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5 Runaway American Dream HOPE AND DISILLUSION IN THE EARLY WORK OF BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN Two young Mexican immigrants who risk their lives trying to cross the border; thousands of factory workers losing their jobs when the Ohio steel industry collapsed; a Vietnam veteran who returns to his hometown, only to discover that he has none anymore; and young lovers learning the hard way that romance is a luxury they cannot afford. All of these people have two things in common. First, they are all disappointed that, for them, the American dream has failed. Rather, it has become a bitter nightmare from which there is no waking up. Secondly, their stories have all been documented by the same artist – a poet of the poor as it were – from New Jersey. Over the span of his 43-year career, Bruce Springsteen has captured the very essence of what it means to dream, fight and fail in America. That journey, from dreaming of success to accepting one’s sour destiny, will be the main subject of this paper. While the majority of themes have remained present in Springsteen’s work up until today, the way in which they have been treated has varied dramatically in the course of those more than forty years. It is this evolution that I will demonstrate in the following chapters. But before looking at something as extensive as a life-long career, one should first try to create some order in the large bulk of material. Many critics have tried to categorize Springsteen’s work in numerous ‘phases’. Some of them have reasonable arguments, but most of them made the mistake of creating strict chronological boundaries between relatively short periods of time 1 , unfortunately failing to see the numerous connections between chronologically remote works 2 and the continuity that Springsteen himself has pointed out repeatedly. I would like to 1 In her article on “Class and Gender in Bruce Springsteen’s rock lyrics” (1992), Pamela Moss distinguishes four phases. However, she draws quite strict boundaries between them and in doing so, she misplaces Born to Run (1975) and Darkness on the Edge of Town (1978) in the same closed category, missing the closer thematic connection between the latter and The River (1980), which is placed in another ‘phase’. 2 Most critics have, for instance, trouble interpreting the ten-year ‘gap’ between Born in the USA (1985) and The Ghost of Tom Joad (1995). The chronologically intervening albums Tunnel of Love (1987), Human Touch (1992)

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Runaway American Dream HOPE AND DISILLUSION IN THE EARLY WORK OF

BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN

Two young Mexican immigrants who risk their lives trying to cross the border; thousands of

factory workers losing their jobs when the Ohio steel industry collapsed; a Vietnam veteran

who returns to his hometown, only to discover that he has none anymore; and young lovers

learning the hard way that romance is a luxury they cannot afford. All of these people have

two things in common. First, they are all disappointed that, for them, the American dream has

failed. Rather, it has become a bitter nightmare from which there is no waking up. Secondly,

their stories have all been documented by the same artist – a poet of the poor as it were – from

New Jersey. Over the span of his 43-year career, Bruce Springsteen has captured the very

essence of what it means to dream, fight and fail in America. That journey, from dreaming of

success to accepting one’s sour destiny, will be the main subject of this paper.

While the majority of themes have remained present in Springsteen’s work up until

today, the way in which they have been treated has varied dramatically in the course of those

more than forty years. It is this evolution that I will demonstrate in the following chapters. But

before looking at something as extensive as a life-long career, one should first try to create

some order in the large bulk of material. Many critics have tried to categorize Springsteen’s

work in numerous ‘phases’. Some of them have reasonable arguments, but most of them made

the mistake of creating strict chronological boundaries between relatively short periods of

time1, unfortunately failing to see the numerous connections between chronologically remote

works2 and the continuity that Springsteen himself has pointed out repeatedly. I would like to

1 In her article on “Class and Gender in Bruce Springsteen’s rock lyrics” (1992), Pamela Moss distinguishes four phases. However, she draws quite strict boundaries between them and in doing so, she misplaces Born to Run (1975) and Darkness on the Edge of Town (1978) in the same closed category, missing the closer thematic connection between the latter and The River (1980), which is placed in another ‘phase’. 2 Most critics have, for instance, trouble interpreting the ten-year ‘gap’ between Born in the USA (1985) and The Ghost of Tom Joad (1995). The chronologically intervening albums Tunnel of Love (1987), Human Touch (1992)

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argue that there can only be made one key division into two parts: part one ranging from his

debut in 1972 up until the 1995 album The Ghost of Tom Joad and part two starting with his

2001 record The Rising. The major turning point between these two phases seems to be an

accumulation of both internal and external events occurring around the turn of the century,

the most prominent being – internally – the reunion of Springsteen’s long-time friends and

partners in the renowned E Street Band (after a ten year-long break) and – externally – the

terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, which made as deep an impression on Springsteen,

just as they did on most Americans. The main argument in favor of 9/11 as a defining

moment is the sudden change of attitude towards the themes he had been treating for all those

years. What had become a deeply rooted pessimism – with The Ghost of Tom Joad as climactic

exponent – suddenly turns into a message of hope and optimism. The “Badlands”3 where

dreams are inaccessible illusions, become a “Land of Hope and Dreams”4, where collective

faith can ultimately lead to salvation. Another notable difference is that between the primarily

negative view on religion in his twentieth-century work and its prominent positive presence in

his 21st-century songs. Thirdly, whereas his earlier work focuses almost exclusively on the

working-class people from his native New Jersey, the more recent songs have broadened their

area of inspiration5. The ‘working-class hero’ has become an all-American poet deliberately

choosing for eclecticism on various levels. Thematically, his recent work deals with people

from all ranges of societal, ethnical or geographical background. But also musically, he has

adopted other styles, going deeply into Negro spirituals and soul music, as well as adapting to

contemporary musical innovations.

This brings us to another problem that critics often face when discussing Springsteen,

being the angle from which to approach his oeuvre: is it possible to deal with his songs solely

on a literary level? The fact is that it is hard to talk about Bruce Springsteen’s lyrics without

taking into account the music that supports them. Very often, the combination of the two is

what really brings across the intended atmosphere – just as poets frequently depend on sounds

to strengthen their message. The contrast between, on the one hand, the hopeful cheers on

Born to Run and, on the other hand, the desperate cries on Nebraska, is also partially brought

out by the contrasting musical styles – bombastic versus minimalistic. However, while the

musical tone can sometimes be misleading (songs like “Working on the Highway” might come

and Lucky Town (1992) are, thematically speaking, to be placed in an entirely different timeline. Ghost should consequently be seen as the true successor to the protest songs on Nebraska and Born in the USA. 3 From his 1978 album Darkness on the Edge of Town. 4 Released in 2002 as a b-side to “The Rising”. 5 On The Ghost of Tom Joad, we can already perceive signs of this tendency towards a slightly broader subject matter (cf. CHAPTER 7).

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across as cheerful, while its story is far from happy), the words never lie. But sometimes it is

exactly this seemingly conflicting fusion between words and music that gives songs like “Born

in the USA” their full strength. In this paper, I choose to focus on the messages that lie in

these different songs, and the evolution that runs through them. In his own trademark style,

using gently picked but usually highly intelligible phrases, Springsteen tells in each of his songs

a short story – frequently (part of) someone’s life story – which always tries to grasp the very

essence of this character in an average of about three hundred words, using first person

narratives or anecdotes. They are short stories that, because of their rich imagery, could be

adapted easily into feature length films – and some of them already have been.

The problems mentioned above are only two of the many moot points that arise when

trying to discuss the work of Bruce Springsteen (cf. CHAPTERS 1-2). Taking them all into

account, I have tried to create a retrospective overview of the evolution that takes place in the

twenty years between 1975 and 1995. This paper will, in other words, focus on the ‘first

phase’ as described above. I have chosen to largely omit the first two albums (Greetings from

Asbury Park, NJ and The Wild, The Innocent and the E Street Shuffle) from my area of research,

as well as the three albums that were released between 1987 and 1992 (Tunnel of Love, Human

Touch and Lucky Town) – not because they are artistically irrelevant to his career, but because

they are no substantive part of the evolution I will describe. The first two function as typical

experiments, offering reflections of the life of a young artist in the growing music scene at the

Jersey shore. The latter three, in their turn, mostly deal with the subject of love, and are deeply

inspired by the events taking place in Springsteen’s own private life (from his divorce from his

first wife to the marriage with his second). While chronologically, they of course have their

respective places in between Born in the USA and The Ghost of Tom Joad, thematically they are

nothing but a temporary break from the themes that pervade the majority of his work.

As a result, this paper deals primarily with the work released on the remaining six

albums. In the next chapters, I will describe the remarkable development in the way

Springsteen tackles the myths of the American dream and the ‘upward mobility’ regarding

blue collar America. On Born to Run (1975), the working-class youth is given a chance to

escape: by means of a collective effort, one is said to be able to break out of the oppressive

working-class surroundings. Even though the album – just like the other five – departs from

the point of view that prolonging one’s stay in this environment is not an option, it offers a

certain optimism that a concrete possibility of escape truly exists. This possibility fades away

on the following albums Darkness on the Edge of Town (1978) and The River (1980), where the

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main undertone has shifted from optimism to nostalgia. The characters described here are

mostly frustrated in their realization that the things they have always dreamed of will never

come true. The escape offered here, is no longer a positive one, but rather an evasive solution:

they lose themselves in regretful reveries. The cautious laments then turn to explicit rebellion

and a flight into immorality. Feeling like their cruel background never gave them an honest

chance, the characters end up losing themselves completely in criminality or despair. Their

protest takes on two forms: the almost silent, but heart-rending howls on Nebraska (1982) and

the loud charge on Born in the USA (1984). Finally, when it becomes obvious that no form of

protest is ever going to change the situation of those poor people, Springsteen offers a final

means of escape: death. The Ghost of Tom Joad (1995), directly inspired by the tradition of the

protest song and by the influential figures of Woody Guthrie, John Ford and John Steinbeck,

is Springsteen’s only work where he seems to entirely give up the fight. It therefore serves as

the climax of the evolution from optimistic dreaming to facing the nightmare, which will be

dealt with chronologically in CHAPTERS 3-7. The first chapter will introduce the work of

Springsteen as a valuable subject of academic study, while the second gives a brief outline of

the major themes and motifs, and the language that is used to express them.

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CHAPTER 1 | Springsteen as an Academic Research Subject

“Bruce Springsteen is the single most influential purveyor of literacy in what is often falsely considered the non-literate culture of rock music”

(H.E. BRANSCOMB)

Compared to the great amount of research that is being devoted to 20th century prose, as well

as drama and poetry, much less time is being spent by academics on another part of our recent

literary tradition, being music lyrics. Moreover, the lion’s share of this research is being done

by critics in the field of social sciences or musicology, given that in most literature

departments, popular music still bears the stigma of being unworthy compared to the work of

canonized ‘literary’ poets. This is largely due to two reasonable conceptions.

First of all, the scene of popular music is surrounded by an atmosphere of transience.

While most literary authors consider their works to be a long-term legacy, success in the music

business is – especially nowadays – intense but temporary. Above all, singer-songwriters are

much more susceptible to commercial interests: even more than popular novelists, they are

under immense pressure to produce new work as soon as possible, while the ‘hype’ is still fresh.

As a result, the value of their work often may often suffer from high commercial demands,

rather than artistic ones. Secondly, the subject of popular music is often considered as quite

‘new’, historically speaking. While the novel as we know it has been around for centuries and

poetry for thousands of years, the first forms of rock and roll music were introduced in the

1950s, by Chuck Berry, Elvis Presley and many other aspiring young artists. Just like other

new poetic genres, rock music did not immediately become part of the canon. Chronological

distance is often seen as an important criterion in academic circles, as it seems to lend a certain

aura of objectivity to the research. As an illustration, the songs of Bob Dylan, who started his

career in the early 60s, have been receiving far more critical attention than those of artists that

debuted in the 70s or 80s, but articles on ‘traditional’ literature, for their part, still outnumber

those on Dylan. Both time and esteem thus work against recent music as a research topic.

While articles on 1950s novelists such as J.D. Salinger can fill whole libraries and

commentaries on 1960s songwriter Bob Dylan could still account for a few bookshelves, the

accumulated literary research on Bruce Springsteen would barely start a campfire.

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However, I believe that both popular music in general and the work of Springsteen in

particular could pose questions deserving of comprehensive study. Besides, they can easily

refute the two counter-arguments described above. As to the second objection considering the

relatively ‘new’ genre of popular music, there is a simple but clear rebuttal. Many ancient

traditions of storytelling have been inextricably bound up with music: the ancient Greek aoidoi

used musical lyre accompaniment to facilitate the memorization and recitation of stories that

were passed down orally from one generation to another; the medieval troubadours used more

or less the same techniques to sing their tales6. Carl Rhodes summarizes that “indeed the use of

musical forms to embody stories and knowledge is not new; lyric poetry and oral traditions

have performed this function in many cultures past and present”7. Contemporary music can

then be seen as building on those ancient traditions of storytelling: for some songwriters,

music is just the natural and most desirable way to express their thoughts and to convey their

message.

As to the first objection – that commercial pressure and the need to get the most out of

temporary success restrict the artistic potential – the answer is even more clear-cut. From the

very beginning, Springsteen has gone his own way, surrounded by only a few associates who

granted him full intellectual and artistic freedom. Knowing where he came from, surrounded

by New Jersey working-class families who were as poor as church mice, he was very well aware

that “this is what he would have become if he had no musical talent”8. For this reason as well

as ethical ones, Springsteen never gave in to commercial success and always kept close to his

roots. After the bestselling album The River, he decided to work on a grim folk record

(Nebraska) that would never even come close to matching the earlier success. Almost directly

after the record-breaking Born in the USA, he decided to part from the successful E Street

Band setting and start a 14-year long solo career in which he barely scored any ‘hits’. And

when he had just returned to big commercial success with The Rising, he started working on

another folk record (Devils & Dust) and a project with Pete Seeger in which he breathed new

life into classical American folk songs and spirituals (We Shall Overcome: the Seeger Sessions).

Even though his art has made him a millionaire, Springsteen has always meticulously

delineated what he himself wanted to achieve with his art. As he told his biographer Dave

Marsh, “the release date is just one day, at a certain place set in a certain time. But the record

6 Paterson & Cheyette (1995), 411-413. 7 Rhodes (2003), 5. 8 Ibid.

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remains forever. So you better be aware that what you say today, will be – and should be –

relevant not only in this particular setting, but for generations to come”9.

Springsteen may not be, like other artists such as Leonard Cohen or Paul Simon, the

example par excellence of a songwriter who, if born a century earlier, could have turned out to

be a Victorian poet. Nevertheless, connections to the literary world are never far away. Rhodes

remarks that “in addition to his commercial success, artistically Springsteen has been

compared to American musical and literary giants, ranging from Woody Guthrie and Bob

Dylan, to Walt Whitman and John Steinbeck”10. This has led him to be heralded as “the

single most influential purveyor of literacy in what is often falsely considered the non-literate

culture of youth and rock music”11. It is through this literariness that “Springsteen’s allegorical

lyrics use familiar characters and situations to tell big stories”12. The most direct link with

literature is found on his 1995 album The Ghost of Tom Joad, which is named after the

protagonist of Steinbeck’s novel The Grapes of Wrath (1939) and adopts many of its themes –

although the majority of them were already present in earlier work.

Because of these clear connections with literature, plus the fact that Springsteen can

counter most prejudices against music lyrics, it is rather strange that so few literary scholars

have paid attention to his work. In this paper it will become clear – I hope – that this now 62-

year old New Jersey songwriter has a lot more in common with the literary world than most

people think. His work can be analyzed using more or less the same techniques that are

employed in a literary analysis, with attention to themes, motifs, character sketches and plot

development.

9 Marsh (2003), 452. 10 Rhodes (2003), 11. 11 Branscomb (1993), 29. 12 Rhodes (2003), 5.

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CHAPTER 2 | Hopeful Dreams in a Horrible Reality

“I spent most of my life as a musician measuring the distance between the American dream and American reality”

(BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN)

As this chapter’s title suggests, the majority of themes in Springsteen’s lyrics revolve around a

certain ambiguity: contrasting images spread through his work, always with a thin line

between them. There’s the intimate dance of life and death, the closeness of failure and

success, and the rich contrastive imagery of night and day. Hope and despair are close

neighbors, as are expectation and disappointment. Together, they make up the main paradox

of his oeuvre: the coexistence of dreams and reality.

