Chapter
XIII
Survivals of
the Non-Invidious Interests
In an increasing proportion as time goes
on, the anthropomorphic cult, with its code of devout observations,
suffers a progressive disintegration through the stress of economic
exigencies and the decay of the system of status. As this disintegration
proceeds, there come to be associated and blended with the devout attitude
certain other motives and impulses that are not always of an anthropomorphic
origin, nor traceable to the habit of personal subservience. Not all
of these subsidiary impulses that blend with the habit of devoutness
in the later devotional life are altogether congruous with the devout
attitude or with the anthropomorphic apprehension of the sequence of
phenomena. The origin being not the same, their action upon the scheme
of devout life is also not in the same direction. In many ways they
traverse the underlying norm of subservience or vicarious life to which
the code of devout observations and the ecclesiastical and sacerdotal
institutions are to be traced as their substantial basis. Through the
presence of these alien motives the social and industrial regime of
status gradually disintegrates, and the canon of personal subservience
loses the support derived from an unbroken tradition. Extraneous habits
and proclivities encroach upon the field of action occupied by this
canon, and it presently comes about that the ecclesiastical and sacerdotal
structures are partially converted to other uses, in some measure alien
to the purposes of the scheme of devout life as it stood in the days
of the most vigorous and characteristic development of the priesthood.
Among these alien motives which
affect the devout scheme in its later growth, may be mentioned the motives
of charity and of social good-fellowship, or conviviality; or, in more
general terms, the various expressions of the sense of human solidarity
and sympathy. It may be added that these extraneous uses of the ecclesiastical
structure contribute materially to its survival in name and form even
among people who may be ready to give up the substance of it. A still
more characteristic and more pervasive alien element in the motives
which have gone to formally uphold the scheme of devout life is that
non-reverent sense of aesthetic congruity with the environment, which
is left as a residue of the latter-day act of worship after elimination
of its anthropomorphic content. This has done good service for the maintenance
of the sacerdotal institution through blending with the motive of subservience.
This sense of impulse of aesthetic congruity is not primarily of an
economic character, but it has a considerable indirect effect in shaping
the habit of mind of the individual for economic purposes in the later
stages of industrial development; its most perceptible effect in this
regard goes in the direction of mitigating the somewhat pronounced self-regarding
bias that has been transmitted by tradition from the earlier, more competent
phases of the regime of status. The economic bearing of this impulse
is therefore seen to transverse that of the devout attitude; the former
goes to qualify, if not eliminate, the self-regarding bias, through
sublation of the antithesis or antagonism of self and not-self; while
the latter, being and expression of the sense of personal subservience
and mastery, goes to accentuate this antithesis and to insist upon the
divergence between the self-regarding interest and the interests of
the generically human life process.
This non-invidious residue of the religious
life - the sense of communion with the environment, or with the generic
life process - as well as the impulse of charity or of sociability,
act in a pervasive way to shape men's habits of thought for the economic
purpose. But the action of all this class of proclivities is somewhat
vague, and their effects are difficult to trace in detail. So much seems
clear, however, as that the action of this entire class of motives or
aptitudes tends in a direction contrary to the underlying principles
of the institution of the leisure class as already formulated. The basis
of that institution, as well as of the anthropomorphic cults associated
with it in the cultural development, is the habit of invidious comparison;
and this habit is incongruous with the exercise of the aptitudes now
in question. The substantial canons of the leisure-class scheme of life
are a conspicuous waste of time and substance and a withdrawal from
the industrial process; while the particular aptitudes here in question
assert themselves, on the economic side, in a deprecation of waste and
of a futile manner of life, and in an impulse to participation in or
identification with the life process, whether it be on the economic
side or in any other of its phases or aspects.
It is plain that these aptitudes
and habits of life to which they give rise where circumstances favor
their expression, or where they assert themselves in a dominant way,
run counter to the leisure-class scheme of life; but it is not clear
that life under the leisure-class scheme, as seen in the later stages
of its development, tends consistently to the repression of these aptitudes
or to exemption from the habits of thought in which they express themselves.
