articles from the Internets

From the (London) Times Literary Supplement, John Barnard takes up this old question: did all the nasty critical press John Keats got during his short life hasten his physical decline?  (Yes, educated people used to care intensely about what newspaper literary critics said.)  For an older take on this conundrum, have a look at Shelley’s great elegy for Keats, “Adonais,” which makes claims similar to Barnard’s.

From the language wars, two interesting articles.  In The American Conservative, Peter Wood reviews a somewhat skeptical new book on Strunk and White’s Elements of Style.  This new study finds good old S & W to be a little stiff in some places, and uncharacteristically unclear about their principles in others.  Meanwhile, Liam Julian takes an equally intelligent look at another classic writer’s guide, the re-released and newly edited Fowler’s English Usage (first published in 1926 and still indispensable for anyone who cares to write anything well in English).  It’s very unhip–if you are an academic–to mention books like Fowler’s, because, faced with university students who can’t write grammatical sentences in the language they grew up speaking, the rulers of various campus Writing Programs would have teachers focus on, uh, not grammar or style.   (Such topics are “conservative” and “old-fashioned” and supposedly of little use to today’s student–hence it’s much more kosher to teach things like Computer Literacy and blog design and interactive group projects).  I wonder why our students continue getting clumsier and dumber?   But it keeps writing professors and pedagogical “theorists” in business on many an elite campus, even if the kids at said campuses can’t tell the difference between a plural and a possessive noun (or just don’t care–they long ago got the message that that’s OK).

Christopher Hitchens on some of our nation’s current top-dog demagogue’s weirder connections and more glaring idiocies.  Yes, yes, another article on why Sarah Palin is evil and dangerous to a democracy.  The Hitch is still lucid at times, and when he’s on, it is great fun to read him.

LASTLY, an NPR piece on the relation between race, language, and nerdiness.  The gist of it is that white nerds borrow slang from black English far less than their more socially popular Caucasian peers do.  Not sure about that–I myself am a giant nerd who grew up listening to and (sometimes) parroting hip-hop language–but nonetheless it is fascinating.  And you needn’t even read, because it was on the radio!   (thanks to Mary Claire for this one).

-TGR

Good Book about Wallace Stevens: James Longenbach, “The Plain Sense of Things”

I know a lot of you like Wallace Stevens. Although English teachers conventionally stress the “difficulty” of his poetry, my perception—gleaned from years of being that slightly too observant person at the coffee house, the friend who looks at your library while nervously smirking about people who look at other people’s libraries, the dude inspecting your book on the bus, a guy who will bloviate about literature on first dates (thereby often assuring no second dates)—is that he is genuinely popular. As far as poetry goes, that is; although I don’t like admitting it, I realize that the serious novel has a much bigger audience than serious poetry.

About Stevens’ reputation as an especially demanding poet. To a certain extent it’s a fair one: if for no other reason than his opulent language, Stevens demands a great deal of attention. That said, like all great poets he also makes you love him at the same time, and hence desire to pay attention. Love is at the heart of reading and is the basis of one’s taste in books.

Part of the Difficult Poet rep is the idea that Stevens’ poetry is cut off from history, from the real life we all agree to live, as if he were just a Connecticut dandy. Since the 1950s, when the New Critics got hold of him and used Stevens to help make generations of college students think poems are otherwordly, atemporal puzzle boxes, that misperception has dogged him. Without denying the complexity of Stevens’ work, James Longenbach does a lot to correct this image in Wallace Stevens: The Plain Sense of Things (Oxford, 1991). Longenbach gives the requisite biographical details from Stevens’ life, which was outwardly bourgeois (guy was an insurance exec at The Hartford) but inwardly astonishingly complex. He also reads Stevens’ poetry in relation to contemporary history: this means dealing with the Great Depression and nuclear war as much as with the influence of writers like Emerson and Yeats, and Longenbach does it masterfully. A poet himself,with a writer’s intuitive feel for the work of other writers he likes, Longenbach is also a professor of literature, and he brings the scholar’s deep, wide perspective to his aid. Stevens comes across as an artist who spent his entire life meditating on the relation between art, the making and consumption of which demands time away from other concerns, and history, which is public and involves all other people as much as it does the writer, which is those “other concerns.”

The Plain Sense of Things is lucidly written, not dogmatic, and thoroughly humane. This is criticism written by a great teacher. As such, it’s entertaining if you have any interest in poetry. If you do suffer from that interest, you might consider scanning a chapter or two of Longenbach, whose work can also be found in shorter formats at places like Slate.com. The Google will point you there.

