-. ~ -. -lw i w-,. J -- w w % - .- :- ' A PRECOCIOUS AUTOBIOGRAPHY, by Yevgeny Yevtushenko, translated from the Russian by Andrew R. MacAndrew, E. P. Dutton & Co., Inc., 1963, 124 pages, $3.50. THE WRITING of an autobiography presents many problems even for the oldest and most experienced of authors. For a young poet, thirty years of age, and a critic of post-Stalinist Russia, the task becomes exceedingly more complex. Fortunately, Yevgeny Yevtushenko, the young Russian poet who meets this de- scription, realizes the inherent dangers of autobiography. In his book, "A Preco- cious Autobiography," he has been able to avoid most of them. He understands how a work must fail if the author is not honest in his selection of material: An autobiography is meaningless if it is only an account of the events in a man's outward life and not also an account of his interior life-of his thoughts and feelings. He knows that when a writer hesitates to tell the whole truth, or at least those truths relevant to his "interior" life and the formation of his character he has lied to himself and his readers. In only a few instances does Yevtus- henko fail to select his material honestly and present his readers all the facts con- cerning it. Yet the book's failures are small in comparison to its successes. One such success is the title itself, for it provides the key to understanding Yevtushenko and his early autobiographical work. That key is locked in the word precocious, precocity defining the basic paradox be- tween youth and maturity. This paradox may be the essential element of the book, for the clashes between the youth and maturity of the author are evident in abundance. On the youthful side of the scale, Yev- tushenko has some difficulty in express- ing basic principles he believes true. His attempts to do so are self-conscious and awkward. Basic principles awkwardly ex- pressed become mere cliche regardless of the author's sincerity in expressing them, Yevtushenko falls prey to this trap for the sincere young writer when he says, "The word 'peace' can have a concrete meaning only for those who know what war is" and "Before you can have any- thing to say, you must learn to listen." Yet clearly weighted against these cliche figures, and perhaps overbalanc- ing them in the final evaluation, is the author's mature prose style. Its freshness and delicacy underscore the fact that Yevtushenko is first a poet, then an auto- biographer. If "A Precocious Autobiography" were to be evaluated simply as the serious prose work of a serious young poet, it would be favorably placed among similar portraits of artists as young men. Certainly the work must first be classified on this level. But Yevtushenko's book is more than the self-portrait of a young artist. It is a mature and artistic explication of the Russian people and their suffering. With a compassion that never stoops to senti- ment or self-pity, Yevtushenko explains his people: . . . Our special Russian character must be kept in mind. Suffering is a sort of habit with us. What seems nearly unendurable to others we en- dure more easily. Besides, we have paid for our ideal with so much blood and torment that the cost itself has endeared it and made it more precious to us, as a child born in pain is more precious to its mother. At the same time that it is an explan- ation of the Russian character, "A Preco- cious Autobiography" is the story of the current thaw in the supression of Rus- sian literature told by a Russian artist whose sensitive ear is tuned to the echoes of the political in art. Page Eight Evaluated on this plane, "A Precocious assume that evolution also yielded dif- Autobiography" becomes an even larger ferences in inherited mental character- work. Some of Yevtushenko's brass ego- istics-such as the innate components of tism losses its edge when he explains: intelligence? To a Russian the word "poet" has overtones of the word "fighter." Rus- sia's poets were always fighters for the future of their country and for justice. Her poets helped Russia to think. Her poets helped Russia to struggle against her tyrants. Yevtushenko's self-righteous approach to his own poetry steps into proper per- spective as he makes clear the typical Russian attitude toward social criticism: Lenin once said that our enemies would always eat the crumbs of self- criticism that fall from our table. In fact, they clearly do. But what are we to do to stop them? Keep silent about our mistakes, about the fail- ings of our society? A strong man is not afraid of showing his weaknesses. I believed then and I believe now in the spiritual strength of our people and I therefore regard it as my duty to speak openly about whatever I think is wrong. This precisely is my way of expressing my love for the people and my unlimited trust in them. In this context, "A Precocious Autobiog- raphy" outgrows the limits of mere in- trospection. It becomes the conscience of a nation that is only now experiencing the thaw of an icy restriction of the arts. Written in the spring of the thaw, Yev- tushenko's work is precocious indeed, and, as precocity usually infers, somewhat remarka ble. --Louise Lind THE SOUTHERN CASE FOR SCHOOL SEG- REGATION by James Jackson Kilpatrick. New York: the Crowell-Collier Press, 1962. 