When my oldest son was a Boy Scout in England 20 years ago, I
once watched his troop play a game in which the boys formed a
circle around a troop leader holding a soccer ball. The leader
proceeded to throw the ball to the boys at random, saying as he did
so either “head” or “catch.” If he said “head,” the boy was
supposed to catch it; if he said “catch,” the boy was supposed to
head it. Anyone who slipped up and caught the ball when instructed
to catch it or head the ball when instructed to head it was out and
had to leave the circle. Eventually, only one scout was left
standing. That boy, as I have often had occasion to think since,
must have been one of nature’s ironists. He and the others had
certainly had an education in the central principle of all
ironic—and, for that matter, non-ironic— discourse, namely that
meaning depends on context. A boy who’d said that he would just
love to play such a game could have meant either that he’d
love to play it or that he’d absolutely hate it, and all but the
most literal-minded would have been able to tell which it was on
hearing the words spoken in their context.
The ability to read that context, to pick up the cues indicating
irony or its absence, depends on a certain degree of social skill
and experience in complex social interactions. Irony, that is,
belongs to the world of face-to-face communication, even when we
encounter it in a book or a movie. If we are able to recognize the
irony in fictional contexts it is because we have previously
experienced it, or something like it, in real ones. Maybe that’s
why, as we have begun to spend more and more of our time
interacting with each other remotely and electronically, rather
than face-to-face, it seems that our irony-reading skills have
tended to atrophy, or else to go haywire. This is producing, on the
one hand, a leaden literalism or, on the other, the sort of
paranoia which supposes that everything must mean something other
than what it says.
The latter is the world of the postmodern critic, that master
figure of the popular culture, in which everything is assumed to be
ironic. It is what makes possible the endless “reboots”—as they are
now called—of cartoon and movie franchises, such as this spring’s
of Star Trek and X-Men. The fans of both have
always been ironists, and so they are naturally open to new
“readings” of these classics. In fact they delight in them. If you
were never the victim of the naïve illusion that Captain James T.
Kirk was a real person in the first place, you are unlikely to mind
that he has become yet another simulacrum of a person. But—call me
crazy—I keep looking for signs of the culture’s reaction against
ironical excess.
Ten years ago, a young man named Jedediah Purdy, then still in
his twenties and home-schooled by hippies in West Virginia, wrote a
book titled ForCommon Things that was an attack
on the ironic culture as he saw it then—before there was any
DailyShow or Colbert Report and nothing
worse than David Letterman or Seinfeld to give irony a bad
name. Ironically, the anti-irony screed enjoyed a certain vogue.
The New York Times at its most po-faced published an
interview that treated this backwoodsman and recent Harvard
graduate as a reincarnation of H. D. Thoreau, or perhaps a sort of
humorless version of Abraham Lincoln, destined for greatness by his
call for a return to what he imagined were the rustic simplicities
of our forefathers.
Of all the silly things to be against, irony must be among the
silliest. It is like being against algebra. Irony is simply a
rationalization of the way the world—in this case the rhetorical
world—works, and has always worked. But people could sympathize
with the sort of social insecurity that must have lain behind Mr.
Purdy’s attachment to puritanical plain-speaking, and, with the
help of the New York Times, the book made enough of a
splash that that gentleman, now a law professor at Duke University,
has lately written another, even sillier book. It is called
ATolerable Anarchy and is a tract on behalf of
liberal utopianism. I see it as a sort of sequel, which must have
grown out of the earlier book’s implied preference for humanity in
the abstract rather than with all its confusing imperfections.
Two decades before his denunciation of irony and a few years
before my son was inducted into the scouts, Terry Jones of Monty
Python fame, a champion ironist who was also a part-time
medievalist, wrote a book called Chaucer’s Knight: The Portrait
ofa Medieval Mercenary, which purported to show that
the man described in the Prologue to TheCanterburyTales as a parfit gentil
knight was in fact a brutal and cold-blooded killer with
nothing chivalric about him. In fact, Mr. Jones was pretty sure
that there was nothing chivalric about medieval chivalry itself.
The arguments over his detailed evidence for this shocking
proposition have gone on for nearly three decades without anyone’s
thinking to ask what would have been the point of Chaucer’s
encoding the truth about his knight so successfully that it took
some six centuries for a TV comedian to decode it.