The positive discipline of the leisureȘclass scheme of life goes pretty
much all the other way. In its positive discipline, by prescription
and by selective elimination, the leisure-class scheme favors the all-pervading
and all-dominating primacy of the canons of waste and invidious comparison
at every conjuncture of life. But in its negative effects the tendency
of the leisure-class discipline is not so unequivocally true to the
fundamental canons of the scheme. In its regulation of human activity
for the purpose of pecuniary decency the leisure-class canon insists
on withdrawal from the industrial process. That is to say, it inhibits
activity in the directions in which the impecunious members of the community
habitually put forth their efforts. Especially in the case of women,
and more particularly as regards the upper-class and upper-middle-class
women of advanced industrial communities, this inhibition goes so far
as to insist on withdrawal even from the emulative process of accumulation
by the quasi-predator methods of the pecuniary occupations.
The pecuniary or the leisure-class
culture, which set out as an emulative variant of the impulse of workmanship,
is in its latest development beginning to neutralize its own ground,
by eliminating the habit of invidious comparison in respect of efficiency,
or even of pecuniary standing. On the other hand, the fact that members
of the leisure class, both men and women, are to some extent exempt
from the necessity of finding a livelihood in a competitive struggle
with their fellows, makes it possible for members of this class not
only to survive, but even, within bounds, to follow their bent in case
they are not gifted with the aptitudes which make for success in the
competitive struggle. That is to say, in the latest and fullest development
of the institution, the livelihood of members of this class does not
depend on the possession and the unremitting exercise of those aptitudes
are therefore greater in the higher grades of the leisure class than
in the general average of a population living under the competitive
system.
In an earlier chapter, in discussing
the conditions of survival of archaic traits, it has appeared that the
peculiar position of the leisure class affords exceptionally favorable
chances for the survival of traits which characterize the type of human
nature proper to an earlier and obsolete cultural stage. The class is
sheltered from the stress of economic exigencies, and is in this sense
withdrawn from the rude impact of forces which make for adaptation to
the economic situation. The survival in the leisure class, and under
the leisure-class scheme of life, of traits and types that are reminiscent
of the predatory culture has already been discussed. These aptitudes
and habits have an exceptionally favorable chance of survival under
the leisureȘclass regime. Not only does the sheltered pecuniary position
of the leisure class afford a situation favorable to the survival of
such individuals as are not gifted with the complement of aptitudes
required for serviceability in the modern industrial process; but the
leisure-class canons of reputability at the same time enjoin the conspicuous
exercise of certain predatory aptitudes. The employments in which the
predatory aptitudes find exercise serve as an evidence of wealth, birth,
and withdrawal from the industrial process. The survival of the predatory
traits under the leisure-class culture is furthered both negatively,
through the industrial exemption of the class, and positively, through
the sanction of the leisure-class canons of decency.
With respect to the survival of
traits characteristic of the ante-predatory savage culture the case
is in some degree different. The sheltered position of the leisure class
favors the survival also of these traits; but the exercise of the aptitudes
for peace and good-will does not have the affirmative sanction of the
code of proprieties. Individuals gifted with a temperament that is reminiscent
of the ante-predatory culture are placed at something of an advantage
within the leisure class, as compared with similarly gifted individuals
outside the class, in that they are not under a pecuniary necessity
to thwart these aptitudes that make for a non-competitive life; but
such individuals are still exposed to something of a moral constraint
which urges them to disregard these inclinations, in that the code of
proprieties enjoins upon them habits of life based on the predatory
aptitudes. So long as the system of status remains intact, and so long
as the leisure class has other lines of nonȘindustrial activity to take
to than obvious killing of time in aimless and wasteful fatigation,
so long no considerable departure from the leisure-class scheme of reputable
life is to be looked for. The occurrence of non-predatory temperament
with the class at that stage is to be looked upon as a case of sporadic
reversion. But the reputable non-industrial outlets for the human propensity
to action presently fail, through the advance of economic development,
the disappearance of large game, the decline of war, the obsolescence
of proprietary government, and the decay of the priestly office. When
this happens, the situation begins to change. Human life must seek expression
in one direction if it may not in another; and if the predatory outlet
fails, relief is sought elsewhere.
As indicated above, the exemption
from pecuniary stress has been carried farther in the case of the leisure-class
women of the advanced industrial communities than in that of any other
considerable group of persons. The women may therefore be expected to
show a more pronounced reversion to a non-invidious temperament than
the men. But there is also among men of the leisure class a perceptible
increase in the range and scope of activities that proceed from aptitudes
which are not to be classed as self-regarding, and the end of which
is not an invidious distinction. So, for instance, the greater number
of men who have to do with industry in the way of pecuniarily managing
an enterprise take some interest and some pride in seeing that the work
is well done and is industrially effective, and this even apart from
the profit which may result from any improvement of this kind. The efforts
of commercial clubs and manufacturers' organizations in this direction
of non-invidious advancement of industrial efficiency are also well
know.
