Babbitt Read Online
1923 | A silent film version of Main Street is released. |
1925 | Arrowsmith, which Lewis dedicates to American novelist Edith Wharton, is published. |
1926 | Mantrap is published. Lewis is awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Arrowsmith, but declines it. |
1927 | Elmer Gantry is published. Lewis postpones a planned autobiographical book and sets sail for Europe. |
1928 | The Man Who Knew Coolidge is published. Lewis and Grace Hegger divorce. In England he marries Dorothy Thompson, the central European correspondent and bureau chief of the New York Evening Post. He moves to a 290-acre farm in Barnard, Vermont, spending the winters in New York and traveling intermittently to London, Berlin, Vienna, and Moscow. |
1929 | Dodsworth is published. |
1930 | Lewis becomes the first American to be awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature. His second son, Michael, is born in June. |
1931 | A film version of Arrowsmith is released. |
1933 | Ann Vickers is published, and a film version of the novel is released. |
1934 | Work of Art is published. Lewis collaborates with Sidney Howard on the theatrical version of Dodsworth, which receives critical acclaim when it premieres. A film version of Babbitt is released. |
1935 | It Can’t Happen Here and Selected Short Stories are published. |
1936 | A Hollywood film version of Dodsworth, for which Lewis receives writing credit, is released. |
1936- 1942 | Lewis writes several plays and acts in a few of them. |
1938 | The Prodigal Parents is published. |
1940 | Bethel Merriday is published. |
1941 | Japanese warplanes attack Pearl Harbor on December 7. President Franklin D. Roosevelt declares war on Japan the following day. |
1942 | Lewis divorces Dorothy Thompson. He begins to spend most of his time in Europe. |
1943 | Gideon Planish is published. |
1944 | Lewis’s son Wells, a lieutenant in World War II, is killed by a sniper in the Piedmont Valley of France. |
1945 | World War II ends. Cass Timberlane is published. |
1947 | Kingsblood Royal is published. A film version of Cass Timberlane, starring Spencer Tracy and Lana Turner, is released. |
1949 | The God-seeker is published. |
1951 | On January 10 Lewis dies in Rome of heart disease. World So Wide is published posthumously. |
1960 | The Hollywood film version of Elmer Gantry, starring Burt Lancaster in the title role, is released. |
INTRODUCTION
George F. Babbitt: Promoting the Middle Man
In his novel Babbitt, Sinclair Lewis took a close look at what America was fast becoming and described it in clear, often damningly accurate and hilarious detail. In the 1920s, when readers first encountered the novel, they glimpsed new trends and tendencies that were going on all around them; we, as readers today, are in the curious position of witnessing just when and how the world as we know it—the world that we see virtually everywhere and that we tend to take for granted—came into being.
The hero, or at least the main character, of the book is hardly unusual. He is distinguished by neither intelligence nor stupidity, bravery nor cowardice, kindness nor cruelty. Although he manages to demonstrate all these characteristics, none of them can quite define him. In fact, George F. Babbitt is most interesting because he is not interesting, because he manages to locate himself between the extremes, positioning himself resolutely in the middle. He is, to put it simply, a middle-class, middle-brow, middle-aged, middle-American male who is about to embark on a midlife crisis. As a resident of the middle-sized Midwestern city of Zenith in 1920, he is poised on the brink of a great boom in the American economy and all the daring social changes that came along with it.
Yet as a person of some (although it must be stressed, just some) feeling, moral conscience, and spiritual belief, he is also heir to the terrible disillusionment that followed the Great War (World War I), which, in fact, is directly mentioned only once in the book (p. 111). Babbitt may not have participated in the “war to end all wars,” but his experience of his world makes clear in subtle ways just how America was struggling to redefine and, at the same time, to remain itself after the cataclysm. Babbitt, who was and probably still is regarded by many as a (if not the) quintessential American type, stands at the center of a culture that, to borrow from Charles de Gaulle, had gone from barbarism to decadence without the usual intervening phase of civilization.
George F. Babbitt may not be a very likeable character, but he is difficult to hate completely. Ultimately, like some of the people who inhabit Sinclair Lewis’s fiction, he makes his peace with his times by choosing to go along with them and with all that he has previously questioned. The notion of conformism, which Babbitt at times praises and at other times ridicules, plays a powerful role in the way he lives his life. One may not wish to be exactly like everyone else, but at the same time, one cannot afford to be too different. The pressure of others is inescapable in the end.
Nevertheless, perhaps his very lack of anything outstanding, whether for good or ill, makes Babbitt a genuinely outstanding modernist creation.
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