Archive for the ‘Literary Culture’ Category

#397 – Geeking Out

Tuesday, June 22nd, 2010

two critics on the art of fandom & the politics of geekdom.

Artistry often begins in fandom—as an aspiration, at first, not really to express one’s creative identity but to take on someone else’s. …Real anxiety comes not with influence, but with the imperative to transcend it, which is another part of creative development.

- David Hadju, “Pretending,” on The Beatles: Rock Band & Guitar Hero, The New Republic, 2 December 2009

Whatever the personal roots of Lethem’s compulsions in temperment and trauma, geekdom also responds to a wider history. It is not simply fandom and was not fully possible before the 1970s, the decade in which Lethem grew up. Its scholarly posture awaited the erasure of high/low distinctions and the rise of a popular culture that thought enough of itself to elicit a corresponding critical seriousness. …All of a sudden it was intellectually respectable to spin out theories about Spiderman or I Dream of Jeannie. And not just respectable, but necessary. The ’70s also marked the moment when media culture reaached a kind of saturation point, the age by which we found ourselves, as George W.S. Trow famously put it, within the context of no context. What Warhol intuited and Sontag theorized was now universal—and for children of the ’70s, congenital. All media, all the time: commercials, billboards, boom boxes, Muzak, cable; hooks, jingles, icons, slogans, logos. …Geekdom resists the informational avalanche through the impossible strategy of seeking to master it—hence both its theoretical drive and the infinitude of its quest.

— William Deresiewicz, “A Geek Grows in Brooklyn,” on the novel Chronic City by Jonathan Lethem, The New Republic, 21 October 2009

Hadju, adolescent of the 1960s, and still something of a modernist, argues that fandom arises out of imitation—the anxiety of influence comes from the next step: trying to become yourself.

Deresiewicz, child of the 1970s, and fully born into the postmodern experience, expresses an entirely different worry: no more is the issue to become yourself in the shadow of heroes, but rather simply to survive the onslaught of information in the first place.

This is not an anxiety of influence, but rather an anxiety of lack of influence. The goal is not originality, but mastery of lost originals. One geeks out not to transform oneself, but to find refuge in what already exists.

#378 – Pynchonesque Potboiler

Friday, April 2nd, 2010

sleuthing the cig-sties.

What we lost when we lost the addled Sixties, this novel is saying to us, is the illumination that may strike the truly confused….

-Michael Wood, “What Happened at Gordita Beach?,” New York Review of Books, 24 September 2009

Inherent Vice might be thought of as Thomas Pynchon’s sequel to The Crying of Lot 49 and (especially) Vineland, two of his shorter, more disciplined novels. In fact, references to characters and details from both turn up—clue-like—in Inherent Vice.

The more focused form does not mean that the book is not wonderfully sprawling and epic as we follow in the gumshoes (or as one character jokes, the “gum-sandals”) of a hippie private investigator named Doc Sportello and embark on a noirish detective caper. We find ourselves in a remake of The Maltese Falcon, but this time the bird is on acid, and the tale is set in a cloud of reefer smog hanging over the beach communities of the Los Angeles metropole, circa 1970.

Much as the book is, on the surface, a spoof of the lowbrow (but often in fact high art) detective story, Michael Wood makes the intriguing argument that Inherent Vice might be better understood as a historical novel. For Wood, the book is really more about the Sixties than it is about Pynchon’s literary appropriation of noir.

But they why does Pynchon use the noir form to explore the burnt-out scene of late-sixties L.A.? We might say that Pynchon’s novel uses the psychological intensity and paranoid lostness of noir (as well as its oddly self-aware, low-budget, and formulaic mannerisms) to uncover new meanings (and profoundly Flitcraftian meaninglessnesses) in the Sixties counterculture.

If Wood’s interpretation is correct, then the countercultural Sixties can better be grasped not as a superficial program or a coherent ideology, but instead as a kind of faux-detective story in which the most profound illuminations emerged for those who were most bewildered by the bewildering world of a bewildering decade. Sam Spade, it turns out, wasn’t the forerunner of Dirty Harry, but of dirty hippies.

