Lionel Trilling

From Vero - Wikipedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Template:Short description

Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox person

Lionel Mordecai Trilling (July 4, 1905 – November 5, 1975) was an American literary critic, short story writer, essayist, and teacher. One of the leading U.S. critics of the 20th century,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> he analyzed the contemporary cultural, social, and political implications of literature. He and his wife, Diana Trilling (née Rubin), were members of the New York Intellectuals and contributors to the Partisan Review.

Personal and academic life

Lionel Mordecai Trilling was born in Queens, New York, the son of Fannie (née Cohen), who was from London, and David Trilling, a tailor from Bialystok in Poland.<ref name="Rodden1999">Template:Cite book</ref> His family was Jewish. In 1921, he graduated from DeWitt Clinton High School, and, at age 16, entered Columbia University, beginning a lifelong association with the university. He joined the Boar's Head Society and wrote for the Morningside literary journal.<ref name=ahearn> Template:Cite book</ref> In 1925, he graduated from Columbia College, and in 1926 he earned a master's degree at the university (his master's essay was titled Theodore Edward Hook: his life and work). He then taught at the University of Wisconsin–Madison and at Hunter College.

In 1929, he married Diana Rubin, and the two began a lifelong literary partnership. In 1932, he returned to Columbia to pursue his doctoral degree in English literature and to teach literature. He earned his doctorate in 1938 with a dissertation about Matthew Arnold that he later published. He was promoted to assistant professor the next year, becoming Columbia's first tenured Jewish professor in its English department.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> He was promoted to full professor in 1948.

Trilling became the George Edward Woodberry Professor of Literature and Criticism in 1965. He was a popular instructor and for 30 years taught Columbia's Colloquium on Important Books, a course about the relationship between literature and cultural history, with Jacques Barzun. His students included Lucien Carr, Jack Kerouac, Donald M. Friedman,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Allen Ginsberg, Eugene Goodheart, Steven Marcus, John Hollander, Richard Howard, Cynthia Ozick, Carolyn Gold Heilbrun, George Stade, David Lehman, Leon Wieseltier, Louis Menand, Robert Leonard Moore,<ref>Author of Compendiary (2 v., 2007–2009)</ref> and Norman Podhoretz.

Trilling was the George Eastman Visiting Professor at the University of Oxford from 1963 to 1965 and Charles Eliot Norton Professor of Poetry at Harvard University for academic year 1969–70. In 1972, the National Endowment for the Humanities selected him to deliver the first Jefferson Lecture in the Humanities, described as "the highest honor the federal government confers for distinguished intellectual achievement in the humanities."<ref name="jefflect">Jefferson Lecturers Template:Webarchive at NEH Website (Retrieved January 22, 2009).</ref> Trilling was a senior Fellow of the Kenyon School of English and subsequently a senior Fellow of the Indiana School of Letters. He held honorary degrees from Trinity College, Harvard University, and Case Western Reserve University and memberships in the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Academy of Arts and Letters. He also served on the boards of The Kenyon Review and Partisan Review.<ref name=":0">Template:Cite news</ref>

Trilling, a longtime heavy smoker, died of pancreatic cancer in 1975.<ref name=":0" /> He was survived by his wife and son, James Trilling, an art historian who served as a curator at the George Washington University Museum and Textile Museum.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> His nephew Billy Cross is a musician residing in Denmark.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Partisan Review and the "New York Intellectuals"

In 1937, Trilling joined the recently revived magazine Partisan Review, a Marxist but anti-Stalinist journal founded by William Philips and Philip Rahv in 1934.<ref>Longstaff, S. A. “New York Intellectuals”, Johns Hopkins Guide to Literary Theory and Criticism.</ref>

The Partisan Review was associated with the New York Intellectuals—Trilling, Diana Trilling, Lionel Abel, Hannah Arendt, William Barrett, Daniel Bell, Saul Bellow, Richard Thomas Chase, F. W. Dupee, Leslie Fiedler, Paul Goodman, Clement Greenberg, Elizabeth Hardwick, Irving Howe, Alfred Kazin, Hilton Kramer, Steven Marcus, Mary McCarthy, Dwight Macdonald, William Phillips, Norman Podhoretz, Harold Rosenberg, Isaac Rosenfeld, Delmore Schwartz, and Susan Sontag—who emphasized the influence of history and culture on authors and literature. The New York Intellectuals distanced themselves from the New Critics.