An indisputably large part of Springsteen’s work is shaped by his own background, and

the environment where he grew up. Born on September 23, 1949, in Long Branch, New

Jersey, Bruce Springsteen was the firstborn child in a poor working-class family. His father,

Douglas Springsteen, was an Irish Catholic whose life had brought him little happiness.

Growing up in a poor household himself, he had to cope with the great grief that struck his

family when his five-year old sister Virginia died in 1927, when she was hit by a truck while

riding her tricycle across the neighborhood13. Her loss would keep on haunting the family and

its offspring for decades to come. Having been sent to the front during World War II, he

returned, with few prospects, to his native town of Freehold. After Bruce was born, he

struggled to find a regular job that would support his family. Taking on every trade he could

find – working as a cab driver, prison guard and factory laborer – he would nonetheless suffer

long periods of unemployment. This caused the family to move from one house to another,

only to lower the rent a few dollars a month, and eventually to move in with their

grandparents14. Feeling like a failure at everything he did, Douglas became an introverted,

cynical man who did not restrain himself from taking his frustrations out on his family. In

interviews, Springsteen would often testify “how simple father-son conversations could

deteriorate into screaming matches”15. Bruce’s mother Adele, a second-generation Italian

immigrant, tried to provide the warmth and support that his father could not give. When he

13 Remnick (2012). 14 Marsh (1987). 15 Ginell (1998).

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was younger, she would tell him an endless range of stories that she made up herself. She

bought her son his first acoustic guitar when he was 13 and two years later, she even

negotiated a $60 loan to be able to buy him his first electric one – a moment he would later

commemorate in “The Wish”.

His parent’s divergent personalities would have tremendous impact on the nature of

his art. From his mother, he inherited the valiant strength to keep faith and see the hope in

every setback. His father, on the other hand, became a symbol for the oppressive working-class

atmosphere, a personification of the thousands of laborers who saw their already futureless jobs

in the New Jersey factories melt away as the industry in the entire region collapsed. Douglas

Springsteen became a symbol for failed dreams and disappointment. Summarizing the malaise

and tension that pervaded his home, Springsteen recalled: “When I was a kid, I really

understood failure. In my family, I lived deep in its shadow”16. The spark of hope, however,

would come from a tiny little thing in the family’s kitchen. Encouraged by his mother,

Springsteen started listening to their old radio, picking up an interest in rock and roll music.

Listening to Elvis Presley, Roy Orbison and The Beatles, he found in them “a collective

struggle for freedom and equality”17. Rock music created unprecedented opportunities for the

lower classes to express themselves. To quote from one of Springsteen’s songs, “the hungry and

the hunted exploded into rock and roll bands”18. He would later recall this defining ‘epiphany’

during a stage performance in London:

It wasn’t until I started listening to the radio, and I heard something in those singer’s voices that said there was more to life than what my old man was doing and the life that I was living myself. And they held out a promise that every man has a right to live his life with some decency and some dignity. And it’s a promise that gets broken every day, in the most violent way. But it’s a promise that never, ever dies, and always remains inside of you19.

As becomes obvious in the quote above, it was more about keeping faith and believing

in it, rather than actually making the dream come true. The belief in the dream, for

Springsteen, was a means to survive in a world were hope seems lost. It is this fierce belief that

recurs on all of his albums, although it takes on different forms – motifs to express the greater

theme.

16 Marsh (1987), 49. 17 Garman (1996), 73. 18 From “Jungleland” (Born to Run, 1975). 19 Marsh (1987), 36.

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Basically, Springsteen’s characters try to break away from everything that typifies their

existence. However, one aspect in particular becomes the main ‘evil’, namely the key part of

working-class life: work itself. Nearly every mention of work in his early songs has a strictly

negative connotation. In Springsteen’s hometown of Freehold, New Jersey, “the local

economy centered around a plastics factory, a rug mill, a Nestlé plant, and other small

manufacturing companies”20. Manuel labor work in these places offered few prospects, and

when the laborers would get started Monday morning, they “already got Friday on [their]

mind” as Springsteen sings in “Out in the Street”. In the beautiful but tragic poem-like song

“Factory”, based on his father’s life as a factory worker, he sums up what work meant to the

people in Freehold: “Through the mansions of fear, through the mansions of pain / I see my

daddy walking through them factory gates in the rain / Factory takes his hearing, factory gives

him life / The working, the working, just the working life”. Little life remains, however, at the

end of the day (which is also the end of the song), when the “factory whistle cries” and “men

walk through these gates with death in their eyes”. Still, terrible as these jobs may be, they do

give the people some structure in their lives, and they produce the little money that keeps

them and their families alive. When this fundamental keystone vanishes, life becomes chaos.

The war veteran who returns to his hometown in “Born in the USA” becomes desperate upon

hearing that all the jobs are gone or taken. And when Nebraska’s “Johnny 99” loses his job

when the local auto plant is closed down, all hell breaks loose.

This conception of work is closely connected to the father figure. In “Adam Raised a

Cain”, Springsteen sang about his painful relationship to his father: “Daddy worked his whole

life for nothing but the pain / Now he walks these empty rooms looking for something to

blame / You inherit the sins, you inherit the flames”. A few years later, the melancholic song

“Independence Day” described a son’s farewell to his father, when he recalls “[t]here was just

no way this house could hold the two of us / I guess we were just too much of the same kind”.

In the same song, he claims that “they can’t touch me now, and you can’t touch me now /

They ain’t gonna do to me, what I watched them do to you”. Another four years later, in the

last song on the Born in the USA album, Springsteen has taken up the role of the father

himself, as he drives his son through Main Street in “My Hometown”, remembering how his

father had taken him for the same ride and how the town has declined since21.

As said before, the characters try to escape everything that is connected to this working

life and everything it represents. The first two albums, Greetings from Asbury Park, NJ and The 20 Marsh (2003), 21. 21 Morley (1987), quoted in Sawyers (2004), 153.

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Wild, the Innocent and the E Street Shuffle, which are primarily concerned with New Jersey

nightlife, introduce the duality of night and day as a contrast that mirrors fantasy and reality –

an image that is further elaborated as a more universal motif on Born to Run and Darkness.

While the day symbolizes the monotonous work in the factory, the night offers new

possibilities. On songs like “Night”, “Born to Run” and “Prove It All Night”, the darkness is

when dreams come alive – even though they are bound to surrender to the upcoming dawn.

Another motif, closely connected to that of the night, is the imagery of cars and streets. Many

Springsteen songs feature roads and highways as a literal getaway from reality. As he

remembers, in the 1970s in New Jersey’s working-class society, “cars were still a symbol of

success, and success offered a way out of this misery”22. Many songs on Born to Run deal with

this concrete escape via the road out of town. On Darkness (“Racing in the Street”, “Streets of

Fire”), however, the function of the streets has become a way of forgetting misery, rather than

escaping from it. Looking at the later albums Nebraska and The Ghost of Tom Joad, the image

of cars in the night has become the icon for doom. The streets are filled with nothing but

death, from the dead dog in “Reason to Believe” to the “Wreck on the Highway” and the

burned cars in “Something in the Night”.

Other significant motifs include that of the river, which develops most prominently in

“The River”, the title song from the 1980 double-album, where it serves as a place of refuge

and shelter – a spot where people can forget their troubles for a moment. But while the initial

image is that of a “valley where the fields were green” where a young couple can live their

dreams, in the end the narrator still visits the place even though he “know[s] the river is dry”.

The dateless image of the river as a heavenly place of rebirth and salvation eventually becomes

a ghostly image of paradise lost.

The use of these and other motifs in the course of the twenty years that I am about to

discuss will indicate the changes in Springsteen’s outlook on the promise delivered by the

American dream. Worthy of a final introductory note is the language that Springsteen employs

to sing all these stories. As Springsteen’s characters bear witness, they speak in a “working-class

language, which locates them in a specific social space”23. Concrete manifestations of this

specific language are colloquialisms (“you ain’t a beauty, but hey you’re alright”24), the

dropping of word endings (“seem like the whole world walkin’ pretty”25), moderate slang

22 Sawyers (2004), 3. 23 Garman (1996), 86. 24 From “Thunder Road” (Born to Run, 1975). 25 From “Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out” (Born to Run, 1975).

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vocabulary (“some fleshpot mascot was tied into a lover's knot with a whatnot in her hand”26)

and, very often, the use of improper verb tenses (“is a dream a lie, if it don’t come true?”27).

The fact that Springsteen himself originates from a society where this kind of language was

rather standard, does not, according to Bryan Garman, necessarily mean that this was the kind

of language he was going to use in his music. Garman claims that through “the use of

nonstandard English, Springsteen deliberately represents the unequal educational

opportunities afforded to working people and corresponds to the lack of political and cultural

power and influence that they wield in the vast social spaces claimed by the middle class”28.

Yet, by making use of this working-class language, Springsteen also makes a statement that this

‘dialect of the poor’ is worthy enough to function as a form of art.

Taking these main themes and motifs as a basis, I will demonstrate the way in which

they develop throughout the years. While the following chapters are ordered chronologically,

each dealing with one or two albums at a time, it is important to bear in mind that there is a

continuity that flows from work to work. Even though there are many years in between the

release dates of these albums, the songs have been written exactly during those years, and

overlaps are far from seldom29. The greater part of my paper will consist of a close reading of

some of the key songs on the respective albums, as well as supportive arguments taken from

some of the academic articles written on specific themes or albums (the most notable being

those by Bryan Garman and Jim Cullen). Additional background information primarily stems

from Dave Marsh’s biography Glory Days (1987) and its updated version Two Hearts (2003).

As Garman rightfully notes, “Marsh’s narrative is far too hagiographic to rely on as a sole

source, but it does provide a wealth of information on Springsteen’s political and artistic

development”30.

In my analyses, I have selected the songs that I deem most relevant to the themes that I

have been describing in this chapter, and those that are most representative of the albums’

predominant atmosphere. By no means have I intended to arrive at a full-scale in-depth

analysis of the entire albums, since this would lead us too far from the main subject of this

paper, but I believe that, together, these selected songs sketch a well enough picture.

26 From “Blinded by the Light” (Greetings from Asbury Park, NJ, 1973). 27 From “The River” (The River, 1980). 28 Garman (1996), 87. 29 A song like “Independence Day”, written in 1978 was a contender for a place on the Darkness on the Edge of Town record, but it was eventually released two years later, on The River (as explained in the documentary film “The Promise: The Darkness on the Edge of Town Story”, CBS, 2010). 30 Garman (1996), 110.

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CHAPTER 3 | An Invitation to Escape: Born to Run

“The night’s busting open These two lanes will take us anywhere”

(“BORN TO RUN”)

The idea of the ‘American dream’ has lived in the US from the very beginning, although it has

gone by a variety names. All versions are united by “a common underlying faith that is rarely

articulated explicitly, and has never been formally codified, but it can be summed up in the

following assertion: anything is possible if you want it badly enough”31. The creed has taken

on many forms and has been articulated from different angles. Its earliest formulation was

perhaps best expressed by John Winthrop, for whom the American dream was a religious one.

In time, the dream took on a more political (in the Declaration of Independence) and

individualistic character (for example in the Transcendentalists’ quest for self-reliance). In the

twentieth century, the term ‘American dream’ has become very chameleonic. For foreign

immigrants, it stands for the promise that America holds as a land of new opportunities; for

poor people already living inside its borders, the dream represents the hope of rising to better

economic circumstances (the myth of ‘upward mobility’ that can bring someone ‘from rags to

riches’); for the more prosperous citizens, it can be the desire for fame and personal success; for

the politicians at the country’s head, it includes the diffusion of American values all over the

world. But for all these people, pursuing the dream means to achieve something, to improve

one’s current condition.

In twentieth-century music and literature, many great works have tried to deal with the

concept, one of the most famous being F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby. Few fictional

characters can better embody the modern dream of personal freedom and success than the

tragic James Gatz, Fitzgerald’s protagonist, “who transformed himself into the fabulous Jay

Gatsby to win the heart of the beautiful Daisy Buchanan”32. Gatsby makes the classic mistake

of pretending to have achieved something already, thinking that if he imagines it hard enough,

it would eventually come true. The novel’s narrator, Nick Carraway, cannot help but be

moved by the intensity by which Gatsby is longing for the dream, symbolized in many forms,

including Daisy herself, but also a green light at the end of her private dock. At a certain point,

31 Cullen (1997), 54. 32 Ibid, 57.

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Nick even compares the green light to how America, rising out of the ocean, must have looked

to early settlers of the new nation, making it the ultimate symbol for the American dream33.

While Fitzgerald described the decay of the American dream in the 1920s and the

hollowness of the upper class society, Bruce Springsteen portrays a similar evolution in the

United States’ working-class culture during the century’s last three decades. In the twenty

years from Born to Run to The Ghost of Tom Joad, we notice the sharp decline of belief in this

dream. For people of Springsteen’s generation of working-class people, born in the late 1940s

and early 1950s, the dream was a promise that was given to everyone who was ‘born in the

USA’ – a promise that there would be at least some opportunity in their lives, some chance to

really make something out of the, say, seventy or eighty years that are given to us on this

planet. As he grew up in Freehold, however, Springsteen could not help but notice that for his

family, and the many others leading their working-class lives, this dream never came true. Yet,

on his 1975 breakthrough album Born to Run, he still proclaims the possibility of achieving

the dream, by means of an escape from this ‘doomed society’.

On the night Barack Obama crowned Springsteen as one of the 2009 Kennedy Center

honorees, Jon Stewart mentioned in his celebratory speech that “if you listen to Bruce

Springsteen, you no longer feel like a loser. You feel as if you are a character in an epic

poem… about losers”34. Indeed, there is a mysterious irony in his work, as he is at the same

time disgusted by this “town full losers”35 and nevertheless portrays its people in all their

dignity. Springsteen offers them, through his music and lyrics, a worthy platform to tell their

stories. And nowhere is this truer than on Born to Run.

As with many of his albums, the title track includes most the essential ideas of the

record. The opening lines immediately introduce the contrast between day and night

(mentioned in CHAPTER 2) as symbolizing dreams and reality: “In the day we sweat it out in

the streets of a runaway American dream / At night we ride through mansions of glory in

suicide machines”. The protagonist sends out an invitation to who seems to be his love

interest, named Wendy, to run away from their town, which he describes as “a death trap” and

“a suicide rap”. He incites her to come with him: “We gotta get out while we’re young /

‘Cause tramps like us, baby we were born to run”. A similar, even more cinematic scene is

found in the first song on the album, “Thunder Road”. The protagonist sits in his car, in front

of Mary’s house, and invites her to run away with him, because he is “riding out tonight to 33 Fitzgerald (2000), 136. 34 “2009 Kennedy Center Honors”, as broadcasted on CBS (2009). 35 From “Thunder Road” (Born to Run, 1975).

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case the promised land”. The song starts with some dreamy, illusory imagery: “The screen

door slams, Mary’s dress waves / Like a vision she dances across the porch as the radio plays”.

However, the silky appearance is nothing but a façade, as the protagonist uncovers her true

situation: “You can hide ‘neath your covers and study your pain / Make crosses from your

lovers and throw roses in the rain / Waste your summer praying in vain for a savior to rise

from these streets”. Again, the night comes in to offer a getaway opportunity: “The night’s

busting open, these two lanes will take us anywhere … Climb in back, heaven’s waiting down

the tracks”.