220 pp. $3.95. It would be easy and comfortable to point out the holes in the "Southern Case." There are enough to fill a respect- ably long review; a sufficiently deter- mined liberal could find enough to dis- miss Kilpatrick without a second thought. But in a Northern publication, most of whose readers pay at least lip service to the concept of racial equality, it's per- haps more important to dwell on this Southern journalist's stronger points. If the advocate of civil rights will lay aside his desire to brand its author a bigot, he will find in the "Southern Case" some valuable insights into the Southern white's values and reasoning-and a sub- stantial intellectual challenge to his own. Kilpatrick's major themes-racial dif- ferences, practical barriers to true inte- gration, states' rights and the evils of the 1954 school segregation verdict - are nothing new; they are, in fact, the same arguments with which Mississippi Gov- ernor Ross Barnett won contempt when he spoke at the University recently. But in the reasonable and careful prose of Kilpatrick's essay they are a little harder to laugh off. The "racial differences" theme is the most disturbing. The foundation of the civil-rights movement is the assumption that innate differences between Negroes and whites are limited to superficialities such as color and facial features; their inborn intellectual potential is assumed to be equal. But, Kilpatrick reminds us, this is only an assumption. With no conclusive proof either way, the Southerner is equally en- titled to his basic assumption: that the Negro race, as a group, is innately in- ferior to the white race-and therefore should not be forced upon unwilling whites under a false banner of "equality." Kilpatrick offers some circumstantial evidence that the Southerner may be right: -The people of Africa were separated from the people of Europe long enough to produce innate differences in their cut- ward appearance. Isn't it reasonable to -"From the dawn of cvilization to the middle of the twentieth century, the Negro race, as a race, has contributed no more than a few grains of sand to the enduring monuments of mankind," Kil- patrick asserts. Was Africa's failure to develop a civilization merely a trick of fate-or did the Africans lack the intel- ligence to advance themselves beyond a primitive hunter culture? -Intelligence tests, even when correct- ed in every conceivable way for social, educational and economic factors, still show whites, as a group, well ahead of Negroes. Can we, Kilpatrick asks, con- fidently attribute these substantial dif- ferences simply to the psychological rav- ages of discrimination-or do they point to innate differences? So "if these Negro characteristics are innate, the white Southerner sees noth- ing but disaster to his race in risking an accelerated intermingling of blood lines. And even if these Negro characeristics are not innate, the white Southerner wants no intimate association with them anyhom. And he is determined not to let his children be guinea pigs for any man's social experiment." Unfortunately, in his hard-headed de- termination to stick to the "facts," Kil- patrick fails to face the moral questions these "facts" raise. Suppose Negroes, as a group, are innately inferior by various criteria. What does this do to an indi- vidual Negro's right to live, learn, marry, work and worship where and with whom he pleases? And what special privileges should being a member of a superior group confer upon the individual Cau- casian? Despite its shortcomings, the believer in racial equality should give the "South- ern Case" an openminded hearing-if not to change his own views, at least to un- derstand those of his segregationist ad- versary. If the battle for civil rights is to won, it must be won in the hard and skep- tical world of the Kilpatricks-a world far removed from that promised by the re- assuring choruses of "We Shall Over- come.,, -Kenneth Winter THE GRAPHIC ARTS OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY, by Claude Rogers-Marx, Mc- Graw Hill, New York, 1963, 254 pp. $6.95. The original purpose of the Ford Foundation Tamarind Workshop was a three-year program to rescue the dying art of lithography and to reestablish and promote the technical mastery of the medium. It seems impossible at first glance that the most important