Current:Home > ContactBook Review: So you think the culture wars are new? Shakespeare expert James Shapiro begs to differ -Edge Finance Strategies
Book Review: So you think the culture wars are new? Shakespeare expert James Shapiro begs to differ
View
Date:2025-04-18 03:45:26
“The theater, when it is any good, can change things.” So said Hallie Flanagan, a theater professor tapped by the Roosevelt administration to create a taxpayer-funded national theater during the Depression, when a quarter of the country was out of work, including many actors, directors and other theater professionals.
In an enthralling new book about this little-known chapter in American theater history, Shakespeare scholar James Shapiro examines the short, tragic life of the Federal Theatre Project. That was a New Deal program brought down by Martin Dies, a bigoted, ambitious, rabble-rousing East Texas congressman, with the help of his political allies and the media in a 1930s-era version of the culture wars.
From 1935 to 1939, this fledgling relief program, part of the WPA, or Works Progress Administration, brought compelling theater to the masses, staging over a thousand productions in 29 states seen by 30 million, or roughly one in four, Americans, two-thirds of whom had never seen a play before.
It offered a mix of Shakespeare and contemporary drama, including an all-Black production of “Macbeth” set in Haiti that opened in Harlem and toured parts of the country where Jim Crow still ruled; a modern dance project that included Black songs of protest; and with Hitler on the march in Europe, an adaptation of Sinclair Lewis’s anti-fascist novel, “It Can’t Happen Here.”
Shapiro, who teaches at Columbia University and advises New York’s Public Theater and its free Shakespeare in the Park festival, argues that Dies provided a template or “playbook” for Sen. Joseph McCarthy’s better-known House Un-American Activities Committee hearings in the 1950s and for today’s right-wing culture warriors who seek to ban books in public schools and censor productions of popular high school plays.
The Dies committee hearings began on August 12, 1938, and over the next four months, Shapiro writes, “reputations would be smeared, impartiality abandoned, hearsay evidence accepted as fact, and those with honest differences of opinion branded un-American.” The following June, President Roosevelt, whose popularity was waning, eliminated all government funding for the program.
In the epilogue Shapiro briefly wonders what might have happened if the Federal Theatre had survived. Perhaps “a more vibrant theatrical culture… a more informed citizenry… a more equitable and resilient democracy”? Instead, he writes, “Martin Dies begat Senator Joseph McCarthy, who begat Roy Cohn, who begat Donald Trump, who begat the horned `QAnon Shaman,’ who from the dais of the Senate on January 6, 2021, thanked his fellow insurrectionists at the Capitol `for allowing us to get rid of the communists, the globalists, and the traitors within our government.’”
___
AP book reviews: https://apnews.com/hub/book-reviews
veryGood! (2)
Related
- Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
- Ashanti Shares Message on Her Postpartum Body After Welcoming Baby With Nelly
- Warriors Hall of Famer Al Attles, one of NBA’s first Black head coaches, dies at 87
- Stock market today: Wall Street slips and breaks an 8-day winning streak
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Government: U.S. economy added 818,000 fewer jobs than first reported in year that ended in March
- 3 people charged after death of federal prison worker who opened fentanyl-laced mail
- Voters in Arizona and Montana can decide on constitutional right to abortion
- At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
- Georgia lawmaker urges panel to consider better firearms safety rules to deter child gun deaths
Ranking
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Little League World Series: Updates, highlights from Tuesday elimination games
- Michael Strahan's Daughter Isabella Strahan Takes Major Life Step After Finishing Cancer Treatments
- A Handy Guide to Jennifer Lopez's 6 Engagement Rings: See Every Dazzling Diamond
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- Sorry, Chicago. Yelp ranks top 100 pizza spots in Midwest and the Windy City might get mad
- The price of gold is at a record high. Here’s why
- Coach Steve Kerr endorses Kamala Harris for President, tells Donald Trump 'night night'
Recommendation
New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
Horoscopes Today, August 20, 2024
How Leroy Garrett Felt Returning to The Challenge Weeks After Daughter Aria’s Birth
Some Florida counties had difficulty reporting primary election results to the public, officials say
Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
‘The fever is breaking': DeSantis-backed school board candidates fall short in Florida
Several factors may be behind feelings of hypochondria. Here are the most common ones.
Trial date set for June for man accused of trying to assassinate Supreme Court Justice Kavanaugh