If I were to ask you to name a “corrupt” writer, who comes to mind first? Consider the adjective. From the Latin and French, the original fourteenth-century English borrowing, according to the OED, meant “putrid, rotten or rotting; infected or defiled by that which causes decay.” In other words, a biochemical process, a dissolution of living tissue. The word mutated into its more familiar figurative sense almost immediately: “debased in character; infected with evil; depraved; perverted; evil, wicked.” Thus, it becomes a common modifier of politicians and political behavior, as in “corrupt Congressman.”
As to corrupt writers, the
description applies to those who do not necessarily write ineptly or have
little fondness for linguistic felicity. Rather, it suggests dishonesty and an
advocacy of stupid, vulgar, self-indulgent or hateful ideas. Lots of candidates
come to mind, of course. My first nominee is Norman Mailer. It must be
difficult for young people to comprehend how embarrassingly awful Mailer’s thinking
and prose could be (Marilyn, anyone? Ancient Evenings? Tough
Guys Don’t Dance?), and how seriously he was taken by critics and readers.
I remember reading The Naked and the Dead as a teenager and wondering
what all the fuss was about. I had already read U.S.A. by Dos Passos,
and Mailer was clearly manipulating some of the same narrative devices as his
predecessor. A tone of strident preaching and dangerously elevated levels of machismo
were already discernable.
Michael Oakeshott suggests
an even more consequential example of writerly corruption in a 1967 entry in his Notebooks,
1922-86 (Imprint Academic, 2014):
“Karl Marx is a remarkable
writer. No other can turn possible truths into superstitions so rapidly &
so conclusively. Every truth that came to him he turned into a falsehood. He
is, possibly, the most corrupt writer who ever lived. It is not,
therefore, surprising that he became the apostle of the illiterate masses of
the world – by ‘illiterate’ I mean those who can accept nothing but what has
been endowed with the quality of superstition.”
For the unconvinced I suggest
reading the three-volume history of Marxist philosophy, Main Currents of
Marxism: Its Origins, Growth and Dissolution (1976; trans. P.S. Falla, 1978)
by Leszek Kolakowski, who describes Marxism as “the greatest fantasy of the
twentieth century.” Later in his Notebooks Oakeshott writes:
“It was not Marx who
portended the new, deadly uniformity; it was Francis Bacon & St Simon, the
Faustian progenitors of a world where everything is organized. The world where
law has ceased to be lore.”
Oakeshott was born on this date, December 11, in 1901, and died in 1990 at age eighty-nine.