In the Sixties of Inherent Vice, there was much more glaring, stark black-and-white within the psychedelic light show than we now think. Many more shadows lurked in the tie-dye swirls of the past than popular memory permits.

#366 – Aggregation Elation

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

digesting bookforum’s omnivore blog.

I remain amazed at the continual flow of articles and links at Bookforum’s Omnivore blog. Its authors remain in the shadows—in fact, they might best be called blog editors instead of authors—but their assemblages are magnificent examples of materials organized in playfully thematic ways.

#361 – Extra! Extra! Read All About It!

Saturday, January 30th, 2010

mcsweeney’s captures the gone grandeur of the twentieth-century newspaper.

Issue 33 of McSweeney’s Quarterly Concern takes the form of The San Francisco Panorama. Published on giant newsprint, the latest creation of Dave Eggers and gang is a kind of romanticized, fetishized idealization of the classic urban daily. It’s a brilliantly strange move, for the articles zip and zap with the energy and flash of an online news aggregator, but they make you recall the sheer beauty and thrill of the newspaper.

McSweeney’s issue 33: The San Francisco Panorama.

The San Francisco Panorama reminds one of what made the newspaper so great as an object: it compressed the feeling of living in a metropolis into a satchel. It was destined for scrap paper, butcher wrap, fire kindling, and, in more recent times, the recycling pile. It was merely a common part of everyday life. At the same time, in its heyday, the newspaper was perhaps the most important, vital, miraculous, valuable thing you owned: for without it you were stranded, lost, alone, without company, even the company of strangers. Within its columns, one accessed civilization.

McSweeney’s issue 33 recovers this feeling by its transposition of the urban daily to magazine form. You are pretending to read the daily here. The pleasure is the same as entering a great antique store. You wonder, why would anyone ever give this stuff up?

Then, clicking away, screened from the past, you realize that only when nobody wants yesterday’s papers do we start to appreciate the newsprint all over our fingers.

#353 – The Dude Abides

Wednesday, December 30th, 2009

hey, careful, man, there’s a beverage here — a refreshing look at how the dude abides in academia.

At long last, a New York Times article that does not simply dismiss academic efforts to take pop culture seriously.

In  “Dissertations on His Dudeness,” book critic Dwight Garner earnestly engages scholarly analyses of the cult film The Big Lebowski while also, with congenial subtlety, poking fun at the attempt to philosophize alongside the Dude.

This is a cause for celebration. For even if you’re into the whole brevity thing, and you don’t like mixing your highbrow and your lowbrow, Garner let’s you enjoy the fun of taking this strange, absurd, borderline-insane/borderline-profound Coen Brothers film seriously. This approach of twinkling and rolling the critic’s eye all at once is so much more refreshing than the umpteenth version of the typical New York Times reactionary response to academic studies of popular culture.

In the typical Times article, the reader, the film, popular culture, the academy all get bashed repeatedly by a “can you believe those daffy professors are writing about American Idol?” tone of incredulity that has become even more tiresome and limiting than the worst mismatches between high theory and low culture could ever be. What started out as a healthy guarded skepticism in profiles of the ivy tower gone prime time became nothing more than a long line of gimmicky, close-minded, clichéd puff pieces-in-reverse: one loud lazy whine of hack-job elitism masquerading as populist outrage.

In Garner’s review, which makes fabulous use of Umberto Eco’s essay “Casablanca: Cult Movies and Intertextual Collage,” we can have our white Russians and learn how new shit has come to light too. And this, thankfully, is how the whole durned human comedy can keep perpetuatin’ itself.

#348 – Snark with Spark

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

a critique of critique of critique.

Jody Rosen had two extremely fun and funny critical takedowns of other critics last week in Slate. The first burst burned down the bucolic barn of New York Times editorial-page ruralist Verlyn Klinkenborg. The second went at all the John Mayer haters out there.

Were they snarky? Yes. Were they ruining conversation? Probably not. For there was plenty of argument behind Rosen’s fairly vicious quipping. He had a point to make in each case, and he made it with a series of swift, magnificent uppercuts rather than any hits below the belt.

