s/t: Muckraking/Revolution/Seeing America At Last
One of America's greatest journalists, Lincoln Steffens (1866-1936) not only reported on events but also took part in them. This story is also the portrait of an entire era. Index.
Steffens was born April 6, 1866, in San Francisco. He grew up in a wealthy family and attended a military academy. He studied in France and Germany following graduation from the University of California.
Steffens began his career as a journalist at the
New York Evening Post
. He later became an editor of
McClure's
magazine, where he became part of a celebrated muckraking trio with Ida Tarbell an
Steffens was born April 6, 1866, in San Francisco. He grew up in a wealthy family and attended a military academy. He studied in France and Germany following graduation from the University of California.
Steffens began his career as a journalist at the
New York Evening Post
. He later became an editor of
McClure's
magazine, where he became part of a celebrated muckraking trio with Ida Tarbell and Ray Stannard Baker. He specialized in investigating government and political corruption, and two collections of his articles were published as
The Shame of the Cities
(1904) and
The Struggle for Self-Government
(1906). In 1906, he left
McClure's
, along with Tarbell and Baker, to form
The American Magazine
.
From 1914–1915 he covered the Mexican Revolution and began to see revolution as preferable to reform. In March 1919, he accompanied William C. Bullitt, a low-level State Department official, on a three-week visit to the Soviet Union and witnessed the "confusing and difficult" process of a society in the process of revolutionary change. He wrote that "Soviet Russia was a revolutionary government with an evolutionary plan", enduring "a temporary condition of evil, which is made tolerable by hope and a plan."
After his return, he promoted his view of the Soviet Revolution and in the course of campaigning for U.S. food aid for Russia made his famous remark about the new Soviet society: "I have seen the future, and it works", a phrase he often repeated with many variations.
His enthusiasm for communism soured by the time his memoirs appeared in 1931. The autobiography became a bestseller leading to a short return to prominence for the writer, but Steffens would not be able to capitalize on it as illness cut his lecture tour of America short by 1933. He was a member of the California Writers Project, a New Deal program.
He died of heart failure on August 9, 1936, in Carmel-by-the-Sea, California.
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