IL 40- 7 Turner: Old violence is the sire rI L 'Generalists often finish last Cities in a Race With Time, by Leanne R. Howe; Random House, N1o. by David L. Aiken Jeanne R. Lowe is a generalist. She's a journalist with a specialty, >ut makes no pretense to being an xpert in the usual academic ense of expertise. She has written :or several magazines, specializ- ng in urban affairs. It's often valuable to be a gen- ralist. Sometimes you can look it things from a perspective )roader than that of the "expert." Vliss Lowe has not really been ible to do so in this book. The )roblem generalists face is saying ;omething somebody hasn't al- 'eady said. She hasn't solved the problem. Ostensibly, the book is "a ma- or study of how leading Ameri- :an cities are facing their ... >roblems," to quote from a jacket >lurb. Well, "major" it is - here's about 600 pages of it. Well locumented it is, too - in some :hapters, every sentence is "ac- :ording to" somebody. But it just loesn't seem to come across as t really original contribution to he literature of urban problems - an ever-expanding literature, t may be noted, now that recent -evolts are making the causes of rnrest even more popular topics 'or pundits to ponder. The sections presenting :ase studies of urban renewal pro- rams in several cities are of ;reatest interest. In them, Miss owe makes quite clear what nany critics of urban renewal ave been saying for a long time - from its inception, planning for )rojects under the urban renewal >rogram has been done at the top, among professional planners, real state interests and merchants. .oncern for the people affected iy projects has come rather late n the game. Her cases are New York (or, nore specifically, Robert Moses); 'ittsburgh (for which read, Rich- rd King Mellon and Mayor David .awrence); the Southwest section f Washington, D. C. (New York eal estate investor James H. )cheuer); Philadelphia (Mayors ;lark and Dilworth, and the city planners); and New Haven (the renowned Mayor Richard Lee, and his innovative sidekick. Mitchell Sviridoff). This list is organized by Mrs. Lowe as a sort of continuum, both in time and in style of operation. In the beginning was Robert Moses, and Robert Moses was ur- ban renewal in New York. Moses didn't let anybody know, least of all the commissioners who were supposed to know, what was being planned. He came out with one grandiose public works project or concentration of blockhouses after another, none of them integrated into a comprehensive plan for the city's development. A good deal of hanky-panky with favored real e- tate developers was also un- covered during his reign. If Moses is the bottom, then Lee is the top in Miss Lowe's little totem pole of urban renewers. By the time New Haven came around to electing him in 1954, a number of lessons were available from other cities which had begun ur- ban renewal projects earlier. Phil- adelphia, for example, had shown what a carefully-drawn master plan for development could ac- complish for pepping up the city's core and co-ordinating redevelop- ment of industrial and commer- cial areas. Southwest Washington had just begun an extensive relo- cation program, which was being handled fairly carefully in an ef- fort to move poor people with as little fuss as possible, to smooth the path for middle- and upper- income people who were to oc- cupy the high-rises. Lee and his advisers had even learned from the experiences of developers of suburban shopping centers about the necessity to have at least one, preferably more, big, solid, good-credit chain of department stores around which little shops can cluster. So Lee, Sviridoff, Edward L o g u e and others sweated through until downtown New Ha- ven was being rebuilt from the ground up, secure with a nice new Macy's store. But for per- haps the first time, the munici- pal officials of an entire city re- alized that building up the down- town alone would not suffice. The story of New Haven's pro- grams to reach out to people in the poorer sections, help them help themselves, and maybe even give them a voice in what was to be done in their neighborhoods, is by now familiar. In Pittsburgh, the predomi- nance of Richard King Mellon, in- heritor of most of the vast Mel- lon family wealth and power, in Pittsburgh's post-war "Renais- sance" is enlightening. (It may be noted that one of the fellow- ship programs in the University of Chicago's