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£6 -- '— '-- "- zasssssBs 93 "vrmnw, Prof. Ivan Dolenc je dugogodlSnji specijalni saradnik. Stalnoje zaposlen kao predavad stranih jezika u High School u Toronto. Sposobnost i iskustvo profesionalnog novinara i publiciste sa kojim je pre mnogo godina doSao u Kanadu iz rodne Ljubljane, nastavio je da razvija. Cenjen je po zapaienim publicistidkim i knjilevnim delima, kako na ovom kontinentu, tako u Jugoslaviji. jmmm.juij.-u_i;.WLWiH.nwin-f.4.i- H!. i .Ј.ти.ипмшдмш.ц.мциаидцмцц When Louis Adamic's The Bohunks appeared in the July, 1928. issue of American Mercury, the promising young author could not have anticipated that his words would disturb Slovene American publicists for more than fifty years afterwards. For many opponents of Adamic's political activities during World War II this publication has served as a vehicle for recruiting other Slovene immigrants against him. Here it must be emphasized, however, that the original Englich text of The Bohunks was read by very few Slovene Americans, partly because it was published in a magazine unfamiliar to them, but chiefly because at that time very few among them read or understood English. Moreover, since not a single editor of the Slovene American newspapers of the day seemed to dare to publish Adamic's text in Slovene translation (the first "translation" was published only in Ljubljana in 1979.), it appears that the interested Slovene American public divided itself for or against Adamic's views while faithfully relying solely on the opinions expressed by this or that reviewer or correspondent in the Slovene American press. Out of this has emerged the considerable confusion over the description of The Bohunks as everything from an "article", "essay", "review", "short story", or "sketch", to a "satire". In Vatro Grill's memoires there is a telling description of the atmosphere of the turbulent weeks following Adamic's publication: "Something unexpected happened — unexpec-ted at least to me. In the Slovene American press a violent storm errupted over the head of this new author. It was absurd, even utterly hilarious". This and other contemporary references to Adamic's text open anew the question of why Adamic's mere five thousand words, printed on seven pages of an American monthly, precipitated such a deluge of polemics, which today already exceed its number of lines several times (only the first "objection" contained over two thousand words!), and do not appear to have ceased flowing. With the exception of the first Slovene translation of Adamic's The Bohunks which, as poor as it is, represents the first positive step toward an understanding of what took place in America, all other contemporaty allusions to Adamic's publication can only further confuse the uniformed reader. For no one yet has written about The Bohunks by starting at the beginning — that is, at the text itself. A critical review of the first polemical articles, which set the tone and direction of the "storms" over Adamic's head, and an interpretation of the most recent reaction to its theme have also been lacking. Adamic's The Bohunks is written in the form of a magazine report or reportage, fashionable in the twenties and thirties in the American monthly press, of which Adamic produced a great number. Stylistically, it presents a mingling of the elements of an article with fictional images, or a combination of report and essay. Since it is written humouristically with not a little satire, it reads easily, often entertainingly, and also like serious journalism, in the manner of Adamic's good friend Carey McWilliams, for instance. In the title the author adopts the costomary ethnic epithet for all Slavic immigrants, with the exception of the Russians, which immediately told old stock Americans what his work was about, without ever using the word anywhere in an offensive or pejorative sense. The word Bohunk is a combination of "Bohemian" and "Hunky", which were well-know- n in the literature of the American Slavs long before Adamic's arrival on the American scene, and which even appeared in the writings of Slovenes. To Adamic "Bohunk" meant norhing more than "greenhorn", or immigrant from South-Easter- n Europe, and corresponds in his later works to his use of the terms "foreigner", "foreing-born- ", or "alien". In his Bohunks Adamic's use of the epithet is also a much narrower one, describing only members of the often isolated settlements or ethnic ghettos, Any other interpretation of Adamic's use of the word has to be excluded, since the writer was already at this time what Michael Novak has recently described as a "pluralistic personality", and had entered his name into the history of American ethnics as one of the first interpreters and defenders of all "humiliated and injured" non-Anglo-Sax- on Americans. The Bohunks is formally divided into four parts. It begins with a literary treatment of the return of an "Amerikanec" to his native village, "some peasant who four or five years before had quietly left for America clad in homespun, and with a bundle on his back and hair on his face", and now returned sporting guady clothes, a clean-shave- n face, and a repertoire of foreing words "impressively meaningless". But the light satirical touches in the text are directed more at those at home who give the visitor the oportunity to "floor them with the oppulence and sophistication he had acquired in the West Virginia mines or the Pennsylvania steelmills", than at the poor "plutocrat" himself. The