The British-born, American historian of French culture, Tony Judt, died over the weekend. Right now, Judt is perhaps most famous for a series of essays he has written over the past year or so detailing his struggles with Lou Gehrig's disease. They are unflinching in their honesty about the condition. As difficult as they are to read, I can only imagine how hard they most have been to write. Just prior to this, Judt had attained some level of controversy over his articles on Israel and the Middle East. A former Zionist, he came to a strongly critical position of the Israeli state late in his life. This contributed to a cancellation of a scheduled 2006 speech at the Polish Embassy in New York, prompted by pressure from the Anti-Defamation League.
But in fact Judt's speciality was intellectual history, and this is how I first became aware of him, especially around the publication of Past Imperfect, which indicted a number of Marxist and Left-wing intellectuals in post-War France, most notably Jean-Paul Sartre, for their moral obtuseness. At the time, I was falling out of love a bit with Western left-wing thinking myself, so I rather enjoyed Judt's elegant polemics. Now I think that it could also be seen as a bit of piling on: hitting the Left when it was in disarray and demoralized following the collapse of Soviet Communism and the seeming triumphant rise of free-market capitalism as solution to the human condition. But Judt was, to his credit, never a neo-liberal. As far as I can tell he remained a social democrat throughout his life, and his political positions were always a bit unpredictable, which is about as safe a guarantee of an original and honest mind as I can imagine. To get some idea of what we have lost, read this, one of the last essays he wrote for NYRB.
Monday, August 9, 2010
Friday, August 6, 2010
Americans will destroy beer if we let them
I'm been meaning to write this post for some time now. About a year and half, to be more precise, dating from the moment when I first tried Sam Adams Imperial Stout. I note for the record that I am a big fan of Samuel Adams and of Jim Koch. Sam Adams Boston Lager was the beer that got me interested in drinking outside the pilsner style that had dominated North American brewing for so long, and I still think that it's a solid beer: a good example of how you can move from niche market to mass market and not totally lose your soul. Also, I think that Koch has done more than any other single person to bring interesting beer back to the American public. I don't remember ever really disliking a Samuel Adams beer with the possible exception of that cherry-flavored crap that they called a lambic, and which they now, Thank God, seem to have discontinued. So I was excited to see that they had produced these "speciality" beers, what they called the Brewmasters Collection. If their regular beers are that good, my thinking went, their speciality beers will be even better.
Well, no. The Imperial Stout, first of all, did not taste like a stout. It tasted like a watery, slightly beery flavored molasses. So bad that for perhaps the first time in my life I was tempted to toss out beer that I had paid good money for into the garbage (I didn't. I used it in recipes instead, where the food could help mask the taste). The last time I remembered hating a beer this bad was when I was at a tasting sponsored by Tulsa's resident beer expert, Elliot Nelson (owner/operator of the always-reliable McNellie's pub in the downtown portion of our city), and we were given a sample of what Nelson called "extreme beer:" which are not really defined by anything other than the desire to push the envelope. Extreme hoppy taste, or extremely high alcohol content, or extremely strange flavors (often, in the last case, inspired by beers of past ages). And then I remembered that Nelson had mentioned Koch being somewhat impressed by the whole idea of extreme beer.
So, who to blame for what I think is this extremely bad idea? Well, maybe Koch himself, who may have coined the phrase. But I think the better candidate might be one Sam Calagione, owner of Dogfish Brewery in Delaware and the subject of this 2008 New Yorker profile by Burkhard Bilger. Calagione seems to have been a slightly fucked-up scion of American wealth (he got kicked out of his East Coast prep school for shenanigans)--a Holden Caulfield type, a bit of a lost soul, until he discovered his true calling in his twenties: which was to screw up American craft brewing by making really, really hoppy beers. As soon as I started to read about Calagione I recalled Dogfish from my days in Philly. It was one of those beers that I wanted to enjoy but just couldn't. Everything about it was funky and cool, right down to its name and its labels. The only problem was I didn't like the actual taste of the beer. Bilger's story is mostly hagiographic, but for me, the key quote is a negative one from Garrett Oliver, the brewmaster at Brooklyn Brewery (which makes some good beers):
"When a brewer says, ‘This has more hops in it than anything you’ve had in your life—are you man enough to drink it?,’ it’s sort of like a chef saying, ‘This stew has more salt in it than anything you’ve ever had—are you man enough to eat it?’"
It's important that beer, like any other sort of food, taste interesting. But actually, that's not the most important thing. The most important thing is that it taste good. Extreme beer seems to be the product of two different forces. The first is the inherent American tendency to think that bigger is better. The same attitude that gave us the Lincoln Navigator and Golden Corral has produced beer with an alcohol content upwards of 20 percent. The second is the need of the modern beer aficianado to prove cultural capital through drinking beer with "complex" or "interesting" tastes (or sometimes, "notes," as though we were describing wine.) When I was at the beer festival in Montreal earlier this summer, there were a lot of beers that were aiming for this palate: most notably, Dieu de Ciel, whose Péché Mortel has achieved international recognition. But for my money Unibroue--as much as it has turned into a corporation--still has the best of the Quebec brews. Unibroue generally follows older styles, particularly from Belgium and France, and doesn't try to get too fancy.
