Saul Bellow, America's Poet
Of Urbanity
By A.O. SCOTT
Saul Bellow
MANY, if not most, of the major American Realist novelists in the first
half of the 20th century were, by birth or breeding, Midwesterners: Theodore
Dreiser, Sinclair Lewis, Willa Cather, Ernest Hemingway, F.Scott Fitzgerald. In
the second half, a large number of the nation's important writers -- literary
critics, journalists and sociologists, as well as novelists -- were Jews. It
was Saul Bellow's good fortune -- and the source, perhaps, of a portion of his
greatness -- to have been both Midwestern (bred if not born, that happened in
Canada) and Jewish.
Not that he put much stock in the determining power of origins or
traditions. One of his first literary acts was to alter his name, from Solomon
Bellow. But the act of creating a new identity is equally a prerogative of the
sons of the heartland and the children of immigrants, and Bellow was almost
unique among writers in claiming this double birthright. Recall the first lines
of ''The Adventures of Augie March,'' one of the boldest and most memorable
beginnings in literature:
''I am an American, Chicago born -- Chicago, that somber city -- and go
at things as I have taught myself, free-style, and will make the record in my
own way: first to knock, first admitted; sometimes an innocent knock, sometimes
a not so innocent. But a man's character is his fate, says Heraclitus, and in
the end there isn't any way to disguise the nature of the knocks by acoustical
work on the door or gloving the knuckles.''
A bit later, Augie says, ''My own parents were not much to me,'' making
clear that this will be his story, a story of self making rather than of
inheritance. The freedom and self-confidence blowing through these sentences --
the bluster, the slightly show-offy diction, the chutzpah -- marked the
beginning of something new for Bellow and also for the American novel. ''Augie
March'' was his third book but his first fully to deserve the adjective
Bellovian, a word able to encompass both the vulgarity of big cities and the
wisdom of Greek philosophers. In ''The Victim'' and ''Dangling Man,'' composed
under the influence of European existentialism and in the shadow of World War
II, the protagonists are hemmed in and hung up, anxious and abused, anything
but the masters of their own fates.
Augie and the men (and they were always men) who followed were not case
studies or allegories but vital, unmistakable individual characters in both the
literary and the vernacular senses of the word. They could be annoying,
self-deluded, neurotic, impossible in a hundred different ways, but they were
always real, and the novels that sustained Bellow's reputation bore their
names: ''Herzog,'' ''Henderson,'' ''Mosby,'' ''Sammler,'' ''Humboldt,''
''Ravelstein.''
Not that their labors of self-realization (to use therapeutic jargon
Bellow would have mocked) were altogether heroic. Bellow's heroes were plagued
by frustration and failure -- beleaguered by ex-wives, bad luck, disloyal colleagues,
random crazies and the hectic, busy, disappointing rhythm of modern urban life.
These characters are unthinkable outside of the cities that tormented
them, and in this they became something of a lost tribe. The postwar American
novel resembles, for the most part, a suburb, populated by standardized ciphers
who dream of becoming characters and wonder (along with their readers) why they
can't quite succeed.
But Bellow's books, refusing to flee the cities -- even in the face of
nihilism and social crisis -- are like cities unto themselves: densely
populated, often messy and full of the contradiction and cacophony that make up
the true noise of civilization. Many of these books -- the best of them:
''Augie March,'' ''Humboldt's Gift,'' ''Herzog'' -- can feel unwieldy,
overpopulated, lacking clear boundaries. But then again, so can Chicago. Like
the great American metropolises, Bellow's big novels have a way of making every
place else feel puny and dull, characterless in comparison.
Even though his novels were thick with companionship and were,
themselves, such rich and surprising company, he was also a somewhat lonely
figure, not in his personal life but in the landscape of American letters. He
had no shortage of admirers, of course, and a few peers, but not many
followers. (His most visible and self-declared heir is Martin Amis, an
Englishman.)
Just as he resisted the American novel's flight to the suburbs, he also
stood indifferent to the political grandstanding, ethnic sentimentality and
magpie historicism that preoccupied so many other writers. He was often funny
but never ironic in the attenuated, timid postmodern sense of the word. He had
political opinions and allegiances, some controversial, but his mind leaned
away from abstraction toward the inexhaustible strangeness of life, toward an
ideal of the novel not as a form or a tradition but as a vessel of personality.
Alfred Kazin, his longtime friend, put it nicely: ''The great thing was
Saul's talent for the literature of direct experience. Every day, I saw
intellectuals clever enough to make the world over many times. Yet Bellow, who
had been brought up in the same utopianism and was himself a nimble adept of
the University of Chicago style, full of the Great Books and jokes from
Aristophanes, would obviously be first and last a novelist, a storyteller,
creating new myths out of himself and every other intellectual he had ever
known, fought, loved, hated. This loosened the bonds of ideology for the rest
of us.''
By ''the rest of us,'' Kazin, thinking back to the early 1940's, means
the passionate, contentious band of intellectuals, mostly Jews, who were
emerging from the political fevers of the previous decade. But his words
provide an apt epitaph in our own time, when the bonds of ideology threaten to
strangle what remains of our civility to say nothing of our literature. The
rest of us Bellow readers can take heart from his imperfect, immortal strivers,
arguers, dreamers and failures and learn, once again, to go at things our own
way.
http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F00E10F83F5A0C738DDDAD0894DD404482&ref=saulbellow&pagewanted=print
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