It Can't Happen Here (Paperback)
by Sinclair Lewis (Author), Perry Meisel (Introduction) "The
handsome dining room of the Hotel Wessex, with its gilded
plaster shields and the mural depicting the Green Mountains, had
been reserved for the..."

(more)
Reviewer: KatreenkaTudor "cat herder" - See all my reviews
" Sinclair Lewis, the first American to receive the Nobel Prize
For Literature, wrote this satirical political novel in 1935, a
time when the United States and Western Europe had been in a
depression for six years. In this novel, Sinclair Lewis asks the
question - what if some ambitious politician would use the 1936
presidential election to make himself dictator by promising
quick, easy solutions to the depression - just as Hitler had
done in Germany in 1933."
As frightening and politically current today as it was then...
IT CAN’T HAPPEN HERE by Sinclair Lewis
Book review by Jodey Bateman
Sinclair Lewis, the first American to receive the Nobel Prize
For Literature, wrote this satirical political novel in 1935, a
time when the United States and Western Europe had been in a
depression for six years. In this novel, Sinclair Lewis asks the
question – what if some ambitious politician would use the 1936
presidential election to make himself dictator by promising
quick, easy solutions to the depression - just as Hitler had
done in Germany in 1933.
The hero, Doremus Jessup, a small-town newspaper editor in
Vermont, turns 60 years old the year the dictator is elected.
Doremus struggling for a year with the new government’s attempts
to censor his paper and ends up in a concentration camp. Within
a year he escapes to Canada, from there, he goes on missions
back into the states for the underground resistance movement
against the dictatorship.
While Doremus Jessup could be anybody, the identity of Buzz
Windrip, the power-hungry senator who makes himself a dictator
would be obvious to any American in 1935. Parallels are made in
his dictatorial control of his own un-named state with the
career of Huey Long, senator from Louisiana. In 1935 Long had a
mass organization, the Share the Wealth League, and was planning
to challenge Roosevelt for the Democratic nomination for the
president in 1936. (While Lewis was writing his novel, Long was
assassinated.)
The identity of the main ally of the fictional dictator would be
equally obvious, Bishop Peter Paul Prang, the popular radio
preacher who endorses Buzz Windrip’s campaign, is based on
Father Charles Coughlin, the most popular radio speaker of the
thirties who had a weekly program on CBS in which he denounced
President Roosevelt and the Jews for causing and perpetuating
the depression. Father Coughlin’s fans included the father of
Pat Buchanan, a candidate for the Republican nomination for the
president in the year 2000.
The parallel between Father Coughlin and such present-day TV
evangelists as Pat Robertson is equally obvious. (In his novel,
Lewis foresees that TV would have even greater propaganda
potential than the radio – this fictional dictator introduces
mass coast-to-coast TV broadcasting in 1937 - something that did
not happen in reality until 1948.)
Lewis’s novel was supposed to be made into a film in 1936, but
Will Hays who was in charge of censorship for the movie studios,
used all his power and stopped the film from being made. Hays
felt that a film of this novel would be seen as an attack on the
Republican party. Although Lewis’s fictional dictator Windrip
ran for President as a Democrat, any implied attack on Hitler’s
Germany was seen as Democratic party propaganda in 1935, since
Jews, Hitler’s enemies, mostly voted Democrat, and eighty
percent of all movie studio executives at that time were Jews.
Whatever dislike most Republicans might have for Hitler’s Nazi
State, Republicans were seen as more opposed to anything that
might lead to war with Germany than Democrats were.
IT CAN’T HAPPEN HERE was issued in a new edition in 1993. At the
moment, there seems less chance of the current equivalents of
Lewis’s villains gaining dictatorial power in this country than
there was a few years ago, because the economy has improved -
but the equivalents are still there on the sidelines, waiting
for the next big economic down turn to try for power.
part two
http://motherbird.com/Can%27tHap2.htm
Any discussion of the politics of It Can’t Happen Here should
keep in mind that Sinclair Lewis, the author, whas a political
moderate although he had been around the left wing for a while
in his youth. In his novel, Lewis satirized the conservative
midwestern small town life ha had grown up in, but he also
satirized the left wing.
Doremus Jessup, the hero of It Can’t Happen Here is a moderate
Republican editor whose motto is: "Blessed are those who don’t
think they have to go out and Do Something About It!"
But then Doremus Jessup, like his creator Sinclair Lewis is
plunged into the chaos of the Depression, when American society
seemed to be falling apart.
When Americans looked for solutions to the Depression, the great
majority went no further than the liberal reforms of President
Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal. But for many, these reforms did
not seem to be effective and they looked for something more
drastic.
Lewis believed that most of those who wanted more radical
solutions would not turn to the small American left wing, but to
the right. He based the two villains of It Can’t Happen Here,
Buzz Windrip and Bishop Prang on the two leading right-wing
demagogues of the Thirties, Huey Long and Father Coughlin.
Doremus Jessup for all his moderation and trying to get along
with the new right-wing dictatorship, winds up in a
concentration camp. When he escapes from the concentration camp,
he finds himself part of the resistance movement because that is
all there is left for him to do. He blames himself for the
failed revolution because he did not take Buzz Windrip more
seriously when there was still a chance to stop him.
It Can’t Happen Here is not a revolutionary book. It reflects
the fears of essentially moderate people like Sinclair Lewis
that that desperate conditions of the thirties would sooner or
later leave them no other choice than revolution.
It Can't Happen Here : LexingtonInstitute.org
It Can't Happen Here Feb 27, 2007 Print friendly page ... Like
Sinclair Lewis' 1935 satirical novel of the same name, the song
was a warning that no matter ...
http://
lexingtoninstitute.org/1060.shtml