I need hardly caution you that when you read Mencken, who wrote the extended Preface of American Credo--his literary partner, George Jean Nathan assembled the aphorisms--that you have to expect to be offended. The racist references to blacks and anti-Semitic strokes are pretty glaring, but so often followed by equally scurrilous attacks on Catholics, Presbyterians, Methodists, etc. that it is best to treat the author as contemptuous of mankind in general, rather than a hater of particular cohorts therein. The other thing to bear in mind when reading this pamphlet is that it was written in the immediate wake of WWI and of the massive damage Woodrow Wilson did the structures of the Republic and to the comity of civil society. So, this essay is very much of a particular time and place. However, its core insight very much applies to the current moment:
But what, then, is the character that actually marks the American—that is, in chief? If he is not the exalted monopolist of liberty that he thinks he is nor the noble altruist and idealist he slaps upon the chest when he is full of rhetoric, nor the degraded dollar-chaser of European legend, then what is he? We offer an answer in all humility, for the problem is complex and there is but little illumination of it in the literature; nevertheless, we offer it in the firm conviction, born of twenty years' incessant meditation, that it is substantially correct. It is, in brief, this: that the thing which sets off the American from all other men, and gives a peculiar colour not only to the pattern of his daily life but also to the play of his inner ideas, is what, for want of a more exact term, may be called social aspiration. That is to say, his dominant passion is a passion to lift himself by at least a step or two in the society that he is a part of—a passion to improve his position, to break down some shadowy barrier of caste, to achieve the countenance of what, for all his talk of equality, he recognizes and accepts as his betters. The American is a pusher. His eyes are ever fixed upon some round of the ladder that is just beyond his reach, and all his secret ambitions, all his extraordinary energies, group themselves about the yearning to grasp it. Here we have an explanation of the curious restlessness that educated foreigners, as opposed to mere immigrants, always make a note of in the country; it is half aspiration and half impatience, with overtones of dread and timorousness. The American is violently eager to get on, and thoroughly convinced that his merits entitle him to try and to succeed, but by the same token he is sickeningly fearful of slipping back, and out of the second fact, as we shall see, spring some of his most characteristic traits. He is a man vexed, at one and the same time, by delusions of grandeur and an inferiority complex; he is both egotistical and subservient, assertive and politic, blatant and shy. Most of the errors about him are made by seeing one side of him and being blind to the other.In effect, the glory of liberalism--the social fluidity that allows an individual to rise on the basis of his own merit, irrespective of personal power--is also terrifying to those who distrust their own worth--because it permits one to fall without recourse to external supports. This reality is, of course, particularly scary today for older white men. as America has realized the promises of liberalism and incorporated women, blacks, Jews, Muslims, immigrants, etc. into the dream, we have removed the structural supports--segregation, discrimination, etc--that privileged white men. Confronted, for the first time, with a genuinely level playing field, it is indicative how little faith MAGA have in their own abilities that they retreat into the Identitarianism that seeks to restore the notion of their supremacy. they illustrate the truth that Eric Hoffer stated in The True Believer: "The less justified a man is in claiming excellence for his own self, the more ready he is to claim all excellence for his nation, his religion, his race or his holy cause." There is something delicious in the way this joint work by the ostensibly racist Mencken, at least incidentally, if not intentionally, digs out the racism of MAGA. (Reviewed:) Grade: (B+) Tweet Websites:-WIKIPEDIA: H.L. Mencken - -ENCYCLOPAEDIA BRITANNICA : Your search: mencken, henry louis -ENCYCLOPAEDIA BRITANNICA : Mencken, H.L. -H(enry) L(ouis) Mencken (1880-1956) (kirjasto) -REVIEW : of The Dissenting Opinions of Mr. Justice Holmes arranged by Alfred Lief, with a forward by George W. Kirchwey (H.L. Mencken, The American Mercury, May 1930) -ETEXT : The American Language : An Inquiry into the Development of English in the United States by H.L. Mencken (Bartleby) -ETEXT : Prejudices: First Series. -ETEXT : In Defense of Women by H. L. Mencken (Gibbons Burke) -ETEXT : The Philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche by Henry Louis Mencken -ETEXT : The Hills of Zion by H. L. Mencken -ETEXT : "THE MONKEY TRIAL": A Reporter's Account (H.L. Mencken) -ESSAY : Last Words (H. L. Mencken, 1926) -INTRODUCTION : to Gulliver's Travels by Jonathan Swift (H.L. Mencken) -ESSAY : THE UPLIFTERS TRY IT AGAIN (H. L. Mencken, by The Evening Sun, 1925) -ESSAY : "A Neglected Anniversary" (H. L. Mencken, New York Evening Mail, Dec. 28, 1917) -ESSAY : Where is the graveyard of dead gods? -ESSAY : Chiropractic (H.L. Mencken, 1924) -ESSAY : Martyrs (H. L. Mencken, Smart Set, April, 1922) -ESSAY : Professor Veblen (H.L. Mencken) -ESSAY : The Burden of Humor (H. L. Mencken, The Smart Set, Feb. 1913) -ESSAY : Rudolph Valentino's Curse : What happens when two legends met? America's greatest newspaper reporter and iconoclastic social observer H.L. Mencken tells of his meeting in 1926 with America's greatest silent screen and saddest star. -ESSAY : The Real Lorelei : Novelist and screenwriter Anita Loos wrote "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes" with one motive -- revenge. Angered that a dumb blonde starlet could captured the attention of the man (the newspaper reporter and social critic H. L. Mencken), that the already married, Loos was pursuing, she expressed her frustration by taking pen in hand. This is the story of how Anita Loss meet one Miss Mae Davis. The morale being never annoy a really good writer. -ESSAY : JAMES A. REED OF MISSOURI (H. L. Mencken, American Mercury, April, 1929) -ESSAY : The Declaration of Independence in American (H. L. Mencken, 1921) -ESSAY : The Land of the Free (H.L. Mencken, January 12, 1925) -ETEXTS : H.L. Mencken (Bartleby.com) -ETEXTS : H. L. Mencken (Positive Atheism) -TRIBUTE : The Passing of Gilbert (1836-1911) (H. L. Mencken, Baltimore Evening Sun, May 30, 1911) -REVIEW : of The Mikado (H. L. Mencken, Baltimore Evening Sun, November 29, 1910) -REVIEW : of The Goslings: A Study of the American Schools by Upton Sinclair -REVIEW : of The Cambridge Ancient History, Volume V: Athens, 478 - 401 B. C. Edited by J. B. Bury, S. A. Cooks, and F. E. Adcock -LECTURE EXCERPTS : Advice from H.L. Mencken (H.L. Mencken addressed the first convention of the NCEW in Washington on Oct. 14, 1947. The following is an abridged version of his remarks, extracted from "A Gang of Pecksniffs," a collection edited by Theo Lippman Jr. and published by Arlington House, 1975.) -TRANSLATION : THE ANTICHRIST by Friedrich Nietzsche (1895) (translation by H.L. Mencken, Ã�Published 1920) -Quotes from H.L. Mencken (Freedom's Nest) -QUOTES : The best of H.L.Mencken : witty defender of liberty (Libertystory.net) -The Mencken Society Home Page -The HL Mencken Page (Gibbons Burke) -THE HL MENCKEN HOME PAGE -H.L. Mencken (1880-1956) -American Writers : H. L. Mencken (C-SPAN) -The San Antonio College LitWeb : HL Mencken Page -PAL: Perspectives in American Literature: A Research and Reference Guide : H(enry) L(ouis) Mencken (1880-1956) -PROFILE : H. L. Mencken Ã�(Walter Lippmann, The Saturday Review of Literature, December 11, 1926) -H.L. Mencken Corner (Diane Alden) -PROFILE : H. L. Mencken Ã�(Walter Lippmann, The Saturday Review of Literature, December 11, 1926) -PROFILE : Mencken, Henry Louis, 1880-1956. Editor, essayist, and critic (Fred Hobson ) -PROFILE : By His Own Rules H. L. Mencken, A Cigar Always in Hand, Was the Most Influential Commentator of his Time (Marion Elizabeth Rodgers, Cigar Afficianado) -PROFILE : H. L. Mencken (John Patrick Michael Murphy, 1999, infidels.org) -PROFILE : H. L. Mencken, Critical Firebrand (Victor Lazofsky, '33, The Magpie, January 1933) -PROFILE : H. L. Mencken : Journalist of the Century (Shelton Hull, October 1999, Ink 19) -PHOTO : H.L. Mencken (1880-1956), journalist, editor, and critic (American History 102) -PHOTO : H.L. Mencken & George Jean Nathan -H. L. Mencken (Find a Grave) -H. L. Mencken Collection (Princeton University) -H. L. Mencken Room and Collection (Enoch Pratt Free Library) -THE