same satirical blows are aimed at the local "intelligensia", the parish priest, the schoolteacher and the postmaster, who considered these returned Americans "an unwholesome influence upon the community". Adamic continues: "It appered that America worked in them a deplorable change... it deprived them of their native respect for people of higher callings. Thus America corrupted them, made them arrogant, perverse, vulgar, and worse..." (p. 318). Following Adamic's effective presentation of the type of immigrant his reportage concerns, we are provided with an anecdotal and partly autobiographical account of the anti-Americ- an propaganda circulated in Slovenia, in newspa-pers, in books such as New Ameriko! (Do Not Go to America!), and from the pulpit, containing the message: "...so far as its influence on our good peasantry and our great, although microscopic, nation in general was concerned, America was a cruel, evil place. True, a great deal of money came from it, but... was it worth the price? America broke and mangled bodies, defiled souls, mad? men irreligious, corrupted their charming dialects and ways, and alienated them from their homeland" (p. 318). The introduction to The Bohunks ends, however, with the conclusion that, in spite of such propaganda, "during the quarter of a century immediately preceding the World War, America received great hordes of Bohunks, and made use of them" (310). Throughout this first part Adamic's sympathies are clearly on the side of his "Bohunks"; he treats critically only those who have made them what they are; and, finally, he aims at the "unrighteous rule of the Austrian oligarchy" and the Yugoslav nationalists", including their supporters among our own masses. In the second part the author, again semi-autobiographica-- lly, turns to the image of America in the mind of the immigrant, to Adamic himself America appeared to be a "crazy place", whose "turmoil" bewildered the immigrants upon their arrival — "from the most intelligent ones down to the densest dunce". Then Adamic provides us with the most essential clue for understanding these immigrants later on by remarking that their first urgency was to seek out their countrymen. We are given further glimpses into the new life of the "poor Bohunks", as Adamic realistically recounts their difficulty (although "to them not the most important") in making native-bor- n Americans and other alliens understand who they were, for many unclear on the point themselves. ' The Slovene immigrant was "Austrian", "Krainer" or Q
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Nase Novine, May 05, 1982 |
Language | sr; hr |
Subject | Yugoslavia -- Newspapers; Newspapers -- Yugoslavia; Yugoslavian Canadians Newspapers |
Date | 1982-03-10 |
Type | application/pdf |
Format | text |
Rights | Licenced under section 77(1) of the Copyright Act. For detailed information visit: http://www.connectingcanadians.org/en/content/copyright |
Identifier | nanod2000144 |
Description
Title | 000130 |
OCR text | £6 -- '— '-- "- zasssssBs 93 "vrmnw, Prof. Ivan Dolenc je dugogodlSnji specijalni saradnik. Stalnoje zaposlen kao predavad stranih jezika u High School u Toronto. Sposobnost i iskustvo profesionalnog novinara i publiciste sa kojim je pre mnogo godina doSao u Kanadu iz rodne Ljubljane, nastavio je da razvija. Cenjen je po zapaienim publicistidkim i knjilevnim delima, kako na ovom kontinentu, tako u Jugoslaviji. jmmm.juij.-u_i;.WLWiH.nwin-f.4.i- H!. i .Ј.ти.ипмшдмш.ц.мциаидцмцц When Louis Adamic's The Bohunks appeared in the July, 1928. issue of American Mercury, the promising young author could not have anticipated that his words would disturb Slovene American publicists for more than fifty years afterwards. For many opponents of Adamic's political activities during World War II this publication has served as a vehicle for recruiting other Slovene immigrants against him. Here it must be emphasized, however, that the original Englich text of The Bohunks was read by very few Slovene Americans, partly because it was published in a magazine unfamiliar to them, but chiefly because at that time very few among them read or understood English. Moreover, since not a single editor of the Slovene American newspapers of the day seemed to dare to publish Adamic's text in Slovene translation (the first "translation" was published only in Ljubljana in 1979.), it appears that the interested Slovene American public divided itself for or against Adamic's views while faithfully relying solely on the opinions expressed by this or that reviewer or correspondent in the Slovene American press. Out of this has emerged the considerable confusion over the description of The Bohunks as everything from an "article", "essay", "review", "short story", or "sketch", to a "satire". In Vatro Grill's memoires there is a telling description of the atmosphere of the turbulent weeks following Adamic's publication: "Something unexpected happened — unexpec-ted at least to me. In the Slovene American press a violent storm errupted over the head of this new author. It was absurd, even utterly hilarious". This and other contemporary references to Adamic's text open anew the question of why Adamic's mere five thousand words, printed on seven pages of an American monthly, precipitated such a deluge of polemics, which today already exceed its number of lines several times (only the first "objection" contained over two thousand words!), and do not appear to have ceased flowing. With the exception of the first Slovene translation of Adamic's The