Joan Didion

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but i don't think she refuses to psychologize; she just does it fitfully, tentatively and obliquely

yeh, sure, you put it better: she refuses 'to get inside their heads'. which i can see as a virtue in her reporting! certainly that kind of empathizing can involve submerging someone in an entirely alien terminology (lol, projecting)

i admire harrison's essay for not really attempting any 'elegance' but just coming at it blunt & ugly. the lavender thing was terrible tho, yeah.

her meanness is purposeful

yes, sometimes! & the 60s did deserve it! but sometimes i just feels like smallness to me, rather than real objectivity.

neti pot, kombucha, how to die alone (Lamp), Wednesday, 15 June 2011 07:10 (twelve years ago) link

haha maybe the pinefox will wake up soon & carry this torch for me, but i think im ~done~

i wish someone had revived a thread abt an author we all liked :/

neti pot, kombucha, how to die alone (Lamp), Wednesday, 15 June 2011 07:12 (twelve years ago) link

no, it's good that all these smart people dislike didion. but it means i will never stop obsessing about her. or sleep.

horseshoe, Wednesday, 15 June 2011 07:13 (twelve years ago) link

i think this is my favorite joan didion mean girl moment

☂ (max), Wednesday, 15 June 2011 07:14 (twelve years ago) link

[re: her takedown of woody allen in the nyrb]

To the Editors:

What piques screenwriter Joan Didion so much about those large, enthusiastic audiences Woody Allen gets is that they seem to recognize themselves in lives that Didion finds unimportant. People who live such lives are unimportant to Didion because they “go to restaurants and ask one another hard questions” about “relationships,” something only “adolescents” still discuss much. Evidently where Joan Didion lives problems of love and psyche evaporate in a haze of margaritas by age twenty-one and folks can get down to the real business of living—which is what, by the way, if it isn’t the self or others? Losing weight? More likely, it’s vocations. Careers. Movie deals.

Didion complains that Woody Allen is stuck in the “fairly recent” notion of finding or making or inhabiting the self, as a central obsession. She’s right that it’s recent: those who trace it back to Augustine are exaggerating, a little. But surely the literature of “recent” centuries is richer for the works of people who’ve made this same faux pas. It’s what modern narrative art is mostly about, and Didion is sophomoric (“adolescent?”) in complaining that Woody Allen hasn’t managed to rehabilitate pre-modern modes of being, such as “attaining grace.” Didion would make a vice out of the fact that Woody Allen keeps to the side of the street he knows best—the sign of a tyro, by the standards of Hollywood, where a “writer” is someone who can dish out visions of the Gold Rush, the Boxer Rebellion, or the Lower East Side with equal competence. She calls the narrowness of Woody Allen’s focus “self-absorption.” Another word for it is modesty.

Admittedly there’s nothing modest about the list of things he lives for in Manhattan, but that’s not what Didion doesn’t like about it. Instead she notes that it’s “modishly eclectic,” which is a too deft way of saying that the list isn’t governed by any particular fashion or set of fashions. Here Didion’s need to attack the mindlessly modish audience (for roller-skating in crumpled linen, is it?) overcomes her intellectual honesty. The “Jupiter,” as she knows, is not at all a stylishly unfamiliar symphony—I think I’ve heard it in the Park—nor is a passion for “Potato Head Blues” likely to win you fancy friends. Didion may resent Woody Allen’s public display of his connoiseurship—and a (gorgeously) indulgent scene it is, too—but she shouldn’t pretend she knows his tastes to be modish when she can’t, because they ain’t. For instance: she says that the point of listing Sentimental Education is to obviate a gauche reference to Madame Bovary. A subtle discrimination, indeed! To know which of these two novels is hipper than the other betrays a suspiciously keen eye for what’s in, what’s out. Keener than Allen’s.

Which brings me to his defense on one last point, and here I’m answering not only Joan Didion, but also my friend Michael Wood, who in these pages [NYR, June 29, 1978] made the point that Allen doesn’t know as much as he implies about the bulk of his literary references. Probably there’s truth in this; that bulk is rather large. But when an allusion is apt—and even illuminating—it deserves credit even from the knowing. And the concerns of Sentimental Education have an eerie relevance to the concerns of Manhattan. In Frédéric Moreau as in the character Woody is endlessly playing, strength of feeling isn’t a source of action but rather an enfeeblement. By reminding us of the barely sympathetic, weak Frédéric, Woody Allen is reinforcing not the central character but those others in the film (or in the audience) who doubt his strength, his maturity, his authenticity. To say that this similarity in the themes of the two works is just accidental might be quite correct, but it would also be an instance of not crediting on the screen what we wouldn’t hesitate to find—and maybe praise—in a flawed but intelligent novel.