The tendency to some other than
an invidious purpose in life has worked out in a multitude of organizations,
the purpose of which is some work of charity or of social amelioration.
These organizations are often of a quasi-religious or pseudo-religious
character, and are participated in by both men and women. Examples will
present themselves in abundance on reflection, but for the purpose of
indicating the range of the propensities in question and of characterizing
them, some of the more obvious concrete cases may be cited. Such, for
instance, are the agitation for temperance and similar social reforms,
for prison reform, for the spread of education, for the suppression
of vice, and for the avoidance of war by arbitration, disarmament, or
other means; such are, in some measure, university settlements, neighborhood
guilds, the various organizations typified by the Young Men's Christian
Association and Young People's Society for Christian Endeavor, sewing-clubs,
art clubs, and even commercial clubs; such are also, in some slight
measure, the pecuniary foundations of semi-public establishments for
charity, education, or amusement, whether they are endowed by wealthy
individuals or by contributions collected from persons of smaller means
- in so far as these establishments are not of a religious character.
It is of course not intended to
say that these efforts proceed entirely from other motives than those
of a self-regarding kind. What can be claimed is that other motives
are present in the common run of cases, and that the perceptibly greater
prevalence of effort of this kind under the circumstances of the modern
industrial life than under the unbroken regime of the principle of status,
indicates the presence in modern life of an effective scepticism with
respect to the full legitimacy of an emulative scheme of life. It is
a matter of sufficient notoriety to have become a commonplace jest that
extraneous motives are commonly present among the incentives to this
class of work - motives of a self-regarding kind, and especially the
motive of an invidious distinction. To such an extent is this true,
that many ostensible works of disinterested public spirit are no doubt
in a restless assertion of the impulse to workmanship in other directions
than that of business activity. As has been noticed already, the everyday
life of the well-to-do women and the clergy contains a larger element
of status than that of the average of the men, especially than that
of the men engaged in the modern industrial occupations proper. Hence
the devout attitude survives in a better state of preservation among
these classes than among the common run of men in the modern communities.
Hence an appreciable share of the energy which seeks expression in a
non-lucrative employment among these members of the vicarious leisure
classes may be expected to eventuate in devout observances and works
of piety. Hence, in part, the excess of the devout proclivity in women,
spoken of in the last chapter. But it is more to the present point to
note the effect of this proclivity in shaping the action and coloring
the purposes of the non-lucrative movements and organizations here under
discussion. Where this devout coloring is present it lowers the immediate
efficiency of the organizations for any economic end to which their
efforts may be directed. Many organizations, charitable and ameliorative,
divide their attention between the devotional and the secular well-being
of the people whose interests they aim to further. It can scarcely he
doubted that if they were to give an equally serious attention and effort
undividedly to the secular interests of these people, the immediate
economic value of their work should be appreciably higher than it is.
It might of course similarly be said, if this were the place to say
it, that the immediate efficiency of these works of amelioration for
the devout might be greater if it were not hampered with the secular
motives and aims which are usually present.
Some deduction is to be made from
the economic value of this class of non-invidious enterprise, on account
of the intrusion of the devotional interest. But there are also deductions
to be made on account of the presence of other alien motives which more
or less broadly traverse the economic trend of this non-emulative expression
of the instinct of workmanship. To such an extent is this seen to be
true on a closer scrutiny, that, when all is told, it may even appear
that this general class of enterprises is of an altogether dubious economic
value - as measured in terms of the fullness or facility of life of
the individuals or classes to whose amelioration the enterprise is directed.
For instance, many of the efforts now in reputable vogue for the amelioration
of the indigent population of large cities are of the nature, in great
part, of a mission of culture. It is by this means sought to accelerate
the rate of speed at which given elements of the upper-class culture
find acceptance in the everyday scheme of life of the lower classes.
The solicitude of "settlements," for example, is in part directed to
enhance the industrial efficiency of the poor and to teach them the
more adequate utilization of the means at hand; but it is also no less
consistently directed to the inculcation, by precept and example, of
certain punctilios of upper-class propriety in manners and customs.
