Nineteen NineteenWashington Square Press, 1961 - 511 pages The second volume of U.S.A. refines the approach of the first. As in Three Soldiers and One Man's Initiation - 1917, Dos Passos reveals the damage done by World War I. Nineteen Nineteen, however, focuses on the fear and social unrest on the home front. Across America, Dos Passos is troubled by how new institutions and movements -- such as industrialization, imperialism, and materialism -- stifle human freedom. He hopes for societal advancement through means consistent with the country's democratic roots as he perceives them. Nineteen Nineteen uses a fresh, multimedia style that mixes newsreels, song lyrics, biographies of major figures, semi-autobiographical prose poems, and standard narrative. Pithy, miniature biographies of John Reed, Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson, J.P. Morgan, and the Unknown Soldier are featured. |
Contents
JOE WILLIAMS | 14 |
RICHARD ELLSWORTH SAVAGE | 78 |
EVELINE HUTCHINS | 115 |
Copyright | |
12 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
afternoon American Anne Elizabeth asked began blue boat boys café cognac cold Colonel crowd damn dark Daughter Dick Don Stevens door drank drink Eleanor Eveline everything eyes face feel fellow felt Freddy French funny Genoa girl glass goddam gotten gray hair hand he'd head hell Hutchins J. P. Morgan kissed knew laughed League of Nations limey looked Mademoiselle from Armentières Miss Moorehouse morning never Newsreel night Paris Paul Paul Johnson pretty rain Randolph Bourne Red Cross Sally Emerson Sam Browne belt ship shook sick sitting sleep smell smile sore started street suddenly talking taxicab tell thing thought told took town train turned uniform voice waiting walked wanted Wesley Everest who'd Wilson window wine woman yelled young