In his preface to the essay collection Beyond Culture (1965), Trilling defended the New York Intellectuals: "As a group, it is busy and vivacious about ideas, and, even more, about attitudes. Its assiduity constitutes an authority. The structure of our society is such that a class of this kind is bound by organic filaments to groups less culturally fluent that are susceptible to its influence."

Critical and literary works

Trilling wrote one novel, The Middle of the Journey (1947), about an affluent Communist couple's encounter with a Communist defector. (Trilling later acknowledged that the character was inspired by his Columbia College compatriot and contemporary Whittaker Chambers.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref>) His short stories include "The Other Margaret". Otherwise, he wrote essays and reviews in which he reflected on literature's ability to challenge the morality and conventions of the culture. Critic David Daiches wrote, "Mr. Trilling likes to move out and consider the implications, the relevance for culture, for civilization, for the thinking man today, of each particular literary phenomenon which he contemplates, and this expansion of the context gives him both his moments of his greatest perceptions, and his moments of disconcerting generalization."

Trilling published two complex studies of authors Matthew Arnold (1939) and E. M. Forster (1943), both written in response to a concern with "the tradition of humanistic thought and the intellectual middle class which believes it continues this tradition."<ref>Trilling, Lionel, et al., The Situation in American Writing: A Symposium Partisan Review, Volume 6 5 (1939).</ref> His first collection of essays, The Liberal Imagination, was published in 1950, followed by the collections The Opposing Self (1955), focusing on the conflict between self-definition and the influence of culture, Freud and the Crisis of Our Culture (1955), A Gathering of Fugitives (1956), and Beyond Culture (1965), a collection of essays on modern literary and cultural attitudes toward selfhood. In Sincerity and Authenticity (1972), he explores the ideas of the moral self in post-Enlightenment Western civilization. He wrote the introduction to The Selected Letters of John Keats (1951), in which he defended Keats's notion of negative capability, as well as the introduction, "George Orwell and the Politics of Truth," to the 1952 reissue of Orwell's Homage to Catalonia.

In 2008, Columbia University Press published an unfinished novel Trilling abandoned in the late 1940s. Scholar Geraldine Murphy discovered it among Trilling's papers archived at Columbia University.<ref name="powells">"Synopses & Reviews": The Journey Abandoned Powell's Books, 2008. Retrieved 2008-05-27.</ref> The Journey Abandoned: The Unfinished Novel is set in the 1930s and has a young protagonist, Vincent Hammell, who seeks to write a biography of an older poet, Jorris Buxton. Buxton's character is loosely based on the 19th-century Romantic poet Walter Savage Landor.<ref name="powells"/> Writer and critic Cynthia Ozick praised the novel's "skillful narrative" and "complex characters", writing, "The Journey Abandoned is a crowded gallery of carefully delineated portraits whose innerness is divulged partly through dialogue but far more extensively in passages of cannily analyzed insight."<ref>Template:Citation review of The Journey Abandoned: The Unfinished Novel.</ref>

Politics

Trilling's politics have been strongly debated and, like much else in his thought, may be described as "complex." An oft-quoted summary of Trilling's politics is that he wished to:<ref>1974 foreword to The Liberal Imagination, quoted and cited as "often repeated" in Template:Harv</ref> Template:Blockquote

Trilling wrote, "Ideology is not the product of thought; it is the habit or the ritual of showing respect for certain formulas to which, for various reasons having to do with emotional safety, we have very strong ties and of whose meaning and consequences in actuality we have no clear understanding."<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Politically, Trilling was a noted member of the anti-Stalinist left, a position he maintained to the end of his life.<ref>Writing in the 1974 foreword to his 1950 collection The Liberal Imagination, (shortly before his 1975 death) he wrote that the essays were "with reference to a particular political-cultural situation, ... [namely] the commitment that a large segment of the intelligentsia of the West gave to the degraded version of Marxism known as Stalinism." Template:Harv</ref><ref> Template:Cite book</ref>

