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ОглавлениеINTRODUCTION
A Genealogy of Postwar American Modernism
IN APRIL 1949, the San Francisco Art Association held a three-day “Western Round Table on Modern Art,” bringing together an eclectic group of artists, critics, and curators to discuss the state of modernism in America. Held at the San Francisco Museum of Art, the round table was designed “to bring a representation of the best informed opinion of the time to bear on questions about art today,” with the goal of achieving progress “in the exposure of hidden assumptions, in the uprooting of obsolete ideas, and in the framing of new questions.”1 The boldness of this agenda was matched by the boldness of the participants, which included art historian Robert Goldwater, artists Marcel Duchamp and Mark Tobey, composer Arnold Schoenberg, and architect Frank Lloyd Wright. While the organizers of the conference tried to structure the discussion around specific themes such as the function of the artist, the roles of the critic and the collector, and the purpose of the museum, the participants, regardless of the topic, tended to return their comments to a statement made by Marcel Duchamp early in the proceedings in which he distinguished between “taste” and what he referred to as the “aesthetic echo.” According to the famed artist and provocateur, taste simply referred to the commonplace “likes and dislikes” of the average consumer, while the aesthetic echo referred to the willingness to forgo the familiar for the mysterious or unknown. “While many people have taste,” argued Duchamp, “only a few are equipped with aesthetic receptivity.”2 For Duchamp, the popular attacks against modern art in the postwar period signaled that most individuals lacked both the education and temperament to appreciate the work that he and his fellow artists were producing.
While not all participants were willing to echo Duchamp’s unabashed elitism, most agreed that, because of the nature of mass society and mass culture, the goal of the modern artist was to carve out a realm to safeguard the work of art from the distorting hands of an ungrateful public. Modernism, in other words, needed safekeeping. One participant, however, grumbled numerous complaints against this consensus. Throughout the proceedings, literary critic Kenneth Burke, who had recently achieved academic fame for his 1945 book of literary criticism A Grammar of Motives, wondered aloud if his fellow discussants had not in fact distorted the project of art in general. A veteran of the avant-garde movements in Greenwich Village in the 1920s and 1930s and a poet and fiction writer in his own right, Burke had obvious modernist credentials. But he spent three days in San Francisco trying to convince his fellow artists and critics that they had gone astray in their aesthetic projects. Specifically, Burke took a stand against what he saw as the two opposed but equally untenable approaches to modern art. On the one hand, several commentators including Robert Goldwater argued that the artwork at its essence was an external manifestation of the artist’s true being and therefore needed protection from the public at large. As Goldwater explained, the modern artist had to struggle to ensure that nothing disturbed “the integral expression of his own personality as he conceives it—be it dealers, be it patrons, be it the concept of society in general.”3 Modernism, according to such a definition, was the medium through which the artist discovered himself outside the concerns of the world at large. On the other hand, several commentators such as Marcel Duchamp and Frank Lloyd Wright argued that the work of art had little to do with the intentions or feelings of the artist and existed as an ontologically distinct statement in and of itself. “We don’t emphasize enough that the work of art is independent of the artist,” asserted Duchamp; “the work of art lives by itself, and the artist who happened to make it is like an irresponsible medium.”4 For Duchamp, the imperative was to shield the artwork from any interpretive or cognitive distortion, guaranteeing in some sense its sacredness. Although the two camps disagreed on the origins of the artwork, they agreed, as Arnold Schoenberg declared, that such work should “never bow to the taste of the mediocre.”5
Burke cringed at such language, continuously interrupting his colleagues to question their claims and their motives. Of course Burke was not rejecting the project of modernism overall. He was just as committed as the others at the table to the belief that art at its essence was the privileged medium for disrupting the staid conventions of modern life and reenchanting what had become an awful, gray landscape. But Burke feared that his fellow artists and critics had let their antisocial, if not misanthropic, feelings interfere with the true purpose of art—persuasion. “Very well, the artist is expressing himself,” exclaimed Burke, “but he must use some kind of language.”6 Throughout, Burke argued that an exclusive focus on separating the artist and the artwork from the consuming public was foolish, ignoring the fact that the goal of the artist was to persuade the spectator, listener, or reader. According to Burke, “there is always communication…. The communication is there the minute the painting is done” (27). Even worse, artists like Duchamp and Wright ignored the fundamental need for artistic statement in a confused modern age. According to Burke, the recent global catastrophes—from economic collapse to total war—had not only irreparably damaged the average individual but had destroyed the traditional vocabularies through which the world was understood. In such a vacuum, the artist had a responsibility to offer new forms of orientation, new ways of understanding modern experience, and new sites for communion. “That’s why we should take modern expression so seriously,” argued Burke, “because it is concerned with the basic motives of life, with the things over which men will lurk, and mull, and linger, and for which they will seek new statements” (28). Those scrambling to escape into the purity of the aesthetic realm, disconnected from the social landscape, had according to Burke forsaken the true task of the artist.
