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Max Eastman

 
Biography: Max Eastman

Max Eastman (1883-1969) was a poet, radical editor, translator, and author. He edited the socialist magazine "The Masses" (1912-1917) and translated Leon Trotsky into English.

Max Forrester Eastman was born on January 4, 1883, the son of two ministers. He graduated from Williams College in 1905 and studied philosophy with John Dewey at Columbia University (1907-1911), where he completed the work for a doctoral degree which he then decided not to claim. In 1909 Eastman founded the Men's League for Women's Suffrage and became a well-known and popular member of the bohemian left in New York City, where his growing reputation as a writer, lecturer, and fund-raiser led to his being invited, in 1912, to become the editor of the socialist magazine The Masses.

Under Eastman's leadership The Masses became an exuberantly anti-establishment left-wing socialist magazine featuring literary and political writing by such figures as Floyd Dell, John Reed, and Louis Untermeyer and graphic art by John Sloan, Robert Minor, and Art Young. When The Masses at first opposed America's entry into World War I it was banned by the government, and its editors, led by Eastman, were put on trial twice under the Espionage Act. Eastman was the star at both trials, a handsome and articulate young man whose eloquence was credited with achieving the victory of two hung juries at a time when most defendants under the Espionage Act were foredoomed to conviction.

After the death of The Masses Eastman founded The Liberator (1918-1922), then embarked enthusiastically on a sojourn to the Soviet Union, where he expected to discover the success of socialism. Eastman left the Soviet Union in 1924, disillusioned by the bitter struggle that followed Lenin's death in which Trotsky was brushed aside by Stalin. In 1925 Eastman's small book Since Lenin Died revealed to the world for the first time "Lenin's Testament," warning the party against allowing Stalin to succeed to power. Eastman's opposition to Stalin isolated him from American Marxists, and although he continued for some years to consider himself a radical, his views were rejected by orthodoxies of the left and the right, a position that Eastman himself, a rebellious individualist, did much to encourage.

Eastman's differences with his former comrades led him into bitterness that finally came full circle when in 1941 he published in the Reader's Digest (a conservative popular magazine with an enormous circulation) an article titled "Socialism Does Not Gibe with Human Nature." Eastman accepted a retainer as a roving editor for the Reader's Digest (which supported him until his death in 1969) and became an advocate of free enterprise and a supporter of Sen. Joseph McCarthy's attacks on alleged communists. (He did not, however, inform on his former friends, as some ex-communists and fellow travellers did).

Eastman was, according to his most sympathetic biographers, a gifted man who because of personality, conviction, and circumstance did not achieve his full possibilities. He was a prolific writer whose real text seems to have been his own contradictory life and an idiosyncratic, rebellious individualist whose journey from radical socialism to conservatism seemed to typify an American pattern. Eastman's intelligence and independence allowed him to struggle free of Marxist orthodoxies, but also prevented him from discovering a satisfying engagement with culture and politics. In his personal life, Eastman was a lifelong advocate of feminist principles who, after divorcing his first wife and through two long and apparently successful marriages, became the conscientiously self-indulgent lover of many women. Eastman's opposition to Marxist literary theory cut him off from an important part of American intellectual and artistic life during his prime; his opposition to modernist approaches to art throughout his life cut him off from much of the rest. Milton Cantor, one of Eastman's biographers, says that Eastman "we find that rare thing - the fusion of the life and the letters, the thinker and the doer, the artist and the revolutionary … who knew life and yet loved it, knew men and yet loved them… He was, before the loss of hope, … [the] gnarled apple which had the sweetest taste."

Further Reading

Eastman wrote, edited, and translated many books. Among them are Enjoyment of Poetry (1913) and Poems of Five Decades (1954). His political works are better known than the poetical and include Since Lenin Died (1925); The End of Socialism inRussia (1937); Marxism: Is It Science? (1940); and Stalin's Russia and the Crisis in Socialism (1940). Also important are two volumes of autobiography: The Enjoyment of Living (1948) and Love and Revolution (1965). For a sampling of The Masses, see William L. O'Neill (editor), Echoes of Revolt: the Masses, 1911-1917. For general biography, see William L. O'Neill, The Last Romantic: A Life of Max Eastman (1978) and Milton Cantor, Max Eastman (1970). Useful critical accounts of Eastman in the context of American radicalism may be found in Daniel Aaron, Writers on the Left: Episodes in American Literary Communism (1961); John P. Diggins, Up from Communism: Conservative Odysseys in American Intellectual History (1975); and Leslie Fishbein, Rebels in Bohemia: The Radicals of The Masses, 1911-1917 (1982).

