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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 November 2024
Those novels about the Young Idea versus Crabbed Old Age, those films about Our Dancing Daughters, those Boy-Scout Jamborees, that Hiking Movement, that Slimming Campaign, that ‘Beaver’ Ramp, those foolish letters to the papers from alleged old colonels about the spinelessness and cocktails of the younger generation, those nostrums for preserving the School-girl Complexion, that glorification of Charlie Chaplin and Jackie Coogan, those prodigies of Jehudi Menuhin, those babblings of Gertrude Stein, that smile of Mr. Drage, that shortening of skirts and bobbing of hair, those Nazis and Fascists and Bright Young People—perhaps you did not even see a connexion between these things? And, so far as the newspaper stunts were concerned, perhaps you did not take them seriously at all? Or are you one of the crétins who swallow the whole thing?
Now Mr. Wyndham Lewis takes it all very seriously indeed. He has written a book about it which claims to be a ‘research, as “scientific” as any branch whatever of biology or chemistry.’ He has made a valuable collection of this nonsense from the press, but he does not regard it as nonsense. He sees a Sinister Purpose behind it all. The gigantic ‘Youth-racket’ of these post-war years is a put-up job. It is a machination of Big Business in its bid for power. It is baby-snatching on a large scale for the enslavement of Western Man.
1 Doom of Youth. By Wyndham Lewis. (Chatto and Windus, 1931.)
2 This argument is indeed rather obscure and relatively unimportant. We are tempted to wonder if Mr. Wyndham Lewis would have bothered about this ‘Doom’ tail-piece had he not wanted the title for his book with its oblique reference to Mr. Alec Waugh's Loom of Youth. It will be noted that we have suggested another title which satisfies this requirement and at the same time covers more exactly the subject of Mr. Lewis's research.
3 We have confined these pages to a consideration of Mr. Wyndham Lewis's main thesis. But there is much subsidiary matter in his book which deserves more serious attention. In particular we would recommend courageous consideration of his theory that a desexualising process is at work among us. This phenomenon is far more disquieting than all the Youth Movements put together and than the author himself seems to realise.