Friday, August 22, 2008

the public lag

I just received via e-mail my recent installment of New York Times book reviews and glimpsed a new biography of Norman Mailer. It reminded me that fame brings the suppression of truths about someone that don't fit a neat marketable image: these only emerge over several decades, often postmortem. And even "reputable" sources like NPR, reporting testimonies, have a brand identity to protect. Maybe ethnography is the only ethical place for this endeavor. Ideally, and as far as I'm concerned, there is no "there" there in ethnography except for what emerges in conversation and interaction. But it takes also self-discipline for quelling ego-clinging to be open enough to what is being received and perceived. Meditative arts and fieldwork would make excellent bedfellows!

1 comment:

The Chip N' Dip Show said...

Why can't everyone sit back and remember the good times when we used to have a smiling leprechaun give us his magical treasure every morning for breakfast. I don't know why that comment was relevant but I felt it had to be addressed. That damn leprechaun has had more people recognize him and that SOB doesn't have an ego to boot.

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