Taking Sides: the TLS v. the LRB

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enjoyed 'Wang Xiuying''s piece on 'China after Covid,' though it was also interesting to read a counterpoint to the view that gongye dang (the 'technocrat/technological/industrial party) view is dominating, in the thread here:

Currently just as many academics and lawyers as there are engineers at the top; dominant position is held by business management, finance, economics, and degrees in socialist theory/party management

— T. Greer (@Scholars_Stage) October 16, 2020

Fizzles, Saturday, 17 October 2020 15:13 (three years ago) link

fwiw adam elkus has an archive of essays on his github which i think are often write-ups of his tweet-essays: https://aelkus.github.io

ffs is popper responsible for the present-day salience and flavour of the term "conspiracy theory"? it is 1000 yrs exactly since i last read the open society. there's a piece in GQ by never-say-former ilxor d0rian lynsk3y abt CTs -- i checked to see if it was behind a paywall (no) and googled to see if the names epstein and hofstadter feature in it (no and yes) so i'm guessing it's bad not good but i haven't actually read it yet

jeet heer recently wrote an excellent takedown of "the paranoid style" in the nation -- DL seems just to be treating it as "magisterial in its authority" or w/evs

mark s, Saturday, 17 October 2020 15:36 (three years ago) link

yeah that github repository is rly good. still, there’s a lot of value in his feed, but it’s SO MUCH ALL THE TIME.

Fizzles, Saturday, 17 October 2020 15:46 (three years ago) link

meek says popper is the originator but doesn’t say populariser so not sure. thx for the links - will definitely the read the jeet heer. maybe even the DL if i’m feeling like a benevolent elephant.

Fizzles, Saturday, 17 October 2020 15:50 (three years ago) link

New LRB contains Paul Keegan on T.S. Eliot / Emily Hale correspondence. I started leafing through and it went on ... and on. 10 pages?

I happen to be one of the perhaps few actually *interested* in this - I'll read every word of this article - and even I can see that this looks excessive. The material will be covered by any specialist Eliot journal, etc - it hardly requires such massive, intense coverage in a generalist paper.

And what is the issue anyway? Private letters between two people who had a bit of an on-off relationship? It's not like 500pp of Eliot and H.D. debating poetics. Hard to justify.

the pinefox, Saturday, 17 October 2020 16:38 (three years ago) link

Fizzles: your own thoughts about Meek and conspiracy appear to be more subtle and substantial than the tweets you then posted from somebody else.

the pinefox, Saturday, 17 October 2020 16:41 (three years ago) link

on the eliot letters i must admit doing the same pf. i think the status of the letters are a lot to do with eliot and the eliot estate having a symbolic power in lit politics disproportionate to their actual cultural importance. basically they had to cover it and boy have they covered it.

Fizzles, Saturday, 17 October 2020 16:51 (three years ago) link

on adam elkus - i think he’s a v good guide and illuminator of modern media and technology spaces. possibly i would suggest that individual tweets do not do justice to more sustained engagement but possibly he may not be congenial!

Fizzles, Saturday, 17 October 2020 16:54 (three years ago) link

From your theorist: 'The mask fiasco'?

... when you go out, most people carry and / or wear masks, at least when they're in shops. (I expect this includes you, like me.)

It's presumably because they've heard this is advisable / necessary / mandatory.

Some people, regrettably, don't comply.

Not really much of a fiasco.

the pinefox, Saturday, 17 October 2020 17:18 (three years ago) link

he’s referring to the consistent advice at the beginning of the pandemic that masks did not help prevent the spread of covid and might even do harm. this despite a number of vocal commentators (zeynep tufekci the most prominent) showing strong evidence that it was known that at worst they were a cheap risk avoidance method and at best would help spread the prevention of covid.)

advice was then switched to masks being mandatory on the basis of changing scientific evidence without much actually changing at all other than masks being more available. the UK was even further behind than the states in this respect.

that’s the fiasco to which he’s referring.

Fizzles, Saturday, 17 October 2020 17:24 (three years ago) link

his point being is that it’s hard to convince people that institutions aren’t responsible for top down disinformation in scenarios like that.

Fizzles, Saturday, 17 October 2020 17:25 (three years ago) link

and that such doubt contributes (in his view “wrongly but nevertheless”) to conspiracy theorising.

Fizzles, Saturday, 17 October 2020 17:26 (three years ago) link

I think the current UK government is the most evil and mendacious in my lifetime. I hate the current UK PM more than any politician ever. But on the particular issue you cite, I think they were simply (another of their great flaws) stupid, hapless and incompetent.

