Left in Place

Cooper, Matthew

Left in Place Diana and Lionel Trilling, New York's most important intellectual couple, confronted what was wrong with liberalism but never wandered from the faith BY MATTHEW COOPER The...

...The Monthly would eventually apply this same principle of questioning liberal orthodoxies in asking what had gone wrong with the American union movement, with public schools, and with government itself while maintaining a faith that these institutions could work...
...I could not have wished Lionel to be a drunkard in order to be a novelist...
...And there are observations on what it was like to deal with the antisemitism that excluded Jews from any number of elite professions...
...Ginsberg and Jack Kerouac were the public embodiment of what, in a way, the repressed Trillings—and in some way, much of the nation—privately yearned for in the years after World War II...
...their refusal to talk or think about politics was how they guaranteed their intellectual purity...
...Allen Ginsberg was a student of Trilling's at Columbia in the 1940s...
...But they also had important lessons about simply loosening up that Li and Di, in all their wisdom, would have been wiser still to have embraced...
...During the 1950s, while America was embracing the gray flannel suit, Ginsberg and Kerouac were consciously rebelling against the careerism of their contemporaries and trying to strip away the masks that hide us from others and from ourselves...
...Left in Place Diana and Lionel Trilling, New York's most important intellectual couple, confronted what was wrong with liberalism but never wandered from the faith BY MATTHEW COOPER The Beginning of the Journey: The Marriage of Lionel and Diana Trilling Diana Trilling, Harcourt Brace & Co., $24.95 If you don't know the work of the Trillings, you should—especially if you are a reader of this magazine...
...Think of it as an account of what it was like to be a thinking person during the first half of this century...
...It is as personal as it is political, and much of that story is sad...
...Kids raised this way tend to get beaten up a lot...
...And of course the transformation of women's roles is equally extraordinary...
...Christ and Cervantes get an occasional plug, too...
...News & World Report...
...For her part, Diana was denied even an interview for a post at the Metropolitan Museum of Art...
...But like many memoirs, this one reveals melancholy behind the public facade...
...The qualities that made Lionel Trilling such a profound thinker—his grace and moderation—were, he understood, his undoing as a writer of fiction...
...This comes as a surprise...
...I doubt that I left any social gathering without being more than a little drunk...
...I haven't read much about what it was like to drink in the twenties...
...But it would be wrong to think of The Beginning of the Journey as merely the story of an era...
...Lionel was prone to depression and writer's block...
...this burden still falls to many if not most women in today's two-career marriages...
...In journals like The Nation and Partisan Review, Diana wrote similar sorts of essays and reviews...
...Neither became a neoconservative...
...As adults Lionel and Diana were themselves neurotic...
...And the two were not untypical of a time when liquor flowed more freely than it does today...
...Ironically, a couple of parallels to the Trillings that come to mind are Edward Said, also a Columbia English professor, who is a strident Matthew Cooper, a contributing editor of The Washington Monthly, covers the White House for U.S...
...Of Lionel's father, for instance, Diana writes: "By the time I met Lionel's father, his hypochondria was so extreme that he would not have gone within splashing distance of cold water...
...cheerleader for Palestinian nationalism, and his polar opposite, Norman Podhoretz, the neoconser-vative editor of Commentary and a former student of Trilling's, who is a strident champion of Reagan and the Likud...
...Or, like the Trillings, they rejected Communism yet remained true to the great liberal goal of fair play...
...Still, the Beats had a lesson for the Trillings that Diana seems to note only grudgingly...
...In his later years he was editing a literary anthology and "day after day, week after miserable week, he labored at this one assignment: Often the most he could accomplish in a day was to change a colon to a semicolon or a 'but' to a 'however.'" More ominously, Lionel was given to occasional outbursts of enormous anger—nothing physically violent, but during which he would blame Diana for all that was wrong in his life...
...Even in the face of such madness, however, the Trillings were never moved to react by abandoning liberalism altogether...
...Over a period of years Ginsberg popped in and out of the Trillings' lives...
...To be sure, Ginsberg's eccentricities could be infuriating...
...Both Li and Di, as close friends called them, rejected what she calls "ritualistic politics...
...One of the remarkable things about the memoir is how it reminds us how much our culture has changed in a relatively short time...
...She was especially prone to panic attacks...
...Of the two Trillings, Lionel is by far the better known—or at least he was until his death in 1975...
...And while he achieved no small fame with a handful of stories and a novel, his work was, he recognized, a decidedly bloodless product...
...On the one hand, they took Whittaker Chambers' path, turning sharply right...
...He had five, or was it six, weights of underwear with which to move from season to season without 'shock to the system.'" As a boy Lionel bore the expectations of parents who expected him to become an Oxford-educated literary critic...
...They opposed Communism but also opposed Joseph McCarthy...
...Both Trillings had parents who could only be called neurotic...
...Three years before Lionel's death, both Trillings resisted the entreaties of Irving Kristol, the neoconservative editor of The Public Interest, and his wife, the historian Gertrude Himmelfarb, to sign a petition supporting Richard Nixon's reelection, even though both Trillings were uncomfortable with McGovern's brand of liberalism...
...For example, it's not surprising to hear that Diana was expected to do the housework even though Lionel was well ahead of his time in being supportive of her writing...
...English departments were particularly disdainful of Jews because they were not thought to be sufficiently refined...