Burke’s criticisms in the late 1940s predated what would become a larger revolt against the aesthetic and epistemological assumptions of modernism in the 1960s and 1970s, as a range of intellectuals and artists associated with the movement known as postmodernism criticized the project of modernism in the postwar period as too esoteric, too devoid of playfulness, and too disconnected from popular concerns. Of course Burke was no postmodernist. While he challenged the elitism and biases of those gathered together in San Francisco, Burke had not, as others eventually would, given up on the project of modernism. Instead, he argued that the project simply needed to be recast. According to Burke, modern artists could not remain content with isolating themselves from anything that hinted of the popular, vernacular, or commonplace in the name of individual purity. Such artists instead needed to begin the difficult project of unearthing the shared historical, cultural, and political traditions in which they lived and reorienting those traditions in ways that were not merely more equitable and just but also translatable and digestible to a skeptical audience. In other words, modern artists needed to stop focusing on simply expressing themselves and instead to begin communicating, using the methods available in the modern world, to those willing to listen. “Can’t the artist create for a communication?” Burke wondered aloud; “certainly he is not talking to himself, is he?” (33). In other words, modern art according to Burke needed to recover its roots as a form of rhetoric.
Burke was part of a group of artists, writers, and intellectuals in the 1940s and 1950s that began critiquing modernism from the inside, so to speak, challenging the obvious elitism and sense of separation that had led so many artists to abnegate their responsibility to translate their visions to a consuming public. Throughout the postwar period, Burke and those who followed his lead like sociologists C. Wright Mills and Erving Goffman and novelist Ralph Ellison or mirrored his theoretical moves like sociologist David Riesman, Freudian revisionist Norman Brown, novelist James Baldwin, and artist Jasper Johns reformulated the project of modernism in the early Cold War, giving rise to the movement I refer to as late modernism. Unwilling to abandon the literary and cultural revolution begun in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries by their modernist predecessors, whose original goal was to explore new forms of consciousness and unearth new forms of perception in the hopes of transforming the world at large, late modernists argued not only that the nature of the aesthetic form needed to be rethought in an age of mass media but that the general assumptions about the nature of subjectivity needed to be updated. They reformulated aesthetics as a mode of symbolic action—a deliberate attempt to use the aesthetic form to challenge the choice of lens through which individuals made sense of the world around them and to persuade them that the visions offered by the artist were not merely more poetic but possibly more liberating. For late modernists, the spoken word, the written work, the musical refrain, and the abstract canvas were all calls to action on the part of the artist as rhetorician, that is, an artist who interweaved rational arguments, libidinal enticements, and poetic pleas in his works in order to produce a commitment or at least a response from the viewing audience. Modernists, in other words, needed to take communication, and everything connected to it, seriously. “For in this world, communication is never an absolute,” proclaimed Burke, for “only angels communicate absolutely.”7 But Burke demanded that his fellow modernists at least try. In so doing, Burke and other late modernists ushered in a new form of cultural politics, one that did not simply point to the rise of postmodernism in the 1960s but that overcame the artistic limitations of those postwar modernists like the ones Burke encountered in San Francisco in the late 1940s. The future of modernism was up for grabs.
