"For a brief time, roughly between 1912 and 1918, The Masses became the rallying center-as sometimes also a combination of circus, nursery, and boxing ring-for almost everything that was then alive and irreverent in American culture. In its pages you could find brilliant artists and cartoonists, like John Sloan, Stuart Davis, and Art Young; one of the best journalists in our history, John Reed (journalist), a writer full of an indignation against American injustice that was itself utterly American; a shrewd and caustic propagandist like Max Eastman; some gifted writers of fiction, like Sherwood Anderson; and one of the few serious theoretical minds American socialism has produced, William English Walling. All joined in a rumpus of revolt, tearing to shreds the genteel tradition that had been dominant in American culture, poking fun at moral prudishness and literary timidity, mocking the deceits of bourgeois individualism, and preaching a peculiarly uncomplicated version of the class struggle. There has never been, and probably never will again be, another radical magazine in the U. S. quite like The Masses, with its slapdash gathering of energy, youth, hope...As one looks back across the shambles of the intervening decades, it is hard not to envy them: the fierce young John Reed (journalist) making his prose into a lyric of revolt, the handsome young Max Eastman mediating among a raucus of opinions, the cherubic Art Young drawing his revolutionary cartoons with the other worldly aplomb of a Bronson Alcott. History cannot be recalled, but in this instance at least, nostalgia seems a part of realism. For who among us, if enabled by some feat of imagination, would not change places with the men of The Masses in their days of glory?"
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Journalists from the United StatesCartoonists from the United StatesSocialists from the United StatesPeople from WisconsinPeople from Illinois
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Irving Howe Introduction to Echoes of Revolt: The Masses, 1911-1917 by William L. O'Neill (1989)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Art_Young
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Art Young
1866 β 1943
Arthur Henry Young (January 14, 1866 β December 29, 1943) was an American political cartoonist.
105 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Art Young β
Related Quotes
"Although I knew that art schools could not make artists, I enjoyed the environment and the thought that I had an aim β¦"
"Capitalism is an old man gone insane. Terrified and desperate, but still able to fight with a vicious strength, as a β¦"
"There is an humble looking man hanging around the press headquarters of the conference (Guess who it is?-Ed.) He has β¦"
"Inasmuch as the years ahead of us look stormy for financial kings, they may be called upon like the kings of old to aβ¦"
"Obviously the League of Nations is an attempt to form a trust, to put down international competition. In that sense iβ¦"
"Usually politics was my theme, varied now and then, on an off day, by some travesty on prevailing fads."
"An imagination is a brain with wings. Guided by a hand that holds a pen or a voice that directs its dream, it has accβ¦"
"If he has illuminated the dark and serious subject with a suspicion of fun-it is meant to convey the hope he feels foβ¦"
"I was in deadly earnest about developing my talent, and carousing had no lure for me. I applied myself assiduously toβ¦"
"I was to see more of the class struggle in the near future without knowing what it meant. Indeed, at that time, when β¦"