...The Washington Monthly's founder and editor, Charles Peters, often cites Franklin Roosevelt and John Kennedy as his political heroes...
...Not only politically sensible and smart, they were gracious and refined...
...And although we tend to think of the Depression as a sudden calamity that befell the entire nation, Trilling reminds us that its effects were more gradual: "Throughout the winter of 1929 and the spring of 1930, the life of the city was much as it had always been...
...Lionel did not live long enough to witness the rise of the neoconservative movement," Diana writes, "but I have little question that if he had been alive and working in the eighties, he would have been highly critical of this swing to the right by our old friends...
...But any parallels end there...
...But what is amazing was that as late as 1967, when Diana found herself at a dinner in Germany with such intellectual luminaries as Daniel Patrick Moynihan, no one suggested that Diana join the men after their German host enjoined his male guests to move into the parlor to discuss politics...
...Diana writes: "Until Lionel and I decided to marry we were never wholly sober in each other's company...
...For her part, Diana was a walking catalogue of phobias and ailments...
...And Ginsberg's devotion to psychedelic drugs was wrong...
...If Dashiell Hammett and Lillian Hellman were in some sense frauds—a dashing couple with unsavory Stalinist politics—then Li and Di were truly admirable...
...But among the forebearers of Peters' critique of liberalism, Lionel Trilling stands out as a key figure—and not just because he taught Peters at Columbia...
...The slightly pretentious but useful French term is engage...
...I was not surprised when J. Robert Oppen-heimer, testifying at his loyally hearing before the Atomic Energy Commission in 1954, declared that in the late twenties and early thirties he had no radio and read no newspaper...
...There's a sad but unintentionally funny account of a bookish young Lionel enduring an onslaught of snowballs by thinking of Norse myths...
...In the thirties, forties, and fifties, liberals disillusioned with Soviet totalitarianism went one of two ways...
...Since her book was released earlier this fall, it has received wide praise, including thoughtful and flattering reviews in The New Republic and The Atlantic Monthly, but most have failed to emphasize that this is a fun book...
...From his perch at Columbia, he wrote for more than 40 years on literature, society, politics, and culture in a way that's rare today when contemporary literary criticism, concerned as it is with semiotics, deconstruction and other linguistic methodologies, self-consciously distances itself from the world outside the academy...
...The Beats often went too far...
...The book pretty much leaves off around 1950...
...Restaurants continued to be patronized, theaters and concerts were as well-attended as ever...
...Trilling argued that liberalism, though born of laudable motives, often becomes rigid and ossified...
...He saw his life, Diana writes, as a disjunction...
...Lionel Trilling was the first Jew to become a tenured professor in Columbia's English department...
...His novel The Middle of the Journey is based on the Alger Hiss spy affair, and while undeniably subtle and intelligent, the book comes off as cool and detached...
...Its style is conversational, perhaps owing to the fact that Diana Trilling, now approaching 90, is virtually blind and "wrote" the book by dictating it in her New York apartment...
...But I could have wished him to have a thousand mistresses were this to have released him from the constraints upon him as a writer of fiction...
...Given that both Trillings lived their lives with considerable sorrow and repression, it is surprising and unfortunate that Diana doesn't have kinder words for the Beat poets of the 1950s...
...During the Columbia riots of 1968, radicals decried his anti-Communism and put up posters bearing his picture with the inscription: WANTED, DEAD OR ALIVE, FOR CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY...
...There are scores of other interesting insights—how, for instance, the kind of intellectuals who became engage in the thirties spent the twenties "deliberately distancing] themselves from public affairs...
...Diana Trilling's memoir chronicles their intellectual journey from thirties' radicalism to a more searching, skeptical liberalism...
...In our own circle the collapse of the market and the possible consequences were scarcely spoken of—it was as if, in a more recent time, the Berlin Wall came down without any of us stopping to comment on it...
...Trilling himself understood that he was too emotionally constrained to write a passionate novel...
...Those who were familiar with the Trillings couldn't help but be impressed by them...
...Although the Trillings' literary criticism can be a bit daunting for those who haven't kept up with their Cousine Bettes or their Princess Casamassimas, this memoir is delightfully approachable for the rest of us...
...Here I learn that Lionel and Diana met at a speakeasy in 1927 which, far from being a Capone-style saloon, was more like a family trattoria...
...On the great issues of their lives the Trillings walked a delicate middle course...
...between the circumspect life of criticism and the life of unhampered instinct, of drunkenness, irresponsibility, unimpeded sexual freedom, from which flowed (as Lionel would have it) the capacity to be a novelist...
...For years she sought comfort from an array of psychoanalysts—both Trillings were deep admirers of Freud—whose treatments were utterly ineffective...
...He once showed up at the Trillings' house and unceasingly played an accordion-like instrument all night...
...It's hard to think of contemporary literary critics who do such work now...
...Trilling's 1950 collection of essays, The Liberal Imagination, presaged much of what the Monthly would advocate at its birth 19 years later...
...In the 1960s, the campus left vilified Lionel...
...The power to write fiction does not lie in the bottle...
...There's much in this book about Lionel's exquisite manners...
...The Trillings shared the Said-Podhoretz connection with the real world...
...More than he wanted to be a great critic, Lionel strove to be a great novelist...

Vol. 25 • January 1993 • No. 12


 
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