Gilbert Seldes facts for kids
Gilbert Vivian Seldes (/ˈsɛldəs/; January 3, 1893 – September 29, 1970) was an American writer and cultural critic. Seldes served as the editor and drama critic of the seminal modernist magazine The Dial and hosted the NBC television program The Subject is Jazz (1958). He also wrote for other magazines and newspapers like Vanity Fair and the Saturday Evening Post. He was most interested in American popular culture and cultural history. He wrote and adapted for Broadway, including Lysistrata and A Midsummer Night's Dream in the 1930s. Later, he made films, wrote radio scripts and became the first director of television for CBS News and the founding dean of the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania.
He spent his career analyzing popular culture in America, advocating cultural democracy, and subsequently, calling for public criticism of the media. Near the end of his life, he quipped, "I've been carrying on a lover's quarrel with the popular arts for years ... It's been fun. Nothing like them."
Contents
Childhood and early life
Gilbert Seldes was born on January 3, 1893, in Alliance, New Jersey, and attended a small elementary school in the 300-home farm community. Both Gilbert's parents were Russian Jewish immigrants, and his mother, Anna Saphro, died in 1896 when he and his older brother, famed war correspondent and journalist George Seldes, were still young. Gilbert's father, George Sergius Seldes, a strongly opinionated and radically philosophical man, affected every aspect of his young sons' lives. The elder George pushed his sons to "read books that you will reread—and that you will never outgrow," and refused to force religion upon children who were "too young to understand it," instilling a free-thinking attitude within his sons.
Seldes attended Philadelphia's Central High School and then enrolled in Harvard, concentrating on English Studies and graduating in 1914. During this time, he was a self-confessed 'cultural elitist'. It was here that Seldes met and befriended both Scofield Thayer and James Sibley Watson, Jr. along with E.E. Cummings, Winslow Wilson, Harold Stearns, and John Dos Passos. Upon graduation Seldes joined his brother as a war journalist from 1916 to 1917, eventually being promoted to sergeant. George Santayana's and William James' ideas also influenced him greatly during this time.
Personal life and family
Seldes had a fling with the American journalist Jane Anderson from early 1918 to late 1919. They eventually drifted apart, and he married Alice Wadhams Hall, an upper-class Episcopalian, in Paris in 1924. The actress Marian Seldes was their daughter; their son is literary agent Timothy Seldes. He was the younger brother of legendary liberal journalist George Seldes.
Ideas
On mass culture
From the 1930s, Seldes was wary of the transformation of popular culture to mass culture, which television and radio facilitated. He was concerned that the popular arts had lost their dynamism as 'passive observation' had, by then, replaced 'active participation' in the arts. Furthermore, he worried that American tastes were becoming uniform and undiscriminating. This concern increased in the 1950s, as he saw that the arts were monopolized, homogenized, and of poor standard. In the second edition of The Seven Lively Arts (1957), he wrote, "we are being engulfed in a mass-produced mediocrity".
Media responsibility was also a pertinent issue to Seldes, as he believed that entertainment corporations' control and commercialization of the arts eroded the value of popular culture. He blamed media corporations for broadcasting content that he thought pandered to the lowest common denominator. He considered soap operas and TV dramas "corrupting influences". To Seldes, TV detrimentally narrowed the interests of the public, when, instead –
the public [should] be given every opportunity to find its own level of taste by having access to the best as well as to the mean – which in this case, is far from golden.
Moreover, he also rued how television's accessibility made entertainment seem like a 'right', rather than a reward to be earned.
Still, he remained optimistic and wished that the public would criticize the media. This was Seldes' enduring ideal – for American cultural criticism's democratization. The historian Michael Kammen considers Seldes the forerunner of the cultural studies for his research into the social impact, political implications and educational potential of cultural mediums.
In early 1946, Seldes wrote an essay in Esquire magazine, where he criticized what he perceived to be the prevailing radio humor of the time. According to Seldes, most comedians on the airwaves based their humor almost solely on various insults, which he found tiresome. His essay led to an invitation on The Jack Benny Program to defend his stance, which he accepted. He appeared on Benny's radio program on February 24, 1946. Despite his objections to radio comedy, Seldes did enjoy appearing on the show, and recalled that Benny's writers "accomplished the miracle of making me seem very funny indeed".
On politics
While a patriot, Seldes was largely apolitical. He later regretted this neglect and he conceded that his material comforts had made him apathetic –
nothing in public affairs has caused me so much regret as my failure to join them. The only one that seems even faintly valid to myself is that I wasn't, by nature, a joiner of movements… In a sense, this absorption into a life I had never anticipated and the prosperity I enjoyed, could make me indifferent to public causes.