Innovation is not bad per se (nor, for that matter, is excess), but there's problem, I think, when we start to value these things for their own sake, rather than establishing some other, competing standard for quality. Surrender that more rigorous standard, you end up with some asshole in Scotland making beer that's 55 per cent alcohol, stuck inside a Dead Squirrel. (Why not just drink some whisky? I guarantee it will taste better than that shit.)
We can't let this happen to beer. As Belgian monks have always known, beer is too important.
Well, no. The Imperial Stout, first of all, did not taste like a stout. It tasted like a watery, slightly beery flavored molasses. So bad that for perhaps the first time in my life I was tempted to toss out beer that I had paid good money for into the garbage (I didn't. I used it in recipes instead, where the food could help mask the taste). The last time I remembered hating a beer this bad was when I was at a tasting sponsored by Tulsa's resident beer expert, Elliot Nelson (owner/operator of the always-reliable McNellie's pub in the downtown portion of our city), and we were given a sample of what Nelson called "extreme beer:" which are not really defined by anything other than the desire to push the envelope. Extreme hoppy taste, or extremely high alcohol content, or extremely strange flavors (often, in the last case, inspired by beers of past ages). And then I remembered that Nelson had mentioned Koch being somewhat impressed by the whole idea of extreme beer.
So, who to blame for what I think is this extremely bad idea? Well, maybe Koch himself, who may have coined the phrase. But I think the better candidate might be one Sam Calagione, owner of Dogfish Brewery in Delaware and the subject of this 2008 New Yorker profile by Burkhard Bilger. Calagione seems to have been a slightly fucked-up scion of American wealth (he got kicked out of his East Coast prep school for shenanigans)--a Holden Caulfield type, a bit of a lost soul, until he discovered his true calling in his twenties: which was to screw up American craft brewing by making really, really hoppy beers. As soon as I started to read about Calagione I recalled Dogfish from my days in Philly. It was one of those beers that I wanted to enjoy but just couldn't. Everything about it was funky and cool, right down to its name and its labels. The only problem was I didn't like the actual taste of the beer. Bilger's story is mostly hagiographic, but for me, the key quote is a negative one from Garrett Oliver, the brewmaster at Brooklyn Brewery (which makes some good beers):
"When a brewer says, ‘This has more hops in it than anything you’ve had in your life—are you man enough to drink it?,’ it’s sort of like a chef saying, ‘This stew has more salt in it than anything you’ve ever had—are you man enough to eat it?’"
It's important that beer, like any other sort of food, taste interesting. But actually, that's not the most important thing. The most important thing is that it taste good. Extreme beer seems to be the product of two different forces. The first is the inherent American tendency to think that bigger is better. The same attitude that gave us the Lincoln Navigator and Golden Corral has produced beer with an alcohol content upwards of 20 percent. The second is the need of the modern beer aficianado to prove cultural capital through drinking beer with "complex" or "interesting" tastes (or sometimes, "notes," as though we were describing wine.) When I was at the beer festival in Montreal earlier this summer, there were a lot of beers that were aiming for this palate: most notably, Dieu de Ciel, whose Péché Mortel has achieved international recognition. But for my money Unibroue--as much as it has turned into a corporation--still has the best of the Quebec brews. Unibroue generally follows older styles, particularly from Belgium and France, and doesn't try to get too fancy.
Innovation is not bad per se (nor, for that matter, is excess), but there's problem, I think, when we start to value these things for their own sake, rather than establishing some other, competing standard for quality. Surrender that more rigorous standard, you end up with some asshole in Scotland making beer that's 55 per cent alcohol, stuck inside a Dead Squirrel. (Why not just drink some whisky? I guarantee it will taste better than that shit.)
We can't let this happen to beer. As Belgian monks have always known, beer is too important.
Tuesday, June 22, 2010
The uses of bad literature
The idea for this post came when I was reading a Salon column several months ago (which I no longer find unfortunately, and therefore cannot link to) about what books not to bring to the beach with you this summer. It was titled "Worst Books Ever," or something like that, and it naturally got me to thinking about books that I've really, really hated. Which naturally got me to thinking about Olivier Pauvert's Noir. Now, it may be the case that I have hated a book more that Noir, but if so, that happened some time in my distant past, perhaps during my undergraduate years, and I must have blocked the moment from my memory. I hated Noir so much that about half of the way through I seriously considered just throwing it away, which is something I almost never do with a novel, both because I am almost pathologically addicted to plot, of almost any sort, and because I'm such a lazy bastard that when I put a sufficient amount of energy into a book (like, say, reading past the first page) I don't want to think that its all been wasted by not finishing it off. So I kept reading to the end, which fulfilled by expectations by being both as repulsive and banal as I thought it would be.
What makes Noir so bad? Not its prose style: since I read it in translation it wouldn't be fair for me to comment on that aspect of the book. It may be that Pauvert is a master of modern French, though I can't believe anyone this stupid could write lyrically in any language. Not its predictable politics either: progressive denunciations of corporate capitalism and racism are of course nothing new, but that particular sin certainly is not Pauvert's alone. Many other, and better, writers share it, but make up for the failing by being more subtle in their understanding of the human condition, or of interpersonal relationships, or of the nature between reality and artifice. The problem is not even in the overwrought depictions of violence that are a near constant element of the narrative. To be sure, the treatment of violence is something to make most readers queasy, because you get the same sense with Pauvert as you do in a movie like Natural Born Killers: that these depictions are consciously undertaken with an eye toward critique, but unconsciously the artist (Pauvert in one case, Stone in the other) is actually getting off on them, or at least pandering to them.
