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The Emotional Life of the Great Depression最新文献

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What You Want to Hear 你想听的
Pub Date : 2019-10-31 DOI: 10.1093/oso/9780198847731.003.0007
J. Marsh
This chapter discusses hope, how it works, and what people in the 1930s hoped for. It begins with a late science fiction story (Isaac Asimov’s “Liar!”) that reveals how hope works or, at least, how those who do not think much of hope think hope works. It then returns to one particularly ambiguous archive of Great Depression hope: the largely unprecedented genre of self-help books and success manuals. Many of these books reflect the tempered hopes of the decade, nowhere more so than in the pages of Alcoholics Anonymous, published in 1939. The skepticism about hope is also reflected in the politics of the decade. Chastened by the blasted hopes of the Depression, the greatest contribution policymakers made during the 1930s was to develop safety net provisions—unemployment insurance, social security—founded on the belief not that everything would turn out well but could turn out badly.
这一章讨论希望,它是如何运作的,以及20世纪30年代的人们希望什么。它以一个晚期的科幻小说故事(艾萨克·阿西莫夫的《骗子!》)开始,揭示了希望是如何起作用的,或者,至少,那些不太看重希望的人是如何认为希望起作用的。然后,它回到了一个特别模糊的大萧条希望档案:基本上前所未有的自助书籍和成功手册。这些书中的许多都反映了这十年来人们的希望有所缓和,在1939年出版的《匿名戒酒会》(Alcoholics Anonymous)一书中表现得最为明显。对希望的怀疑也反映在这十年的政治中。在大萧条破灭的希望的磨练下,决策者在20世纪30年代做出的最大贡献是建立了保障网络——失业保险,社会保障——建立在并非一切都会好的信念上,但也可能会有糟糕的结果。
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引用次数: 0
A Sordid, Futureless Mess? 一个肮脏的,没有未来的烂摊子?
Pub Date : 2019-10-31 DOI: 10.1093/oso/9780198847731.003.0006
J. Marsh
The first part of the chapter surveys how love fared in the film and literary fiction of the period, including the scandalous pre-Code film Baby Face, John O’Hara’s BUtterfield 8, and Mary McCarthy’s The Company She Keeps. In those works, love is a lost cause, mired in a cauldron of selfishness, venereal disease, and general tawdriness that reflected the hard times love had fallen on during the decade. After this survey of 1930s sordidness and lovelessness, the chapter offers a theory as to why so many writers and, for a time, the culture at large may have suddenly lost faith in love. (In short, the economy did it.) Its final take on the decade is that heterosexual love, like the economy with which its fate so closely intertwined, eventually recovered from the Depression that it, too, had been thrown into.
本章的第一部分调查了这一时期的电影和文学小说中爱情的发展情况,包括《密码》之前的丑闻电影《娃娃脸》、约翰·奥哈拉的《巴特菲尔德8》和玛丽·麦卡锡的《她的同伴》。在这些作品中,爱情是注定要失败的,深陷在自私、性病和普遍俗艳的大锅中,反映了爱情在这十年中所经历的艰难时期。在调查了20世纪30年代的肮脏和无爱之后,这一章提供了一个理论,来解释为什么那么多作家,以及一段时间以来,整个文化可能突然对爱情失去了信心。(简而言之,是经济造成的。)它对这十年的最后总结是,异性恋,就像它的命运如此紧密地交织在一起的经济一样,最终从大萧条中恢复过来。
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引用次数: 0
“The Hazards and Vicissitudes of Life” “生命的危险与变迁”
Pub Date : 2019-10-31 DOI: 10.1093/oso/9780198847731.003.0008
J. Marsh
Social Security provides a fitting conclusion to the book. Its passage was shaped not just by the emotions of those who drafted the bill, debated it, denounced it, revised it, made it law, and then four years later amended it. Its passage was also shaped by the feelings of ordinary Americans. The chapter focuses on three sets of actors: Dr. Frances Townsend and his followers, who provided much of the urgency for Social Security; Franklin Roosevelt and the planners of Social Security, who tried to steer the sudden and clamorous demand for pensions into a more pragmatic piece of legislation; and critics of Social Security, whose misgivings would guide the 1939 amendment to the bill. The upshot is a history of Social Security that clusters around the emotions previously discussed in the book: righteousness, panic, and fear, but also awe, love, and hope.
《社会保障》为本书提供了一个恰当的结论。它的通过不仅是由那些起草法案、辩论、谴责、修改、使之成为法律、并在四年后对其进行修订的人的情绪所决定的。它的通过也受到普通美国人感情的影响。这一章主要关注三组行动者:弗朗西斯·汤森博士和他的追随者,他们为社会保障提供了很大的紧迫性;富兰克林·罗斯福(Franklin Roosevelt)和社会保障的规划者们,他们试图将突然而喧闹的养老金需求转变为一项更务实的立法;以及社会保障的批评者,他们的疑虑引导了1939年的法案修正案。其结果是社会保障的历史,围绕着书中之前讨论过的情感:正义、恐慌和恐惧,但也有敬畏、爱和希望。
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引用次数: 0
Fear Itself 恐惧本身
Pub Date : 2019-10-31 DOI: 10.1093/oso/9780198847731.003.0004
J. Marsh
The chapter begins with perhaps the most famous quotation to emerge from the Great Depression: Franklin Roosevelt’s assertion that the only thing Americans had to fear was fear itself, which sounds good in theory but may not have reflected reality. To test that reading, the chapter examines various sources of fear in the Great Depression: a serial murderer in Cleveland; the polio epidemic that broke out in New York City in the summer of 1931; and the nearly constant fear of unemployment that characterized life during the Great Depression and made its way into the fiction of the period, including Helen Hunt’s Hardy Perennial. The chapter argues that what these sources have in common is a concern for the purity and autonomy of being, the nature or essence of a person, and the dread that such being might be violated and despoiled by impersonal but malevolent forces.
