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The Sleep of Reason


Article # : 12482 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 7 / 1987  2,652 Words
Author : Peter Shaw
Peter Shaw is a frequent contributor to Commentary, the American Scholar, and other journals. He is the author of The Character of John Adams.

       IMPORTANT NONSENSE
       Lionel Abel
       Buffalo, N.Y.: Prometheus Books, 1987
       232 pp., $22.95
       
        Lionel Abel has been an intimate witness to some of the most important intellectual and artistic developments of our time. He knew the leading intellectuals in New York when Marxism flowered in the thirties. During World War II he met the émigré Europeans who were profoundly influencing American styles of thought. After the war he was in Paris among the group that developed existentialism. Back in New York in the 1950s, he was in renewed contact with the abstract expressionist painters whose revolution triumphed in that decade. In the early 1960s, as a playwright and again an intimate of those forging a new movement, he participated in the birth of Off-Broadway theater and the Theatre of the Absurd.
       
        Abel's account of these experiences appeared a few years ago in his memoir, The Intellectual Follies. Now, Important Nonsense offers his account of intellectual developments from the early sixties to the present in the form of essay written during the period. An essay on comedy and one on Sophocles carry forward the drama criticism of Abel's Metatheatre (1963).
       
        Abel has arranged the essays of Important Nonsense neither in the order he wrote them nor by category. As a result, he has staked out less claim to attention as a cultural critic than he might have. He contents himself with suggesting in a brief, offhand preface that the essays exposed some of the "important nonsense" of our period. His purpose has been to cast a skeptical eye over thinkers and ideas of the times and to analyze their limitations. And it seems fair to say that in this somewhat casual, belletristic intention can be found both Abel's considerable strengths and his self-imposed limitations as an essayist.
       
        A Prophetic Grasp of the 1960s
       
        If one makes a chronological rearrangement of Abel's essays, there emerges a powerful, even prophetic grasp of how the culture and politics of our time were transformed in the early 1960s. For example, writing in Dissent in 1966, a few years after the Broadway production of Peter Weiss's play The Persecution and Assassination of Marat as Performed by the Inmates of the Asylum at Charenton under the Direction of the Marquis de Sade, Abel put his finger on how the run of that play contributed to the atmosphere of
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