Before and during World War II, however, Seldes was completely committed to American exceptionalism. He emphasized the uniqueness of American culture and democracy against Europe's. Despite his populist inclinations, he was an anti-Communist. He believed that Communism was incompatible with America, as it required "complete self-dedication" at the expense of democratic suffrage. He saw Americans during the 1930s as generally apathetic and undisposed to rebellion. He, therefore, championed middle-class American concerns instead. These dominated Mainland (1936), Your Money or Your Life (1938) and Proclaim Liberty! (1942). He later considered his views during this period dogmatic, pedantic and isolationist.
Career
Editor, writer and cultural critic
Following his graduation from Harvard University in 1914, Seldes left for London as the Philadelphia Evening Ledger's correspondent during World War I. He covered the social conditions in England. He also wrote for the Boston Evening Transcript, The Forum and New Statesman in London.
After the end of the war, Seldes returned to America and became Collier Weekly's associate editor. Seldes would become second associate editor for The Dial in 1920, often contributing how own pieces to the periodical under the pseudonyms Vivian Shaw or Sebastien Cauliflower. His long, glowing 1922 review in The Nation of Ulysses by James Joyce helped the book become known in the United States (although it would remain banned there until 1933). Seldes' tenure as editor of The Dial included the publication of the famous November 1922 issue featuring T. S. Eliot's The Waste Land. Together, they took The Dial on a modernist track, as opposed to other magazines like Van Wyck Brooks' The Freeman and Henry Luce's TIME. During this time, he worked with other intellectuals like Marianne Moore and Sophia Wittenberg (who later became Lewis Mumford's wife), who recounted him as an excellent colleague –
Gilbert was lighthearted and easy to get along with. Though he was serious about his work, which he seemed to enjoy, I would not say he was intellectually intense… The Dial in its early days, and I was there in one capacity or another from the start, was conducted in the office along rather informal lines with a general camaraderie, and Gilbert did much to foster that. I think he thoroughly enjoyed his work.
Vanity Fair named Seldes one of ten 'modern critics of America' in 1923, and he soon became a commentator for its magazine. In January 1923, he sailed for Europe to turn his articles on popular culture into a book. In a letter to his brother George Seldes, he stated that –
The purpose of this voyage is a four months trip of rest, frivolity, and impressions to be followed… for solitude to be spent in writing a couple of books.
In the final months of 1923, Seldes resigned his position at The Dial to pursue freelance writing. The Seven Lively Arts, his most famous book, is the result of Seldes' sojourn in Paris.
He returned to New York the following year to write for several journals and newspapers, of which his weekly column for the Saturday Evening Post provided the most significant remuneration. Over the late 1920s and 1930s, he also dabbled in writing and producing plays and musicals, besides writing columns. Some, like A Midsummer Night's Dream (1936), performed badly in the box office, and others, like Love of Three Oranges (1925), were not even staged. His one Broadway success was his adaptation of the Greek play Lysistrata by Aristophanes (1932).
Television and higher education
Seldes' interests evolved along with the expansion of film, radio and television. From 1927, he was a film critic for The New Republic, and investigated the working class' especial partiality to film. He joined CBS in 1937 as its first director of television programs, and in 1952, served as the director of the National Association for Better Radio and TV, a nonprofit corporation. He wrote, produced and directed mostly educational programs for the small screen and for radio, covering topics on American history and culture. These include Americans at Work and Puritan in Babylon (1937) for the radio and This is America (1933), a seventy-minute documentary that was shown in picture houses across the U.S. It was the first full-length documentary film ever made. He also hosted NBC's The Subject is Jazz (1958), a weekly series that introduced genres of jazz to the American public. From the 1950s, he was an adjunct lecturer for literature and communications at Columbia University.
Seldes was the founding dean of the Annenberg School of Communications at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia (1959–1963). He was the program consultant for National Educational Television from 1963 and was also elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters in that year.
Throughout his career, Seldes struggled between the pragmatic journalistic need to write profitably and his desire to write material of enduring value. In the years following the Great Depression, for example, he experienced financial difficulties and had little choice but to write for purely commercial projects. These include This Is New York (1934), a tourist guide to the city.
The Seven Lively Arts
The Seven Lively Arts is Seldes' most significant accomplishment. In explaining its title, he asserted that he was not referring to seven arts in particular –
One thing should, perhaps, be made clear about the phrase. There were those who thought (correctly) that you couldn't find seven and there were those who felt (stuffily) that the seven were not arts. Lively was for the most part unchallenged. The sacred 7 came from the classics, from 'the seven arts' (which was also the name of a magazine recently defunct) and I never tried to categorise the contents of the book to conform to the figure.
