The "Social"
Novels and Plays
(1956)
Ludwig von Mises
Issue LXX-
August 14, 2006
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Part VI of "Literature
Under Capitalism," The Anti-Capitalist
Mentality, Ludwig von Mises, D. Van Nostrand Co
(Princeton, NJ), 1956.
The public, committed to socialist ideas, asks for
socialist (“social”) novels and plays. The authors,
themselves imbued with socialist ideas, are ready to
deliver the stuff required. They describe
unsatisfactory conditions which, as they insinuate,
are the inevitable consequence of capitalism. They
depict the poverty and destitution, the ignorance,
dirt and disease of the exploited classes. They
castigate the luxury, the stupidity and the moral
corruption of the exploiting classes. In their eyes
everything that is bad and ridiculous is bourgeois,
and everything that is good and sublime is
proletarian.
The authors who deal with the lives of the
poverty-stricken can be divided into two classes.
The first class are those who themselves did not
experience poverty, who were born and brought up in
a “bourgeois” milieu or in a milieu of prosperous
wage earners or peasants and to whom the environment
in which they place the characters of their plays
and novels is strange. These authors must, before
they start writing, collect information about the
life in the underclass they want to paint. They
embark upon research. But, of course, they do not
approach the subject of their studies with an
unbiased mind. They know beforehand what they will
discover. They are convinced that the conditions of
the wage earners are desolate and horrible beyond
any imagination. They shut their eyes to all things
they do not want to see and find only what confirms
their preconceived opinions. They have been taught
by the socialists that capitalism is a system to
make the masses suffer terribly and that the more
capitalism progresses and approaches its full
maturity, the more the immense majority becomes
impoverished. Their novels and plays are designed as
case studies for the demonstration of this Marxian
dogma.
What is wrong with these authors is not
that they choose to portray misery and destitution.
An artist may display his mastership in the
treatment of any kind of subject. Their blunder
consists rather in the tendentious misrepresentation
and misinterpretation of social conditions. They
fail to realize that the shocking circumstances they
describe are the outcome of the absence of
capitalism, the remnants of the precapitalistic past
or the effects of policies sabotaging the operation
of capitalism. They do not comprehend that
capitalism, in engendering big-scale production for
mass consumption, is essentially a system of wiping
out penury as much as possible. They describe the
wage earner only in his capacity as a factory hand
and never give a thought to the fact that he is also
the main consumer either of the manufactured goods
themselves or of the foodstuffs and raw materials
exchanged against them.
The predilection of these authors for
dealing with desolation and distress turns into a
scandalous distortion of truth when they imply that
what they report is the state of affairs typical and
representative of capitalism. The information
provided by the statistical data concerning the
production and the sale of all articles of big-scale
production clearly shows that the typical wage
earner does not live in the depths of misery.
The outstanding figure in the school of
“social” literature was Émile Zola. He set the
pattern which hosts of less-gifted imitators
adopted. In his opinion art was closely related to
science. It had to be founded on research and to
illustrate the findings of science. And the main
result of social science, as Zola saw it, was the
dogma that capitalism is the worst of all evils and
that the coming of socialism is both inevitable and
highly desirable. His novels were “in effect a body
of socialist homiletics.”(1)
But Zola was, in his prosocialist bias and zeal,
very soon surpassed by the “proletarian” literature
of his adepts.
The “proletarian” critics of literature
pretend that what these “proletarian” authors deal
with is simply the unadulterated facts of
proletarian experience (2).
However, these authors do not merely report facts.
They interpret these facts from the point of view of
the teachings of Marx, Veblen and the Webbs. This
interpretation is the gist of their writings, the
salient point that characterizes them as
pro-socialist propaganda. These writers take the
dogmas on which their explanation of events is based
as self-understood and irrefutable and are fully
convinced that their readers share their confidence.
Thus it seems to them often superfluous to mention
the doctrines explicitly. They sometimes refer to
them only by implication. But this does not alter
the fact that everything they convey in their books
depends on the validity of the socialist tenets and
pseudoeconomic constructions. Their fiction is an
illustration of the lessons of the anticapitalistic
doctrinaires and collapses with them.