No, in the end what moves Noir past mediocre or even bad literature into truly terrible literature is the moral incoherence at the center of it. On the one hand, Pauvert clearly wants to be the next Michel Houellebecq, an enfant terrible of letters who shocks the elders but entrances the younger generation with his stylish cynicism. Only he doesn't have Houellebecq's balls, so his targets are all what one would expect of a well-read but not particularly imaginative teenager. Screeds against God, claims about the meaningless of the universe: these are not going to épater anyone at this point. If you want the cultural cachet that comes with transgression, then do something that is actually going to piss people off, like Houellebecq does: make fun of post-60 political pretensions, say something nasty about women, or non-Christian religions, or people of a darker hue. Pauvert can't make himself actually move beyond what would constitute the established boundaries of any conceivable audience for a book like this, so his "scandalous" pronouncements end up as reaffirmations of convention: he's a bourgeoisie in Nietzschean clothing, who wants to combine a 60s flower-child ethos with a nihilistic metaphysics and can't quite figure out (or maybe, can't admit) that the one position makes the other non-sensical. If nothing means anything, then the real hero of Pauvert's tale isn't the poor schlep we've been following through 200-odd pages. It's the amoral capitalist we meet at the end, the guy who's been pulling the strings all along, the one who can look on with equanimity as his wife and children are slaughtered. He's the real ubermensch, the one who's seen through the veil of human weakness (aka morality) that the rest of us use in order to avoid facing up to human existence with genuine courage.
So that's all I'm going to say about Noir (for now). The other part of this post deals with the book I was reading when I read the original essay: Porius, by the modernist Welsh poet and novelist John Cowper Powys. The first thing you should know about Porius, if you're thinking about reading it, is that it is 750 pages long. The second thing you should know is that it is filled with sentences like this: "Even without this new light the upward-spurting flame from the fire tended by the Derwydd would have been in itself sufficient illumination to reveal the pitiful contortion, like that of a child about to cry, that convulsed Llew's face; and her blow was followed by an immediate revulsion of pity, and snatching at his hand, the girl moved straight towards the dirty blanket leanding him gently with her and not forgetting, as her eyes encountered Brochvael's before the curtain closed behind them, to touch her breast with a significant smile, as if to remind her friend of the presence in that warm place of his rag-sheathed dagger." (Just curious. At what point in reading that did you start to wonder about what you were going to make for dinner tonight?)
According to the introduction to the story, Powys considered Porius--essentially a retelling of the Arthurian legend with the historical novel genre--as his magnum opus. He worked on it for over fifteen years. This explains, it does not excuse, his inability to edit either the story or his prose. The American publisher he sent it to, Simon and Shuster, mailed it back with the comment, " over-written and undicepherable," which is not an unfair description of a great deal of the book. At the beginning of the story is a Tolstoyan list of characters, in unpronounceable Welsh rather than unpronounceable Russian. Many of them--Medrawd, Gwennydd, Myrddin Wyllt--are Powys' Welsh versions of more common English names--Mordred, Guiniverre, Merlin respectively--a fact I didn't cotton onto until I was about two-thirds of the way through. Also, it was so complicated moving back and forth from the text to the initial cast of characters that I eventually just gave up. He creates a whole new word, cavorseniargize. Despite the fact that it plays a fairly important role in conveying the personality of the main character, after finishing the book I am still at a loss as to describe what the word means, or even how it might sound if spoken.
Nor are these complications the only major problem with the book. Perhaps more damaging, in the end, is Powys' anachronistic depiction of his main characters. They are not, despite the setting and plot, Romanized Britons of fifth century AD. Rather, they are twentieth-century English bohemians: intensely concerned with their personal feelings and subjective reactions to events. They are people of the text, not of an oral culture which surely would have been the actual historical context of the people who inhabited Wales in the year 499.
And yet, having said all of this, if someone were to ask me if I would recommend this book, and if that person were someone I respected, I would almost certainly say yes, for a least two reasons. First, because of the way that Powys both understands and is able to communicate a relationship between human experience and the world that it seems to me we have lost, and that is essential to regain if we are to avoid eventually destroying ourselves or our descendants. In reviews he is often compared to Garcia Marquez and the magical realists, but these comparisons seem to me to fundamentally miss the point. In Powys' history, nothing happens that, strictly speaking, could not be accepted by any modern materialist: even when characters see instances of supposed magic, it is generally conceded that there is at least the possibility they are only being fooled by their minds, or the angle of the sun on a rock. The closest I can get to labeling Powys' universe is to call it one of realistic mysticism. He does not so much accept miracles and spirits as to see through the veil of ordinary reality into something deeper, more beautiful, more wild. His "super-naturalism" is exactly that: part of the natural world but at the same time superseding it. Beyond it, more of it. His trees, his rivers, his animals, his humans: they are themselves and more than themselves. They are at one and the same time both the copies of the Idea, and the Idea itself.
The other valuable aspect of the book is Powys' critique of Christianity. Speaking as a Christian believer, it is a relief to find someone who can actually articulate an intelligent challenge to the faith, in distinction to metaphysical midgets like Christopher Hitchens and Richard Dawkins. To be sure, the author loads the dice: all his Christian characters are dogmatic bullies or neurotic gits. But that's fair enough, in a way: Chesterton loads the dice too. While the main characters' briefs again Christianity are historically unconvincing, as philosophical arguments they at least make a sympathetic and persuasive case against the Christian worldview, on the only intelligent grounds, which are not epistemological but moral.