The economic substance of these proprieties will commonly be found on
scrutiny to be a conspicuous waste of time and goods. Those good people
who go out to humanize the poor are commonly, and advisedly, extremely
scrupulous and silently insistent in matters of decorum and the decencies
of life. They are commonly persons of an exemplary life and gifted with
a tenacious insistence on ceremonial cleanness in the various items
of their daily consumption. The cultural or civilizing efficacy of this
inculcation of correct habits of thought with respect to the consumption
of time and commodities is scarcely to be overrated; nor is its economic
value to the individual who acquires these higher and more reputable
ideals inconsiderable. Under the circumstances of the existing pecuniary
culture, the reputability, and consequently the success, of the individual
is in great measure dependent on his proficiency in demeanor and methods
of consumption that argue habitual waste of time and goods. But as regards
the ulterior economic bearing of this training in worthier methods of
life, it is to be said that the effect wrought is in large part a substitution
of costlier or less efficient methods of accomplishing the same material
results, in relations where the material result is the fact of substantial
economic value. The propaganda of culture is in great part an inculcation
of new tastes, or rather of a new schedule of proprieties, which have
been adapted to the upper-class scheme of life under the guidance of
the leisure-class formulation of the principles of status and pecuniary
decency. This new schedule of proprieties is intruded into the lower-class
scheme of life from the code elaborated by an element of the population
whose life lies outside the industrial process; and this intrusive schedule
can scarcely be expected to fit the exigencies of life for these lower
classes more adequately than the schedule already in vogue among them,
and especially not more adequately than the schedule which they are
themselves working out under the stress of modern industrial life.
All this of course does not question
the fact that the proprieties of the substituted schedule are more decorous
than those which they displace. The doubt which presents itself is simply
a doubt as to the economic expediency of this work of regeneration -
that is to say, the economic expediency in that immediate and material
bearing in which the effects of the change can be ascertained with some
degree of confidence, and as viewed from the standpoint not of the individual
but of the facility of life of the collectivity. For an appreciation
of the economic expediency of these enterprises of amelioration, therefore,
their effective work is scarcely to be taken at its face value, even
where the aim of the enterprise is primarily an economic one and where
the interest on which it proceeds is in no sense self-regarding or invidious.
The economic reform wrought is largely of the nature of a permutation
in the methods of conspicuous waste.
But something further is to be said
with respect to the character of the disinterested motives and canons
of procedure in all work of this class that is affected by the habits
of thought characteristic of the pecuniary culture; and this further
consideration may lead to a further qualification of the conclusions
already reached. As has been seen in an earlier chapter, the canons
of reputability or decency under the pecuniary culture insist on habitual
futility of effort as the mark of a pecuniarily blameless life. There
results not only a habit of disesteem of useful occupations, but there
results also what is of more decisive consequence in guiding the action
of any organized body of people that lays claim to social good repute.
There is a tradition which requires that one should not be vulgarly
familiar with any of the processes or details that have to do with the
material necessities of life. One may meritoriously show a quantitative
interest in the well-being of the vulgar, through subscriptions or through
work on managing committees and the like. One may, perhaps even more
meritoriously, show solicitude in general and in detail for the cultural
welfare of the vulgar, in the way of contrivances for elevating their
tastes and affording them opportunities for spiritual amelioration.
But one should not betray an intimate knowledge of the material circumstances
of vulgar life, or of the habits of thought of the vulgar classes, such
as would effectually direct the efforts of these organizations to a
materially useful end. This reluctance to avow an unduly intimate knowledge
of the lower-class conditions of life in detail of course prevails in
very different degrees in different individuals; but there is commonly
enough of it present collectively in any organization of the kind in
question profoundly to influence its course of action. By its cumulative
action in shaping the usage and precedents of any such body, this shrinking
from an imputation of unseemly familiarity with vulgar life tends gradually
to set aside the initial motives of the enterprise, in favor of certain
guiding principles of good repute, ultimately reducible to terms of
pecuniary merit. So that in an organization of long standing the initial
motive of furthering the facility of life in these classes comes gradually
to be an ostensible motive only, and the vulgarly effective work of
the organization tends to obsolescence.
