Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/09/08
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]All this about Sontag (which I never could get through) reminds of an article I read years ago. The author had gone back to school to get a masters to teach and make some money while continuing to work on his writing career. He took a class called Science Fiction and since he had written several SF novels that had been published he felt he would fly through the course. And when he got into the class he discovered that one of the books to be cover was one of his own, written under a pen name. Wow, he thought. So he didn't say anything to the teacher. But then came a final exam and the teach wanted students to write an essay analyzing what the author (him) was trying to say, what was the underlying message, plus the social and political position of the author and how he had used that to develop his plot and so on. Well, the hero of this story did his best but barely got a C on the essay. The irony is that he had written it at the kitchen table in two weeks right after his wife had left him and he needed the money desparately, and had not a single such thought as the professor assumed authors had. Elliot Erwitt summed up the key underlying message that almost all photographer espose, in the instant they frame and compose, select the decisive moment from the continuum of history, shading for political, psychological and social bias: "I like to take pictures, and I particularily like to take pictures of things I like to take pictures of." Sontag's book, as is most criticism, is written BY someone who will never be able to do the art FOR those who will never be able to do the art, but want to pretend they can imagine what it would be like if they could, without ever getting their hands (and souls) dirty, whereby you REALLY discover what it is like. donal __________ Donal Philby San Diego www.donalphilby.com