Manhattan Transfer
Manhattan Transfer
Manhattan Transfer
Abstract
This article discusses how John Dos Passos in Manhattan Transfer (1925) uses
the fragmented Manhattan of the early twentieth century both as a style for
writing an urban tale and as a symbol of a suffocating, all-consuming fiery
inferno, where the only chance for success and redemption is by leaving. Taking
its point of departure in theories on city literature and historical writings on the
city of the early twentieth century, the article discusses Dos Passos cryptic and
fragmented style and links it to the portrayal of a fragmented and destructive
city.
* * *
In 1925, John Dos Passos wrote to Robert Hillyer: New York last week
was like being rolled naked in metal filings (Carr 209). He wrote to
Rumsey Marvin three years earlier describing how he was driven away
from New York because people wanted to make him into a prize cow
(Carr 189).
Dos Passos New York Minute partly became the basis for his
novel Manhattan Transfer (1925) in which he portrays New York City in
the first two decades of the twentieth century. He offers his vision of the
new urban landscape with all its tendencies good or bad, but mainly
bad. Dos Passos saw himself as a chronicler more than a novelist and felt
that it was the writers responsibility to reveal, and exercise moral
judgment upon, the social tendencies of his times (Hook 39).
If we consider the history of the city in literature, we find that Since
there has been literature, there have been cities in literature (Pike 3).
The image of the city has always reflected the times in which the
literature was written, and the image has not always been a pleasant one.
In ancient Hebrew, the word city could also mean enemy. Also,
related words for city carried [. . .] the meanings of watching angel,
vengeance and terror (Pike 5).
No Moren a Needle in a Haystack 37
that Manhattan Transfer is a synoptic novel with the city as the main
character.
John Dos Passos likes the cinematic technique of writing where he
uses expressions and surfaces to show emotion and he also brings in
abrupt cuts, flashbacks, and close-ups (Carr 215). Furthermore, the use
of montages is seen both in Manhattan Transfer and The Big Money
(1936). In Manhattan Transfer, Dos Passos takes snapshots of people
and incorporates them into the story. Sometimes they have a function and
reappear, but mostly they are just another face or another flash of a
person or his/her clothing on the journey through the streets of
Manhattan. Dos Passos, in a sense, stands on top of a skyscraper, along
with the reader, and surveys the masses on the streets of Manhattan. This
again points to the theory of the watching angel.
The overwhelming number of characters in the novel is, of course, a
way of depicting urban life at the time. Thomas West argues that the
characters, are the city, a cluster and tangle of lives compacted into a
single object (West 66). Some of the characters have prominent roles
such as Jimmy Herf and Ellen while others appear briefly and then
disappear. The minor characters become the stereotypes found on any
street corner (Mizener 19), and can be labeled as flat characters.
Overall, the characters, major or minor, are no moren a needle in a
haystack the haystack that is Manhattan (MT 28).
However, this needle in a haystack is not just a reference to the
people in the city. The needle also becomes the plot and/or meaning for
the reader to find. There is no obvious red thread in the novel and at
times it can be very cryptic and even confusing. Writing in the tradition
of the Lost Generation, Dos Passos makes Manhattan Transfer about the
quest for identity and meaning not just for the characters but for the
reader as well.
Desmond Harding quotes critic Marshall McLuhan when he states:
The reader in Dos Passos is not required to have much more reading
agility than the reader of the daily press. Nor does Dos Passos make any
more serious demands than a good movie (Harding 107). Certainly, as
stated above, one can see Dos Passos style as cinematic, thus the
comparison with the movies is justifiable. The quote from McLuhan is
from an essay comparing Dos Passos and James Joyce, and, granted, the
reader will probably find Dos Passos easier to read and understand than
Joyce, but the notion that Manhattan Transfer does not require much of
40 Michael Madsen
Jimmy has been living with an iron ban around his heart but now
the iron band was breaking and he begins to realize his true self (MT
309). He later says to Ellen: lifes going to mean something to me now
[. . .] God if you knew how empty my life had been for so many years.
Ive been like a tin mechanical toy, all hollow inside (MT 336). Ellen
responds with a strangled voice that they should not talk about toys.
Here Dos Passos emphasizes the fact that Ellen does not understand what
Jimmy is saying. One argument could be that she in fact chooses to strive
for success, while Jimmy breaks the iron band in order to break away
from the strangling clutches of the city. Although it seems correct that
Jimmy chooses to break away from the city, it is hard to argue that Ellen
chooses what she does. She is a product of her surroundings much like
most of the characters in the novel. Out of all the characters populating
Dos Passos Manhattan, Jimmy is just about the only one who manages
to realize what is happening to him and he then decides to leave.
Ellen does not realize what the city is doing to her, but her changes
are described thoroughly in the novel. Ellens dream of becoming the
greatest hit on Broadway leads to a feeling of disgust that chokes her
(MT 145). Later, all her nerves were sharp steel jangled wires cutting
into her (MT 333-334). The city has grabbed her and is not letting go as
the wires cut into her and, essentially, the city is about to destroy her.
Like Jimmy, Ellen is throughout the novel associated with metal.
When she is born, the nurse holds the basket containing Ellen as if it
were a bedpan (MT 15). Dos Passos here uses the idea of ashes to
ashes but changes it so it becomes metal to metal. Ellen goes from
being born and associated with metal to becoming a metal structure such
as a skyscraper near the end. Jimmy walks the streets of Manhattan while
a skyscraper has obsessed him, and he sees Ellen, absolutely lifelike
beckoning from every window (MT 327). He tries to find a door to
enter the building but fails, in an example of how he can never reach
Ellen in her current state of mind. Eventually, the building [falls] onto
him out of a scudding sky (MT 327) and it becomes a reference to
Babel that was cast out of the sky (Harding 6). Jimmy cannot reach
Ellen, but she is close to becoming the cause of his destruction as she,
symbolizing the city, falls onto him.
Generally, Dos Passos hated corporate America and as mentioned
above, people who succeed in his fiction are doomed. Donald Pizer sums
it up very well by saying: To fail is to be cast out but to preserve the
No Moren a Needle in a Haystack 45
that she becomes a metal structure and falls onto Jimmy trying to destroy
him.
Nevertheless Dos Passos believes in Jimmy, as he lets him live to
fight another day and lets the sun shine on him. Failure brings hope along
with it and that is the message to the reader from Dos Passos even in
this wicked city there is hope.
Works cited