The Contours of American Modernism
In a 1967 essay, “The Culture of Modernism,” Irving Howe, in troubled, almost exacerbated language, argued that the cultural sensibility of the Western avant-garde of the early twentieth century had reached an unfortunate end. The exhaustion of modernist literature, exemplified in the failure of current writers to match the enthusiasm or radicalism of their predecessors, was for Howe a key sign that modern society was able to assimilate any and every oppositional force. As Howe argued, “it seems greatly open to doubt whether by now, a few decades after World War II, there can still be located in the West a coherent and self-assured avant-garde.”8 In part, Howe blamed the failure of modernism on its practitioners who had either retreated into university classrooms or had turned to the trappings of authoritarian politics to address the ineffectiveness of art to enact real change. But more important, modernists recognized that the imperative to maintain a constant struggle against the reigning cultural landscape had become a source of exhaustion. The enthusiasm of the original “men of 1914”—T. S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, Wyndham Lewis, and the like—had lapsed over the decades, according to Howe, into the futile whining of Jack Kerouac and his compatriots racing across the American continent. The playfulness of the Beat Generation was for Howe merely a façade covering a larger existential despair over its inability to imagine any reconciliation between the self and the world, exemplified by the forlorn hero at the end of Kerouac’s On the Road mournfully staring at the New Jersey landscape. “In modern America,” explained Howe, “this problem often appears as a clash between a figure of consciousness who embodies the potential of the human and a society moving in an impersonal rhythm that is hostile or, what is perhaps worse, indifferent to that potential” (28). According to Howe, the incessant nihilism within modernist literature was a sign of this exhaustion.
Howe’s essay was merely one of many eulogies written in the 1960s about the supposed end of modernism. In his 1965 introduction to his classic work of formalist criticism Modern Poetry and the Tradition, literary critic Cleanth Brooks asked the same question as Howe: “Has the revolution in poetry which began about the time of the First World War now exhausted itself?”9 Both critics presented a narrative of decline, a story about the unraveling of modernism from its heyday in artistic circles in Paris and London in the 1920s to its disappearance by the 1960s. Howe saw this unraveling occurring through three historical stages. Modernism had burst onto the cultural scene in the nineteenth century as a reaction against bourgeois society, an aesthetic heroism emerging out of the remnants of the Romantic movement that challenged political, social, and religious norms through “a transcendental and orgiastic aggrandizement of matter and event in behalf of personal vitality.”10 This effort to delve into the depths of human consciousness to reveal the artifice of modern life—a theme Howe found in Walt Whitman, Arthur Rimbaud, and Charles Baudelaire—marked the ambitious attempt by early modernist practitioners to present a vision of man that ran counter to the gentility of late nineteenth-century society. But the experience of World War I and the collapse of the revolutionary movements in the aftermath gave rise to a chastened form of modernism found in the work of Virginia Woolf, Thomas Mann, and others, a modernism that began “to recoil from externality and now devotes itself … to a minute examination of its own inner dynamics: freedom, compulsion, caprice.” This retreat to an extreme form of subjectivity, guarding against any social contamination, eventually proved to be an insurmountable problem. In its final stages after World War II, modernism abandoned its heroic claims, lapsing into a state of despair because of the perceived futility of art as a means of producing social change. At this point, “there occurs an emptying-out of the self, a revulsion from the wearisomeness of both individuality and psychological gain.” Samuel Beckett, according to Howe, was the result.
My book picks up where Howe left off, charting a similar evolution of modernist practices but focusing specifically on the moment after World War II when the famed New York intellectual claimed that modernism had lost its noble purpose. In beginning my story at that moment, I want to challenge the declension narrative that Howe and others have presented and, in so doing, make a case for an invigorated “late modernism” that encompassed a wide range of artistic expression. Howe’s essay in many ways reflected what was a widely acknowledged divide between defenders of a slightly more academic, and formalist version of high modernism and those practitioners of a supposedly irrational, perverse, and therefore immature form, which I term romantic modernism, associated with the members of the Beat Generation who had fled the university for the corrupt spaces of Times Square or the open road. Both sides accepted these caricatures. Literary critic Lionel Trilling, for instance, always stressed his distance from his former students Allen Ginsberg and Jack Kerouac, who, in turn, obsessively stressed their rejection of the staid modernism of their Columbia professor. Trilling openly challenged the “group of my students who have become excited over their discovery of the old animosity which Ezra Pound and William Carlos Williams bear to the iamb, and have come to feel that could they but break the iambic shackles, the whole of modern culture could find a true expression.”11 For Trilling, modernism had reached an impasse; for Ginsberg, modernism had only begun to change the world. This divide between teacher and student was nothing new in the history of modernism.12 Since its inception, modernism had been divided against itself—between symbolism and surrealism, formalism and experimentalism, imagism and futurism, Ezra Pound and F. T. Marinetti, Pablo Picasso and Henri Matisse.13