MENCKEN COLLECTION (JULIA ROGERS LIBRARY GOUCHER COLLEGE, Bibliography by KATHERINE S. BOUDE) - -TRIBUTE: A Birthday Tribute to the ‘Sage of Baltimore’ — H.L. Mencken (Mark J. Perry, September 12, 2022, AEI) -ESSAY: Americans Laughed at H.L. Mencken’s Cynical Commentary—Little Did They Know (Peter Carlson, November 23, 2020, HistoryNet) -H. L. Mencken Books Central (Self-Knowledge) -ESSAY : Mencken: Race -ESSAY : Absent Voices (Richard Mitchell, The Underground Grammarian) -ESSAY : The Ghost of Mencken (J.D. Tuccille , 03/22/97, About.com : Civil Liberties) -ESSAY : THE AMERICAN MERCURY (Daniel R. McCloskey, Editor-in-Chief, The Exchange: Culture Reason Style) -ESSAY : Mencken's Creed (Bluepete, October 20, 1997) -ESSAY : Postal censorship against h. l. mencken (Eric Longley) -ESSAY : Ã�H.L. MENCKEN AND THOMAS WOLFE: DIVERGENT STYLES AND SHARED IDEOLOGIES (The Thomas Wolfe Review) -ESSAY : Mencken's Critique of Democracy and Government Ã� -ESSAY : The Bathtub, Mencken, and War (Wendy McElroy) -ESSAY : H.L. Mencken enjoys presidential campaign revival (November 1, 2000, CNN) -ESSAY : POLITICS AND THE AMERICAN LANGUAGE (Joseph Stromberg, August 17, 1999, Antiwar.com) -ESSAY : AMERICAN ENGLISH VS. BRITISH ENGLISH : Or whose language is it anyway? (Linda Berube, American Studies Today) -ESSAY : It's a nine ring circus and you'll never be bored (Alistair Cooke, December 4, 2000, Letter from America : BBC) -ESSAY : Sage Door (Brennen Jensen, February 1, 2000, Baltimore City Paper) -WEBRING : H.L. Mencken Bomis Ring -LINKS : Top: Arts: Literature: Authors: M: Mencken, Henry Louis Ã�(Open Directory) -REVIEW ESSAY : God, Man, and H. L. Mencken (George Weigel, First Things) -REVIEW : of Treatise on the Gods (Keith Otis Edwards) -REVIEW : of The American Language by H.L. Mencken. Abridged Edition, edited by Raven J. McDavid Jr (W. V. Quine, The New York Review of Books, January 9, 1964) -REVIEW : Murray Kempton, Saving a Whale (The New York Review of Books June 11, 1981) A Choice of Days: Essays from "Happy Days," "Newspaper Days," and "Heathen Days," by H.L. Mencken The Young Mencken: The Best of His Work collected by Carl Bode The American Scene: A Reader by H.L. Mencken, edited by Huntington Cairns On Mencken edited by John Dorsey H.L. Mencken on Politics: A Carnival of Buncombe edited by Malcolm Moos A Mencken Chrestomathy edited and annotated by H.L. Mencken Letters of H.L. Mencken edited by Guy J. Forgue -REVIEW : of Disturber of the Peace: The Life of H. L. Mencken by William Manchester (Keith Otis Edwards) -REVIEW : of H. L. Mencken Revisited by William H. A. Williams (George C. Leef, Ideas on Liberty) -REVIEW: of The Dissenting Opinions of Mr. Justice Holmes, Mr. Justice Holmes (H.L. Mencken, May 1930, The American Mercury) -REVIEW ESSAY: A Great Individualist: H. L. Mencken may be known as a curmudgeon, but he’s best understood as a conservative. (Richard M. Weaver, Spring 1962, Modern Age) -ESSAY: Mencken and Orwell, Social Critics With Little (and Much) in Common (EDWARD ROTHSTEIN, October 26, 2002, NY Times) -ESSAY: H. L. Mencken: The Joyous Libertarian (Murray N. Rothbard, Summer 1962, New Individualist Review) -REVIEW: of THE SKEPTIC: A Life of H.L. MenckenBy Terry Teachout (Richard Lingeman, Washington Post) -REVIEW: of The Skeptic (David Kipen, SF Chronicle) -REVIEW: of The Skeptic (Jack Shafer, Reason) -REVIEW: of The Skeptic: A Life of H.L. Mencken by Terry Teachout (Jonathan Yardley, Washington Post) -REVIEW: of The Skeptic (Jackson Lears, New Republic) -REVIEW: of The Skeptic (Tom Chiarella, Esquire) -REVIEW: of The Skeptic: A Biography of H.L. Mencken (Ben Boychuk, Claremont) Book-related and General Links: -ETEXT: The American Credo: A Contribution Toward the Interpretation of the National Mind by George Jean Nathan and H.L. Mencken (1920) -AUDIO: The American Credo: A Contribution Toward the Interpretation of the National Mind by George Jean Nathan and H.L. Mencken (1920) (LibriVox) -ESSAY: Proceeding With the American Credo (George Jean Nathan, december 1927, Vanity Fair) -ESSAY: F. Scott Fitzgerald's Contributions to "The American Credo" (JAMES L. W. WEST III, Autumn 1972, The Princeton University Library Chronicle) -ESSAY: The American Credo (TV Tropes) -ESSAY: The Origins of Right Wing Populism: The intellectual history of this seemingly contradictory political tendency. (Matthew McManus, 21 Mar 2025, Liberal Currents) |
Copyright 1998-2015 Orrin Judd