It should be noted that in both songs, the escape can only be achieved collectively. The

protagonist of “Born to Run” is “just a scared and lonely rider” and constantly asks Wendy to

accompany him, because “only together we could break this trap”. In “Thunder Road”, the

young man is waiting for Mary to “take that long walk from your front porch to my front

seat” before he can take off. In both songs, too, there are risks that come with the attempt to

escape. Both narrators cite examples of people who have failed and are now lost, roaming the

streets at night. In “Born to Run” “[t]he highway’s jammed with broken heroes on a last

chance power drive”, while in “Thunder Road” “[t]here were ghosts in the eyes of all the boys

you sent away / They haunt this dusty beach road in the skeleton frames of burned out

Chevrolets”. Lastly, both songs also feature a fierce optimism that the efforts will be rewarded

with success: “Someday girl, I don’t know when / We’re gonna get to that place where we

really want to go, and we’ll walk in the sun” / “It’s a town full of losers, and I’m pulling out of

here to win”. After this last line, the song bursts into a glorious symphony that mirrors the

narrator’s hopeful message.

The day-versus-night motif is certainly on of the most prominent on the album. It also

dominates its third song, “Night”, which describes how factory workers try everyday to survive

the eight hours of hell, only to be released into the oblivion of the night. While during the

day, “the world is busting at its seams and you’re just a prisoner of your dreams”, at night

something like love suddenly becomes possible and you find yourself “out on a midnight run /

Losing your heart to a beautiful one”. Every night “she will be waiting there / And you’ll find

her somehow you swear”. However, the narrator knows in his heart that the rescue of the

night is not a definitive one: it is a sort of escapism that does allow one to flee for a moment,

but eventually pulls your feet back to the ground. This is why he sings that “somewhere

tonight, you run sad and free” – sad, because this freedom is not really there. There is a

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constant nervous friction between dreams and reality, symbolized by the nervous rhythm that

continuously underscores the words.

At the end of most songs, the eventual outcome remains a mystery. We are not sure if

Mary ultimately gets in the car, or if Wendy really goes out on a run. “Meeting Across the

River” offers no difference, as it is another song that suggests nothing more than an invitation.

The narrator apparently has fixed a meeting with – as is strongly suggested – a Mafioso and he

asks his friend Eddie to accompany him on the dangerous trip. He tells his friend that his

girlfriend Cherry wants to walk out on him every minute, as he has pawned her radio to

temporarily solve their financial troubles. What she does not understand, he continues, is that

“two grand is practically sitting here in my pocket”. He is determined that “tonight is gonna

be everything that I said / And when I walk through that door, I’m just gonna throw that

money on the bed”. However, just as in “Born to Run” and “Thunder Road”, it is unclear

whether he actually carries out his plan. His certainty in the penultimate verse is being undone

by the single final line of the song, in which the question of the first line is repeated: “Hey

Eddie, can you catch us a ride?”

Springsteen has often mentioned that, on all of his albums as well as his live shows, he

always tries to tell the story as a whole, starting with the posing of questions at the beginning

and trying to answer them towards the end. In some way, Born to Run’s last song,

“Jungleland”, answers to “Thunder Road”, and it symbolizes the almost desperate holding on

to hope of Born to Run slowly flowing into the growing despair of Darkness on the Edge of

Town. The hope, here, is again crystallized in a love relationship, that struggles to persist amid

a backdrop of gang violence. The song opens with the description of the two lovers: the

“Barefoot Girl” and her beloved man nicknamed “Rat”, who has a hard time combining his

‘work’ in the city’s criminal underworld with saving his relationship. The opening lines mirror

the cinematic beauty of “Thunder Road”, describing the “Barefoot Girl sitting on the hood of

a Dodge / Drinking warm beer in the soft summer rain / The Rat pulls into town, rolls up his

pants / Together they take a stab at romance and disappear down Flamingo Lane”. Trouble

enters, however, with references to the gang’s conflict with the authorities (“the Maximum

Lawman chasing them down Flamingo”). The atmosphere changes, giving almost morbid

descriptions of the city: “The kids round here look just like shadows, always quiet, holding

hands / From the churches to the jails, tonight all is silence in this world”. The plot builds up

towards a confrontation between the gang and the police as “the midnight gang assembles”

but “the local cops rip this holy night”. As to the exact events of the night, we can only guess,

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as they are described in a poetic chaos. All we know is that “the streets are alive as secret debts

are paid” and “lonely-hearted lovers struggle in dark corners / desperate as the night moves

on”. The last two stanzas, coming after Clarence Clemons’ extended four-minute saxophone

solo, describe the final fall of the Rat (“soft refusal and then surrender”), and how his “own

dreams gun him down as shots echo down them hallways”.

The structure of the song is emphasized by the musical arrangement, which strictly

demarcates the five parts of Rat’s epic tale. As a whole, the song resembles a classic symphony,

with its division in various pieces, all with their own orchestration. The first verse is

characterized by romantic, joyful piano play and a violin intro. The second verse, the advent of

approaching danger is heralded by the drummer’s beat that sets in. The middle part, which is

made up by verse three and four, serves as a climactic moment, mirrored in the entrance of

several other instruments and a guitar solo. After the illustrious four-minute sax – which could

be interpreted as Rat’s swan song – the sadness following his death is reflect in the minimal

instrumentation and the almost whisper-like tone in which the last part of the story is

unfolded.

The song then ends with a final part that could be seen as Springsteen’s first real

attempt at a protest song. As the band slowly returns to its full sound, the narrator describes

the ironical apathy towards Rat’s tragic fall, and the lack of impact his deeds and death have

on the world around him: “No one watches when the ambulance pulls away, or as the girl

shuts out the bedroom light”. Moreover, Rat’s catastrophic “death waltz between flesh and

fantasy” will not be remembered in history, it seems, since “the poets down here don’t write

nothing at all, they just stand back and let it all be” – an ironical comment written by a man

who, with this song and this album, has given a platform to people like the ones living in

“Jungleland”. More than just giving them a voice, he remolds them into characters of an epic

tragedy.

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CHAPTER 4 | Broken Promises: Darkness and The River

“Is a dream a lie, if it don’t come true, or is it something worse?”

(“THE RIVER”)

If Born to Run was epic cinema, Darkness on the Edge of Town (1978) is brutal reality, its

characters not dreaming of idealized escape anymore, but rather trying to live in and make

sense of their circumstances. Some consider it to be about “the people left behind after Born to

Run”36, assuming that the characters back then succeeded in their escape, leaving the others in

their rearview mirror. Personally, I see Darkness as the tale of the people who tried to escape

but failed, and who are now destined to remain in this doomed society.

Shortly after the release of Born to Run, Springsteen artistically arrived at the

crossroads. He won a lawsuit against his former manager Mike Appel, who wanted to take full

control over the artistic direction of the new album, and he hired Jon Landau as his new

mentor and producer. However, the suit lasted for ten long months, in which Springsteen

could not record a single note, on pain of detention. However, he did keep on writing in the

meantime and, just as important, he started reading a lot: Walt Whitman, John Steinbeck,

Flannery O’Connor, and the history books of Henry Steele Commager and Allan Nevins. As

he read about American ideals in the latter’s Pocket History of the United State of America, he

started to fully understand that there were promises made at the very beginning, that were

never delivered. First published in 1942, Commager’s and Nevin’s narrative “maintains an

unwavering faith in the myths of freedom and opportunity”37. They assert that “America is an

interesting country because its people have been conscious of a peculiar destiny, because upon

it have been fastened the hopes and aspirations of the human race, and because it has not

failed to fulfill that destiny or to justify its hopes”38. During the tour that followed the release

of Darkness, Springsteen would comment on this book:

“In Commager and Nevins I found a lot of things that were important to know, because they helped me understand the way that my life was and the way it developed. They helped me understand how when I was a kid, all I remember was my father worked in a factory, his father worked in a factory,

36 Sawyers (2004), 10. 37 Garman (1996), 71. 38 Commager & Nevins (1986), v-vi.

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and they didn’t know enough about the forces that controlled their lives … The idea was that in the United States there’d be a place for everybody, no matter where you came from, no matter what religion you were or what color. You could make a life that had some decency and dignity to it … But like all ideals, that idea got real corrupted”39.

Whereas on Born to Run, Springsteen was fighting against this fixed fate, Darkness is

where he “asserted that social status is in part predetermined by social and historical forces that

even the hardest working people cannot overcome”40. As his understanding of these forces

grew, he felt that it was his duty to report the damages they caused. He began composing

shorter, more tightly constructed songs, carefully moving more and more towards Woody

Guthrie’s hurt song tradition41. The mood had altered, too: the fierce optimism had been

eclipsed by a sense of alienation and isolation, shrouding the characters in darkness.

“Badlands”, the opening song of the album, summarizes what had happened to the

dreams that were so much alive in 1975: “Talk about a dream, try to make to make it real /

You wake up in the night, with a fear so real / Spend your life waiting for a moment / that just

don’t come”. The narrator of the song acknowledges his situation, saying that “[he] got [his]

facts learned real good right now” and screams it out in the chorus: “Badlands, you gotta live it

every day / Let the broken hearts stand as the price you gotta pay”. His rebellion becomes

most directly clear in the final lines, where he calls out for resistance: “I wanna find one face

that ain’t looking through me / I wanna find one place, I wanna spit in the face of these

badlands!” However, it is clear that the song was written very shortly after the Born to Run

period, given that although the dream of escape may be far away now, it is not entirely gone.

In the song’s bridge, he sings: “I believe in the love that you gave me / I believe in the faith

that could save me / I believe in the hope and I pray / That some day it may raise me above

these badlands”.

The rebellious spirit flares up in one more song on the album, before it is extinguished

by nostalgia and despair. In “The Promised Land”, the narrator sums up his life in two lines,

saying he is “working all day in [his] daddy’s garage” and “driving all night chasing some

mirage”, but convinced that “pretty soon, [he’s] gonna take charge”. He then bursts into the

chorus, which expresses the unfulfilled desire to raise above his oppressors: “The dogs on Main

39 Quoted in Marsh (1987), 57. 40 Garman (1996), 74. 41 The genre of the ‘hurt song’ is defined by Bryan Garman as “written in working-class language and expressing the collective pain, suffering and injustice working people have historically suffered … while articulating their collective hopes and dreams of a less oppressive future” (1996, 70). For a further discussion of Guthrie’s protest tradition, see CHAPTER 5 on Nebraska, where this influence becomes more prominent.

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Street howl, ‘cause they understand / If I could take one moment into my hands / Mister I

ain’t a boy, no I’m a man / And I believe in a promised land”. The choice for the words could

and one moment, however, reveals his uncertainty – it would have sounded far more

convincing had he said that those dogs would howl because “they understand that I will take

this moment into my hands”. Yet deep down, he begins to recognize that that moment will

never come. His frustration about this turns into real aggression in the second verse:

“I’ve done my best to live the right way I get up every morning and go to work each day But your eyes go blind and your blood runs cold Sometimes I feel so weak I just want to explode Explode and tear this whole town apart Take a knife and cut this pain from my heart Find somebody itching for something to start”

At the end of the song, he predicts a storm will come from the desert “to blow

everything down that ain’t got the faith to stand its ground”. It will be a final test to see who

can hold on to his faith. But at the same time, it could be a liberating relief of those false

hopes, as the storm will “blow away the dreams that tear you apart / Blow away the dreams

that break your heart / Blow away the lies that leave you nothing but lost and brokenhearted”.

The fact that he acknowledges the treacherous character of these dreams might imply that he

would rather get rid of them.

Whereas “Badlands” and “The Promised Land” serve as a transitory bridge between

the previous album and the new one (still swinging between rebellion and acceptance), the

songs that came out later in the writing process are more clearly marked by the ‘Darkness’. For

the first time in Springsteen’s oeuvre, we encounter the motif of the father, elaborated in

different manners in various songs. The album’s second song, “Adam Raised a Cain”, gives the

thorny father-son relationship a biblical twist, also introducing another religious notion,

namely that of the (original) sin. The references to the story from the Book of Genesis are

partly inspired by John Steinbeck’s novel East of Eden (1952), which offers many parallels to

the Biblical tale. In a raw, aggressive style, Springsteen’s narrator almost spits out the words:

“In the Bible Cain slew Abel, and East of Eden he was cast You’re born into this life paying, for the sins of somebody else’s past Daddy worked his whole life for nothing but the pain Now he walks these empty rooms looking for something to blame You inherit the sins, you inherit the flames Adam raised a Cain

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Lost but not forgotten, from the dark heart of a dream Adam raised a Cain”

The narrator here interestingly argues that Cain is not to blame for his sins, as they

were inherited from his own sinful father. Likewise, the narrator’s father cannot be held

responsible for his actions, or for the fact that he leads a life of disappointment. He can be seen

as a victim of the age-long oppression of the working class. Nevertheless, the father experiences

a deep sense of personal failure, which “casts a shadow similar to the one that darkened the

Springsteen household, as the father searches for an outlet for the frustration he endures”42.

The autobiographical song “Factory” sketches a more intense portrait of Springsteen’s father,

in the realistic setting of the 3M plastics plant in Freehold where Douglas used to work. In a

poem-like song (consisting of three quatrains with a steady rhythm), Springsteen describes one

day in his father’s life, a day full of “hard and drudgerous labor governed by the factory whistle

and locked in by iron gates. It is a bitterly iron-gated work whose irony is only ever worked

out with pain and hurt”43. Short as it may be, the song succeeds in overwhelming its listener

with a heavy feeling of repetitive weariness, intensified by the monotonous refrain that is

repeated every time. The first four-line stanza deals with the daily morning routine:

“Early in the morning, factory whistle blows Man rises from bed and puts on his clothes Man takes his lunch, walks out in the morning light The working, the working, just the working life”

The second quatrain than describes the working day itself, the eight hours the father

and his co-workers undergo the droning heartbeat of the factory, which terrifies its laborers,

but at the same time seems to give them structure and some kind of ‘life’:

“Through the mansions of fear, through the mansions of pain I see my daddy walking through them factory gates in the rain Factory takes his hearing, factory gives him life The working, the working, just the working life”

That life, however, ambiguously disappears when the men walk out of those very same

gates at the end of the working day. The breath that was given to them as long as they were

inside the gates, this meaning to their lives, is taken away from them just as quickly on their

way to home:

“End of the day, factory whistle cries, 42 Garman (1996), 74. 43 Palmer (1997), 4.

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Men walk through these gates with death in their eyes And you just better believe, boy, somebody’s getting hurt tonight It’s the working, the working, just the working life”

The earlier lines in “Adam Raised a Cain” about “daddy walk[ing] these empty rooms

looking for something to blame” can then be seen as the logical outcome of the events

described in “Factory”. The fact that Springsteen mentions his father so often – on Darkness as

well as on its successor The River – is quite significant. It proves that his focus has shifted from

the ones that are trying to escape towards the ones that are trying to live with the fact that it

cannot be achieved.

A different way to symbolize this is by means of another familiar motif, namely that of

the streets and cars that were so prominent on Born to Run as the primary way to escape. In

both “Something in the Night” and “Racing in the Street”, however, cars now evoke quite

another sentiment. The first proclaims a bitter, pessimistic message, saying that “you’re born

with nothing and better off that way / Because as soon as you’ve got something they send

someone to try and take it away”. The song’s multiple narrators testify to their attempted

escape – almost as if they are the characters from Born to Run looking back at their failed

endeavor:

“When we found the things we loved They were crushed and dying in the dirt We tried to pick up the pieces And get away without getting hurt But they caught us at the state line They burned our cars in one last fight And left us running burned and blind Chasing something in the night”

Their cars, the ultimate means to run away, have been burned, symbolizing the

impossibility of escape. For those who still have their wheels, they can do little but ramble

around. Here, the act of driving is not an attempt at a physical escape, but rather at a

psychological one – they simply drive to forget. “Racing in the Street” tells the nostalgic story

of working men who clamp onto their cars because it is the only thing in their lives that gives

them a sense of mental freedom, even though it does not offer any real escape from reality. It

seems to be the only thing that keeps them from surrendering: “Some guys they just give up

living / And start dying little by little, piece by piece / Some guys come home from work and

wash up / And go racing in the street”. The song’s protagonist dredges up memories about the

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times when his car gave him pride, confidence and seductiveness, as he lured his girlfriend

away from a man he defeated at racing. Now, however, her vitality has deserted her.

