ebook img

Throughout his writing career, Nelson Algren was fascinated by criminality and the apparatuses of PDF

335 Pages·2011·1.59 MB·English
by  
Save to my drive
Quick download
Download
Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.

Preview Throughout his writing career, Nelson Algren was fascinated by criminality and the apparatuses of

RAGGED FIGURES: THE LUMPENPROLETARIAT IN NELSON ALGREN AND RALPH ELLISON by Nathaniel F. Mills A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (English Language and Literature) in The University of Michigan 2011 Doctoral Committee: Professor Alan M. Wald, Chair Professor Marjorie Levinson Professor Patricia Smith Yaeger Associate Professor Megan L. Sweeney For graduate students on the left ii Acknowledgements Indebtedness is the overriding condition of scholarly production and my case is no exception. I‘d like to thank first John Callahan, Donn Zaretsky, and The Ralph and Fanny Ellison Charitable Trust for permission to quote from Ralph Ellison‘s archival material, and Donadio and Olson, Inc. for permission to quote from Nelson Algren‘s archive. Alan Wald‘s enthusiasm for the study of the American left made this project possible, and I have been guided at all turns by his knowledge of this area and his unlimited support for scholars trying, in their writing and in their professional lives, to negotiate scholarship with political commitment. Since my first semester in the Ph.D. program at Michigan, Marjorie Levinson has shaped my thinking about critical theory, Marxism, literature, and the basic protocols of literary criticism while providing me with the conceptual resources to develop my own academic identity. To Patricia Yaeger I owe above all the lesson that one can (and should) be conceptually rigorous without being opaque, and that the construction of one‘s sentences can complement the content of those sentences in productive ways. I see her own characteristic synthesis of stylistic and conceptual fluidity as a benchmark of criticism and theory and as inspiring example of conceptual creativity. Megan Sweeney, despite joining my committee at a later date, has been invaluable as a teacher and professional mentor whose critical rigor and expertise are matched only by her enthusiasm for working with beginning scholars. I hope that my dissertation reflects the diverse influences, priorities, and investments of my dissertation committee, a committee that it‘s been nothing short of an intellectual pleasure to work with. In my time as a graduate student at Michigan I‘ve also benefitted from conversations with Sara Blair, Gregg Crane, Linda Gregerson, June Howard, Steven Mullaney, Eric Rabkin, Vivasvan Soni, and Theresa Tinkle. Portions of my dissertation were helpfully workshopped by the participants of the 2010 Mellon Humanities Dissertation Seminar at Michigan. George Bornstein has been an invaluable mentor and good friend since I began my Ph.D. work. Finally, I owe a lasting debt to Harvey Teres, iii who first introduced me to the possibilities available in working on the encounter between American literature and leftist politics in the twentieth century. My friends in the graduate program in the English Department at Michigan, and those I‘ve met through my fellow graduate students, have been both helpful critics and close friends. I would have been at a loss in multiple ways if I had never known Meg Ahern, Sarah Allison, Chris Barnes, Ben Beckett, Alex Beringer, Geremy Carnes, Alison Carr, Manan Desai, Sarah Ehlers, Andromeda Hartwick, Molly Hatcher, Korey Jackson, Konstantina Karageorgos, Chung-Hao Ku, Megan Levad, Sarah Linwick, Asynith Malecki, Brian Matzke, Karen McConnell, Danny Mintz, Rebecca Porte, James Reichert, Mikey Rinaldo, Casey Shelton, and Mike Tondre. I‘m also grateful for productive conversations with graduate students at the Ohio State University, particularly Tiffany Anderson, Brad Freeman, Anne Langendorfer, and Brian McAllister. I‘ve had the pleasure of being both friends and colleagues with former graduate students from Syracuse University, including Rachel Collins, Michael Dwyer, Brigitte Fielder, Lindsay Metzker, Mike O‘Connor, and Jonathan Senchyne. My work on the dissertation was further strengthened by insights, suggestions, and challenges gleaned from conversations with Geoff Eley, Barbara Foley, Christine Guilfoyle, Bryan Palmer, and Joseph Ramsey. Patrick Lucey helped me grasp some of the finer points involved in translating Marx‘s German. One of the pleasures of writing this dissertation was the opportunity to work with skilled and always helpful archival specialists like Dr. Alice Lotvin Birney at the Library of Congress, Moira Fitzgerald at the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library at Yale University, and