That's bad, but not really conspiracy theory material.

the pinefox, Saturday, 17 October 2020 18:15 (three years ago) link

i think elkus is discussing the situation in the US

mark s, Saturday, 17 October 2020 18:41 (three years ago) link

My comments on Fizzles' thinker (whom I don't know) led away from the real topic, on which Fizzles was interesting: Is Meek's article good or bad?

I read it last thing last night and I can somewhat now see what Fizzles meant.

Reading the article I mostly felt: this is OK. No real problems with it.

But it leaves doubts. As far as I recall, Meek never defines what he means by conspiracy theory. Which means that we can never really tell whether someone has a conspiracy theory, or a bad theory, or just a theory.

Meek also implies a kind of pathology - that conspiracy theorising is a sort of condition / illness that you get into or out of - but doesn't explain the mechanism by which you get into or out of it.

A corollary of all this is: Meek doesn't really admit that there might be a continuum of thought, from 'mad conspiracy theories' to what many of us could consider 'sensible critical thinking', and a lot of contested mixture in between.

the pinefox, Sunday, 18 October 2020 08:58 (three years ago) link

The figures in the poll he quotes at the start are worth looking into. They look very high. Is this, then, that poll that attributed 'conspiracy' thought to people holding what actually sounded sensible views? There was a lot of criticism of that at the time.

the pinefox, Sunday, 18 October 2020 08:59 (three years ago) link

xposts and apologies for re-de-railing.

i've taken the odd step in this post of just indicating for each para what specific area that para applies to, to avoid crossing the streams here.

[abstract argument about epistemic health] yep - US. though i think the general points he's making, about epistemic health – from where do we get information and what is the quality of that information – holds more widely true. the general application here is that it's not necessarily about the masks specifically, but the fact that this sort of institutional gaslighting creates the conditions for conspiracy theorising.

[abstract argument about epistemic health] riffing beyond what he says slightly, institutional silence and institutional lying are obviously not unknown historically, perhaps what is different here is the easy shift from one message to another without evidence change and with a fair bit of institutional 'you must do this' and 'don't you see', which is why i call it gaslighting above, perhaps slightly dangerously.

[meek lrb article]the general reason to bring it up here is that Adam Elkus is like a monkey in the rigging on this sort of stuff. plenty to disagree with and chew on, yes, but meek looks like a bit of a landlubber in comparison. you might allow it if his article were full of links and further reading (again, something elkus is good at), but there's Popper and one recent book on conspiracy theory (which may be v good), and the rest is Meek in the park arguing with randos.

[specific thing about masks] just finally on masks specifically, rather than as one example of a more abstract argument, i actually find the UK example even more 'fiasco' like than the US. One thing that was notable in the US was from very early on a very noisy cohort of people writing about how we should be definitely wearing masks to help reduce the likelihood of transmission. The most obvious figures were the slightly silly but still quite powerful Nicholas Nassim Taleb (of The Black Swan), and the very good Zeynep Tufekci in The Atlantic. It produced a sizeable social media group of people actively pushing masks, and attacking the CDC and other institutions for not doing the same. Those institutions responded robustly on masks and then later equally robustly said people should be wearing them.

In the UK i didn't notice any particularly noisy pro-mask people, although the government and crucially the government medical advisor message was that there was no evidence they made any difference and may indeed do harm. so i think if there wasn't perceived to be a 'fiasco' in the UK, it's only because all media was fairly quiet on it.

i felt i noticed this in particular because i had a bit of a bee in my bonnet whenever travelling through east Asian countries about how many people were wearing masks and what i perceived to be overzealous health cordons at international borders. well, obviously it was the experience with SARS and almost immediately Covid hit the UK i was thinking why aren't they recommending wearing masks? (I did not myself wear a mask). needless to say i feel very fucking silly now.

Fizzles, Sunday, 18 October 2020 09:14 (three years ago) link

pinefox i think the questions in your post are interesting, and - you're right - meek sort of raises but doesn't address them.

i think my general recent experience of meek is a bit cruder, which is i tend to say 'and?' or 'so?' at the end of his articles. or a feel he's described the situation, but not usefully gone into either underlying mechanics of it (insight), or what might be done.

i also thought the figures were high. I wondered if this was an approach that took many examples of conspiracy thinking and saw how many people believed in (rather like that excellent report into UK anti-semitism, which found that although the number of people who were anti-semitic was very low, the number of people who held at least one example of anti-semitic thinking was high).