In American intellectual circles after World War II, the tradition of high modernism reached its zenith, a form of modernist practice self-consciously determined to separate art from the detritus of daily existence. Arguing that the failure of religion to provide meaningful answers to a world continuously at war had rendered individual salvation problematic, high modernists believed that aesthetics was the only refuge in a disenchanted, chaotic landscape. High modernism originated in the 1920s in the poetry of T. S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, William Butler Yeats, and Rainer Maria Rilke and the novels of Virginia Woolf, Thomas Mann, and Marcel Proust but became the dominant version of modernism in the United States in the 1940s and 1950s, led in particular by the literary studies of the New Critics. Originating in the criticism of T. S. Eliot, William Empson, and I. A. Richards, the New Criticism was associated with the work of Allen Tate, John Crowe Ransom, Cleanth Brooks, and others, who turned modernism into a literary style and a pedagogical practice. Their defense of aesthetics as an autonomous practice separate from political and personal demands was echoed by a range of other critics throughout the early Cold War including Dwight Macdonald, Lionel Trilling, Philip Rahv, Clement Greenberg, and Theodor Adorno, all of whom turned to formalist modes of reading that treated the aesthetic object as an autonomous work disconnected from the distorting hand of mass society. For these high modernists, the work of art, either through the formal relationship of the painting’s colors and designs or through the poem’s internal tensions, presented a form of experience distinct from the banalities of everyday life. These critics officially institutionalized their brand of modernism in the 1950s, promoting a particular canon of writers and artists through established academic journals, publishing houses, university classrooms, popular magazines, and art galleries. Reflecting upon the threat of totalitarianism from abroad and the militarization of American society in the early Cold War, high modernists fought a desperate campaign to safeguard art as a distinct mode of knowledge separate from industrial growth.
Of course, modernists of all persuasions were committed to aesthetics as a form of disruption and disorientation, a process of making the familiar seem unfamiliar and the commonplace enchanted. But the institutionalization of high modernism, despite its commitment to challenging political orthodoxy and bourgeois values, was too conservative for an emerging group of artists in the 1950s who argued that the high modernist stress on aesthetics as a distinctive experience separate from everyday life had produced art that was isolated, overly intellectual, and cold and therefore irrelevant.14 A range of new modernist practitioners—from Beat poets such as Allen Ginsberg, Jack Kerouac, and William Burroughs to writers such as Norman Mailer and Saul Bellow to abstract expressionists such as Jackson Pollock, Willem de Kooning, and Mark Rothko—argued, like many previous groups within the European avant-garde, that any commitment to aesthetics went hand-in-hand with a commitment to rejuvenating life. As Harold Rosenberg, the New York art critic whose 1952 essay “The American Action Painters” outlined this new commitment, said, “the new painting has broken down every distinction between art and life.”15 I refer to this motley group as romantic modernists because they were determined to return to what they saw as the original roots of modernism in the dissolution of Romanticism—to the writings of Henri Bergson and Friedrich Nietzsche, to the poetry of Arthur Rimbaud and Paul Verlaine, and to the disruptive techniques of André Breton and other European surrealists—as a way to translate life into art and vice versa. These artists, as they saw themselves, were returning to the moment in the late nineteenth century when Romanticism gave birth to modernism, that is, the moment in which aesthetics began to incorporate the metaphysical claims once generated by religion. As Cleanth Brooks explained in distinguishing between high and romantic modernism, “because the critical revolution that began some fifty years ago was essentially a reaction against Romanticism … and because the countermovements of the last fifteen years, including that of the Beatniks, have been essentially pro-Romantic, any attempt to set the revolution in a wider context will have to concern itself with Romanticism.”16 In part, these artists were frustrated with their lack of critical reception, arguing, as Jack Kerouac and Jackson Pollock both did throughout the 1950s, that they were producing modernist masterpieces unrecognized by their formalist counterparts. This frustration eventually translated into entirely new forms of modernist practice that operated through shock and immediacy and that incorporated spontaneous methods of production. Soon, the success of these romantic modernists produced in their high modernist counterparts endless stories about the contamination of modernism by arrogant bohemians and delinquent college dropouts.
