When the salt becomes the meal
I start my day by reading some news and some opinion columns, usually political, from all positions on the ideological spectrum. And just this morning, just now, I have finally figured out what bothers me about them more than anything else. I knew it all along, but it came into sharp focus this morning. And I must admit, this insight spills over into the non-political, non-news world as well – this same quality that I despise in the political arena rubs me the wrong way in every other arena as well.
It is irony. Cleverness. Posing.
Partisanship may actually be a more damaging characteristic of modern political discourse – nothing is a more damning image of the decline of
Okay, a lot of things about modern life bug me. The stupidification of our society blows me away.
But all of that pales in my mind next to the everyday, reflexive irony of our culture. When people cloak the inadequacy of their analysis, their lack of knowledge or understanding, and their lack of caring, in the fashionable garb of ironic detachment and clever superiority, they are committing the greatest crime of interpersonal relations I can imagine. They are damning themselves, and abusing their audience. I really do not have words to indicate the depth of my despite for such behavior.
And yet, it is everywhere. Our entire culture runs on irony. Sometimes two or three levels deep; ironic commentary on someone else’s ironic posing. Reality TV shows have gone all-camp, all-the-time… a kind of self-hating, self-loving game that is all about detachment from everything real in pursuit of everything material. And the smarter one is, the more prone one is to this refuge… thus, many of my smart friends are the worst offenders, without even realizing it – their daily vocabulary and style are suffused with irony, with pseudo-intellectual posing and detachment that “comes with the territory”; without which one can barely survive in the upper echelons of business or society. Even when it comes to really important personal topics – marriage, family, life goals – they are ineluctably sucked into a thought-style and a habit of expression that is pure sitcom – always as if their smart friends are watching and commenting; as if there could be no greater sin than uncoolness.
And thus, many smart “liberal” political commentators snipe and snark and grin and wink reflexively, without even really knowing they’re doing it, as if they are simply softening the bite of their brilliant analysis. But in reality, they are sloughing over everything important; they are avoiding the pain and difficulty of reality in order to remain fashionable. And in the process, everything they say is worse than useless – it is dead wrong. And it’s frustrating, because we’re capable of so much more, so much more. It’s not surprising – there’s nothing at all new about this – but that doesn’t make it any more palatable. Oh, for a few people that could be real and smart at the same time.
With all her faults, this is what makes my wife so wonderful – not an ounce of self-conscious cleverness in her, and she’s as smart as anyone on planet Earth. God must have been looking out for me.



5 Comments:
This is very interesting and very *you*. I see this as an anti-Postmodernist stance on your part. You want the hard purity, the pungency and direction of the long, lost Modern age. You want a Socratic diaglogue where all parties are earnest and willing. I can understand this, but I don't relate or agree. Irony is like cocaine to me, I *need* it. I'm very much in the ghetto in this way. But I am earnest. My form of irony is founded on hard inner experiences that are ugly and war-like. As a woman, I'm not "supposed" to be this way. (You'll have to forgive me, I'm on a bit of an anti-patriarchy tear these days. Actually, feminism is very Modern and out of vogue right now, so maybe I'm with you after all.)
I suppose irony comes in many types and flavors. I for one, would never waste my time watching Survivor. But I do watch E, and like shows like The Soup and that David Spade thing, so. Just to put this in its television context.
Yeah, Peter, I too must have irony. In fact, I think it's espescially appropriate in the contect of any digest of current events, given the irony inherent to being a human; we are of the utmost importance to ourselves, but are actually of little consequence.
Actually, it's the picture of irony to look to the (tv) news for objective information. As media corporations, they are driven to achieve ratings, and thus show us that which will cause us to tune in. They show us that which will make us watch; watching the TV news is like looking in a money mirror of the mind of society. It's beautiful.
Oh, I'm very with you on this.
Here's the thing. I have been meaning to write about this too... It is impossible to say just what I mean!
I have written earlier about how all statements are lies (essentially). Another way of looking at this is that all truth is paradoxical. By saying one thing, one affirms it's opposite as well. When I say I despise irony, I do so because I love and appreciate irony.
But one can get lazy with this kind of trendy paradox as well. REFLEXIVE irony -- the pose of "post-modernism" (this is a false classification, but that doesn't matter) -- is simply debilitating. I would strongly recommend Kierkegaard's The Present Age on this topic.
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I assume this is the same ideasware that posted to my comment on Digg. I'm PaleAler, and you called me a pseudo-intellectual. (apologize for tracking you down)
Re-reading my comment, sure it comes across as naive. It skips a lot, is emotional and makes quite a few assumptions. But, it is not meant as a philosophical or intellectual exercise. Rather, it is a means to an end for me, because maybe what I wrote hopes to instill some irrational logic in someone else so that they may question the validity of their own. Not a sound argument I know, but I never claimed to be a know it all Berkeley poly sci student. In fact, I know way too little about my major. (i spend too much time developing websites) I rarely post messages or discussions because I know it will eventually boil down to the same sort of emotional irrational partisanship and naivety you mention on your blog, but when I do I try to see things from the outside and not take sides. Unfortunately I see the reality as partisanship being necessary for politics to matter. It is a little excessive but the few examples of bi-partisanship do give some hope.
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