Micah Mattix

Micah Mattix is a senior editor of The Spectator’s World edition and the author of the Prufrock newsletter. He has written for the Wall Street Journal, the New Criterion, the Atlantic and many other publications.

We don’t need more literary magazines

From our US edition

At CNN, Leah Asmelash laments the demise of many “long-standing” literary magazines. “The Believer,” she writes, which was started in 2003, “was once at the top of the literary magazine game. A leading journal of art and culture, the Believer published the work of icons like Leslie Jamison, Nick Hornby and Anne Carson. It won awards, it launched careers.” But the University of Nevada, which has housed the magazine since 2017, announced that it was shutting it down: “In a statement explaining the decision, the dean of the school's College of Liberal Arts called print publications like the Believer ‘a financially challenging endeavor.’” Oh, boy. Leslie Jamison, an icon? The Believer, a publication that “launched careers”?

Egotistical prose

From our US edition

Two recent pieces — one on the contemporary American essay and one on Sean Thor Conroe’s novel Fuccboi — argue that contemporary writing has become too egotistical. Rather than focusing on the story, writers constantly turn toward themselves. In the Drift, Jackson Arn writes in a review of Phillip Lopate’s The Contemporary American Essay, that he is sick of the constant questioning one finds in many contemporary American essays that also seem to lack any real interest in answers.

Praising multiculturalism

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In their recent book on the Middle Ages provocatively called The Bright Ages, Matthew Gabriele and David Perry make the uncontroversial but often ignored point that the medieval period was multilingual and multicultural. (Listen to my conversation with them in the latest episode of the podcast.) It was, for the most part, seen as neither a virtue nor a vice that a city or region would contain various people from various places speaking various languages. It was a fact. That doesn’t mean that certain people or certain languages weren’t the objects of hatred — the burning of thousands of copies of the Talmud in Paris in 1242 is a case in point. But cities or regions didn’t exist in silos. It was a period of great cultural exchange.

Banning ‘Maus’

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Whatever one thinks about the school board in McMinn County, Tennessee removing Maus from the curriculum, it isn’t “banning,” Thomas Balazs argues in a level-headed piece at Quillette. The school board voted to remove it from the required curriculum, which isn’t the same thing as removing it from the library: Both the content and artwork in this section are difficult to absorb, not just because of the bathtub scene, but also because the expressionist illustrations are distorted and sometimes grotesque. At a time when teen suicide is at an all-time high, this section alone may have caused some parents and board members understandable concern.

Working out isn’t so new after all

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One of the things I did during my nine-month hiatus from Prufrock, the email newsletter I send three times a week (if you aren’t a subscriber, why not give it a try?) was to cycle the Blue Ridge Parkway twice. I started in Cherokee, North Carolina, rode to the start of Skyline Drive, Virginia, and back. It took two weeks — one at the beginning of the summer and one at the end — and I clocked over 900 miles and 100,000 feet of climbing. It was something I had wanted to do for a long time. I loved it and will never do it again. Cycling is an ideal way to experience a landscape. You feel the ups and the downs. Walking has a pleasure of its own, but with cycling you can experience an entire region — in all its subtle variety — in a single day.

Cashing in on BLM

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Whatever one thinks of the grassroots Black Lives Matter movement, it is not the same thing as the Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation, which was cofounded by Patrisse Cullors. Starting BLMGNF has been very lucrative for Cullors, who has used her notoriety to land book contracts and a big juicy deal with Warner Brothers, as Variety reported in October 2020: The co-founder of Black Lives Matter has signed her first over overall deal with Warner Bros. Television Group. Characterized as multi-year and wide-ranging, the pact will see Cullors develop and produce original programming across all platforms, including broadcast, cable and streaming.

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The New York Times buys Wordle

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First the Athletic, now Wordle. In case you missed it, the New York Times has bought Wordle for a couple of mil. Josh Wardle, the game’s creator, talks to TIME magazine about how he feels about the sale: “‘My biggest sense, actually, right now, isn’t joy. It’s relief,’ Josh Wardle, who was paid ‘in the low seven figures’ for the daily puzzle, told me by phone. It was our second conversation in as many days... when we met, Wardle had not wanted his photo taken, and was clearly worn down by the attention tsunami that a few days earlier had swept across the Great Plains to engulf a Canadian industrial equipment salesman with the same name: ‘Regina man mistaken for inventor of Wordle fielding flood of emails, CNN interview request’ was the headline on a CBC story.

