THE GREAT DEPRESSION AND AMERICAN CULTURE
Despite the Great Depression' devastating impact on many Americans, the 1930s witnessed the emergence of many influential cultural trends. Historians note that literature, arts, music, or cinema of the period flourished and became vehicles for establishing and promoting what would be presented as truly American traditions and values - a phenomenon that was a response to the demoralizing effect of the economic crisis. The New Deal, with its core idea of the government's intervention in the economy, politics, and social life, included also programs that funded and promoted various cultural projects, many of them focusing on the documentation of the experience of ordinary Americans during the dramatic economic depression.
THE NEW DEAL AND CULTURE
The first short-lived New Deal program that supported cultural projects was the Public Works of Art Project (PWAP) that run from December 1933 to June 1934. PWAP was a relief program that created jobs for artists, who were hired to paint scenes depicting contemporary ordinary American life in public buildings and spaces. PWAP was replaced by the Federal Art Project (FAP), one of the cultural programs under the 1935 Works Progress Administration (WPA) and a much more ambitious and expansive arts program that its predecessor. FAP provided funding for artists and artisans to create murals, easel paintings, sculpture, graphic art, posters, photography, theater design, and arts and crafts. It established more than 100 community art centers throughout the country, researched and documented American design, commissioned a significant body of public art without restriction to content or subject matter, and sustained some 10,000 artists and craft workers during the Great Depression. Additionally, in 1934, the Section of Painting and Sculpture was established in order to commission high quality murals in public buildings. Artists worked with government-provided guidelines that focused on realistic themes relevant to the life of local communities.
FAP was part of the Federal Project Number One, a WPA umbrella program that supported not only visual arts but also literature (under the Federal Writers' Project), music (the Federal Music Project), and theater (the Federal Theater Project). Writers, musicians, and theater artists were funded to create both their own original projects and projects under the auspices of the government. Documenting what was seen as American traditions drove many of the latter. For example, literary professionals were hired to produce the State Guide Series - a series of popular guidebooks for every state. Writers and musicians engaged in a series of ethnographic and archival projects that aimed to preserve American history and cultural legacy, including collecting oral histories among former slaves, recording traditional folk songs, or preserving and organizing archival collections. The public funding was also used to make theater productions easily available to mass audiences.
ARTS
Visual arts in the United States of the 1930s followed both global and regional trends. Many of the works created under WPA belonged to Social Realism - an international art movement that depicted the everyday life of ordinary people, most notably the working class and the poor. The movement's aim was not simply to represent but to critique the realities of social inequalities and injustice. Related to Social Realism was American Regionalism, which depicted rural America, both realistic and as a subject of myths and folk legends, as well as images drawn from American history. Regionalism and Social Realism are sometimes described as a rural branch and an urban branch (respectively) of American Scene Painting, although borders between the meanings of these three terms are not always clear. Another movement of the era, Precisionism, focused on images of urban industrial America. While sometimes differences between artists and art works belonging to these movements may be blurry, the one characteristic that they all shared was realism, or focusing on depicting American life as it was.
The commitment to realism resulted also in the popularization of photography. For example, under the Farm Security Administration, a New Deal agency that aimed to combat rural poverty, photographers documented rural areas and the misery of working class rural Americans. The works of such photographers as Dorothea Lange or Walker Evans remain among the most iconic images of the Great Depression. Much later, these documentary photography projects would be criticized for their racial bias. Despite the fact that at the time so many poor rural Americans were black, the New Deal photographs create an impression that poor rural America was predominantly white.
In architecture and design, the 1930s was the height of the Art Deco - an eclectic style inspired by industrialization that combines traditional craft motifs with Machine Age imagery and materials.
Dorothea Lange, "Migrant Mother," Farm Security Administration, Office of War Information, 1936
Dorothea Lange's Migrant Mother - an iconic image of the Great Depression - depicts Florence Owens Thompson, age 32, a mother of seven children and a migrant worker, in Nipomo, California.
