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Friday, November 08, 2019

“Meme Wars, nothing but Meeeeeeeme Wars...”

My friend works around the corner from a BMV outlet. I’m green with envy, I love those stores. Anyway he’s become tight with the guy who manages this particular outlet. He commented to the manager on the apparent overabundance of Chomsky titles on the shelves. The manager said, “Yeah, I’ve stopped taking them in trade.”

“Nobody reads Chomsky anymore?”

“It’s more like Chomsky’s been integrated on a cellular level — at least where his theories on politics and the media are concerned.”

Critical Theory Osmosis, in other words.

I think that’s about right. Kids have a complete distrust of any media in which they are not active participants. But critical osmosis, like religious/philosophical osmosis, is a very instinctual working-with-primary-colours business. So where Chomsky tirelessly collated data to support his sustained critique of western geopolitical power plays, the kids reach for the memes.

A blanket over-generalization. Shame on me, Prajer.
Funny because it’s “true”?
I am dissatisfied with last week’s post and disappointed with myself for posting it.

It is wishy-washy and vague in its endorsements, and gestures breezily in the direction of closure, where in fact none exists. My best defence of it is the only one, which I gave to my wife — I posted it to keep track of how and why I am thinking the way I currently do.

Personally, the most distressing change under the aegis of 45 is the deterioration of public discourse — his game brings down everyone else’s. Just one example — Ron Rosenbaum.

The influence Ron Rosenbaum’s Explaining Hitler has had on me is incalculable. Here are two ways to frame it: 1) when I finished the book my hermeneutics of suspicion, which after 500 years of watching Anabaptist family getting burned at the stake and worse is pretty freakin’ deep, got just a little deeper; 2) Rosenbaum helped me appreciate anew just how tenuous a proposition it is for the little guy to take a principled stand in the roiling, bloody tides of history.

He wrote a terrific book, in other words. He layered historical record with anecdote and personal observation to deeply persuasive effect. Vanity Fair, LARB, NYT, Lapham’s Quarterly, etc — the prestige press loved to print him, and for good reason.

Cut to a quick Google search, and it looks like he hasn’t had anything published by these people in the last two years. I’ve got the bad feeling he’s too busy on Twitter. ALL CAPS, spelling missteaks . . . O Captain! My Captain! Your game, sir — your game.

Alright, back to last week’s post.

This link and this link (followed by this interview) were ultimately dissatisfying for the same reasons my post was (see above).

This link, on the other hand, achieved penetration and has me cogitating, hopefully in helpful directions.

It’s what I’d like all my posts to achieve. Can’t be done, of course. The best I can manage — or try to manage — is to keep track of my own thoughts and feelings, while keeping my head in the game.
Along with posting the occasional Wittgenstein meme.

2 comments:

  1. What quite often happens with me after reading one of your posts, especially recently, is that it will send me off in 10 different directions at once.
    After reading your previous post, I spent some time researching who Peter Thiel was.
    I also spent some time researching that meme. (I had actually seen the episode of 30 Rock it was from, way back when, so I knew I had seen it in a sitcom somewhere, but couldn't remember which one it was.)

    Incidentally, while doing that Google search came across this article, which I thought maybe you'd get a kick out of:
    ‘How do you do, fellow kids’ has become the ‘how do you do, fellow kids’ of memes

    https://www.theverge.com/2017/7/13/15966094/30-rock-buscemi-how-do-you-do-fellow-kids-meme-kill-it-please

    I also enjoyed the quote about Herbert Marcuse

    I always enjoy reading your posts. It usually sends me off in several new and interesting directions. Great way to start my morning with a cup of coffee.

    Often I'll get to the end of one of your posts and feel that I don't have any coherent thoughts to articulate in the comment section, but I hope that that radio silence doesn't give the impression that your not being read and enjoyed.
    Even in cases where your posts don't seem to come to a solid conclusion, they always give me plenty to think about, or new things to look up.

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  2. The Verge -- bah!

    Thanks for the encouragement Joel. No point in me stopping now, is there?

    ReplyDelete