Rebecca Jewett at the Rare Books and Manuscripts Library at the Ohio State University. The staff of the English Department at the University of Michigan regularly go out of their way to assist graduate students, and I‘m very grateful for the myriad efforts made on my behalf by Jan Burgess, Bonnie Campbell, Lisa Curtis, Linda Deitert, Beth Dethloff, Karena Huff, Donna Johnston, and Senia Vasquez. Finally, I owe debts I can never repay to Corinne Martin, whose love, support, patience, intellect, and critical acumen stand behind every page of this dissertation. My relationship with her is at once my greatest achievement and my most rewarding project. iv Table of Contents Dedication……………………………………………………………………………ii Acknowledgements………………………………………………………………….iii Introduction: Figuring (Out) the Lumpenproletariat……………………………….....1 Chapter 1: Starting Out in the Thirties: Nelson Algren and the Depression Lumpenproletariat………………………………………………………44 2: Doing it the Hard Way: Nelson Algren, the Lumpenproletariat, World War II, and a New Internationalism………………………………………..111 3: The Addict‘s Revolt: The Postwar Anti-Capitalism of The Man with the Golden Arm………………………………..................................154 4: Ralph Ellison, the Lumpenproletariat, and Slick: The Development of an American Marxism…………………………………………………………...188 5: Lumpenproletarian Science, Lumpenproletarian Blues: Invisible Man and the Literary Practice of American Marxism……………………………...243 Conclusion: ―Yes, but…‖: Notes on the Form of Lumpenproletarian Marxism…...313 v 1 Introduction Figuring (Out) the Lumpenproletariat Paper Planes Straight From Hell Marxism has often struggled with the sociopolitical consequences of those who lack class identity, or social location of any kind, in capitalist society. The poor and the criminal, the desperate and the inventive who haunt the recesses of modern society have been epistemological and political challenges for Marxism and for anti-capitalist politics more expansively. In part, this is because Marx considered this group—which he named the lumpenproletariat, or ―ragged proletariat‖—irrelevant to the concerns of Marxism. But it‘s also because the fluid, diverse composition of the lumpenproletariat (Marx introduced the term to describe nearly everyone without an identifiable class position or a role in reproducing the main social arrangements of capitalism) and its underworlds reminds us of the internal complexity of modern society and its processes, a complexity that often resists explication by pre-formulated theoretical paradigms. The lumpen remind us that theory—particularly of a revolutionary kind—must take that complexity as its starting point. Furthermore, proper Marxist thought proceeds from real conditions understood in their internally-dynamic fluidity and multivalent composition. Paradoxically then, one of the most marginal categories in Marx is in fact central to the development and continued effectiveness of the various, ever-urgent epistemological and political tasks that go by the name of Marxism. Through an extended analysis of the lumpenproletariat in the mid-twentieth- century fiction of novelists Nelson Algren and Ralph Ellison, my dissertation introduces this concept of the lumpenproletariat to American literary studies. Reading for the social and conceptual places of the lumpenproletariat is my strategy for redefining the practice of Marxist writing, reevaluating the theoretical and formal experiments of the American literary left in the 1930s-1950s period, opening up new approaches to Algren and 2 Ellison‘s lives and work, and demonstrating the remarkable epistemological and political work of which literary form is capable. Before proceeding to a full exposition of this project in the introduction proper, however, I offer a tactile demonstration of the aesthetic, political, and theoretical energies of the lumpenproletariat as mobilized in a work of contemporary popular culture: the 2007 song ―Paper Planes,‖ by Sri Lankan-descended British hip-hop artist M.I.A. The song‘s portrait of social outsiders, and the theoretical project to which it subjects that portrait, demonstrate the specific stakes of Marx‘s concept. ―Paper Planes‖ foreshadows my dissertation‘s treatment of the more extensive literary implementations of the lumpen in Algren and Ellison‘s fiction, and it indicates why I insist on preserving Marx‘s term (in all its Germanic clunkiness) as the object of my study, rather than supplanting it with empirical descriptors like ―homeless‖ or ―outcasts.‖ M.I.A.