What is true of the efficiency of
organizations for non-invidious work in this respect is true also as
regards the work of individuals proceeding on the same motives; though
it perhaps holds true with more qualification for individuals than for
organized enterprises. The habit of gauging merit by the leisure-class
canons of wasteful expenditure and unfamiliarity with vulgar life, whether
on the side of production or of consumption, is necessarily strong in
the individuals who aspire to do some work of public utility. And if
the individual should forget his station and turn his efforts to vulgar
effectiveness, the common sense of the community-the sense of pecuniary
decency - would presently reject his work and set him right. An example
of this is seen in the administration of bequests made by public-spirited
men for the single purpose (at least ostensibly) of furthering the facility
of human life in some particular respect. The objects for which bequests
of this class are most frequently made at present are most frequently
made at present are schools, libraries, hospitals, and asylums for the
infirm or unfortunate. The avowed purpose of the donor in these cases
is the amelioration of human life in the particular respect which is
named in the bequest; but it will be found an invariable rule that in
the execution of the work not a little of other motives, frequency incompatible
with the initial motive, is present and determines the particular disposition
eventually made of a good share of the means which have been set apart
by the bequest. Certain funds, for instance, may have been set apart
as a foundation for a foundling asylum or a retreat for invalids. The
diversion of expenditure to honorific waste in such cases is not uncommon
enough to cause surprise or even to raise a smile. An appreciable share
of the funds is spent in the construction of an edifice faced with some
aesthetically objectionable but expensive stone, covered with grotesque
and incongruous details, and designed, in its battlemented walls and
turrets and its massive portals and strategic approaches, to suggest
certain barbaric methods of warfare. The interior of the structure shows
the same pervasive guidance of the canons of conspicuous waste and predatory
exploit. The windows, for instance, to go no farther into detail, are
placed with a view to impress their pecuniary excellence upon the chance
beholder from the outside, rather than with a view to effectiveness
for their ostensible end in the convenience or comfort of the beneficiaries
within; and the detail of interior arrangement is required to conform
itself as best it may to this alien but imperious requirement of pecuniary
beauty.
In all this, of course, it is not
to he presumed that the donor would have found fault, or that he would
have done otherwise if he had taken control in person; it appears that
in those cases where such a personal direction is exercised - where
the enterprise is conducted by direct expenditure and superintendence
instead of by bequest - the aims and methods of management are not
different in this respect. Nor would the beneficiaries, or the outside
observers whose ease or vanity are not immediately touched, be pleased
with a different disposition of the funds. It would suit no one to have
the enterprise conducted with a view directly to the most economical
and effective use of the means at hand for the initial, material end
of the foundation. All concerned, whether their interest is immediate
and self-regarding, or contemplative only, agree that some considerable
share of the expenditure should go to the higher or spiritual needs
derived from the habit of an invidious comparison in predatory exploit
and pecuniary waste. But this only goes to say that the canons of emulative
and pecuniary reputability so far pervade the common sense of the community
as to permit no escape or evasion, even in the case of an enterprise
which ostensibly proceeds entirely on the basis of a non-invidious interest.
It may even be that the enterprise
owes its honorific virtue, as a means of enhancing the donor's good
repute, to the imputed presence of this non-invidious motive; but that
does not hinder the invidious interest from guiding the expenditure.
The effectual presence of motives of an emulative or invidious origin
in non-emulative works of this kind might be shown at length and with
detail, in any one of the classes of enterprise spoken of above. Where
these honorific details occur, in such cases, they commonly masquerade
under designations that belong in the field of the aesthetic, ethical
or economic interest. These special motives, derived from the standards
and canons of the pecuniary culture, act surreptitiously to divert effort
of a non-invidious kind from effective service, without disturbing the
agent's sense of good intention or obtruding upon his consciousness
the substantial futility of his work. Their effect might be traced through
the entire range of that schedule of non-invidious, meliorative enterprise
that is so considerable a feature, and especially so conspicuous a feature,
in the overt scheme of life of the well-to-do. But the theoretical bearing
is perhaps clear enough and may require no further illustration; especially
as some detailed attention will be given to one of these lines of enterprise
- the establishments for the higher learning - in another connection.
Under the circumstances of the sheltered
situation in which the leisure class is placed there seems, therefore,
to be something of a reversion to the range of non-invidious impulses
that characterizes the ante-predatory savage culture. The reversion
comprises both the sense of workmanship and the proclivity to indolence
and good-fellowship. But in the modern scheme of life canons of conduct
based on pecuniary or invidious merit stand in the way of a free exercise
of these impulses; and the dominant presence of these canons of conduct
goes far to divert such efforts as are made on the basis of the non-invidious
interest to the service of that invidious interest on which the pecuniary
culture rests. The canons of pecuniary decency are reducible for the
present purpose to the principles of waste, futility, and ferocity.
