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Masscult and Midcult

Masscult and Midcult

Essays Against the American Grain

by Dwight Macdonald, introduction by Louis Menand, edited by John Summers

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An uncompromising contrarian, a passionate polemicist, a man of quick wit and wide learning, an anarchist, a pacifist, and a virtuoso of the slashing phrase, Dwight Macdonald was an indefatigable and indomitable critic of America’s susceptibility to well-meaning cultural fakery: all those estimable, eminent, prizewinning works of art that are said to be good and good for you and are not. He dubbed this phenomenon “Midcult” and he attacked it not only on aesthetic but on political grounds. Midcult rendered people complacent and compliant, secure in their common stupidity but neither happy nor free.

This new selection of Macdonald’s finest essays, assembled by John Summers, the editor of The Baffler, reintroduces a remarkable American critic and writer. In the era of smart, sexy, and everything indie, Macdonald remains as pertinent and challenging as ever.

CONTENTS
Introduction
Masscult and Midcult
James Agee
Ernest Hemingway
By Cozzens Possessed
The Book-of-the-Millennium Club
Updating the Bible
The String Untuned
The Triumph of the Fact
Parajournalism
Or, Tom Wolfe and His Magic Writing Machine
Norman Cousins’s Flat World
Sources

Additional Book Information

Series: NYRB Classics
ISBN: 9781590174470
Pages: 320
Publication Date:

Praise

He was a radical, he was a conservative, he was compassionate, he was scathing. He had exquisite taste in many a literary matter. But his transcendental virtue, that unique quality which sets him far apart from all other literary figures for whom one can feel respect, was that he had the rare gift of always speaking out of his own voice.
—Norman Mailer

Dwight Macdonald was a generalist whose specialty was capsizing conventional wisdom, exposing highfalutin fraudulence and filing heretical dissents.
—James Wolcott, The New York Times

Those who read much and care about the quality of what they read ought to be grateful for the consistent tough-mindedness of Dwight Macdonald.... he is provocative and well worth rereading. The quality of his essays is in direct ratio to their ambitiousness.
—Larry McMurtry, The Washington Post

Dwight Macdonald's...real legacy lies in the series of unforgiving, inflammatory and ferociously witty essays he wrote during the 50s, 60s and 70s. Most of his work is out of print now, but this new collection edited by John Summers aims to right this wrong and prove Macdonald's enduring relevance as a cultural watchdog....If, politically, Macdonald was a confused and often erratic radical, intellectually he was a staunch conservative; he was against the grain in more ways than one. It's this unresolved contradiction that makes his essays so thrilling and complex.
— Ermanno Rivetti, The Guardian

As with all great essayists, his writing had a poetic component, but it was a poetry cleansed of poeticism. No modern American prose writer of consequence ever postured less: compared with him, Mary McCarthy is on stilts, Gore Vidal grasps a pouncet-box, and Norman Mailer is from Mars in a silver suit. At his best, Macdonald made modern American English seem like the ideal prose medium: transparent in its meaning, fun when colloquial, commanding when dignified, and always suavely rhythmic even when most committed to the demotic.
— Clive James, The Atlantic

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