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Disguise, Containment and the Porgy and Bess Revival of 1952–1956
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 October 2001
Abstract
Life in the cultural shallows tested the character of American art. Where
the Depression had encouraged artists to engage in social and political
criticism, the early cold war years constricted and confounded them. By
conflating dissent and disloyalty, the triumphant conservatism of the cold
war not only shifted the frame of cultural reference dramatically to the
right, it narrowed it as well. This had a profound impact on America's
cultural establishment. With conservatives now in possession of the moral
absolutes, the more politically progressive artists felt pressed into the
position of endorsing ambivalence and moderation. The result, for many,
was a quiet retreat from principle; unwilling to blindly adopt the
conservatives' standard of good and evil, and yet unable to risk their own,
forward-thinking artists ended up chronicling rather than challenging
their age. So much of fifties art became an exploration of the ordinary –
domestic comedy, social commentary, “wistful melodrama,” sermons on
rootlessness or delinquency or affluence – instead of a questioning of the
larger truths. Tragedy, which, by challenging certitudes, required the
moral commitment of liberal writers, became, in this context, anachronistic.
“We are not producing real tragedy,” observed Leonard
Bernstein in 1952, because “caution prevents it, all the fears prevent it;
and we are left, at the moment, with an art that is rather whiling away the
time until the world gets better or blows up.” Art had adopted the
Technicolor blandness of the age.
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- © 2001 Cambridge University Press
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