technical innovation in art of the last 200 years would find itself in this position. ' But the twentieth century, and in par- ticular the years since the end of World War II have produced a fragmenting of artistic movements. Gradually, the in- dividual artists have directed themselves toward such personal statements that both communication and widely encom- passing artistic philosophies have been very vague. The prerequisites for lithography to flourish at this time are too much of a burden for the loner to surmount (big heavy presses, big heavy stones and a big heavy floor to support all this.) In addi- tion, the seeming inability of the artist today to form any sort of a group-school- movement, has made the self-conscious, ever-evaluating Ford Foundation dip into its fat trust like a magic good fairy. Poof, a sparkling clean worshop with sparkling clean printers not too far from Disney-. land. Will lithography die? Will Louis the Fordteenth's patronage lead to a brave and glorious art? For background reading on this potent question, McGraw Hill's The Graphic Arts of the Nineteenth Century by Claude Rogers-Marx is an admirable but labor- ious survey of this period, its innovators and innovations. Before 1800, the general mass of prints, except for Rembrandt, Durer and their like, were judged on their details and faithfulness of reproduction. With Goya's first great series of etchings, "The Caprices" done in 1799, the nine- teenth century realized the expressive potentialities of the graphic arts. So be- gan the renaissance of printmaking. Corot, Gericault, Delacroix, Daumier, Degas, Toulouse-Lautrec, Van Gogh, Vuillard and Whistler-all these were in- novators in the graphic arts, enlarging the visual vocabularly of the artist and creating a wider circulation of art for the general public. Mr. Rogers-Marx deals with the chron- ological history of the artists and their work, describing individual techniques and their subsequent acceptance as rudi- mentary tools in enlarging artistic de- finitions. As far as the reproductions go, the 152 in black and white are superb, the 16 in color dreadful. By the way, the Museum of Art is planning a show of prints produced at Tamarind March 1. -Robert Israel RICHARD STRAUSS, Also Sprach Zara- thustra, Lorin Maazel conducting the Philharmonia Orchestra. ANGEL stereo S135994, $5.98 (monaural 35994, $4.98). Reading British record reviews has its undeniable advantages. For one thing, they often contain reviews of records which have not even been offered to American reviewers-let alone consum- ers-as yet. For another, by checking back with the English magazines one discerns such salient bits of information as the fact that this particular version of "Also Sprach Zarathustra" ("Thus Spake Zar- athustra") is being issued in this country minus the performance of "Till Eulen- spiegel" coupled with it in Europe. Accepting the fact that Maazel's Ameri- can fans are automatically being short- changed, then, what about the "Zara- thustra"? No disappointment there-for me, Maazel's edition of this master ex- ample of orchestration easily transcends its most obvious competition, the recent recording by the late Fritz Reiner and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra on RCA Victor. The main difference between the two versions is not merely one of tempo- although Maazel is usually faster than Reiner where this work is concerned- but rather one of "spirit," as a direct comparison between the two reveals. Compare the introduction as set forth by these respective conductors, for example, and you will see that Reiner seems quite tame here when compared to Maazel, es- pecially when the tympani add their im- pact to the coruscating climax of that section of the work. Or compare the respective "Dance- Song" episodes, and see how pallid and uninspired the Reiner version sounds. Maazel, or rather his solo violinist (who unfortunately is not mentioned on either jacket or label), on the other hand, offers a passionate and joyful performance of this portion. In fact, wherever the tempo is speeded up, it is Maazel who is more dramatic; the Reiner record merely sounds tired-both in the Science Fugue, where such lethargy is no great sin, and in the ensuing "Convalescent" episode, where it adds up to a dull affair. If you happen to prefer your "Zarathus- tra" at a slower, more "majestic" pace, Reiner's your man, especially since Vic- tor's recorded sound is usually slightly better than Angel's, particularly in cli- maxes. Those who elect the more vital Maazel edition, however, will find both a magnifi- cent performance and vivid sound make the latter a sonic and musical experience not to be missed. -Steven Haller THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE MAGAIZINE Vol. V, No. 6 Sunday, February 2, 1964