|
|
BOOKS: A Worthy Adversary
By Tevi Troy
Tevi Troy on A Life in the Twentieth Century: Innocent Beginnings by Arthur Schlesinger Jr.
Arthur Schlesinger Jr.
A Life in the Twentieth Century: Innocent Beginnings, 1917-1950.
Houghton Mifflin.
556 pages. $28.95
In 1991, political
correctness was at its height, the nations top universities were instituting speech
codes, and multiculturalists were trying to purge campus reading lists of DWEMs
dead white European males. As the debate raged on, Jesse Jackson, a two-time contender for
the Democratic party presidential nomination, weighed in strongly on the side of the
multiculturalists, leading groups of protesting Stanford students in chants of "Hey
hey, ho ho, Western cultures got to go." At the same time, Arthur Schlesinger
Jr. published The Disuniting of America, a defense of Western civilization and an
attack on mindless multiculturalism. The contrast could not have been starker.
Schlesinger, the high priest of an earlier era of liberalism, and Jackson, the high priest
of liberalisms current incarnation, clearly stood on very different sides of a
cultural divide.
This was not the first time that Schlesinger broke from his fellow liberals. In
addition to his defense of the classics and of objective standards, Schlesinger had been a
staunch anti-communist throughout his career. Unlike many of his colleagues on the left,
and unlike even many of his neoconservative critics who had earlier drifted away from
youthful Marxist dalliances, Schlesinger always rejected communism and took a hard line on
many Cold War issues.
Of course, none of this should suggest that Schlesinger is a conservative, or even a
neoconservative drifting rightward with age. His writings reveal that Schlesinger is, and
always was, an unflinching Democratic partisan. Yet despite his disdain for what he calls
conservatism, there is readily discernible in Schlesinger (gasp) an unmistakable
conservative temperament.
In addition to that temperament, reading Schlesinger also reveals as well a witty,
learned man, with a good sense of humor and a willingness to make friends on both sides of
the political aisle all three sides if you count the Marxists. Schlesinger does not
reject Western civilization, as so many of his leftist colleagues do, but he sees his
brand of liberalism as the apotheosis of Western political development. Schlesingers
anti-communism, anti-multiculturalism, and good old-fashioned American nationalism have
earned him often bitter critiques from the left, but Schlesinger, to his credit, has held
his ground, convinced that History, his constant ally, is on his side.
Schlesingers recent autobiography, A Life in the Twentieth Century: Innocent
Beginnings, 1917-1950 his first book in almost 10 years confirms
this view. The mere fact that he felt the first 33 years of his life worthy of a 556-page
memoir demonstrates either hubris or a life truly worth living. Fortunately,
Schlesingers book covers a fascinating interval, in which he wrote three books, met
everyone worth meeting, and provided a lively commentary detailing this eventful period.
As Schlesinger modestly put it, "I have lived through interesting times and had the
luck of knowing some interesting people."
Schlesinger was born in Columbus, Ohio, in 1917, the son of historian Arthur
Schlesinger Sr. Schlesinger pere was a disciple of Charles Beard, the author of an Economic
Interpretation of the Constitution (1913) and the father of the Progressive school.
The theories of historians like Schlesinger Sr. and Beard helped reshape the study of
American history, paving the road for social history and the study of races and gender
within history. Despite the apparent similarities, social history differs from the kind of
racial and gender history we see on campuses today. As Schlesinger describes the
difference between the two approaches, "my father and his generation saw
multiculturalism as a stage in the absorption of newcomers into an American nationality
and culture that they remolded as they entered." In the 1990s, in contrast,
"Ideologues saw ethnicity as the defining experience for Americans.
Multiculturalism in this militant version rejected the concept of a common culture and of
a single American nationality." Although both generations of Schlesingers rejected
the latter approach, Schlesinger Sr.s theories helped pave the path for todays
versions of gender and racial history. Schlesinger had historians genes on both
sides of his family. His maternal grandfather was George Bancroft, "Americas
first major historian." With this impressive birthright, Schlesinger gravitated
towards history at an early age, keeping a journal and reading voraciously. His wide
reading is one of his most admirable characteristics. Schlesinger devoured the classics in
his youth, and he spends dozens of pages detailing his reading. One particularly amusing
memory skewers the Robinson family of Switzerland: "I remember liking Swiss
Family Robinson as a child. But when I later read Johann Wysss rip-off of
Crusoe to my own children, the Robinson family seemed to me a pack of bloodthirsty
Calvinists who spent an inordinate time (a) in praying and (b) in massacring inoffensive
animals." One of Schlesingers most sobering, yet trenchant, observations is
that most people have read the bulk of books that they will read by the age of 25.