Fizzles, Sunday, 18 October 2020 09:19 (three years ago) link

just answer whether i think the piece is good or not, i think my answer would be... not really? if i were a teacher marking an a level essay i would say “C+ covers the subject well but doesn’t attempt any higher
level analysis. doing this will help you get a B, doing it well will help you get an A”

Fizzles, Sunday, 18 October 2020 10:15 (three years ago) link

The more I think about Meek's article, the more I agree with Fizzles on it.

"this sort of institutional gaslighting creates the conditions for conspiracy theorising."

This seems accurate. But then - you and I both agree that there has been such gaslighting, and yet we don't believe we have fallen into conspiracy theorising.

Conspiracy theorising is always someone else's problem. This is one of the most obviously suspicious things about it.

"there's Popper and one recent book on conspiracy theory (which may be v good), and the rest is Meek in the park arguing with randos."

Yes, this is part of the problem here. Meek's other articles have been much longer and much fuller. He writes about farming, and talks to lots of farmers, and learns about farming. Here, he ... randomly meets someone in a park. And randomly meets someone at a demo. That's it.

re: the study I mentioned that inflated conspiracy numbers: here is a link:
https://leftfootforward.org/2018/11/guardian-and-academics-under-fire-for-indirectly-branding-entire-british-left-conspiracy-theorists/

The survey stated:
“The most widespread conspiracy belief in the UK, shared by 44% of people, was that ‘even though we live in what’s called a democracy, a few people will always run things in this country anyway'”.

Lefists, including Owen Jones as I recall, stated that this was not a conspiracy theory but a reasonable observation.

This is simply an example of the possibly fluid or contested border between 'conspiracy theory' and 'sensible critical approach to society'.

I do think that there must be a distinction between mad conspiracy theories and sensible critical views. But Meek doesn't properly theorise what it is, even though it's what his whole article relies on.

the pinefox, Sunday, 18 October 2020 11:41 (three years ago) link

Here is another example of a problem that Meek does not even mention:

When RLB was fired this year - one of the most significant stories certainly in the UK Opposition in 2020, and one with big effect on the politics and even membership of the Labour Party - the official reason given was that she had endorsed an 'anti-semitic conspiracy theory'.

She hadn't. To say that she had was a slur - practically libellous. But this was the official reason given by LOTO, not just by a Daily Express gloss on the event. So 'conspiracy theory' is a term that can be easily used, very officially, by extremely mainstream people, to delegitimise statements that they find inconvenient. This suggests that a critical and cautious approach to the term may be appropriate.

the pinefox, Sunday, 18 October 2020 11:44 (three years ago) link

I think ultimately what Fizzles has helped me to notice is that this was a peculiarly poor instance of Meek's work - short by his standards (which can seem a blessing), half-baked, under-researched, failing really to carry through its thought or define its terms, relying on shared starting terms of reference rather than being prepared to question them.

the pinefox, Sunday, 18 October 2020 11:46 (three years ago) link

Andrew O'Hagan, Short Cuts on fresh air in Berlin: rambling, random, yet much more readable than usual, and less offensive.

the pinefox, Sunday, 18 October 2020 11:47 (three years ago) link

Really unusually poor letters page in LRB 22.10.2020, including a feeble (though lengthy) defence of the judgment of R.B. Ginsburg by someone who lives in Shrewsbury.

the pinefox, Sunday, 18 October 2020 11:49 (three years ago) link

checking the shrewsbury letter out in case it's some clown i went to school with

(no afaicr)

mark s, Sunday, 18 October 2020 12:12 (three years ago) link

https://londonreviewbookbox.co.uk/collections/debut-novelists-in-conversation-with-preti-taneja

LRB-based event featuring Eley Williams who is known to Tim.

the pinefox, Monday, 26 October 2020 11:55 (three years ago) link

I had been thinking that maybe my previous dismissal of the ludicrously long Eliot letters article was unjust; that maybe it would be good reading.

It's quite well written (but too arch, with various references to the poetry unsignalled, perhaps unfair to those who don't know them). But it has almost no structure, is just one of those articles that, given large amounts of space, allows itself to ramble anywhere without progressing (except maybe, very gradually, in chronology).

I am still only halfway through. Perhaps it will change my mind. But so far:

My sense is that it's a lot of fuss about something rather embarrassing -- the fact that TSE was happy to have a 'relationship' of sorts as long as it was at the longest possible arm's length (ie: virtually two continents away if possible).

Larkin and Flaubert also had this kind of correspondence, but that was with women with whom they had sexual relationships -- but who were frustrated that they couldn't live with the writers. There's an unhappy situation here of needing relationship and needing to escape it. This could happen to anyone - it's not a crime - but it's not worth vast exploration either.

