Fletch
I'll Lock Up
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- Iowa - The Land That Stuff Forgot
As the 1930s fade from living memory, among the most overlooked figures of that more and more overlooked era are the "sellouts."
The stories from that decade that live today are those of silent suffering and bold activism. It might seem trivial, even tasteless, to consider the talent and creativity that hired out to the mercantilists for a going rate of much less than thirty pieces of silver.
Yet much of that so-called hack work was of a quality that would be impressive indeed today - if only we had a place for it in what we understand as history and culture.
Consider the example of Ted Geisel, Dartmouth class of '25, a young commercial artist gifted with a zany imagination, a rubber pen, and - yes - a sure sense of salesmanship that won him a wildly diverse array of commissions in the dark years.
Yet the generations that brought him fame were not born then. They knew nothing of his first career - not even his name. Well, all right...they knew his middle name.
The Advertising Art of Dr. Seuss
The stories from that decade that live today are those of silent suffering and bold activism. It might seem trivial, even tasteless, to consider the talent and creativity that hired out to the mercantilists for a going rate of much less than thirty pieces of silver.
Yet much of that so-called hack work was of a quality that would be impressive indeed today - if only we had a place for it in what we understand as history and culture.
Consider the example of Ted Geisel, Dartmouth class of '25, a young commercial artist gifted with a zany imagination, a rubber pen, and - yes - a sure sense of salesmanship that won him a wildly diverse array of commissions in the dark years.
Yet the generations that brought him fame were not born then. They knew nothing of his first career - not even his name. Well, all right...they knew his middle name.
The Advertising Art of Dr. Seuss
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