Bohunks which, as poor as it is, represents the first positive step toward an understanding of what took place in America, all other contemporaty allusions to Adamic's publication can only further confuse the uniformed reader. For no one yet has written about The Bohunks by starting at the beginning — that is, at the text itself. A critical review of the first polemical articles, which set the tone and direction of the "storms" over Adamic's head, and an interpretation of the most recent reaction to its theme have also been lacking. Adamic's The Bohunks is written in the form of a magazine report or reportage, fashionable in the twenties and thirties in the American monthly press, of which Adamic produced a great number. Stylistically, it presents a mingling of the elements of an article with fictional images, or a combination of report and essay. Since it is written humouristically with not a little satire, it reads easily, often entertainingly, and also like serious journalism, in the manner of Adamic's good friend Carey McWilliams, for instance. In the title the author adopts the costomary ethnic epithet for all Slavic immigrants, with the exception of the Russians, which immediately told old stock Americans what his work was about, without ever using the word anywhere in an offensive or pejorative sense. The word Bohunk is a combination of "Bohemian" and "Hunky", which were well-know- n in the literature of the American Slavs long before Adamic's arrival on the American scene, and which even appeared in the writings of Slovenes. To Adamic "Bohunk" meant norhing more than "greenhorn", or immigrant from South-Easter- n Europe, and corresponds in his later works to his use of the terms "foreigner", "foreing-born- ", or "alien". In his Bohunks Adamic's use of the epithet is also a much narrower one, describing only members of the often isolated settlements or ethnic ghettos, Any other interpretation of Adamic's use of the word has to be excluded, since the writer was already at this time what Michael Novak has recently described as a "pluralistic personality", and had entered his name into the history of American ethnics as one of the first interpreters and defenders of all "humiliated and injured" non-Anglo-Sax- on Americans. The Bohunks is formally divided into four parts. It begins with a literary treatment of the return of an "Amerikanec" to his native village, "some peasant who four or five years before had quietly left for America clad in homespun, and with a bundle on his back and hair on his face", and now returned sporting guady clothes, a clean-shave- n face, and a repertoire of foreing words "impressively meaningless". But the light satirical touches in the text are directed more at those at home who give the visitor the oportunity to "floor them with the oppulence and sophistication he had acquired in the West Virginia mines or the Pennsylvania steelmills", than at the poor "plutocrat" himself. The same satirical blows are aimed at the local "intelligensia", the parish priest, the schoolteacher and the postmaster, who considered these returned Americans "an unwholesome influence upon the community". Adamic continues: "It appered that America worked in them a deplorable change... it deprived them of their native respect for people of higher callings. Thus America corrupted them, made them arrogant, perverse, vulgar, and worse..." (p. 318). Following Adamic's effective presentation of the type of immigrant his reportage concerns, we are provided with an anecdotal and partly autobiographical account of the anti-Americ- an propaganda circulated in Slovenia, in newspa-pers, in books such as New Ameriko! (Do Not Go to America!), and from the pulpit, containing the message: "...so far as its influence on our good peasantry and our great, although microscopic, nation in general was concerned, America was a cruel, evil place. True, a great deal of money came from it, but... was it worth the price? America broke and mangled bodies, defiled souls, mad? men irreligious, corrupted their charming dialects and ways, and alienated them from their homeland" (p. 318). The introduction to The Bohunks ends, however, with the conclusion that, in spite of such propaganda, "during the quarter of a century immediately preceding the World War, America received great hordes of Bohunks, and made use of them" (310). Throughout this first part Adamic's sympathies are clearly on the side of his "Bohunks"; he treats critically only those who have made them what they are; and, finally, he aims at the "unrighteous rule of the Austrian oligarchy" and the Yugoslav nationalists", including their supporters among our own masses. In the second part the author, again semi-autobiographica-- lly, turns to the image of America in the mind of the immigrant, to Adamic himself America appeared to be a "crazy place", whose "turmoil" bewildered the immigrants upon their arrival — "from the most intelligent ones down to the densest dunce". Then Adamic provides us with the most essential clue for understanding these immigrants later on by remarking that their first urgency was to seek out their countrymen. We are given further glimpses into the new life of the "poor Bohunks", as Adamic realistically recounts their difficulty (although "to them not the most important") in making native-bor- n Americans and other alliens understand who they were, for many unclear on the point themselves. ' The Slovene immigrant was "Austrian", "Krainer" or Q |
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