ABSTRACT

First Published in 2005. The main purpose of the book is to expand the scope of revisionary studies of the thirties by analyzing novels using recent innovations in critical theory. The book adds to the research of Barbara Foley, Michael Denning, Alan Wald, and others who have challenged Cold-War-era accounts of the decade's socialist and communist culture. The book explores leftist literature from the thirties as balanced between two antithetical philosophical modalities: identity and ideology. Writers create identitarian fiction, he argues, as they attempt to appeal to a mainstream audience using familiar types and patterns culled from mass culture. They engage ideology, on the other hand, when they use narrative as a means of critiquing those same types and patterns using strategies of ideological critique similar to those of their European contemporary Georg Lukcs.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

Revolutionary Symbolism: Depression-Era Leftist Literature

chapter |26 pages

Disguised Theology of the Master Wizard

Critical and Scientific Marxism at the 1935 American Writers' Congress

chapter |20 pages

“I was not a character in a novel”

Fictionalizing the Self in Agnes Smedley's Daughter of Earth

chapter |22 pages

Standardized

Stereotypes of the Depression in the Thirties Novels of West and Steinbeck

chapter |18 pages

The Artists Dialectic

Race Authenticity in the Thirties Novels of Richard Wright

chapter |11 pages

Conclusion

The Power of Negative Thinking