“Now there’s wrinkles around my baby’s eyes And she cries herself to sleep at night When I come home the house is dark She sighs ‘baby did you make it all right?’ She sits on the porch of her daddy’s house But all her pretty dreams are torn She stares off alone into the night With the eyes of one who hates for just being born”

The porch is reminiscent of the scenes in “Thunder Road”, where the protagonist

wanted to tempt Mary away from her daddy’s porch. It seems all the more likely that, in the

end, she never answered his call, and that Darkness is indeed about the people who failed to get

out. The song’s accompanying tone also offers a strong suggestion. Whereas the tender piano

intros of Born to Run would often quickly explode into rock ‘n roll, songs like “Racing in the

Street” on Darkness and many songs on its successor, the 1980 double-album The River, are

never able to rise above the melancholic tone of Roy Bittan’s piano. These songs seem to deal

with the life of those who have accepted their faith, or are at least trying to. Describing the

neighboring town of Jackson, New Jersey, as a prison from which there is no escape, the song

“Jackson Cage” demonstrates how acceptance is the only option, since any form of fight is

useless: “You can try with all your might / But you’re reminded every night / That you’ve been

judged and handed life / Down in the Jackson Cage”.

As the people give in to the unassailable forces that keep them down, they become the

easiest prey for nostalgia. Not surprisingly, many songs on The River sound just about as

nostalgic as it can possibly get. “Independence Day”, for instance, tells the story of a tense

farewell between a father and his son, and how the latter cannot bring himself to part with the

father, no matter how much he wants to. The song has little to do with the 4th of July holiday,

but rather indicates the day when the son seeks his own independence – from his father,

house, and hometown. At the heart of the song is the sad realization that the son can only

catch a glimpse of happiness by leaving behind his father and everything he represents. “They

ain’t gonna do to me”, says the son, “what I watched them do to you”. The emotional beauty

of the song is largely made up by the reversal of roles: the son treats his father almost like his

child, whom he is trying to explain why he has to leave. The opening line serves as one of the

clearest examples: “Well Papa, go to bed now, it’s getting late”. Given that the song was

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originally written to appear on Darkness on the Edge of Town44, it is no surprise that in some

underlying layer, the need for change is still alive, although its fierceness has disappeared.

There is no more “pulling out of here to win”45, and it all seems to mellow to a quiet, resigned

declaration of independence. The fear of being absorbed by the “town full of losers”46 is not

dictated anymore by the conviction that he is different from them, but rather by the

understanding that he is becoming their spitting image. In the second verse, he admits their

similarity: “There was just no way this house could hold the two of us / I guess that we were

just too much of the same kind”. For this reason exactly, he finds it so hard to leave his father.

Instead of bidding him farewell himself, he urges his father to utter the words. For over six

times, the request is repeated, and the last time it is almost screamed out in desperation:

“Won’t you just say goodbye, it’s Independence Day…” However, the song remains a

monologue and, as with so many Springsteen songs, we will never know the outcome.

Also brimming with nostalgia is the album’s title track. During live performances in

the 80s, “The River” was often preceded by a long introductory tale about Springsteen’s own

youth, the time when all of his friends were drafted to fight in Vietnam, and the troubled

relationship he had with his father. The story was not directly linked to the events in the song,

but it set the right nostalgic atmosphere. “The River” is a semi-autobiographical story – it was

inspired by Springsteen’s own sister – about a young couple whose promising relationship is

never given an honest chance, due to the girl’s unexpected pregnancy. Just like Springsteen’s

sister and his brother-in-law, the couple were forced to get married as teenagers, and never

really recovered from this rash decision. In the first verse, the narrator explains how he and

‘Mary’, as he calls her, would ride out of the valley towards the river. The valley symbolizes the

working-class society, “where mister when you’re young / They bring you up to do just like

your daddy done”. Down by the river, however, “where the fields were green”, the two could

forget their troubled life for a while. The stream is a strong symbol of life and, in its biblical

sense, of rebirth and redemption. After the first chorus, the troubles set in, as Mary writes her

boyfriend that she is pregnant (“and that was all she wrote”, as if all the rest did not matter

anymore). The narrator recalls how for his nineteenth birthday, all he got was a union card

and a wedding coat. All of a sudden, his innocent youth was over. The wedding is everything

but the celebration it should have been, as there were “no wedding day smiles, no walk down 44 It remains unsure how much of the original lyrics survived the two years up until the song’s release on The River, but in the documentary film “The Promise: The Darkness on the Edge of Town Story” (2010), Springsteen has hinted that most of the words have remained intact, and that only the musical arrangement had changed. 45 From “Thunder Road” (Born to Run, 1975). See CHAPTER 3. 46 Ibid.

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the aisle / No flowers, no wedding dress” – it was strictly an unwished-for formality. The same

night, the couple rides down to the river again and they dive in the water, as if it would make

them forget or as if it would wash away the ‘sin’ they committed47.

The song then skips a few years, as it tells how “on account of the economy”, the

husband loses his job working construction. Now, “all the things that seemed so important”

when they were young, “they vanished right into the air”. Even though the narrator acts like

he does not remember, those memories of bygone days “come back to haunt [him]”. He poses

himself the question that greatly summarizes the main ideas in Darkness and The River: “Is a

dream a lie if it don’t come true / Or is it something worse?” In the end, the couple returns to

the river, against their better judgment (“though I know the river is dry”), driven by an almost

neurotic need to find redemption. Some critics claim that the last ride to the river will be their

final one, since the couple commits suicide – though I believe this reading is quite far-fetched,

as it is nowhere suggested in the lyrics48.

The final songs on the album already move towards Nebraska, as they are dominated

by a grim atmosphere and a sense of hopelessness that has surpassed the stage of sad nostalgia.

Rather than recollecting memories of the past, the narrators are more concerned now with

their current blind-alley situation. In “Point Blank” the narrator describes his life as “You wake

up and you’re dying / You don’t even know what from”. The man driving in his “Stolen Car”

confides to us that he “travels in fear that in this darkness [he] will disappear”. These two

songs are followed by “The Price You Pay”, which literally looks back on some of the

characters in the earlier stories. “Do you remember the story of the Promised Land?” the

narrator asks us, “How he crossed the deserts sands / And could not enter the chosen land /

On the banks of the river he stayed / To face the price you pay”. To emphasize this meta-

communication musically, the song also features a piano intro very similar to the one that

sparks off “The Promised Land”. Here, we get the straightforward message, in unmistakable

terms, that any attempt to escape has failed. This assumption is endorsed by the fact that one

of the outstanding symbols of this escape – the night – becomes something to be afraid of:

“Caught in a dream when everything goes wrong / Where the dark of night holds back the

light of day”.

47 Given that Springsteen grew up in a strict catholic society, his sister’s pre-marriage pregnancy would undoubtedly have been frowned upon, if not condemned by the family as a severe ‘sin of the flesh’. 48 Pamela Moss (1992: 82) subscribes to this interpretation, as does Rolling Stone critic Jonathan Valin.

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The last song on the album, “Wreck on the Highway”, then opens the gates to the raw

and haunting reality of Nebraska. It relates how a man, who is driving on the freeway on a

rainy night, comes upon a car wreck. He describes how “there was blood and glass all over /

And there was nobody there but me / As the rain tumbled down hard and cold / I seen a

young man lying by the side of the road”. As he witnesses the ambulance driving the man

away, the narrator’s thoughts wander off to “a girlfriend or a young wife / And a state trooper

knocking in the middle of the night / To say your baby died in a wreck on the highway”.

Years later, he would wake up in the dark sometimes, thinking about that night. As in “The

Price You Pay”, the night has become parallel to fear and death.

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CHAPTER 5 | The Silent Cries of Nebraska

“I guess there is just a meanness in this world” (“NEBRASKA”)

On previous albums, Springsteen produced sketches of people who successively cherished and

lost their dreams. Eventually, they gave up the fight and had to learn how to live with what

they still had: an unchallenging job, a minimum wage and what family, friends and lovers they

had left. In Nebraska, Springsteen takes this experience even further: what happens when those

basic things that structure one’s life, all of a sudden disappear? In his liner notes on the album,

Springsteen told that “[i]f there’s a theme that runs through the record, it’s the thin line

between stability and that moment when time stops and everything goes black, when the

things that connect you to your world fail you. I wanted the music to feel like a waking dream

and the record to move like poetry. I wanted the blood on it to feel destined and fateful”49. In

another interview, with Mark Hagen, he added that “[t]here are things that make sense of life

for people: their friends, the work they do, their community, their relationship with their

family and partner. What if you lose those things… then what are you left with?”50 In one

word: Nebraska.

The stories on the album are linked with the “dangerous consequences of living a life

in isolation”51 and what Springsteen often perceived to be “the loss of community in the

United States”52. “Nebraska was about that American isolation”, he told his biographer, “what

happens to people when they are alienated from their friends and their community and their

government and their job. Because those are the things that keep you sane, that give meaning

to your life in some fashion, no matter how horrible that life might be. And if they slip away,

and you start to exist in some void where the basic constraints of society are a joke, then life

itself becomes a joke, and anything can happen”53. Springsteen’s method of recording for

Nebraska contributes to the ghastly atmosphere: the whole album stems from a set of

recordings he taped on a little cassette player in his rented house in Colts Neck, New Jersey.

49 Songs (1998), 35. 50 Hagen (1999). 51 Marsh (1987), 118. 52 Ibid, 119. 53 Ibid, 121.

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The technique, nowadays known as lo-fi recording54, leads to the typical raw and harrowing

sound that suits these poignant tales.

The inspiration for Nebraska came from different angles. During the previous tour of

The River, Springsteen buried himself in the short stories of Flannery O’Connor, as he was

“fascinated by the Southern writer’s dark spirituality and grotesque characters”55. He also

started listening intently to the “eerie ballads and laments”56 that dominated Harry Smith’s

Anthology of American Folk Music. One of the main sources of inspiration in this tradition was

Woody Guthrie, whose tradition of the ‘hurt song’ really spoke to Springsteen’s mind. The

genre is defined by Bryan Garman as “written in working-class language and expressing the

collective pain, suffering and injustice working people have historically suffered”57, while at the

same time “articulating their collective hopes and dreams of a less oppressive future”58. As the

traveled through 1930s America, Guthrie had used genres like the rural blues and traditional

ballad to connect his own pain and suffering with those that had become the casualties of the

Great Depression, and to encourage them to join him in his pursuit of social justice.

Employing the language and representational strategies of the hurt song, Springsteen “reclaims

popular music as a cultural space in which class relations are both taken seriously and

historicized”59. He places his work in the context of a recognizable cultural and political

tradition, which affords his characters dignity, even in their deepest suffering. Darkness

included some of his earlier attempts at protest song writing, but it is through Nebraska and –

in many ways its true successor – The Ghost of Tom Joad, that Springsteen connects this

tradition to the social and economic conditions that shaped it, “reconstructing a history which

often contrasts sharply with conventional histories written about the United States”60.

The direct influence for many of the songs on Nebraska came in the figure of Charles

Starkweather, an American teenaged spree killer who murdered numerous people in various

locations across Nebraska and Wyoming. The events, which took place in 1958, during a two-

month road trip with his 14-year-old girlfriend, were also the basis for the 1973 movie

dramatization Badlands, directed by Terrence Malick and starring Martin Sheen as the

54 As opposed to the usual standard of hi-fi, the specific sound of lo-fi music is usually achieved by either degrading the quality of the recorded audio afterwards, or by using certain equipment, for example inexpensive cassette tape recorders or elementary instruments. 55 Sawyers (2004), 11. 56 Ibid. 57 Garman (1996), 70. 58 Ibid. 59 Ibid, 71. 60 Ibid.

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notorious murderer61. Since childhood, Starkweather had developed “a severe inferiority

complex” and he had become “very self-loathing, believing that he was unable to do anything

correctly and that his own inherent failures would cause him to live in misery”62. A high school

dropout, he was employed as a garbage collector for minimum wage. Starkweather began

progressing towards very nihilistic views on life, and finally conceived his own personal

philosophy, in which he considered himself a “supreme bringer of justice”63. One night, a

heated discussion at a Lincoln service station led him to steal a shotgun and kill one of the

station’s attendants. It was the horrible starting point of a two-month terror scare across the

Great Plains, where eleven people were killed, including the mother, stepfather and 2-year old

sister of Starkweather’s girlfriend Caril Ann Fugate – who nonetheless decided to accompany

him on his deadly raid. Eventually, the two were arrested after a fierce pursuit in Douglas,

Wyoming. Starkweather was sentenced to death and executed on the electric chair, while

Fugate was given a lifelong prison sentence64. At only 14 years old, she became the youngest

female in United States history to have been tried for first-degree murder.

The story became the subject of the opening song and title track “Nebraska”, while its

spirit haunts almost the entire album. The first words of the 13-line short song describe how

Starkweather and Fugate meet each other, as she is “standin’ on her front lawn just twirlin’ her

baton”, right before they “went for a ride and ten innocent people died / From the town of

Lincoln, Nebraska … / Through the badlands of Wyoming”. While the characters on

Springsteen’s first five albums were innocent victims of society, those on Nebraska are far from

guiltless. However, just like Starkweather, they do not consider themselves culpable of their

crimes. “I can’t say that I’m sorry for the things that we done”, the protagonist says, “[a]t least

for a little while, sir, me and her was had us some fun”, preposterously minimizing the impact

of his deeds. The absurdity becomes total when he asks for his final favor: “Sheriff, when the

man pulls that switch, sir, and snaps my poor head back / You make sure my pretty baby is

sittin’ right there on my lap”. Bizarrely enough, this is also based on reality, as this it was

Starkweather’s final wish that the couple would be executed in the same chair. (As Ann Fugate

was underage, however, she could not be sentenced to death.) In the last lines, it is described

how the jury asks him for the motive behind his crimes, upon which he replies: “Well sir, I

guess there’s just a meanness in this world”, putting the blame on society and the true nature

of humankind, rather than on himself.

61 Springsteen had seen Badlands in 1976, which inspired him to write the eponymous song on Darkness. 62 Ibid, 36. 63 Ibid, 132. 64 In 1976, however, she was paroled in 1976 after serving 17 years as a “model prisoner” (Newton 1998, 318).

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“State Trooper”, the sixth song on Nebraska, briefly returns to the moment when a

criminal gets caught on the highway – and it seems to be an attempt to discover what was

going on in Starkweather’s mind the moments before his arrest. In a neurotic, anxious style,

we get a stream of consciousness description of a man behind the wheel, waiting for the state

trooper to stop him: “License, registration, I ain’t got none / But I got a clear conscience ‘bout

the things that I’ve done”. He dreads a confrontation, since he knows he will probably end up

killing the officer, something he would rather avoid: “Maybe you got a kid, maybe you got a

pretty wife / The only thing that I got’s been bothering me my whole life”. The man’s anxiety

is stressed by the constant hasty repetition of the phrase “Please don’t stop me”, and it is

mirrored in the two-chord pattern of the song. As discussed in CHAPTER 2, the symbolic value

of cars and highways has shifted drastically since Born to Run. Whereas on the 1975 album,

the streets were the way of possibility, they became a broken promise on Darkness and a place

of crime, death and doom on Nebraska.

The album’s fourth song is quite similar to these ‘criminal songs’. “Johnny 99” also

deals with morality and murder, and just like “Nebraska” it was based on real events. In the

shadow of Ronald Reagan’s decidedly anti-labor policies, the unemployment rate had reached

a high of 11% in 1982, and as industrial cities and towns rapidly decayed, homelessness

became a visible national problem65. To address these large economic issues as tangibly as

possible, Springsteen focuses on the individual stories of its victims – who become, in turn,

malefactors themselves. “Johnny 99” focuses on the life of a young worker who loses his job at

the Ford Motor Company plant in Mahwah, New Jersey. In June 1980, the facility was closed

and two years after the shutdown, “more than half of the 3,359 workers who had lost their

jobs remained unemployed”66. Further indicating the gravity of the situation, Bryan Garman

quotes Douglas Fraser, president of the United Auto Workers Union, “who saw nearly

250,000 workers lose their jobs in the early 80s” and explains that “the kind of permanent

layoff at Mahwah was much more shattering than anything that happened in the Depression.

