Carnival Culture

Garvey, Michael O.

LIKE A SEPTIC TANK CARNIVAL CULTURE The Trashing of Taste in America James B. Twitchell Columbia University Press, $24.95, 306 pp. Michael O. Garvey If you blindfolded yourself and threw a...

...When Twitchell writes "like religion, television addresses our deepest concerns by first distorting them," the reader may be forgiven for wondering how a sensibility so deadened to matters of belief can recognize anything worth celebrating, defending, or enjoying in culture...
...and that the movie Days of Thunder included more than seventy such "product placements," most notably one for the sugar substitute Sweet 'n Low which involved Tom Cruise's tongue and Nicole Kidman's thigh...
...The marriage of Donald and Ivana Trump is the meridian bisecting popular culture, with Mrs...
...That "deconstruction" ranks anywhere at all in the taxonomy is pretty silly, but to rank it above "King Lear," let alone The Super Bowl, is outrageous...
...And that Mel Brooks retorted "Bullshit...
...that for $60,000 it will be consumed on screen...
...Chesterton, not a bad culture critic himself, once remarked that the young man knocking on the brothel door is looking for God...
...The annoying thing about your average culture critic, as Walker Percy suggested in these very pages thirty-three years ago, is what he or she won't talk about...
...Best of all, he's an academic writing about show business, promising to examine "how the organizations of production and transmission evolved into their current conglomerated forms and what this portends for the future...
...The critic will never say much more than some vague thing or other about some books and music and pictures everyone used to admire, or at least respect...
...Nowhere in Carnival Culture, an absorbing study of the triumph of the barbarians, is this specific experiment recommended, but its predictable outcome is the sort of thing the reader is invited to lament...
...For an academic, a professor of English at the University of Florida, Twitchell writes vividly and well, and when he occasionally uses a word like "hebephrenic" to describe something like a McDonald's commercial, you figure that he just can't help himself...
...That's right...
...We're talking morbid delectation in every medium you can think of...
...But at the tiptop is "abstract expressionism" (outranking Blake's Prophetic Books and "some French philosopher you've never heard of) and at the very bottom is "truck/tractor pulls" (presumably more despicable than Geraldo Rivera, Phil Donahue, and the happy face...
...And why does he think that those images were comforting and inspiring...
...We call whatever is vulgar, junk," he The Legacy of Abraham Joshua Heschel A series of courses & lectures Six Thursday evenings begining Oct...
...In the name of what, you wonder, is this indictment being made...
...If Twitchell is ambivalent about junk, he's certainly an expert on the arcana of the rapacious market which so ingeniously turns out the paperback books, movies, and TV networks...
...An enjoyable, if disorienting, feature of the book is Twitchell's "taxonomy of taste" with people, ideas, and specific works presented in descending order through the categories of High Culture, Popular Culture, and Low Culture (which overlaps with Popular Culture...
...22,1992 The Jewish Theological Seminary of America 3080 Broadway (at 122 St...
...that Philip Morris paid $350,000 to have James Bond smoke Lark cigarettes in License to Kill...
...Which—let's face it—makes for a lot of fun, especially for us suburban white trash types who thought Terminator 2 was garbage but had to admit that the opening scene was great, and who can't afford cable TV but don't mind watching it from a bar stool every once in a while...
...But Twitchell is, after all, an academic...
...that for $40,000 the product will be mentioned in the script...
...But the critic who wrote Carnival Culture, if timid about what makes life worth living, is confident, even swaggering, when it comes to religious belief, an area in which he, like so many others in his guild, is color blind, tone deaf, and triumphally illiterate...
...The book is loaded with wonderfully depressing information like that...
...And did you know that cable television bills are paid more promptly by most people than their utility bills...
...Still, it's difficult to believe that anyone, academic or otherwise, has studied our collective daydream as thoroughly...
...An apt analogy for American show business might be the Holy Roman Catholic church of the early Renaissance," he writes...
...Trump at the top of the bottom...
...Members of the cultural elite denounced by VicePresident Dan Quayle will find in Carnival Culture a thriller of social criticism, and in James B. Twitchell a writer almost as entertaining as Stephen King (who, the reader will learn, is one of three authors who wrote ten of the thirteen novels selling 1 million or more copies during the last decade...
...He might have said the same of the zit-faced channel surfer, or, for that matter, of the feminist assistant professor at the Modern Language Association convention...
...You can sit around all day making lists of encroaching crap, and this is fun as far as it goes, but finally not very satisfying...
...In one paragraph, for instance, the reader learns that the Disney Company charges $20,000 to place a brand product in the background of one of its movies...
...The current (since the 1960s) use of the word 'junk' demonstrates how ambivalent we have become...
...The other two are Danielle Steele and Tom Clancy...
...The church's great power was its willingness to pay attention to its audience and to provide a steady stream of images that were comforting and inspiring...
...NYC For information call: (212) 678-8996 audio cassettes available 9 October 1992: 29 COMING November 6 FALL BOOKS writes...
...Twitchell is as alarmed as you'd expect an academic to be about the onslaught on America's leisured and literate masses, and he wonders about the relationship between democracy and schlock, but his chief indictment of the vulgarians seems merely to be that they are so...well, so vulgar...
...Trump at the bottom of the top and Mr...
...The critic will deliver all sorts of dreadful news about how the culture is going to hell but not a suggestion about where it was before beginning the descent...
...to the suggestion that he was vulgar...
...Michael O. Garvey If you blindfolded yourself and threw a brick into a crowd of typical North American college students (as you really should sometime), you'd be more likely to injure a Nintendo enthusiast than a devoted reader of Paul Claudel...
...G.K...
...To dismiss such questions is to sign on with the Visigoths, which seems a lamentable thing for a culture critic to do...
...All right, but where does he think that willingness (and so that power) came from...
...It's difficult to imagine what Chesterton would make of Twitchell's conclusion that "the mass-mediated world is worthy of our impassioned study lest Oscar Wilde's prediction [sic] prove true: 'The brotherhood of man is not a mere poet's dream: it is a most depressing and humiliating reality.'" But Twitchell would be a more interesting culture critic if he understood that Wilde's epigram is not a prediction and that is what makes it funny...
...Exhaustive research of pop culture is impossible because the thing is, like a septic tank, continually replenished...
...Which they are, of course, but considerably more than that needs to be said...
...My hunch is that this shyness, this boorish fear of absolutes, is precisely the reason that most critics of Twitchell's stature can't do much more than catalogue the collapse...
...We also use this term to describe the most potent narcotic (heroin) and its users (junkies), a particularly potent and annoying kind of marketing (junk mail— now junk phone calls), a favorite diet of empty calories (junk food), and even a method of risky financing (junk bonds...

Vol. 119 • October 1992 • No. 17


 
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