Monday, September 8, 2008

Grapes Wrath. BOOK REVIEW: 'Obscene in the Extreme': Book Burning, Banning in Pre. Know.

Reproduced in the book, the photo shows three men on a sun-baked avenue in Bakersfield, Kern County, California, on Aug. 24, 1939. Farm working man Clell Pruett sets afire a copy of John Steinbeck's novel, "The Grapes of Wrath.



" It was a staged photo for the neighbourhood newspaper, the Bakersfield Californian, and Pruett is accompanied by his boss, Bill Camp, and a formidable manservant in the Associated Farmers organizing named L.E. Plymale. Steinbeck's original featuring the extended Joad family, past due of Oklahoma and now frustrating their serendipity in the fields of California's Central Valley, had been published in April 1939 and was a blockbuster success.






It was praised by critics and by both President Franklin D. Roosevelt and First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt. It was anything but standard in Kern County, the backdrop of most of the California bid goodbye of the rules of the "Okie" lineage false off their homestead in Oklahoma. Just before the burning, the Kern County Board of Supervisors passed a solution condemning the unconventional and ordering it banned from the county's visible libraries and schools.



The privilege of Wartzman's reserve is a repeat from one of the titan farmhouse operators in the county referring to the novel's explicit -- for its span -- sensual references. The slick operator who came up with the depiction of Steinbeck's log was a fellow of the Associated Farmers and an comrade of the Kern supervisors. The county librarian who opposed the ban, Gretchen Knief, is one of the many unforgettable characters in the hard-cover -- a undertaking that reminds us that the differing put of the fabricate of California as a liberal, reform-minded express was a right-wing workings led by the Associated Farmers that apophthegm in Steinbeck's story a attend for armed insurrection and Soviet-style collective farms conduct by interlopers love the unreal Joads. Wartzman notes that California in the up to date 1930s had just elected its start Democratic governor of the 20th Century, Culbert Olson, a factional protege of longtime socialist Upton Sinclair.



Sinclair (1878-1968), founder of many "muckraking" books but literary perchance most praiseworthy for his 1906 unfamiliar "The Jungle," had on the ru a hastily for governor of California as a Democrat in 1934 on a elementary party line that promised to "end destitution in California." Olson had appointed to a exuberant state picket Carey McWilliams, whose "Factories in the Field," a nonfiction counterpart to Steinbeck's novel, had called for collectivization of the state's gargantuan agribusiness operations. McWilliams later went on to become the copy editor of The Nation, a liberal magazine. As substance for this fly-past and to obtain out why "The Grapes of Wrath" still sells 100,000 copies a year and is required reading in many schools, I reread the novel. It was persuasive when I word go peruse it decades ago and it's still a blinding indictment of the forces of organized agribusiness in the Golden State.



Having lived for 16 years in California, I always tinge the state's humanistic repute was often undeserved. Before he became a open-minded icon as Chief Justice of the United States, Earl Warren was a ruler in area for the internment of Japanese Americans in such loathsome camps as Manzanar in the wash of the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941. Warren, a Republican, was attorney normal of California at the adjust and in November 1942 was elected governor. The internment was opposed by none other than the aptitude of the FBI, J. Edgar Hoover.



Another role in the book, Wartzman's favorite, was a stupid ACLU bencher named Raymond Henderson, hired to altercation the words ban. Wartzman was impressed by Henderson's perception of humor and his annunciation that often concluded his letters: "May the pork chops never be wanting." It caught the stout-heartedness of the eager times in the depths of the Great Depression. "Obscene in the Extreme" is exhaustively researched and encyclopedic readable.



It's must reading for those who deliver -- echoing the championship of Sinclair Lewis' 1935 blockbuster of a fascist takeover of America -- "It Can't Happen Here." Read Steinbeck's divine novel, victor of the Pulitzer Prize, and review Wartzman's regulations -- laudable of a serious champion -- to catch on the depression and doctrinaire feelings that prevailed only a few generations ago -- "Only Yesterday" to sponge the baptize of Frederick Lewis Allen's soft-cover of the first 1930s.

grapes of wrath




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