At least in the 1930s, workers had hopes of being called back to work”67.

Springsteen tells the story of Ralph, who lost his job when they “closed down the auto

plant in Mahwah late that month”. He “went out lookin’ for a job but couldn’t find none”.

One night, he goes out drinking and upon his return, he “got a gun and shot a night clerk”.

From this moment on, Ralph becomes ‘Johnny 99’, a depersonalized icon for all those outlaws

65 Aronowitz (1992), cited in Garman (1996), 85. 66 Garman (1996), 84. 67 Ibid.

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who lost their way after they lost their jobs. He is arrested and tried at the city court, where he

stands face to face with the power of the state. A fight breaks out, in which Ralph/Johnny is

literally ‘alienated’ from the people around him – “they had to drag Johnny’s girl away”, while

his mother “stood up and shouted no to take [her] boy away”. The judge, who is nicknamed

“Mean John Brown”, sentences him for a symbolic ninety-nine years, saying: “the evidence is

clear, let the sentence fit the crime / Prison for 98 and a year, we’ll call it even, Johnny 99”.

When the judge asks him for a final statement, he partly blames society for his deeds: “Now

judge, I had debts no honest man could pay / The bank was holdin’ my mortgage and takin’

my house away / Now I ain’t sayin’ that makes me an innocent man / But it was more ‘n all

this that put that gun in my hand” Instead of his prison sentence, he prefers the death penalty,

as it would release him out of his misery (“Well your honor, I do believe I’d be better off dead

/ … let ‘m shave off my hair and put me on that execution line”).

Throughout the Nebraska album, Springsteen represents the lack of power given to the

working class and its individuals by having his protagonists formally address both the audience

and other characters in the songs with the polite titles of “mister” and “sir”. In turn, the

oppressors underscore this unequal relationship, for instance when the judge in “Johnny 99”

refers to the accused as “son”. Sociologist Alan Rauch asserts that “through such language,

Springsteen’s characters defer to their social superiors, and while titles may indeed connote

genuine feelings of respect, they can also mask feelings of resentment”68. While the protagonist

of “The Promised Land” persevered that he would rise to their height (“Mister, I ain’t a boy,

no I’m a man”), the characters on Nebraska reconcile themselves to the facts.

While this murder song considers the rather drastic effects of class oppression,

“Mansion on the Hill” represents what Garman calls “the daily humiliations of working-class

life”. A rewriting of the 1947 song by Alabama songwriter Hank Williams, it portrays the

unattainable hopes and dreams of the poor, in sharp contrast with the wealthy richer class.

Springsteen relies on geography to sketch this difference: the working-class people live, quite

literally, at the foot of the mountain, while the upper class society enjoys a rich life inside their

mansion on the hill. To indicate the inaccessibility of wealth for the workers, the mansion is

not only geographically remote (the house is described as “rising above the factories and fields”

of Linden Town), but also fenced-off by impenetrable “gates of hardened steel”. Ironically, the

steel would probably have been produced by the laborers in Linden Town’s steel factory.

Garman goes further in his interpretation that “as the fruit of their labor are transformed into

68 Rauch (1988, 35), quoted in Garman (1996), 87.

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the ornaments of wealth which segregate them from comfort and success, Springsteen suggests

that labor does not deliver workers to the American dream, but rather isolates them only

further from it”69. In the song’s third verse, it is described how a father takes his son “through

the streets of town so silent and still” to a parking spot from which they can watch the

mansion. The fourth verse gives a similar depiction of the son and his sister, “hiding out in the

tall corn fields [to] sit and listen to the mansion on the hill”. Although they are obviously

drawn towards the mansion, they remain strictly on their own territory, realizing the “virtual

impossibility of moving from the dark, still and silent streets of Linden Town to the light,

laughter and enjoyment of the mansion”70. With their hiding out in the fields or sneaking

through the streets, they are expressing a sense of shame associated with their social status. The

Born to Run desire to break out of these social boundaries has now completely settled into their

sorrowful acceptance.

The gloominess of everyday working-class life is probably best portrayed in “Used

Cars”, an autobiographical song told from the perspective of a boy whose father goes out to

buy a car. Normally, a new car would be a showpiece to display wealth and luxury, but not in

this case. The narrator recounts how, after the family had taken the car for a test drive, the

salesman “stares at my old man’s hands”, recognizing that the father is a factory worker – and

therefore an unreliable client to offer a payment deal. He tells the family “all about the break

he’d give us if he could, but he just can’t”. The family ends up buying a second-hand car and

the son expresses the shame he felt when “the neighbors came from near and far / As we pulled

up in our brand new used car” – even the rhythm in the lyrics seems to be disturbed by the

insertion of “used”. The son then summarizes life in their working-class town: “My dad, he

sweats the same job from mornin’ to morn / Me, I walk home on the same dirty streets where

I was born”. The chances of escaping from this life are virtually nonexistent, as they are

compared to drawing a winning number in a lottery: “Now, mister, the day the lottery I win /

I ain’t even gonna ride no used car again / Now, mister, the day my numbers come in / I ain’t

ever gonna ride no used again”.

Around the release of Nebraska, Springsteen told his biographer that the “tricky thing

about getting older is not giving in to cynicism”71. The album’s last song “Reason to Believe”,

however, is as skeptical as it gets. In the four verses, each telling a different but similar

anecdote, Springsteen appears to be offering a “cynical look at a species that despite all

69 Garman (1996), 89. 70 Ibid, 90. 71 Marsh (1987), 132.

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evidence to the contrary, absurdly insists on believing in something”72. The first verse tells how

a man accidentally runs over a dog on the highway. The narrator witnesses the man “lookin’

down kinda puzzled, pokin’ that dog with a stick” in the middle of the road, “like if he stood

there long enough, that dog’d get up and run”. He then confesses that it “struck [him] kinda

funny” how “at the end of every hard earned day, people find some reason to believe”. The

second anecdote relates how Mary Lou, left by her husband a long time ago, still “waits down

at the end of that dirt road for young Johnny to come back”. The third verse deals with the

irony of life and death, as the narrator describes simultaneously the baptism of a newborn

child and the death of an old man, and the people who “pray Lord won’t you tell us, tell us

what does it mean”. The final story mirrors the second, as a groom waits for his bride at the

altar, even when all the guests for their romantic riverside wedding, including the preacher, are

gone. He “stands alone and watches the river rush on so effortlessly / Wonderin’ where can his

baby be still / At the end of every hard earned day, people find some reason to believe.”

72 Branscomb (1993), 38.

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CHAPTER 6 | Bombastic Sadness in Born in the USA

“There is a war outside still raging But it ain’t ours anymore to win”

(“NO SURRENDER”)

Although Nebraska was one Springsteen’s most critically acclaimed albums, it did not reach a

wide audience, and being a self-proclaimed protest singer, few things were harder to deal with

than not getting your message across. This led him to the conclusion that he needed to

reinvent himself – not just his music and lyrics, but his entire presence on stage (dressing as a

warrior-like figure, a champion of working class rights). Although he first cast some doubts

about ‘going big’, he was ultimately persuaded by the fact that many of his biggest heroes

(from Sinatra to Elvis to Dylan) had – at a certain point in their respective careers – performed

for a crowd of millions. “Reaching a mass community of like-minded souls thus was,” as

Springsteen thought, “a worthwhile and worthy goal”73. More than with Born to Run, which

was a largely unexpected commercial success, he wanted this time to consciously bring a clear

message across to the American people.

Released in the early summer of 1984, Born in the USA is actually the product of two

historical periods combined. Past events from the 60s are connected to the 80s present,

together forming the backdrop for a series of bombastic protest songs that bleed from a deep

sadness, impotence and melancholia. The album serves as one of the main blue-collar

antidotes for Ronald Reagan’s presidential actions74. While Reagan’s two terms resulted in a

welcome sensation of growing optimism, under the surface his Reaganomics exacted a high

price in return. While the American dream came within reach for the rich, the poorer working

class had to bury its aspirations completely. As Springsteen was writing the songs for his

upcoming album, national unemployment rate rose to a height of 10,8%75 and strict anti-

labor policies were putting thousands of factory workers out of business.

73 Sawyers (2004), 12. 74 Since Reagan could easily sweep away all kinds of political opposition, the most notable forms of protest against his presidency stemmed from the artistic world – in the form of music, art and literature (Cullen 1992, 14). 75 Statistics found in “Employment status of the civilian non-institutional population 16 years and over, 1940 to date.” United States Bureau of Labor Statistics. Retrieved July 10, 2012.

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Despite their great differences in terms of background, politics and personality,

Jefferson Morley highlighted the notable similarities between Springsteen and Reagan. In his

1987 article in the New Republic, he observed that “both have become cultural icons by giving

the American people a reflection, a vision of themselves. Both deftly used the mass media to

define what is American, to present a seemingly natural but carefully molded persona with

which their audience can identify: Reagan as a patriarch of ‘traditional’ middle-class values;

Springsteen as an exuberant yet sensitive son of the working class”76. An interesting difference

between the two, however, is found in the way each recalls events from the past in order to

define the present and future. In his fierce optimism, Reagan is quite blind for the lessons

from the past and the consequences of his present actions for the future. For instance, he

largely neglected the traumatic impact of America’s earlier wars in Europe, Korea and Vietnam

on both the soldiers abroad and their families at the home front77. Another example of his

shortsighted decision-making was the way in which he radically changed the American

industrial landscape, aiming solely on short-term profits for the wealthy classes of society.

Encouraging people to contracting loans, borrowing money the ultimately could not pay back.

The number of personal bankruptcies augmented by 600%, the sale of anti-depressants

astonishingly increased threefold78. Reagan allowed the welfare state to enlarge and the military

budget to explode causing monstrous budget deficits. At a certain point, he made a notorious

statement, saying that “the federal deficit is so big, it can take of itself”79. Paying little attention

to the lessons learned in the Great Depression of the 30s, Reagan’s fierce optimism led him to

belief that the past was “literally priceless – valuable beyond measure, yet costing nothing

today”80.

Springsteen, on the other hand, is almost obsessed with confronting painful memories

from the past. For both men, however, the 1960s are a critical point of reference. As Reagan

first won office in California in 1966, based on the strength of his opposition to the emerging

student movement, Springsteen’s music and childhood memories are deeply embedded in this

period of rebellion and progressivism. Meanwhile, his native New Jersey was afflicted by the

loss of its young men, who were drafted to fight in Vietnam – a deeply personal issue which is

never completely absent from Springsteen’s work.

76 Morley (1987), quoted in Sawyers (2004), 146. 77 Bartles (1991), 464. 78 Statistics originate from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (published online at www.bls.gov/bls). 79 Reagan made this remark at the annual dinner party at the Gridiron Club, on March 24, 1984. 80 Morley (1987), quoted in Sawyers (2004), 147.

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As said in the introduction to this paper, most of Springsteen’s lyrical work can be

analyzed strictly through the words themselves, since the music largely matches the expected

atmosphere evoked by the lyrics. For “Born in the USA”, however, this is not the case. Music

and words compose a complex whole, which seems contradictory at first, but becomes

coherent once you understand the underlying idea. The loudness of the accompanying tune is

sharply contrasted with the actual theme of the song, being existential and political silence.

The song starts with twenty seconds of an anthemic instrumental melody, which radiates

power and conviction. Though Springsteen is screaming his voice hoarse, he barely manages to

take control over this wall of sound. Jefferson Cowie makes a telling comparison to “a man

caught in a musical cage, overpowered by the anthem of his own country”81. In the same

article, Cowie summarizes the controversy that arose upon the song’s release:

“The song’s narrative, buried beneath the pounding music and the patriotic hollers of the chorus, explores a working-class man burning in the despair of deindustrialized, post-Vietnam America. Like the neopatriotism of the Reagan era itself, the power of the national chorus conceals the pain below it.”82

“The narrative-chorus contrast of the song has been much fought over by rock critics, activists, and scholars. Was the song part of a patriotic revival or a tale of working-class betrayal? A symptom of Reagan’s America or antidote to it? Protest song or national anthem? Both sides assumed that the words and the music could not go together, and in picking one over the other, each disregarded the song’s unity for its individual parts.”83

Before judging the song’s different interpretations, one should of course first

thoroughly examine the work itself. Originally written for the Nebraska album, “Born in the

USA” tells the story of a Vietnam veteran who returns home, suffering from injuries for which

there is no cure. Mentally exhausted, he musters up his courage to find a job, only to discover

that there is nothing left for him anymore. He reminisces about his brother, who died fighting

alongside him at Khe Sahn. Every four lines, all this misery gets drowned out by a desperate

exclamation. The narrator was indeed born in the United States, but where are all these

promises that are the birthright of every American, born in this ‘great nation’? As a veteran,

who risked his life and lost a brother in this country’s dubious war, he wonders if he does not

have the right to have these promises fulfilled.

81 Cowie (2006), 359. 82 Ibid. 83 Ibid.

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The first verse tells how, born in a working-class family, he was not destined for

greatness. The main concern would be to “cover up” from what Bryan Garman calls “the

wounds of class”84. As he was “born down in a dead man’s town”, he never had much of a

chance to live the life he wanted, and the narrator tells that, living in this world, you quickly

“end up like a dog that’s been beat too much / ‘Till you spend half your life just covering up”.

His condition is immediately contrasted with the first chorus, suggesting that – contrary to the

reigning belief and the promise of the American dream – being born on American soil does

not necessarily imply a happy life. The fact that a song called “Born in the USA” starts with

the line “Born down in a dead man’s town” (suggesting their equality) sets the critical and

highly cynical tone for the rest of the story.

Although for the entire narrative, the narrator is an American located in the United

States, it is this narrator’s experience in Vietnam that deeply dominates the story. “Born in the

USA”, argues Cowie, “is further proof of how deeply the jungles of Vietnam have made their

way into the ideological landscape of the US”85. The second verse relates how the protagonist

ended up in the Asian forests in the first place. After he “got in a little hometown jam”, the

authorities offered him the choice that was commonly given to young male offenders in the

1960s: the choice between prison and enlistment. The American blue-collar youth became the

great marketplace for new recruits during the Vietnam era, since many sons of richer

households escaped the draft through the “loopholes” that were created after World War II. As

historian Christian Appy explains, “Vietnam, more than any other American war in the 20th

century, was a working-class war. The college draft-exemption was the most infamous aspect

of the 1960s class divide. In a society in which education is one of the best proxies for class,

those in college generally did not serve”86. The song’s working-class narrator, financially

unable to receive higher education, then forms an easy target. The army thus “puts a rifle in

[his] hand” and “sent [him] off to a foreign land / To go and kill the yellow man”. The fact

that he calls it “a foreign land” (while a certain pronunciation of Viet-nam would have fitted

even better in the rhyme scheme), indicates the obscurity and the confusion of the working-

class youth, who were forced to fight in a war “they did not support, nor understand”87.

Significantly, the wartime itself is not described. After an extended version of the

chorus (with five exclamations instead of four), the protagonist returns to his home soil in the

84 Garman (1996), 91. 85 Cowie (2006), 362. 86 Appy (1993), 30. 87 Cowie (2006), 365.

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third verse. The oil refinery where used to work, will not take him back, and the Department

of Veteran Affairs cannot help him any further on his quest for a job. Another striking

observation is that we do not hear the question, only the answers: “Come back home to the

refinery / Hiring man says ‘Son, if it was up to me’ / Went down to see my VA man / He said

‘Son, don’t you understand’”. Both the hiring and VA man represent forms of institutional

protection, the latter provided on behalf of the state to support former soldiers upon their

return to native soil. Neither, though, offers help, and we are left to guess at the explanation

why. “If it was up to me” and “don’t you understand” are but vague allusions to the

underlying cause. Is it the failing economy that prevents him from picking up a job again, or

are the narrator’s physical or mental injuries an impassable obstacle? As Cowie interprets, the

narrator’s “supposed allies become uncertain, and the hometown takes on the same darkness as

the guerilla jungle it was previously defined against”88.