‘s acclaimed song vividly demonstrates some of the theoretical intricacies of the lumpenproletariat. Its clever lyricism and self-conscious attempt to ―do theory‖ in a cultural text lead us straight to my dissertation‘s correlation of the formal and theoretical work performed by and through the ―ragged figures‖ of the lumpenproletariat. ―Paper Planes‖ describes, in rather romantic terms, the life of those who struggle to get by on the legal and material margins of globalized capitalist society: people denied full subjectivity and recognized citizenship in a post-national economy, the refugees from the third world struggling on the margins of the first world. While capitalist processes of dislocation and compelled migration necessitate the criminal acts of the song‘s figures, those oppressive structural determinations are de-emphasized in the lyrics. Instead, M.I.A. affirms the criminal means (violence, robbery, black market transactions) to which these figures resort as alternative routes to material subsistence, even affluence. She appears to cast the lives of global capitalism‘s non-subjects as anything but deprived. In fact, those marginal lives no longer even seem marginal: these figures may be excluded from the legitimate global market of capitalism, but they engage in processes of commodity exchange on a global black market. M.I.A. rewrites their marginality as an empowering temporal distinction. In an age of faceless transnational capitalism, her hustlers resemble an earlier model of the capitalist as crafty entrepreneur. She invokes 3 and appropriates the aura of a previous stage of capitalism whose practices purportedly sustain and encourage, rather than efface, individual subjectivity. Is the song then a weird production of capitalist nostalgia, a nostalgia which masks economic deprivation and social marginality by transposing both into heroic registers? Is M.I.A. telling us it‘s an opportunity—that it‘s even cool—to be poor and placeless? Even if we see the song‘s brazen, violent rhetoric as a political attempt to claim and inhabit a devalued identity, her claiming of that identity would seem to rely on a sort of ghetto exoticism, glamorizing the very forces which devalue that identity in the first place. But M.I.A. is actually doing something more intricate. ―I fly like paper get high like planes,‖ she tells us at the outset, and goes on to describe her skill for forging immigration visas. M.I.A. gives us a persona who literally rewrites marginality as a mobile subjectivity. Because she has no place as a national citizen, she is potentially a citizen of any and all nations because she must forge her own visas. She appropriates her exclusion in order to produce her own freedom, flying ―like paper‖ quite simply because she makes (a certain form) of paper. Citizenship, the mode of social inclusion examined here, is always tied to authorized written papers. Non-citizens are routinely deprived of access to the means of survival by not having their papers in order. In the reality of global migration, ―papers‖ are a loaded signifier. But precisely because national inclusion and exclusion are processes of writing and documentation, they are vulnerable, at their very center, to rewriting and forgery. In an era in which capital itself crosses borders and negates national distinction, paper figures the permeability and fragility of the border between inclusion and exclusion, center and margin, legitimacy and illegitimacy. Those borders still matter, of course (literally: they have material consequences), but ―Paper Planes‖ suggests that the parodic resemblances between the structural agents of transnational capitalism, and those marginalized subjects hustling on a transnational black market, make marginality a condition of potential. Here is the song‘s central dialectic: there really are people who must fend for themselves because of the structural exclusions of capitalism, yet those same people are potentially and frequently enabled by the very ontology of global capital. They are both marginal and not marginal, the border between the two states being as real but also as slight and as revisable as a blank sheet of paper. 4 We can theoretically situate M.I.A.‘s project by reference to the figurative extensions of the ―raggedness‖ of Marx‘s ―ragged proletariat.‖ For if the lumpenproletarian types of ―Paper Planes‖ are economically and discursively ―ragged‖— materially deprived, and unrecognized as subjects—they recuperate that raggedness as generative mobility, an open-ended rather than hemmed in condition, a state of exclusion that is not absolute but frayed around the edges and open to its own possibilities. The material history of paper production from rags gives us a handy historical figure for conceptualizing this passage from deprivation to subsistence and the processes by which those Marx called the ―refuse of all classes‖ recycle their condition as one of productivity (Eighteenth Brumaire 65). When read symptomatically, Marx‘s lumpenproletariat encompasses these