‘Ulysses’ at 100

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I have twice tried and failed to finish James Joyce’s Ulysses. Perhaps the third time will be the charm, if there is a third time. Tomorrow marks the novel’s 100th anniversary. After being serialized in the Little Review between 1918 and 1920, it was published in full in Paris by the English-language bookstore Shakespeare and Company. The novel takes place in Dublin on a single day, but it was written in Trieste, Zurich and Paris. Catherine Flynn takes stock of the novel’s debt to the European avant-garde in a jargonish but nevertheless worthwhile piece in The Irish Times: The Dadaists attacked not only national identity but also sense itself.

Russia’s aristocratic anarchist

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In the latest issue of The New Criterion, Gary Saul Morson writes about Peter Kropotkin. Kropotkin was raised in an “ancient and highly privileged” Russian family, but he became disillusioned with the aristocracy and came to view serfdom as a great evil. He was recommended to a post in East Siberia early in his life. The five years he spent there, Morson writes, changed him: When he arrived in Irkutsk, the capital of East Siberia, the spirit of reform reigned and the young governor-general was delighted to have a liberal on his staff. He assigned Kropotkin to outline reforms for the prisons and the system of Siberian political exile. By the time these proposals worked their way back to the centers of power, however, such reforms were no longer so welcome.

The age of the media explainer

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We live in an explainer age. Pundits, bloggers, TV hosts, professors, journalists, and scientists love to explain why whatever is happening is happening. Visit the New York Times, for example, and you’ll find articles explaining who Boris Johnson really is, why kids are behind in school (no great mystery there) and how to help them, and why the Omicron variant of COVID-19 really isn’t milder. The Atlantic, which loves to explain things, too, also has an article on why “Calling Omicron ‘Mild’ Is Wishful Thinking.” Wondering “Why Making Friends in Midlife Is So Hard”? The Atlantic has an answer for you. Curious about “The Real Reason Americans Aren’t Isolating”?

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The brazen dishonesty of armchair postcolonial critical theory

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Last week it was announced that Kate Clanchy has parted ways with her publisher, Pan Macmillan. Who is Kate Clanchy? She is an award-winning poet and teacher whose latest book, Some Kids I Taught and What They Taught Me, won the 2020 Orwell Prize. The book is the story of her poetry students who contributed to the anthology she edited, England: Poems from a School, and an analysis of how public schooling has changed in England. Why has she parted ways with Pan Macmillan? A year ago some people on social media criticized Some Kids I Taught for containing racial stereotypes. Her former students — including those included in the anthology — defended her, but to no avail. Clanchy at first defended the book but then agreed to rewrite it for a revised edition.

Revisiting Toni Morrison’s ‘Recitatif’

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In the New Yorker, Zadie Smith argues that Toni Morrison’s only short story, “Recitatif,” is magisterial in how it deals with racial stereotyping and conflict. I agree. It follows two characters, Twyla and Roberta, who spend four months together in a shelter as young girls. One of them is white and one black, but we don’t know which one is which, and as they grow and their paths cross at various points, they grow further and further apart, which reaches a climax at a school protest: The personal connection they once made can hardly be expected to withstand a situation in which once again race proves socially determinant, and in one of the most vulnerable sites any of us have: the education of our children. Mutual suspicion blooms. Why should I trust this person?

Picking a fight

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Lee Siegel’s defense of argument in the latest volume of Yale’s “Why X Matters” series is original, provocative and frustrating, which isn’t bad for a book on argument. Siegel is less interested in what argument does than in what it is. An “expression of a universal longing for a better life” is how he puts it initially. It is also a justification for “ways of living,” something that“ flows from our intuitive certainty that our right to exist is the most fundamental truth,” and an expression of our “unique, particular existence.” Albert Camus stated in The Myth of Sisyphus that the only serious philosophical question is suicide, “whether life is or is not worth living.” Siegel therefore writes “To exist is to argue your existence.” You get the idea.

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The last conservative critic?

