Sunday, July 20, 2008

An ally in an unlikely place.

In the July-August issue of Utne Reader, a writer rails against the current state of the essay. Here's my favorite part; the rest can be found here.

The problem, of course, is not merely our essayists; it’s our culture. We have grown terribly—if somewhat hypocritically—weary of larger truths. The smarter and more intellectual we count ourselves, the more adamantly we insist that there is no such thing as truth, no such thing as general human experience, that everything is plural and relative and therefore undiscussable.

Of course, everything is plural, everything is arguable, and there are limits to what we can know about other persons, other cultures, other genders. But there is also a limit to such humility; there is a point at which it becomes narcissism of a most myopic sort, a simple excuse to talk only about one’s own case, only about one’s own small area of specialization. . . .

Today’s essayists need to be emboldened, and to embolden one another, to move away from timid autobiographical anecdote and to embrace—as their predecessors did—big theories, useful verities, daring pronouncements. We need to destigmatize generalization, aphorism, and what used to be called wisdom. We must rehabilitate the notion of truth—however provisional it might be. As long as writers with intellectual aspirations are counted idiots for attempting to formulate a wider point, they will not do so, and even if they dared, most editors would not publish them and most critics would not praise them.

3 comments:

Steve said...

Precisely.

Grant said...

I completely agree. It's funny though. The thing that struck me the most was her comment about coaches and their quest for truth. This got me musing one the idea that the popularity of sports could possibly be tied up in how absolute they are. There is little relativity in a game ending with one team having more points then the other.

Kaitlin said...

Would you consider that a good thing, or a bad thing? I think it's a shortcoming of sports, and games in general—no room for nuance, or varying degrees of accomplishment. Why should 50% of the people on the field have to leave as losers?