david foster wallace: classic or dud

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mdd afaik

all yoga attacks are fire based (rogermexico.), Saturday, 8 September 2012 20:16 (eleven years ago) link

I don't know a lot about this kinda stuff, but do these diseases really have to fit in a certain box? like couldn't somebody be effectively 80% depressive 20% borderline or something.

iatee, Saturday, 8 September 2012 20:16 (eleven years ago) link

ya it couldve been depression, i pulled that diagnosis from a v hazy iirc

lag∞n, Saturday, 8 September 2012 20:17 (eleven years ago) link

okay reading gbx's last post he basically says what i said

iatee, Saturday, 8 September 2012 20:20 (eleven years ago) link

His diagnosis seems to have been atypical/treatment-resistant major depressive.disorder, along with the whole substance abuse/addiction situation. Acc. to Max he also self-diagnosed at one point at least as a sex addict, apparently in earnest.

*sad hug eomticon* (Control Z), Saturday, 8 September 2012 20:21 (eleven years ago) link

iatee did you just ask if it's possible to be borderline borderline?

manic pixie, mercy, yo chick she's so quirky (some dude), Saturday, 8 September 2012 20:22 (eleven years ago) link

A pervasive pattern of instability of interpersonal relationships, self-image and affects, as well as marked impulsivity, beginning by early adulthood and present in a variety of contexts, as indicated by five (or more) of the following:

Frantic efforts to avoid real or imagined abandonment. Note: Do not include suicidal or self-injuring behavior covered in Criterion 5

A pattern of unstable and intense interpersonal relationships characterized by alternating between extremes of idealization and devaluation.

Identity disturbance: markedly and persistently unstable self-image or sense of self.

Impulsivity in at least two areas that are potentially self-damaging (e.g., promiscuous sex, excessive spending, eating disorders, binge eating, substance abuse, reckless driving). Note: Do not include suicidal or self-injuring behavior covered in Criterion 5

Recurrent suicidal behavior, gestures, threats or self-injuring behavior such as cutting, interfering with the healing of scars or picking at oneself (excoriation).

Affective instability due to a marked reactivity of mood (e.g., intense episodic dysphoria, irritability or anxiety usually lasting a few hours and only rarely more than a few days).

Chronic feelings of emptiness

Inappropriate anger or difficulty controlling anger (e.g., frequent displays of temper, constant anger, recurrent physical fights).

Transient, stress-related paranoid ideation, delusions or severe dissociative symptoms

*sad hug eomticon* (Control Z), Saturday, 8 September 2012 20:24 (eleven years ago) link

wait for suicide people... wait for it

lag∞n, Saturday, 8 September 2012 20:26 (eleven years ago) link

someone please make a new thread for diagnosing artists

puff puff post (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Saturday, 8 September 2012 20:27 (eleven years ago) link

would it even be possible for someone to be 100% 'borderline' and 0% anything else? it just seems like such a vague disease

iatee, Saturday, 8 September 2012 20:28 (eleven years ago) link

I don't know a lot about this kinda stuff, but do these diseases really have to fit in a certain box? like couldn't somebody be effectively 80% depressive 20% borderline or something.

― iatee, Saturday, September 8, 2012 3:16 PM (3 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

well, yeah. psych diagnoses are pretty soft, if anyone's being honest about it, i mean consider that basic life stuff like being in love with a certain kind of other person was 'pathological' up until pretty recently. we don't ~actually~ know why ppl with mdd have depressive episodes that are deeper and more recurrent than most ppl, but the patterns of presentation seem sufficiently stereotyped that giving it the status of 'diagnosis' is ok. that someone's symptoms improve with medication (half the time) doesn't really tell us a whole lot about what's going on, physiologically. cuz in a way, as soon as a psychiatric condition is found to have an organic cause ("your irritability is actually because of your hyperthyroid, your personality changes are because you have Pick's disease"), it ceases to be psychiatric. lotta tautology over on the psych ward.

catbus otm (gbx), Saturday, 8 September 2012 20:31 (eleven years ago) link

I guess it was mostly the recurrent suicidality (inc. srs attempts) starting in late adolescence & on into adulthood, along with the substance abuse and intense/poss. compulsive relationship stuff, as far as actual behaviors, that sent up that flag in my head. The mood stuff seemed to me to fit, too, as well as a baseline super-negative and rather...wobbly sense of self. But I do not know.

