Rogueish
Great American Losers by Elaine Blair | NYRblog | The New York Review of Books→
03/24/12
Female characters get to remind the hero that he’s a navel-gazing jerk, but most of the good lines, and certainly the brilliant social and psychological observations, still go to the hero. The problem is not that he doesn’t share the spotlight, per se, but the subtle sense that a transaction is taking place: the hero is entitled to the spotlight because he has been appropriately self-critical—it’s his novel, bought and paid for with all those jokes at his own expense. The male novelists performing elaborate genuflections toward female readers are perhaps not exactly bargaining so much as trying to draw us into a new contract: I, the author, promise always to acknowledge my characters’ narcissism, and you, in return, will continue to take an interest in it. Okay? Agreed? Sign on the dotted line please, Ms., and I will countersign my book for you.
inventing the pain of others: david foster wallace’s kenyon college commencement speech « ads without products→
03/28/10
Isn’t there something oddly solipsistic about David Foster Wallace’s suggestion that the only way to avoid a solipsistic response to the everyday indifference of others is to imagine that they are in the middle of tragedy or drama? It seems to me a kind of communism of boredom would be a preferable response.