two poles of marginality in an ongoing process of negotiation. It conceptualizes the relation, in various concrete historical forms, between material and discursive exteriority and the possibility that such exteriority could lead to new sociopolitical options and theoretical directions. ―Paper Planes‖ gives us an aesthetic representation not of an empirical social category, but of the form that this conceptual relation takes in twenty-first century global capitalism. To fault M.I.A. for glamorizing illegality and thereby providing an alibi for the iniquities of capital is to miss this point, to read the song only as an empirical portrait. The political shrewdness of the song can only be grasped when it‘s approached as a song about the lumpenproletariat as a concept, and not just third-world immigrants and hustlers. But for all her bravado, M.I.A. doesn‘t lose site of the material hardships of the global migrant. The song‘s lyrics are built upon a musical sample of the opening of The Clash‘s 1982 punk anthem ―Straight to Hell.‖ ―Straight to Hell‖ also describes the experiences of marginalized groups, but in what could be called a strictly materialist manner. The song references multiple forms of the oppressions and destitutions wrought by late capitalism: immigrants from the third world facing racism and material exclusion in the first, American imperialism in Vietnam, and the economic disenfranchisement of workers in a post-industrial economy. The song‘s lyrical distinction derives from the way it interweaves these conditions from a perspective that refuses to get sentimental about them, but at the same time refuses to modulate its outrage over them. The song is a powerful protest text, drawing effectively on a punk sensibility of anger and bitter 5 sarcasm to articulate an anti-capitalist and anti-imperialist perspective. Clash singer Joe Strummer‘s ironic advice for the victims of these global capitalist iniquities is to go straight to hell, words that indicate the material conditions of those victims as well as their irrelevance, their utter lack of any significance, to the agents of their oppression. The song protests these injustices, and diagnoses their social and economic causation, but portrays marginality in all forms as an unbearable and absolute hell. The song‘s dislocated persons inhabit a ―no man‘s land,‖ but this excluded place is no productive, sustaining underworld: ―there ain‘t no asylum here.‖ By citing the Clash‘s portrait, M.I.A. intends to build on it, to supplement the position of the politically well-intentioned yet socially and culturally-privileged British punk rocker with the perspective of the third-world immigrant. We‘re ―already going to hell, just pumping that gas,‖ M.I.A. insists: life goes on in hell, which actually offers its own conditions for sustainability, even material success. To see the globally displaced as socially dead is to unintentionally mirror the vision of hegemonic ideologies, which think that those who don‘t matter for capitalism, or don‘t matter for the nation, can‘t matter at all. The Clash echo (although with considerably more sympathy) Marx‘s conscious understanding of the lumpenproletariat. For the thinker invested in how capitalism ―produces . . . its own grave-diggers,‖ those who have no functional role within capitalism are irrelevant (Communist Manifesto 16). The proletariat‘s inevitable revolutionary capacity ultimately derives in Marx not from absolute oppression, but from their structural place at the center of capitalist production. So between the sampling of ―Straight to Hell‖ and her own lyrics, M.I.A. limns the terms of a very old debate on the left about the political effectiveness and the creative capacities of the oppressed. Her lyrics explore the possibility that a specific, post-national form of global capital might actually now enable creativity, vibrancy, and resistance not among those integral to its economic processes, but among those it marginalizes. This political vision should be familiar to us, due especially to Antonio Negri and Michael Hardt‘s endeavors to locate revolutionary alternatives in the sociocultural productions of a mobile, global poor. But ―Paper Planes‖ stops short of ontologizing this vision, of stating with absolute certainty that this is now how capitalism and resistance work. After all, the instantly- recognizable opening of ―Straight to Hell‖ remains: ―Paper Planes‖ signifies upon, but

Description:
program at Michigan, Marjorie Levinson has shaped my thinking about critical above all the lesson that one can (and should) be conceptually rigorous .. Althusser's concepts of social structure, formation, and processes help us
See more

The list of books you might like

Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.