And then, finally, I came to be more sympathetic even to Powys' crazy prose style. At least, I managed to produce a hypothesis that did not simply chalk things up to incompetence. What Powys might have been trying to do, I think, is to craft a prose that paralleled the oral poetry of the original oral sources, with their overloaded physical descriptions and characterizations. It didn't work in the end because oral narrative does not really translate that well into textual narrative. What works in the one medium does not work in the other. But perhaps Powys might be given credit for an heroic, and necessarily doomed, attempt.
I once heard that Louis L'Amour had claimed never to have read a bad book, which I thought was about as dumb a thing as I would expect Louis L'Amour to say. But maybe a case can be be made that there are no worthless books. Some, like Noir, they can help illuminate just why a set of ideas (in Pauvert's case, certain fascistic tendencies on the modern left) are incoherent. Others, like Porius, have a great deal of value despite some very obvious faults, and in the end may have more of an impact upon those who read than much more skillful tales.
What makes Noir so bad? Not its prose style: since I read it in translation it wouldn't be fair for me to comment on that aspect of the book. It may be that Pauvert is a master of modern French, though I can't believe anyone this stupid could write lyrically in any language. Not its predictable politics either: progressive denunciations of corporate capitalism and racism are of course nothing new, but that particular sin certainly is not Pauvert's alone. Many other, and better, writers share it, but make up for the failing by being more subtle in their understanding of the human condition, or of interpersonal relationships, or of the nature between reality and artifice. The problem is not even in the overwrought depictions of violence that are a near constant element of the narrative. To be sure, the treatment of violence is something to make most readers queasy, because you get the same sense with Pauvert as you do in a movie like Natural Born Killers: that these depictions are consciously undertaken with an eye toward critique, but unconsciously the artist (Pauvert in one case, Stone in the other) is actually getting off on them, or at least pandering to them.
No, in the end what moves Noir past mediocre or even bad literature into truly terrible literature is the moral incoherence at the center of it. On the one hand, Pauvert clearly wants to be the next Michel Houellebecq, an enfant terrible of letters who shocks the elders but entrances the younger generation with his stylish cynicism. Only he doesn't have Houellebecq's balls, so his targets are all what one would expect of a well-read but not particularly imaginative teenager. Screeds against God, claims about the meaningless of the universe: these are not going to épater anyone at this point. If you want the cultural cachet that comes with transgression, then do something that is actually going to piss people off, like Houellebecq does: make fun of post-60 political pretensions, say something nasty about women, or non-Christian religions, or people of a darker hue. Pauvert can't make himself actually move beyond what would constitute the established boundaries of any conceivable audience for a book like this, so his "scandalous" pronouncements end up as reaffirmations of convention: he's a bourgeoisie in Nietzschean clothing, who wants to combine a 60s flower-child ethos with a nihilistic metaphysics and can't quite figure out (or maybe, can't admit) that the one position makes the other non-sensical. If nothing means anything, then the real hero of Pauvert's tale isn't the poor schlep we've been following through 200-odd pages. It's the amoral capitalist we meet at the end, the guy who's been pulling the strings all along, the one who can look on with equanimity as his wife and children are slaughtered. He's the real ubermensch, the one who's seen through the veil of human weakness (aka morality) that the rest of us use in order to avoid facing up to human existence with genuine courage.
So that's all I'm going to say about Noir (for now). The other part of this post deals with the book I was reading when I read the original essay: Porius, by the modernist Welsh poet and novelist John Cowper Powys. The first thing you should know about Porius, if you're thinking about reading it, is that it is 750 pages long. The second thing you should know is that it is filled with sentences like this: "Even without this new light the upward-spurting flame from the fire tended by the Derwydd would have been in itself sufficient illumination to reveal the pitiful contortion, like that of a child about to cry, that convulsed Llew's face; and her blow was followed by an immediate revulsion of pity, and snatching at his hand, the girl moved straight towards the dirty blanket leanding him gently with her and not forgetting, as her eyes encountered Brochvael's before the curtain closed behind them, to touch her breast with a significant smile, as if to remind her friend of the presence in that warm place of his rag-sheathed dagger." (Just curious. At what point in reading that did you start to wonder about what you were going to make for dinner tonight?)
According to the introduction to the story, Powys considered Porius--essentially a retelling of the Arthurian legend with the historical novel genre--as his magnum opus. He worked on it for over fifteen years. This explains, it does not excuse, his inability to edit either the story or his prose. The American publisher he sent it to, Simon and Shuster, mailed it back with the comment, " over-written and undicepherable," which is not an unfair description of a great deal of the book. At the beginning of the story is a Tolstoyan list of characters, in unpronounceable Welsh rather than unpronounceable Russian. Many of them--Medrawd, Gwennydd, Myrddin Wyllt--are Powys' Welsh versions of more common English names--Mordred, Guiniverre, Merlin respectively--a fact I didn't cotton onto until I was about two-thirds of the way through. Also, it was so complicated moving back and forth from the text to the initial cast of characters that I eventually just gave up. He creates a whole new word, cavorseniargize. Despite the fact that it plays a fairly important role in conveying the personality of the main character, after finishing the book I am still at a loss as to describe what the word means, or even how it might sound if spoken.