The requirements of decency are imperiously present in meliorative enterprise
as in other lines of conduct, and exercise a selective surveillance
over the details of conduct and management in any enterprise. By guiding
and adapting the method in detail, these canons of decency go far to
make all non-invidious aspiration or effort nugatory. The pervasive,
impersonal, un-eager principle of futility is at hand from day to day
and works obstructively to hinder the effectual expression of so much
of the surviving ante-predatory aptitudes as is to be classed under
the instinct of workmanship; but its presence does not preclude the
transmission of those aptitudes or the continued recurrence of an impulse
to find expression for them.
In the later and farther development
of the pecuniary culture, the requirement of withdrawal from the industrial
process in order to avoid social odium is carried so far as to comprise
abstention from the emulative employments. At this advanced stage the
pecuniary culture negatively favors the assertion of the non-invidious
propensities by relaxing the stress laid on the merit of emulative,
predatory , or pecuniary occupations, as compared with those of an industrial
or productive kind. As was noticed above, the requirement of such withdrawal
from all employment that is of human use applies more rigorously to
the upper-class women than to any other class, unless the priesthood
of certain cults might be cited as an exception, perhaps more apparent
than real, to this rule. The reason for the more extreme insistence
on a futile life for this class of women than for the men of the same
pecuniary and social grade lies in their being not only an upper-grade
leisure class but also at the same time a vicarious leisure class. There
is in their case a double ground for a consistent withdrawal from useful
effort.
It has been well and repeatedly
said by popular writers and speakers who reflect the common sense of
intelligent people on questions of social structure and function that
the position of woman in any community is the most striking index of
the level of culture attained by the community, and it might be added,
by any given class in the community. This remark is perhaps truer as
regards the stage of economic development than as regards development
in any other respect. At the same time the position assigned to the
woman in the accepted scheme of life, in any community or under any
culture, is in a very great degree an expression of traditions which
have been shaped by the circumstances of an earlier phase of development,
and which have been but partially adapted to the existing economic circumstances,
or to the existing exigencies of temperament and habits of mind by which
the women living under this modern economic situation are actuated.
The fact has already been remarked
upon incidentally in the course of the discussion of the growth of economic
institutions generally, and in particular in speaking of vicarious leisure
and of dress, that the position of women in the modern economic scheme
is more widely and more consistently at variance with the promptings
of the instinct of workmanship than is the position of the men of the
same classes. It is also apparently true that the woman's temperament
includes a larger share of this instinct that approves peace and disapproves
futility. It is therefore not a fortuitous circumstance that the women
of modern industrial communities show a livelier sense of the discrepancy
between the accepted scheme of life and the exigencies of the economic
situation.
The several phases of the "woman
question" have brought out in intelligible form the extent to which
the life of women in modern society, and in the polite circles especially,
is regulated by a body of common sense formulated under the economic
circumstances of an earlier phase of development. It is still felt that
woman's life, in its civil, economic, and social bearing, is essentially
and normally a vicarious life, the merit or demerit of which is, in
the nature of things, to be imputed to some other individual who stands
in some relation of ownership or tutelage to the woman. So, for instance,
any action on the part of a woman which traverses an injunction of the
accepted schedule of proprieties is felt to reflect immediately upon
the honor of the man whose woman she is. There may of course be some
sense of incongruity in the mind of any one passing an opinion of this
kind on the woman's frailty or perversity; but the common-sense judgment
of the community in such matters is, after all, delivered without much
hesitation, and few men would question the legitimacy of their sense
of an outraged tutelage in any case that might arise. On the other hand,
relatively little discredit attaches to a woman through the evil deeds
of the man with whom her life is associated.
The good and beautiful scheme of
life, then - that is to say the scheme to which we are habituated -
assigns to the woman a "sphere" ancillary to the activity of the man;
and it is felt that any departure from the traditions of her assigned
round of duties is unwomanly. If the question is as to civil rights
or the suffrage, our common sense in the matter - that is to say the
logical deliverance of our general scheme of life upon the point in
question - says that the woman should be represented in the body politic
and before the law, not immediately in her own person, but through the
mediation of the head of the household to which she belongs. It is unfeminine
in her to aspire to a self-directing, self-centered life; and our common
sense tells us that her direct participation in the affairs of the community,
civil or industrial, is a menace to that social order which expresses
our habits of thought as they have been formed under the guidance of
the traditions of the pecuniary culture. "All this fume and froth of
'emancipating woman from the slavery of man' and so on, is, to use the
chaste and expressive language of Elizabeth Cady Stanton inversely,
'utter rot.' The social relations of the sexes are fixed by nature.
