被留在家里的人夺占了。而当时又正值经济萧条时期,新的工作无法找到,现有的工作机会本就为数不多,而且人们又宁愿聘用非退伍军人,而把退伍军人看作难对付的孩子,不愿聘用。就连他们自己的家对他们来说也常常是不舒服的;他们再也不能适应家乡和家庭了,并且萌生出一种突如其来的、迷惘的厌世之感。这种感觉不论是他们自己还是他们的亲友都不能理解。战争激起了他们的劲头,打掉了他们的天真幼稚。而现在,在遍布全国的沉睡的、落后的地方,到处都要求他们抑制他们的劲头,并恢复那种自欺欺人的、维多利亚式的天真无邪的态度。但是他们现在觉得这种态度同那种说什么他们的战斗已“使民主在这个世界有了保障”的论调一样,都是陈旧过时的。再者,似乎家乡的情况还不够受的,退伍军人还得面对凡尔赛和约那种愚蠢的、拿破仑式的犬儒主义、禁酒法令那种虚伪的行善主义,以及那些发了战争财的人们的洋洋自得的爱国主义。那些气鼓鼓的美国青年的不满迟早要爆发出来。在经过一段短暂的强烈的怨忿之后,它终于以一种彻底推翻温文尔雅的行为规范的形式而爆发出来了。
7 Greenwich Village set the pattern. Since the Seven-ties a dwelling place for artists and writers who settled there because living was cheap, the village had long enjoyed a dubious reputation for Bohemianism and eccentricity. It had also harbored enough major writers, especially in the decade before World War I, to
support its claim to being the intellectual center of the nation. After the war, it was only natural that hopeful young writers, their minds and pens inflamed against war, Babbittry, and \gentility , ,should flock to the traditional artistic center (where living was still cheap in 1919) to pour out their new-found creative strength, to tear down the old world, to flout the morality of their grandfathers, and to give all to art, love, and sensation.
格林威治村为他们树立了榜样。自七十年代因其生活消费低廉而成为艺术家和作家聚居地以来,格林威治村在很长时间里一直享有波希米亚式生活和怪僻行为的说不清是好还是坏的名声。过去,尤其是在第一次世界大战之前的十年中,这地方还曾栖居过许多大作家,因而使它成了名副其实的全美国文人雅士中心。战后,那些脑子里和笔杆子里都充满着对战争、市侩气和“清教徒式的”道德修养的仇恨的怒火的年轻有为的作家们便自然而然地云集到这个传统的艺术中心(那儿的生活消费在1919年仍很低廉),去倾泻他们那新近获得的创造力,去摧毁旧世界,嘲弄前辈们所信守的道德规范,把自己的一切献给艺术、爱情和感官享受。
8 Soon they found their imitators among the non-intellectuals. As it became more and more fashionable throughout the country for young persons to defy the law and the conventions and to add their own little matchsticks to the conflagration of \youth\it was Greenwich Village that fanned the flames. \although in reality this self-conscious unconventionality was rapidly becoming a standard feature of the country club class -- and its less affluent imitators --throughout the nation. Before long the movement had be-come officially recognized by the pulpit (which denounced it), by the movies and magazines (which made it attractively naughty while pretending to denounce it), and by advertising (which obliquely encouraged it by 'selling everything from cigarettes to automobiles with the implied promise that their owners would be rendered sexually irresistible). Younger brothers and sisters of the war generation, who had been playing with marbles and dolls during the battles of Belleau Wood and Chateau-Thierry, and who had suffered no real disillusionment or sense of loss, now began to imitate the manners of their elders and play with the toys of vulgar rebellion. Their parents were shocked, but before long they found themselves and their friends adopting the new gaiety. By the middle of the decade, the \party\had become as
commonplace a factor in American life as the flapper, the Model T, or the Dutch Colonial home in Floral Heights.
很快,知识分子阶层以外的人便也开始仿效他们了。在全国各地,青年人蔑视法律和一切传统习惯,为“燃烧着的青年”的大火添柴加油越来越成为时髦之举,而煽起这场大火的正是格林威治村。“波希米亚”生活方式已成为人们追求的时尚,每个城镇都有一群“生活放荡者”,他们为自己的反传统行为感到自豪。可实际上,这种有意识的反传统行为正迅速在全国范围内成为乡村俱乐部的富人们以及一些不那么富有的效仿者所共有的一个基本特征。没过多久,这场运动便得到了教会、电影杂志以及广告商们的正式承认:教会方面是通过谴责的方式对它予以承认;电影杂志则是一方面假意对它进行谴责,一方面又将它描写得放荡胡闹而又引人人胜;广告商们更是间接地对这场运动起了推波助澜的作用,因为他们不论是推销香烟还是推销汽车一类的商品时都在暗示说,这种商品将使买主具有不可抗拒的性感。在贝洛森林战役和蒂耶里堡战役正在进行之时,参战青年的小弟弟小妹妹们还在家里玩着弹子游戏和洋娃娃,他们并没有体验到真正的幻想破灭或失落感,可现在竞也学起兄长们的样子,玩起群众性的反传统游戏来了。他们的父母先是大吃一惊,继而便发现自己以及自己的朋友们也都正在
接受这种时兴的快乐的生活方式了。及至二十年代中期,这种“放荡的狂欢会”便像摩登少女、T型汽车或弗拉洛花园的荷兰式房屋一样,成为美国生活中司空见惯的事物了。
9 Meanwhile, the true intellectuals were far from flattered. What they had wanted was an America more sensitive to art and culture, less avid for material gain, and less susceptible to standardization. Instead, their ideas had been generally ignored, while their behavior had contributed to that standardization by furnishing a pattern of Bohemianism that had become as conventionalized as a Rotary luncheon. As a result, their dissatisfaction with their native country, already acute upon their return from the war, now became even more intolerable. Flaming diatribes poured from their pens denouncing the materialism and what they considered to be the cultural boobery of our society. An important book rather grandiosely entitled Civilization in the United States, written by \J. Harold Stearns, was the rallying point of sensitive persons disgusted with America. The burden of the volume was that the best minds in the country were being ignored, that art was unappreciated, and that big business had corrupted everything. Journalism was a mere adjunct to moneymaking, politics were corrupt and filled with incompetents and crooks, and American family life so devoted to making money and keeping up with the