Nor are these complications the only major problem with the book. Perhaps more damaging, in the end, is Powys' anachronistic depiction of his main characters. They are not, despite the setting and plot, Romanized Britons of fifth century AD. Rather, they are twentieth-century English bohemians: intensely concerned with their personal feelings and subjective reactions to events. They are people of the text, not of an oral culture which surely would have been the actual historical context of the people who inhabited Wales in the year 499.
And yet, having said all of this, if someone were to ask me if I would recommend this book, and if that person were someone I respected, I would almost certainly say yes, for a least two reasons. First, because of the way that Powys both understands and is able to communicate a relationship between human experience and the world that it seems to me we have lost, and that is essential to regain if we are to avoid eventually destroying ourselves or our descendants. In reviews he is often compared to Garcia Marquez and the magical realists, but these comparisons seem to me to fundamentally miss the point. In Powys' history, nothing happens that, strictly speaking, could not be accepted by any modern materialist: even when characters see instances of supposed magic, it is generally conceded that there is at least the possibility they are only being fooled by their minds, or the angle of the sun on a rock. The closest I can get to labeling Powys' universe is to call it one of realistic mysticism. He does not so much accept miracles and spirits as to see through the veil of ordinary reality into something deeper, more beautiful, more wild. His "super-naturalism" is exactly that: part of the natural world but at the same time superseding it. Beyond it, more of it. His trees, his rivers, his animals, his humans: they are themselves and more than themselves. They are at one and the same time both the copies of the Idea, and the Idea itself.
The other valuable aspect of the book is Powys' critique of Christianity. Speaking as a Christian believer, it is a relief to find someone who can actually articulate an intelligent challenge to the faith, in distinction to metaphysical midgets like Christopher Hitchens and Richard Dawkins. To be sure, the author loads the dice: all his Christian characters are dogmatic bullies or neurotic gits. But that's fair enough, in a way: Chesterton loads the dice too. While the main characters' briefs again Christianity are historically unconvincing, as philosophical arguments they at least make a sympathetic and persuasive case against the Christian worldview, on the only intelligent grounds, which are not epistemological but moral.
And then, finally, I came to be more sympathetic even to Powys' crazy prose style. At least, I managed to produce a hypothesis that did not simply chalk things up to incompetence. What Powys might have been trying to do, I think, is to craft a prose that paralleled the oral poetry of the original oral sources, with their overloaded physical descriptions and characterizations. It didn't work in the end because oral narrative does not really translate that well into textual narrative. What works in the one medium does not work in the other. But perhaps Powys might be given credit for an heroic, and necessarily doomed, attempt.
I once heard that Louis L'Amour had claimed never to have read a bad book, which I thought was about as dumb a thing as I would expect Louis L'Amour to say. But maybe a case can be be made that there are no worthless books. Some, like Noir, they can help illuminate just why a set of ideas (in Pauvert's case, certain fascistic tendencies on the modern left) are incoherent. Others, like Porius, have a great deal of value despite some very obvious faults, and in the end may have more of an impact upon those who read than much more skillful tales.
Tuesday, June 15, 2010
The Internet doesn't make you stupid: but celebrity just might
Last week, the New York Times published a op-ed contribution by Steven Pinker, dismissing the possibility that the Internet is making us dumber by the day. I have to say, that when I first heard about the idea myself I was pretty dubious. The title of Nicholas Carr's essay for The Atlantic, "Is Google Making us Stupid?" was a turn-off. Like Pinker, this way of framing the matter reminded me of many earlier panics over new media forms, including but not limited to the penny press, comic books, rock and roll, Hollywood movies, and television.
But Carr's more recent effort in Wired magazine struck me as making at least a plausible argument (maybe it's just a case of getting a better headline writer). It's seems reasonable to assume that media have some sort of impact on how we think. It may not be universally bad, or good (nor does Carr argue otherwise, at least in the new article). Still, it seems worth a look into the matter, at least.
For Pinker it's all bunkum. The idea that we might be seeing negative effects on intelligence due to modern media use is belied, he thinks, by the success of modern science. Also, other intellectual activities, like philosophy, cultural criticism, and history, are "flourishing." As to the notion that media change the way our brains work: "cognitive neuroscientists" simply "roll their eyes at such talk," since it overestimates the effect that experience can have on the functioning of our brains.
Some problems with Pinker's argument here: first, it's always a mistake to use widespread social trends--like scientific work, or crime statistics, or IQ scores, or divorce rates, or measures of political cynicism--as convincing proof of anything, pro or con. So many different factors could be at play, and it's not always clear (as in the case of IQ tests) that you are necessarily measuring what you think you are measuring. Moreover, claims such as "scientific progress is dizzying," or "philosophical work is flourishing" are so subjective that they are impossible to support in any rigorous manner. As a working social scientist, I would certainly take issue with the idea that current work in my own field or in related fields like sociology or political science is particularly impressive. Much of it is focused on answering very narrow questions, based on theories developed some time ago. It is rare any more to find a thinker of the stature of Weber or Durkheim, or even Goffman or Geertz. Indeed, the state of the field seems to fit very well with Kuhn's description of "normal science." It makes for a lot of publications, but not necessarily great scientific insights.
Even more infuriating is the fact that Pinker, a tenured professor of psychology, feels no need to cite any actual empirical work to support his argument, beyond the vague gesture towards the opinions of certain unnamed cognitive neuroscientists (in marked contrast, I would note, to Carr). At best this is sloppy, but coming from a man who uses science, and the scientific method, as rhetorical tools with which to dismiss other, competing claims to truth, the better description, I think, would be hypocrisy.
