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Tue, 7 Jul 1998 11:55:28 -0400 |
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On Jul 5, 7:06pm, Barry Crimmins wrote:
> . . . that great "humoracist" Van Wyck
> Brooks.
What did Brooks do to earn the title "humoracist"?
I've never seen him as anything worse than a want-a-be psychiatrist who was
able to attract an audience and who was able to spark a long-lived debate about
Twain by declaring that "Twain was a frustrated spirit, a victim of arrested
development[,] . . . the artist . . . had withered into the cynic and the whole
man had become a spiritual valetudinarian." (quoted in Foner's _M.T.: Social
Critic_, 57)
I won't argue with those who wish to call Brooks names. I just don't
understand why "humoracist" is one of the names to call him. Should I now have
another reason ("humoracism") to be upset with Brooks or is Barry just using
hyperbole?
(And, please, I didn't include the Brooks quote to renew an 80-year-old debate
on the Forum. It's safe to assume that the vast majority of Forum members
disagree with Brooks' analysis.)
thanks, larry marshburne
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