TSE's tale seems more pathetic than Larkin and Flaubert's as, as far as I know so far, he didn't even have a sexual relationship with this woman (maybe rest of the article will contradict this). She was just a friend, but someone he spun out in this special way for a ridiculous amount of time -- before eventually deciding this hadn't even been worth doing. And the impression is that her letters were totally unlike his, and she wasn't getting what he was getting from the correspondence.

It's a case of human fallibility. I can sympathise. We all have such failings. But it's too pathetic, I think, to bear this amount of rambling coverage. It's breaking a butterfly on a wheel.

the pinefox, Friday, 30 October 2020 11:55 (three years ago) link

I started Patricia Lockdown, I mean, Patricia Lockwood, on Vladimir Nabokov with quite high hopes. It started well - bold, vivid, imaginative.

As it went on, my hopes fell. Disappointing, frustrating. Even what had initially seemed such a strong gambit turned out to be oddly ill-founded. In my head I formulated a long account of specific things that were not quite right about the article, but then realized there was no point writing it out. No-one else would ever agree anyway.

I will just propose:

1: This is a talented writer who may not be currently doing full justice to her talent.

2: This writer, in what I've read, relies heavily on received ideas. That is, much of her prose seems to be about bouncing off images of, eg a writer, that the reader already has. I can see some appeal in this. And her LRB readership is typically well-read enough for it to work.

But there are limits to it also. It could be a good exercise for her to write about something in a way that doesn't presume a bank, an 'image-repertoire' as Barthes' translators put it, of pre-existing clichés about it, but has to describe and explain it to the reader from the ground up.

Sadly, despite being such an annoying disappointment, this review may well be the most interesting thing in this issue of the LRB.

the pinefox, Thursday, 5 November 2020 10:29 (three years ago) link

Evidently I'm operating at a far lower level of sophistication but I found something to enjoy in every paragraph of this piece!

Also think that all LRB reviewers should henceforth be obliged to produce bingo cards for the authors under review like PL's of Nabokov.

https://pbs.twimg.com/media/ElbxFMAXgAEe904?format=jpg&name=large

Piedie Gimbel, Thursday, 5 November 2020 10:50 (three years ago) link

This thread title is peculiarly fulfilled by an LRB article about the TLS.

https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v42/n21/stefan-collini/book-reviewing

the pinefox, Thursday, 5 November 2020 16:20 (three years ago) link

I'm currently navigating the thorny problem of intrusive thoughts developing into intrusive speech with one of my kids (and the attendant problems of shame and censure) and I idly put 'taboo' into the LRB search and came across this (mostly) great Nicholas Spice essay on psychoanalysis: https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v26/n01/nicholas-spice/i-must-be-mad

I think it'll be useful, by the by, but I was mostly glad to notice that one of the letters in response was from Mike Brearley, who I always forget is a practising psychoanalyst. That was my Sunday morning.

Vanishing Point (Chinaski), Sunday, 8 November 2020 10:49 (three years ago) link

i enjoyed the lockwood, and actually laughed out loud at two lines in it. i would have been curious at your itemisation of things that weren't quite right pinefox, because i think that idea about using perceptions of a writer, such as nabokov, to describe her own version of nabokov, is an interesting one. i need to go back to the article again, but i thought it was a success.

Fizzles, Sunday, 8 November 2020 21:47 (three years ago) link

Ian Pattern on Ngaio Marsh: It was never made clear why write specifically about Marsh at all. It's really more a survey of Golden Age detective fiction - and not an exceptionally inspired one. Does include a mild demurral from Lanchester, for Lanchester-controversy fans.

Thomas Meaney on US power had some insights, lost focus at the end, was at least in the same grand zone as Perry Anderson's vast NLR special on the same theme a few years ago.

Artist Rosa Bonheur was new to me. I could agree that her interest in animals was the most interesting thing about her.

The Lockhart Plot against Bolshevism was also new to this reader.

Barbara Newman on Medieval arts of dying: quite good.

I have walked past the Warburg Institute thousands of times, didn't know about Warburg's special collection of images or that people compared him to Benjamin.

None of these was more interesting than the flawed Lockwood.

