TJNDAV, NOVEMBER 30, 1930 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE SUNDA. NOFR30 130TH MCHGA D IL ARTIST LYND WABO'S NEW, NOVEL[I COMPLEIX MAD MAN'S DRUM: A novel in woodcuts by Lynd Ward: published 1930 by Jonathan Cape and Harri- son Smith; New York; Price $3.00. Pictorial narrative of any great length has almost a priori limita- tions. Psychology, and thus any depth of character, is almost im- possible of consistent attainment (and this would be particularly true with such a rigid, inflexible. art-medium as the wood-cut). -it needs to confine itself almost c - tirely to "events" of as high a degree of symbolizing power as possible. These lmiitations suggest that the novel in wood-cuts would be a new and diverting versin of melodrama: with any psychology (varying with the reader) being acceptable. When Lynd Ward initiated the novel in wood-cuts last year with his "God's Man," he was quite aware of these limitations and at- tempted only a swift story. The added (really superimposed) inter- est of resourceful design, affording consistent pleasure to the eye, made the new genre acceptable, even excitnig. In his second novel, "Mad Man's Drum," Mr. Ward tries to attain something richer than melodrama: the novel of character. The efficacy of his attempt depends, I think, on the degree of thinking the individ- ual reader is willing to contribute to Mr. Ward's designing. The more ambitious this art-form becomes, the more woefully incomplete it proves. But with the resourceful co-operation of the reader, it is still stimulating. The novel tellsthe life-story of a .boy, who is the victim of his father's obsession for establishing him as a man of culture. The father, brutality cut sharp on his face, is shown amassing his fortune at the slave-trade, then returning 'o his child to settle down, a large drum hung on the wall of their home as symbol of what he had left behind. The father brutally squelches his boy's interest in the huge native drum that hangs on the wall and with dogmatic stupidity confines him to books. The boy's life story becomes a tragedy of isolation and inability to com- prehend the jeering world. Wood- cut after wood-cut, in a manner slightly repetitious, show this: the boy in study is superimposed on a wild cabaret scene: the boy reads under a tree while healthy farmers know reassuring contacts with soil. Gradually in his pitiful maladjust- ment to the world, his long-crushed affective instincts are wildly awak- ened in him and carry him away into madness. In the closing cut, he is wandering over the horizon IsUES SECON NOVEL IN WOODCUTS I, n" A - a* - aT /1A A T I TWTTUWV9W 1p-Cr1 oil aIP In aanre% III PIaII AIMS OF AMERICAN UNIVERS111tS ASSAILED BY ABRAHAM FLEXNER UNIVEiRSITIES: American, English, itself complicating its task and dis- 9IJ[ TECHN l German. By Abraham Flexner. New sipating energy and funds by doing Yerk, Oxford University Press. 1930. a host of inconsequential things; I CLAUDIA. by Arnold Zweig: Trans- Price s p.5rsthe second danger, arising from the lated from the German by Eric more concerned with the short- fact that learning has never been Sutton: Published by the Viking ccmings of its place in contempor- free from pedantry and suprf- Press: New York, 1930: Price $2.50: ary life than has the teaching ciality, is the flourishing manufac- Review Copy courtesy of Wahr's guild; and certainly no other pro- ture of make-believe science, over book store. fession has digested the fruits of which mediocrity is jubilant. On CLAUDIA will make you wonder. this concern into public print with this basis, the pursuit of science For here, for the first time to my such obvious gusto and relish. The and scholarship belong to the um-knowledge has the techniue o upshot has been a deluge of mate- versity; but assuredly neither see- knweghstetcnqeo rial possessing elephantine oropor- ondary, technical, vocational, nor the short story been applied to the tions, but often bovine understand- popular education have a place in novel. Certain reviewers- called ing. the ideal scheme. "Farewell to Arms" two short stor- In this welter, the appearance of So much for the idea of the med- ies without connection. Perhaps it Dr. Flexneir's book is an agreeable ern university. To its organization, was but the life in Switzerland was sign; it marks the first substantial Dr. Flexner devotes the remaining a natural development of the char- effort in long months to clear away three sections of his book, dealing acters after the war. In CLAUDIA much of the sedentary rubbish now in turn with three radically differ- we cannot expect anything. It is a obscuring the major aims of edu- ent education systems. And what novel in which the author retains cation and to reinterpret the func- balance Dr. Flexner at first loses the right to make his characters do tion of the university in the light by being purely the theorist, he anything. For Zweig has not pin- of extensive, well-seasoned data. now regains as a very practical ned them down to actual material The scope of this treatise, as may man who does not mince his spade- experiences. be inferred from its title, is the calling. He denounces correspond- Perhaps I