Our entire civilization - that is whatever is good in it - is based
on the home." The "home" is the household with a male head. This view,
but commonly expressed even more chastely, is the prevailing view of
the woman's status, not only among the common run of the men of civilized
communities, but among the women as well. Women have a very alert sense
of what the scheme of proprieties requires, and while it is true that
many of them are ill at ease under the details which the code imposes,
there are few who do not recognize that the existing moral order, of
necessity and by the divine right of prescription, places the woman
in a position ancillary to the man. In the last analysis, according
to her own sense of what is good and beautiful, the woman's life is,
and in theory must be, an expression of the man's life at the second
remove.
But in spite of this pervading sense
of what is the good and natural place for the woman, there is also perceptible
an incipient development of sentiment to the effect that this whole
arrangement of tutelage and vicarious life and imputation of merit and
demerit is somehow a mistake. Or, at least, that even if it may be a
natural growth and a good arrangement in its time and place, and in
spite of its patent aesthetic value, still it does not adequately serve
the more everyday ends of life in a modern industrial community. Even
that large and substantial body of well-bred, upper and middle-class
women to whose dispassionate, matronly sense of the traditional proprieties
this relation of status commends itself as fundamentally and eternally
right-even these, whose attitude is conservative, commonly find some
slight discrepancy in detail between things as they are and things as
they should be in this respect. But that less manageable body of modern
women who, by force of youth, education, or temperament, are in some
degree out of touch with the traditions of status received from the
barbarian culture, and in whom there is, perhaps, an undue reversion
to the impulse of self-expression and workmanship - these are touched
with a sense of grievance too vivid to leave them at rest.
In this "New-Woman" movement -
as these blind and incoherent efforts to rehabilitate the woman's pre-glacial
standing have been named - there are at least two elements discernible,
both of which are of an economic character. These two elements or motives
are expressed by the double watchword, "Emancipation" and "Work." Each
of these words is recognized to stand for something in the way of a
wide-spread sense of grievance. The prevalence of the sentiment is recognized
even by people who do not see that there is any real ground for a grievance
in the situation as it stands today. It is among the women of the well-to-do
classes, in the communities which are farthest advanced in industrial
development, that this sense of a grievance to be redressed is most
alive and finds most frequent expression. That is to say, in other words,
there is a demand, more or less serious, for emancipation from all relation
of status, tutelage, or vicarious life; and the revulsion asserts itself
especially among the class of women upon whom the scheme of life handed
down from the regime of status imposes with least litigation a vicarious
life, and in those communities whose economic development has departed
farthest from the circumstances to which this traditional scheme is
adapted. The demand comes from that portion of womankind which is excluded
by the canons of good repute from all effectual work, and which is closely
reserved for a life of leisure and conspicuous consumption.
More than one critic of this new-woman
movement has misapprehended its motive. The case of the American "new
woman" has lately been summed up with some warmth by a popular observer
of social phenomena: "She is petted by her husband, the most devoted
and hard-working of husbands in the world. ... She is the superior of
her husband in education, and in almost every respect. She is surrounded
by the most numerous and delicate attentions. Yet she is not satisfied.
... The Anglo-Saxon 'new woman' is the most ridiculous production of
modern times, and destined to be the most ghastly failure of the century."
Apart from the deprecation - perhaps well placed - which is contained
in this presentment, it adds nothing but obscurity to the woman question.
The grievance of the new woman is made up of those things which this
typical characterization of the movement urges as reasons why she should
be content. She is petted, and is permitted, or even required, to consume
largely and conspicuously - vicariously for her husband or other natural
guardian. She is exempted, or debarred, from vulgarly useful employment
- in order to perform leisure vicariously for the good repute of her
natural (pecuniary) guardian. These offices are the conventional marks
of the un-free, at the same time that they are incompatible with the
human impulse to purposeful activity. But the woman is endowed with
her share-which there is reason to believe is more than an even share
- of the instinct of workmanship, to which futility of life or of expenditure
is obnoxious. She must unfold her life activity in response to the direct,
unmediated stimuli of the economic environment with which she is in
contact. The impulse is perhaps stronger upon the woman than upon the
man to live her own life in her own way and to enter the industrial
process of the community at something nearer than the second remove.
So long as the woman's place is
consistently that of a drudge, she is, in the average of cases, fairly
contented with her lot. She not only has something tangible and purposeful
to do, but she has also no time or thought to spare for a rebellious
assertion of such human propensity to self-direction as she has inherited.