Another of Schlesingers admirable characteristics is his love of country.
Schlesingers patriotism, which has been instrumental in his opposition to both
communism and multiculturalism, developed out of the Schlesinger familys immigrant
roots. When Schlesinger Sr. complained that other children mocked his own fathers
foreign accent, his father replied: "You tell them, son, that their parents had no
choice about coming but I came because I wanted to because I thought the United
States the best country on earth." As a result of this, Arthur Jr. noted, "My
father thereafter began to think of immigrants not as a chosen people but as a choosing
people."
In addition to a profession, patriotism, and politics, Schlesinger Sr. also passed on
his personal relationships to his son. From an early age, when the senior Schlesinger
introduced his son to H.L. Mencken, to Schlesingers appointment as a colleague of
his fathers at Harvard, Schlesingers career consistently benefited from his
fathers reputation and connections. When the Schlesinger family fretted about the
quality of education their son was receiving from his public school, Schlesinger
Sr.s connections saved the day: After young Schlesingers "civics teacher
had informed the class that the inhabitants of Albania were called Albinos and had white
hair and pink eyes," Schlesinger Sr. "forthwith called his friend Corning
Benton, the treasurer for Phillips Exeter Academy, and entered me as an upper middler for
the autumn of 1931."
After Exeter, and a trip around the world, Schlesinger went to Harvard, where he began
to establish his own relationships with the key players of the political establishment. He
also undertook as his senior thesis a study of the nineteenth century Transcendentalist
Orestes Brownson, which became his first published book.
After Harvard, he served as a Henry Fellow at Cambridge, and then as a member of the
Society of Fellows at Harvard, meeting even more future celebrities along the way. World
War II interceded, but it did not interrupt Schlesingers journey through the future
stars of postwar America. While serving in the Office of War Information and later in the
Office of Strategic Services, the precursor to the cia, Schlesinger met Bill Casey, Wild
Bill Donovan, John Kenneth Galbraith, Stewart Alsop, Walt Rostow, Leon Edel, and George
Ball. Before Schlesingers return from Europe, his publisher released his second
book, The Age of Jackson. The book, which portrayed Andrew Jackson as a proto-New
Deal Democrat, sold 90,000 copies, won the Pulitzer Prize, and transformed Schlesinger
from young man on the make to made man.
Schlesinger moved to Washington and joined the salons of the Georgetown elite,
especially Washington Post publisher Phil Graham and columnist Joe Alsop. He
wrote freelance articles for Fortune, Life, and the Atlantic,
and helped found the liberal anti-communist group Americans for Democratic Action. After a
year of freelancing, Schlesinger returned to Harvard as a professor, but maintained his
close ties to Washington. In 1948, he wrote the Vital Center, which urged a
nationwide anti-communist effort, a common rallying cry among both right and left. The Vital
Center summarized the liberal anti-communist position that dominated American
intellectual life in the 1950s.
If course, while his
first 33 years are as interesting as anyones have a right to be, the most eventful
years of his life took place after Schlesingers first volume comes to a close. In
1952 and 1956, Schlesinger served as speechwriter for Adlai Stevensons presidential
runs. Although Stevenson lost both races, the senator nevertheless helped shape future
campaigns and presidential administrations by bringing teams of prominent intellectuals
into his campaign. Stevenson recognized that in postwar America, the increasingly educated
middle class provided a market for the writings of intellectuals, who in turn gained
increasing sway over their new readers. After the Stevenson campaign, all subsequent
presidential candidates hired or consulted with intellectuals in the course of their
campaigns and administrations.
Schlesinger, of course, benefited from this development, serving, in his best-known
job, as resident intellectual in the Kennedy White House. Despite the conventional view of
Schlesingers job as a top aide to Kennedy, his contemporaries had a different view.
