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a set of sharp and cogent notes

Stuff We Like

  • F for Fake

    This is Orson Welles's masterpiece, a virtuoso performance of sound and video editing that co-opts the documentary but is not one. It is the rare postmodern text that's laugh out loud funny, steeped in the relativism of the post war period but not held hostage by it. He appears as himself, sheared of doubts and humanity, in full possession and knowledge of his genius, but he is not the subject (excuse my language) of the film. It's a "film about trickery, fraud and lies," and about two great exponents of those arts, Elmyr de Hory and Clifford Irving. The film is not much watched by people from any generation, met with cold critical reception on release, how can it be Welles's masterpiece? But it is, and is neglected due to its translation from the dross and palaver of our late capitalist society in which relativism extends mainly to the comparison of ledgers, a number of hard, unpleasant truths about meaning, about value, and about our modern oracles, the experts. Or as Welles says of art (or anything): "How is it valued? The value depends on opinion. Opinion depends on the expert. A faker like Elmyr makes fools of the experts, so who's the expert? Who's the faker?"

  • Ferret-Legging

    Ferret-Legging

    The ferret goes in your pants. Your pants are cinched to prevent its escape. Then you stand there while a scared rodent scratches, bites, and generally freaks the fuck out in the vicinity of your manly-bits. He who endures the longest wins. There you have the “sport” of ferret-legging, a Yorkshire coalminer practice now revived at the Richmond, VA Celtic Festival. While I cannot speak for the rest of the Plasma Pool team, I have not personally experienced the joy of ferret legging – nor do I have any desire to do so in the future. But what should be Liked about this particular Stuff is not corporeal, but rather its statement about the competitive nature of man such that he would trap a ferret in his pants for over five hours for no reward but the knowledge that he did what no other man could do. There exists in each of us a compulsion to strive for greatness, and in the course of this pursuit we are capable of unimaginable sacrifice in the name of achievement. Today humanity faces new and difficult challenges, but what drives these semi-sane “athletes” is the same that drives those in more noble fields to cure diseases, create art, and improve humanity in countless other ways. So, thank you ferret-leggers. Just keep that animal away from my junk.  -- Donny Bridges

  • Reactions to the OJ Simpson Verdict

    OJ Simpson Verdict

    Without getting into any kind of commentary about the trial itself or its place in pop culture memory, this video of the OJ Simpson verdict is stunning. Pay attention to 1:24, 2:10, 3:30, 3:59. The camera pans over a near-complete spectrum of emotions, almost oblivious to the murmur of the verdict while the faces hang on to every word. The calm voice at the end advises to "expect the worst." For me, the bizarre essence of the clip is that some idea of "justice" is located somewhere in the physical and conceptual space between the rows of silent faces and the implied source of the unseen voices. The mass of bodies tenses and contorts as an articulation of the disembodied speech of the justice system. I am reluctant to give a reading of all this beyond this cursory description, but one final thing to consider is that our detached gaze is nearly embedded in the perspective of the invisible jury, who sits at the center of the verdict.  -- Scott Coomes

From the Vault

Things that died in 2008.

Our president pledged as primary candidate to staunchly defend individual civil liberties and curb the domestic intelligence abuses of the Bush Administration. As the Democratic candidate, he hedged. As president-elect, he made stunning about-faces, notably on immunity for telecommunications companies who cooperated with Bush's illegal requests. Now, as president, he's continued as many of Bush's abuses as he's curtailed. Also, there was a time when John McCain wasn't an unprincipled, dishonorable bigot. He was quite the man, when he was a man. Then came a succubus to hasten his by then inevitable decline.

Buckley, Mailer, and The American Conservative

Kevin Hilke

Norman Mailer, from <i>The New Yorker</i>'s publication of his selected political letters in late 2008

Norman Mailer, from The New Yorker's publication of his selected political letters in late 2008. Photograph by Diane Arbus.

Of the many interrelated reasons to lament the passing of William F. Buckley, the decline in quality of the locus of his particular incarnation of American intellectual conservatism, The National Review, is one of the most moving. The president who will leave office in eighteen days oversaw a decline in the already laggardly American intellectual discussion. Our new president, an intellectual and a minority, has the potential to invigorate and diversify this discussion significantly, but without a conservative wing with intellectual legitimacy, it will be unproductively incomplete.

Norman Mailer, rightly considered a serious liberal intellectual in his prime—and who enjoyed camaraderie and friendship with Buckley, a worthy and beloved sparring partner—understood the necessity of a serious conservative opposition, and so we find him writing to Buckley, in January, 1966:

Dear Bill,

I send you the enclosed not because I love National Review so much, for I don’t—it’s not so good as it ought to be, and often it’s tiresome, especially when one knows in advance what your trusted old line contributors are going to say—but as a personal mark of respect to you. Your letter was the best letter I ever read by an editor asking for funds. . . .

One request. Please keep my contribution in the secret crypts. It is not that I fear public opinion so much as ceaseless repetition. Repetition kills the soul and I would not wish to spend one hundred evenings in succession explaining to various outraged and somewhat stupid people in calm clear fashion my complex motives for giving a gift to a magazine for which I feel no affection and to an editor with whom on ninety of a hundred points I must rush to disagree. They would not understand that good writing is good writing, and occasionally carries the day.

Yours,

Norman

Next to Buckley’s National Review, Rich Lowry, Kathryn Jean Lopez, Jonah Goldberg and the bulk of the rest of the current bunch are a terrible joke, as they proved in their much-glossed reaction to McCain’s selection of Sarah Palin and by the in-house dissent of David Frum and Buckley’s son Christopher.

If any American conservative publication of broad appeal can claim to be a home for conservative intellectuals today, it is not The National Review. It might be The American Conservative—founded, perhaps surprisingly, by Pat Buchanan. Yes, that one. Its regular contributors, of whom Buchanan—one of Mailer’s “trusted old line contributors”—is both the most regular and the most predictable, are individuals of intelligence and expertise who care passionately about the complex ideas required to think the political today. Even when they are wrong, they are willing to take intellectual risks, willing to experiment in the pursuit of what they take to be the greater good.

Take Dennis Dale’s November assessment of Obama’s campaign rhetoric, the first from the popular right I came across to treat it with anything approaching acumen. Yes, Dale is crass. He grossly and offensively misapprehends black culture, in a way that some surely would—and wrongly—cast as racist. He thrives among the solid certain roots of things, speaking unironically of “fundamental truths” and the like, and accordingly fails to see the vacuity of Obama’s as potentially productive, perfunctorily suspecting anyone proximal to it—principally Obama—of attempting to sinisterly exploit it. On substance, he is, from start to finish, almost entirely wrong. But unlike many conservatives, he apprehends well the way the rhetoric functions; he deftly maps its potent vacuity. Whatever we think of his views, he has the right sort of inquisitive, adaptable mind. Whatever his ideological baggage, he is smart and he gives a damn. We can work with that. It is all we can work with.

Category: Art and Culture, Briefs, Policy and Politics, Thought and Society

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  1. [...] Cockburn on the unlikely integrity of The American Conservative under publisher Ron Unz, which we pointed to last [...]

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