But Carr's more recent effort in Wired magazine struck me as making at least a plausible argument (maybe it's just a case of getting a better headline writer). It's seems reasonable to assume that media have some sort of impact on how we think. It may not be universally bad, or good (nor does Carr argue otherwise, at least in the new article). Still, it seems worth a look into the matter, at least.
For Pinker it's all bunkum. The idea that we might be seeing negative effects on intelligence due to modern media use is belied, he thinks, by the success of modern science. Also, other intellectual activities, like philosophy, cultural criticism, and history, are "flourishing." As to the notion that media change the way our brains work: "cognitive neuroscientists" simply "roll their eyes at such talk," since it overestimates the effect that experience can have on the functioning of our brains.
Some problems with Pinker's argument here: first, it's always a mistake to use widespread social trends--like scientific work, or crime statistics, or IQ scores, or divorce rates, or measures of political cynicism--as convincing proof of anything, pro or con. So many different factors could be at play, and it's not always clear (as in the case of IQ tests) that you are necessarily measuring what you think you are measuring. Moreover, claims such as "scientific progress is dizzying," or "philosophical work is flourishing" are so subjective that they are impossible to support in any rigorous manner. As a working social scientist, I would certainly take issue with the idea that current work in my own field or in related fields like sociology or political science is particularly impressive. Much of it is focused on answering very narrow questions, based on theories developed some time ago. It is rare any more to find a thinker of the stature of Weber or Durkheim, or even Goffman or Geertz. Indeed, the state of the field seems to fit very well with Kuhn's description of "normal science." It makes for a lot of publications, but not necessarily great scientific insights.
Even more infuriating is the fact that Pinker, a tenured professor of psychology, feels no need to cite any actual empirical work to support his argument, beyond the vague gesture towards the opinions of certain unnamed cognitive neuroscientists (in marked contrast, I would note, to Carr). At best this is sloppy, but coming from a man who uses science, and the scientific method, as rhetorical tools with which to dismiss other, competing claims to truth, the better description, I think, would be hypocrisy.
Tuesday, May 11, 2010
Attention all journalists. Stop with the name-dropping
This recent article by Adam Gopnik in the New Yorker, about a new food movement in France that wants to liven up that country's cuisine, reminded me of one of the more annoying tics of modern journalism. If the technique has a name I am not aware of it, but the best way to describe, it is as "description-through-allusion."
It happens a lot in reviews, particularly of work by newer artists or ones that could be expected to be unfamiliar to readers, in which case the writer will describe the music or plot or style with reference to some older, better-known artist (though not too well-known, for reasons that we'll get to in a second). So, some clever Midwestern wordsmith with a penchant for good hooks becomes "the Elvis Costello of Ames, Iowa," or a young postmodern male novelist is described as "Borges-meets-David Byrne," or "the love child of Italo Calvino and the Rolling Stones." In Gopnik's case, he's decided to characterize every Frenchwoman he meets in the story by reference to some French actress of the past. One reminds him of Brigitte Fossey, another of Bardot, yet another of a "young Anouk Aimée as rendered by Modigliani." Also, one of the cooks is compared to Danton, and then a whole host of them to various figures in the French New Wave. By the end you get the idea even Gopnik thinks it's a little silly, and is doing a bit of a self-parody.
It's easy to see why journalists do this. It's a reliable method for describing things or people without having to sit down and really think about what this person looks like, or what this song is trying to do. Also, its a quick and dirty way of establishing a certain level of sophistication: which is why the figures need to be known well enough to get the point across but not so well known that just anyone could have thought up the comparison. But it's still lazy, and no, Gopnik doesn't get any points for realizing that he's doing it. That's another really annoying aspect to modern journalism: trying to foreclose criticism by letting the reader know that you know what's going on, and then presenting this as some kind of postmodern self-irony. Don't tell me that you know it's wrong while you're busy doing it: just don't do it.
It happens a lot in reviews, particularly of work by newer artists or ones that could be expected to be unfamiliar to readers, in which case the writer will describe the music or plot or style with reference to some older, better-known artist (though not too well-known, for reasons that we'll get to in a second). So, some clever Midwestern wordsmith with a penchant for good hooks becomes "the Elvis Costello of Ames, Iowa," or a young postmodern male novelist is described as "Borges-meets-David Byrne," or "the love child of Italo Calvino and the Rolling Stones." In Gopnik's case, he's decided to characterize every Frenchwoman he meets in the story by reference to some French actress of the past. One reminds him of Brigitte Fossey, another of Bardot, yet another of a "young Anouk Aimée as rendered by Modigliani." Also, one of the cooks is compared to Danton, and then a whole host of them to various figures in the French New Wave. By the end you get the idea even Gopnik thinks it's a little silly, and is doing a bit of a self-parody.
It's easy to see why journalists do this. It's a reliable method for describing things or people without having to sit down and really think about what this person looks like, or what this song is trying to do. Also, its a quick and dirty way of establishing a certain level of sophistication: which is why the figures need to be known well enough to get the point across but not so well known that just anyone could have thought up the comparison. But it's still lazy, and no, Gopnik doesn't get any points for realizing that he's doing it. That's another really annoying aspect to modern journalism: trying to foreclose criticism by letting the reader know that you know what's going on, and then presenting this as some kind of postmodern self-irony. Don't tell me that you know it's wrong while you're busy doing it: just don't do it.
