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Unmasking the Writers of the W.P.A.

August 2, 2003
 By DOUGLAS BRINKLEY 




 

NEW ORLEANS, Aug. 1 - Writers are usually unabashed about
claiming authorship for their work. So it's curious that
many of the alumni of one of the most significant American
literary projects of the 20th century were ashamed of it:
the Federal Writers' Project, a program of President
Franklin D. Roosevelt's Works Progress Administration. 

Created in 1935, in the heart of the Great Depression, the
Writers' Project supported more than 6,600 writers, editors
and researchers during its four years of federal financing.
When the government funds expired, Congress let the program
continue under state sponsorship until 1943. Although
grateful for even subsistence wages in a time of economic
despair, few participants deemed it a badge of honor to
earn $20 to $25 a week from the government. 

But the Library of Congress takes a different view. With
little fanfare, it has been unpacking boxes of
extraordinary Writers' Project material over the last few
years from warehouses and storage facilities. After an
arduous vetting process, much of it is now available to the
public. 

What is becoming clear, says Prof. Jerrold Hirsch of Truman
State University, in Kirksville, Mo., is that the editors
of the project believed that they could build a national
culture on diversity. "They faced a great challenge coming
out of the 1920's, where white supremacists, via WASP
primacy and the K.K.K. and anti-immigration laws, held
sway," Mr. Hirsch said. "In the Federal Writers' Project,
ethnic minorities were celebrated for being turpentine
workers or grape pickers or folk artists." 

John Cheever was one of the program's unenthusiastic
participants. A child of proud Massachusetts Republicans
who had called the W.P.A. short for "We Poke Along," he was
ashamed of working as a "junior editor" at the program's
Washington office. He once described his duties as fixing
"the sentences written by some incredibly lazy bastards." 

Nonetheless, Cheever's experiences at the Writers' Project
provided the material for many of the best scenes in his
1957 novel, "The Wapshot Chronicle." 

Cheever wasn't the only one who found inspiration at the
Writers' Project. Others included Conrad Aiken, Nelson
Algren, Saul Bellow, Arna Bontemps, Malcolm Cowley, Edward
Dahlberg, Ralph Ellison, Zora Neale Hurston, Claude McKay,
Kenneth Patchen, Philip Rahv, Kenneth Rexroth, Harold
Rosenberg, Studs Terkel, Margaret Walker, Richard Wright
and Frank Yerby. 

These federal employees produced what would become the
renowned American Guide Series, comprising volumes for each
of the 48 states that then existed, as well as Alaska. The
Writers' Project also turned out many other regional, city
and cultural guides, like Algren's "Galena, Illinois" and
Wright's "Bibliography of Chicago Negroes." All in all, it
published more than 275 books, 700 pamphlets and 340
"issuances" (articles, leaflets and radio scripts). 

Eudora Welty even served as photographer for the
Mississippi guide. W. H. Auden called the whole project
"one of the noblest and most absurd undertakings ever
attempted by a state." 

Cataloging the output has been a long project. John Cole,
director of the Center for the Book at the Library of
Congress, has been working on it since 1978, when he first
read Jerre Mangione's seminal study "The Dream and the
Deal: The Federal Writers' Project, 1935-1943." 

"The Library of Congress has its work cut out," Mr. Cole
explained in a telephone interview from his office on
Capitol Hill. "It's an amazing collection. The Federal
Writers' Project helped us rediscover our heritage in a
more detailed and colorful way than it had ever been
described. I'm thinking here of both the state guides and
all of those other publications that they put out - the
collection offers the best examples of local history and
oddball anecdotal stories ever amassed." 

Nearly 3,000 of the oral history interviews are now
available on the Library of Congress's W.P.A. Life
Histories Web site,
memory.loc.gov/ammem/wpaintro/wpahome.html, with more to
come. 

In the last few years, some good biographies of the most
notable alumni have been published. But no one has yet
tackled a broad-based study of the thousands of untested
but talented young writers who fanned out across the
continent in search of a collective self-portrait of
America. Recently, though, a number of scholars and
researchers have begun to track the literary paper trail,
unearthing documents and writings that have been packed in
boxes for decades. 

Pam Bordelon, a writer in Pensacola, Fla., for example, has
spent the last 10 years editing interviews and compiling
artifacts from the project's Poets Recording Expeditions
Into the Floridas. She has traveled all over the state,
searching for Writers' Project work done by Hurston, who
was hired to collect folklore during the 1930's. 

"I was just blown away by the richness," Ms. Bordelon
recalled. "The voices in Florida alone are unbelievable." 

David A. Taylor, a writer, and Andrea Kalin, a Washington
filmmaker, have begun work on "American Voices," a
documentary focusing on the Writers' Project in four
states: New York, Florida, Illinois and Nebraska. One
discovery is unpublished correspondence between Cheever and
Ellison, who met at the project. 