This is taken even further in the following verses, were – in contrast to the vaguely

described hometown – the Vietnam environment is suddenly given specific details and

realities. The uncertainty of “foreign land” becomes a specific designation of place: “I had a

brother at Khe Sahn / fighting off the Viet Cong”. Instead of the previous four-line verses, this

one is stripped to just three, as the third line (“They’re still there, he’s all gone”) is followed by

four beats of instrumental bombast, ironically symbolizing a powerless silence. The

penultimate verse obeys this evolution, as it counts only two lines, in which the assumed

adversary (the “yellow men” that he was supposed to kill in the second verse) unexpectedly

becomes more than an ally, as the narrator tells his brother “had a woman in Saigon / I got a

picture of him in her arms now”. All of a sudden, the Vietnamese and the American working

class are united as co-victims of the mysterious “they” (the government that brought them

together to die while fighting each other). While the foreign land becomes a final home and

resting-place for his brother, the so-called ‘hometown’ remains one big uncertainty. The last

verse describes how he roams its streets, looking for meaning: “Down in the shadows of the

penitentiary / Out by the gas fires of the refinery / I’m ten years burning down the road /

Nowhere to run, ain’t got nowhere to go”. Indeed, it has been ten long years since Born to

Run, but the dreams of escape described in 1975, are long lost and faded. While back then the

highway was jammed with heroes who were “out on the run tonight” with “no place left to

hide”, the only option in “Born in the USA” becomes hiding and slowly pining away from

grief.

88 Cowie (2006), 366.

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After having listened intently to the lyrics, it is almost incomprehensible how, upon its

release, many Americans misinterpreted the song as a glorious national anthem of pride and

patriotism. In September 1984, as “Born in the USA” became a top-ten hit on the American

radio charts, conservative columnist George Will claimed Springsteen as a “repository of

Republican values” in his opinion column entitled “A Yankee Doodle Springsteen”. Will had

been to an E Street Band show the other night, and he asserted that “Springsteen is no whiner,

as the recitation of closed factories and other problems always seems punctuated by a grand,

cheerful affirmation: ‘Born in the U.S.A.!’”89. Of course, Will could not have been more

wrong about the cheerfulness in Springsteen’s music. It did not prevent him from getting the

notion pushed up to the office of Reagan’s campaign advisor Michael Deaver. The

Republicans were in the midst of the presidential re-election promo tour, and New Jersey was

their next stop on the way. Will wrote to Deaver that “if all Americans – in labor and

management, who make steel or cars or shoes or textiles – made their products with as much

energy and confidence as Springsteen and his merry band make music, there would be no need

for Congress to be thinking about protectionism”90. Less than a week later, Reagan’s made a

campaign stop in Springsteen’s home state, claiming him as a Republican ally, saying the

“future of our youth lies in the hope and dreams in the songs of New Jersey’s own Bruce

Springsteen. And making those dreams come true is what this job of mine is all about”91.

Disgusted by the unauthorized abuse of his name and fame, Springsteen tried to

disassociate himself from the president’s words. A few nights later, at a performance in

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, he decided to respond to the president’s statement. “The president

was mentioning my name the other day,” he said with a bemused laugh, “and I kinda got to

wondering what his favorite album might have been. I don’t think it was this one”92. After

which he launched into a passionate acoustic version of “Johnny 99” from Nebraska – a song

he wrote, along with the other tunes on Nebraska, “in response to the malignant public and

political atmosphere that had been fostered by Reagan’s social policies”93. As another anti-

movement, Springsteen started performing versions of Woody Guthrie’s “This Land Is Your

Land”, originally written in 1940 as a response to Irving Berlin’s “God Bless America” (which

he considered “unrealistic and complacent”94). Before playing the song on stage in

Philadelphia, Springsteen commented upon its topicality: “if you talk to the steelworkers out 89 George Will wrote this in his column of September 13, 1984 in the Washington Post. 90 Quoted in Garman (1996), 92. 91 Quoted in Gilmore (1998), 274. 92 Ibid. 275. 93 Ibid. 94 Klein (1992), 44.

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there who have lost their jobs, I don’t know if they’d believe this song is what we’re about

anymore. And maybe we’re not. As we sit here, this song’s promise is eroding every day”95.

As with The River, the sadness and powerlessness of the characters translates into a lot

of nostalgic narratives. Though largely missing on Nebraska, nostalgia is – next to anger – the

main mood of Born in the USA. Most of the other songs on the album deal with stories of

personal or collective decay. The narrator of “No Surrender”, for instance, recalls an oath he

had sworn with his friends when they were young. They had promised never to yield to

anything or anyone, no matter how hard the circumstances would be. He melancholically

reminisces about their childhood: “We busted out of class / Had to get away from those fools /

We learned more from a three-minute record / Than we ever learned in school”. Years later,

however, the narrator’s friends seem to have given up. He sees how “young faces grow sad and

cold / And hearts of fire grow cold”. The last verse describes how “on the street tonight the

lights grow dim / The walls of my room are closing in / There’s a war outside still raging / But

it ain’t ours anymore to win”. The refrain then is nothing but an unavailing call to his

(former) friends: “We made a promise we swore we’d always remember / No retreat, baby, no

surrender / Like soldiers in the winter’s night with a vow to defend / No retreat, baby, no

surrender”. The only way out of this misery, it seems, is to sleep and dream (a softer precursor

for the theme of escape through death in The Ghost of Tom Joad). First, the narrator tells his

friend “You say you’re tired and you just want to close your eyes / And follow your dreams

down”. In the song’s last lines, he expresses his own desire “to sleep beneath peaceful skies in

my lover’s bed / With a wide-open country in my eyes / And these romantic dreams in my

head”. The “wide open country” – the land of opportunity, hopes and dreams; the promised

land from sea to shining sea – only exists in romantic dreams, not in reality.

Personal decay is most explicitly rendered in “Downbound Train”, where the first

verse summarizes the narrator’s life is decomposed step by step: “I had a job, I had a girl / I

had something going, mister, in this world / I got laid off down at the lumber yard / Our love

went bad, times got hard / Now I work down at the carwash / Where all it ever does is rain /

Don’t you feel like you’re a rider / On a downbound train”. The second verse elaborates on

the narrator’s wife, who left him, with the simple excuse that “We had it once, we ain’t got it

anymore”. At night, the man keeps on reliving the moment when she packed her bags and got

on the Central Line train. The chorus-less song continues in two additional verses, the first

containing some of the most cinematic lines Springsteen has ever written:

95 Quoted in Marsh (2003), 466.

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Last night, I heard your voice You were crying, crying, you were so alone You said your love had never died You were waiting for me at home Put on my jacket, I ran through the woods I ran ‘till I thought my chest would explode There in the clearing, beyond the highway In the moonlight, our wedding house shone I rushed through the yard, I burst through the front door My head pounding hard, up the stairs I climbed The room was dark, our bed was empty Then I heard that long whistle whine And I dropped to my knees, hung my head and cried

Similar to the factory whistle on songs like “Out in the Street” and “Factory”, the

whistle of the train serves as a literal wake-up call from his anxious, nostalgic dreams, and as a

recurring symbol of reality. In the last lines, the narrator recounts how he ironically found a

job “swinging a sledge hammer on a railroad gang”, where the brutal sounds of reality are now

all he hears.

“Bobby Jean” is a first-person narrative about someone who comes by the house of an

old friend he has known since they were sixteen, and hears that this friend “went away”. It is

not clear what exactly happened to this Bobby Jean: some argue that she is the narrator’s lover

who committed suicide, while others claim that she is actually a he and that this friend joined

the army to go to Vietnam (which would then of course repeat some of the elements from the

album’s title track). Still others try to combine these two arguments in saying that the narrator

and this Bobby Jean were homosexual lovers – making it possible for the latter to enlist, while

at the same time accounting for the fact that the narrator addresses him as “baby” in the last

verse96. No matter from which perspective the song is analyzed, one comes to the same

conclusion: the narrator feels powerless realizing he cannot change the past, the present or the

course of life in general. He says “I wish I would have known / I wish I could have called you”,

but it would have been “just to say goodbye”. He thereby acknowledges the words of Bobby

Jean’s mother, who “said there was nothing that I could have done / There was nothing

nobody could say”.

Similar themes of nostalgia and powerlessness also pervade songs like “Dancing in the

Dark”, “Glory Days”, “Working on the Highway” and “Cover Me”. With the exception of 96 Springsteen never explicitly revealed the true meaning of the song, though he hinted that the departure of his old friend Steven Van Zandt from the E Street Band was the main inspiration for the song (Marsh 2003, 233).

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“I’m On Fire”, which deals with its protagonist’s sexual frustrations, all the songs in Born in

the USA are strongly characterized by this melancholic mood. The album’s last feature,

entitled “My Hometown”, draws the clearest sketch of combined personal and societal decay.

The narrator remembers how, when he was eight years old, his father would drive him around

town on his car, and “he’d tousle my hair and say, son, take a good look around / This is your

hometown”. This happy nostalgic memory of the 50s, however, is disturbed when the

narrative shifts to 1965. The autobiographical narrator remembers the race riots that took

place in Springsteen’s native Freehold, New Jersey, during several periods in the 60s97:

In ’65 tension was running high, at my high school There was a lot of fights between the black and white There was nothing you could do Two cars at a light on a Saturday night, in the back seat there was a gun Words were passed, in a shotgun blast Troubled times had come To my hometown

Ever since these “troubled times”, the whole place has almost become a ghost town.

The narrator describes how now “Main Street’s whitewashed windows and vacant stores /

Seems like there ain’t nobody wanting to come down here no more / They’re closing down the

textile mill across the railroad racks / Foreman says these jobs are going boys, and they ain’t

coming back / To your hometown”. The description of the town in decay is redolent of the

situation of Youngstown, which Springsteen would later describe on The Ghost of Tom Joad

(cf. CHAPTER 7). In the song’s last verse, the narrator and his wife talk about leaving this

godforsaken place. At the age of thirty-five, they now have a boy of their own. Driving around

town with the little boy, the narrator repeats the words of his own father. The bitter irony is

telling, as the son knows how charming the town was once, before riots and

deindustrialization crossed its path. Although the young boy might not know any better, the

father certainly does, and we can almost tell the bitterness from his face as he says: “Son, take a

good look around / This is your hometown”.

Because of the music that accompanies the lyrics on Born in the USA, the album is

often misinterpreted as a less dark ‘interlude’ between the grim folk records Nebraska and The

Ghost of Tom Joad. Although the music at times reinforces the song’s message (for instance, as

97 The riots would eventually lead to the climactic racially charged shooting of May 19, 1969, on the corner of Freehold’s Route 33 and South Street, where two young boys were shot. Springsteen used to live on South Street during his high school years, and even though he had moved to Asbury Park by the time of the shooting, the events made a big impact on him, as they did on the entire town of Freehold (Marsh 1987, 56).

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discussed, in “Born in the USA”), it can simultaneously deceit the inattentive listener. “Glory

Days” and “Working on the Highway” are both set to a rather cheerful tune, while their

content is far from optimistic. Only “My Hometown” and “Downbound Train” are

accompanied by a sound that can only suggest melancholia. Therefore, it is no wonder that

Springsteen often chose to perform these songs acoustically, since he noticed that in the early

months after the release, his songs were often mistaken for positive cheers, not in the least by

the Republicans supporting the new Reaganistic optimism. The acoustic versions of “Born in

the USA” (a stinging performance on a twelve-string slide guitar) and “No Surrender”

(featuring on the Live 1975-85 album) tell the more straightforward story, one that is not to

be misunderstood, and often preceded on stage by a sharp criticism of the Republican Party.

Ironically, 1984 turned out to be an unprecedented success story for both Reagan and

Springsteen. The latter managed to reach the huge audience he had wished for, with the

album selling more than 18 million copies in the US alone, and the accompanying 156

concert shows sometimes luring more than 100,000 attendants a night. However, he did not

look back upon the whole Born in the USA period as a complete success, as Ronald Reagan

was re-elected with a landslide victory (winning 49 out of 50 states), five months after the

album’s release. Springsteen came to understand that reaching a big audience did not

necessarily imply that all of those people would go home with a full understanding of (or a

like-minded view on) the issues he had been addressing. A great part of his audience only came

for the musical hype, missing the social commentary altogether. This led to great

disappointment, and Springsteen decided to stay away from the political spotlight for a while,

as he disbanded his E Street Band and went on to produce a number of solo records, filled

with reflection on other themes, predominantly the beauty and danger of love. It was not until

1995, eleven years after Born in the USA, that he would regain his critical voice.

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CHAPTER 7 | Dead and Defeated: The Ghost of Tom Joad

“You got a one-way ticket to the promised land You got a hole in your belly and a gun in your hand”

(“THE GHOST OF TOM JOAD”)

Apart from a few efforts for fundraising (from local food banks to an Amnesty International

concert tour), Springsteen retired from the social and political scene for a long time – a period

that would last until 1995. The intervening albums Tunnel of Love, Human Touch and Lucky

Town are strongly typified by the two-sidedness of love: while Tunnel of Love is marked by his

failed marriage with and divorce from Julianne Philips, the latter two are optimistic cheers

following his marriage to Patti Scialfa and the birth of his children.

With the Born in the USA tour still underway, Springsteen married Julianne Phillips,

only to separate less than two years later, and finally divorcing in 1989. As always, he “turned

to music to reconcile his roiling emotions”98. Consequently, Tunnel of Love features some of

the most beautiful songs written about love gone wrong. Some consider the album his “most

perceptive one to date”, comparing his lyrics to the short stories of Raymond Carver “in their

deceptive simplicity of people struggling to find themselves a physical, emotional and spiritual

place in the world”99. Human Touch and Lucky Town, released simultaneously in March 1992,

“continue to plumb these domesticity”100. In the five years since Tunnel of Love, Springsteen’s

private life took a sharp turn towards a happy and steady life, after his marriage to E Street

Band-member Patti Scialfa and the birth of his first two children. This translates into a widely

optimistic record, which celebrates love rather than questioning its deceitfulness. Lyrics such as

“Tonight I’m lying in your arms carvin’ lucky charms”101 and “Looking for a little bit of God’s

mercy, I’ve found living proof”102 (written upon the birth of his son), proof that on these

records, Springsteen took a long break from the social criticism that pervaded the first 15 years

of his career. While the songs on Tunnel of Love are valuable in terms of their affecting lyrics

and melodies, Tunnel’s two successors are far from memorable. With the exceptions of a few

lesser-known gems (“Leap of Faith” and “I Wish I Were Blind” are worthy of mention), the

98 Sawyers (2004), 12. 99 Alterman (1999), 185. 100 Sawyers (2004), 13. 101 From “Better Days” (Lucky Town, 1992). 102 From “Living Proof” (ibid).

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songs written in the late eighties and early nineties belong to Springsteen’s weaker efforts at

songwriting. Springsteen later admitted this himself, calling the Human Touch and Lucky

Town albums “generic material”103. Tellingly, these songs rarely appeared during any of his

recent concert tours, as they “don’t tell the right story, and they would only distract the

audience from the message [he] want[s] to convey”104.

With The Ghost of Tom Joad (1995), Springsteen made a celebrated return to the social

realism that characterized his earlier classics. Rather than writing another Nebraska or

Darkness, however, this time he broadened his area of research. Crossing the borders of his

native New Jersey, he moved to California where he was affected and inspired by the stories of

Mexican and Asian immigrants and “bewildered members of the new underclass”105 of Los

Angeles and San Diego. Yet he did not restrict his interest to the Southern border alone.

