“starring in her own propaganda film”

Start with a cup of half-understood Nietzsche, add a slavering devotion to wealth and a refusal to acknowledge history, finish with a dash of sexual bitterness, and you’ve got yourself some Ayn Rand.  Like a lot of nerds, I was deep into The Fountainhead during high school.  Then I went to college and started an education; ten years later, I’m–like a lot of nerds–embarrassed by my youthful affection for this crank.

There’s a new biography out, reviewed here by Sam Anderson of New York Magazine.  If I didn’t think Halloween is  silly child’s holiday, I might dress up as  Howard Roark–you know, be an asshole toward everyone who doesn’t think like I do, and maybe end up with a babe in the end.  Ladies, according to Ayn Rand, you all worship imperious men.  Didn’t work out so well for her, though.

If you want to cleanse your palate, the magazine is also running an interview with one of my favorite sports writers, Bill Simmons, a.k.a. The Sports Guy.

-TGR

City Journal rules

If anybody wants to buy me a subscripton ($23/yr) for Christmas, I say go.  I found out about it mainly through Matthew Yglesias, a great blogger with an interest in urban design and landscape architecture.

For now, two good articles from the recent issue.  The first is about E.D. Hirsch and the present fork in the proverbial road of American education.  As a college teacher who is routinely appalled by even his best students’ lack of basic cultural knowledge, I find Hirsch’s emphasis on core curriculum reassuring.  It works, and lately we haven’t been honest about that.  In fact, Hirsch is so smart that I even forgive him for teaching at The Other Place.

The other article, “A Place is Better Than a Plan,” deals with the minor moves and subtleties that are crucial to urban landscaping.

-TGR

I gripe too much about hip-hop journalism

. . . because although he deserves some of his detractors, you’ve got to concede that Sasha Frere-Jones  is a good journalist.*  He is plain-spokenly erudite: the guy isn’t a dick about how much he knows.  His writing has the style of all good teaching, because he clearly likes what he’s talking about and wants you to like it, too.  Jones is an amateur in the original sense.*  His latest piece in The New Yorker is both a mini-history of rap and a compact survey of contemporary stylistic trends and lyrical tendencies, as well as good recent albums, including the mixtapes of Freddie Gibbs (who da truth).   The thing I like most about Jones is that he pays attention to form; mainly to musical form–as a musician, that’s the perspective he works from–but with a good sense of why lyrics matter and should be interesting.  Given the entwined histories of poetry and music, Jones would make a good literary journalist, too.*

-TGR

* TGR knows almost nothing about music journalism and is the kind of person who gets his music tips from The New Yorker and smart friends.

* There will always be a need for generalist critics, i.e. specialists who can transmit their knowledge to an audience of intelligent laypeople (see Wood, James).  This is particularly important vis-a-vis music culture/criticism, which tends to fracture into little islands of pompous cognoscenti, and thus needs critics who aren’t, well, pompous when talking to people who know less about music than they.

* One can admire a critic’s general toolkit, so to speak, without admiring or accepting ALL of his/her specific ideas and positions.  For instance, S F-J is wrong about Kid Cudi being abrasive, and he likes Grizzly Bear a whole lot more than I do.  Nonetheless, I acknowledge that the way(s) he lays out his opinions is/are graceful.

three great articles

From the Internets . . .

A retrospective on the life of Elizabeth Hardwick, one of the century’s great critics, now unfairly forgotten or given as a footnote to Robert Lowell’s life.

Responsible suburbanites getting stoned & not feeling guilty about it.

Lewis Lapham’s rapier take-down of Tim Russert, “Elegy for a Rubber Stamp,” written just after he died, a la Mencken on William Jennings Bryan or Hunter Thompson on Nixon.

your teachers were right . . .

. . . reading literally does make your brain more efficient.  This is why I sometimes feel like crying when I see so many twenty-somethings (or thirty-somethings or forty-somethings) who can’t sit or walk by themselves for 15 seconds without opening their iPhones or shoving in some earbuds.   Are we really entering an age of “secondary orality”?  Click and read and think: Caleb Crain, “Twilight of the Books.”

I usually give this essay to my students.  They are usually fascinated by it, but as far as I can tell, few if any of them become any more likely to read something besides Harry Potter.

Raymond Carver and his editors

As usual, the daily book pages of British papers, especially The Guardian and The Observer, put American newspaper reviews to shame.  From The Observer, this piece is a thoughtful, well-researched, impartial look at the relationship between a writer and his/her confidants (both the official kind and the ones s/he finds amongst family and friends).  In this case the writer is a he famous for his lean prose and portraits of anxious, quietly angry Americans, and his confidants may have had far more of a hand in his work than readers previously imagined.  For instance, I didn’t know that What We Talk About When We Talk About Love was not Carver’s own original title;  nor did I realize that Carver’s second wife, the poet Tess Gallagher, great love of his middle age (which turned out to be his late age), often rewrote whole sentences.  I don’t think this should reduce our admiration for Carver’s brilliance.  But it does remind us that even if The Author isn’t dead, as Roland Barthes, a man who wrote no novels or poetry, once famous claimed (fooling two generations of academics into nodding their heads–seriously, how many dumb theories have come out of the French academy?), writers are also not sui generis creatures.  Even a genius needs an audience to hear and fiddle with (or suggest fiddlings with) his/her work before it actually hits the marketplace.  All that Keatsian Romantic stuff about the lone genius was a bit overblown.

It’s also interesting that poets tend to incorporate less outside input into their work than novelists or dramatists do.  A big reason for this is the basic condition of the literary marketplace: novelists work with editors (since there is actually money to be made from novels, big publishing houses demand this level of involvement in the product) and dramatists, like filmmakers, operate  in much more crowded, sociable environments–the playwright at his desk in his office cannot be separated from the playwright working with directors and actors to put his work onstage.  However, I also wonder if there is something more solitary or imperious about most poets’ temperaments.  True, if you’re a smart aspiring poet, you seek out critical readers wherever and whenever you can, but most of the final editorial decisions are yours.  Not to say there are many people eager to help with the decisions: poetry is a lonelier game, if only in an economic sense.  A novelist, though, burdened and blessed by the existence of a public willing to buy his creations in large enough quantities for a few people to make money off them, often gives up a decent measure of control.  Not to say that there are not lone wolves prowling the literary landscape or suggest that a novelist isn’t the master of his work; nevertheless, these differences are real.

Anyway, a nice fifteen-minute read for Sunday morning before football starts, or for a Tuesday afternoon when you are trying to avoid work.  I got this from Arts and Letters Daily, the best arts & culture clearinghouse on the web.  If some good literary journalism gets published anywhere in the Western world, you can be sure it will end up there.

-TGR