I don't much relish reading Ferdinand Mount on Andrew Adonis - might as well read Michael Heseltine on Peter Mandelson - but it must be done.

the pinefox, Monday, 9 November 2020 09:42 (three years ago) link

ferdie on adonis on ernie bevin is a bit of a "posh boys lament the lost red wall" special tbh

mark s, Monday, 9 November 2020 11:32 (three years ago) link

the recent swerve into fannish luxuriating in the good and bad of mid-tier tecfic (presumably sparked by lanch's butterfly mind, here as you say w/a very guarded dissent) interests me bcz of this very belated rapprochement w/genre fiction of any type at all

mark s, Monday, 9 November 2020 11:35 (three years ago) link

belated editorial rapprochement i mean

mark s, Monday, 9 November 2020 11:36 (three years ago) link

Rosa Lyster on a climate fiction novel: refreshingly critical, though maybe veering into non-relevantly / unfairly critical perspectives by the end.

Mount on Adonis on Bevin: yes, better than I'd hoped. It managed not to remind me much of what a terrible person Adonis is. It makes Bevin seem excellent, but I suspect that this is quite a partisan position and, say, a TRIBUNE writer could give a different picture.

the pinefox, Wednesday, 11 November 2020 14:25 (three years ago) link

My boyfriend finds lockwood unreadable and i find her pieces very enjoyable. His main criticism, which has really tarnished her writing for me is how often at the moments she seems to be about to deliver a real insight or sharp observation it suddenly flips out into an observation about herself. Once you notice this its hard not stop noticing it. He found the piece she wrote on lucia berlin unbearable for this reason. he had just read a book by berlin and i thought he might enjoy the piece but he felt that it kept telling him more about lockwood than it did about berlin. I don't want to read a piece about patricia lockwood he said and this feels incredibly self regarding.

i think pinefox's observations on her are really sharp. i think she is very funny and has a way of pulling at her metaphors or coming at them sideways but yes they do often avoid the work of describing the thing she is talking about but instead pull at assumed shared assumptions about them. There is a line that is v memorable from the john updike piece where she says he grows up, not into an adult but into a country club member which i think is a v good example of her appeal as a writer and how she can be simultaneously both very witty and very lazy. I think this is a big part of her appeal, her writing reminds me of a friend who is very funny in a similar way, but i suspect she could be a lot better.

plax (ico), Sunday, 15 November 2020 12:44 (three years ago) link

"His main criticism, which has really tarnished her writing for me is how often at the moments she seems to be about to deliver a real insight or sharp observation it suddenly flips out into an observation about herself."

Think this could be the function of being very online, which also merges with a current for auto-fictional narratives.

Lockwood being given the task of writing about male ++ writers is simultaneously interesting and lazy.

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 15 November 2020 13:06 (three years ago) link

the updike one was very very funny but i got bored of the nabokov one quickly. the women writers series is much patchier than youremember as well

plax (ico), Sunday, 15 November 2020 13:32 (three years ago) link

that said, if i see her name on the cover i'm pretty pleased

plax (ico), Sunday, 15 November 2020 13:40 (three years ago) link

in general a thing i guess i find frustrating abt the lrb is the non-on-line-ness of its editors (gawkersphere-style) -- almost all of our crit in these theads is abt editing as much as writing

by contrast the lrb shop's account is twitter MVP hall-of-famelol

mary kay wilmers go on cum town is what im saying to an extent

mark s, Sunday, 15 November 2020 13:50 (three years ago) link

cum town?

plax (ico), Sunday, 15 November 2020 13:52 (three years ago) link

It's an irony (not really leftist, but has some currency on us left twitter) podcast

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 15 November 2020 13:57 (three years ago) link

oh ok i was not sure what user mark s was advising famous octogenarian literary editor mary kay wilmers do but it sounded rather unwholesome

plax (ico), Sunday, 15 November 2020 14:00 (three years ago) link

"by contrast the lrb shop's account is twitter MVP hall-of-famelol"

You'd also never expect it coming from the guy who runs it (if it is indeed him)

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 15 November 2020 14:15 (three years ago) link

i've avoided the nabokov piece cuz it's precisely suited to make me both hypercritical and miserably conscious that i'm being hypercritical out of jealousy. lockwood is in this unfortunate uncanny valley for me where she's always good enough to trigger this but never good enough to shut it up.

difficult listening hour, Sunday, 15 November 2020 14:21 (three years ago) link

i suspect the lrb editors love her but have no idea what to do with her

plax (ico), Sunday, 15 November 2020 14:26 (three years ago) link

she has intimated a couple of times in articles that they're basically pitching her ideas so it sounds like everybody is p delighted with the setup

plax (ico), Sunday, 15 November 2020 14:27 (three years ago) link

guess the cattiest thing i could say is that she's on the same page xp

difficult listening hour, Sunday, 15 November 2020 14:27 (three years ago) link


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