*sad hug eomticon* (Control Z), Saturday, 8 September 2012 20:33 (eleven years ago) link

BPD isn't a disease, nor, really, is any kind of personality disorder. they're generally assumed to be developmental, which is both accurate as well as a bit of hand-waving; if you want to be waggish, it's a way of saying "we can't find anything ~wrong~ with you, but..."

there are no neuroanatomical findings, no presumed synaptic imbalances (so to speak), just...something didn't go as planned while you were growing up. nb - shooting from the hip here, i have like six weeks of psychiatric experience and only one personal diagnosis, so salt shakers all around

xp i didn't know about the recurrent suicidality and relationship stuff, maybe you're right, who knows

catbus otm (gbx), Saturday, 8 September 2012 20:39 (eleven years ago) link

yeah I want a pocket version of you to come out when my mom decides people in our family are bipolar or ADD and that explains all their problems

iatee, Saturday, 8 September 2012 20:40 (eleven years ago) link

ha, i prob shouldn't be explaining anything to anyone, but ok when's dinner

catbus otm (gbx), Saturday, 8 September 2012 20:44 (eleven years ago) link

its at 6 but you only get a pocket-sized portion

iatee, Saturday, 8 September 2012 20:45 (eleven years ago) link

p.s.: srs q: have yall read the bio

*sad hug eomticon* (Control Z), Saturday, 8 September 2012 20:47 (eleven years ago) link

i haven't :(

gave the lipsky one a shot, but something about it grated, and i gave up

catbus otm (gbx), Saturday, 8 September 2012 20:49 (eleven years ago) link

Lipsky's yammering ruined it for me; I couldn't finish it either. The bio is no masterpiece of literary art but it struck me as well-researched and p even-handed, given the inevitable limitations. Anyhow I obv found it tremendously affecting and should probably stfu. In any case my opinion of DFW's work is unaffected, or maybe higher than before.

*sad hug eomticon* (Control Z), Saturday, 8 September 2012 20:55 (eleven years ago) link

really like the lipsky just because of the sheer quantity of the man himself -- am less excited about reading the bio

Guayaquil (eephus!), Saturday, 8 September 2012 21:14 (eleven years ago) link

"...to the extent that I understand reality TV, it has a certain logic, and it's not hard to take that kind of logic to its extreme. I think 'Celebrity Autopsy,' while childhood friends of the celebrity sit around talking about whether or not this celebrity was a good person while his or her organs are being excised, would be the terminus of that logic." -- dfw, 2004 intv

*sad hug eomticon* (Control Z), Sunday, 9 September 2012 09:47 (eleven years ago) link

^otm

*sad hug eomticon* (Control Z), Sunday, 9 September 2012 09:56 (eleven years ago) link

Enjoyed the bio way more than I expected to, although it felt a little slight - would have been happy for it to have been twice as long. Found the extent to which stuff in the fiction was drawn from life and stuff in the nonfiction was made up really interesting. Guess I should read the Lipsky.

toby, Tuesday, 11 September 2012 00:04 (eleven years ago) link

i like the lipsky a lot.

i enjoyed reading this a lot (& am getting a lot out of the notes, at the end, in which a lot of v good, relatively uncondensed minutiae is featured), though i'm kinda just thrown by the end at the moment - just so sad i can barely reach back to before it. i find some of the compressions of 'wow wallace was an asshole/&c' that i've read in response to the bio too reductive to be worth engaging with.

i liked dfw's belated appreciation for wharton, & his speculation on his younger self's thought processes when encountering it.

very sexual album (schlump), Tuesday, 11 September 2012 01:22 (eleven years ago) link

some of the compressions

some of the reactions

very sexual album (schlump), Tuesday, 11 September 2012 01:23 (eleven years ago) link

but they are compressions of course

Guayaquil (eephus!), Tuesday, 11 September 2012 02:00 (eleven years ago) link

(and of course you end up compressing yourself)

Guayaquil (eephus!), Tuesday, 11 September 2012 02:00 (eleven years ago) link

the footnote-to-text relation is hilariously arbitrary sometimes. i feel like he half wanted to do DFW style notes but then ... didn't somehow? half of the information in there should just be in the text frankly

it's a good effort, but: hrm. certainly i already am at the point where i feel we're invading the privacy of other, still-living people. i just got to the point where there's a footnote acknowledging he talked to wallace's AA buddies.

thomp, Tuesday, 11 September 2012 10:35 (eleven years ago) link

I was interested to learn that DFW had attended a Buddhist meditation retreat at Plum Village (the place in France set up under the auspices of Thich Nhat Hanh), sometime in the 2000s iirc. It doesn't seem to have done him much good -- he left before the 10-day retreat was over, and made a jokey reference to it in a note to somebody -- but it lends weight, or at least context, to George Saunders' tribute in which he claimed DFW as a sort of American Buddhist writer (quoted in full waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaay upthread), which tribute had struck me before as an unexpected (tho not totally loony) sort of special pleading.

*sad hug eomticon* (Control Z), Tuesday, 11 September 2012 12:04 (eleven years ago) link

xpost: Yes, to learn that there is an actual guy upon whom Gately was based was just fucking weird. Half of me wanted that dude -- "The sonofabitch (DFW) was doing research all that time (in the 12-step meetings)!" -- to have, like, sued or made some other sort of hellacious public fuss after IJ came out, and half just...doesn't care that much? Idk. But it's discomfiting, yeah.

*sad hug eomticon* (Control Z), Tuesday, 11 September 2012 12:12 (eleven years ago) link

oh saunderspaws

lag∞n, Tuesday, 11 September 2012 13:38 (eleven years ago) link

It's actually p great. As noted I found the Buddhist angle surprising tho it made a kind of sense to me even then.