Listen to Rosen on Klinkenborg:

…bewilderment is his shtick. Klinkenborg’s columns are literary minstrel routines, starring the writer as an idiot savant—a bumpkin-seer who perceives the marvelous in the pedestrian and pivots to “epiphanies” that elude those of us who haven’t spent years watching sunlight dapple the snouts of woodchucks.

And Rosen on Mayer and Jonah Weiner’s “playa hating” of him:

Jonah, let’s cut to the chase: John Mayer is a douchebag. Or, rather, he’s a meta-douchebag—a guy who’s smart enough, self-aware enough, to know that he’s a douchebag, and to meditate on douchebaggery and its discontents in his music.

…It strikes me that Mayer and his ilk get an especially tough time from critics. Sensitive white boy singer-songwriters with easy-listening proclivities and Berklee College of Music-honed chops—they’re not exactly rock critic bait. Even in these poptimistic times, it’s still socially acceptable to reflexively dismiss the Mayers of the world. So I’ll say one more nice thing about him: the guy can write some tunes.

What’s wonderful about these critical put-downs is that after the initial sting, there’s plenty to ponder. Having pastoral tendencies, I have always read Klinkenborg uncritically, dreaming of life on ye old idyllic Hudson Valley farm; but I will never do that the same way again, even if I will still not “playa hate” Klinkenborg as much as Rosen does. And though I still, much to my own dismay, cannot remove my authentic core of rockist purity (I jest for those of you who have followed the great poptimist vs. rockist debates), I will give that Mayer another, more ironic listen.

The key to Rosen’s snark is that it has spark: it illuminates. It may open up wounds, but it also opens up conversation, deeper thinking, and more careful inquiry.

#338 – Culture Rover’s Unfamiliar Quotations

Friday, October 16th, 2009

I am serious about criticism. The critic has a moral requirement. He may write about a book from any view whatever, but he owes it to his audience and to the book to separate the book’s ideas from his own, and to follow it with a warning that his reaction to the particular work must be seen within that context. Without such a demurrer, all integrity leaves criticism, and one is merely producing propaganda.

- Norman Mailer, Letter to Max Glissen, 17 December 1951, published in the New York Review of Books, 12 February 2009

#291 – A Staggering Comment of Heartbreaking Genius

Tuesday, March 3rd, 2009

“I believe I want adult sanity, which seems to me the only unalloyed form of heroism available today.” – David Foster Wallace

#287 – Souped Up

Friday, February 20th, 2009

the problem with louis menand’s “ambidextrous” postmodernism.

The point of Warhol’s Campbell’s soup-can paintings was not that a soup can is like a work of art. It was that a work of art is like a soup can: they are both commodities.

[Robert Rauschenberg] would buy paint cans whose labels had come off, so that he wouldn’t know the color before he used it, in order to let the materials dictate the products.

- Louis Menand, “Saved From Drowning: Barthelme Reconsidered,” New Yorker, 23 February 2009

big-torn-campbells-soup-can-c1962

Louis Menand has a typically marvelous essay about a new biography of Donald Barthelme in this week’s New Yorker. In the piece, Menand uses Andy Warhol to distinguish between an understanding of postmodernism as the continuation of modernism — we are all modernists now — and a use of the term to signal that modernism is dead and what follows is something new, something even antimodern.

The definitions come down, for Menand, to one’s view of art as something similar to, or different from, commerce: highbrow-lowbrow-middlebrow kinds of categorizations of art.

As many do, Menand uses Warhol to symbolize postmodernism as the effort to extinguish art, to destroy its status, to render it (or reveal it) as nothing more than another commodity, another soup can. Barthelme has often been associated with this Warholian understanding of the postmodern. But in Menand’s reassessment, he should in fact be grouped with the other definition of the postmodern: Barthelme was, in Menand’s interpretation, exploring the modernist obsession with form and process (which focused on the how rather than the what of representation) that he found and loved in authors such as Beckett.

All well and good. But there is one problem. I do not think upon closer inspection that Warhol’s art holds water, or better said, holds condensed soup, as a container for the kind of postmodernism that Menand describes.

