Mammonart
![]() First edition | |
Author | Upton Sinclair |
---|---|
Language | English |
Publisher | Self (Pasadena, California) |
Publication date | 1925 |
Media type | Print (Hardcover) |
Pages | 390 pages |
Mammonart. An Essay in Economic Interpretation (1925) is a book of literary criticism by the American novelist, journalist, and political activist Upton Sinclair. He offers his assessments, from a socialist point of view, of 85 past "great authors" (along with a few painters and composers) from Europe and the United States.
Background
[edit]In the late 1910s and 1920s, Sinclair wrote a series of books about American institutions and culture: The Profits of Religion (Christianity), The Brass Check (news media), The Goose-step (higher education), The Goslings (elementary and high school education), Mammonart (traditional literature, art and music), and Money Writes! (contemporary literature). He called these books the "Dead Hand" series—a sardonic derivation of Adam Smith's "invisible hand" that guides capitalism.
Contents
[edit]Sinclair's title merges "Mammon" and "art" to emphasize how art has always been, in his estimation, commodified and controlled by the wealthy. He begins the book with a framing device in the form of an extended allegory. It is, according to his biographer Anthony Arthur:
an allegory of the first artist, the Neanderthal "Ogi", who finds meaning in his life by scratching crude images on his cave wall of the beasts he eats and who try to eat him. Ogi's mate—Mrs. Ogi—supports him, but the tribe, dominated by early members of the Los Angeles Merchants and Manufacturers Association, expels him because he alone, among all the other painters, refuses to make the images they want. Finding refuge in another cave, Ogi continues his work, poor and isolated but honest. His more pliable fellow artists remain in the big cave, well fed and honored. Thus we see, Sinclair says, that "from the dawn of human history, the path to honor and success in the arts has been through the service and glorification of the ruling classes; entertaining them, making them pleasant to themselves, and teaching their subjects and slaves to stand in awe of them."[1]
Interspersed throughout Mammonart are dialogues between a modern-day Mr. and Mrs. Ogi, as represented by Sinclair and his wife Mary Craig. They trade quips and barbs in a kind of running commentary on the book and on the history of art.
In the majority of chapters, there is a short biography and critique of a famous writer from the past. Sinclair's assessment depends on how he measures that writer's level of support for the rich and powerful. He asserts that throughout history, most artists have not challenged the status quo, but instead took apolitical positions such as "art for art's sake" or "art is entertainment". From Sinclair's perspective, such artists perpetuate injustice and inequality no matter how beautiful the work they create.[2] For example, in his chapter on Shakespeare entitled "Phosphorescence and Decay", Sinclair praises the poet-playwright's glorious facility with words, but claims that Shakespeare's talent "saved him the need of thinking".[3] In contrast, Dickens' unique contribution was to "force into the aristocratic and exclusive realms of art the revolutionary notion that the poor and degraded are equally as interesting as the rich and respectable."[4]
Mammonart is notable for Sinclair's repeated statement that all art, including his own, is propaganda. The popular distinction between "pure and unsullied creative artists" like Shakespeare and Goethe, and "propagandists" like Jesus and Tolstoi, "is purely a class distinction and a class weapon; itself a piece of ruling-class propaganda, a means of duping the minds of men, and keeping them enslaved to false standards of art and of life." [5]
The list of artists that Sinclair discusses is similar to, though shorter than, a 1940 list of Great Books. He also adds several writers who contemporary readers might deem of lesser importance, but who were regarded in the 1920s as part of the American literary canon.
