------------ EH.NET BOOK REVIEW --------------
Published by EH.NET (October 2006)
David Zimmerman, _Panic! Markets, Crises, and Crowds in American
Fiction_. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 2006.
xi + 294 pp. $22.50 (paperback), ISBN: 0-8078-5687-8.
Review for EH.NET by Scott Dalrymple, Department of Business
Administration, Hartwick College.
My grandmother, who came of age during the Great Depression,
eventually became a bank teller. By the 1970s, she was head teller at
her bank, a position that made her justifiably proud. She liked the
banking world, and understood it quite well.
And yet, while she maintained a savings account at the bank where she
worked, she always kept a sizeable portion of her cash in a coffee
can hidden away in the closet. I once asked her about this, asked her
why she would forego the potential interest from her money. "You can
never be too careful," she warned me, quite seriously. "The bank
might not be there tomorrow."
In our post-FDIC world, it's easy to forget that generations of
Americans shared this very real fear of the banking industry, and
understandably so. Panics like those that occurred in 1873, 1893, and
1907 were so devastating because they caused ordinary Americans to
lose _trust_ in the banking system -- trust that is essential for a
capitalist economy whose engine is the lending of money to others.
In _Panic!_, David Zimmerman, a professor at the University of
Wisconsin, Madison, has chosen a fascinating lens through which to
view the phenomenon of bank panics: contemporary novels written in
response to the panics. As Zimmerman points out, bank panics left
people searching for answers about what had just happened, and why.
And as they always do, authors of fiction stepped forward in an
attempt to make sense of it all.
Zimmerman concentrates his study on novels published during the
period from 1898 to 1913 -- a choice that makes perfect sense, since
this was the heyday of the American economic novel. Hundreds of
novels on economic themes appeared during this fifteen year period, a
point first made by V.L. Parrington's _Main Currents in American
Thought_ in 1930, and later expanded in Walter Fuller Taylor's
exhaustive 1942 analysis, _The Economic Novel in America_.
As Zimmerman points out, novelists who tried to explain panics tended
to come from two camps: those who viewed panics as evidence that
capitalism as a system simply did not work; and those pro-business
authors who sought to explain the mechanics of the system and "give
the United States a business paternity" (p. 22). Zimmerman organizes
his study into five chapters. The first chapter examines Frederic
Isham's _Black Friday_ (1904); the second, Frank Norris's _The Pit_
(1903); the third, actual stock manipulator and sometime-novelist
Thomas Lawson; the fourth, Upton Sinclair's _The Moneychangers_
(1908); and the fifth, Theodore Dreiser's _The Financier_ (1912).
All of these chapters are well written, insightful, and engaging. The
chapter on Lawson, though, is especially interesting. As Zimmerman
reminds us, Lawson was a feared stock manipulator who had a large
hand in the 1899 Amalgamated Copper stock swindle. He later gained
notoriety with his 1904 expos� _Frenzied Finance_ -- in which he
revealed scandalous details about how the stock market actually
worked, indicting numerous Wall Street figures including himself.
Lawson became something of a sensation, lauded by those who
appreciated his apparent turnaround ... and vilified by those who
thought his muckraking just another attempt at market manipulation.
Lawson is even more intriguing because in 1906, he wrote a novel,
_Friday, the Thirteenth_. The lead character, who seems quite
obviously based on Lawson himself, actually justifies the creation of
market panics, which he believes will somehow cleanse the system of
its problems -- sort of like a bank robber claiming to have taken the
money in order to help improve bank security. Zimmerman spends a few
pages discussing Lawson's novel, providing an ostensible reason for
this chapter to be in the book. In truth, though, this chapter is a
stretch for _Panic!_; it just doesn't seem to fit. Having said that,
it's a fascinating chapter, and quite worthy of expansion into its
own book.
Most of _Panic!_ is more traditional historical/literary criticism,
and quite well done at that. Zimmerman's discussion of Frank Norris,
especially, shows no small amount of insight into Norris's
psychology. Zimmerman uncovers an obscure 1897 Norris article titled
"Inside the Organ" (in which Norris waxes rhapsodic about a huge pipe
organ) and proceeds to show how Norris used similar language and
imagery to describe financial markets in _The Pit_. This insight
reveals much about how Norris -- author of the much less
business-friendly novel _The Octopus_ -- could not help but be awed
by Wall Street, despite its warts. This is a very interesting piece
of literary detective work on Zimmerman's part, and it helps bolster
this fine essay on Norris, who, had he lived beyond his thirties,
might have become our greatest American novelist.
Zimmerman's overall knowledge of the economic fiction of the time is
impressive. He discusses not only the more obvious authors of such
work -- Norris, Dreiser, and Sinclair -- but also some of the
once-popular names since forgotten by literary history, including
writers like Samuel Merwin, Henry Kitchell Webster, Will Payne, and
Edwin Lef�vre.
_Panic!_ is a well-written, well-researched study and a worthy
addition to the literature of economic and literary history.
Scott Dalrymple is Assistant Professor of Business Administration at
Hartwick College in Oneonta, NY. His essay on economic novelist Will
Payne was awarded the James Soltow Award by the Economic and Business
Historical Society in 2005.
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Published by EH.Net (October 2006). All EH.Net reviews are archived
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