Max Eastman Poet
- Gender: Male
- Citizenship: United States
- Born: Jan 4, 1883
- Died: Mar 25, 1969
Max Forrester Eastman was an American writer on literature, philosophy and society; a poet, and a prominent political activist. Moving to New York City for graduate school, Eastman became involved with liberal and radical circles in Greenwich Village. He supported [[]]socialism and became a leading patron of the Harlem Renaissance, and an activist for a number of liberal and radical causes. For several years, he edited The Masses. With his sister Crystal Eastman, in 1917 he co-founded The Liberator, a radical magazine of politics and the arts.
In later life, however, Eastman changed his views, becoming highly critical of socialism and communism after his experiences during a nearly two-year stay in the Soviet Union in the 1920s, as well as later studies. He was influenced by the deadly rivalry between Leon Trotsky and Joseph Stalin, by which Trotsky was assassinated, as well as the wholesale abuses of the 1930s show trials under Stalin, who conducted widespread terror against his citizens; repression and purges that resulted in the imprisonment and deaths of millions of people in the Soviet Union.
Humor is the instinct for taking pain playfully.
humor
The worst enemy of human hope is not brute facts, but men of brains who will not face them.
hope
It is the ability to take a joke, not make one, that proves you have a sense of humor.
humor
A smile is the universal welcome.
smile
Dogs laugh, but they laugh with their tails.
pet
Classic art was the art of necessity: modern romantic art bears the stamp of caprice and chance.
romantic
It is art that makes life, makes interest, makes importance and I know of no substitute whatever for the force and beauty of its process.
art & beauty