Literature and Reality

Literature and Reality

by Howard Fast
Literature and Reality

Literature and Reality

by Howard Fast

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Overview

Howard Fast’s controversial essay on the proper role of literature, offering insight into his life and works
In this 1950 essay, Howard Fast argues that all writers have a duty to reflect the truth of the world in their works, particularly regarding social justice. Fast’s treatise on literary criticism allows for a fuller understanding of his early novels, in which his political beliefs remain inseparable from his writing. Literature and Reality, which Fast wrote around the time of the 1949 Peekskill riots, offers a unique window into his worldview during the mid-twentieth century. This ebook features an illustrated biography of Howard Fast including rare photos from the author’s estate.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781453235058
Publisher: Open Road Media
Publication date: 12/27/2011
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 126
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Howard Fast (1914–2003) was one of the most prolific American writers of the twentieth century. He was a bestselling author of more than eighty works of fiction, nonfiction, poetry, and screenplays. The son of immigrants, Fast grew up in New York City and published his first novel upon finishing high school in 1933. In 1950, his refusal to provide the United States Congress with a list of possible Communist associates earned him a three-month prison sentence. During his incarceration, Fast wrote one of his best-known novels, Spartacus (1951). Throughout his long career, Fast matched his commitment to championing social justice in his writing with a deft, lively storytelling style.

Read an Excerpt

Literature and Reality


By Howard Fast

OPEN ROAD INTEGRATED MEDIA

Copyright © 1950 Howard Fast
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-4532-3505-8


CHAPTER 1

ALL the schools, styles, and fashions in literature, in other times as well as today, have come into existence through the particular relationship of an author or a group of authors to objective reality. Howsoever these schools and fashions in literature may designate themselves, they can be quite adequately understood through an investigation of the writer's relationship to reality; the application of any other set of standards can only lead to confusion, and very often to the erection of a philosophical structure wherein obscurity is enthroned and ignorance deified.

Then, indeed, a strange and shoddy piece of cloth is woven, the unraveling of which becomes a task of some consequence; yet unless that particular cloth is taken apart, unless each shoddy thread of it is exposed to the light of day, we are bound to witness a steady destruction of standards, a process of corruption which is all too evident today. Literature has always been a most precise reflection of the society which produced it, and in a society rent by contradictions, strangling in its own economic chaos, and looking fearfully to a hideous world war as a possible solution, a great deal of that society's literature will quite naturally be far from healthy. The literature, creative and critical, of America is sick, deeply sick; only a great progressive upsurge can cure it. While it may be certainly stated that the progressive upsurge is on its way, one of the immediate steps to be undertaken is an examination of the illness, so that the cure may have some sense and direction.

Much of the essay which follows will be occupied with an investigation of the nature of reality in terms of its literary reflection, as well as the use of the realistic method in the attempt to portray life truthfully. However, when I speak of reality, it should be noted here that I do not refer to any absolute, but to the historically relative understanding of the truth at the moment when the particular literary product comes into being. Truthful writing—which I use as the highest criterion—is always dependent upon the relationship of the writer to reality, but the truth itself must be seen in the dialectical sense, which, to quote M. Rosenthal and P.Yudin, the Soviet philosophers, in Handbook of Philosophy, "recognizes the relativity of our knowledge, not in the sense of a denial of objective truth, but in the sense of the historical limitations of the approximation of our knowledge to this truth."

I do not propose the essay which follows as anything more than a beginning of this examination; yet a beginning must be made somewhere. We must take a full grip on this matter of reality and literature; we are at a time when all of mankind is being projected into a face-to-face relationship with reality, and writers must march at the front, not at the rear. Theirs is the task of communicating the nature of reality to masses of people, and therein is their art and their glory; for the very nature of their work makes it possible for them to extract the essence of human hope and fear and suffering and triumph. But to do this, they must see the world and not a shadow of it.


CHAPTER 2

VERY NEAR the top of what I have, in the past, rather indelicately called the "cultural dung heap of reaction" sits Franz Kafka, one of the major Olympians in that curious shrine the so-called "new critics" and their Trotskyite colleagues have erected. Mr. Kafka is treasured as well as read; in a dozen literary quarterlies and "little" magazines, joss sticks are burned to him, and his stilted prose is exalted as a worthy goal. Worthy or not, that goal is certainly interesting, for in the creation of a shadow world, a world of twisted, tormented mockeries of mankind, Mr. Kafka holds a very high place. It is worth examining the substance of that throne.

Perhaps the most widely read of Kafka's work, here in America, is a tale called Metamorphosis, which narrates in great detail how a German traveling salesman woke up one morning and discovered that he was a cockroach.

Now, although there is satirical intention in Kafka's tale, he departs from the satirists of the past in the absolute literal presentation of his point. It is much as if, having once proceeded to put down his idea upon paper, he was carried away by a conviction of the reality of the situation he had conceived. Let me quote the first two paragraphs of the story to make this plain:

"As Gregor Samsa awoke one morning from a troubled dream, he found himself changed in his bed to some monstrous kind of vermin.

