A tough lesson to remember, one even the most open-minded among us resists: we can learn something from people with whom we vehemently disagree. Please don’t mistake this for a group-hug. I’m just reminding myself that only occasionally is someone thoroughly wrong down to the mitochondria level.
One of the
critics I learned most from when young was Irving Howe (1920-93), a socialist
to his dying day. His politics were stubbornly silly but I remember reviews and essays he
wrote half a century ago that left an abiding impression on my thinking
– those on the great Hungarian novelist György Konrád, the American novelist Paula
Fox, Vasily Grossman, George Eliot’s Daniel
Deronda, and such unlikely Howe enthusiasms as Kipling and Edwin Arlington
Robinson. He devoted an intelligent book to Sherwood Anderson.
I’ve written before about Howe’s close friendship with J.V. Cunningham when both taught at
Brandeis. In A Margin of Hope: An
Intellectual Autobiography (1982), Howe describes the poet-critic as “the
one colleague whom I regarded as my teacher.” I’ve since acquired a copy of Cunningham’s
Tradition and Poetic Structure (1960)
inscribed “For Irving, Aug.29, 1960, J.V.C.”
Howe devotes
many pages in A Margin of Hope to his political evolution, from Trotskyist to “democratic
socialist.” The book’s saving grace, even when you disagree with his
conclusions, is his inevitable return to literature and literary values. He
writes near the conclusion of his autobiography:
“The names
of the writers who have meant the most to me—I put forward an odd yet by no
means arbitrary list: Eliot and Brecht, Solzhenitsyn and Orwell, Kafka and
Silone and Nadezhda Mandelstam—are not necessarily those of the greatest writers.
But they are the names of crucial witnesses.”
Howe’s
qualification of his list is critical. With Eliot and Mandelstam I have no
quarrel. The others I rank from utter dismissal (Brecht) to respect with limited quantities of pleasure (Solzhenitsyn). In his next paragraph he writes:
“Old Tolstoy
having come unbidden, let me bid four writers of my own time to an imaginary
but not wholly unimaginable meeting. They sit in my apartment: Octavio Paz, the
Mexican; Milan Kundera, the Czech; V.S. Naipaul, the Trinidadian; György Konrád,
the Hungarian.”
Howe stages
an imaginary conversation among the gathered writers. All but Kundera, now
ninety-three years old, are dead, including their host. Howe writes, mingling
literature and politics:
“The writers
gathered here, all endowed with a keen political sense, have sung the dirge of
utopia. Their voices ring with skepticism, doubt, weariness: they are poets of
limitation. But could their skepticism weigh so heavily upon them, had there
not been an earlier enchantment with utopia—that of the generation of Silone
and Malraux? Now, what separates these two generations is not just a few
decades but a historical chasm.”
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