Literature
Lady Gaga and Today's Modernism
Amid the numerous allusions and references to past musicians, actors, and styles in Gay Talese's recent
New Yorker article about Lady Gaga recording with Tony Bennett ("High Notes," September 19), I was struck by a more subtle aesthetic echo: the uncanny, Hemingway-esque dialogue that unfolds between Gaga and Bennett. The exchanges of "I'm having a good time." "Good."?and "We can do it until we're very happy with it." "Everybody's happy...Happy faces!" (with accompanying whiskey, for Gaga)?could be taken right out of
The Sun Also Rises. As is well known, such language in Hemingway's narratives usually hints at the presence of malaise?even terror?right under the surface of any given scene. In terms of Gaga and Bennett in the present moment, their dialogue is curious because it suggests a return of modernist anxieties. Given the upcoming elections, the stalled economy, nostalgia for an earlier (fantasy) moment of the nation, and the boisterous lack of confidence in the current administration, it is no wonder that such ambient tremors would find their way (if unconsciously) into the production enclaves of commercial art and culture.
Of course, strains of American Modernism were also trying to make things new. Would that were the case for today's modernists. One dreams of an alternative
New Yorker article in which Lady Gaga decides to collaborate with the Obama re-election campaign rather than on a Tony Bennett duets album. In this dream article, instead of drinking whiskey alone, Gaga would have a beer with Obama and then get to work, gearing her talents and mass appeal toward real change?which takes time, patience, and sustained collective effort as well as dynamic individuals.
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Character Sketch For Pride & Prejudice
Jane is a quiet and reserved. She is the oldest of the Bennett sisters and by far the prettiest. She is suited by Mr.Bingley. A mutual attraction is formed; there is even talk of them getting married. Her gentleness and openness is sometimes to her detriment....
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Ends Of Things
film equipment for The End of the Tour at the Muskegon Airport in Michigan I wrote about the film The End of the Tour for 3:AM Magazine. I can't tell if the current hype around David Foster Wallace?spurred on by the film and countless reviews...
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Libertarianism And Leaf Blowing: An Aporia
Tad Friend's recent New Yorker article on the suburban politics of leaf blowing suggests a very troubling state of affairs ("Blowback," October 25). The article pits quiet-loving citizens against "the libertarians" who want to be able to pay gardeners...
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Interests Converge
Many of my current interests converge on the cover of this week's New Yorker: Air travel, ecology, post-apocalyptic imagery, book reading versus the new media technologies...this illustration serves as a cipher for a host of anxieties and consolations...
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The Sun Also Rises By Ernest Hemingway
?I can't stand it to think my life is going so fast and I'm not really living it.? A quick read. Not much happens. The snappy dialogue provides the narrative with forward momentum. The lost generation. WWI. Lots of drinking. Expatriates....
Literature