Saturday, May 1, 2010
When bigotry is, and when it isn't
Several weeks ago the State of Arizona passed a law aimed at illegal immigration, which has so excited the sensibilities of educated America (NB: not just liberal America) that it has provoked calls for boycotts of the state, and I think maybe even the baseball team. We're all properly outraged by those rednecks living down there in Phoenix and Tucson. They didn't celebrate MLK's birthday either, you know.
Okay, so the people of Arizona are bigots (not all of them, prolly. Just the middle-aged white Republicans.) Where it gets weird is when we pass over the ocean a few days later, and the Prime Minister of Great Britain gets caught, on what he thought was a dead mic, calling a middle-aged women from the Northern English town of Rochdale a bigot. This "gaffe," as the newspapers are now calling it, is so serious that Labour's support has cratered in the days since it was aired. "How dare you diss Mrs. Duffy? That's my aunt," reads a headline in the London Times.
Now, it was true that Gillian Duffy didn't actually tell Gordon Brown that he should make all immigrants carry their papers on them at all times, and allow police to stop anyone who they thought was in the country illegally. What she asked him, essentially, was why he wasn't doing those things. But Gillian Duffy is not a bigot. Or at least, it's wrong to accuse her of being a bigot. So why is that?
I offer three possible explanations:
1. Brown's comments fit the classic Kinsley-esque definition of a gaffe, which is when a politician accidently tells the truth. In this case, the truth would be that Duffy is a bigot, only you're not supposed to say so, and especially not during an election.
2. Arizona voters are bigots, and Duffy is not, because white Southern Americans are probably all racists, if you scratch them hard enough, whereas white northern English working class people are all salt-of-the-earth miners and miners' wives who spend their spare time singing "The Red Flag" in their rocking chairs, waiting for the tea to boil, knitting scarves for the strikers.
3. Gillian Duffy is not a bigot because she is a person. She clearly has done some good in the world. She is worried, understandably, about where the money is going to come from to pay for her living expenses now that her husband has died and she is on a pension. She's worried about crime, because she is old and feels threatened. She is worried about education for younger people and the world that her grandchildren will inherit. Whatever her views on immigration, she is more than that. The Arizona voters, on the other hand, are simply the Arizona voters. A big, amorphous bloc of people with no personality or face, with the exception of the noxious Republican governor who signed the bill into law. They can safely be demonized because we don't actually have to answer to any particular person for doing so.
I like all of my explanations but I like the last one the best because it gets to the problem that critics of racism and bigotry have when they talk about racism and bigotry. Very few racists--at least, very few of the ones that I know, and I know quite a few--wear sheriffs' hats and walk around spitting tobacca' juice and swinging baseball bats and hitting colored people over the head just for their daily exercise. They are often otherwise decent people who are afraid, or who are busy and therefore don't care to think too hard about issues like immigration policy, and so some kinds of ready-made, handy explanations appeal to them. So they create stereotypes about who the problematic people are, and what needs to be done about them.
But they're not the only ones who dream up stereotypes, I don't think.
Okay, so the people of Arizona are bigots (not all of them, prolly. Just the middle-aged white Republicans.) Where it gets weird is when we pass over the ocean a few days later, and the Prime Minister of Great Britain gets caught, on what he thought was a dead mic, calling a middle-aged women from the Northern English town of Rochdale a bigot. This "gaffe," as the newspapers are now calling it, is so serious that Labour's support has cratered in the days since it was aired. "How dare you diss Mrs. Duffy? That's my aunt," reads a headline in the London Times.
Now, it was true that Gillian Duffy didn't actually tell Gordon Brown that he should make all immigrants carry their papers on them at all times, and allow police to stop anyone who they thought was in the country illegally. What she asked him, essentially, was why he wasn't doing those things. But Gillian Duffy is not a bigot. Or at least, it's wrong to accuse her of being a bigot. So why is that?
I offer three possible explanations:
1. Brown's comments fit the classic Kinsley-esque definition of a gaffe, which is when a politician accidently tells the truth. In this case, the truth would be that Duffy is a bigot, only you're not supposed to say so, and especially not during an election.
2. Arizona voters are bigots, and Duffy is not, because white Southern Americans are probably all racists, if you scratch them hard enough, whereas white northern English working class people are all salt-of-the-earth miners and miners' wives who spend their spare time singing "The Red Flag" in their rocking chairs, waiting for the tea to boil, knitting scarves for the strikers.
3. Gillian Duffy is not a bigot because she is a person. She clearly has done some good in the world. She is worried, understandably, about where the money is going to come from to pay for her living expenses now that her husband has died and she is on a pension. She's worried about crime, because she is old and feels threatened. She is worried about education for younger people and the world that her grandchildren will inherit. Whatever her views on immigration, she is more than that. The Arizona voters, on the other hand, are simply the Arizona voters. A big, amorphous bloc of people with no personality or face, with the exception of the noxious Republican governor who signed the bill into law. They can safely be demonized because we don't actually have to answer to any particular person for doing so.
I like all of my explanations but I like the last one the best because it gets to the problem that critics of racism and bigotry have when they talk about racism and bigotry. Very few racists--at least, very few of the ones that I know, and I know quite a few--wear sheriffs' hats and walk around spitting tobacca' juice and swinging baseball bats and hitting colored people over the head just for their daily exercise. They are often otherwise decent people who are afraid, or who are busy and therefore don't care to think too hard about issues like immigration policy, and so some kinds of ready-made, handy explanations appeal to them. So they create stereotypes about who the problematic people are, and what needs to be done about them.
