Saturday, December 02, 2006OUT OF CONTEXT![]() The world of arts and criticism used to be such that one critical work published in the correct publication would ensure one's permanent place in the culture. For George S. Trow, who wrote numerous articles and plays and who died in Naples this week at 63, that work was a 1980 New Yorker essay entitled "Within the Context of No-Context." Its thesis, that television and celebrity culture had destroyed contemporary discourse and altered our relationship to the rhythms of history, had its echoes in Adorno,, Marcuse, Baudrillard and many others, but Trow's stark, aphoristic prose published in a weekly magazine caused new debate about a culture that has now pretty much progressed the way Trow feared it would. In a time when our ability to choose when to view, download, buy or rent the latest blockbuster is a major topic of debate, I'm going to be a bit old school and remember Trow and his finally melancholic work. (The Times obit characterized him as a "wistful curmudgeon" whose "nostalgia for a waning world grew into an enveloping despair" in recent years.) The New Yorker has published online an excerpt from Trow's essay. Here's a portion: TELEVISION Comments (2) |
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