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The Smart Set v64 1

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Title
The Smart Set
Date | Number: v64 1 | Lang: English (en)
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Filesize 39.49mb consisting of 148 pages | Format: EBook
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   By crashryan
I read a fair amount of Mencken when I was younger, but "The Smart Set" was only a legend, one which many intellectuals held in reverence. It's interesting finally to have the chance to read the magazine. I was immediately struck by the overwhelming snarkiness of the criticism. The smug self-importance of Mencken, Nathan, and the others is astonishing. They're 1920s versions of Internet trolls, expressing contempt for those to whom they feel superior (which is almost everyone), and smirking coldly down their noses at the "idiots" who haven't heard of their favorite obscurities (it's worth noting that Remy de Gourmont, Ludwig Thoma, and Max Reger didn't make it into the pantheon of immortals.) The editors peddle mysogyny, racism, and anti-iiberalism with a pompous superiority that presages Mencken's later romance with Chancellor Hitler's campaign to clean up the mess of the masses. Very disappointing. It's the sort of thing that gave intellectualism a bad name.
   By Kracalactaka
I don't really see the "anti-liberal" slant (and why would being anti-liberal be bad necessarily btw?) This mag to me seems pretty lib since they shared an attitude with Capt Billy's that seemed to rail against the religious, tee-totaling crowd that brought in prohibition. (look at some of the covers, esp from the 1922 run) as for the misogyny & racism, yeah that sure is there, but then confirmed lefty Jack London was also misogynistic & racist. Definitely not excusing it but it seems from my reading of older material that almost everyone of every political leaning back then was misogynistic & racist. It was an omnipresence in the cultural landscape that we have yet to fully overcome.
   By The Australian Panther
'They're 1920s versions of Internet trolls, expressing contempt for those to whom they feel superior' ; My thoughts exactly, although since they had to sign their names to their comments there were limits that kept them in check, unlike what happens on the internet today. I have to agree with Kracalactaka tho, re the social and political slant The mag is of its time, and, yes, what we see as racism and bigotry would not have resonated as such at the time. I'm happy to see it on the site tho, Much of it is quite entertaining and the covers are wonderful. Every era had a literary and artistic elite like this who find some kind of outlet for their angst for believing themselves to be different from the general zeitgeist.
   By crashryan
You're right, Krac, "anti-liberalism" was a poor choice of words. It was my vain attempt to give a name to an undercurrent that runs through the Mencken/Nathan/Hatteras essays. On many issues they take stands generally ascribed to liberals: critiquing fundamentalist religion, for example, or disdaining bourgeois capitalism. But they also take shots at "liberal" concepts like democracy, universal education, and socialism. Re-reading their essays I realize that the writers aren't criticizing particular ideals or values. They're ridiculing the very notion of having ideals or values. I've read references to the cynicism of 1920s intellectuals. I guess this is what it looks like. Mencken & Co. define themselves primarily in terms of what they're against, and what they're against is anything that lots of other people--left, right or center--agree upon.
  
Additional Information
 
Content:The Smart Set [v64 #1, January 1921] ed. George Jean Nathan & H. L. Mencken (The Smart Set Co. Inc., 35c, 144 +, standard) Details supplied by Richard Fidczuk.
Page 1Laughter - Katherine George
Page 2A Panorama of Idiots - Owen Hatteras
Page 3The Posturer - Stanley Olmsted
Page 24Treatise on Simplicity - T. F. Mitchell
Page 24Lines - Le Baron Cooke
Page 25Amy's Story - Thyra Samter Winslow
Page 33Répétition Générale - George Jean Nathan & H. L. Mencken
Page 41Wow - W. B. Seabrook
Page 44The Wall - Eugene Dolson
Page 45The Green Cord - K. T. Edmondson
Page 47The Singer - A. Newberry Choyce
Page 48Nocturne - Sam Hellman
Page 48The Stranger - Zoe Ongley
Page 49Star Magic - Joseph Upper
Page 53A Pound of Chocolates - Walter Yust
Page 57Spring - Oscar C. Williams
Page 57The Kiss of Love - Stewart Holmes
Page 58Had I Forgotten - Russell McCarthy
Page 58Ten Additions to the American Credo - Malcolm H. Oettinger
Page 59A Pastel of Vienna, Matinee at the Hofoper - Helen Woljeska
Page 60Study in Sentiment - Russell A. Hartmann
Page 61Three Swallows, Clear! - Donal Hamilton Haines
Page 70The Fire Is Out in Acheron - Maxwell Anderson
Page 71Conversations: III. On Women - Owen Hatteras
Page 76When You Came to Me - Oscar C. Williams
Page 77John Miles' Stenographer - Nan Apotheker
Page 80Redemption - David Morton
Page 81Pepperell Square - John Hunter Sedgwick
Page 86God and the Marquis - W. B. Seabrook
Page 89Popapeeka - Lawrence Vail
Page 98At the Curb - Vincent Starrett
Page 99Still Further Addenda to the American Credo - H. J. Roemer, H. R. Keeble & M. A. Murphy
Page 101Faith - Walter McLaren Imrie
Page 113The Sacred Story - J. B. Hawley
Page 118The End - Ralph B. Cooney
Page 118Keepsakes - Frances Avery Faunce
Page 119Threnody upon a Decadent Art - Joseph W. Krutch
Page 122The Faith - Leonard Hall
Page 123Engaged - Laura Kent Mason
Page 126Moods - Grace Hazard Conkling
Page 127The Illumination - Robert Merkle
Page 128Song - Glenn Ward Dresbach
Page 129"Splendid et Mondial" - Gaston Roupnel(in French)
Page 131The Dirt Diggers - George Jean Nathan
Page 138Consolation - H. L. Mencken
 
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