jr., and although hc attacked the NTational Review for its stylelessness, Macdonald alxays defended Bucklev as a nice nman, or, as he told F. W. Dupee, "a hard guy to hate.' When late in life someone told himn that Borges x as a right-wvinger, he replied, "Who gives a flick? When you're that good it doesn't matter any more." Politics ran between 1943 and 1949. BurnofUt for its editor set in roughly midxvay. The magazine went from a imonthly to a bimonthly to a quarterly, and sonmctimes issues came out wildlv late or missed appearilng altogether. 1 the financial strain--"Everything I get involved in seems to be a way of not mnakinig money, or of losin1g it"-was added political duibiety: "I have lost nw faith in any general and radical improecment in modem society whether by Marxian socialism or pacifist persuasion and ethical example," he wrote to a subscriber in 1949. In an item in its issue of July 1944, Macdoniald wrote, "I have always had a sneaking admiration for the editors of a tinv nmimeographed journal called Proletarian Outlook xvho once asked the usuai leftist question, 'What is to be done?' and answered it unexpectedlv: 'Nothing, absolutely nothing? and the editors showed thev wvere in earnest by folding tip their paper?" In I949, to the dismav of his small band of loval readers -amonig them1 T S. Eliot-Macdlonald did the same with Politics. Sectarian Macdonald might from current perspectives seem, but he was not so far otlt of the main currents of the intellectual life of his time. He was always anti-Staliniist. In I949 he wvrote to William Phillips that "I'm fairly sure Hiss is guiltv"C IHe had hils doubts about the whole radical perspective on life genierally: "Don't VOLu feel" lhe wrotc to Joan Colebrook, with whom he was having an affair, "that we've all been on the wrong track all our lives-by 'we' I mnean myself and the milieu I've lived in so long here in NYC'. To a reader of Politics he noted: "I nio longer sce any political (or . . . historical) reality in sucth all-or-notliing doctrinics as revolutionary socialism or pacificism" Freed from sectarian politics, Macdonald turncd to cultural criticism. This entailed an examination of contemporary cultural products for wliat thev night yicld in the wvay of insight into the presuppositions and inner wvorkings of the larger society in which thev w^ere produced. Cultural criti- cism gave him what fame he would enijoy as a writer and made him a larger figure than he had hitherto seemed, or perhaps even dreanied. In the 196os, he wxas briefly employed to do ten-minute bits on movies fir NBC'S "Today Show?' Outside academic life, among critics in the 1950s, a960s, and early 1970S perhaps only Edmund Wilson was better known. In large meast re, this was owing to the magazines for whiich he had begun- to write- The Nm Yorker and, latcr, Esqutire, for xvhom he xwrote about movies, In culture, Macdonald was a traditionalist, wh1ich meant an elitist, while remaining politically a main of the left. An "anarchoconservative" was one of the labels he used to describe his own position in this middle period. When tension betveen the two appeared, the conserative in him tended to xvin out ovcr the anarchist. He ncver went for the Beats in America nor the Anigry Young Men in England. He despised the xvatering doxvn of culture -which supplied the poxverffll animus to his attacks oni the Great Books, the revised Bible, and the new Webster's-and in devising his oxvn theory of culture made use of the conservative Albert Jay Nock's Memoirs of a Supefluous Man. The quickcst way to Dwight Macdonald's heart-with, that is, a dagger-was to call him "our best journalist" Paul Goodman did so, xvhcn reviexvilg Memoirs of a Revolutionist in Dissent. Macdonald took this to nmean that he was fundanmentally unserious. "For xvhat is a journalist?,' he shot back in a letter to the editor. "Alas, an ignorant and Tlhe Neew Criterion Noveinber 2001 29 Dwvight Macdonald byvJosrph Epstein superficial fellow, a kibitzer (rather than 'a man determined to a goal of action and trutt')?'" Macdoniald felt him,self a thinker, subtle, 'discriminiating, penetrating. As a writer, 1he was a sprinter, not a marathon man, and while hlis dreamn was the book, his formn was thc essayv Over the years in his letters he refers to plans to write books on modern dictatorship, miscornception-s about capitalism, Commuslnism and fascism, the steel industry, Edgar Allan IPoe, an intellectual autobiography, mass culture, and the Kennedy assassination. Enchanted cigarettes, Balzac called such books, works that exist ever so beautiftil:y only ir a writer's mind as the smoke of fantasy formls before hint. Macdoalzad got furthest perhips on a book on mass culture, biut what he produced, a sixty-five-page essay tided shows that he "Masscult & Midcultt probably didn't have a full book on thie subject inihim. Along with "T'he Responsibility OF Peoples"-his essay about collective guilt after World War Two-"Masscult & Midcult" is Macdonald's most ambitions intellectual effort.. A rerun of the old highbrow, middilebrow, lowbrow triad developed by Russell Lynes, the essay is a characteristic performance. Written with not a little