June 16, 2005

  • Final Arrangements, continued:

    “Joe Strauss to
    Joe Six-Pack”

    (Editor’s sneering headline
    for a David Brooks essay
    in today’s New York Times)
    and Back Again

    “I was emptying some boxes in my basement the other day and I came across
    an essay somebody had clipped on Ernest Hemingway from the July 14,
    1961, issue of Time magazine. The essay was outstanding. Over three
    pages of tightly packed prose, with just a few photos, the anonymous
    author performed the sort of high-toned but accessible literary
    analysis that would be much harder to find in a mass market magazine
    today….

    The sad thing is that this type of essay was not unusual in that era….

    The magazines would devote pages to the work of theologians like
    Abraham Joshua Heschel* or Reinhold Niebuhr. They devoted as much space
    to opera as to movies because an educated person was expected to know
    something about opera, even if that person had no prospect of actually
    seeing one….

    Back in the late 1950′s and early 1960′s, middlebrow culture, which is
    really high-toned popular culture, was thriving in America. There was
    still a sense that culture is good for your character, and that a
    respectable person should spend time absorbing the best that has been
    thought and said.”

    – David Brooks,
       The New York Times,
       June 16, 2005

    The Time essay begins by quoting Hemingway himself:

    “All stories,
     if continued far enough,
     end in death,
     and he is no true
    storyteller
     who would keep that from you.”

    Here is the top section of today’s
    New York Times obituaries.

    The image “http://www.log24.com/log/pix05A/050616-NYTobits.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

    Here is the
    middlebrow part –

    The image “http://www.log24.com/log/pix05A/050616-NYTbrow.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.
    Esteemed Conductor
    Dies at 91

    – and here is a link that returns,
    as promised in this entry’s headline,
    to “Joe Strauss”
    complete with polkas.

    *  “Judaism is a religion of time, not space.”
        — Wikipedia on Heschel.
        See the recent Log24 entries
        Star Wars continued,
        Dark City, and
        Cross-Referenced, and last year’s
        Bloomsday at 100.

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