Center for Urban Studies is named for him.) But the narrowness of Pittsburgh's program is also instructive - little attention was given to im- proving the neighborhoods of the little people, for example, other than moving them out to make room for an expanded Jones and Laughlin steel plant. Although the case s t u d i e s are instructive, Miss Lowe makes the mistake of biting off a bigger chunk of the complex tangle of urban problems than she could comfortably chew. When she gets into chapters which are supposed to cover the difficult dilemmas of slum life and urban decay, she can do little more than regur- gitate undigested hunks of a smorgasbord of "experts." It is praiseworthy to devote at- tention to the crucial role of pub- lic schools in affecting urban life, for example. It is even praise- worthy to have done one's home- work as diligently as Miss Lowe. She has read a great deal of the literature, it seems. But a reader would be misled if he thought he were reading an adequate treatment of the motiva- tional problems of Negro res- idents of slum areas when Miss Lowe tells him, According to recent sociological stud- ies, juvenile delinquency and crime, in disproportionate amounts among -the lower classes, are caused by the society that encourages certain aspirations yet withholds the pos- sibilities of achieving these aspira- tions legitimately. ... For many young Negro males another principal cause is the early and often permanent absence of a father, as former Assistant Secre- tary of Labor Daniel P. Moynihan made clear in his paper on The Negro Family. Continued from page ten prison a doom greater than that which the officials of Southamp- ton County have prepared; the ultimate doom of being, in John Donne's words, "everlastingly, everlastingly out of the sight of God." But the novel ends with the tragic deed unaccomplished. In the last moments before his exe- cution, Nat Turner finally com- prehends the meaning of God's silence: it is the other nature of God-him who commands us to love: I feel the nearness of flowing waters, tumultuous waves, rushing winds. The voice calls again, "Come!" Yes, I think just before I turn to greet him, I would have done it all again. I would have destroyed them all. Yet I would have spared one. I would have spared her that showed me Him whose presence I had not fathomed or maybe never even known. Great God, how early it is! Until now I had almost forgotten His name. "Come!" the voice booms, but commanding meunow: Come, My son! I turn in surrender. Surely I come quickly. Amen. Even so, come, Lord Jesus. Oh how bright and fair the morning star . . . The simultaneous conclusion of the two tragic actions is what gives The Confessions of Nat Tur- ner its power. It is an immensely moving book, whose force in de- termined by a thoroughly worthy conception of man's nature and destiny. Most of the arguments I have read which fault The Confessions seem to me mere cavils. Of these, the most plausible attacks "the clumsiness of the historical meth- od." Though Styron's ideas are impressive, the argument goes, t h e r e is something inherently messy.about fictionalizing an his- toric personage like Turner. One major problem is the idiom: to white men, Turner talks like Lit- tle Black Sambo; writing in his journal, Turner is a cross be- tween Dickens and the King James Bible. Such an argument has a grain of truth in it: the juxtaposition of Turner's florid writing and his "nigger talk" is often pathetic, and reveals Styron's weakness for the old-fashioned periodic sen- tence. But the simple charge that the language is not contemporary smacks of prejudice: I see no reason why contemporary novel- ists should be barred from at- tempting the effects of the Vic- torians. Is the tender sensibility of Dickens no longer effective with readers? Or the grandeur and sweep of Hardy? If we could no longer feel these emotions, then Styron would surely have been wrong to try for them. But if his style comes off most of the time-which is all we can expect of any writer-then the pathos we are made to feel justifies his ob- solescent means. Neverthelesssthere remain ser- ious weaknesses in The Con f es- sions, faults not of language but of thought. A major novel, we all know, cannot have less than four hundred pages- and in padding his magnum opus to that length, Styron courts the charges of ir- relevance and over-motivation. There are such