Additional Sources

O'Neill, William L., The last romantic: a life of Max Eastman, New Brunswick, U.S.A.: Transaction Publishers, 1991.

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Columbia Encyclopedia: Max Eastman
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Eastman, Max, 1883-1969, American author, b. Canandaigua, N.Y., grad. Williams, 1905. For many years a Communist and a leader of American liberal thought, he edited the left-wing periodicals The Masses (1913-17) and the Liberator (1918-23). His eventual disillusionment with Communism is reflected in such works as Marxism, Is It Science? (1940), Stalin's Russia (1940), and Reflections on the Failure of Socialism (1955). His other works include Enjoyment of Poetry (1913), his most popular work; Enjoyment of Laughter (1936); and Poems of Five Decades (1954). Among his autobiographical works is Love and Revolution (1965).
Works: Works by Max Eastman
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(1883-1969)

1913Enjoyment of Poetry. Eastman's first book mounts a popular argument that poetry should be primarily enjoyed rather than deciphered or interpreted.
1936Enjoyment of Laughter. The radical social critic offers a descriptive study of the psychology of humor, illustrated by examples from various American humorists.

Quotes By: Max Eastman
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Quotes:

"Emotion is the surest arbiter of a poetic choice, and it is the priest of all supreme unions in the mind."

"A joke is not a thing but a process, a trick you play on the listener's mind. You start him off toward a plausible goal, and then by a sudden twist you land him nowhere at all or just where he didn't expect to go."

"Laughter is, after speech, the chief thing that holds society together."

"A poet in history is divine, but a poet in the next room is a joke."

"The defining function of the artist is to cherish consciousness."

Wikipedia: Max Eastman
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The young Max Eastman.
Eugene V. Debs, Max Eastman and Rose Pastor Stokes in 1918.
Charlie Chaplin and Max Eastman in Hollywood 1919.

Max Forrester Eastman (January 4, 1883 – March 25, 1969) was an American writer on literature, politics and society; supporter of progressive causes, and patron of the Harlem Renaissance.

Contents

Early life and education

He was born in Canandaigua, Ontario County, New York. Both his parents, Samuel Elijah Eastman and Annis Bertha Ford, were Congregational Church clergy. In 1889 his mother was one of the first women ordained as a minister. This area was part of the "Burnt Over District", which earlier in the 19th century had generated much religious excitement, including the formation of the Mormon movement, and social causes, such as abolitionism and support for the Underground Railroad.

Eastman graduated with a bachelor's degree from Williams College in 1905. From 1907 to 1911 he worked toward a Ph.D. in philosophy at Columbia University but chose not to claim the degree. He was a member of the Delta Psi and Phi Beta Kappa societies. Settling in Greenwich Village with his sister Crystal Eastman, he became involved in political causes, helping to found the Men's League for Women's Suffrage in 1910. While at Columbia, he was an assistant in the philosophy department, as well as a lecturer with the psychology department. After completing the requirements for his degree, however, he refused to accept it and simply withdrew in 1911.

Marriage and family

He married Ida Raub. They divorced in 1922.

In 1924 he married Eliena Krylenko, a native of Moscow, whom he met during a year's stay in the Soviet Union.

Career

Eastman became a key figure in the left-leaning Greenwich Village community, and lived its influence for years. He combined this with his academic experience to explore varying interests, including literature, psychology and social reform. In 1913 he published Enjoyment of Poetry, an examination of literary metaphor from a psychological point of view. The same year he became an editor of The Masses, a magazine combining socialist philosophy with the arts.

In 1918 The Masses was forced to close due to charges under the Espionage Act of 1917. Its frequent explicit denunciations of U.S. participation in World War I had caused protest. Eastman subsequently stood trial twice under provisions of the Sedition Act, but was acquitted each time. In 1919 he and his sister Crystal founded a similar publication titled The Liberator. In 1922 after continuing financial troubles, it was taken over by the Workers Party of America. In 1924, The Liberator was merged with two other publications to create The Workers Monthly, and Eastman left the magazine.

