The World Beyond BetterMost > The Culture Tent
In the New Yorker...
Front-Ranger:
The article on Susan Sontag covered two or three books based on her diaries and writings that she sold to UCLA. One of the books was quite critical of her and the other was a little more charitable. The writings themselves were quite self-critical. Made me think of all the diaries and writings I have around the house. Should I have a bonfire? Maybe.
I have read "On Photography" and think of it almost every time I take a picture. She raised valid questions about how we live. Do we just consume experiences or do we actually live? What is it like to live anyway? I prefer storytelling as a way to find meaning; nevertheless, what Sontag said and wrote resonates far beyond her times. I also recently acquired The Volcano Lover and am planning to read it. I resist dismissing someone just because of some label that has been attached to them.
serious crayons:
--- Quote from: Front-Ranger on September 24, 2019, 08:08:23 pm --- The writings themselves were quite self-critical. Made me think of all the diaries and writings I have around the house. Should I have a bonfire? Maybe.
--- End quote ---
Yeah, I'm sure SS would not be thrilled to know some of that stuff has been published. I wonder why David Rieff allowed it?
--- Quote --- I also recently acquired The Volcano Lover and am planning to read it.
--- End quote ---
I read it long ago and liked it. I still recall the part about the differences between people who live in the north and people who live in the south. She was talking primarily about Europe, but also more generally and her points apply to the United States, too.
--- Quote --- I resist dismissing someone just because of some label that has been attached to them.
--- End quote ---
Oh, you're right. I was being flippant. There are plenty of public intellectuals I like perfectly well and would go out of my way to read (as well as some I like but probably wouldn't read a whole book by ;D). Ta-Nehesi Coates, Roxane Gay, Robert Wright, Laura Kipnis ...
I'm reading a book right now by a guy I'd consider a public intellectual: Yuval Noah Harari, an Israeli historian. The book, Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind, traces human evolution and cultural development from the time when humans were just another species on earth, through the agricultural revolution (which Harari considers the worst thing to have ever happened to humans) through the development of language and finally, gaining the ability to talk about ideas and abstractions. I read it just before bed, to relax, like one might settle in with a favorite mystery writer. Practically every page contains some fascinating idea that you might never have considered quite that way before but once you think about it makes perfect sense. And best of all, it has nothing to do with Donald Trump or any other disturbing current events :laugh: !
Jeff Wrangler:
--- Quote from: serious crayons on September 25, 2019, 08:59:01 am ---Yeah, I'm sure SS would not be thrilled to know some of that stuff has been published. I wonder why David Rieff allowed it?
--- End quote ---
Maybe he had no right to prevent it. I was confused about that point. Malcolm says SS sold her papers to UCLA, so I wonder if that entitled her to name a literary executor or not, or if she could but didn't, or if UCLA held all rights to say yes or no to publication? Malcolm says, "Access to them was largely unrestricted," but does that mean all rights belong to the university?
serious crayons:
--- Quote from: Jeff Wrangler on September 25, 2019, 12:04:18 pm ---Maybe he had no right to prevent it. I was confused about that point. Malcolm says SS sold her papers to UCLA, so I wonder if that entitled her to name a literary executor or not, or if she could but didn't, or if UCLA held all rights to say yes or no to publication? Malcolm says, "Access to them was largely unrestricted," but does that mean all rights belong to the university?
--- End quote ---
Good questions. ???
Front-Ranger:
Some articles are so well written that I find myself zipping through them even though I'm not interested in the subject. "Dr. Robot" by D. T. Max is such an article.
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