<http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/10/opinion/10brooks.html?th=&emc=th&pagewanted=print&position=>

The New York Times

April 10, 2005
OP-ED COLUMNIST

Bellow's Democratic Nobility of the Intellect
 By DAVID BROOKS


In this country we have hotels that are democratized versions of European
palaces. We have parks that are democratized versions of royal hunting
grounds. And we have the novels of Saul Bellow, which are European novels
of ideas adapted to the idiom of the American wisenheimer.

 So much of the best American culture has been an imitation, adaptation or
rejection of European forms and ideas. But Bellow's death reminds us that
we're now living in a unipolar moment, culturally as well as politically.
Today's writers and artists are much less likely to be Americanizing
European stuff, and a way of writing and thinking is dying.

 In the 1950's, when Bellow came of age, European ideas enjoyed immense
prestige. Hannah Arendt and other émigrés brought their central European
intellectual seriousness with them, and it was natural that a young,
ambitious writer like Bellow would want to take on Dostoyevsky, Tolstoy,
Gogol, Proust and Kafka. It was natural that he would go on to write a
novel, "Herzog," in which the hero tries to make sense of the world by
writing letters to Martin Heidegger.

 "American readers sometimes object to a kind of foreignness in my books,"
Bellow once observed.

 But contact with European seriousness only made him more acutely aware of
his own Americanness, as it has with so many others. While admiring the
intellectual aristocracy of Europe, he grew up on the streets of Chicago, a
full-bore democrat. Attracted by the hierarchies of the best that has been
thought and said, he still had that American instinct to take any hierarchy
and - Marx Brothers-style - ridicule it to smithereens.

 Attracted by the rarefied but often anti-Semitic world of high culture, he
had that Jewish instinct to want entree into that world and yet not want it
at the same time.

 Out of that tension between European elitism, which stoked Bellow's
ambition, and America's leveling democratic shtick, which was in his bones,
emerged Bellow's manic conception of the American dream. In his first great
book, "The Adventures of Augie March," Bellow writes of "the universal
eligibility to be noble." As Christopher Hitchens wrote in a wonderful
essay for The Wilson Quarterly a few years ago, that's as "potent a
statement of the American dream as has ever been uttered."

 This idea, that we can all grow up to be noble, acknowledges the virtue of
aristocratic greatness and reconciles it with equality. It spiritualizes
the American scramble for success.

 "Look at me, going everywhere! Why, I am a sort of Columbus of those
near-at-hand," Augie March exults. Bellow's comic twist on this idea is
that these soaring big ideas and big ambitions often end up detaching
Americans from reality. Bellow's characters are often on these epic voyages
- even if only in their own minds - and they flit wildly between the
hyper-materialism of American commercial life and the hyper-attenuated
aspirations in their heads.

 As one of the characters says to Augie, "You have a nobility syndrome. You
can't adjust to the reality situation."

 Bellow's best America would be a Times Square version of a German
university, with intellectual rigor on one side and scrambling freedom -
sex included - on the other.

 The tension that propelled Bellow's work is now mostly absent from
American life. On the one hand, you have a generation of students who are
educated in a way that doesn't bring them into contact with the European
canon, the old "best that has been thought and said." They don't have a
chance to push back and assert their own Americanness. On the other hand,
there are those in the academic and literary stratosphere who are part of
the global circuit of conferences and academic appointments. They seem
aloof from or ashamed of America, so they are not driven to define, the way
Bellow did, an American identity.

 Finally there are the rest of us who don't pay attention to what is being
written and said in Europe because it doesn't seem that exciting, (Quick,
what book is the talk of Berlin? Who is the François Truffaut of our
moment?)

 American democracy is no longer engaged in an Oedipal struggle with
European aristocracy, the way it was from the days of the American
Revolution all the way up until Bellow's heyday.

 We're living in a unipolar culture, and it's lonely at the top.

-- 
-----------------
R. A. Hettinga <mailto: [EMAIL PROTECTED]>
The Internet Bearer Underwriting Corporation <http://www.ibuc.com/>
44 Farquhar Street, Boston, MA 02131 USA
"... however it may deserve respect for its usefulness and antiquity,
[predicting the end of the world] has not been found agreeable to
experience." -- Edward Gibbon, 'Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire'


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