Current:Home > StocksWhen art you love was made by 'Monsters': A critic lays out the 'Fan's Dilemma' -AdvancementTrade
When art you love was made by 'Monsters': A critic lays out the 'Fan's Dilemma'
View
Date:2025-04-22 03:55:10
Last month, I gave a talk at a conference in honor of the late writer Norman Mailer. When I mentioned this conference in class to my Georgetown students, a couple of them blurted out, "But, he stabbed his wife." I could feel the mood in that classroom shifting: The students seemed puzzled, disappointed even. What was I doing speaking at a conference in honor of a man capable of such an act?
The situation was reversed at the conference itself: When I confessed in my talk that, much as I revere Mailer's nonfiction writing, I was just as glad never to have met him, some audience members were taken aback, offended on Mailer's behalf.
If Mailer's writing had always been as bad as his sporadic behavior there would be no problem. But as Claire Dederer points out in her superb new book, Monsters, the problem arises when great art is made by men who've done bad things: men like Picasso, Hemingway, Roman Polanski, Miles Davis, Woody Allen and, yes, Mailer.
Do we put blinders on and just focus on the work? Do geniuses, as Dederer asks, get a "hall pass" for their behavior? Or, do we "cancel" the art of men — and some women — who've done "monstrous" things?
I hope that Dederer herself doesn't turn out to be a monster because I flat-out admire her book and want to share it with my students. As a thinker, Dederer is smart, informed, nuanced and very funny. She started out as a film critic and credits Pauline Kael as a model for grounding her judgments in her own subjectivity, her own emotions.
The subtitle of Monsters is A Fan's Dilemma: the dilemma being still loving, say, the music of Wagner or Michael Jackson; still being caught up in movies like Chinatown or maybe even Manhattan. In short, Dederer wants to dive deep into the murk of being "unwilling to give up the work [of art you love], and [yet, also being] unwilling to look away from the stain [of the monster who created it]."
The #MeToo movement propels this exploration but so, too, does our own social media, biography-saturated moment: "When I was young," Dederer writes, "it was hard to find information about artists whose work I loved. Record albums and books appeared before us as if they had arrived after hurtling through space's black reaches, unmoored from all context."
These days, however, "[w]e turn on Seinfeld, and whether we want to or not, we think of Michael Richard's racist rant. ... Biography used to be something you sought out, yearned for, actively pursued. Now it falls on your head all day long."
Maybe you can hear in those quotes how alive Dederer's own critical language is. She also frequently flings open the door of the stuffy seminar room, so to speak, to take her readers along on field trips: There's a swank dinner in New York with an intimidating "man of letters" who, she says, likes to play the part, "ironically but not — ties and blazers and low-key misogyny and brown alcohol in a tumbler."
When she expresses distaste for Allen's Manhattan normalizing a middle-aged man in a relationship with a 17-year-old he tells her to "Get over it. You really need to judge it strictly on aesthetics." Dederer confesses to finding herself put off-balance in that conversation, doubting herself.
We also march through a Picasso show at the Vancouver Art Gallery in the company of Dederer and her children. At the time, she says they "possessed the fierce moral sense to be found in teenagers and maniacs, [and] were starting to look a bit nettled" at the exhibit's disclosures of Picasso's abusive treatment of the women in his life.
So where does all this walking and talking and thinking and reacting get us on the issues of monsters and their art? Still in the murk, perhaps, but maybe buoyed up a bit by a sharp question Dederer tosses out in the middle of her book:
What if criticism involves trusting our feelings — not just about the crime, which we deplore, but about the work we love.
To do that we'll have to think and feel with much greater urgency and, yet, more care than we are currently doing. As Dederer suggests — and Pauline Kael famously did — we should go ahead and lose it at the movies and then think hard about what we've lost.
veryGood! (54532)
Related
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- Usher Shares His Honest Advice for Pal Justin Bieber After Welcoming Baby
- Aldi announces wage increases up to $23 an hour; hiring thousands of employees
- Judge frees Colorado paramedic convicted in death of Elijah McClain from prison
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- How many points did Caitlin Clark score today? Rookie breaks WNBA assist record in setback
- A teen killed his father in 2023. Now, he is charged with his mom's murder.
- Father of Georgia school shooting suspect requests separate jailing after threats
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- Inside The Real Love Lives of the Only Murders in the Building Stars
Ranking
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- Clock is ticking for local governments to use billions of dollars of federal pandemic aid
- MLS playoff picture: Hell is Real, El Tráfico could provide postseason clinchers
- Watch these squirrels escape the heat in a woman's amazing homemade spa
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- Indy woman drowned in Puerto Rico trying to save girlfriend from rip currents, family says
- Cher drops bid to be appointed son Elijah Blue Allman's conservator
- Nicole Kidman speaks out after death of mother Janelle
Recommendation
In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
Don Lemon, life after CNN and what it says about cancel culture
Indianapolis man gets 60 years for a road rage shooting that killed a man
Pennsylvania mail-in ballots with flawed dates on envelopes can be thrown out, court rules
Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
Sam Bankman-Fried’s lawyers claim in an appeal that he was judged too quickly
After just a few hours, U.S. election bets put on hold by appeals court ruling
Universities of Wisconsin adopt viewpoint-neutral policy for college leaders