John Romano

Columbia University, New York City

Joan Didion replies:

Oh, wow.

http://www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/1979/oct/11/theyll-take-manhattan-3/

☂ (max), Wednesday, 15 June 2011 07:17 (twelve years ago) link

i mean sometimes i just admire her as a master zinger, frankly

☂ (max), Wednesday, 15 June 2011 07:19 (twelve years ago) link

yeah, that's classic.

horseshoe, Wednesday, 15 June 2011 07:19 (twelve years ago) link

she's right that manhattan isn't a serious movie in the way woody allen aspires for it to be, but she does come off sort of joyless in the review. such a good movie!

horseshoe, Wednesday, 15 June 2011 07:20 (twelve years ago) link

ya it kinda bugs me that she dislikes woody but i cant really imagine them inhabiting the same world anyway so ill settle for ignoring her article and savoring her "oh, well"

☂ (max), Wednesday, 15 June 2011 07:21 (twelve years ago) link

lol i mean "oh, wow"

☂ (max), Wednesday, 15 June 2011 07:21 (twelve years ago) link

morelike oh, snap

neti pot, kombucha, how to die alone (Lamp), Wednesday, 15 June 2011 07:24 (twelve years ago) link

It's a little odd or touching to see Michael Wood crop up in that 1978 letter.

the pinefox, Wednesday, 15 June 2011 08:46 (twelve years ago) link

i don't think she's a snob or anything, she's just really brainy.

estela, Wednesday, 15 June 2011 08:46 (twelve years ago) link

it can be hard for girls to write about the world without feeling pompous. i think she suffers at times from a slight self-consciousness when making declarations but she still makes them anyway, thank goodness.

estela, Wednesday, 15 June 2011 08:57 (twelve years ago) link

I never read Joan Didion. I would see her books in stores and heard people talk about her. I always grouped her with Susan Sontag for some reason and assumed her work had no relevance for me and my concerns. If I love Marguerite Duras and Marina Tsvetaeva, should I read Didion?

JacobSanders, Wednesday, 15 June 2011 10:26 (twelve years ago) link

No!

*tera, Wednesday, 15 June 2011 10:31 (twelve years ago) link

Estela, why can be hard for girls to write about the world without feeling pompous? Curious. Also are you referring to Didion when you say "she suffers at times from a slight self-consciousness when making declarations but she still makes them anyway..." because Didion should be not only a woman at this point but a seasoned author.

*tera, Wednesday, 15 June 2011 10:39 (twelve years ago) link

she's otm about Manhattan.

I still prefer her political writing to anything else: her talent for skewering people for their language never found a better, to quote T.S. Eliot, objective correlative.

The Edge of Gloryhole (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 15 June 2011 11:06 (twelve years ago) link

Most of us remember very well these secret signals and sighs of adolescence, remember the dramatic apprehension of our own mortality and other “more terrifying unsolvable problems about the universe,” but eventually we realize that we are not the first to notice that people die. “Even with all the distractions of my work and my life,” Woody Allen was quoted as saying in a cover story (the cover line was “Woody Allen Comes of Age”) in Time, “I spend a lot of time face to face with my own mortality.” This is actually the first time I have ever heard anyone speak of his own life as a “distraction.

BOOM!

The Edge of Gloryhole (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 15 June 2011 11:15 (twelve years ago) link

How exactly is that a criticism of Woody Allen?

JacobSanders, Wednesday, 15 June 2011 11:20 (twelve years ago) link

oh, wow

The Edge of Gloryhole (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 15 June 2011 11:21 (twelve years ago) link

How is it not?

joey kramer, anarcho-misogynist (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Wednesday, 15 June 2011 11:21 (twelve years ago) link

Midnight in Paris is the latest example of an Allen film being so damn clumsy about its literary allusions; they're more like tags of erudition than references.