unnecessary in- cidents as the history and internal affairs of the white Turner fam- ily, Nat's first masters, Nat's brief stay with a homosexual preacher, and lengthy, seeming- ly interminable scenes of na- ture. The tendency of the novel is to be inclusive, that of tragedy to be brief and clean; Styron chose the former, at the sacrifice of fo- cus and power. Styron also chooses to over-mo- tivate Nat in a typically twentieth century manner. It must be made clear that one predisposing cause for Turner's violence was his backed-up sex drive. But we would of this barely garet V a white witness repress gy-ride be telli differe: perhap 1960's, of Nat Nat Tu God is tragedy en by a Styro his dig) ment o side isc prevent ing a n it from greatne irony ti make I time, in masks and tha from b from no Mr. graduati ment of sity of C) This author says this, that author says that, and then there's this other guy over here ... Miss Lowe throws them all at us. Perhaps this book can act as "an indispensable guide for the interested layman ... who wants to go beyond news stories," as the jacket blurb claims. But, even after traversing the 600 pages of Miss Lowe's guidance, he will be only a short distance from where he started. Mr. Aiken is an M.A. candidate in the sociology of education at the Department of Education of the University of Chicago. ==m........== Important works of Fried rich N ietzsche- translated and edited by America's leading authority on Nietzsche Walter Kaufmann I TIME' / TIMV TI M E T . I - TIME TI - . . . TIME TI ~~ ~ I his backed-up sex drive. But we sity of C : vi'.' rcf. rf:9:ii" f." "\C.4 '"i $} . \... Yt::.i:{i: vv: ;{ ".; r.,., ., ,v r un:::vv."x v{.vv:{ ": nvt.n ..n;;::8iii::i:ii;:;.;:::;:: +.. ti:{"::Lb; ".:::::::::: :<".;. r..... ........:: ". ....,{.,"::::::.. .. .... 4'?+ ... rv: ::":: n"+: ". :.v" :....::. :::::. :::. :4:::'1. ::. :w :". ::::::. :::. ::::::: }::. :. NJ.'ti4ii::?: i:.: Y+'.1, hV . " . :rr."+:.+. ii: h : r}. k ..:{r :n+i}{' \ vf" f T::.: : 'v. I I THE WILL TO POWER The Chicago Literary Review Editors-in-chief . .Edward W. Hearne Bryan R. Dunlap Associate Editor ... David L. Aiken Executive Editor . . David H. Richter Managing Editor .Mary Sue Leighton Advertising Manager . Wayne Meyer Advertising Assistant . . . Dick Clark Art Editor ............ Bob Griess Loyola Editor .......... Paul Lavin Michigan Editor ..... Lissa Matross Minnesota Editor ...Mike Anderson Mundelein Editor ..... Kathy Riley Valparaiso Editor.Mary Jane Nehring Wayne State Editor .. .Art Johnston Wooster Editor ......Gary Houston Circulation Manager . . 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A new translation by - WALTER KAUFMANN and R. J. HOLLINGDALE. Edited by WALTER KAUFMANN. A wide selection from Nietzsche's notebooks - which compare favorably with those of Gide, Kafka, Camus, and Wittgenstein, and offer a fascinating glimpse into the workshop and mind of a great thinker. The topical arrangement en- ables the reader to find easi- ly what Nietzsche wrote on nihilism, art, morality, reli- gion, the theory of knowl- edge, and many other sub- jects. With commentary and index. $10 Now at your bookstore.' VINTAGE BOOKS Quality paperback editions pub- lished by Alfred A. Knopf and Random House BEYOND GOOD AND EVIL Prelude to a Philosophy of the Future Translated, with Commentary, by WALTER KAUFMANN. V337. $1.65 THE BIRTH OF TRAGEDY and THE CASE OF WAGNER Translated, with Commentary, by WALTER KAUFMANN. V369. $1.65 ON THE GENEALOGY OF MORALS Translated by WALTER KAUF- MANN and R. 1. HOLLINGDALE ECCE HOMO Translated by WALTER KAUF- MANN (Both works in one volume, ed- ited, with commentary, by WAL- All the news of 1929 Read it now, just as Time reported 4i it then. Four new Time Capsules chronicle the events of four turbulent . years: 1929, 1923, 1941, 1950. They are the first in a memorable new series of books-each cov- ering one year, each condensed from the original reports as they appeared in Time Magazine. Available now, $1.65 in paperback wher- ever magazines and books are sold. (Hard cover, $3.95.) If not at your store, both editions are available by mail prepaid plus 100 Time Capsules, Time-Life Bldg., Chicago, III. 606 1 .. RANDOM HOUSE :'' ',^,h.'\t.:; . t\ i~i ' ; "t'}.h'.; .' + .;,h".;....; ,,:>.: %2 '',\l~~..:.. . . . .".f:;w t:xo-ar: 0 CHICAGO LITERARY REVIEW 0 October, 1967 October, 1967 " CHICAGO LITEI IL _IL A& 41,k . q - IL