But they're not the only ones who dream up stereotypes, I don't think.
Sunday, April 25, 2010
The continued relevance of physical space in the postmodern global village
'Round about now, my sister is driving along the coast of Oregon or maybe Northern California with her new boyfriend, which is not what she is supposed to be doing. What she is supposed to be doing is recuperating from having just run the London Marathon. You already know why she's not in London. One of the many disruptions of the big ash cloud of 2010.
(As a side note: Sort of strange how the world media covered the event. At first it was all, "huh, this is kind of weird." Then increasingly it became, "MONEY IS BEING LOST HERE. SOMEONE DO SOMETHING!" And then, "Fucking pussies who won't go up in the fucking air with their fucking big jets. Fucking losers.")
Long time ago, Marshall McLuhan observed that the world was becoming a "Global Village." As is the case with pretty much everything that McLuhan ever wrote, the idea is both useful and also capable of leading us completely astray. To be sure, the modern media have allowed us to connect more easily with people living vast distances from us, and this has caused profound changes in how we interact with both those distant others and the not-so-distant others who share our physical space. It has changed how we think of ourselves, how we construct our social identities. And it has allowed for the near-instant transmission of some kinds of information, a feature of modern life that in turn has been essential to the rise of global markets.
But we can, and we do, take it too far. What media can't do is that they cannot transfer the large packets of information that we call human bodies. And since it is these packets that, in the end, most concern us--although we sometimes manage to forget, or ignore that--the effect of all these transmissions of electronic bytes is not exactly what we imagine it to be. Other things that cannot be sent over fiber optic cables--steaks, tulips, onions, magazines, automobiles, t-shirts, sneakers, living room sofas, video cameras, iphones. The modern world has actually not made distance disappear, or even made it irrelevant. It's just made our experience of it different. It's always good to have these sort of disruptive environmental events take place at unpredictable times to help us see that the new world we've been so busy building for the past 50 years has actually not managed to overcome certain fundamental realities of human existence. You can buy your plane ticket and reserve your hotel room and surf to find the best place to eat in Porto but if the pilots strike, or an earthquake tears up the runway, you're not going anywhere, buddy.
The continued relevance of space--and of embodied experiences--is why most people, if they have the choice, still opt to live in places like Manhattan and Paris and Prague instead of Tulsa, Oklahoma, or Estevan, Saskatchewan. Those latter spots are wired: you could order up some genuine Chicago-style deep dish and get it delivered to your door in a day or two if you really wanted. But somehow it just wouldn't be the same.
Modern media discourse ignores this obvious point because it needs to sell us on the bogus notion that the networked world is making the world "flatter," making every place the same, thus making opportunities increasingly equal for all. The battle against the takeover of our lives by people in places far away from us requires that we periodically remind ourselves of what a crock of shit this has always been, and remains.
(As a side note: Sort of strange how the world media covered the event. At first it was all, "huh, this is kind of weird." Then increasingly it became, "MONEY IS BEING LOST HERE. SOMEONE DO SOMETHING!" And then, "Fucking pussies who won't go up in the fucking air with their fucking big jets. Fucking losers.")
Long time ago, Marshall McLuhan observed that the world was becoming a "Global Village." As is the case with pretty much everything that McLuhan ever wrote, the idea is both useful and also capable of leading us completely astray. To be sure, the modern media have allowed us to connect more easily with people living vast distances from us, and this has caused profound changes in how we interact with both those distant others and the not-so-distant others who share our physical space. It has changed how we think of ourselves, how we construct our social identities. And it has allowed for the near-instant transmission of some kinds of information, a feature of modern life that in turn has been essential to the rise of global markets.
But we can, and we do, take it too far. What media can't do is that they cannot transfer the large packets of information that we call human bodies. And since it is these packets that, in the end, most concern us--although we sometimes manage to forget, or ignore that--the effect of all these transmissions of electronic bytes is not exactly what we imagine it to be. Other things that cannot be sent over fiber optic cables--steaks, tulips, onions, magazines, automobiles, t-shirts, sneakers, living room sofas, video cameras, iphones. The modern world has actually not made distance disappear, or even made it irrelevant. It's just made our experience of it different. It's always good to have these sort of disruptive environmental events take place at unpredictable times to help us see that the new world we've been so busy building for the past 50 years has actually not managed to overcome certain fundamental realities of human existence. You can buy your plane ticket and reserve your hotel room and surf to find the best place to eat in Porto but if the pilots strike, or an earthquake tears up the runway, you're not going anywhere, buddy.
The continued relevance of space--and of embodied experiences--is why most people, if they have the choice, still opt to live in places like Manhattan and Paris and Prague instead of Tulsa, Oklahoma, or Estevan, Saskatchewan. Those latter spots are wired: you could order up some genuine Chicago-style deep dish and get it delivered to your door in a day or two if you really wanted. But somehow it just wouldn't be the same.
Modern media discourse ignores this obvious point because it needs to sell us on the bogus notion that the networked world is making the world "flatter," making every place the same, thus making opportunities increasingly equal for all. The battle against the takeover of our lives by people in places far away from us requires that we periodically remind ourselves of what a crock of shit this has always been, and remains.
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