In the end, however, neither mode of modernist practice was triumphant; as the traditional story goes, both high modernism and its precocious avant-garde challenger had their loftier claims punctured by the sudden rise of postmodernism in the 1960s. By the end of the decade, for instance, the playfulness of the soup can paintings of Andy Warhol had replaced Jackson Pollock’s “drip” paintings as the emblem of American art. Critic Andrew Ross has observed in perhaps overstated language that “modernism ends when there are no places left to run to—the autonomy of art, the Romantic ‘psyche,’ poetic license, the bardic, magic, psychosis, suicide, and even silence.”17 Modernism in all its forms had seemingly relinquished its privileged status, a shocking transformation given its ubiquity only a few years prior. Indeed, modernism had appeared in the 1950s in endless forms—the action paintings of Willem de Kooning, the cultural reportage of Partisan Review, the Jamesian-inspired criticism of Dwight Macdonald, the aesthetic writings of Theodor Adorno, the spontaneous prose of Jack Kerouac, the color-field paintings of Mark Rothko, the projective verse of Charles Olson, and the Dadaist-inflected compositions of William Burroughs. The early Cold War was a moment of seemingly endless experimentation, craftsmanship, and innovation in American art. But the apparent displacement of both by the end of the 1960s—due to charges of elitism, to the reactionary politics of its practitioners such as Kerouac or Trilling who lambasted the student movement, and to the suicidal gestures of Pollock and Rothko—signaled a fundamental transition in American culture.
But we cannot act as if there was something linear or logical to the rise and fall of modernism, as if the complications inherent in the belief in the transformative potential of art inevitably meant that modernism in all its forms was destined to be eclipsed. Irving Howe himself, in a more honest moment, made a similar claim: “Modernism will not come to an end; its war chants will be repeated through the decades.”18 We must recognize instead the more complicated historical roots of modernism, thereby treating the transition to postmodernism less as a radical shift to a fundamentally new paradigm of literary and epistemological understanding and more as a complex, historically engaged challenge to the dominant strands of modernist practice.19 Similarly, we need to move beyond the arbitrary divisions between high modernism and the avant-garde and between modernism and postmodernism, no longer treating these camps as the only possibilities of aesthetic and epistemological practice. In this spirit, I argue that this opposition between high and romantic modernism in the early Cold War was triangulated by another tradition, late modernism, which critiqued the theoretical assumptions of these other traditions and prefigured the movement toward postmodernism. Kenneth Burke’s outburst at the round table in San Francisco in 1949 was an obvious example of this emerging trend. Indeed, there were a number of artists, writers, and critics from the 1950s who did not fit comfortably within any of the traditional modernist categories, artists such as Jasper Johns who challenged both the formalist aesthetics of Clement Greenberg and the overt expressionism of Jackson Pollock while also pointing the way toward the overt commercialism of Andy Warhol but without making the journey himself.
The title of my book therefore signifies both the chronological lateness of modernism in the 1960s, when such practices had supposedly run their course, and a demarcation of a viable modernist tradition in its own right, one that complicates the story that Howe and others have told over the years. Alongside the battle between high modernism and romantic modernism and between the intellectual elite and these bohemian upstarts was a third tradition that charted an entirely different course, one that leads to a fuller, more compelling explanation for the transition to postmodern aesthetics in the late twentieth century. In this, I am following the lead of critic Fredric Jameson, who argued years ago that cultural historians needed to introduce an intermediary concept between the demarcations of modernism and postmodernism, a space for those artists and writers who do not fit comfortably within any of the other established categories.20 But unlike Jameson, who merely echoes Howe in linking late modernism to the last gasp of writers such as Samuel Beckett or Vladimir Nabokov, I want to posit a more complex version of late modernism, one that was able to offer a new and more flexible understanding of art and the aesthetic experience. If anything, the tradition of late modernism represented a maturing of modernism, an overcoming of the elitism that hampered high modernism and a rejection of the more mystical claims of romantic modernism. This tradition was best represented by Kenneth Burke, whose essays, reviews, and, more important, three major works from this period—A Grammar of Motives, A Rhetoric of Motives, and The Rhetoric of Religion—rethought the nature of modernism. Unlike high modernists who stressed the autonomy of the aesthetic object and unlike romantic modernists who treated art as a direct expression of a unique individual subject, Burke argued instead that the work was a rhetorical form, that is, an object that confronted and challenged the embedded assumptions within particular languages, discursive formations, and established motives. As I explore throughout this book, Burke and those who directly borrowed from his work such as C. Wright Mills, Erving Goffman, and Ralph Ellison or those who independently echoed his claims such as Norman Brown, David Riesman, James Baldwin, and Jasper Johns all treated art (as well as all discursive forms) as persuasive elements that intervened in and critiqued embedded assumptions of everyday life. These late modernists tried to open modernism by blending it with realism and rhetoric, treating art at its essence as a form of communication.
