Edward Bellamy was a literary man of no great
distinction. Frail and tubercular he had to abandon journalism as too strenuous and took up
writing novels in a desperate
attempt to make a living. The novels sold moderately, perhaps enough to eke out
a living on the bottom rung of middle
class respectability. They had no
particular merit or anything to distinguish them from hundreds of others
published annually. Certainly none would
be remembered or read today.
Then
he tried his hand at a social fantasy. Overnight, it seemed he and his book Looking
Backward were both famous and the center of an exciting popular reform
movement.
Bellamy
was born March 26, 1850 in Chicoppee
Falls in western Massachusetts.
He was the son and grandson of Baptist ministers. A word about New England Baptists of this
period. Do not get them confused with
today’s Southern Baptists. Although Evangelical
the Baptists were radically egalitarian and having been oppressed by the established churches of the Standing Order—the Congregationalists and, yes, the Unitarians—they reveled in the status of dissenters and outsiders.
Since members of the established churches tended to be first Federalists, then Whigs, and finally Republicans,
Baptists tended to be Democrats largely
out of loyalty to Thomas Jefferson
and his steadfast devotion to Freedom of
Religion.
After
what public education Chicoppee Falls could offer and reading in his father’s
library, Bellamy went off to Union College
in Schenectady, New York. For whatever reason, he dropped out of school
after completing just two semesters. He
somehow found the money for a trip to Europe,
spending most of his time in Germany,
still the epicenter of romanticism and
a hotbed of Biblical criticism and
various socialist schemes. Certainly more than enough to shake out any
cobwebs of theological and economic orthodoxy.
On
returning to the states he seemed a young man at loose ends. He tried his hand at reading law but quickly abandoned it. He drifted into newspaper work. Probably
through connections from Union College, he found work at the New
York Daily Post which was co-owned and managed by John Bigelow, an 1835 Union graduate and benefactor of the college. He worked under the eye of editor-in-chief William Cullen Bryant,
the noted poet and former abolitionist who
was also a vigorous advocate and defender of labor. Although he did not
spend long on the paper, as a young man absorbing influences like a sponge, it
was formative.
Bellamy
chose to move closer to home, taking a job with the most important paper in
western Massachusetts, Springfield
Union. Now we come to the scene where, if this was a bio-flick, we would see Bellamy hunched over a desk, pen in
hand. Probably in his shirtsleeves with arm garters, cravat loosened, celluloid
collar unhooked, hair a tad disheveled.
He is working furiously by oil lamp.
He coughs. Foreboding music
swells. He presses a handkerchief to his mouth, coughs
again, and stares at the crimson splotch of blood on the cloth. We know
in an instant that he has consumption and
is ultimately doomed.
In 1877 Bellamy went to the Hawaiian Islands for a yearlong rest cure. Most New Englanders of the period were going
south to places like Charleston or
even Cuba. A few were taking the long train trip to
the desert southwest. Bellamy’s choice was influenced by reading Mark Twain’s popular accounts of his
time in the Sandwich Islands nearly
a decade before. He took to the palm
trees, sea, and native girls. He also
took to writing. He completed his first
novel, Six to One while
there.
The book did not make much of a splash, but sold
well enough to Bellamy to decide that he could no longer stand the stress and
demands of daily journalism.
In his second novel, Dr.
Heidenhoff’s
Process, published in 1880 Bellamy dabbled in some
fantastic elements. A doctor invents a
process which can erase painful memories from the brain. When the woman he loves is seduced and abandoned by a cad he uses the process on her. She is cured and about to fall gratefully
into his arms when the doctor awakes, realizes it was all a dream, and his
beloved has committed suicide. Pot
boiler stuff.
In real life, despite his inevitably fatal
condition, Bellamy fell in love and in 1882 married Emma
Augusta Sanderson.
Their marriage was apparently happy and produced two children, a boy and a
girl.
After
another novel, Miss Ludingto’s Sister, in 1884, Bellamy tried something daringly
new. Utopian novels were not new.
They dated back to Sir Thomas
Moore’s Utopia published in Latin
in 1516 which gave birth to the genre.
But such novels were not common.
Bellamy was probably inspired by the work of pioneer science fiction author Jules
Verne whose work in translation from the French was beginning to be popular stateside.
He was also well aware of a body of works on cooperative societies, Christian socialism, and even Marxism that included Charles Fourier, Robert
Owen and Henri Saint-Simon, as
well as to the Associationism of Albert Brisbane whom Bellamy had met in
the 1870s. Two more recent works were
also influential in his thought, Laurence
Gronlund’s The Co-operative
Commonwealth in 1884, and August
Bebel’s Woman in the Past,
Present, and Future in 1886.
In
Looking
Backward: 2000-1887 Julian West falls
into a deep, hypnotic induced sleep
in Boston in 1887 and awakens in the
same city, but utterly transformed city in the year 2000. He is introduced to his new surroundings by a
kindly and scholarly Doctor Leete who
regards the cut throat world of the 19th
Century as a barbaric Dark Age.
In
the new world all industrial production is
controlled by the state and it
products shared equally among the population.
Technical innovation has greatly reduced the hours of labor needed to produce
any item and distribution though common warehouse like stores has cut out
layers of middlemen and the goods
delivered to the door. Everyone is paid
in equal credits on which they can draw to purchase the necessities of life and
access to enriching culture. Those doing
hard physical labor work a few hours a day.