"He lay on his back, which was as hard as armor plate, and, raising his head a little, he could see the arch of his great brown belly, divided by bowed corrugations. The bedcover was slipping helplessly off the summit of the curve, and Gregor's legs, pitiably thin compared with their former size, fluttered helplessly before his eye."

Just this will give you a sense of the horror Kafka evokes in this story, and the evocation of horror is precisely the result of the literal presentation of the situation. Whatever Kafka intended, his product is not satire; satire is a means whereby irony, ridicule, and sarcasm are used to expose tyranny, vice, folly, and stupidity; and thereby satire becomes a shortcut to reality. But in this story, Kafka does not direct himself toward such exposure; he is concerned only with proving that a certain type of human being is so like a cockroach that it is entirely plausible for him to wake up one morning and discover a natural metamorphosis has taken place. And throughout the remainder of the story, with a world of intricate detail concerning the various problems of a man who is a cockroach, Kafka reiterates his thesis.

Horror and nausea are the effects Kafka's tale have on the reader, but what is the purpose? We know that men do not turn into monstrous cockroaches overnight, and we also know that the German petty bourgeois, for all the despicable qualities he may exhibit, is far, far indeed from a cockroach. It was no army of cockroaches that devastated half the civilized world—what then is Kafka's purpose? In his mind, he has performed the equation; man and roach are the same; they are each as worthy as the other; they are each as glorious as the other; they cancel out—and thereby we have the whole miserable philosophy of the "new critics," of the "new poets," of the "avant garde" of the Partisan Review, a philosophy which, to quote Milton Howard, in the periodical Mainstream, preaches "to the 'educated classes' of contemporary America, confronted by the enormous inhumanity of capitalist society, that their sole cultural recourse lies in a literature which is presumably in the great 'modern tradition' because it is based on helplessness, disgust, self-loathing, mysticism, and contempt for social action."

But helplessness, disgust, self-loathing, mysticism, and contempt for social action do not arise spontaneously. The equation of man and cockroach is a part of an enormous process on the part of the ruling class which may be quite simply defined as a confusion and distortion of the nature of the objective reality. In literature, schools arise, and charming names are given to what is by no means a charming process; but the method is essentially no different from that of Mr. Bullitt, former ambassador to France, who, testifying before the House Committee on Un-American Activities, stated that he suspected that Russians, when they were particularly hungry, ate their children.

Both Mr. Bullitt and Mr. Kafka, though they belong to different generations and cultures, and though they might, if Kafka were alive, disapprove of each other heartily, have both separated themselves from reality, and however different their motivations, they are politically a part of the same thing, and each contributes in his own way to the debasement of American culture. Whether the product of either is art cannot be determined in a narrow frame of stylistic precision or emotional response; we must apply to their products a broader yet more accurate set of standards, using truth as a gauge within the context of culture in its broadest sense, that is, seeing culture as it is defined by the British anthropologist Grahame Clark. According to Mr. Clark, "Man has achieved his present status through the medium of his culture. Man and culture are, indeed, coincident; it is impossible to conceive of man at however low a level without culture, and there is no culture apart from man."

If, therefore, we keep in mind the intimate relationship of human beings to culture, we can approach standards in terms of people; and thus we can examine art in the light of the reality of human beings. As a matter of fact, there are no other means whereby it may be examined.


CHAPTER 3

IT IS ONE THING to say that art can flourish only in relationship to the capacity of the artist to discern the truth, or, in other words, the basic objective reality; it is something else indeed to understand this process. The more so, when so many "critics" have written so many words and coined so many exceedingly complicated and often occult theories with no other intent than to deny this rather simple proposition. Hardly anything in modern life has been so obscured, so surrounded with fanciful notions, so swathed in cotton batting, so immersed in cheap snobbery as the creative process. Under capitalism, the creative writer is as much exploited as any other section of the population, but the very nature of his work makes it necessary for him to be cozened rather than coerced. If he behaves and if he is skillful, his rewards may be quite substantial, but more often than not, obedient though he may be, the payoff is piddling; his financial status is that of a petty white-collar clerk, but his pen is potentially a thousand times more lethal, and therefore there is created for him a mystical status, a dream world wherein he reigns supreme in spirit and light in purse.

An exception, of course, is that group of writers who sell themselves as agents-extraordinary of monopoly capitalism. For them, the sky is the limit, whether they attempt some pretense of literary quality, as does Kenneth Roberts; vulgarize and debase the Bible, as do Oursler and Douglas; write pretentious and bad films, as does Ben Hecht, or give up any and all pretensions of either literary quality or historical truth, as does Arthur Schlesinger, becoming, as he does in his latest hastily and badly written tract, The Vital Center, a shameless and sniveling tool of the right. From Arthur Schlesinger down the slope of dung to Howard Rushmore, the Journal-American hatemonger, there is a generous sliding scale of big money pay, entirely dependent upon the skill of the particular writer and the degree of shamelessness he is willing to indulge.