Eastman embarked in 1923 on a fact-finding tour of the Soviet Union to learn about the Soviet practice of Marxism. He stayed for over a year, observing the power struggles between Leon Trotsky and Joseph Stalin. Upon returning to the United States, Eastman wrote several essays that were highly critical of the Stalinist system, beginning with "Since Lenin Died" in 1925. These treatises were unpopular with American leftists of the time. In later years, however, Eastman's writings on the subject were cited by many on both the left and the right as sober and realistic portrayals of the Soviet system.

Although Eastman's view of the Soviet Union was sharply altered by his experiences there and by subsequent study, his commitment to left-wing political ideas continued unabated. While in the Soviet Union, Eastman began a friendship with Leon Trotsky, which endured through the latter's exile to Mexico. Eastman translated several of Trotsky's works into English during this time.

During the 1930s Eastman continued writing critiques of contemporary literature. He published several controversial works in which he criticized James Joyce and other modernist writers, who, he claimed, fostered "the cult of unintelligibility."[1] Eastman published The Literary Mind (1931) and Enjoyment of Laughter (1936), in which he also criticized some elements of Freudian theory. In the 1930s, he debated the meaning of Marxism with philosopher Sidney Hook (who, like Eastman, had studied under John Dewey at Columbia University) in a series of public exchanges.[2] Eastman was an active traveling lecturer throughout the 1930s and 1940s, when he spoke on various literary and social topics in cities across the country.

Following the Great Depression, by 1941 Eastman had mostly abandoned his former left-wing beliefs and connections. That year he was hired as a roving editor for Reader's Digest magazine, a position he held for the remainder of his life. He wrote articles critical of socialism and communism, served as a contributing editor of the conservative National Review magazine, and in the 1950s actively supported McCarthyism. Eastman's repudiation of socialism in general and communism in particular reached a high water-mark with the publication of Reflections on the Failure of Socialism in 1955. Friedrich Hayek refers to Eastman's life and to his repudiation of socialism in his The Road to Serfdom, and, in turn, Eastman helped to promote Hayek's work by serializing The Road to Serfdom for Reader's Digest. For the noted economist Ludwig von Mises, Hayek's mentor, Eastman threw a party in order to celebrate the publication of his treatise Human Action.[3]

Although his politics moved Eastman into conservative circles, he remained a lifelong atheist, and, in the 1960s, he resigned from The National Review's Board of Associates on the grounds that the magazine was too explicitly pro-Christian.[4] During this period he also produced a number of autobiographical works, and several include memories of his friendships and encounters with many of the leading figures of his time, including: Mark Twain, H. G. Wells, George Bernard Shaw, Charlie Chaplin, John Reed, Ernest Hemingway, Isadora Duncan, Leon Trotsky, H. L. Mencken, Bertrand Russell, Albert Einstein, Sigmund Freud and John Dewey. The last memoir was Love and Revolution: My Journey through An Epic (1964). He died at his summer home in Bridgetown, Barbados, at the age of 86.

Actor Edward Herrmann portrayed Eastman in the 1981 film Reds, starring Warren Beatty, which was based on the life of John Reed and was winner of three Academy Awards. The irony of Eastman's famous good looks being depicted by Herrmann, and Reed's bookish appearance being depicted in the film by the handsome Beatty, has been noted by scholar John Patrick Diggins in his work, Up From Communism.[5]

Selected works

References

  1. ^ Eastman, "The Cult of Unintelligibility," Harper's Magazine, clviii, April, 1929, pp. 632-639; famously, when Eastman asked Joyce why his book was written in a very difficult style, Joyce replied: "To keep the critics busy for three hundred years."
  2. ^ John Diggins, Up From Communism, Harper & Row, 1975, pp. 51-58.
  3. ^ John Diggins, Up From Communism, Harper & Row, 1975, .pp. 201-233.
  4. ^ O'Neill, William L., The Last Romantic: a Life of Max Eastman, Transaction Publishers, 1991; "Morality and American Society by William F. Buckley," interview, Acton Institute [1] (retrieved 4-13-09).
  5. ^ For this observation and more on Eastman, John Diggins, Up From Communism, Harper & Row, 1975, .pp. 201-233.

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Biography. © 2006 through a partnership of Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
Works. The Chronology of American Literature, edited by Daniel S. Burt. Copyright © 2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Max Eastman" Read more