This section contains 1,059 words (approx. 4 pages at 300 words per page) |
Whatever may be Mr Van Wyck Brooks's distinctive mark in the contemporary American literary world, the five-volume work that comes to a close with The Confident Years seems to me to be in an essential respect very representative—representative, I mean, of a prevailing climate: while it is, to a portentous tune, inflationary in tendency, it at the same time shows an indifference to the real American achievement. The indifference must be judged to be unawareness, and if one asks how such unawareness could be preserved by a critic intention exalting and magnifying an established American literature, the explanation is to be seen in the nature of the inflationary bent itself. (p. 138)
The very contemporary spirit of Mr Van Wyck Brooks's survey as a whole is given in the adjective of his concluding title, The Confident Years. The confidence asserting itself in the years covered by the volume...
This section contains 1,059 words (approx. 4 pages at 300 words per page) |