dash, it struggles to cut deep without quite being able to do so, despite an early Adorno quotation and rmuch waving about of the flag of classical modernism: tvo Picassos rampant upon a field of Finnegans Wake. "Masscult & Midccult" has two chief concerns. The first is to mnake. the case that mass entertainmenit is '"an instrument of dormination?' The second is that Midcult, or the middlebrow, will infect true High Culturc, and its values "instead of being transitional -'the price of progress'-may nowv th-iemselves become a debased, permanent standard' Some good things get said alon0g tthe way. Of the Lords of Kitsci, as he calls themn, Macdonald says "never uniderestimrate the ignorance and xvulgaritv of publishers. movie producers, network executives, and other architects of Masscult?" He declares "a tepid ooze of Midcult is spreading evenr30 T'he New Criterion Nov)emuber 2oo7 where' which seems to mne also correct, though this was predictable with the rise of higher (half-) education. Yet one wishes Macdonald hacd taken on tougher cases in this essay. He attaecks Our Town, The OldMan and tlhe Sea, Archibald .MacLezishs play J.B. and Stcphen Vincent Bene'es poem John Brownls Body as cxamples of Midcult, when it would have been mruch more interesting to cotnsider instead, say, Thie Deati of a Salesman, ThJe Naked and the Dead, Cat o0t a Hot 7is Roof. and the poetrv of Mark Van l)oren. The essay also posits a pretapsarian time for culture, with patroniaristocrats cultivating beauitltifl gardens of art while the happy peasantry enjoved the purest of folk art. TIhe existenrce of this almpie art-sensitive aristocracy is surelv a fiction; and thle loNwer classes of golden olden days, one does well to rememner, had such charming divertissements as bearbaiting, dogfights, and gin drinkinilg to keep their m-inds off the plow. As for the old leftist qulestion, "'Vhatis to be done?' Macdonald's best answer is thiat we recognize that we really have two cultures, high (or authentic) and the rest (inauthentic), "that have developed in this country, and that it is the national interest to keep themln separate?' He closes by noting: "ILt the majority eavesdrop if they like, but their tastes should be firmly ignored?' Two cultures we now nave- have had, shall always have -Lbut I wonder if wve need be miiuch concerned about the elitism of high ctulture, chiefl-y becaulse it is a dremocratic elite. In the United States, most of the people who bothl create and respond to high cuLture do not derive fromn the upperor eveni the uppcr-middle classes. They have comne instead in greater numbers from the lowver-middle and middle classes. Nor have micost of them- gone to the putatively bcst schools. Many of the people I know who are in on the secrct of the suiperiority of high culture have come to it by accident, almrost magically, through the luck of encountering an important teacher, book, recording, or exhibition. Luck of all good Dwight Macdonald by Jfseph Fpstein luck, a spark ignited the flame of a passion that didin't burn out. Things ean be done through education to insure that some sparks continue to go off and that flamies, once ignited, may be sustained, But railing against mass culture is so much howling in the wind. Smashin-g the pretenses of middlebrow cuXlture that wants to pass itself off as rmore serious thani it is is somnething else againi, and always worth doinig, andi this in his time Dwight Macdonald did as well as anyone in the business, But the cuestion is whiether he did anything more. A search of his wvritinigs reveals nothing originial about his critical opinions. He discovered no new writers or filmmakers, nor revived the reputationis of anv vnose reputationis were in need of revivai. He slashed James Gould Cozzens's bestselling novel, ignoring his earlier, more impressive work, vet fell for the elevated clich6s of Norman Mailer. As a critic of culture5 Macdonald fired away out of the secure cockpit of received intellectual opinion. He shot a spitball at Cozzens, for example, for being on record as admiring Somerset Maugham. Would he be shocked, I wonder, to be told that Somerset Maugham is a better writer thhan Virgin ia Woolf? Witlh the exception of a rather disappoiniting piece on Buster Keaton written near the end of his life, he wrote no extended appreciations of a writer nor any other artist. No one ever accused Macdonaid the critic of fairness, evenhandedness, disinterestedness. His was chiefly a po'emical mind, quick, sharp, smart, but without much in the way of texture, balance, concern- with cormplexity. IniArnmies of fthe NighTht (i968), his account of the anti-Vietnam-n War protest march on the Penitagon, Normani Mailer describes himself, Robert Loowell, an-d Dwight Macdonald as "America's best poet, best novelist, and best critic." This is a judgment of all three mcn that hasn't held up, but it is one made in the first place more oin political than literary grounds-as, in i968, almost all cultural judgments tended to be. By the time of A rnies of the Ntqht, Macdonald was all but finished as a writer. As early as ig61 to Joln Lukacs, who was always encouraginig him to be better than he was, fhe