|
|
First Things
Books in Review
Cleanth Brooks and the Rise of Modern Criticism
Copyright (c) 1997 First
Things 72 (April 1997): 50-52.
Before Foucault
Cleanth Brooks and the Rise of Modern Criticism.
By Mark Royden Winchell. University Press of Virginia. 510 pp.
$34.95.
Reviewed by R. V. Young
I still own and still make frequent use of my paperback copy of Cleanth
Brooks' The Well Wrought Urn, which I purchased for $1.35 more
than thirty years ago. What is more, I still have fond memories of
Brooks' hospitality during an English Department picnic held at his
country home while I was a graduate student at Yale a quarter century
ago. Finally, Brooks' incisive talk and gracious conviviality during the
following reception at the school where I teach, some fifteen years ago,
still remains with me as an exemplary image of the proper conduct of
academic life. So I am not the most objective reviewer of Mark Royden
Winchell's literary biography of the man who, perhaps more than any
other, made the study of English literature of central importance in the
modern university curriculum. It may be, however, that my personal debt
to Cleanth Brooks can serve as an indication of what he has meant to the
world of humane letters and higher education during this century in
America, and of the loss that world sustained in his recent death.
An unexpected virtue of this book is that the life of Cleanth Brooks
turns out to be quite as interesting as that of most poets and
novelists. Of course much is owing to Mark Royden Winchell's skill as a
biographer. His style is clear and unobtrusive, and he knows how to
provide a full picture of his subject without swamping the reader in
trivia. Most important, Winchell recognizes that what matters about a
man of letters is his work, and details of his life are significant
insofar as they explain and illuminate that work. This account of the
life of Cleanth Brooks furnishes valuable information about the Southern
Agrarian movement, the literary scene at Oxford and Cambridge in the
late 1920s, when Brooks was a Rhodes Scholar, the curious relationship
between Louisiana State University and the political machine of Huey
Long, the crucial role of the Southern Review (of which Brooks
was a founding editor) in the rise of Southern literature and literary
modernism in America, and the development of literary criticism at Yale
(where Brooks taught from 1947 till 1975).
In addition, Winchell introduces the numerous novelists and poets,
critics and scholars who were Brooks' friends and associates through a
long and productive career: Allen Tate, Donald Davidson, John Crowe
Ransom, Robert Penn Warren, Katherine Anne Porter, Robert B. Heilman,
Maynard Mack, Louis Martz, Rene Wellek, William Wimsatt-and the list
goes on. In providing details of these relationships, Winchell creates
the intellectual context for the theme that is indicated by the second
half of his title: The Rise of Modern Literary Criticism.
What we learn about Brooks' personal life, apart from the intrinsic
interest of learning about the life of a good man, is largely important
as an indication of the kind of life that is open to an academic
literary man and the kind of model that he can furnish. The "New
Criticism" (by now the old New Criticism) that Brooks
championed, with its insistence on the intrinsic meaning and value of
the literary text and its identification of paradox and irony as the
essential features of imaginative literature, has often been decried in
recent years as "elitist"-as the purely leisurely pursuit of privileged
white men.
Although Brooks was a man of substantial affluence by the time of his
death, largely as a result of the commercial success of the textbooks he
helped to edit, he certainly did not start out that way. The son of a
Methodist minister, Brooks grew up in very modest circumstances in a
family that moved from one parsonage to another as his father was
transferred from church to church in rural Kentucky and Tennessee.
Brooks made his way through Vanderbilt and Tulane and eventually was
awarded a Rhodes Scholarship by dint of sacrifice, hard work, and the
unremitting application of his considerable intellectual gifts. He
labored at LSU for nearly fifteen years under the burdens of a daunting
teaching schedule and the editing of the Southern Review with a
small salary and little local appreciation. Still, he managed to write
and publish scholarly and critical works of sufficient substance to win
him national recognition and appointment to the Yale faculty. If he was
an elitist, it was in the sense that everyone associated with a
university and the life of the mind should be: he strove always to
attain and promote excellence.
The New Criticism that Brooks championed seems to have been a means of
coming to terms with the literary modernism that emerged in the early
twentieth century in the writings of Eliot, Yeats, Pound, and Joyce, and
in their successors. The criticism of T. S. Eliot, in particular, sought
a critical and historical justification for his own difficult and
obscure poetry in the French symbolists and the English metaphysical
poets of the seventeenth century, and Eliot's revaluation of these poets
implied a revision of literary history-or of the literary canon, to put
it in contemporary terms.
Brooks' achievement was to apply the method of close reading, with its
emphasis on poetic tension, or paradox, or irony, to virtually the
entire English and American literary tradition, including prose fiction
and drama as well as nondramatic verse. His early critical works like
Modern Poetry and the Tradition (1939) and, especially, The
Well Wrought Urn (1947) were very influential in this development;
but undoubtedly his most enduring contribution to literary education
arises from the anthologies he edited for college students in freshman
composition and introductory literature courses: Understanding
Poetry (1938), Understanding Fiction (1943) with Robert
Penn Warren, and Understanding Drama (1945) with Robert B.
Heilman.
These textbooks all went through more than one edition and influenced
the way in which literature was taught for decades. It is important to
recall that they were conceived and composed not at Yale but at
Louisiana State for students who would typically be majoring in
agriculture, accounting, or mechanical engineering. What Brooks and his
collaborators offered such students was a means of independent
interpretation and judgment of virtually any literary work they might
encounter. Perhaps the most important legacy of the New Criticism is
thus pedagogical: it made English courses the principal vehicle for
teaching the average American college student how to read and think
critically; it provided the lower and middle class students who began to
flood higher education in the fifties and sixties (among whom I number
myself) with the opportunity for intellectual and imaginative
cultivation. It is hard to conceive of a more democratic form of
elitism.
Brooks was himself a practicing Christian (as an adult he moved from his
boyhood Methodism to the Episcopal Church), but there is little overt
treatment of religion in his literary criticism. In one of the
exceptions, The Hidden God (1963), he remarks that at least
some of the new critics did not stress the religious dimension of
literature because-despite Matthew Arnold's expectation that poetry
would replace Christianity-religion and literature are different, if not
unrelated, activities.
A fundamental theme of Brooks' theory is that literary works are not
sermons or treatises; stories, novels, and poems are, like plays,
essentially dramatic, not rhetorical. Hence a work of literature will be
most effectively religious not by propounding abstract dogma, but by
representing human experience concretely and honestly-whatever the
professed beliefs of the author. The thesis of The Hidden God
is that the work of unbelieving writers like Yeats and Faulkner, or of
Eliot before his conversion, can present a vision of reality of profound
significance to Christians insofar as it is faithful to the truth of
human experience. Though Beethoven's final religious views are somewhat
obscure, and Mozart was associated with the Masons, their settings of
the Mass furnish far greater enhancement to the liturgy than the hymns
being composed by devout believers in our time. By the same token, the
first thing a Christian should ask about a work of literature is whether
it is honestly and skillfully crafted.
Mark Royden Winchell has crafted a fine biography of Cleanth Brooks. He
not only presents an effective narration of his subject's life, but he
also shows why that life was important to American education and
culture. This book provides a real sense of how much Brooks contributed
to the academic study of literature, and of what a decline has occurred
since he has been displaced by Michel Foucault as the most influential
thinker in university English departments.
R. V. Young is Professor of English at North Carolina State
University.
Email this to a friend
copyright
© 1995-2012
Leadership U. All rights reserved.
Updated: 13 July 2002
|