Of course late modernism did not represent any self-acknowledged group of compatriots any more than the earliest modernists considered themselves part of a unified movement. One can hardly imagine a cocktail conversation between Norman Brown, Jasper Johns, and Erving Goffman or, for that matter, one between T. S. Eliot, Virginia Woolf, and Friedrich Nietzsche. Obviously, any interpretive category is artificial at best, and I do not want to give the impression that these late modernists represented any sort of “school” in the traditional sense. But missing from the literature on art and culture after 1945 is any sense that there was a range of writers and artists who tried to find a language that did not partake of either the formalist visions of high modernism or the mystical visions of romantic modernism. For instance, the novelist Ralph Ellison spent years fighting against both alternatives. He repeatedly admitted that he had little patience for high modernist critics such as Lionel Trilling who limited the possibilities inherent within the aesthetic form by trying to divest art of any social or political attachments. “Fuck Trilling and his gang,” Ellison wrote to his friend Albert Murray in 1957; “I know that a novel is simply hard to write, especially during this time when you can’t take anything for granted anymore.”21 Similarly, Ellison had little respect for the bohemian denizens of New York, who included Norman Mailer, Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg, and others, a modernist avant-garde pushing madness, despair, and sex. “Man, where did Norman Mailer and them—them—teenagers get that shit from,” an exacerbated Ellison once asked; “that goddamned Mailer sounds like a degenerate” (211).
In contrast to these two dominant strands of modernist practice, Ellison centered his own project on what he referred to as “the enigma of aesthetic communication.”22 Unlike high modernists who focused on the artwork as a form disconnected from outside entanglements and romantic modernists who saw the artwork as a reflection of their own personalities, Ellison argued instead that the artwork was designed to address the complicated relationship between artist and audience, serving as a means to bridge social differences and to forge new connections between disparate individuals. The artwork in this sense did not skirt social communication, as many modernists would have it, but existed solely as a form of communication between the artist who offered his personal vision of redemption and an audience who “counters the artist’s manipulation of forms with an attitude of antagonistic cooperation.” In this way, the importance of any artwork was for Ellison its rhetorical nature, that is, the way in which it challenged the choice of cultural lens through which its audience made sense of the world. “By playing artfully upon the audience’s sense of experience and form,” explained Ellison, “the artist seeks to shape its emotions and perceptions to his vision, while it, in turn, simultaneously cooperates and resists, says yes no in an it-takes-two-to-tango binary response to his effort.” In so doing, Ellison, like his other late modernist counterparts, offered an entirely new way of thinking about the nature of the modernist form, one that refused to shy away from the notion that art at its essence was a form of rhetoric, persuasion, and social communication.
But I want to guard against the assumption, despite what my terminology might suggest, that I am arguing that there was some sort of strict progression to modernist developments or that the eclipse of prior forms of modernism was inevitable. My category of late modernism instead is designed to open up our understanding of the possibilities inherent to the modernist movement overall, possibilities that often were grossly simplified or quickly brushed aside by postmodernist critics who have sometimes offered a less than nuanced account of their predecessors.23 Indeed, the seeming shift from Jackson Pollock to Andy Warhol, from Jack Kerouac to Thomas Pynchon, and from Allen Tate to Paul de Man was anything but inevitable or absolute. Now that we have begun to rethink the nature of postmodernism after its heyday in the 1980s, absorbing its lessons and thinking through its implications, we can begin the task of forging new aesthetic practices that take into account the range of possibilities offered by the various forms of modernism and postmodernism available to us. In other words, I treat the development of modernism as a contested and continuous one that offers no easy solutions and no simple formulations. Thus, my book traces a combative debate between these three schools of modernist practice—high, romantic, and late modernism—and the divergent paths that such practices took throughout the 1950s and 1960s. In so doing, I suggest that the rethinking of the aesthetic form offered by Kenneth Burke, Jasper Johns, Ralph Ellison, and others might help us think through our own current impasse.