shouldn't call CLAUDIA university in the United States, ence and home study schools as a novel Very patently it is a col- England and Germany. In his in- centers of quackery. He points out lection of short stories hung to- troductory essay, "The Idea of a ha e ort oardbs A h. eter on a very slender thread. Modern University," the author may be counted toward an A. B. de- In each one there is an emotional ably renews and adorns the tradi- gree, or the so-called combined de- experience and a climax. In each tion of clear thinking and inive gree passes the limits of credibili- one the characters get some place. criticism begun by Newman and ty." Dr. Flexner asserts that there And the place at which they ar- crtcsgyis not a college or a university in rvaftrth n, left latent since Woodrow Wilson's the United States that "has the rive aer coming through the maze Princeton days. The conception of the t State thatihs he of experiences which make each of a modern university Dr. Flexner courage to place athletics where the seven chapters eomplete rtis- set foth n tes wods:"Wht-every one knows they properly be- tic wholes in themselves, is the ever allowances we might make long." He lays the principal blame taking off point for the next story. for national tradition or tempera- for America's failure to place high- That is the thread which connects ment, we should see to it somehow er education in its due position to them. In this way, Zweig has built that in aprpopriate ways scholars three causes. while America places a work around the overtones in the and cietiss wuldbe onsiou ofa naive trust in education, it lacks lives of various peopealcnct and scientists would be consosao of comprehension is indicated by ev f osplc llconnet four major concerns: the conserva- o opeeso sidctdb ed in some way with the artistic tion of knowledge and ideas; the the miscellaneous character of cur- stratum of German post war so- and ricula, by its aversion to discipline, ciety. For in a short story, it is not ideas^; the search for truth; the and by its over-emphasis on social possible to delineate the basic ton- training of students who will prac- activities as against intellectual ef- al structure (our maturing through tise and 'carry on.'" But he sees fort.eniomt)noulvspn two dangers to be encounteredin In England the church and so- which the overtonesuare arranged. modernizing the university: a uni- ciety needed and obtained specific It is only possible to give an accur_ versity seeking to be modern, seek- types of edcation which, hateve ate account of the emotional struc- ing to evolve theory, seeking to ti dfs dolid atn aterstabture of a person without telling solve problems, may readily find lish a sane, solid and authoritative, hor he developed. Andgthis is no -- _____________though far too limited, concept of small task. For the range of these educational ideals. The future of overtones is infinite. OTTRA M VARIES her universities will be largely de- tons is ite. ETE NAL T HR E e rmined by the redistribution of This is rather obscure, but it is ET ERNA L T HR E Efnancial support. Despite the pov- something that one can not fail to i - - erty of post-war Germany, however, realize upon reading the book. We A RICH MAN'S DAUGHTER. by R. the German ministers and the look in vain for experiences which H. ftottram: Published by Harper German faculties not only value are not intricately conditioned. It Brothers: New York, 1920 education, but know what it is. In is necessary to catch this if we are R. H. Mottram, who wrote "The America University presidents and tof t able to tell why the book fai Spanish Farm Trilogy," carries on faculties have not learned to use of its purpoe at the end, why we the story of Geoffrey Skene in his their campuses and dormitories, as are left with an unsatisfied feel- new book, "ARich Man's Daugh- is witnessed by the fact that they ing. ter." will not forego a lovely campus, a There can be two reasons for this Young Olive Rose Purchas, the Roman stadium, and extraxagant feeling. The one is the fact that rich man's daughter, has married buildings in order to make teach- in the last chapter or chapters (the above her class and Raymond ing a decent and possible profession line is not very definite) Zweig Blythway, her husband, is not the for men of brains and taste in suf- must have decided to make a novel sort to make the union a success. ficient numbers. Skene is a lonely bachelor, set This book easily commends itself - - - - - adrift after his war service in a to the student of university educa- world he no longer cares for and tio. It is authoritative, contains among people who give him nostal- an amazing amount of information, gia. He meets the discontented and is written in a manner that is O N Olive and fals in love with her. at once trenchant and lucid. What- The rest of the book describes the ever else Dr. Flexner has done, he emotions of a man who wants has at least succeeded in produc- something and the reaction of the ing a constructive critique of the same man after he gets what he university in modern life. ant W. W. GERMAN AUTHOR IS WRITING SECOND BOOK ON WAR TH [EME 'f -t J 4 i d F i F i L 1 i S