But then, in the lit-crit biz as it is practiced today, such
questions simply don’t arise. Irony is pretty much self-justifying
and, without it, the whole edifice of literary scholarship would
come crashing to the ground. In a recent issue of The Chronicle
of HigherEducation, an English professor at the
University of Virginia admitted as much in the course of a quixotic
call for a moratorium on “readings”—that is, the critical
application of one of the many proprietary keys (“Marx’s, Freud’s,
Foucault’s, Derrida’s, or whoever’s,” as he put it) designed to
unlock the infinite number of ironic meanings of a text which could
not have been intended by its author. I wonder if this poor sap can
realize how much the very well-entrenched cultural phenomenon known
as postmodernism, which extends well beyond academia and into
popular entertainment, depends on the existing gentleman’s
agreement among critics to honor any ironic scrip as legal tender?
Literary scholarship first became a sort of Oklahoma land rush in
which a horde of fledgling intellectuals, bent on obtaining tenure
against fierce competition, sought to stake out their little ironic
territory wherein they alone might be supposed to know what this or
that monument of Western civilization really meant—or at
least could be made to mean. Now that every blogger on the Internet
can take part too, I don’t think we’re going to be giving up the
“readings” game, even temporarily, anytime soon.
Besides, the “texts” that are subject to ironic reinterpretation
now include the documents on which our government is founded. Every
judge is now an ironist, seeking new meanings in old documents by
which some progressive fad—the latest is gay “marriage”—can be
shown to be not only justified but mandatory. President Obama has
lately told us that a pack of legal ironists headed by his attorney
general are also to be turned loose on the so-called torture memos
written by officials of his predecessor’s administration so as to
find in them some way for their authors to be prosecuted as
criminals. Already, the George W. Bush administration has been the
subject of more ironic reinterpretation than any in our history,
including that of Terry Jones in Terry Jones’s War on the War
on Terror (2004).
Well, why believe the president of the United States when you’ve
got the finely tuned paranoia of Terry Jones’s—or Frank Rich’s or
Maureen Dowd’s or Eric Holder’s or whoever’s—“reading” of him to go
by? Still, you’ve got to think that even the po-mo critic must
sometimes get weary of such a soul-deadening exercise, set up on
the premise that nobody but he knows what anybody or anything is
really about. That may be why, in Romeo Castellucci’s
recent staging of Dante’s Inferno in London, hell was
represented between a pair of outsized quotation marks as the seat
of irony, where a Satanic Andy Warhol went about with a Polaroid
camera, snapping photos of the damned. It is, as Dominic Cavendish
noted in the Daily Telegraph, “a vision of unremediable
human loneliness.” Likewise, a staging of Beowulf in New
York had the legendary hero, in the shape of the nerdy-looking
author, Jason Craig, confronting three academic critics in the
place of the monsters of the poem. Of course, that was itself meant
to be an ironic joke, but I detect in it a further ironic subtext
of desire to leave the circle of the ironically clued-up, at least
for a moment, in order to breathe a purer air.
About the Author
James Bowman, our movie and culture critic, is a resident scholar at the Ethics and Public Policy Center. He is the author of Honor: A History and Media Madness: The Corruption of Our Political Culture, both published by Encounter Books.
here is my take on today's brave new world entertainment in a
nutshell:
Equality now means misery loves company, everyone is united in
our slouch towards Babylon.
During economic contractions entertainment does well because no
one will ever go broke underestimating our taste, produce a
cartoon where the Family Guy or South Parker uses the noun penis
every other episode and your studio will sell it. 'Adult'
entertainment was always adolescent but now it's slinking to
cartoon level-- as it softens the shock value, despite no one
much left to shock.
Depravity = equality of misery.
As you have had for a long time to discuss 'politics' (social
platitudes) by prefacing your smarm with "I'm no racist", now you
have to preface discussion of the ultrameritocratic (what used to
be called capitalist) though egalitarian-promoting Entertainment
Industry with "I'm no prude"; perhaps not using such terminology,
yet the inference is the same. Best to resort to the old "what
about the children?" ploy, even if the true children today are
over twenty.
Many think we're evolving a rightwing Marxist society, and such
is almost the case, but the state is withering away so we can
live in what is more a left-libertarian society where 'just don't
get caught' rather than 'do as thou wilt' will be the rule rather
than exception.
Alan Brooks| 6.20.09 @ 1:20AM
"society" is used advisedly, Maggie Thatcher has been shown to be
correct, though society exists in the material and biological
senses.
some rambling anecdote demonstrating how in someone whose better
judgment was overruled by genes-- say, for instance, my Dad being
a Communist in the '30s-- by the mirror-image perceptions of
Marxism and marxism:
the release of Sgt. Pepper in '67 was/is sometimes seen as the
time when the fractured Western World united for a brief moment,
and that probably was what did occur.
