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Masscult and Midcult

by Dwight Macdonald

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1972138,545 (3.96)1
"Political radical, trenchant essayist, and impresario of the New York intellectuals, Dwight Macdonald was one of the towering figures of twentieth-century American letters. In his most famous and controversial essay, ""Masscult and Midcult"", MacDonald turns his formidable critical attention to what he sees as a new, and potentially catastrophic, development in the history of Western civilization- the influence by turns distorting, destructive, and inadvertently ridiculous of mass culture on high culture. In this new collection of essays, ranging in subject matter from Ernest Hemingway, James Agee, and Tom Wolfe to Webster's Dictionary and the Revised Standard Version of the Bible, Macdonald is shrewd, passionate, and bracingly alive to the complexities of his subject, which he defines as being not the dead sea of masscult but rather the life of the tide line where higher and lower organisms compete for survival. "… (more)
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Quintessential mid-century curmudgeon of an essayist. We could use more provocateurs of Macdonald's ilk these days - our criticism is by and large one of permissiveness, consensus, and mutual back-patting.

Highlight essay for me was the review (evisceration?) of Webster's 3rd, which could be read as a kind of prologue to David Foster Wallace's much more famous "Authority and American Usage" a classic essay in its own right.

Don't think I've chuckled this much reading essays almost all 50 years old, and I doubt I will again unless I seek out more of Macdonald's oeuvre. ( )
  Aaron.Cohen | May 28, 2020 |
This is a cantankerous set of essays, combining a Menckensian scorn and distrust for the average Joe Plumber, but also a progressive's crusty anti-consumerism.

The title essay, Masscult and Midcult, describes cultural phenomenon with Orwellian phrasing. 'Masscult' is the commercialized media and culture produced for mass consumption, and 'midcult' is 'middlebrow' art - 'masscult' with the appearance of 'Highbrow' culture, or at least attempting to imitate it.

The watertight separation between art and culture for various social groups is not new. Macdonald traces the origins of 'masscult' to Folk Art. That, at least, was something original, made by the lower classes and for them, although perhaps unconsciously imitating High Culture. High Culture was never really popular, and perhaps never will be. But such is the nature of art, he says, produced by an individual, and beloved by few other individuals who have the breadth and depth of experience to attempt to understand it. Such is Folk Art, and High Culture.

What makes this masscult so different and so insidious compared to Folk art is its mass-production, as well as its underlying purpose. In the United States, masscult is a means of distraction and self-flattery. In the Soviet Union, it is propaganda. It is a tool to make the individual into a broader, malleable mass which is a 'market', and thus targeted and satiated with new products. Even worse - masscult is easily understood as such, but midcult is not - it is manufactured art, attempting to deceive those fledging middle-classes who, with the benefits of education for the first time, into thinking it is something greater.

After such a provocative starting piece, Macdonald does not relax in his later essays. His piece on James Agee's novels is thoughtful, and laments his early death, before he could mature after the passion of [b:Let Us Now Praise Famous Men|243360|Let Us Now Praise Famous Men|James Agee|http://d.gr-assets.com/books/1348861035s/243360.jpg|1204501]. He drips acid onto some long-forgotten New York Times bestseller named 'James Gould Cozzens', noting so many deficiencies in style, in dialogue, in plot and in general execution that it is no wonder he has vanished from our memories. His scorn covers Mortimer Adler and the 'Great Books' salesman of the 1960s, the new inarticulate Biblical translations, and Tom Wolfe. I quote his comments after a particularly unbearable selection:

"It seems impossible but Wolfe has managed to get wrong the only two facts underlying all that echolalia."

The only problem I have with this selection is that it's too short. Macdonald is a piercing critic. Like the very best critics, he does not just attack, he often creates something of his own art in the process. A fine read. ( )
1 vote HadriantheBlind | Mar 30, 2013 |
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Against the American Grain: Essays on the Effects of Mass Culture contains a different selection of essays than Masscult and Midcult:
Essays against the American Grain
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"Political radical, trenchant essayist, and impresario of the New York intellectuals, Dwight Macdonald was one of the towering figures of twentieth-century American letters. In his most famous and controversial essay, ""Masscult and Midcult"", MacDonald turns his formidable critical attention to what he sees as a new, and potentially catastrophic, development in the history of Western civilization- the influence by turns distorting, destructive, and inadvertently ridiculous of mass culture on high culture. In this new collection of essays, ranging in subject matter from Ernest Hemingway, James Agee, and Tom Wolfe to Webster's Dictionary and the Revised Standard Version of the Bible, Macdonald is shrewd, passionate, and bracingly alive to the complexities of his subject, which he defines as being not the dead sea of masscult but rather the life of the tide line where higher and lower organisms compete for survival. "

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