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Testimonial
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15233 |
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Section : |
BOOK WORLD
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8 / 1989 |
3,892 Words |
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Herb Greer Herb Greer is an American writer and playwright who lives in
Britain and on the Continent. |
PARTIAL PAYMENTS
Essays on Writers and Their Lives
Joseph Epstein
New York: Norton, 1989
429 pp., $18.95
It is our fortune--good or bad--to live in a time when almost all art aspires not to the conditions of music, but to the condition of the supermarket. I hasten to add that this is only secondarily a question of selling. The primary consideration is to attract attention, without which no audience, no sale, and often no existence is possible. Works of art past, present, and incipient, are goods; they are given the title of "projects" or "properties," and treated accordingly.
Criticism in such conditions comes very close to the art (and it is an art) of advertising, in a positive or a negative mode. The critic is subject to all the temptations of the advertiser, whether he wishes to share the relatively rare experience of consuming high-quality goods or is inclined to warn the potential customer against something that seems faulty or meretricious. These temptations apply whether the work under discussion is contemporary or, in Samuel Lipman's phrase, part of our artistic capital.
A case in point is Joseph Epstein's new collection of short essays, Partial Payments. He calls these pieces exercises in literary portraiture in the tradition of Sainte-Beuve and V.S. Pritchett. The book's epigraph, a quote from G.C. Lichtenberg, implies that these sketches (they are too scant to be called portraits) are meant as payment of Epstein's debts to the subjects.
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