In a midcentury American cultural episode forgotten today,
intellectuals of all schools shared a belief that human nature was
under threat. The immediate result was a glut of dense, abstract
books on "the nature of man." But the dawning "age of the crisis of
man," as Mark Greif calls it, was far more than a historical
curiosity. In this ambitious intellectual and literary history,
Greif recovers this lost line of thought to show how it influenced
society, politics, and culture before, during, and long after World
War II.
During the 1930s and 1940s, fears of the barbarization of
humanity energized New York intellectuals, Chicago
protoconservatives, European Jewish emigres, and native-born
bohemians to seek "re-enlightenment," a new philosophical account
of human nature and history. After the war this effort diffused,
leading to a rebirth of modern human rights and a new power for the
literary arts.
Critics' predictions of a "death of the novel" challenged
writers to invest bloodless questions of human nature with flesh
and detail. Hemingway, Faulkner, and Richard Wright wrote flawed
novels of abstract man. Succeeding them, Ralph Ellison, Saul
Bellow, Flannery O'Connor, and Thomas Pynchon constituted a new
guard who tested philosophical questions against social
realities--race, religious faith, and the rise of technology--that
kept difference and diversity alive.
By the 1960s, the idea of "universal man" gave way to moral
antihumanism, as new sensibilities and social movements transformed
what had come before. Greif's reframing of a foundational debate
takes us beyond old antagonisms into a new future, and gives a
prehistory to the fractures of our own era."
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