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                                                                                      Leavisism  27

                      loss. Whereas in the past a worker lived in his or her work, he or she now works in
                      order to live outside his or her work. But as a result of industrialization, the experience
                      of work has deteriorated to such an extent that workers are actually ‘incapacitated by
                      their  work’  (69).  Therefore,  instead  of  recreation  (re-creating  what  is  lost  in  work),
                      leisure provides workers with only ‘decreation’ (a compounding of the loss experienced
                      through  work).  Given  such  a  situation,  it  is  little  wonder  that  people  turn  to  mass
                      culture for compensation and passive distraction; the drug habit develops and they
                      become junkies addicted to ‘substitute living’. A world of rural rhythms has been lost
                      to the monotony and mediocrity of ‘suburbanism’ (99). Whereas in the organic com-
                      munity everyday culture was a constant support to the health of the individual, in mass
                      civilization  one  must  make  a  conscious  and  directed  effort  to  avoid  the  unhealthy
                      influence  of  everyday  culture.  The  Leavisites  fail  to  mention,  as  Williams  (1963)
                      remarks, ‘the penury, the petty tyranny, the disease and mortality, the ignorance and
                      frustrated intelligence which were also among its ingredients’ (253). What we are pre-
                      sented with is not a historical account, but a literary myth to draw attention to the
                      nature of our supposed loss: ‘the memory of the old order must be the chief incitement
                      towards a new’ (Leavis and Thompson, 1977: 97). But, although the organic commun-
                      ity is lost, it is still possible to get access to its values and standards by reading works
                      of great literature. Literature is a treasury embodying all that is to be valued in human
                      experience.  Unfortunately,  literature  as  the  jewel  in  the  crown  of  culture,  has,  like
                      culture, lost its authority. Leavisism, as noted earlier, made plans to remedy this by dis-
                      patching cultural missionaries, a small select band of literary intellectuals, to establish
                      outposts of culture within universities to maintain the literary/cultural tradition and
                      encourage its ‘continuous collaborative renewal’ (Leavis, 1972: 27); and into schools
                      to arm students to wage war against the general barbarism of mass culture and mass
                      civilization. The re-establishment of literature’s authority would not of course herald
                      the return of the organic community, but it would keep under control the expansion
                      of  the  influence  of  mass  culture  and  thus  preserve  and  maintain  the  continuity  of
                      England’s cultural tradition. In short, it would help maintain and produce an ‘educated
                      public’, who would continue the Arnoldian project of keeping in circulation ‘the best
                      that has been thought and said’ (now more or less reduced to the reading of works of
                      great literature).
                        It  is  very  easy  to  be  critical  of  the  Leavisite  approach  to  popular  culture.  But,  as
                      Bennett (1982b) points out,

                          Even as late as the mid fifties ...‘Leavisism’ [provided] the only developed intel-
                          lectual terrain on which it was possible to engage with the study of popular cul-
                          ture. Historically, of course, the work produced by the ‘Leavisites’ was of seminal
                          importance, constituting the first attempt to apply to popular forms techniques of
                          literary analysis previously reserved for ‘serious’ works. . . . Perhaps more import-
                          antly, the general impact of ‘Leavisism’ at least as scathing in its criticisms of estab-
                          lished ‘high’ and ‘middle brow’ culture as of popular forms tended to unsettle the
                          prevailing canons of aesthetic judgement and evaluation with, in the long term,
                          quite radical and often unforeseen consequences (5–6).
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