Pictured in multiple forms — as serial repetitions, stuffed with dollar bills, in mutated colors, in various poses — Warhol’s Campbell’s soup cans did not reduce art to a commodity so much as artfully explore the nature of the commodity.

That is, Warhol’s Campbell’s soup cans are still lives turned into history paintings. They explore the material of the postwar consumer world, including the invisible, just-add-water materials of marketing and advertising, in order to grasp at representing the experiences — emotional, sensorial, intellectual, ideological — of the historical moment.

In this sense, Warhol’s soup cans are just like Rauschenberg’s paint cans — they start with the material reality of the world as it is and not in the representational mode of what it might be. They refuse to fake it, but in doing so seem like they are rejecting verisimilitude, when in fact, they long to discover, embrace, and capture the real. Or, as Menard quotes Barthelme writing about Rauschenberg: “The confusing signals, the impurity of the signal, gives you verisimilitude.”

What’s fascinating about Warhol’s soup cans (I am working on a longer article about this) is not that they empty out meaning, that they reduce art to the blank form of the commodity, but rather that they are flooded with meaning: these representations continually return to the multiple meanings of the commodity and the labels of marketing, advertising, and consumer desire in which the commodity gets wrapped up.

You can never quite keep the lid on Warhol’s art of the Campbell’s soup can. From drawings by his mother of Campbell’s soup cans followed by a scribble that “soup is gut” (the immigrant Julia Warhola’s effort to write that soup was good) to all the iterations of the soup can that Warhol explored to the rich commercial afterlife of his Campbell’s soup imagery, which was quickly reabsorbed into the mediascapes of postwar American consumer culture (including my favorite example, from a 1969 cover of Esquire, in which Warhol is drowning in a soup can), Warhol’s representations never simply became commodities.

Instead, they are either materially located in his real life (his mother Julia served them as part of Warhol’s lunch for decades) or they can serve as symbols of the perplexing nature of democracy in postwar American consumer culture (in which dreamlives increasingly derived from the same symbols, but never in precisely the same way) or they speak to anxieties about the status of art in the modern world (as on the Esquire cover, which contains the title, “the final decline and total collapse of the American avant-garde” or the soup can erupts out of being merely a commodity in some other manner.

warhol drowning in soup

So this second definition of the postmodern grows increasingly suspect in Menand’s article. Which is where Menand seems to be taking us as he reconsiders Barthelme.

Menand poses a binary of postmodernism as an “ambidextrous” term that at once refers to the continuation of modernism and the abandonment of modernism. In this dichotomy, Barthelme has always been lumped in with Warhol as examples of the rejection of the modernist approach. But Menand notices how  Barthelme’s writing was in fact an elaboration and extension of modernism (quite similar to other writers of the day — Frank O’Hara, John Ashbery, and Kenneth Koch — who attempted to import methods from postwar American painters such as Rauschenberg into their use of language, so that they created poems that were “combines” of lingustic detritus, incongruous sentences and phrases brought together to produce the pleasures of systems on the very of coherence and incoherence).

This would seem to demand a reassessment not only of Barthelme, but also of the entire dichotomy with which Menand started out his essay. But he does not propose how Barthelme’s writing (or Warhol’s art for that matter) forces us to rethink this binary.

Maybe this is because the distinction does not matter so much. Perhaps, a pragmatist might say, it’s not the theoretical categorization that matters, it’s the result that counts.

In this line of thinking, being a new kind of art or nothing more than a commodity is immaterial. What’s important, as Menand argues Barthelme believed, is pondering and trying to access the ineffable. And that might be worth doing, Warhol’s art seems to suggest, even when it’s material for sale all around us. Maybe especially then.

“The aim of literature is the creation of a strange object covered with fur which breaks your heart.” So declares — in mock-ironic tones of grandeur — one of Barthelme’s early short story characters (Baskerville in “Florence Green is 81″). It sounds like it could be a particularly hirsute incarnation of one of Warhol’s Campbell’s soup cans.

#276 – Culture Rover’s Unfamiliar Quotations

Friday, January 23rd, 2009

Although I have read a lot, I have drunk even more. – Guy Debord