Liberal

In his earlier years, Trilling wrote for and in the liberal tradition, explicitly rejecting conservatism; from the preface to his 1950 essay The Liberal Imagination (emphasis added to the much-quoted last line):

Template:Blockquote

Neoconservative

Some, both conservative and liberal, argue that Trilling's views became steadily more conservative over time. Trilling has been embraced as sympathetic to neoconservatism by neoconservatives (such as Norman Podhoretz, the former editor of Commentary). But this embrace was unrequited; Trilling criticized the New Left (as he had the Old Left) but did not embrace neoconservativism.

Diana Trilling claimed that neoconservatives were mistaken in thinking that Trilling shared their views. "I am of the firmest belief that he would never have become a neoconservative", she wrote in her memoir of their marriage, "The Beginning of the Journey", adding, "nothing in his thought supports the sectarianism of the neoconservative."<ref>"Regrets Only: Lionel Trilling and his discontents" by Louis Menand, The New Yorker, September 22, 2008</ref>

The extent to which Trilling may be identified with neoconservativism continues to be debated.<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref>Template:Pn

Moderate

Trilling has alternatively been characterized as solidly moderate, as evidenced by many statements, ranging from the title of his novel, The Middle of the Journey, to a central passage from the novel:<ref>Template:Harv writes "several reviewers quoted [this passage] as Trilling's central point"</ref>

Template:Blockquote

Along the same lines, in reply to a taunt by Richard Sennett, "You have no position; you are always in between," Trilling replied, "Between is the only honest place to be."<ref>Quoted in Sennett essay in Template:Harv</ref>Template:Pn

Works by Trilling

Fiction

Nonfiction and essays

Prefaces, afterwords, and commentaries

Bibliography

  • Alexander, Edward. Lionel Trilling and Irving Howe: And Other Stories of Literary Friendship. Transaction, 2009. Template:ISBN.<ref name="myers">The Never-Ending Journey, Reviewed by D.G. Myers, Commentary Magazine, October 2009</ref>
  • Ariano, Raffaele. Filosofia dell'individuo e romanzo moderno. Lionel Trilling tra critica letteraria e storia delle idee, Edizioni Storia e letteratura, 2019.
  • Bloom, Alexander. Prodigal Sons: The New York Intellectuals & Their World, Oxford University Press, 1986. Template:ISBN
  • Chace, William M. “Lionel Trilling”, Johns Hopkins Guide to Literary Theory and Criticism.
  • Kimmage, Michael. The Conservative Turn: Lionel Trilling, Whittaker Chambers, and the Lessons of Anti-Communism. Harvard University Press, 2009. Template:ISBN.<ref name="myers" />
  • Kirsch, Adam. Why Trilling Matters. Yale University Press, 2011. Template:ISBN.
  • Krupnick, Mark. Lionel Trilling and the Fate of Cultural Criticism. Northwestern University Press, Evanston, 1986. Template:ISBN
  • Lask, Thomas. “Lionel Trilling, 70, Critic, Teacher and Writer, Dies”, The New York Times, November 5, 1975
  • Leitch, Thomas M. Lionel Trilling: An Annotated Bibliography. New York: Garland, 1992
  • Longstaff, S. A. “New York Intellectuals”, Johns Hopkins Guide to Literary Theory and Criticism.
  • O'Hara, Daniel T. Lionel Trilling: The Work of Liberation. U. of Wisconsin P, 1988.
  • Shoben, Edward Joseph Jr. Lionel Trilling Mind and Character, Frederick Ungar Publishing Co., 1981, Template:ISBN
  • Trilling, Diana. The Beginning of the Journey: The Marriage of Diana and Lionel Trilling. Harcourt, Brace & Company, 1993. Template:ISBN.
  • Trilling, Lionel. Beyond Culture: Essays on Literature and Learning.
  • Trilling, Lionel et al., The Situation in American Writing: A Symposium Partisan Review, Volume 6 5 (1939)
  • Template:Cite book

References

Template:Reflist

Further reading

Template:Wikiquote

Template:New York Intellectuals Template:Authority control