Those whose work requires intellectual rigor and specialized training are
rewarded with even fewer hours. Everyone
retires at age 45 with the same guaranteed benefits as working members of
society.
With
all of the extra leisure, everyone has the opportunity to enjoy the arts. Symphony concerts and lectures by the
greatest minds in the world are delivered to homes over the telephone lines in a manner later
readers have compared first to radio and
more recently to the internet.
Most
people eat daily at communal dining halls where nutritious meals are deliciously
prepared by expert chefs. Travel is provided on free public transportation. Despite
these communal aspects to society, every family has their own comfortable home
with the privacy that entails.
On the social level, women are respected and
treated as equals and partners both professionally and in the home. Most crime, which arose out of want,
privation, and ignorance, has been eliminated.
Remaining crime is considered the result of disease and atavism, a tendency in
some to revert to a savage ancestral type.
These conditions can be medically treated. What criminals exist are tried by a triumvirate consisting of a chief judge, a prosecutor, and a defender,
all of whom must ultimately agree on a sentence after dispassionately reviewing
the evidence and the accused’s prospects for ultimate rehabilitation.
In
dialog, one by one West brings up objections to the new order, asking pointed
questions and Dr. Leete patiently explains the near perfection of the new
system.
West
arouses from his slumber, but is convinced that he has been shown the future:
I had visited a
world incomparably more affluent than this, in which money was unknown and
without conceivable use.... These exchanges money effected—how equitably, might
be seen in a walk from the tenement house districts to the Back Bay—at a cost
of an army of men taken from productive labor to manage it, with constant
ruinous breakdowns of its machinery, and a generally debauching influence on
mankind which had justified its description, from ancient time as the “root of
all evil”.
Bellamy
shied away from, but did not totally shun, the use of the word socialism which
then, as now, was burdened with political and social baggage. He preferred to call the system he described
as Nationalism because all of the
means of production and distribution had been nationalized. This is not to be confused with the use of
nationalism as the exhalation of the nation
state in its fierce, self-interested
completion with all other nation states.
No
one was more astounded than Bellamy, who at first insisted that he did not mean
to spark a social revolution only to offer “a literary fantasy, a fairy tale of social felicity,” when
the book became an overnight sensation, flying off shelves faster than the
publisher could issue new editions.
There were not whole books shops filled then with alternative universes
and visions of the future. This was new
and exciting to most readers.
It
also struck a deep chord in a nation that was in the midst of a brutal ongoing class war in which the capitalists and bosses offered
no quarter—11 years after the era began with the Great Railroad Strike of 1877 and just two years after the launch
of a national movement for the Eight
Hour Day and the Haymarket Affair.
Literate
workers were inspired by any vision of a socialist utopia. The middle class, particularly the educated
elite, were charmed with a vision of socialism that did not seem rooted in the
implacable class conflicts of Marxism, but offered a cooperative solution that
erased class differences without destroying comfortable civilization.
How
popular was Looking Backward? In the little more than a decade remaining in
the 19th Century, it became the second most widely read American novel, trailing
only the ante bellum Uncle Tom’s Cabin, and edging out the wildly popular Ben
Hur by Lew Wallace published
in 1880.
Overnight
Bellamy and Nationalist Clubs sprang up first to discuss the ideas in the book
and quickly to find ways of implementing them.
By 1890 there were more than 160 such clubs all around the country. Among the leading intellectuals that were
involved were heavy weights like William
Dean Howells and Edward Everett Hale.
Eugene V. Debs, Grand Secretary and Treasurer of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and other labor leaders were also
attracted.
At
first Bellamy held himself aloof from the movement he had inspired. But within a year he became energized with
the idea that his Utopia might just be achievable. He threw himself into the movement, touring
and speaking widely and writing articles in many of the top publications in the
country. In 1891 he established his own
magazine, The New Nation as an
organ of the movement.
Bellamy
believed that political action by an educated leadership could usher in his
vision of socialism. He and many of his
followers threw themselves behind the new People’s
Party or Populists as a vehicle
for that transformation. After a while
efforts of the Nationalist Clubs and the People’s Party became so enmeshed as
to be indistinguishable. Many elements
of the Nationalist program did make it into the Populist’s platforms. But there were also other forces and visions
at work, especially the agrarian populism
growing out of the Grange Movement, remnants
of the Green Back Party, and
followers of Henry George, exponent of
another popular reform plan the Single
Tax.
Meanwhile
the class war was only getting uglier with the Homestead Strike of 1892, and industrial warfare in the coal fields and
western metal mining districts.
Labor leaders like Debs were growing disenchanted with the Nationalists
gradualist approach and the reliance on middle class leadership rather than
working class self liberation.
The
coalition behind the Nationalist movement began to fall apart almost as quickly
as it formed. Bellamy had to close The New Nation in 1894 for lack of revenue. Most clubs had dissolved. Working class militants looked increasingly
to Marxism and the middle class looked for milder reform models.
By
1895 Bellamy, increasingly fragile, retreated from active political
activity. He dedicated himself to
writing a sequel to Looking Backward that
would concentrate on his vision of equality of women. Equality
expanded many of the themes of the first book.
But its time had already passed.
It sold moderately well to devotees, but was not a huge success.
It
was Bellamy’s last effort. On May 22,
1898 he succumbed at last to tuberculosis in the ancestral home in Chicoppee Falls where he had long lived with
his wife and children. He was only 48
years old.
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