*sad hug eomticon* (Control Z), Tuesday, 11 September 2012 14:33 (eleven years ago) link

ha, of course there's an actual gately -- can you imagine wallace inventing that out of whole cloth?

a sadder realisation is that the crippling agoraphobia the narrator of 'a supposedly fun thing' protests of is a way of talking and not talking about being in recovery

thomp, Wednesday, 12 September 2012 08:13 (eleven years ago) link

"Hyperconsciousness makes life meaningless ... : but what of will to construct OWN meaning? Not the world that gives us meaning but vice versa? Dost embodies this -- Ellis, Leyner, Leavitt, Franzen, Powers -- they do not. Their fictions reduce to complaints and self-pity. Dostoevski has BALLS."

thomp, Wednesday, 12 September 2012 08:25 (eleven years ago) link

D.T. Max's worst discursive endnote yet:

"Rock music was the cultural venue in which signs of disaffection and dis-ease first appeared with serious energy. In the early 1990s bands like Pearl Jam and Nirvana sung of alienation and sophisticated frustration. Their music emphasized the person rather than the political, much as Wallace's fiction did."

thomp, Wednesday, 12 September 2012 08:33 (eleven years ago) link

'popular beat combo'

j., Wednesday, 12 September 2012 12:05 (eleven years ago) link

can you imagine wallace inventing that (Gately) out of whole cloth?

...Yes? At least, I don't know why not -- clearly he didn't lack powers of invention.

the crippling agoraphobia the narrator of 'a supposedly fun thing' protests of is a way of talking and not talking about being in recovery

And all refs to his "church group" (like in, e.g., "The View from Mrs. Thompson's") were in fact to 12-step groups. Such authorial reticence is totally understandable and OK, but as a reader (& prob a naive one) I can't help feeling a bit disoriented after learning these details of how DFW navigated between fact and fiction.

*sad hug eomticon* (Control Z), Wednesday, 12 September 2012 16:29 (eleven years ago) link

two weeks pass...

This I might read:

http://www.amazon.com/Both-Flesh-David-Foster-Wallace/dp/0316182370

Ned Raggett, Friday, 28 September 2012 14:48 (eleven years ago) link

looks like they struggled to fill it

Number None, Friday, 28 September 2012 14:52 (eleven years ago) link

pretty sure that essay has always been known as "Roger Federer as Religious Experience", but I guess that's a less snappy title.

Roz, Friday, 28 September 2012 15:48 (eleven years ago) link

What I've read of DFW's uncollected work should make this well worth buying, however padded out it may otherwise be.

Old Lunch, Friday, 28 September 2012 15:57 (eleven years ago) link

Lots of the essays had their titles changed for re-publication. "Shipping Out" becomes a "A Supposedly Fun Thing I'll Never Do Again" etc. Obviously DFW was around for those changes though

Number None, Friday, 28 September 2012 16:18 (eleven years ago) link

in those cases it was his title vs. the one the publication that commissioned the piece used.

some dude, Friday, 28 September 2012 16:24 (eleven years ago) link

or he came up with a more pretentious title later?

Number None, Friday, 28 September 2012 16:29 (eleven years ago) link

i thought this was interesting http://www.bookforum.com/inprint/019_03/10012

max, Friday, 28 September 2012 16:39 (eleven years ago) link

i think its p dumb and bad

a great big 'huh' to their collecting that 'all hail the returning dragon' essay, though

paradiastole, or the currifauel, otherwise called (thomp), Friday, 28 September 2012 16:47 (eleven years ago) link

i only just started this but it is calling elif batuman out by name for her magazine writing, v poor show

let's get the banned back together (schlump), Friday, 28 September 2012 20:08 (eleven years ago) link

she kinda sucks tho

Mr. Que, Friday, 28 September 2012 20:08 (eleven years ago) link

shuuuut up!
her nyer articles are so great! & exploratory! i could go too far with this but i really feel like the kinda diaristic, peripatetic, casually Sebaldian mode, always really usefully tethered to such alluring backdrops, feels so of its time, & fresh, to me. i am not crazy about her book but the past however many things that have been in the magazine are like ... perfect i think.

what is yr problem w/EB?

i am googling around re: katherine boo, i don't remember reading her.

let's get the banned back together (schlump), Friday, 28 September 2012 20:16 (eleven years ago) link

boo--she's been writing for the nyer forever, right?

EB, I just don't think she's that great a writer, and as the author of the bookforum article puts it, she has this weird anxiety that comes out when she writes. not anxiety in the good sebaldian way either!

when you write dumb shit like this, it's kind of obvious she's a frustrated fiction writer. i dig some of the points she makes here, but there's no reason to shit all over the workshop

http://www.lrb.co.uk/v32/n18/elif-batuman/get-a-real-degree

Mr. Que, Friday, 28 September 2012 20:22 (eleven years ago) link


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