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The death of Terry Teachout has put me in a funk. In 2019, we lost Clive James and John Simon. In 2020, we lost Roger Scruton and George Steiner. In 2021, Adam Zagajewski, Denis Donoghue, and Joan Didion all passed. Now we start 2022 with the sudden death of Terry Teachout. Most of these critics (though not Teachout) came of age in the late 1940s and early 1950s during one of the great periods of literary criticism in the last two hundred years. Consider some of the works that were published between 1947 and 1957. We have Cleanth Brooks’s The Well Wrought Urn in 1947 and F. R. Leavis’s The Great Tradition in 1948. Rene Wellek and Austin Warren published their influential Theory of Literature in 1949.

Dostoevsky’s ‘Demons’ at 150

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Dostoevsky’s novel Demons was first serialized in The Russian Messenger, which also published Crime and Punishment. Over at Law & Liberty, Daniel J. Mahoney argues that Dostoevsky’s alternative to nihilism in the novel is “less convincing or compelling than his unerring diagnosis of the demons that are revolutionary nihilism, political atheism, ‘half-science’ or scientism, and an incipient totalitarianism that combines moral fanaticism with contempt for the primordial distinction between good and evil.” He continues: At the heart of Demons is the revolutionary program of the nihilists themselves. Here Dostoevsky discerned where revolution leads with perfect accuracy.

The Great Books debate continues

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Before Christmas, I called attention to Louis Menand’s review of two books on Great Books: Roosevelt Montás’s Rescuing Socrates: How the Great Books Changed My Life and Why They Matter for a New Generation and Arnold Weinstein’s The Lives of Literature: Reading, Teaching, Knowing. Menand didn’t like either. Both authors argued that reading great works of literature necessarily improves us. Menand disagreed. Now Brian Rosenberg, the president emeritus of Macalester College, has weighed in at The Chronicle. He argues that the difference between Menand and Montás “is about the purpose of reading and studying literature, and by extension about the purpose of the humanities in the academy.

Writing and the conservative impulse

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Radicals often think of writing primarily as an act of provocation — a bullet in the chest of the bourgeoisie. No doubt, writing can provoke, and one doesn’t need to be a radical to know this, as any reader of Tom Wolfe will tell you. But to provoke in writing, particularly literary writing, is at once to provoke and to conserve a provocation. To write is a tacit acknowledgment that something is worth keeping. Otherwise, one could simply shout. What else does writing conserve? All sorts of things, of course, but in literature, it conserves feelings, perceptions, the lives and actions of people or a way of life. It conserves ideas that one hopes won’t be burned to a crisp on the streets of Avignon.

Secularism and social justice

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William Deresiewicz doesn’t believe in God. He thinks “religion is a lie” — not a weakness, not a mistake, but a lie, which is a pretty bold statement: “The philosophes saw through the falsehood of faith in the seventeen hundreds; I saw through it, one day in yeshiva high school in the midst of my Orthodox Jewish upbringing, at the age of fifteen. I’m frankly surprised that we’re still even talking about it.” (Deresiewicz is responding to a Ross Douthat column from almost a year ago now — “Can the Meritocracy Find God?” — in which Douthat hopes for but at the same time disbelieves in the possibility of a religious revival among the elite.

‘The Fifth Head of Cerberus’ at 50

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Gene Wolfe’s sci-fi novella, The Fifth Head of Cerberus, was published fifty years ago this year. It is a minor masterpiece. Set in the town of Port-Mimizon on the imaginary planet of Saint Croix, the story follows a family who are descendants of French colonizers. A sister planet, Saint Anne, was also colonized by the French. The original inhabitants of both planets were shapeshifters, and one of the early questions of the novella is whether the current inhabitants of both planets are in fact French or shapeshifters who, according to one theory, killed the would-be colonizers and permanently took on their form. The story is narrated by one of two brothers, who live in a large house on 666 Saltimbanque.

Norman Mailer cut

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Norman Mailer, champion of gritty realism, liberal politics, and debauchery, has been knifed by his literary children. According to Michael Wolff, a junior staffer at Random House objected to the publication of his essay “The White Negro” in a forthcoming collection, and the publisher has decided to drop the entire volume: With slow-mo hammer-dropping predictability, Norman Mailer’s long-time publisher has recently informed the Mailer family that it has canceled plans to publish a collection of his political writings to mark the centennial of his birth in 2023, confirms the film producer Michael Mailer, the author’s oldest son.