J 1 t e s e s t e I '1 Arnold Zweig, whose first novel, "Claudia," has just been translates into English to meet the great demand for Zweig's work created by the wai novel, "The Case of Sergeant Grischa" A sequel to this war book is in preparation. out of his collection of short stor- begin to yearn for this scherzo, at ies. To do this, he brought in in- least I did, just at the point wherc cidents in the past lives of his the short stories are being moldeC characters which explained them I into a novtl,-at the end. And wE away. These experiences, and var- finish with wonder and a bit of an- ious other subtle touches, limited ger. GUNARONWRITES STIRRINGTRAGEY SEVEN DAYS' DARKNESS: by Gunnar Gunnarson: translated by Roberts Tapley: published by The Macmillan Company: New Yorl 1930: Price $2.50. This novel, ostensibly a stark Ice- landic tragedy, actually has a very sophisticated structure: not too immediately apparent, never obtru- sive, very subtly integrated with the material, and giving a well-told story something like a permanence of appeal. The scene is laid in Reykjavik, Iceland during the week of a terri- ble onslaught of influenza. All through that week, a distant vol- canic mountain blazes against the sky. Dark ashes float into the air of Reykjavik, making the daylight an eerie grey, suggesting the ap- proach of an efernal darkness. The epidemic takes a pitiless sweep of the unprepared city. Church bells toll deaths throughout the seven days. This setting Gunnarson very deftly manages. It inspires Terror. But the intended sensationalism is carefully concealed in the pains- taking, almost prosaic care with descriptive detail. Against this background is enacted an eternal conflict between two men and two philosophies: intended in it woeful 1limax to stimulate Pity. This manipulation of the Aris- ~otelian tragic emotions is made nore subtle by setting the tragic )rotagonist in the terror-inspiring tackground. Grimur Ellidagrimur, ;he idealist of nobility and strength s a doctor who hurries over the ity fighting the epidemic. Into his if e, on the eve of the epidemic, ;omes an old menace of his univer- -ity days, Pall Einarsson: now a history professor and a thoroughly vulgar cynic, employing his keen- ness of mind and his width of background to detect flagrant il- .ogicalities of behaviour and flaunt- ing his discoveries before those who deny them. This han of the ugly distorted body and mind, finds his life in striking at others. He takes pleasure .n being loathed by Grimur, the one man he can least reach. He t becomes obsessed with the necessi- characters that we had learned to accept without a limit. The result is disbelief. The other reason is the too long modal persistence. In a novel of the ordinary kind, we get all the sides of a character. The light and shade are faithfully shown. There is a balance. Here because of the nature of the book, there is no re- lief. The mood, one of wonder and conflict gradually being ironed out adjustments in the psychic feelings of the characters which is the basis for one type of short story, is sus-l tained much too long. We begin to long for a merry scherzo. We But if we read this book for what it really is, a volume of short stor- ies about the same people, we will be amply repayed. The prose, as was the prose in "The Case of Sergeant Grischa" which CLAUDIA precedad in Germany, is beautiful And Zweig's almost magical arti- try in portraying subtle- changes 0 feeling which we all know but can- not put into words, takes the breath away. It is really delightful and wise, even though the technique, an experimental one, cannot be s wallowed whole. Kw S.S.F. k L , 5" ty of disturbing the doctor's seren- ity. He uses the excitement of the epidemic to attack Grimur and with malignant remarks, viciously timed, he bares the weaknesses of }Grimur's idealism and drives him limad. W.J.G. -- ____ A_ ________ ___ __ __u - __._. I. ERSITY OF MICHIGAN 0 0 with "the mar with the flute," theI___ _____ primitive mad-man's drum clutched in his arm. The wood-cuts are energetic. CHRISTMAS CARDS and They are as crowded as psil GIFTS with symbolic detail but only very seldom so indulge symbolism as to Make Your Selections Now and Avoid lose design. But, as I have sug- Disappointment Later gested, unless one is willing to per- sonally create the whole psycho- ... .*.*.~~*.....*. logical liaison (that is, to "write" the novel) "Mad Man's Drum" will become merely a matter of "I like this wood-cut, which one do you like:" which is a complete denial Frank Jewett Mather, America's 1111 SOUTH UNIVERSITY great art-critic, has suggested Mr. HALF BLOCK EAST OF CAMPUS PHONE 4744 Ward's new novel as a profitable e f f o r t t o e s t a b l i s h b y t r i a l a n d e r r o r t h esc o p eo fth ege n r e ._Th i s i s_-- - - - -- the scope of the genre. Tis is un -____-____________________________ deniable. W. J. G. PAME CWARI CTI HN REPAI R NG In HALLER'S State Street Jewelers I' '! 'illl '' ',I u %,l11di Presents The Foremost Washington Correspondent he realm of national problems the articles of Mr. Hard are highly re- spect'ed and widely quoted." 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