Advantage: Salinger.
Thursday, July 02, 2009
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
1:30 AM
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Labels: Catcher in the Rye, copyright, J.D. Salinger
Monday, June 22, 2009
Monday!
* The trailer for the SF-infused Paul-Giamatti-as-Paul-Giamatti comedy Cold Souls causes io9 to ask whether "Charlie Kaufman" is officially a genre yet.
* Kari in the comments directs us to a defense of Holden Caulfield against the spurious assertions of irrelevance I blogged about yesterday.
* Bruce Schneier: SF Writers Aren't a Useful Aspect of National Defense—a followup to an article I posted last month. Via Boing Boing.
* Also not useful: classifying "protests" as "low-level terrorism activity."* The Art of the Title Sequence considers the end of Wall-E. Via Kottke.
* What's wrong with the American essay? I'm not sure anything is, but certainly not this:
The problem, of course, is not merely our essayists; it’s our culture. We have grown terribly—if somewhat hypocritically—weary of larger truths. The smarter and more intellectual we count ourselves, the more adamantly we insist that there is no such thing as truth, no such thing as general human experience, that everything is plural and relative and therefore undiscussable. Of course, everything is plural, everything is arguable, and there are limits to what we can know about other persons, other cultures, other genders. But there is also a limit to such humility; there is a point at which it becomes narcissism of a most myopic sort, a simple excuse to talk only about one’s own case, only about one’s own small area of specialization. Montaigne thought it the essayist’s duty to cross boundaries, to write not as a specialist (even in himself) but as a generalist, to speak out of turn, to assume, to presume, to provoke. “Where I have least knowledge,” said the blithe Montaigne, “there do I use my judgment most readily.” And how salutary the result; how enjoyable to read—and to spar with—Montaigne’s by turns outrageous and incisive conclusions about humankind. That everything is arguable goes right to the heart of the matter.It doesn't seem to me at all that American letters suffers from a lack of hypotheses confused for certainties.
“The next best thing to a good sermon is a bad sermon,” said Montaigne’s follower and admirer, the first American essayist, Ralph Waldo Emerson. In a good sermon we hear our own “discarded thoughts brought back to us by the trumpets of the last judgment,” in the words of Emerson’s essay “Self-Reliance.” In a bad sermon we formulate those thoughts ourselves—through the practice of creative disagreement. If an author tells us “love is nothing but jealousy” and we disagree, it is far more likely we will come up with our own theory of love than if we hear a simple autobiographical account of the author’s life. It is hard to argue with someone’s childhood memory—and probably inadvisable. It is with ideas that we can argue, with ideas that we can engage. And this is what the essayist ought to offer: ideas.
* And Shia Labeouf may live to ruin Y: The Last Man after all.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
12:17 PM
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Labels: America, Catcher in the Rye, Charlie Kaufman, essays, film, homeland security, hypotheses confused for certainties, J.D. Salinger, kids today, Paul Giamatti, protest, science fiction, Shia Labeouf, terrorism, title sequences, truth, Wall-E, Y: The Last Man
Sunday, June 21, 2009
Some links for Sunday.
* Robin Sloan has a filtered #iranelection Twitter feed with most of the repetition and chaos stripped away. Via Boing Boing.
* Salinger and kids today: “Oh, we all hated Holden in my class. We just wanted to tell him, ‘Shut up and take your Prozac.’ ” Via MeFi.
* Another ruins of the modern world roundup. This one has some repetition but also a few I hadn't seen before.
* Advantage: chubbiness. People who are a little overweight at age 40 live six to seven years longer than very thin people, whose average life expectancy was shorter by some five years than that of obese people, the study found.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
3:37 PM
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Labels: Catcher in the Rye, fatopia, health, Iran, J.D. Salinger, kids today, literature, longevity, Ozymandias, ruins, science, Twitter