Reading as much as he could about the underprivileged all over America, he came upon the

heartrending stories of the deindustrialized ghost towns of Ohio, the Asian folks who were

stigmatized after Pearl Harbor and Vietnam, and the roaming families who left the bone-dry

plains of Kansas, Texas and Oklahoma. On The Ghost of Tom Joad, Springsteen truly became

an all-round social critic, releasing himself from the mark of ‘working-class hero’. Taking this

important step, he became more and more the American poet he is today, putting himself in

the great company of like-minded souls “ranging from Walt Whitman to Jack London, Mark

Twain to Jack Kerouac, and Woody Guthrie to Bob Dylan”106.

The core of inspiration for The Ghost of Tom Joad is found in John Steinbeck’s realist

classic The Grapes of Wrath, first published in 1939. Set during the Great Depression, the

novel focuses on a family of roaming ‘Okies’ – Oklahomans who were driven out of their

lands by the infamous Dust Bowl storms, economic hardship, and changes in financial and

agricultural industries. Due to their hopeless situation, the Joads set out to California in search

for jobs, lands, and – above all – in hopes of a better, dignified future. The story sets in as

Tom Joad, the family’s second son and protagonist of the novel, is paroled from prison and

finds upon his return that the family’s Oklahoma farm has been distrained by the banks,

which are dispelling the farmers from their lands on a large scale. Seduced by an advertising

campaign promoting California as a ‘land of opportunity’, young Tom takes leadership of his

family on their westward journey. Even though leaving the state of Oklahoma is a violation of

his parole conditions, Tom decides it is worth the risk. Traveling along Route 66, they are 103 Sawyers (2004), 148. 104 Marsh (2003), 594. 105 Garman (1996), 82. 106 Sawyers (2004), 15.

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confronted by the disillusioned people voyaging in the opposite direction, severely testing the

Joads’ faith in the Californian promises. Gradually, the family falls apart, as some of its

members leave and both paternal grandparents die during the journey. Upon their arrival, they

quickly find themselves in the middle of an on-going dispute between big corporations and

little farmers, and between employers and their underpaid workers, who are uniting themselves

in labor unions. The Joads find a temporary trade as strikebreakers on a peach orchard.

During a strike on the ranch, Tom watches his companion Casy get shot, and revenges him by

killing the attacker. From this moment on, Tom knows he will remain a fugitive forever, and

bids farewell to his mother, promising her that no matter where he goes, he will remain the

fiercest advocate for the oppressed.

A year after the novel’s release, it had already been adapted for the screen by John

Ford, who followed Steinbeck’s narrative rather dutifully, though his alternative ending sheds

a more optimistic light on the future of the Joads. While the novel ends with the family in

very dire straits, fleeing a rising flood, the film version gives them a spark of hope by picturing

them as stabilized and placing them in a safe refugee camp provided by the federal government

– a subtle switch in the chronology of the novel, where this scene appears earlier on in the

story. At the time, the novel’s ending was “considered far too controversial” for a Hollywood

movie107. Also, the producers of Ford’s adaption strongly soften Steinbeck’s political message,

which was rather anti-Republican. An interesting observation concerning the two versions is

that Springsteen had first watched Ford’s film version in 1978, while writing songs for

Darkness on the Edge of Town. It was not until 1993 that he read Steinbeck’s original, and it

served as another eye-opener, significantly influencing the album he was to write a year later108.

Notably, the tone of the Ghost of Tom Joad is definitely more pessimistic than in his earlier

work, as the tiny spark of redemption is now gone. More than a collection of inciting protest

songs, Ghost is a voiced lamentation which citizens how little has changed since Steinbeck’s

and Ford’s era of the Great Depression. Taking their characters as an important source of

inspiration, he places them in a contemporary setting. Instead of being hopeless Dust Bowl

wanderers, they now become lost in George H.W. Bush’s confusing ‘New World Order’.

Next to Steinbeck and Ford, another important figure from the same period played a

part in bringing Springsteen’s attention to the tragic characters in The Grapes of Wrath. A

native of Oklahoma, Woody Guthrie was consulted to make his contribution to the

soundtrack of Ford’s film. Despite his affection for both Ford and Steinbeck, Guthrie, 107 Ford (1982), 152. 108 Marsh (2003), 314.

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however, raised objections to their project. He argued that neither literature nor film were the

right medium to express the laments of the Dust Bowl people. To Guthrie, “only folk music, a

form which captured the voice of the people, could represents the real class struggle” and “use

the truth as a spring of cold water” to bring about social reform109. Bryan Garman notes that

“Steinbeck and Ford had done much to publicize the plight of America’s displaced farm

workers, but because they had not lived the experience as completely as Guthrie had, they

could not, in his view, understand the Okie and working-class ‘hurt songs’ as well as he

did”110. Indeed, Guthrie had suffered first-handedly from the drastic changes that occurred in

Oklahoma in the twenties and thirties. He saw how his father’s fortunes drastically decayed

when the oil boom came to his native Okemah. “Unable to maintain his business in the

town’s fast-paced economy, [Guthrie’s father] Charley lost his political connections and was

forced to move from job to job, house to house, town to town”111. Family tragedies

deteriorated things, as the Guthries’ daughter Clara burned to death in 1919, and Charley was

badly injured in 1927, when his increasingly unstable wife threw a kerosene lamp at him112.

Young Woody Guthrie began to “describe these misfortunes in musical terms and commenced

to sing sadder songs in a luster voice”113.

In the end, Guthrie wrote “The Ballad of Tom Joad” – inspired by Steinbeck, but

largely based on what he witnessed himself – as a soundtrack to the movie. The same year, the

song appeared on his Dust Bowl Ballads (1940), which also included “Vigilante Man” and “I

Ain’t Got No Home”, two songs that Springsteen cited as inspirations for his own album, and

that he performed several times on stage. Recalling a problematic childhood in a troubled

household himself, Springsteen could relate to Guthrie’s sorrow. “Reawakening Joad’s ghost

and putting his spirit to work in contemporary America”, Springsteen thus reconnects with

the hurt song tradition and strengthens his cultural ties to both Guthrie and Steinbeck114.

With his contemporary setting, Springsteen adds a new dimension to this cry for social justice.

As Garman introduces the album, “The Ghost of Tom Joad subjects the American conscience to

though moral questions, dismantles the national and religious myths that structure

109 Klein (1992), 68-69. 110 Garman (1996), 70. 111 Klein (1992), 1-39. 112 Ibid, 40. 113 Ibid, 41. 114 Garman (1996), 94.

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conventional historical narratives, and once again constructs a repressed history which

represents the brutality of the real world”115.

The album opens with the title track, which immediately presents this combination of

Steinbeck’s past and Springsteen’s present. The first lines describe a group of refugees “walkin’

‘long the railroad tracks / Going someplace where there’s no going back”, an image that is very

reminiscent of Steinbeck’s Joad family on their journey from Oklahoma to California. The

next lines, however, introduce a modern element in the form of “highway patrol choppers

comin’ up over the ridge”. Surprisingly, this introduction of helicopters does not come across

as a disturbing break, but rather as a natural continuity. The “shelter line stretchin’ round the

corner” then welcomes the homeless “to the new world order” – a very ironic remark referring

to the promise made by George H.W. Bush during the First Gulf War. In his address to a

joint session of Congress, Bush had prophesied a new era, unprecedented in world history in

its emphasis on peace and justice:

A new partnership of nations has begun, and we stand today at a unique and extraordinary moment. The crisis in the Persian Gulf, as grave as it is, also offers a rare opportunity to move toward an historic period of cooperation. Out of these troubled times, our fifth objective—a new world order—can emerge. A new era—free from the threat of terror, stronger in the pursuit of justice and more secure in the quest for peace. An era in which the nations of the world, east and west, north and south, can prosper and live in harmony. A hundred generations have searched for this elusive path to peace, while a thousand wars raged across the span of human endeavor, and today that new world is struggling to be born. A world quite different from the one we have known. A world where the rule of law supplants the rule of the jungle. A world in which nations recognize the shared responsibility for freedom and justice. A world where the strong respect the rights of the weak.116

The ironic failure of Bush’s utopian promise becomes particularly painful when

reading the last sentence of this excerpt. With “strong” and “weak”, Bush was referring to

wealthy superpowers and oppressed or developing countries – the US used the Iraqi invasion

in the “weak” neighbor-state of Kuwait as the main argument for the Gulf War117. Inside

Bush’s own country, however, the gap between rich and poor was becoming wider every day.

When Springsteen welcomes the refugees to “the new world order”, it serves as a very cynical 115 Garman (1996), 95. 116 Bush (1990). 117 Toft & Mingst (2010), 252.

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comment on the fact that, 5 years since this great promise, nothing has changed, and “the new

era” is everything but “different from the one we have known” – worse still, it was still bearing

a strong resemblance to Steinbeck’s age of the Great Depression. The last phrases of the first

verse concisely summarize the situation of the poor and powerless: “Families sleepin’ in their

cars in the Southwest / No home, no job, no peace, no rest”.

In most of his earlier work, Springsteen had embedded a certain pattern. Songs would

usually commence quite neutrally, before falling into the description of a pessimistic situation

from which there is no escape. In the end, however, most often there is still a spark of

redemption left. In “Thunder Road”, for example, the song begins with the dreamy depiction

of Mary, after which her futureless life is portrayed. The song’s finale nonetheless leaves the

ending quite open to interpretation, as the protagonist sings he is “pulling out of here to win”.

We do not know if he succeeded (and judging by the later stories on Darkness and The River,

it is most likely that he did not), but at least there is some hope. In the chorus of “The Ghost

of Tom Joad”, on the other hand, one can note a reversal of this process. The first line – where

the “highway is alive tonight” – seems positive, but is immediately cancelled out by the dismal

second line – “But nobody’s kidding nobody about where it goes”. The protagonist then

describes himself as “sitting down here in the campfire light / Searchin’ for the ghost of Tom

Joad”. Quite literally, the ghost of Steinbeck’s tragic hero still wanders amidst his modern

fellow-sufferers.

The second verse sketches a revealing picture of one of the group’s individuals. He is a

Catholic priest, who carries along a prayer book, but seems to find more comfort in his box of

cigarettes than he gets from his religion. Using popular slang expressions, Springsteen degrades

the priest – normally a higher member of society – to nothing but one of the many miserable

people wandering towards a dead end. The preacher is “waitin’ for when the last shall be first

and the first shall be last”, but his current position (“in a cardboard box neath’ the underpass”)

does not bode very well. The people who are “sleeping on a pillow of solid rock” are given one

final solution to their problems: “Got one-way ticket to the promised land / You got a hole in

your belly and a gun in your hand”. It seems as if death is the only way to the hereafter,

although it is to be doubted that suicide would actually get them there – since this is of course

considered a sin in Christianity. The second chorus is a repetition of the first, but with two

minor adjustments that bring the song closer towards its doomed ending. “Nobody’s kidding

nobody ‘bout where it goes” becomes a more direct “where it’s headed, everybody knows”, and

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the protagonist is no longer “searchin’”, as much as “waitin’ on the ghost of Tom Joad” – as if

he is certain of his approaching fate.

The third and final verse of the song directly borrows from Steinbeck’s novel. It

rephrases Tom Joad’s key words in his farewell to his mother, which are mostly similar in both

novel and film. The following excerpt comes from Ford’s screen adaptation, which drops some

of the references to marginal characters, making Tom’s speech a bit more cogent and

powerful:

“I’ll be around in the dark. I’ll be everywhere. Wherever there’s a fight so hungry people can eat, I’ll be there. Wherever there’s a cop beatin’ a guy, I’ll be there. I’ll be in the way guys yell when they’re mad. I’ll be in the way kids laugh when they know supper’s ready. And when the people are eatin’ the stuff they raise, and livin’ the houses they build, I’ll be there too.”118

In his “Ballad of Tom Joad”, Woody Guthrie adopted the essence of this passage:

Wherever people ain’t free Wherever men are fightin’ for their rights That’s where I’m gonna be119

In his own song, however, Springsteen relied more on the original text, merely

adapting and shortening it to give it its rhythm and musicality:

Wherever there’s a cop beatin’ a guy Wherever a hungry newborn baby cries Where there’s a fight ‘gainst blood and hatred in the air Look for me, Mom, I’ll be there Wherever somebody’s fightin’ for a place to stand Or a decent job or a helpin’ hand Wherever sombody’s strugglin’ to be free Look in their eyes, Mom, you’ll see me

Notably, Springsteen’s message is still more pessimistic than Steinbeck’s and Ford’s.

Whereas they mentioned the possibility of a positive outcome (a world where people could

freely raise their own food and build their own houses), Springsteen’s protagonist only pays

attention to the struggle and the hurt. Indeed, Jim Cullen also notices that “there is a

bitterness in “The Ghost of Tom Joad” that may even exceed that of Steinbeck”120. Upon the

118 Ford (1940). 119 From “The Ballad of Tom Joad” (Dust Bowl Ballads, 1940). 120 Cullen (1996), quoted in Sawyers (2004), 235.

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cynical false optimism in the chorus (“the highway is alive tonight”, only to be followed by

“where it’s headed, everybody knows”), he aptly comments: “Thunder Road, it seems, is a

dead end”121.

As with nearly all of Springsteen’s albums, the first song sets the mood for the entire

collection. It introduces a theme, which is then elaborated in various ways in the particular

songs. Frequently, this is done by way of numerous character sketches of short stories about

people’s lives. Yet, in “Youngstown”, Springsteen displays his special talent for granting life,

memory and emotion to otherwise inanimate objects such as towns, factories and steel mills122.

Here, the story of decay and hopelessness is symbolized in a factory town in northeast Ohio.

Youngstown was industrialized in the 19th century when iron ore was discovered, and its mines

became one of the great sources of weaponry during the Civil War. Its steel plants went on to

produce arms for all of its country’s battles, including those of World War II and Vietnam. In

1979, however, three of Youngstown’s biggest steel mills were closed down and local people

protested, “searching in vain to negotiate a buyout and taking the matter to court”123. The

judge, though, ruled against them – yet another example of how the poor, no matter their

number, stand no chance due to structural oppression. As a result, “the town’s working people

were devastated when US Steel closed operations, putting thousands of people out of work,

and as support jobs to the mills also folded, the city’s unemployment rate approached 30% in

the early 1980s”124. The rise and fall of Youngstown, from its foundation to the decline of the

steel industry in the 1970s, is described in the five verses of the song125. The recurring chorus

tells how the unemployed protagonist is desperately looking for existential answers, while he is

“sinkin’ down / Here darling in Youngstown”. He is singing his song to “Jenny”, which was a

local nickname for the Jeanette Blast Furnace, one of the largest furnaces owned by the YST

steel factory that was shut down in 1979.

Returning from Vietnam, the protagonist does just like his daddy done (as the lyrics of

“The River” would say) when he came home from World War II. He takes on a job in the

121 Cullen (1996), quoted in Sawyers (2004), 235. 122 On his latest album Wrecking Ball (2012), the title track is a narrative told from the perspective of a sports stadium (the Giants Stadium in New Jersey), which stands on the brink of destruction. In the song, the building is melancholically recalling its great history. It then dares the demolition workers to tear down its walls, knowing that they will be tearing down all those memories as well. Springsteen wrote this song in honor of the stadium, where he played many of his most famous concerts. 123 Linkon & Russo (2002), 30. 124 Maharidge (1985), 35. 125 In 1982, Billy Joel wrote a similar song about the city of Allentown, Pennsylvania (“Allentown”, which appeared on The Nylon Curtain). Joel’s version, however, was less harsh and pessimistic than Springsteen’s portrayal of Youngstown.

