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On January 2, in its Metro Section,
the Washington Post reported that the Fairfax County library
system was dumping thousands of volumes that had not been
checked out in the last 24 months. Among the classics tossed
to make room for more novels by John Grisham and Tom Clancy,
the ghost-written autobiography of Hillary Clinton and the
fulminations of Bill O'Reilly and Ann Coulter: Gibbon's
Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire; Voltaire's Candide,
Hemingway's For Whom the Bell Tolls, and To Kill
a Mockingbird. Tennessee Williams' The Glass Menagerie
got the heave-ho, too. Holding on by a thread only because
one librarian professed a bias as a former English major:
Nine Plays by Eugene O'Neill.
The book was compiled
by O'Neill himself , during a creative lull after his 1936
Nobel Prize for Literature. He was in ill health, battling
alcoholism and depression (as usual), and it was widely assumed,
perhaps even by the playwright himself, that his career was
over. The nine plays were thus O'Neill's summing up of his
artistic legacy before the burst of genius in the 1940s that
produced a second act to his career that was even more impressive
than the first. The nine plays include Desire Under the
Elms. If a Fairfax County English major yields to public
opinion, it will no longer be in the shelves a year from now.
And when that
happens, it will be a cultural turning point, just as the
banishing of Hemingway and Voltaire are turning points. When
public libraries base their collections on public tastes rather
than literary worth, it guarantees widespread loss---loss
of memory, loss of perspective, loss of ideas, loss of inspiration,
loss of critical standards, loss of cultural depth and diversity.
But what is the alternative? One can hardly argue that a book
that never makes it to the check-out desk is contributing
anything to the community. Books, like plays, don't communicate
all by themselves. Somebody has to want to read them and watch
them.
One could be more
sympathetic with the decision of the Fairfax libraries if
its policy were uniformly applied with a consistent philosophy.
The librarian who was interviewed for the Post story said
that the plays of William Shakespeare would "always" be available,
as well as F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby. Wellwhy?
Why is Britain's greatest playwright guaranteed enshrinement
in our culture, while Tennessee Williams loses his place on
the shelves to reader apathy and Eugene O'Neill barely makes
the cut? For that matter, why should one librarian's biases
give O'Neill a pass? And who decided that Fitzgerald's masterpiece
gets the equivalent of academic tenure, while, for example,
Abraham Lincoln: His Speeches and Writings flunks
out? If pure popularity is the measuring stick, than let's
apply it to all. On the other hand, if the library is going
to assume the responsibility of cultural guardian, its choices
should be based on better criteria biases, conventional wisdom
and individual favorites.
Libraries, art
museums, orchestras and theater companies are either the guardians
of cultural riches, or there are no guardians. Art forms that
cannot escape commercial forces are doomed to slough off supposed
classics like dead skin. Commercial radio is gradually eliminating
not only classical music and jazz from the airwaves but also
the popular music of the 40's, 50's and 60's, and with it
Bob Dylan, Bing Crosby, Elvis Presley, Frank Sinatra and Irving
Berlin and Richard Rodgers. With hundreds of cable TV channels
now available, only one consistently shows great black-and-white
classic films, which are gradually fading from public awareness
along with their inimitable stars: James Cagney, Clark Gable,
Errol Flynn, Fred Astaire, Gary Cooper, Bette Davis, Ginger
Rogers, Spencer Tracy, and dozens moreeven Shirley Temple!
What will save
Eugene O'Neill? Commercial necessities long ago invaded the
theater: grants are all that keep most companies, even prominent
ones, out of bankruptcy, and grants are linked to audience.
With libraries, it's circulation. The Post story notes that
circulation in Fairfax libraries has been on the rise, meaning
more fundingand, it is clear, more Stephen King novels pushing
Emily Dickenson and Edgar Allen Poe out the door. "I think
the days of libraries saying, 'We must have that, because
it's good for people,' are beyond us," said Leslie Burger,
president of the American Library Association and director
of Princeton Public Library. "There is a sense in many public
libraries that popular materials are what most of our communities
desire. Everybody's got a favorite book they're trying to
promote."
This is an odd
attitude in a society that delivers messages and promotes
policies to discourage smoking, trans-fats, fast driving,
excessive drinking, pot use and junk food. "Most of our communities"
enjoy those things, too. What's the difference between promoting
good health and good art? It couldn't be that the dollars
for unhealthy food, drink and drugs flow to corporations,
while corporations, foundations and governments will pay
for increased public consumption of rap music, Steve
Martin plays, Ann Rice novels, Ben Affleck movies and Broadway
juke-box musicals.
Could it?
So the hurdles
to keeping the plays of Eugene O'Neill, America's greatest
playwright, in our cultural memory become more and higher.
Each generation of teachers reflects its own cultural experience:
today The Color Purple , the poems of Maya Angelou
and The Heidi Chronicles are more likely to be assigned
in high school than Moby-Dick, the poems of Robert Frost and
A Long Day's Journey into Night. Libraries, it seems,
will be no help. ""A book is not forever," said Sam Clay,
director of the 21-branch Fairfax system, in the Post story.
He is proving it by dumping the writings of Plato and Aristotle,
the thoughts that launched the Renaissance and formed the
foundation of Western philosophy and science. At least they
stayed with us for 3,000 years; the libraries are ready to
jettison O'Neill in less than a century.
If O'Neill is
to survive, as well as Miller, Williams, Albee, Hellman, and
all the other great American playwrights of the past, it must
be the theater that saves him. Even as other cultural institutions
abandon their obligation to fight for the best of our art
and literature, the theater try to adapt its own versions
of the model set by art museums, blending old and new, using
current fads and momentary hits to attract new attention to
proven works of quality and lasting value. And it must find
ways to present O'Neill's plays in new and innovative ways,
without distorting or destroying what makes them great. Most
of all, the theater must do O'Neill well, a difficult challenge,
because his are uniquely difficult plays. Nothing will kill
a classic like a string of shoddy productions.
Even all of this
will not be enough if audiences take no responsibility for
preserving their own cultural heritage. Encouraging the public
to see plays that are more than time-killing eye-candy or
strings of formula one-line jokes is often derided as an "eat
your spinach" tactic that is bound to fail, but while spinach
may not appeal, most adults know that they won't thrive on
a diet of Oreos and Big Macs, either. The argument for Eugene
O'Neill's plays is more persuasive than the case for spinach:
it's not just that they are good for us, but also that they
are good.
O'Neill ought
to be saved, not for him (for he is well past caring), but
for us and those who come after us. Can he be saved in an
era where art that doesn't pay the bills is regarded as a
burden, not a treasure?
We shall see.
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