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Loose Lips Make the World Go Round, and Other News
By
Dan Piepenbring
November 11, 2014
On the Shelf
From U.S. World War II–era propaganda.
Last week, our editor Lorin Stein spoke
at an event in San Francisco about Édouard Levé
, whose work he’s translated—the audio from the discussion
is now online
.
Flannery O’Connor has been inducted into the American Poets Corner at New York’s St. John the Divine
, the “only shrine to American literature in the country.” “Inducting O’Connor this year was a fairly easy consensus decision. More contentious was the selection of the quotation for her plaque. The challenge was to tread a line between what Nelson called O’Connor’s ‘grand pronouncements’ and what Alfred Corn called her southern ‘cracker-barrel humor.’ The quote they settled on is from a 1953 letter that O’Connor wrote to Elizabeth Hardwick and Robert Lowell … ‘I can with one eye squinted take it all as a blessing.’ ”
John le Carré’s
A Most Wanted Man
is banned at Guantánamo, and he’s altogether pretty psyched about it: “In banning my novel, the custodians of Guantánamo have once again demonstrated
their sensitivity and respect for human dignity
. No prisoner who has not been found guilty of any crime should be subjected to cruel and degrading literature.”
Today in bold claims from evolutionary psychologists: “
Gossip is what makes human society as we know it possible.
” Tell all your friends.
The long, strange birth of Fundamentalism in America: “The term itself was coined in the 1920s by American Protestants who resolved to return to the ‘fundamentals’ of Christianity. Their retreat from public life after the Civil War had narrowed and, perhaps, distorted their vision. Instead of engaging as before with such issues as racial or economic inequality, they focused on biblical literalism,
convinced that every single assertion of scripture was literally true
. And so, their enemy was no longer social injustice but the German Higher Criticism of the Bible, which had been embraced by the more liberal American Christians who were still attempting to bring the gospel to bear on social problems.”
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