------------ EH.NET BOOK REVIEW --------------
Published by EH.NET (August 2008)
Amity Shlaes, _The Forgotten Man: A New History of the Great
Depression_. New York: HarperCollins, 2007. x + 464 pp. $27 (cloth),
ISBN: 978-0-06-621170-1.
Reviewed for EH.NET by Michael V. Namorato, Department of History,
University of Mississippi.
Amity Shlaes? _The Forgotten Man: A New History of the Great Depression_
is, in many respects, a unique book. The author has written a rather
lengthy account of what she believes the Great Depression was all about.
She offers her own views on what caused this economic crisis, how badly
it was handled by those in government, and why the economic downturn
lasted so long. And, she does this by her so-called approach of looking
at ?the forgotten man.? Who was this forgotten man? He or she is the one
who paid the bills for the New Deal programs, who was out of work
throughout the economic catastrophe, and who put faith in what those in
power said. Or, at least that is what the reader is led to believe about
the identity of ?the forgotten man.?
Shlaes begins by identifying a group of individuals that are followed
throughout the study. All of them went to the Soviet Union on ?The
Junket? and all were associated with liberal causes and ideas. These
individuals included people like Stuart Chase, Rexford Tugwell, John
Brophy, Paul Douglas, and Roger Baldwin. For whatever reason they had,
the visit to Russia and actually talking to Joseph Stalin would have a
definite impact on them. There are others, however, whom Shlaes also
examines very closely ? individuals such as Andrew Mellon, Herbert
Hoover, Wendell Wilkie, Father Divine, and Samuel Insull. Through these
specific individuals and a few others, Shlaes examines the American
economy, the Hoover presidency, and the Rooseveltian New Deal.
Shlaes goes into much detail on the programs that Calvin Coolidge and
Herbert Hoover supported during their presidencies. The same is done for
Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal. The study begins in January 1927
and ends in January 1940. Each chapter of fifteen chapters begins with a
specific date and an indication of the Dow Jones Industrial Average, the
unemployment rate, or other indexes showing how the economy was doing.
Of course, since this was the period of the Depression, the statistics
typically showed that the American economy was not doing well nor
recovering very quickly. Shlaes is particularly ?microscopic? when it
comes to examining the New Deal. Whether it was the National Recovery
Administration (NRA), the relief programs, the Wagner Act, court
packing, the recession of 1937-38, the 1936 election, or Roosevelt?s
anti-trust attack on business, she explains what happened and/or why
things did not work out as the president had expected. She is very
impressed, moreover, with individuals like Tugwell whom she thinks was
?too radical? for the New Deal. By the same token, she spends an
inordinate amount of time on the attacks on Andrew Mellon for tax
issues, Mellon?s commitment to opening the National Gallery of Art
(showing that private enterprise could match government actions), or
Wendell Wilkie and David Lilienthal?s fight to the finish over the TVA
and the private utility industry. In short, the author gives a very
detailed account of the Depression and how the government dealt with it.
Throughout all of this, she also traces those who had gone on the Soviet
junket to see what happened to them over time and as the Depression
deepened. In the end, Shlaes concludes that the 1920s was really a good
time, a prosperous one. In her view, the stock market crash was
inevitable and the subsequent depression was a breakdown of capitalism.
Both Hoover and Roosevelt misjudged the crash and the depression, both
mistrusted the stock market, and both overestimated what the government
could accomplish. Shlaes argues that Roosevelt was more inspired by
?socialist and fascist? models, but that he lacked faith in the
marketplace. The depression lasted so long and was considered the Great
Depression because government intervention in the economy made it so.
The struggle between private and public was continuous throughout the
1930s. And, the main reason why Roosevelt kept winning his elections was
the possibility of war which loomed continuously on the horizon. In the
end, the forgotten man was remembered by Wendell Willkie who understood
and believed in the individual and liberalism as it should have been. If
there is a hero for Shlaes, it is indeed Willkie.
In assessing this book, one point should be made clear from the very
beginning. There is no doubt that the author is anti-Roosevelt and
anti-New Deal. At first, the fact is subtle, but, as the book
progresses, it becomes clearer that she dislikes FDR and what he did.
Once the reader understands this, everything falls into place. Just as
important are some specific weaknesses in the book itself. The author
gets lost in ?details,? especially with the individuals that she is
supposedly examining. A good case in point is Father Divine. While he is
mentioned in the book from the beginning, it is not until almost the end
of the study that the author even talks about him and then it is in
terms of his purchasing property near the Roosevelt estate in Hyde Park.
Another problem is the author?s insistence on identifying the
motivation of people. Offering little or no evidence, she consistently
tells the reader what and why something was being done by a particular
person. Her discussion of Mellon makes one wonder whether he is a saint
or a devil in disguise. Shlaes has a tendency to pick out what she
wants from the evidence she has examined. This is true in the case of
Tugwell. Whenever she quotes or discusses him, it is always in the
context of Tugwell the radical reformer. The truth of the matter is that
Tugwell can only be understood in terms of his ever-evolving and
developing economic philosophy. Tugwell often ?thought out loud.? You
simply cannot take what he said in 1934 and argue that this was his
thinking all along. Finally, the author seems to have her own definition
of what is liberal in the twentieth century. It would have helped
immeasurably if she had shared her thinking with the reader from the
very start.
In the end, Amity Shlaes? book is a formidable work. Whether scholars of
this period agree with her or not, this study should and needs to be
confronted. Perhaps, by approaching the Depression through the eyes of
the so-called forgotten man, scholars may see the period in a different
and more interesting way. Shlaes should be commended for her effort,
whether or not one thinks that she has succeeded or failed in her work.
Michael V. Namorato is a Professor of History at the University of
Mississippi. His publications include _Rexford Tugwell: A Biography_
(Praeger, 1988) and (as editor) _The Diary of Rexford G. Tugwell: The
New Deal, 1932-1935_ (Greenwood, 1992).
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