And after the stage of universal female drudgery is passed, and a vicarious
leisure without strenuous application becomes the accredited employment
of the women of the well-to-do classes, the prescriptive force of the
canon of pecuniary decency, which requires the observance of ceremonial
futility on their part, will long preserve high-minded women from any
sentimental leaning to self-direction and a "sphere of usefulness."
This is especially true during the earlier phases of the pecuniary culture,
while the leisure of the leisure class is still in great measure a predatory
activity, an active assertion of mastery in which there is enough of
tangible purpose of an invidious kind to admit of its being taken seriously
as an employment to which one may without shame put one's hand. This
condition of things has obviously lasted well down into the present
in some communities. It continues to hold to a different extent for
different individuals, varying with the vividness of the sense of status
and with the feebleness of the impulse to workmanship with which the
individual is endowed. But where the economic structure of the community
has so far outgrown the scheme of life based on status that the relation
of personal subservience is no longer felt to be the sole "natural"
human relation; there the ancient habit of purposeful activity will
begin to assert itself in the less conformable individuals against the
more recent, relatively superficial, relatively ephemeral habits and
views which the predatory and the pecuniary culture have contributed
to our scheme of life. These habits and views begin to lose their coercive
force for the community or the class in question so soon as the habit
of mind and the views of life due to the predatory and the quasi-peaceable
discipline cease to be in fairly close accord with the later-developed
economic situation. This is evident in the case of the industrious classes
of modern communities; for them the leisure-class scheme of life has
lost much of its binding force, especially as regards the element of
status. But it is also visibly being verified in the case of the upper
classes, though not in the same manner.
The habits derived from the predatory
and quasi-peaceable culture are relatively ephemeral variants of certain
underlying propensities and mental characteristics of the race; which
it owes to the protracted discipline of the earlier, proto-anthropoid
cultural stage of peaceable, relatively undifferentiated economic life
carried on in contact with a relatively simple and invariable material
environment. When the habits superinduced by the emulative method of
life have ceased to enjoy the section of existing economic exigencies,
a process of disintegration sets in whereby the habits of thought of
more recent growth and of a less generic character to some extent yield
the ground before the more ancient and more pervading spiritual characteristics
of the race.
In a sense, then, the new-woman
movement marks a reversion to a more generic type of human character,
or to a less differentiated expression of human nature. It is a type
of human nature which is to be characterized as proto-anthropoid, and,
as regards the substance if not the form of its dominant traits, it
belongs to a cultural stage that may be classed as possibly sub-human.
The particular movement or evolutional feature in question of course
shares this characterization with the rest of the later social development,
in so far as this social development shows evidence of a reversion to
the spiritual attitude that characterizes the earlier, undifferentiated
stage of economic revolution. Such evidence of a general tendency to
reversion from the dominance of the invidious interest is not entirely
wanting, although it is neither plentiful nor unquestionably convincing.
The general decay of the sense of status in modern industrial communities
goes some way as evidence in this direction; and the perceptible return
to a disapproval of futility in human life, and a disapproval of such
activities as serve only the individual gain at the cost of the collectivity
or at the cost of other social groups, is evidence to a like effect.
There is a perceptible tendency to deprecate the infliction of pain,
as well as to discredit all marauding enterprises, even where these
expressions of the invidious interest do not tangibly work to the material
detriment of the community or of the individual who passes an opinion
on them. It may even be said that in the modern industrial communities
the average, dispassionate sense of men says that the ideal character
is a character which makes for peace, good-will, and economic efficiency,
rather than for a life of self-seeking, force, fraud, and mastery.
The influence of the leisure class
is not consistently for or against the rehabilitation of this proto-anthropoid
human nature. So far as concerns the chance of survival of individuals
endowed with an exceptionally large share of the primitive traits, the
sheltered position of the class favors its members directly by withdrawing
them from the pecuniary struggle; but indirectly, through the leisure-class
canons of conspicuous waste of goods and effort, the institution of
a leisure class lessens the chance of survival of such individuals in
the entire body of the population. The decent requirements of waste
absorb the surplus energy of the population in an invidious struggle
and leave no margin for the non-invidious expression of life. The remoter,
less tangible, spiritual effects of the discipline of decency go in
the same direction and work perhaps more effectually to the same end.
The canons of decent life are an elaboration of the principle of invidious
comparison, and they accordingly act consistently to inhibit all non-invidious
effort and to inculcate the self-regarding attitude.