这一章的开头可能是大萧条时期出现的最著名的一句话:富兰克林·罗斯福(Franklin Roosevelt)断言,美国人唯一不得不害怕的就是恐惧本身,这在理论上听起来不错,但可能没有反映现实。为了检验这种解读,本章考察了大萧条时期恐惧的各种来源:克利夫兰的连环杀人犯;1931年夏天在纽约市爆发的脊髓灰质炎流行病;以及对失业的恐惧,这种恐惧是大萧条时期生活的特征,并在那个时期的小说中有所体现,包括海伦·亨特的《哈代常年生》。这一章认为,这些来源的共同点是对存在的纯洁性和自主性的关注,一个人的本性或本质,以及对这种存在可能被非个人但恶毒的力量侵犯和掠夺的恐惧。
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引用次数: 0
Purging the Rottenness from the System 清除系统中的腐败
Pub Date : 2019-10-31 DOI: 10.1093/oso/9780198847731.003.0002
J. Marsh
When the Great Depression descended on America, many people had no idea why and no idea about how long it would last. Others, however, experienced no such doubts. For them, the Depression reinforced their understanding of how the world worked and confirmed their most sacred beliefs. This chapter examines their righteous response to the Great Depression. It locates that righteousness in three admittedly far-flung spheres: the laissez-faire fundamentalism of classical economics like Joseph Schumpeter and then secretary of the treasury Andrew Mellon; the apocalyptic interpretations of the Great Depression on the part of many Christians, who believed the Depression signaled the beginning of the end times and the Second Coming of Christ; and one famous Depression short story, F. Scott Fitzgerald’s “Babylon Revisited.” As far apart as these sources are, each nevertheless conveyed a sense that the Depression was a punishment for past misdeeds, whether economic, spiritual, or moral, and, therefore, was a punishment that had to be endured, even embraced, for the good life to resume.
当大萧条降临美国时,许多人不知道为什么,也不知道它会持续多久。然而,其他人则没有这样的疑虑。对他们来说,大萧条加深了他们对世界如何运转的理解,也坚定了他们最神圣的信仰。本章考察了他们对大萧条的正义反应。它将这种正义定位在三个公认的遥远领域:古典经济学的自由放任原教旨主义,如约瑟夫·熊彼特和当时的财政部长安德鲁·梅隆;许多基督徒对大萧条的启示录解释,他们认为大萧条标志着世界末日的开始和基督的第二次降临;还有一个著名的大萧条短篇小说,f·斯科特·菲茨杰拉德的《巴比伦重访》。尽管这些来源相距甚远,但每一个都传达了一种感觉,即大萧条是对过去错误行为的惩罚,无论是经济上的,精神上的还是道德上的,因此,为了恢复美好的生活,这是一种必须忍受甚至接受的惩罚。
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引用次数: 0
“I Saw One Woman Faint” “我看见一个女人晕倒了”
Pub Date : 2019-10-31 DOI: 10.1093/oso/9780198847731.003.0003
J. Marsh
The chapter on panic begins—as it must—with Orson Welles’s 1938 War of the Worlds, the panic it inspired, and the scholarly debate about panic that it also began. With War of the Worlds as a touchstone, the chapter turns to other supposed instances of panic in the decade: the stock market crash in 1929, the bank runs of 1933, and Richard Wright’s Native Son, which begins with Bigger Thomas’s panicked murder of Mary Dalton and ends with Wright’s depiction of the hysterical response to that crime on the part of white Chicagoans. Putting these texts together, the chapter argues that for as much as we remember the decade of the 1930s for its populism, it was also a decade in which people felt real fear about what individuals and crowds of people might be capable of when they panicked or otherwise lost control of their emotions.
关于恐慌的章节从奥逊·威尔斯1938年的《世界大战》开始——这是必须的,它引发了恐慌,也开始了关于恐慌的学术辩论。以《世界大战》为试金石,这一章转向了这十年中其他被认为是恐慌的事件:1929年的股市崩盘,1933年的银行挤兑,以及理查德·赖特的《本土之子》,该书以比格·托马斯惊慌失措地谋杀玛丽·道尔顿开始,以赖特对芝加哥白人对这一罪行的歇斯底里反应的描述结束。把这些文本放在一起,本章认为,尽管我们记得20世纪30年代的民粹主义盛行,但在这十年里,人们对个人和人群在恐慌或失去情绪控制时可能做出的事情感到真正的恐惧。
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引用次数: 0
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The Emotional Life of the Great Depression
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