wrote: John, I am simply not in a state of mind to discuss seriously what I should be writinig. This impasse, this long drawn-out depression, must enid sometime. I am aware that it exists and that wvhat I am now writing is niot wvhat I should be doing. He was doing factual pieces for The Nvew Yorker, but they seemed not to give himor his readers-much pleasure. "Fact is, I'm sick to death of doing New Yoiker fact pieces.... Exposition bores me. Let them Look It Up themselves, I say.' Macdonald's biographer describes but does not attempt to explain his writing block. Depres.ion is mentioned; so is heavy drinking and the ineluctable fact of getting older. The general explanation for writing block that I prefer is absence of fresh ideas, which I suspect applies in Dwight Macdonald's case. In one of his letters, he makes the point that the best method for commercial writing-the edge of the hack-is not to care about your subject. But Macdoniald was never that kind of writer. 'Without passion, for him, all interest was drained. Politics temporarily saved-or, depending on one's point of view, pernmarently sunk-him. Always anti-Stalinist, sometime in the I950s, with Stalin now dead, he crossed the line to become anti-anti-Communi,st. At one point, he was scheduled to replace Irving Kristol as co-editor with Stephen Spender of Encounter, the excellent English monthlv. Doubts about Macdonald's reliability set in and instead he was of: fered the job at excellent pay as roving correspondent for the magazine. He wrote a piece called "America! America!,' a standard attack on UTnited States materialism (those tail fins on the cars, all those television sets, and-would you believe it?-none of the feeling of community one finds in Tuscany), that was rejected by Encounter, wvith much The New Criterion November 2oor 31 Dwight Macdonald bvfoseph Epstein anger on Macdonald's part. When it WLas later revealed that EncouTnter had had financial support from the CIA, he wrote that he was an "unwitting" accomplice of the CIA'S "dirty work" and had been "played for a sucker?" (If MTacdonald were writing this piece, an asterisk would no-w appear, directinig readers to a footnote that would read: "Any attempt on his part to return the rnoney is unknown?') In 1967, he switched his column in Esquire from movies to politics. The Free Speech Movemcent at the urniversities lhad let loose the young middle-class masses, the Vietnam WN7ar had the country in a state of full-time agitationl, first I,vndon Johnson and thcn that great punch-up Bo7. doll Richard Nixon were in the W\hite Housebliss it was in that daw,n to be alive, but to be an aging left-winger looking for new life vas verv heaven. Dwight Macdonald was, after all these years, saying "Yes" again. "iThis is becoming our Peloponnesian Waar," he wrote about Vietnam. He was on the side of the draftcard burn-ers, withheld a fourth of his own income taxes in protest against the war, bracketed Lyvndotn Johnson with Hitler ansd Stalin, wrote "I am ashamed to be an American?" ARL cultural standards were out the window, as he praised his friend Manry McCarthy's pro-North Vietnam book (though he himself opposed siding with the Viet Cong, for reasons both moral and prudential) and Barbara Glarson's playMacBird, which laid the blamie for Kennedy's assassination on his vice-president. He attended a White House Festival of the Arts, boorishly asking other guests to sign a petition expressing dismay over the country's policies in Vietanam and the Dominican Republic. At the protest marchi at the Plentagon, he was disappointed not to have been arrested. A case, not uncotnmmon on the bourgeois left during the 196os, of pure subpoena envy. "You must come uip right away, Dwight" . W Dupee rcported enthusiastically over the phone from Coliumlbia Universitv. "Ies a revolution. Yfou may never get another 32 The New Criterion November zoox chance to see one.' Here was Macdonald saying "Yes" again, more yeses this time out than Mrs. Leopold Bloom. He wrote a letter solicititng futnds for the StLdents for a Democratic Society, and declared the Columbia ruckus "a beneficial disturbance" He was puffing on the good stuff-smoking, that is to say, pot-and dabblinig wvith other drugs. At the New Haven trial of the Black Panther Bobbv Seale, he showed up wearing two buttons: a pink one for gay rights and another with Eldridge Cleaver's political apertu, "If you're not part of the solution you'rc part of the problem?' Abbie Hoffman became part of his social set. Going, you might say, going, and gone: how sympathetic in general I am to the Young, they're the best generation I've known in this country, the cleverest and the most serious and decent (thoough 11 wish they'd tt,AD a little = also I hate that obscenity bit, Up Against the WA'all Motlerfiacker tuinrs ME off, nor do I like-though must accept wryly -that "shir" has becomne an ordinary word of parliamentary discourse, notlinlg obscene or vulgar intended, they just use it the way we wvould say "nonsense?) [Well, not quite gonle.] In a very poor piece hc wrote for The New rYok Revi of Bookes attacking Torrm Wolfe, he showed himself jealous of a younger writer who had swept