Modernism and the Cultural Politics of the Cold War
Of course these debates about modernist practices were not conducted in a vacuum. A cultural tradition predicated upon disrupting staid patterns of thought has always, despite claims from its formalist practitioners, maintained a close watch on political and economic developments. In this sense, the path of modernism in America after World War II was intimately connected to the larger political and cultural debates of the early Cold War. Whether it was Lionel Trilling fretting over the sexualization of American culture in the 1950s or Jack Kerouac lamenting the perceived decline in paternal authority in the wake of the feminist movement or Ralph Ellison reconsidering racial politics in the midst of the civil rights movement, modernists of all persuasions developed their particular aesthetic practices in relationship to the fluctuations of postwar society. But if anything drove modernism in the 1950s it was the larger fear over the threat of totalitarianism. No modernist—from Dwight Macdonald to William Burroughs to Kenneth Burke—wrote about the nature of society without explicitly referencing the threat from right-wing and left-wing authoritarian movements. Of course each group confronted totalitarian politics in different ways. High modernists such as Theodor Adorno, Lionel Trilling, Clement Greenberg, and others saw totalitarianism as an endemic part of the larger collapse of Western civilization and as a desperate psychological response to a world with no focus or direction. Unlike the originators of high modernism in the 1920s, those who wrote after the experience of World War II jettisoned the connection between aesthetic hierarchies and political ones that had led many modernists in the 1930s to turn to Fascism to realize their social visions. High modernism in the Cold War was almost by definition antiauthoritarian, exemplified by the litany of nonaesthetic concerns that appeared in works such as Theodor Adorno’s The Authoritarian Personality and Lionel Trilling’s The Liberal Imagination. High modernism had become a chastened form of modernism. But such practitioners held onto the belief that aesthetics as such, fundamentally disconnected from the contaminating hands of mass society, could disrupt the overtly rational norms of modern society.
I outline how this varied group of high modernists—Theodor Adorno, Allen Tate, Dwight Macdonald, Lionel Trilling, and others—confronted the problem of authoritarianism after World War II. The explicit goal of high modernism in America, besides institutionally defending the humanities in the face of the militarization of society in the early Cold War, was to carve out an image of man uncontaminated by the corrupting appeals of mass society. Promoting a political realism removed from the trappings of ideology, high modernists turned to Freudian psychology to rethink the grounding of the self, offering a new vision of man’s personal autonomy and providing an almost antinomian defense of the individual. In so doing, high modernists like Adorno and Trilling echoed the anti-Communist sentiments of many Cold War liberals, presenting a chastened image of man in the modern age and oftentimes defending the excesses of the rising national security state in the 1950s as protection against the allure of group psychology. In many ways, then, high modernists became domesticated, forfeiting, as numerous challenging practitioners such as Kenneth Burke and Norman Mailer pointed out, the original antistatist, anticapitalist, and anarchic principles inherent to most forms of modernism. Thus, I trace the ever-increasing link between high modernists and the conservative politics of the early Cold War, a link that helps to explain the myriad challenges within modernist circles to their hegemony.
But of course the threat of totalitarianism drove most political discussions in the 1950s, even within other modernist circles. In contrast to their more austere counterparts, romantic modernists like painter Barnett Newman and novelists William Burroughs and Norman Mailer saw totalitarianism instead as a creeping social disease, one emanating from a decrepit American culture controlled by corporations, indistinguishable political parties, and government agencies. For romantic modernists, totalitarianism was, literally and metaphorically, a form of cancer infecting the body politic, a cancer that entered the individual’s system in discrete psychological ways. By presenting such an encompassing definition of totalitarianism, these romantic modernists fretted over almost all of the socioeconomic changes in American life after 1945, lambasting everything from the decline of more rugged forms of masculinity in the wake of postindustrialism to the rise of modern advertising, the expansion of the federal government, and so on. In so doing, they offered a reactionary, libertarian form of politics, one that reflected their obsessive concern with the autonomy of self. They even saw totalitarian practices within the politics of high modernism itself; as William Burroughs once explained to Allen Ginsberg: “It’s about time you wised up to Trilling…. He’s got no orgones, no mana, no charge to him. Just soaks up your charge to keep the battery of his brain turning out crap for the Partisan Review.”24 All of the practices of romantic modernism—the action painting of New York art circles, the spontaneous poetics of Beat writers, and the philosophy of hip in the work of Norman Mailer—were part of a common effort to offer an image of man freed from the creeping disease of psychological control. Romantic modernists searched for an anchor point for individual identity in a world that had apparently reduced subjectivity to mere appearance. Such speculations on the metaphysical ranged from appropriations of Buddhist transcendentalism to discourses on a foundational élan vital or energy underlying artistic production. Through references to either mythology or metaphysics, the immediate was translated into the eternal, all in a desperate attempt to respiritualize the world by making the ordinary extraordinary.
