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Sinclair Lewis and the Diagnostic Novel: Main Street and Babbitt
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 January 2009
Extract
Sinclair Lewis's critical reputation could not easily be lower than it is at present. In the discussion that follows I want to suggest that a radical re-evaluation of this reputation, and of Lewis's achievement as a novelist, is necessary; not just because he ought to be read and studied seriously in his own right, but also because in his best fiction he addresses very important issues of narrative technique and of historical and structural analysis. And I believe that without a proper understanding of Lewis's engagement with his material in these areas, most notably in Main Street (1920) and Babbitt (1922), the two texts I want to concentrate on here, any account of the re-shaping of American fiction in the years after the First World War must be seriously incomplete.
Lewis has proved to be an extremely easy writer to dismiss from any literary or intellectual canon, and not without good reason. His fictions are direct, accessible, and for the most part actively simple. Like Wells and Bennett in England he is a provincial writer of materialist romances, apparently left behind by Modernism; like Upton Sinclair he is a clumsy and over-productive fictionaliser of obvious social problems; in the 1920s he is a man of middle age writing stories about middle-aged characters for a middle-aged readership in a literary and intellectual climate obsessed and characterized by youth; he is a “wildly inconsistent writer, who in his weakest work unquestionably justifies Schorer's description of him as “one of the worst writers in modern American Literature.” And probably more than any other twentieth-century writer of comparable stature, Lewis has been a victim of literary history-writing. With only the very weak platform of spectacular popular success to support him, he stands as the clearest (and unfortunately also the most vociferous) representative of the American fiction that Hemingway and Fitzgerald and their apologists were careful to be seen to be superseding in the 1920s and 1930s.
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1986
References
1 Schorer, Mark, Sinclair Lewis: An American Life (London, 1961), p. 813.Google Scholar
2 In an interview published in the New York Times, February 1950; see Schorer, p. 797.
3 Mencken, H. L., “Consolation,” Smart Set, 01 1921.Google Scholar
4 Forster, E. M., “Our Photography: Sinclair Lewis,” in Abinger Harvest (London, 1936).Google Scholar
5 West, Rebecca, “Babbitt,” The New Statesman, 21 10 1922.Google Scholar
6 Lundquist, James, Sinclair Lewis (New York, 1973). p. 43.Google Scholar