The nominee that
speaks to much of our contemporary moment—and a broad American audience.
The roundtable’s
third presenter, Jeff
Renye of Temple and La Salle Universities, nominated Nathanael West’s The Day of the Locust.
West’s tragically brief
career produced (among a few other works) two particularly unique and
striking novels, Locust and Miss Lonelyhearts;
both have plenty to recommend them and deserve more of a place in our
collective consciousness, but Jeff argued convincingly for a couple
particularly significant and salient components to Locust.
For one thing, Locust remains, more than 70 years after
its publication, perhaps the best and certainly one of the most complex and
challenging representations of that defining American cultural presence and
influence, Hollywood. West takes seriously the attractive as well as the
destructive qualities to that place of dreams, and his depiction of it has yet
to be surpassed. Yet as Jeff noted, West is fully aware of the even bigger
dream—the American Dream—to which Hollywood, journeying to the West, and many
other concurrent narratives can be connected, and there are likewise few novels
that deal with the dark underbelly of the Dream (sometimes called the
American Nightmare) better than Locust.
Jeff also
discussed at length some of the more practical questions that underlie my Even
Bigger Read concept, however, and so I want to make sure to mention that part
of his presentation as well. To paraphrase his point: it’s all well and good
for interested academic scholars to talk about what books we’d like everyone to
read, but it’s quite another matter to think actively about how we connect to
our fellow Americans, particularly those for whom reading—and even literacy—is far more of
a complicated challenge than a job requirement. At the very least, we need to
think about books that will speak to broad American audiences—and Jeff made a
great case that West’s novel can and would do so.
Next nominee
tomorrow,
Ben
PS. Thoughts on
this nomination? Other nominees for an Even Bigger Read?
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