It Can't Happen Here by Sinclair Lewis is a prescient,
prophetic, visionary novel, that embarks on a cautionary tale of a
fascist, misogynist, racist leadership that manages to get
democratically elected in the United States. The novel was written in
1930s when fascism was on a rise in the Western Europe while communism
was growing stronger by the day in the Eastern Europe, and back when,
most of the European nations, the US and Japan harbored strong colonial
aspirations. Central to the story is the character of Buzz Windrip, the
man who becomes the nominee of a major party, then the president, and
then a dictator, "in order to save the nation from the welfare cheats,
from crimes and sex, from drinkers and bootleggers, from the rising
power of women who had just got the right to vote and work in
offices and factories, from the ascendant African-Americans,
businessmen Jews and the immigrants, from a liberal press, and imports". Buzz Windrip
is brought into power with the help of evangelists and with the help of
miners, laborers, and the so-called hardworking middle class American
who believe in his promise that everyone would make more money under his
leadership. In the first quarter of the novel, as the drumbeats around
the nomination and subsequently the election of Buzz Windrip get louder
and louder, the confounded intellectuals around the country go on
mumbling "It can't happen here!"
The novel is a razor sharp
political satire from another era, and it imagines the rise of both a
dictatorial president and his henchmen from a fully-functioning
democractic set-up. The scenarios imagined with a cold accuracy of a
truly imaginative and creative writer appear to the a script many
leaders around the world have emulated over the past few decades.
Sinclair Lewis was the first American novelist to win a Nobel Prize for
literature in 1930, for his major, more famous novels like Main Street,
Babbitt and Arrowsmith. Although America narrowly escaped the wave of
nazism and fascism in 1930s, the script of the novel stays as fresh and
as foreboding as ever. Buzz Windrip, who eventually wins the vote,
within this novel is said to have ghost-authored a book, written in a
folksy, funny, simplified language, with choicest examples and phrases
meant to echo in the minds and hearts of common people. Many chapters
open with a paragraph drawn from the imaginary book, (titled Zero Hour)
and each paragraph seems to have inspired words and phrases we have
heard in our times from the leaders who are said to be in touch with the
public, the masses, the working classes. English and Hindi poetry & prose, published as well as unpublished, experimental writing. Book reviews, essays, translations, my views about the world and world literature, religion, politics economics and India. Formerly titled "random thoughts of a chaotic being" (2004-2013). A short intro to my work: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CQRBanekNAo
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Saturday, March 17, 2018
It Can't Happen Here by Sinclair Lewis
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