"The F.W.P. was much more than guidebooks and oral
histories," Ms. Kalin explained. "It was where social and
economic history met the individual imagination in
literature." 

But it is difficult to trace authorship for the W.P.A.
guides. Mr. Bellow, for example, left mention of his
Writers' Project work at the Chicago office out of his
entry in Who's Who in America. In "Bellow," his biography
of the author, James Atlas writes that Mr. Bellow was
humbled to be toiling alongside hard-drinking literary
heroes of the proletariat, like Algren and Jack Conroy,
editor of the leftist journal The Anvil. Mr. Bellow
explains in the book, "I rather looked up to them, and they
looked down on me." 

Mr. Bellow, whose first Writers' Project job was
inventorying Illinois periodicals at the Newberry Library,
was later assigned to write 20-page profiles of writers
like John Dos Passos, Sherwood Anderson and James T.
Farrell. Mr. Atlas discovered the essays only a few years
ago when he was researching "Bellow." 

"They're incredible essays, very advanced for somebody 21
or 22 years old," Mr. Atlas said. Mr. Bellow, he said, was
ecstatic to reread them recently, amazed that they still
existed. 

Wright and Walker were also first published while employed
in the Chicago office. Studs Terkel, another veteran, used
the oral history techniques he learned in the late 1930's
as his model for books like <object.title class="Movie"
idsrc="nyt_ttl" value="265295">"The Good
War"</object.title> (1984) and "Working" (1974). And Albert
Murray, perhaps Ellison's closest friend as well as the
author of classic works like "South to a Very Old Place"
(1971), maintains that without the Writers' Project,
Ellison would not have written "Invisible Man." 

"It was because of the Writers' Project that I first got to
read pieces Ralph was writing on his own," Mr. Murray
recalled in a telephone interview from his home in Harlem.
"It pulled him away from music and focused him on writing.
It put writers and artists in touch as they had never been
before. It was even more intense than the Harlem
Renaissance. Throughout `Invisible Man' there are sketches
and caricatures of people he met during the Federal
Writers' Project." 

Ellison himself is quoted in a Library of Congress document
as saying that the Writers' Project helped him better
understand the powerful connection between serious
literature and folkways. "I tried to use my ear for
dialogue to give an impression of just how people sounded,"
he notes in the document. "I developed a technique of
transcribing that captured the idiom rather than trying to
convey the dialect through misspellings." 

But Ellison, like many of his peers, didn't like to talk
much about his days as a government employee. "He wanted to
move away from it," Mr. Murray said. "It was his training
ground. But he had higher concepts of art than the W.P.A.
Guide Series." 

Yet to many, the guide series are treasures. William Least
Heat Moon said he wouldn't have written "PrairyErth: A Deep
Map" (1991) without the Nebraska guide. When John Gunther
hit the road for his memoir "Inside U.S.A." (1947), his
suitcase bulged with W.P.A. Guides. So did John Steinbeck's
when he set out to write "Travels With Charley: In Search
of America" (1962). 

"The complete set comprises the most comprehensive account
of the United States ever got together, and nothing since
has even approached it," Steinbeck writes in the book. "It
was compiled during the Depression by the best writers in
America, who were, if that is possible, more depressed than
any other group while maintaining their inalienable
instinct for eating." 

Steinbeck points out that many of the printing plates for
the guides were smashed in the wake of a late-1930's
witchhunt by Representative Martin Dies Jr., Democrat of
Texas, who insisted that the W.P.A. was a Communist plot.
But the Library of Congress has hundreds of boxes of the
guides' raw material: correspondence, interview
transcripts, slave narratives, research notes and
photographs. It is one of the most underused and untapped
historical collections in America. 

With help from the library staff, Ms. Bordelon, for
instance, unearthed tape recordings or transcripts of
recordings of these Florida sources: Earltha White, who ran
a soup kitchen in the slums of Jacksonville; a Cuban cigar
maker from Ybor City; white squatters in the Everglades;
Izzelly Haines, a midwife, who recalls delivering her first
baby; and Norberto Diaz, whose tale of the race-related
murder of a friend in Key West inspired Stetson Kennedy, a
project folklorist, to infiltrate the Ku Klux Klan. 

"Whenever anyone asks me what it was like working with the
Works Progress Administration and recording Florida folk
songs back in the 1930's for the Library of Congress," Mr.
Kennedy once said in a radio broadcast, "I tell them we
were as excited as a bunch of kids on a treasure hunt." 

In "On Native Grounds" (1942), Alfred Kazin said the
Writers' Project, originally a "drive toward national
inventory which began by reporting the ravages of the
Depression," ended with triumphant "reporting on the
national inheritance." He concluded that it changed the
course of American literature forever. 

Douglas Brinkley is director of the Eisenhower Center and
professor of history at the University of New Orleans. 

http://www.nytimes.com/2003/08/02/arts/02WPA.html?ex=1060836287&ei=1&en=65b456c09031b9e5


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