He would reiterate all his life that his intention was to treat popular (and denigrated) culture with the intelligent criticism that contemporary critics were largely inclined only to apply to highbrow culture; in 1922, his initial list of oft-ignored genres were "Slapstick Moving Pictures, Comic Strips, Revues, Musical Comedy, Columns, Slang Humor, Popular Songs, Vaudeville". Following Seldes' completion of The Seven Lively Arts in 1923, he wrote that the central message of the book was
that the minor arts, those frequently called "lowbrow", are not hostile to the major arts, and that both the minor and the major have their chief enemy in the second rate bogus arts.
This "bogus" Seldes defines as the pseudo-intellectual art that pretends to be high: "vocal concerts, pseudo-classic dancing, the serious intellectual drama, the civic masque, the high-toned moving picture, and grand opera", inherently defined by snobbery.
Seldes also sought to explain why African-American music and shows were so popular, and to revise conventional definitions of art. Still, as much as he praised the vitality and honesty of these shows, he also stated that they were savage in nature, and mistakenly predicted that they would be short-lived.
Professional relationships
Seldes was always a "non-joiner", refusing to join H. L. Mencken's "smart set" or the Algonquin Round Table.
Seldes had a strained relationship with Ernest Hemingway, who despised Seldes despite his frequent praise for Hemingway's work.
Seldes was a champion of Krazy Kat cartoonist George Herriman, and the two maintained a friendly relationship. Herriman referenced Seldes' work in his strips, and Seldes commissioned Herriman to draw his family's Christmas cards in 1922.
Edward Murrow and Seldes similarly had a tense professional relationship, as a result of their disagreement over Murrow's portrayal of Senator Joseph McCarthy on Murrow's show, See It Now (March 9, 1954). Seldes consistently advocated fair and responsible reporting, and criticized Murrow's intention to disprove McCarthy's credibility. He also regularly panned F. Scott Fitzgerald's work, save for his most famous novel, The Great Gatsby, which he praised in the August 1925 issue of The Dial. Even so, Seldes and Fitzgerald remained good friends throughout their careers.
Death and legacy
In his later years, Seldes suffered from ill health, poor memory, and emotional distress, which prevented him from completing his memoirs. He relied on his Skye terrier, Bobby, and his daughter, Marian, for companionship. As he was writing his memoirs, As in My Time (1958), he became interested in the impact of scientific progress on social institutions and communications. He died at age 77 of heart failure in his apartment on September 29, 1970.
Seldes' legacy was immeasurable. As author, critic, editor, producer, director and educator, his impact was farther reaching than mere periodical circulation or television time-slot. Leo Mishkin, a critic for New York's The Morning Telegraph described Seldes' impact:
He was my teacher as he was also for thousands of other just coming of age back in the mid-1920s. Not in the sense of standing up in front of a classroom and lecturing, or correcting examinations…But outside of school one of the requirements we all had was to read The Dial ... and when The Seven Lively Arts was published in 1924 we knew instinctively that a new age, a new appreciation of the arts, indeed a new horizon had opened up for us all...(His enthusiasms) will endure as long as the mass of American look for relaxation and rewards in the mass entertainment media. It was Gilbert Seldes who set the whole nation on that road. His name remains a monument to his influence.
Works
Books
- The United States and the War (1917)
- The Seven Lively Arts (1924)
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- Name given to The Seven Lively Arts program.
- The Square Emerald (1928)
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- Published under the pseudonym Foster Johns.
- The Stammering Century (1928)
- The Victory Murders (1928)
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- Published under the pseudonym Foster Johns.
- An Hour with the Movies and the Talkies (1929)
- The Movies and the Talkies (1929)
- The Wings of the Eagle (1929)
- Back from Utopia (1929)
- Against Revolution (1932)
- The Years of the Locust (1933)
- Mainland (1936)
- Movies for the Millions (1937)
- The Movies Come from America (1937)
- Your Money and Your Life (1938)
- Proclaim Liberty! (1942)
- The Portable Ring Lardner (1946)
- The Great Audience (1950)
- Writing for Television (1952)
- The Public Arts (1956)
- The Seven Lively Arts, 2nd ed. (1957)
- The New Mass Media (1957)
- As in My Time (1958)
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- Incomplete and unpublished memoirs.
Plays and musicals
- The Wisecrackers (1925)
- Love of Three Oranges (1925)
- Lysistrata (A Modern Version) (1932)
- A Midsummer Night's Dream (1936)
- Swinging the Dream (1939)
Radio and television
- This is America (1933)
- Americans at Work (1937)
- The Taming of the Shrew (1937)
- Puritan in Babylon (1937)
- Living History (1938)
- Americans All – Immigrants All (1938)
- The Lively Arts (1950s)
- The Subject is Jazz (1958)