The Edge of Gloryhole (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 15 June 2011 11:24 (twelve years ago) link

Woody Allen never tries to hide in his films how he believes much in life is a distraction from death, to make work, love etc a waiting/putting off of death. I don't see how his own honesty about this neuroses is a criticism.

JacobSanders, Wednesday, 15 June 2011 11:26 (twelve years ago) link

I don't think he's hiding it in his films!

The Edge of Gloryhole (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 15 June 2011 11:29 (twelve years ago) link

oh whoops sorry -- you said that. Anyway, why should give him credit for honesty?

The Edge of Gloryhole (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 15 June 2011 11:30 (twelve years ago) link

she's also arguing that these attitudes -- and how he clothes them in undifferentiated psychoanalytic jargon -- are juvenile.

The Edge of Gloryhole (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 15 June 2011 11:31 (twelve years ago) link

Then am I not getting something? Is she take Allen to task as a person or a film maker?

JacobSanders, Wednesday, 15 June 2011 11:33 (twelve years ago) link

I'm not necessarily giving him credit for being honesty. I just don't think there has ever been undercover motives with Allen's films. Scenes From a Mall is not a literary references to Bergman, but a love of him films and knowing he could never recreate it. But he tried. Woody Allen has always been himself which is a failed person who can't sort life out. He admires other peoples work and borrows heavily from it. Sure America isn't attached to freudian babble, but Allen was, for better or worse. I think through his failures he manages to create a body of work that is distinctly his own. I think the failures Didion points out about Allen are included in his films, he displays it. I mean yeah that's him.

JacobSanders, Wednesday, 15 June 2011 11:47 (twelve years ago) link

Geez I should sleep

JacobSanders, Wednesday, 15 June 2011 11:48 (twelve years ago) link

So many good posts in this thread, esp from horseshoe and estela. I agree that Harrison comes off as a crank, especially in the beginning of the essay. There's too much envy blurring her better points. In the part where she lays out the "trick" to Didion's sentences, I found myself thinking "but...that's a great sentence" at almost every example she uses. Didion's style is unimpeachable. Which is a shame because I think Harrison's more political point about Didion seems like a fair criticism. There IS something very End-Of-History-conservative about Didion's almost knee-jerk skepticism of anyone who seems to hold a sincere belief in something.

mike and the quantum mechanics (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 15 June 2011 12:44 (twelve years ago) link

assumed her work had no relevance for me and my concerns

this is odd to me!

Estela, why can be hard for girls to write about the world without feeling pompous? Curious. Also are you referring to Didion when you say "she suffers at times from a slight self-consciousness when making declarations but she still makes them anyway..." because Didion should be not only a woman at this point but a seasoned author.

― *tera, Wednesday, June 15, 2011 6:39 AM (1 hour ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink

i can't obviously speak for estela but when i read didion i very much get the sense that her fantastic ability to read situations, places and people means that shes also very aware (too aware, maybe) of her own place in those situations, and that awareness, combined with a ready insecurity and--this is maybe what estela alludes to?--an early life in which she was taught, implicitly and explicitly, as many women were and are, that she should be quiet and avoid pronouncement and confrontation, turns into a fear of pomposity.

i mean i wouldnt say didion has a 'slight' self-consciousness--i feel like (in what ive read which is not everything didion!) shes all self-consciousness. & i think that self-consciousness is (insofar as its what gives her that ability to read situations and relationships and so forth) what makes her so good, but (insofar as heightened self-awareness can, maybe even tends to, lead to crippling insecurity) it also makes her scared of how she must sound.

i just woke up so that probably doesnt make much sense. also i am over-thinking this. i will say that i think didion's "fear of pomposity"/"self-consciousness" is related less to her lived experience than it is to... "how her brain works" in some sense. so it doesnt matter that shes a seasoned writer now. its like saying "woody allen is successful and respected, why is he still so neurotic."

☂ (max), Wednesday, 15 June 2011 12:46 (twelve years ago) link

So many good posts in this thread, esp from horseshoe and estela.

otm. and everyone else! i love didion but its cool to hear ppl like lamp and pinefox getting to the heart of why they're not on board

just sayin, Wednesday, 15 June 2011 12:49 (twelve years ago) link

There IS something very End-Of-History-conservative about Didion's almost knee-jerk skepticism of anyone who seems to hold a sincere belief in something.

Can you develop this? What I see isn't skepticism of sincerity so much as scorn for malnourished or incoherent thinking in support of a sincere position.