However, not all modernists exhibited the paranoia found in disparate works such as William Burroughs’s Naked Lunch or Theodor Adorno’s The Authoritarian Personality. Although equally concerned with the problem of mass politics, late modernists were more willing to accept the disorder of the modern world without lapsing into the nostalgic visions of a prelapsarian moment that emerged from high modernist writings or without accepting the more mystical visions of romantic modernists. While most modernist practitioners such as Trilling, Adorno, and Burroughs fretted that the autonomous self was under siege from the contaminating influences of mass society and tried, albeit in different ways, to shore up individual subjectivity from noxious influences, late modernists such as C. Wright Mills and Kenneth Burke outlined the social, historical, and linguistic constitution of the self. In so doing, they promoted those more open and intersubjective forms of identity later associated with postmodernism.25 These modernists were willing to view the self in a much more linear or horizontal fashion than their modernist counterparts who delved into the deeper depths of the self. This, if anything, was the common theme running through diverse texts such as David Riesman’s The Lonely Crowd, Erving Goffman’s The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life, and Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man. Late modernist practitioners offered a complex account of subject formation, one that dispensed with the overt essentialism of their counterparts and one that was willing to explore the liberating possibilities remaining in a world seemingly full of artifice, imitative practices, and social conformity.
From Kenneth Burke to James Baldwin to Jasper Johns, late modernists saw a complexity to human identity—a subject that was formed in and through its relations to others, to institutional forms, and to the political landscape. Such late modernists argued that the self was neither fully whole nor autonomous but instead constituted through an endless parade of generalized and significant others—sometimes with overlapping agendas and sometimes with conflicting interests—that provided the context for self-identity. “What is our ‘reality,’” argued Kenneth Burke, “but all this clutter of symbols about the past combined with whatever things we know mainly through maps, magazines, newspapers, and the like about the present?”26 Like the postmodernist writers who came soon after them, late modernists saw the self as formed through a series of identificatory and linguistic practices. But unlike those postmodernists, Burke and others refused to believe that the self was reducible to the context in which it was situated. One can note the difficulty of this project by examining the odd terminology used by many late modernists—sociologist David Riesman referenced the autonomous other-directed personality, sociologist Erving Goffman spoke of the presentation of self in society, and Kenneth Burke described man as homo rhetorician. For all such writers, the self was not something given but something achieved through a delicate social, linguistic, and economic performance, a self that emerged from the landscape of everyday life and that tried to provide an account of its needs, desires, and possibilities. These late modernists provided a description of the self that included, however hesitant, language of the self as subject.
In this sense, my book is both a work of tradition building, in which I carve out an overlooked moment in American intellectual history, and a work of cultural history, in which I map these debates over modernism onto the cultural terrain of the early Cold War. In so doing, I chart the contentious debate between these three forms of modernism—high, romantic, and late—over the nature of art and the nature of the subject. In Part I, I analyze the rise and fall of high modernism, examining how a range of critics such as Lionel Trilling, Theodor Adorno, and Clement Greenberg tried to promote high art as a rejoinder to an American landscape dominated by science and technology and threatened by the specter of totalitarianism from abroad. As the Cold War progressed, these high modernists eventually forfeited their prior aesthetic commitments and turned to more conservative assumptions about social transformation. Throughout, I detail the response by several late modernists who critiqued the failed project of high modernism, exposing its biases and limitations. In Part II, I trace the development of romantic modernism, exemplified by the action painting of Jackson Pollock and Willem de Kooning and the spontaneous poetics of Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg, an avant-garde that similarly critiqued the conservative politics of high modernism. Offering endless metaphysical speculations on the true grounding of being, these romantic modernists tried to salvage the self from a supposedly decrepit, authoritarian culture. Such wild speculations were at times quite cartoonish, and throughout Part II, I examine the rejoinder offered by late modernists to these compatriots as well, exposing the reactionary, if not retrograde, assumptions about identity lurking behind their aesthetic project. Finally, in Part III I summarize the theoretical and aesthetic project of late modernism, demonstrating not only the contribution of writers such as Kenneth Burke and Ralph Ellison to the postmodern turn of the 1960s and 1970s but their own independent reworking of modernism overall. Readers of course will object to certain characterizations of particular works or the pigeonholing of certain thinkers. This is endemic to any attempt at classification. But the refusal to make categorical distinctions leads, borrowing from a famous phrase, to the night in which all cows are black. As we begin to answer difficult questions such as “who comes after the subject,” we might need to look backward to move forward.27 Any post-postmodernist conceptualization of the self needs to recognize the social, political, and historical roots of this dilemma.