 

Oh man

Men’s studies or masculinity studies or whatever is heating up.  It has been for awhile, but now some of the best of it is trickling down into middle-class highbrow magazines.  The Chronicle of Higher Education, for instance, has just published “The Puzzle of Boys,” a compact survey of recent books  (most of them academic, but aimed at general smart readers), arguments, and controversies in the field.   In other words, it is a good way to brush up on this stuff–which is absolutely fascinating viz-a-viz American culture.  Thomas Bartlett underscores that while malehood is just as complicated as any other segment of the gender spectrum, few people have thought seriously about it.  And that’s a major lacuna, given that men still dominate most of the nation’s institutions.  The end of the essay describes what happens to boys when they get to high school; it is particularly sad.

Closely connected to boyhood is, of course, manhood.  Michael Kimmel, a sociologist who teaches at SUNY-Stony Brook, has written two cool books about American masculinity.  Manhood in America: A Cultural History (Oxford UP, 1996, 2005), now in its second edition, is the gold standard.  Or at least one of them, as TGR understands things.  Kimmel is, essentially, a pro-feminist man who hasn’t given up on the importance of distinctly male identities.  Guyland is more contemporary and will appeal to you if you are depressed by things like Judd Apatow and Maxim.  It’s kinda dark out there, lads.

Happy Thanksgiving!

-TGR

INSTA-RECOS

I’m working on a longer post, an appreciation of the poet Adam Zagajewski, which should be up sometime during the next couple weeks.  For now, for the other general readers out there, may I suggest two writers?

If you want novels, get yourself some Denis Johnson.  Tree of Smoke, a book about Vietnam and its aftermath(s) which won the National Book Award in 2007, is very long but a surprisingly quick read.  However, if all those pages make you uneasy, check out Already Dead: A California Gothic, which is about weed growers and occultists in Northern California, among other things.  Even shorter are The Name of the World, a novella which reminds me strongly of Nabokov and Coetzee (particularly in terms of how he writes the male narrator’s voice), and his incredible short-story collection Jesus’ Son, narrated by a sort-of-ex-junkie.  Here are all the Cliffs Notes you need on DJ: he is the drugged-out offshoot of the opulent realism of Saul Bellow, Their Eyes Were Watching God, and F. Scott Fitzgerald, on the one hand, and the weirder perambulations of Melville, Garcia Marquez, Thomas Pynchon, and David Foster Wallace, on the other.  With the possible exception of Pynchon, there is no living American writer whose sentences are as gorgeous and psychologically precise as Johnson’s.

Prefer poetry?  Really? Then buy the Australian Les Murray’s Learning Human, a career-spanning selection of his work.  As a lyric poet with a delicate eye for nature and violence, he is a lot like Seamus Heaney.  But Murray also warps and reconstructs language on the fly, the way John Berryman does in The Dream Songs, mixing together working-class Australian slang, polished international English, and his own bizarre style of dreamy half-babble.  Like Johnson, he writes how the mind moves, without turning his poems into a hash.  He does not show off his experimentation.  Here is “On Removing Spiderweb”:

Like summer silk its denier
but stickily, oh, ickilier,
miffed bunny-blinder, silver tar,
gesticuli-gesticular,
crepe when cobbed, crap when rubbed,
stretchily adhere-and-there
and everyway, nap-snarled or sleek,
glibly hubbed with grots to tweak:
ehh weakly bobbined tae yer neb,
spit it Phuoc Tuy! filthy web!

At first it might seem like gobbledy-gook, but if you read it a couple times, you’ll see that the linguistic twisting and reweaving is just a way to evoke how it feels to walk through a big, nasty, sticky nest.

Enjoy fully not safely,

-TGR

Harry Potter is for children.

Maybe it’s the rainy, windy, generally raw Southern California weather, maybe I’m in a grey mood, but, regardless of the reason, I am just going to say it: if you are a grown-up who reads the Harry Potter books, you should be embarrassed.  You should be really embarrassed.  There are way too many books–good, bad, great, awful–written for adults out there; nobody over the age of 12 needs to read fantasy novels aimed at children.

Look, Harry Potter is great for kids.  I love to see whipper-snappers crack books instead of fiddling with video-game consoles.  The books in the series are well-written and beguiling and all that (yes, I’ve looked), and their existence will probably create a lot of dedicated new readers.  Bless you, J.K. Rowling.  But once a reader becomes a grown-up, s/he needs to read grown-up books, whether that means Dan Brown or Shakespeare or Keynes or whatever.  Otherwise we continue turning into a nation of children which does things like re-elect George W. Bush.  Ever notice how the HP and W eras coincide?  Coincidence?  I THINK NOT.

-TGR