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BlackOxford's Reviews > U.S.A.: The 42nd Parallel / 1919 / The Big Money

U.S.A. by John Dos Passos
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it was amazing
bookshelves: favourites, american

Present at the Birth of Corporate Man

The modern de Tocqueville in fictional format. There is no better observer of the 20th century American character than Dos Passos. He chronicles that unique mixture of frenetic American activity coupled with an equally energetic despair.

Striving in America isn't based on hope but serves to avoid reflection on the need for hope or its source. It isn't possible to understand the attraction of a man like Donald Trump to a huge swathe of the American population without an appreciation of the characters Dos Passos constructs to populate his inter-war novels.

It is during this period that the cultural and political mould of the United States solidified to produce not the revolutionary, or the pioneer, or the successful immigrant, but the corporate man and woman who have to get on in a world that they little understand and don't much like. Trump is the son of one of these people and would continue the tradition.

Postscript: Dos Passos continued a focus on corporate life that I think was started by Theodore Dreiser and continued by authors like Louis Auchincloss and William Gaddis. They each in their own way record what might be called the corporate aesthetic as it emerged in America. See: /review/show...
Although of an entirely different genre, E.L. Doctorow’s Ragtime might be considered as a sort of fictional birth notice of corporate America. See /review/show...

Postscript 29Dec19:
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Reading Progress

April 10, 2016 – Started Reading
April 16, 2016 – Shelved
April 16, 2016 – Finished Reading
July 27, 2016 – Shelved as: favourites
December 27, 2016 – Shelved as: american

Comments Showing 1-12 of 12 (12 new)

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BlackOxford Thanks Greg. Doctorow is one of my favourites as well. And yes indeed, lots of vignettes of 'types' in Dos Passos, mostly just trying to survive in a hostile universe.


message 2: by David (new) - added it

David Wow that review sparks my interest. I have heard about Dos Passos but haven't found the time. Thanks Michael.


BlackOxford David, you definitely won't regret it.


message 4: by Hanneke (new)

Hanneke Gosh, interesting what you say about this novel in relation to the emergence of a corporate braggart like Trump. I have had that novel on my shelves forever. Its size always intimidated me so far, but perhaps this is a time I should read it.


BlackOxford Hanneke. The three are self-contained. So you don't have to tackle them all at once.


message 6: by Hanneke (new)

Hanneke I did not realize U.S.A. contained three separate novels, Michael. Just looked at my copy, indeed, the first book 'The 42nd Parallel' a quite doable 341 pages. Thanks for pointing that out, that makes a difference!


message 7: by Greg (new)

Greg I've got to find some time for this. Too many in the line (queue for you) right now.


BlackOxford Greg wrote: "I've got to find some time for this. Too many in the line (queue for you) right now."

Worth barging!


message 9: by Kalliope (new)

Kalliope I was thinking of reading this in 2018, but first I may reread his Manhattan Transfer


BlackOxford Kalliope wrote: "I was thinking of reading this in 2018, but first I may reread his Manhattan Transfer"

I think that is probably the right sequence.


message 11: by Lisa (new)

Lisa Thank you for an insightful review, Michael! I definitely want to get back to dos Passos soon, and you make a strong case for this one!


BlackOxford Lisa wrote: "Thank you for an insightful review, Michael! I definitely want to get back to dos Passos soon, and you make a strong case for this one!"

Thank you Lisa.


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