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Silly Love Songs, and Other News
By
Jeffery Gleaves
July 6, 2015
On the Shelf
Frans Hals,
Buffoon playing a lute
(detail), 1623.
George Plimpton, our founding editor, held the unofficial title of fireworks commissioner of New York City for some thirty years, but he hosted the hottest fireworks parties at his place in the Hamptons. When he died, in 2003, “his son, Taylor, following his father’s wishes,
packed his ashes into a firework with the help of Phil Grucci and launched him into the sky
.”
What’s wrong with loving love songs? Nothing. Studying them for “subversive” moments may be disingenuous though, like “
scanning a nursery for ugly babies. The interesting question about babies is what makes them so cute
.” There’s nothing wrong with sentiment. Enjoy it.
This week in stereotypes: in effort to attract a more divers readership, comic-book publishers are incorporating more gay characters and story lines—like Kevin, the gay character introduced into the Archie series in 2010. DC Comics, though, has a new gay superhero named Midnighter, who “
likes to fight and is promiscuous
.”
Some things never change, which is to say art is still irrelevant. Looking at the fiscal health of the fine arts can buoy your spirits, but challenge anyone on the street to “
identify the architect of the Freedom Tower or name a single winner of the Tate Prize
,” and you may be disappointed. Even
your
last trip to the museum was probably “for the sake of sensation and spectacle.”
Dune
looks good at fifty, maybe better than it ever has: the science fiction’s concerns—human potential, environmental anxiety, revolution, and altered states of consciousness—have more geopolitical echoes than they did in 1965. “
If
The Lord of the Rings
is about the rise of fascism and the trauma of the second world war
,” then, “
Dune
is the paradigmatic fantasy of the Age of Aquarius
.”
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