As Kennedy aides Kenneth P. ODonnell and David F. Powers reported in Johnny We
Hardly Knew Ye: Memories of John Fitzgerald Kennedy (1970), that Schlesinger was
"special assistant without a special portfolio, to be a liaison man in charge of
keeping Adlai Stevenson happy, to receive complaints from the liberals, and to act as a
sort of household devils advocate who would complain about anything in the
administration that bothered him." Robert Kennedy, as quoted in Robert Kennedy
in His Own Words: The Unpublished Recollections of the Kennedy Years (1988),
edited by Edwin O. Guthman and Jeffrey Shulman, recalled that his older brother
"liked Arthur Schlesinger, but he thought he was a little bit of a nut sometimes. He
thought he was sort of a gadfly and that he was having a helluva good time in Washington.
He didnt do a helluva lot, but he was good to have around."
RFKs assessment was correct; Schlesinger had a helluva good time in his three
years at the White House, where he wrote articles and film reviews, corresponded with the
nations intellectual and cultural elites, advised Kennedy on literary and some
political matters, and accumulated the research for his Pulitzer prize-winning book on the
Kennedy administration, A Thousand Days. In short, his job at the White House
paid him $20,000 to be Arthur Schlesinger Jr. For Kennedy, this was a bargain.
Schlesinger, with his high standing in the intellectual community, helped Kennedy become
president, gain good reviews as president, and become even more popular in the years
following Kennedys tragic assassination.
After the White House, Schlesinger continued to write, teach, and be politically
active. He eventually left Harvard for the Graduate Center at City College in New York.
And now, at 83, he has started publishing his own autobiography. Looking back over
Schlesingers career, one sees both pros and cons. On the pro side, already
discussed, are his sense of humor, his intellect, his erudition, and his patriotism. On
the liability side, there is that one nagging trait his absolute inability to give
conservatives or conservatism a fair shake. As with so many parts of his life,
Schlesingers definition of conservatism came from his dad. In New Viewpoints on
American History, Schlesinger Sr. wrote, "The thinking conservative finds his
chief allies in the self-complacency of comfortable mediocrity, in the apathy and
stupidity of the toil-worn multitudes, and in the aggressive self-interest of the
privileged classes." Schlesinger Jr. had a similarly dismissive view of conservatism,
describing liberalisms two biggest competitors as follows: "Conservatism, rule
by the business community; and socialism, rule by ideological planners."
This misapprehension of conservatism leads Schlesinger to exhibit poor judgment at
times, particularly with respect to conservatives as individuals. In describing his
classmates at Harvard, Schlesinger recalls "Caspar Weinberger, who later served as
Ronald Reagans secretary of defense (and as hopelessly imperious a conservative in
Harvard College as he was half a century later in the Pentagon)." Schlesinger never
mentions Weinberger again, and the comment seems more a gratuitous shot at a future
Republican Cabinet secretary than an accurate snapshot of Weinberger as a college student.
Fortunately, Schlesinger elsewhere mentions a willingness to forge friendships, albeit
grudging ones, across the ideological divide, with individuals like William F. Buckley Jr.
More problematic is Schlesingers political analysis, which suffers from heavy, if
not immovable, ideological blinders. Schlesingers famous "cycles" theory
that American history moves in 20-year waves between progressivism and reaction
is often forced. After the 1992 election, Schlesinger resurrected the theory,
claiming that Clintons victory foreshadowed the start of a new liberal era. Two
years later, when the gop captured Congress for the first time in over four decades, the
Wall Street Journal reprinted Schlesingers prediction, tweaking the historian for
imposing ideology on his powers of analysis. And so with the Kennedys, where
Schlesingers understandable closeness to the family prevents him from engaging in
any kind of objective analysis. Hence his hagiographic treatment of both jfk and rfk.
Even taking into account his devotion to all things Kennedy, Schlesingers assets
still outweigh his liabilities. He might not return the favor to conservatives, but
Schlesinger belongs in the camp of worthy adversaries. He has served the cause of
liberalism well and has consistently valued attributes humor, erudition, and
patriotism that are equally valued on the right, yet too often absent among his
nominal allies on the left. The first volume of his autobiography reveals a temperamental
comrade for conservatives if not a political one, and theres ample reason to look
forward to subsequent volumes.
|
QUICK LINKS:
EMAIL ALERT
CONTACT US
TOOLS:




|