Artists discussed:
- Homer
- Aeschylus
- Sophocles
- Euripides
- Aristophanes
- Virgil
- Horace
- Juvenal
- Boccaccio
- Dante
- Miguel de Cervantes
- Michelangelo
- Raphael
- Shakespeare
- John Milton
- John Bunyan
- John Dryden
- Pierre Corneille
- Jean Racine
- Molière
- Voltaire
- Rousseau
- Jonathan Swift
- Samuel Richardson
- Henry Fielding
- Robert Burns
- Beethoven
- Goethe
- Jane Austen
- Sir Walter Scott
- Samuel Taylor Coleridge
- Robert Southey
- William Wordsworth
- John Keats
- Honoré de Balzac
- Victor Hugo
- Théophile Gautier
- Alfred de Musset
- George Sand
- Flaubert
- Heinrich Heine
- Richard Wagner
- Thomas Carlyle
- Alfred Lord Tennyson
- Robert Browning
- Matthew Arnold
- Charles Dickens
- William Makepeace Thackeray
- John Ruskin
- William Morris
- Ralph Waldo Emerson
- Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
- John Greenleaf Whittier
- Nathaniel Hawthorne
- Edgar Allan Poe
- Walt Whitman
- Pushkin
- Gogol
- Turgenev
- Dostoievski
- Tolstoi
- Goncourt brothers
- Émile Zola
- Guy De Maupassant
- Henrik Ibsen
- Strindberg
- Nietzsche
- Emile Verhaeren
- Algernon Charles Swinburne
- Oscar Wilde
- James Abbott McNeill Whistler
- George Meredith
- Henry James
- Mrs. Humphry Ward
- Mark Twain
- William Dean Howells
- Ambrose Bierce
- Richard Harding Davis
- Stephen Crane
- Frank Norris
- David Graham Phillips
- O. Henry
- Jack London
- Anatole France
- Percy Bysshe Shelley
In the last chapter, Sinclair says he wrote Mammonart as a "text-book of culture". He predicts (somewhat tongue-in-cheek) that it will be used as a Russian high school text-book "within six months", and will be adopted by the rest of Europe "as soon as the social revolution comes".[6]
Critical reception
[edit]As a self-described work of propaganda, Mammonart was mostly ignored by critics. Current History included a one-paragraph summary stating, "Mr. Sinclair contends that all art is propaganda, no matter how carefully disguised or how great the artist's devotion to the theory of 'art for art's sake.'"[7]
In The New English Weekly, the literary scholar Herbert Read accused Sinclair of denigrating outstanding writers out of spite, because "no critic of importance has ever mistaken [him] for an artist. He is the poète manqué, the cock without a comb. The midden he crows on is immense, but it is muck."[8] A reviewer in the Sydney Bulletin offered a more generous interpretation, suggesting that Sinclair's book was often informative and amusing "if you drop entirely his theory".[9]
Legacy
[edit]Mammonart was reprinted in paperback in 2003 by Simon Publications.[10] In 2022, the book was made available on Project Gutenberg.[11]
Quotations
[edit]"All art is propaganda. It is universally and inescapably propaganda; sometimes unconsciously, but often deliberately, propaganda." (p. 9)
"Great art is produced when propaganda of vitality and importance is put across with technical competence in terms of the art selected." (p. 10)
On his enjoyment of John Bunyan's Pilgrims Progress, "One does not escape the need of personal morality by espousing proletarian revolution." (p. 112)
References
[edit]- ^ Arthur, Anthony (2006). Radical Innocent: Upton Sinclair. New York: Random House. pp. 200–201. ISBN 1400061512.
- ^ Sinclair, Upton (1925). Mammonart: An Essay in Economic Interpretation. Pasadena, California: Upton Sinclair. pp. 9, 27. LCCN 25007504 – via Internet Archive.
- ^ Sinclair 1925, p. 97.
- ^ Sinclair 1925, p. 232.
- ^ Sinclair 1925, p. 10b.
- ^ Sinclair 1925, p. 384.
- ^ "Contemporary History and Biography". Current History (1916–1940). 22 (5): x. August 1925.
- ^ Read, Herbert (November 1, 1934). "A Man Without Art". The New English Weekly. pp. 57–59.
- ^ Arthur 2006, pp. 199–200: Arthur cites the Sydney Bulletin issue from September 16, 1926.
- ^ Mammonart. San Diego: Simon Publications. ISBN 0972518975. LCCN 2003106373.
- ^ "Mammonart". Project Gutenberg. September 22, 2022.
External links
[edit]- Sinclair's papers and manuscripts are in the Lilly Library at Indiana University.