The Edge of Gloryhole (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 15 June 2011 13:08 (twelve years ago) link

Martin Amis, in the rather good essay on Didion's style already referenced by Pinefox above, suspects her of being "defensive" in her attack on Manhattan. He accuses her of being scathing about other people's lack of cultural and literary sophistication while repeatedly betraying her own. The argument is subtle and doesn't lend itself to easy summary, but it's worth getting hold of the piece if you're interested in Didion and/or Amis.

frankiemachine, Wednesday, 15 June 2011 13:25 (twelve years ago) link

Writers being writers shockah

The Edge of Gloryhole (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 15 June 2011 13:29 (twelve years ago) link

It doesn't read like that, Alfred. There are enough similarities (and political differences) between the two writers to arouse suspicion of professional jealousy but in fact Amis, who's perfectly capable of being bitchy and partisan, seems to be doing his best to be scrupulously fair on this occasion. He's willing to praise Didion for what he finds good in her. It's an intelligent, perceptive and balanced piece of criticism.

frankiemachine, Wednesday, 15 June 2011 13:43 (twelve years ago) link

I wasn't trying to be glib, mind: a writer always betrays his biases when criticizing fellow writers for their own.

The Edge of Gloryhole (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 15 June 2011 13:52 (twelve years ago) link

He does in one way, in that essay: he says 'all of us are fascinated by what we most deplore' -- which sounds much more like a reference to MA than to JD.

Otherwise, Frankiemachine OTM and it's still the best thing I've read about Didion.

the pinefox, Wednesday, 15 June 2011 14:01 (twelve years ago) link

i'm not convinced martin amis is enough of a human being to deplore anything, to be honest

thomp, Wednesday, 15 June 2011 15:11 (twelve years ago) link

'we are all of us most fascinated by what we most feel mildly inconvenienced by and/or superior to'

thomp, Wednesday, 15 June 2011 15:12 (twelve years ago) link

estela and joan didion not entirely dissimilar in prose style imo

horseshoe, Wednesday, 15 June 2011 15:46 (twelve years ago) link

Thanks, Max.

*tera, Wednesday, 15 June 2011 16:55 (twelve years ago) link

In 50 years from now(or now for that matter), if a person were to read both Didion and Harrison, ignoring all of the hype and critical opinion surrounding Didion, and just read them both as objectively as possible, they would find Harrison a much better, more substancial writer, Imo... yes, her hatchet job is a little over the top, and jealousy may have been a factor, but there is also quite a lot of truth to her arguments, Imo... If one were to read her collection of essays "Off center", you would see that Harrison is a very brilliant writer, and that unlike Didiom, she is very 'common sense' oriented and down to earth... Didion give the impression, Imo, of being a lofty, out of touch, arrogant, snobbish, judgemental elitist, while Harrison gives the impression of being smart, witty, compassionate, articulate, reasonable and earthy... Harrison was a left wing feminist, but she was also very suspicious of dogma and ideology on either political extreme... she is certainly opinionated, but she tried to be as reasonable and fair as possible, at the same time... It's sad that she died in 2002...

jd, Wednesday, 15 June 2011 17:29 (twelve years ago) link

what's ironic about Didion's article about Woody Allen, is that many of the same criticisms that she spouted about Woody Allen could be equally said to apply to her...

jd, Wednesday, 15 June 2011 17:30 (twelve years ago) link

Maybe in the early days. She barely makes allusions to other writers and in the last ten years has stripped her prose of any bombast.

The Edge of Gloryhole (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 15 June 2011 17:32 (twelve years ago) link

i dont hear much referentialism in her early days either?

arachno-misogynist (D-40), Wednesday, 15 June 2011 17:33 (twelve years ago) link

Didion give the impression, Imo, of being a lofty, out of touch, arrogant, snobbish, judgemental elitist

This is about as wrong as wrong gets.

The Edge of Gloryhole (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 15 June 2011 17:33 (twelve years ago) link

definitely didion's body of work should be dismissed because she's not "earthy" enough

horseshoe, Wednesday, 15 June 2011 17:34 (twelve years ago) link

i dont hear much referentialism in her early days either?

I mean, I complained upthread that she seems to have stopped reading novels in the late sixties.

The Edge of Gloryhole (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 15 June 2011 17:35 (twelve years ago) link


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