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- <text id=94TT0363>
- <title>
- Apr. 04, 1994: Books:No Foolish Consistency
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Apr. 04, 1994 Deep Water
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE ARTS & MEDIA, Page 83
- Books
- No Foolish Consistency
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Critic Dwight Macdonald was a brilliant, changeable gadfly
- </p>
- <p>By John Elson
- </p>
- <p> In a lifetime of combative journalism, Dwight Macdonald wrote
- too much and sometimes too carelessly, left many projects half
- finished and was variously a Trotskyite, a socialist, a pacifist,
- an anarchist and an aging camp follower of the student lefties
- of '68. Yet despite his lack of discipline and consistency,
- many of his essays remain classics: consider his merciless dissection
- of the Revised Standard Version of the Bible. Reading that often
- tin-eared update of the beloved King James, Macdonald wrote,
- "is like walking through an old city that has just been given,
- if not a saturation bombing, a thorough going-over." As a satirical
- gadfly, cultural critic and detector of cant, Macdonald was
- a worthy successor to the sage of Baltimore, H.L. Mencken.
- </p>
- <p> Macdonald, who died in 1982 at age 76, has now been accorded
- a solid if not definitive biography. A Rebel in Defense of Tradition
- (BasicBooks; 590 pages; $30) by Michael Wreszin is the kind
- of academic "lumbering dinosaur"--the author's modest self-appraisal--that might have sent its subject to his typewriter harrumphing
- with dismay. Wreszin dutifully portrays the man and his times
- but too often paraphrases rather than quotes directly from a
- writer whose style was the essence of jaunt and spark. (In fairness,
- Wreszin does have the good sense to cite Macdonald's lead of
- a New Yorker profile: "The Ford Foundation is a large body of
- money completely surrounded by people who want some.")
- </p>
- <p> To the writer Diana Trilling, who knew him well, Macdonald was
- the "most fiery" of the New York Intellectuals, that collection
- of political and literary eye gougers who hovered around the
- journal Partisan Review in the 1930s, '40s and '50s. As Trilling
- wrote in her haunting recent memoir, The Beginning of the Journey,
- the New York Intellectuals "were overbearing and arrogant, excessively
- competitive; they lacked magnanimity and often they lacked common
- courtesy." By now there are probably as many books about this
- group as there are about the assorted wits and twits of Britain's
- Bloomsbury circle, but they deserve the attention. Founded in
- 1934 as an organ of the U.S. Communist Party and reborn independently
- in 1937, PR for nearly two decades was America's pre-eminent
- journal of literature and ideas, despite a circulation that
- seldom exceeded 6,000.
- </p>
- <p> PR still appears, but it seldom makes waves. At its zenith,
- though, it was home to some of America's brightest talents,
- from the novelist Mary McCarthy to the poet Delmore Schwartz
- to the critic Lionel Trilling. In its pages, tiresome Marxist
- posturing coexisted with the best of literary modernism; the
- editors, Macdonald perhaps most of all, believed that politics
- was of no consequence when it came to high art. Thus PR printed
- short stories by Kafka and poetry and essays by Anglo-Catholic
- royalist T.S. Eliot.
- </p>
- <p> As a middle-class Wasp Ivy Leaguer among Jews who attended New
- York's no-tuition City College, Macdonald was an unlikely member
- of the PR crowd. A lawyer's son, he grew up in Manhattan and
- after graduating from Yale in 1928 became, of all things, an
- executive trainee at Macy's. Unhappy there, Macdonald signed
- on with what he disdainfully called "the Lucepapers." He wrote
- briefly for Time and spent seven years at FORTUNE, quitting
- after his savage attack on U.S. Steel was eviscerated by editors.
- He soon joined the reborn PR but left the journal in 1943 after
- quarreling with its founding editors, Philip Rahv and William
- Phillips, over whether it was right for the U.S. to take the
- Allied side in World War II. Macdonald, who was then in his
- pacifist mode, started a rival journal called Politics, which
- built its own cadre of distinguished contributors, including
- counterculture tablet givers Paul Goodman and C. Wright Mills.
- Later Macdonald became a staff writer at the New Yorker and
- Esquire's film critic but still wrote occasionally for PR.
- </p>
- <p> Macdonald, Wreszin observes, "was impossible to pigeonhole,
- difficult to categorize, wildly unpredictable." He had some
- nonintellectual eccentricities: at his summer homes in Cape
- Cod and elsewhere, for example, he was devoted to nude cocktail
- parties, which sometimes led to furtive infidelities in the
- sand. Politically, he changed his views about as often as Paris
- realigns skirt lengths--and had the chutzpah to excoriate
- others who held to opinions he had but recently abandoned. Indeed,
- Macdonald reveled in the top-of-the-lungs, ad hominem (and feminam)
- style of argument for which the New York Intellectuals were
- infamous.
- </p>
- <p> A colleague wrote that Macdonald "thought with his typewriter."
- He was more of a sprinter than a distance runner, and many of
- his ambitious book-length projects were either left undone or
- shrank into tantalizingly insightful but incomplete articles.
- What remained after such a failure, however, could be a landmark
- essay like "The Triumph of the Fact" or "Masscult and Midcult."
- In the latter, Macdonald aimed his rage and rhetoric at pompous
- middlebrowism. In one sense, this jeremiad is dated, since no
- one now worries about the popularity of Herman Wouk and Pearl
- Buck. But the problem of high culture sagging into mediocrity
- has, if anything, grown more serious over the years: consider
- only that some critics seriously regard Andrew Lloyd Webber
- as a composer of operas. If only we had a Macdonald now, when
- we need him most.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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