
clementine
Written on Feb 5, 2019
I think I like Sontag's writing more than I like her ideas. Reading "Notes on 'Camp'" for the second time in about a year, I found even less in it that I agreed with. I sort of find her obsession with the art of European men irritating, but then her critiques are so blistering that I think... yes, this was worth it. I think Sontag was an incredible writer and an innovative thinker, and she has some essays that I love. ("Illness as Metaphor"/"AIDS and its Metaphors"! So good!) I think she does better when writing a bit more generally than when reviewing things, but maybe that's just because her reviews seem quite dated by this point. (I mean, they're 50+ years old.)
Anyway, here are some times where she killed men with words in this collection of essays:
"... a few of the films of Bergman - though crammed with lame messages about the modern spirit... - still triumph over the pretentious intentions of their director. In Winter Light and The Silence, the beauty and visual sophistication of the images subvert before our eyes the callow pseudo-intellectuality of the story and some of the dialogue."
"Neither art nor thought of the highest quality is to be found in Camus."
"What is one to make of a view at once so lofty and so banal? As if this were not enough, Ionesco's essays are laden with superfluous self-explication and unctuous vanity."
Anyway, here are some times where she killed men with words in this collection of essays:
"... a few of the films of Bergman - though crammed with lame messages about the modern spirit... - still triumph over the pretentious intentions of their director. In Winter Light and The Silence, the beauty and visual sophistication of the images subvert before our eyes the callow pseudo-intellectuality of the story and some of the dialogue."
"Neither art nor thought of the highest quality is to be found in Camus."
"What is one to make of a view at once so lofty and so banal? As if this were not enough, Ionesco's essays are laden with superfluous self-explication and unctuous vanity."