HOLLYWOOD
1930 marks the beginning of what is considered to be the 'golden age' of Hollywood, a period which lasted through the 1940s. The studio system was at its height, with studios having great control over creative decisions. While in the first years of the Great Depression all the major studios experienced losses (much less people went to see movies and ticket prices decreased), already in the mid-1930s, they began to record profits.
A lasting example of the studio influence was the Motion Picture (or Hollywood) Production Code of 1930 (known also as the Hays Code, after Will H. Hays, who was the president of the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America). In response to a number of scandals in the 1920s and under the pressure of Christian leaders and organizations, the studios adopted a series of topics that should be avoided (e.g., strictly defined sexual content but also ridicule of clergy) and guidelines for how certain topics should be depicted (e.g., a kiss could not last longer than three seconds). The code was not strictly implemented until 1934, when the Production Code Administration was established. The PCA enforced the code by reviewing and making suggestions on all studio scripts before they went into production, then doing the same with all completed films before issuing a PCA certificate. Directors frequently found a way to manipulate the codes that were enforced more and more loosely during the post-World War period and finally abandoned in the 1960s.
As the late 1920s witnessed the popularization and commercialization of a sound film, both popular and more ambitious cinema flourished in the 1930s. A number of popular genres, including gangster films, musicals, comedies, or monster movies, attracted mass audiences, regardless of the economic crisis. Careers of some of the iconic Hollywood's performers also flourished in the 1930s, including Greta Garbo, Bela Lugosi, Boris Karloff, Mae West, the Marx Brothers, Errol Flynn (best known for his role as Robin Hood), or child star Shirley Temple. Charlie Chaplin, the greatest star of the silent era, successfully transitioned into the sound film.
Additionally to more popular and low-budget genres, the most acclaimed works of the period were much more ambitious and expensive films with epic stories in their center. Adaptations of classic or best-selling literary works, biographies of famous individuals, or big adventure movies were the most common examples. Among them are such classics of American cinema as King Kong (1933), Anna Karenina (1935), The Adventures of Robin Hood (1938), Gone With the Wind (1939), or Grapes of Wrath (1940).
LITERATURE
The Great Depression era produced some of the greatest works in American literature. Similarly to visual artists, writers focused on blunt and direct representation of American life and offered social criticism, coming often from te perspective of leftist political views. John Steinbeck (1902–1968) became the quintessential author of the era. He often wrote about poor, working-class people and their struggle to lead a decent and honest life. The Grapes of Wrath , considered his masterpiece, is a socially-oriented novel that tells the story of the Joads, a poor family from Oklahoma, and their journey to California in search of a better life. Other popular novels include Tortilla Flat , Of Mice and Men, Cannery Row, and East of Eden. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1962.
Other important literary works of the Great Depression era that reached the status of American classics include: William Faulkner's Absalom, Absalom!, Light in August, and As I Lay Dying, F. Scott Fitzgerald's Tender Is the Night, Zora Neale Hurston's Their Eyes Were Watching God, John Dos Passos's U.S.A. trilogy, Eugene O'Neill's Mourning Becomes Electra, an Margaret Mitchell's Gone with the Wind. Among American authors who in the 1930s wrote their usually more controversial or experimental and less realistic works were Gertrude Stein, who in 1933 published the memoir of her Paris years entitled The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas, and Henry Miller, who in the 1930s wrote and published his semi-autobiographical novels Tropic of Cancer, Black Spring, and Tropic of Capricorn. Although their themes and stylistic innovations exerted a major influence on succeeding generations of American writers, Miller's groundbreaking novels were banned in the United States until the early 1960s.
The 1930s witnessed also the development of popular literary genres. Pulp fiction magazines began to feature distinctive, gritty adventure heroes that combined elements of hard-boiled detective fiction and the fantastic adventures of the earlier pulp novels. Two particularly noteworthy characters introduced were Doc Savage and The Shadow, who would later influence the creation of characters such as Superman and Batman. Near the end of the decade, two of the world's most iconic superheroes and recognizable fictional characters, Superman and Batman, were introduced in comic books.