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LESSON 13 
”LOST GENERATION” OF AMERICAN LITERATURE IN THE XX CENTURY 
1 Lost generation In literature 
2Literary themes 
3Other uses 
4Notable members 
 
M
any historians have characterized the period between the two world wars as the United 
States' traumatic "coming of age," despite the fact that U.S. direct involvement was relatively brief 
(1917-1918) and its casualties many fewer than those of its European allies and foes. John Dos 
Passos expressed America's postwar disillusionment in the novel 
Three Soldiers
(1921), when he 
noted that civilization was a "vast edifice of sham, and the war, instead of its crumbling, was its 
fullest and most ultimate expression." Shocked and permanently changed, Americans returned to 
their homeland but could never regain their innocence.
Nor could soldiers from rural America easily return to their roots. After experiencing the 
world, many now yearned for a modern, urban life. New farm machines such as planters, 
harvesters, and binders had drastically reduced the demand for farm jobs; yet despite their increased 
productivity, farmers were poor. Crop prices, like urban workers' wages, depended on unrestrained 
market forces heavily influenced by business interests: Government subsidies for farmers and 
effective workers' unions had not yet become established. "The chief business of the American 
people is business," President Calvin Coolidge proclaimed in 1925, and most agreed.
In the postwar "Big Boom," business flourished, and the successful prospered beyond their 
wildest dreams. For the first time, many Americans enrolled in higher education -- in the 1920s 
college enrollment doubled. The middle-class prospered; Americans began to enjoy the world s 
highest national average income in this era, and many people purchased the ultimate status symbol -
- an automobile. The typical urban American home glowed with electric lights and boasted a radio 
that connected the house with the outside world, and perhaps a telephone, a camera, a typewriter, or 
a sewing machine. Like the businessman protagonist of Sinclair Lewis's novel 
Babbitt
(1922), the 
average American approved of these machines because they were modern and because most were 
American inventions and American-made.
Americans of the "Roaring Twenties" fell in love with other modern entertainments. Most 
people went to the movies once a week. Although Prohibition -- a nationwide ban on the 
production, transport, and sale of alcohol instituted through the 18th Amendment to the U.S. 
Constitution -- began in 1919, underground "speakeasies" and nightclubs proliferated, featuring 
jazz music, cocktails, and daring modes of dress and dance. Dancing, moviegoing, automobile 
touring, and radio were national crazes. American women, in particular, felt liberated. Many had 
left farms and villages for homefront duty in American cities during World War I, and had become 
resolutely modern. They cut their hair short ("bobbed"), wore short "flapper" dresses, and gloried in 
the right to vote assured by the 19th Amendment to the Constitution, passed in 1920. They boldly 
spoke their mind and took public roles in society.
Western youths were rebelling, angry and disillusioned with the savage war, the older 
generation they held responsible, and difficult postwar economic conditions that, ironically, 
allowed Americans with dollars -- like writers F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway, Gertrude 
Stein, and Ezra Pound -- to live abroad handsomely on very little money. Intellectual currents, 
particularly Freudian psychology and to a lesser extent Marxism (like the earlier Darwinian theory 
of evolution), implied a "godless" world view and contributed to the breakdown of traditional 
values. Americans abroad absorbed these views and brought them back to the United States where 
they took root, firing the imagination of young writers and artists. William Faulkner, for example, a 
20th-century American novelist, employed Freudian elements in all his works, as did virtually all 
serious American fiction writers after World War I.


Despite outward gaiety, modernity, and unparalleled material prosperity, young Americans 
of the 1920s were "the lost generation" -- so named by literary portraitist Gertrude Stein. Without a 
stable, traditional structure of values, the individual lost a sense of identity. The secure, supportive 
family life; the familiar, settled community; the natural and eternal rhythms of nature that guide the 
planting and harvesting on a farm; the sustaining sense of patriotism; moral values inculcated by 
religious beliefs and observations -- all seemed undermined by World War I and its aftermath.
Numerous novels, notably Hemingway's 
The Sun Also Rises
(1926) and Fitzgerald's 
This 
Side of Paradise
(1920), evoke the extravagance and disillusionment of the lost generation. In T.S. 
Eliot's influential long poem 
The Waste Land
(1922), Western civilization is symbolized by a bleak 
desert in desperate need of rain (spiritual renewal).
The world depression of the 1930s affected most of the population of the United States. 
Workers lost their jobs, and factories shut down; businesses and banks failed; farmers, unable to 
harvest, transport, or sell their crops, could not pay their debts and lost their farms. Midwestern 
droughts turned the "breadbasket" of America into a dust bowl. Many farmers left the Midwest for 
California in search of jobs, as vividly described in John Steinbeck's 
The Grapes of Wrath
(1939). 
At the peak of the Depression, one-third of all Americans were out of work. Soup kitchens, shanty 
towns, and armies of hobos -- unemployed men illegally riding freight trains -- became part of 
national life. Many saw the Depression as a punishment for sins of excessive materialism and loose 
living. The dust storms that blackened the midwestern sky, they believed, constituted an Old 
Testament judgment: the "whirlwind by day and the darkness at noon."
The Depression turned the world upside down. The United States had preached a gospel of 
business in the 1920s; now, many Americans supported a more active role for government in the 
New Deal programs of President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Federal money created jobs in public 
works, conservation, and rural electrification. Artists and intellectuals were paid to create murals 
and state handbooks. These remedies helped, but only the industrial build-up of World War II 
renewed prosperity. After Japan attacked the United States at Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, 
disused shipyards and factories came to bustling life mass- producing ships, airplanes, jeeps, and 
supplies. War production and experimentation led to new technologies, including the nuclear bomb. 
Witnessing the first experimental nuclear blast, Robert Oppenheimer, leader of an international 
team of nuclear scientists, prophetically quoted a Hindu poem: "I am become Death, the shatterer of 
worlds."



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