But such a chasing after rainbows involved is itself an irony of
ironies, and after 30 years wasted as a 'futurist' (a souped-up
goo goo progressive) it now comes into focus that the glimmers of
progress a fool looks at for clues are the delusive memes he is
creating in his mind to lure himself along like a donkey chasing
a carrot.
I now see, perhaps too late, that globalization means not just
free trade but also its nemesis, answering the mass hubris, in
the coming Globalization of Vulgarity;
democracy also means the tastelessness at the bottom of 'society'
is smeared upward into every nook, cranny and pore it can, as if
by osmosis, enter into.
So you don't need a sociologist to tell you "fads are top down,
trends are bottom up."
Progress might even be not material, but, rather, only exist in
the realms of pure science, so natural turbulence is exacerbated
by applied science, as Richard Brookhiser wrote, the turbulence
"lasts for millennia". How I wish I'd listened back in the
day.
My dad wasn't a complete fool, but aside from his genes he lived
when the moral street sign was pointing to him both
directions.
He had a book on his shelf which was tossed after he died, 'The
Decline Of Pleasure'.
How I wish I'd read the book before he died.
Alan Brooks| 6.23.09 @ 10:36AM
the Great Globalization of Vulgarity... remember that; you all
will be thinking about it a great deal 15, 20 years from now--
you wont be able to avoid doing so.
Alan Brooks| 6.12.09 @ 11:02AM
'A Tolerable Anarchy'?
now there's some sort of an oxymoron.
'
Alan Brooks| 6.17.09 @ 11:31PM
here is my take on today's brave new world entertainment in a nutshell:
Equality now means misery loves company, everyone is united in our slouch towards Babylon.
During economic contractions entertainment does well because no one will ever go broke underestimating our taste, produce a cartoon where the Family Guy or South Parker uses the noun penis every other episode and your studio will sell it. 'Adult' entertainment was always adolescent but now it's slinking to cartoon level-- as it softens the shock value, despite no one much left to shock.
Depravity = equality of misery.
As you have had for a long time to discuss 'politics' (social platitudes) by prefacing your smarm with "I'm no racist", now you have to preface discussion of the ultrameritocratic (what used to be called capitalist) though egalitarian-promoting Entertainment Industry with "I'm no prude"; perhaps not using such terminology, yet the inference is the same. Best to resort to the old "what about the children?" ploy, even if the true children today are over twenty.
Many think we're evolving a rightwing Marxist society, and such is almost the case, but the state is withering away so we can live in what is more a left-libertarian society where 'just don't get caught' rather than 'do as thou wilt' will be the rule rather than exception.
Alan Brooks| 6.20.09 @ 1:20AM
"society" is used advisedly, Maggie Thatcher has been shown to be correct, though society exists in the material and biological senses.
some rambling anecdote demonstrating how in someone whose better judgment was overruled by genes-- say, for instance, my Dad being a Communist in the '30s-- by the mirror-image perceptions of Marxism and marxism:
the release of Sgt. Pepper in '67 was/is sometimes seen as the time when the fractured Western World united for a brief moment, and that probably was what did occur.
But such a chasing after rainbows involved is itself an irony of ironies, and after 30 years wasted as a 'futurist' (a souped-up goo goo progressive) it now comes into focus that the glimmers of progress a fool looks at for clues are the delusive memes he is creating in his mind to lure himself along like a donkey chasing a carrot.
I now see, perhaps too late, that globalization means not just free trade but also its nemesis, answering the mass hubris, in the coming Globalization of Vulgarity;
democracy also means the tastelessness at the bottom of 'society' is smeared upward into every nook, cranny and pore it can, as if by osmosis, enter into.
So you don't need a sociologist to tell you "fads are top down, trends are bottom up."
Progress might even be not material, but, rather, only exist in the realms of pure science, so natural turbulence is exacerbated by applied science, as Richard Brookhiser wrote, the turbulence "lasts for millennia". How I wish I'd listened back in the day.
My dad wasn't a complete fool, but aside from his genes he lived when the moral street sign was pointing to him both directions.
He had a book on his shelf which was tossed after he died, 'The Decline Of Pleasure'.
How I wish I'd read the book before he died.
Alan Brooks| 6.23.09 @ 10:36AM
the Great Globalization of Vulgarity... remember that; you all will be thinking about it a great deal 15, 20 years from now-- you wont be able to avoid doing so.
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