the boards of all the kind of attention his own writing used to garner. His attack on Wolfe reads rather like an attack on himself. He mentions the books Wolfe had promised b1ut failed to write. He claims that Wolfe's subjects are of only ephemeral interest and his writing won't last. He nails him for producing ani anthology on the Nex' Journalism: "Those who can, write; those who can't, anthologize." The ironv of thiis remark is that the only book of Macdonald's that is likely to have a continuing life is Parodies, a brilliant anthology of the forn he published in 1960. According to his biographer, Macdonald died thiniking himself a failure. Perhaps at Dwvight Macdonald byfoseph Epstein the end each of us docs, but Macdoinald had the fiurther goads in this direction supplied by drink and depression. (He was in ps)chotherapy for the last decade of his life.) Karl Kraus defined a journalist as "no ideas and the ability to express them." Not true of Macdonald, wvho could be said to have been sunburned b1y ideas. It's the quality of his ideas that is troublesome. How tired and thin, received and even rather coarse they now seem, begoinning with the notion that being radical, which Macdonald liked to reminid his readers means "goes to the root,' suggested greater penetration than calmcr, more centered thinking. While he rightly understood that his mind worked best when rubbing Up againist the particular and the concrete instance, he allowed lots of ideas-TErotskyism, anarchismn, pacificisnm, cven nudism-to violatc him by destroying his conmmoin sensc and balanced perspective. Aesthetically,, Macdonald's central idea seems to be that form and content were indivisible, Stvle and iman, he liked to quote Buffon saying, they are one and the same. One understands the attraction of stuch a notion, the swv7eet symmetry of it, btut adherence to it would force one to disqualify every bad writer in the history of thought, beginning with Immanuel Kant and ninning through at least John Dcwev. Another of Macdonald's core ideas was that the job of the intellectual was to keep up the critical pressure, especially on his own countr,x, which, by definition, can never be g(xod cnough. The word intellectual was purely an honorific for Macdonald and with dissent understood to be the first priority of inteclectuals. This of course neglects the possibility of the reflective intellectual, on1 the model of Tocqueville. Macdonald wianted terriblv for intellectuals to matter in history, but seems to have failed to notice that whenever they have-during the French anid Russian and (to lower the scale a bit) Cuban revolutions-it has always meant disaster. Macdonald's other ideas were equallv thin. He was big on community,, that longstand- ing intellectual clichc and utopiani abstraction, for vhlicli no vivid actual examples exist, A creative disorder man, he felt the countnr was inl better shape when disturbanice, and not order and harmony, wvas dominant. The status quo, fUr him, was alwavs the enemyn. When his friend Delmore Schwartz died, he recognized that there was a large self-destructive element in Schwartz -xvho had an overnveening ambition combilned xvith true meental illness-but that didnl't stop Macdonald from making the hoary claim that America is not kind to its poets and that Schwvartz was, somehowx a victim of mass society This samne nmass societv had for a timne grcatlv elevated Macdonald, and such was his fame that in the late i950s scrious people begaI comparing himn to Mark Twain and H. L. Mencken. Writilng to Ian Watt about this, Macdonald not immodestlv claimed, "I've always been more tough-minded, less open to illusions than Mark was-and mv laughter is not so bitter as his was, int his last phase? (There is also the fact that Mark Twainv was a thwarted artist, and Macdonald a pure critic.) I-Ic disliked Menckeni's style, but allowed that "like Mencken, I reallv enjoy being disappointed and outraged." But one of the principal differences between Mencken and Macdonald, alonig with the fomier having had greater energy, more impressive intellectual production, and deeper influence upon his time, is that Meneken had a surer understanding of the reality of everyday life in America. More crucial, his scepticism was much greater. NoNvhere was this scepticism greater than about ideas, for which Mencken had the greatest distrust. He was always blowing the whistle on con men-professors, would-be revolutionaries, and anyone else who claimed hc had the answers to the impossible questions. IhvXight Macdonaild far more often blew the trumpet, welcoming their arrival. in a smnalltime way,, he was himself, unconsciously,7 even one of the con men. Poor guy, he just couldn't stop saving "Yes." The New Criterioni November 200I 33 COPYRIGHT INFORMATION TITLE: Dwight Macdonald: sunburned by ideas SOURCE: The New Criterion 20 no3 N 2001 WN: 0130501518004 The magazine publisher is the copyright holder of this article and it is reproduced with permission. Further reproduction of this article in violation of the copyright is prohibited. To contact the publisher: http://www.newcriterion.com. Copyright 1982-2001 The H.W. Wilson Company. All rights reserved.