Within this dream world, reality must perforce be shunned; reality is dangerous. Reality prompts restlessness, an incisive probing for the true nature of forces, a brooding discontent that may flare out like a mounting flame—and, above all, a certain partisanship, since the truth is always partisan, as will be shown later.

So the creative writer who plays the game is shunted away from the true nature of things into obscure bypaths which literally lead to nowhere. This is a process which poses an alternative to life, but since there is actually no alternative to life but death, the logical conclusion of this mental illness can be expressed only in terms of death. As I said, this is a process, and as with all processes there are many steps along the way; but the paths converge toward the goal expressed so well by Mr. Hyam Plutzik, one of the "new poets," who is adequately adored by the "new critics." Mr. Plutzik is one of the lesser known of the "new poets." I choose him because his new book has just been received. In his book of poems, Aspects of Proteus, Mr. Plutzik declares engagingly:

    Seeking always the word nearest to silence—
    For speech is a fever, as life an ague of nature—
    One nears the undifferentiated nothing,
    The last mask of multiple delusion.
    Words that have not shape, color or hardness,
    Smell or brightness, or the vivid serial ticking
    Of clock or heart, attract as if to say:
    Prepare for being, the first and last life.


Reading the above, where it makes sense, one is reminded of the philosophy of a fourteen-year-old expressed in very bad poetry. If you recall, in Tom Sawyer, Mark Twain reprinted the composition of a Middle Western schoolgirl, in which the very same philosophy Mr. Plutzik appears so enchanted with was put forth in prose hardly less skillful than Mr. Plutzik's poetry. Allowing for the age differential, what follows is pretty good—considering that the Victorian influence was still to be overcome. Mark Twain's schoolgirl, in a composition she actually wrote and allowed to be used in Tom Sawyer, says:


"But after a while she finds that beneath this goodly exterior, all is vanity; the flattery which once charmed her soul now grates harshly upon her ear; the ballroom has lost its charms; and with wasted health and embittered heart she turns away with the conviction that earthly pleasures cannot satisfy the longings of the soul!"


Now I have no desire to single out Mr. Plutzik for attack, since I know him not at all, and the nonsense he writes is duplicated by dozens of other "new poets," but it is most interesting that Mr. Plutzik's book of poems is published not by some racketeering private poetry mill, but by the large and hard-headed firm of Harper and Brothers, and that, of this particular poem, the New York Times critic was moved to say: "He (Mr. Plutzik) treats some of the oldest poetic themes with strength and clear individuality, and with a freshness that does not depend on innovations."

I am prompted to remark that if this is freshness, then I never smelled a month-old mackerel, and I am also prompted to wonder whether it ever occurred to the Times critic or to the people at Harper that Mr. Plutzik is a grown man and not an adolescent. If it did not occur to them, then where have they dumped their standards? Where is their relationship to that world of reality where life is not "an ague of nature," but a proud and glorious and heart-breaking and splendid achievement, where men struggle and die for freedom and for a good existence, where men strive to know, to build, to change?

This, of course, is a highly rhetorical question. Neither Mr. Plutzik nor the Times critic nor the Harper editors are unique in their attitude toward life. They share the "dead end" which a rejection of reality leads to. Speaking of another modern poet, the Frenchman, St. John Perse, the same Times critic states, incredibly enough, that "he glories in a great poem made from nothing," and quotes the following:

I have built upon the abyss and the spindrift
and the sandsmoke. I shall lie down in cistern
and hollow vessels,
In all stale and empty places where lies the
taste of greatness.


By all means, the poem is made from "nothing," and it is just about as great as Baa, Baa, Black Sheep. The other verses match the ones quoted, and through all of them runs a trite childishness, a third-rate pessimism that is as embarrassing to read as nasty rhymes on toilet walls. Now, if these foolish and badly formed poems were exceptional, they would still warrant comment; but far from being exceptional, they are typical and express very well, in that curious synthesis of idea and direction that poetry so often achieves, the relationship of so many writers to reality. Here is the departure from motion and action which feeds so well on the Bohemian and mystical notion of a creative process which departs—of necessity, as they put it—from the objective world. That the subjective product is so childish appears to bother these people not at all, and that is quite understandable when you consider that standards as well as art can derive only from reality.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Literature and Reality by Howard Fast. Copyright © 1950 Howard Fast. Excerpted by permission of OPEN ROAD INTEGRATED MEDIA.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

  • Dedication
  • Contents
  • Literature and Reality
    • 1
    • 2
    • 3
    • 4
    • 5
    • 6
    • 7
    • 8
    • 9
    • 10
    • 11
    • 12
    • 13
    • 14
    • 15
    • 16
    • 17
    • 18
    • 19
    • 20
    • 21
    • 22
    • 23
  • Reference Notes
  • A Biography of Howard Fast
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