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local “hotter-than-hell” steel furnaces, describing it as “a job that’d suit the devil as well”. The

conditions in the forges are so severe that they would kill the veterans that survived the Second

World War (the father used to say that “them big boys did what Hitler couldn’t do”). As work

in the factories becomes more and more unstable, the narrator wonders what was the real

reason behind all these wars. Indeed, wars marked the time in Youngstown – wartime meant a

considerable boost for the industry, which produced primarily army weaponry (from

cannonballs to tanks and bombs)126. As Springsteen “structures his narrative around a history

of military service”, Bryan Garman notes that “this structure identifies and critically questions

the role that the state plays in advancing interests of big business”127. What is important to

Springsteen is “how both industry and the state promoted this economic ideal at the expense

of Youngstown – the town, the resources, and the people”128. He sharply alludes that the real

winners of these wars – no matter what their outcome might be – are the great steel

corporations.

They built a blast furnace Here along the shore And they made the cannon balls That helped the union win the war … These mills they built the tanks and bombs That won this country’s wars We sent our sons to Korea and Vietnam Now we’re wondering what they were ‘dying for

By the late 1970s, however, “it was clear that the economic system for which they had

sacrificed their lives could no longer utilize them”129. Having completely exploited and

depleted the people and resources of Youngstown, these corporations left the area, taking away

over 10,000 jobs130. In the penultimate verse, the narrator indicates that the situation in his

town is not unique in America. Standing amidst the ashes of what was once an economic

center, he refers to similar ‘victims’ of deindustrialization, such as the Monongahela Valley or

the mines of Appalachia, revealing “the deep wounds that this dramatic economic

transformation has inflicted on people and place”131:

From the Monongahela Valley

126 Maharidge (1985), 42. 127 Garman (1996), 97. 128 Garman (1996), 97. 129 Garman (1996), 98. 130 Maharidge (1984), 21-22. 131 Garman (1996), 98.

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To the Mesabi iron range To the coal mines of Appalachia The story’s always the same Seven hundred tons of metal a day Now sir you tell me the world has changed Once I made you rich enough Rich enough to forget my name Here in Youngstown Here in Youngstown My sweet Jenny, I’m sinkin’ down Here darlin’ in Youngstown

The last verse synthesizes the collapse of faith in blue collar America. The dreams of

the working class are no longer aspirations to escape towards a better life. Rather, their desired

escape is found in the anticipation of death. Moreover, the narrator tells he is not even

interested in heaven, as he feels like he would not belong there:

When I die, I don’t want no part of heaven I would not do heaven’s work well I pray the devil comes and takes me To stand in the fiery furnaces of hell

Where Steinbeck and Ford focused on the life of white families from Oklahoma and

Arkansas, Springsteen widened his scope, as he started to realize that the story of faded dreams

and broken promises, the one he had been telling for all those years, really was an all-American

story. Having moved to California, he came in touch with many people who knew both the

attractiveness and the danger of the Mexican-American borderline. Every year, thousands of

Mexicans tried to cross the border, and many of them lost their lives in the attempt. For those

who succeeded, life on the American side was not necessarily a better one. In “Sinaloa

Cowboys”, the brothers Miguel and Louis Rosales leave their family in Northern Mexico to go

and find work in the United States. Having successfully crossed the border at the river levee,

they find a job in the orchards of San Joaquin (just outside the San Francisco Bay Area),

working “from morning ‘till the day was through / Doing the work the hueros132 wouldn’t

do”. Looking to earn more money, they take on another job, cooking methamphetamine on a

deserted chicken ranch, “in a small tin shack on the edge of a ravine”. The narrator explains

how “You could spend a year in the orchards / Or make half as much in one ten hour shift”.

132 Mexican slang word to indicate “white people” – in this case the Americans, for whom the work in the orchards was too heavy a job to take.

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However, with the bigger paycheck also comes a greater risk: one slip can be enough to let the

acid “burn right through your skin” and “leave you spittin’ up blood in the desert / If you

breathed those fumes in”. One winter evening, fate catches up with the Rosales brothers, as

the shack explodes and Louis is killed in the inferno. When they left their home in Mexico,

their father had told them: “My sons, one thing you will learn / For everything the North

gives, it exacts a price in return”. Indeed, before Miguel places his brother in his grave, he digs

up the ten thousand dollars they had saved over the years. The symbolism could not be

stronger: working on American soil, this new ground has given him more money than he

could have ever earned in Mexico. But the price to be paid in return is much too high, and can

be expressed in neither dollars nor pesetas.

While Springsteen was adding the final touches on the album, Paramount Pictures

launched its latest blockbuster movie, Forrest Gump. In the movie (which would eventually

win six Academy Awards and three Golden Globes), Tom Hanks portrays the naive and slow-

witted title character Forrest, who witnesses (and in some cases influences) some of the

defining moments in 20th century history. The film is filled with inspiring quotes and

optimistic clichés, and although Springsteen acknowledged that the movie was “an artistic

masterpiece”133, he did not like the message it was conveying. As Bryan Garman explains,

“when considered alongside the songs of Ghost, romantic stories about upward mobility and

the American dream such as appear in Forrest Gump trivialize and misrepresent the actual

struggles in which laborers, veterans, and underprivileged people engage everyday”134. In “My

Best Was Never Good Enough”, Springsteen coldly rejects all these clichés and maxims that

are so much embedded in the ‘American spirit’. With this song, he wanted to make clear that

this optimism could not be reconciled with American reality. In this reality, it is not enough

simply to do your best, as some people – and by extension some classes of society – are not

destined to lead happy lives.

If God gives you nothin’ but lemons, then you make some lemonade The early bird catches the fuckin’ worm, Rome wasn’t built in a day Now life’s like a box of chocolates, you never know what you’re gonna get Stupid is as stupid does, and all the rest of that shit Come on baby, call my bluff ‘Cause for you, my best was never good enough

133 Garman (1996), 104. 134 Ibid.

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Still, Garman also notes that “forging an alternative to this optimistic culture is a

difficult proposition, particularly when American popular imagination remains solidly infused

with the idea that American is set off from all other societies, by the opportunities it affords to

vertical mobility”135. For Springsteen, who had become one of the world’s best-known and

wealthiest artists, the complications were perhaps even more challenging. However, “with the

release of Ghost, he made a concerted effort to elucidate his intentions”136. Steering clear of the

mythic four-hour stadium marathons of earlier concert tours, Springsteen now performed

shorter shows in smaller venues, literally asking the audience “to pay quite attention to what

he was singing”137. As he told one of his first audiences on the tour, “a lot of the songs were

written with a lot of silence, and they need silence to work. So if you like clapping and singing

along… Please don’t”. And even if they tried, the songs of Ghost were nearly impossible to

anticipate and engage in as an audience. Many of these songs were written “without choruses

or refrains, and peppered with unusual, if not forced, rhyme schemes”. By stripping down his

performances, almost to a lecture, Springsteen tried to evade the trap of the Born in the USA

tour, where people would shout the lyrics without really thinking about them.

Also musically, the atmosphere becomes more straightforward. The accompanying

melodies are very sober, the instruments very few. The at times angry guitar riffs of Nebraska,

which conveyed the characters escape into rage, are absent from Ghost. In his review, music

journalist Mikal Gilmore comprehensively describes the new atmosphere:

In Tom Joad, there are few escapes and almost no musical relief from the numbing circumstances of the character’s lives. You could almost say that the music gets caught in meandering motions, or drifts into circles that never break. The effect is brilliant – there’s something almost lulling in the music’s blend of acoustic arpeggios and moody keyboard textures, something that lures you into the melodies’ dark dreaminess and loose mellifluence. But make no mistake: what you are being drawn into are scenarios of hell. American hell.

Gilmore would, few years later, sketch the broader context of the work in his book

Night Beat: a Shadow History of Rock & Roll. While Springsteen was retreating from the

political scene in the late eighties and early nineties, withdrawing in his new marriage and

family, “much had changed about the larger family that Springsteen and the rest of us live in –

the tormented home we still call America – and too little of it for the better … Some of the

135 Garman (1996), 104-105. 136 Ibid, 105. 137 Ibid, 106.

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most valuable instruments of opportunity and justice had been curtailed or ended – tools such

as affirmative action, immigration rights, welfare protection for children in poverty, and our

criminal justice system imprisoning poor and young people at increasing rates”138. At the time

when Springsteen decided it was time to mount the platform again, the message had become

clear: “No more help for people on the fringe, no more chances for the losers. These were

pitiless times, and there had been too few voices in either arts or politics who dared to tell us

that the America we were making would be a more perilous, bloodier place than might ever

have imagined”139. For this America, thoroughly transformed by the twelve years of

Republican presidency under Reagan and Bush, there was little hope left, according to

Springsteen. Therefore, The Ghost of Tom Joad, documenting the stories of the poor and

doomed, is by far the darkest, most pessimistic album of his entire career. The American

promise has failed its people, and as a result, their hearts are broken beyond repair.

138 Gilmore (1998), 279. 139 Ibid, 280.

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CHAPTER 8 | Twenty Years Burning Down The Road

In the twenty years from his major breakthrough with Born to Run to the Grammy-winning

Ghost of Tom Joad, Bruce Springsteen has documented the struggle of working-class people to

cope with the fact that their inherent birthrights are different from those of the rich and

wealthy. For these workers, the American creed that every citizen has the right to live in liberty

and pursue his happiness, proves to be a false promise. As Springsteen grows older himself, he

gradually renounces his initial message of optimism, and starts to speak in defense of those

who are not given a voice in America’s political arena. By telling their different individual

stories, he brings attention to the fact that this is not just ‘an entire societal class’ or ‘a large

section of the population’. Rather than functioning as a spokesman for the greater body of ‘the

working class’, he speaks for every single one of them individually – from the young people,

who resent the fact that they were born with in financial, social and educational inequality, to

their fathers, who carry the burden of indelible guilt, anger and sorrow.

Nearly all of the stories depart from the assumption that life as it is, is undesirable.

Therefore, one simply has to escape this current life. But the possibilities of getting out are

gradually changing and decreasing as experience grows. On Born to Run, the belief that a

breakout can be successfully achieved is still very much alive. Young lovers encourage their

sweethearts to escort them on their way out, away from this “town full of losers”140, as they

pull out to win. Glorious saxophones, harps and violins accompany their faithful creed. Yet,

near the end of the album, doubt drops by like an unwelcome guest. The story of Rat and his

Barefoot Girl in “Jungleland” ends in bitter tragedy, described in a song so epically gripping,

that it would test the faith of the fiercest believer.

As the literal breakout becomes gradually more improbable, other ways to work off

steam rise to the surface. On Darkness on the Edge of Town and The River, the most prominent

are rebellion (“Badlands”, “The Promised Land”) and nostalgia (“Racing in the Street”, “The

River”). Both are but temporary solutions, though, and another way to vent these emotions –

the angry rage already suggested in “Adam Raised a Cain” – completely takes over on the next

album, the 1982 folk record Nebraska. The melancholic piano melodies make room for an

oppressively raw sound of acoustic steel strings and a howling harmonica. Against this

140 From “Thunder Road” (Born to Run, 1975).

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background, Springsteen tells the stories of people who have utterly lost their way and who

descended to crime and madness.

Whereas the haunting silence of Nebraska implied a loud cry for help, the bombastic

melodies of its successor Born in the USA really symbolized existential silence. Although the

narrators bellow with pain and scream with rage, their voicelessness and powerlessness is

painfully demonstrated by the fact that they rarely rise above the music (“Born in the USA”)

or by the sharp contrast between the anthemic music and the cheerless lyrics (“No Surrender”,

“Glory Days”). Notably, whereas Born to Run was about looking forward (because past and

present are unattractive), the albums that follow it are more about looking back (because there

is no belief in a better future, suddenly the past does not seem so bad in retrospect). The past

becomes a vital part of Springsteen’s writing and history takes an important place in his

stories. The Ghost of Tom Joad subtly combines two versions of the same story: that of 1930s

Dust Bowl refugees portrayed in Steinbeck’s Grapes of Wrath mixed with elements from

contemporary 1990s America. The combination exposes the glaring similarity between these

two, revealing how little has changed since the Great Depression. It is also on this last album

that Springsteen’s personal contribution to the tradition of protest song writing (initiated on

Darkness and blossoming on Nebraska and Born in the USA) reaches its climax.

The evolution that runs through these albums can best be demonstrated using the

recurring motifs in his work. For example, the highways that once were “jammed with broken

heroes on a last chance power drive”141 become filled with “the dispossessed and

downtrodden”142. The two lanes that could “take us anywhere”143 gradually change into a

predestined way to hell. Furthermore, the cars that were once symbols of freedom and flight

turn into places “in which people of the fallen working class must now sleep and await

death”144. The highway may be “alive tonight”, but Springsteen quickly adds that “nobody’s

kiddin’ nobody about where it goes”145. As Bryan Garman concludes his argument, “the myth

of upward mobility, the hackneyed promise of rock and roll, the opportunity of the West, and

the highly romanticized life of the hobo have taken these people precisely nowhere”146.

In the end, one could say that Springsteen did reach his main goal: to create a platform

where the problems of working class people could be seen and heard. Throughout his canon,

141 From “Born to Run” (Born to Run, 1975). 142 Garman (1996), 95. 143 From “Thunder Road” (Born to Run, 1975). 144 Garman (1996), 95. 145 From “The Ghost of Tom Joad” (The Ghost of Tom Joad, 1995). 146 Garman (1996), 95.

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Springsteen used true stories – most of them based on what he had seen during his childhood

and had read about later on in his life – to “pick at the scabs of a complacent white middle-

class conscience which generously applies to itself such ointments as the work ethic and

individualism to heal the moral trauma inflicted by capitalism”147. Springsteen knows that this

cannot be achieved by talking about general issues and statistics. It can be done, however, by

drawing attention to these people’s individual experiences. “You can’t tell people what to

think,” he explains, “but you can show them something by saying, ‘Put these shoes on, walk in

these shoes for a while’. People then recognize themselves in those characters whose lives on

the surface seem to have no relation to theirs”148. While much of American popular culture

“ignores, trivializes, demonizes, and caricatures the working class”, Springsteen significantly

uses their traditions and language to reclaim this cultural space, in which the lives of these

people are represented with dignity149.

With an estimated number of fifty million albums sold in the US alone, and about

twice as much on a global scale, he certainly lived up to this ambition. He gave a recognizable

face to people who would otherwise be anonymous numbers in government data. And he

allowed them to tell their story – not by reporting their actions, but by allowing them speak

for themselves. From convicted criminals to war veterans from Vietnam and from factory

workers to illegal immigrants, these are all people who we normally encounter in news reports

as statistics: three hundred workers were fired, another thousand immigrants were killed last

year trying to cross the border, while crime rates for the young and unemployed have risen by

six percent… Now we know their names, their face, and their history. In 1995, however, their

future had never looked darker. After the Ghost of Tom Joad, Springsteen expanded his social engagement to a wider

public. Following the events of September 11, 2001, he started working on The Rising, his first

original record with the E Street Band since Born in the USA. As with many Americans, the

traumatic experience of the 9/11 attacks ironically inspired him to bring a new message of

hope and faith. The belief in a better world, through collective salvation – a thought that had

disappeared on The Ghost of Tom Joad – is restored in these new songs and a concert tour that

would function almost as a communal healing process. Accepting his new role, he reinvented

himself once again – as he had done so many times in his career. Taking up the role of a

shepherd, he has lead his flock through the nation’s most defining moments of the 21st

147 Garman (1996), 108. 148 Hagen (1999). 149 Garman (1996), 108.

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century: the impact of 9/11 on The Rising, its dark aftermath on Devils & Dust, the arduous

War in Iraq on Magic, and the renewed hope that came with Barack Obama’s election on

Working on a Dream. On his latest album Wrecking Ball, this hope is severely tested during the

current economic crisis, and in a set of ten stinging songs, Springsteen once again takes up the

cudgels for the weak and poor, for those workers who, once again, will have to pay the highest

price. It looks like you can take a man out the working class, but no matter how much money

he makes telling their stories, you can never take the working class out of Bruce Springsteen.

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