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The second class of authors of “proletarian”
fiction are those who were born in the
proletarian milieu they describe in their books.
These men have detached themselves from the
environment of manual workers and have joined
the ranks of professional people. They are not
like the proletarian authors of “bourgeois”
background under the necessity to embark upon
special research in order to learn something
about the life of the wage earners. They can
draw from their own experience.
This personal experience teaches them
things that flatly contradict essential dogmas
of the socialist creed. Gifted and hard-working
sons of parents living in modest conditions are
not barred from access to more satisfactory
positions. The authors of “proletarian”
background stand themselves in witness of this
fact. They know why they themselves succeeded
while most of their brothers and mates did not.
In the course of their advance to a better
station in life they had ample opportunity to
meet other young men who, like themselves, were
eager to learn and to advance. They know why
some of them found their way and others missed
it. Now, living with the “bourgeois,” they
discover that what distinguishes the man who
makes more money from another who makes less is
not that the former is a scoundrel. They would
not have risen above the level in which they
were born if they were so stupid as not to see
that many of the businessmen and professional
people are self-made men who, like themselves,
started poor. They cannot fail to realize that
differences in income are due to factors other
than to those suggested by socialist resentment.
If such authors indulge in writing
what is in fact prosocialist homilectics, they
are insincere. Their novels and plays are not
veracious and therefore nothing but trash. They
are far below the standards of the books of
their colleagues of “bourgeois” origin who at
least believe in what they are writing.
The socialist authors do not content
themselves with depicting the conditions of the
victims of capitalism. They also deal with the
life and the doings of its beneficiaries, the
businessmen. They are intent upon disclosing to
the readers how profits come into existence. As
they themselves – thank God – are not familiar
with such a dirty subject, they first search for
information in the books of competent
historians. This is what these experts tell them
about the “financial gangsters” and “robber
barons” and the way they acquired riches: “He
began his career as a cattle drover, which means
that he bought farmers’ cattle and drove them to
the market to sell. The cattle were sold to the
butchers by weight. Just before they got to the
market he fed them salt and gave them large
quantities of water to drink. A gallon of water
weighs about eight pounds. Put three or four
gallons of water in a cow, and you have
something extra when it comes to selling her.”(3)
In this vein dozens and dozens of novels and
plays report the transactions of the villain of
their plot, the businessman. The tycoons became
rich by selling cracked steel and rotten food,
shoes with cardboard soles and cotton goods for
silk. They bribed the senators and the
governors, the judges and the police. They
cheated their customers and their workers. It is
a very simple story.
It never occurred to these authors
that their narration implicitly describes all
other Americans as perfect idiots whom every
rascal can easily dupe. The above mentioned
trick of the inflated cows is the most primitive
and oldest method of swindling. It is hardly to
be believed that there are in any part of the
world cattle buyers stupid enough to be
hoodwinked by it. To assume that there were in
the United States butchers who could be beguiled
in this way is to expect too much from the
reader’s simplicity. It is the same with all
similar fables.
In his private life the businessman,
as the “progressive” author paints him, is a
barbarian, a gambler and a drunkard. He spends
his days at the race tracks, his evenings in
night clubs and his nights with mistresses. As
Marx and Engels pointed out in the Communist
Manifesto, these “bourgeois, not content
with having the wives and daughters of their
proletarians at their disposal, not to speak of
common prostitutes, take the greatest pleasure
in seducing each others’ wives.” This is how
American business is mirrored in a great part of
American literature (4).
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1. Cf. P. Martino in
the Encyclopedia of the Social
Science, Vol. XV, p. 537.
2. Cf. J. Freeman, Introduction to
Proletarian Literature in the United
States, an Anthology, New York,
1935, pp. 9–28.
3. Cf. W. E. Woodward (A New
American History, New York, 1938,
p. 608) in narrating the biography of
a businessman who endowed a
Theological Seminary.
4. Cf., the brilliant analysis by John
Chamberlain, The Businessman in
Fiction (Fortune, November 1948,
pp. 134–148). |
Ludwig von Mises (1881-1973) was dean of the
Austrian School and a world-renowned free-market
economist.
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