Abinger Harvest | |
Author: | E.M. Forster |
Country: | United Kingdom |
Language: | English |
Genre: | Non-fiction |
Pub Date: | 1951 |
Two Cheers for Democracy is the second collection of essays by E. M. Forster, published in 1951, and incorporating material from 1936 onwards.
Reflecting Forster's increasing politicisation in the 1930s,[1] particularly in the first section entitled 'The Second Darkness', the collection contains versions of his anti-Nazi broadcasts of 1940, as well as his defence of individualism as "a liberal who has found liberalism crumbling beneath him"[2] in the face of the rise of totalitarianism.
The collection was arranged thematically, not chronologically,[3] with the political first section followed by a second, more cultural part, 'What I Believe', containing Forster's reflection on art in general, as well as on particular artists ranging from John Skelton to Syed Ross Masood.[4]
Part One saw Forster struggling to articulate his quiet liberalism,[5] and his concern for the individual,[6] in the face not only of continental totalitarianism, but also of both right-wing xenophobia and left-wing extremism at home.[7] The book's title comes from the end of the sixth paragraph of "What I Believe" (http://spichtinger.net/otexts/believe.html). Seen widely as out-of-step and ineffective at the time, his writings have perhaps worn better than many of their more strident counterparts--Stanley Cavell for example praising him a half-century later for the honesty of his concrete efforts to weigh up the competing ethical claims of public and private spheres, country and friends.[8]
In Part Two, Forster both enunciated and exemplified his belief in the arts and culture as an (inner) ordering principle in life[9] - providing it with a celebratory sense of meaning.[10] As he himself put it:[11]
I have found by experience that the arts act as an antidote against our present troubles, and also as a support to our common humanity.