In the Nov. 20th edition of The Telegraph (Macon, Georgia) columnist Paige Henson wrote an interesting piece about how (or even if) Flannery O'Connor would have made use of social media were it available in her day. Henson, who for years ran an ad agency in Macon, is an expert in the implementation of social media for businesses seeking to maximize their outreach. She is also a big O'Connor fan. In this article (which unfortunately you can't link to from the paper's website) Henson goes through the different media out there - everything from Facebook and Twitter to LinkedIn and Instagram) and speculates on how Flannery would have utilized it. With the exception of LinkedIn, Henson believes O'Connor would have taken to social media like a duck to water. I'm not so sure. For one thing, it is important to remember that Flannery O'Connor was an intensely private person. I cannot, therefore, see her Tweeting or posting to Facebook. Nor can I see her posting selfies on Instagram. On the other hand she did have a good many friends who I think she would have stayed connected to via emails and text messages. The other thing to remember about Flannery is that when it came to publishing anything that had her name on it she was a perfectionist. Modern social media by its very nature precludes the kind of thoughtful precision that Flannery felt was so necessary to her writing. Blogging, on the other hand, allows for a greater degree of editorial control and so I think she might have been a good blogger. Its' fun to speculate, but I think it's possible that O'Connor may have shunned the whole business. She was, after all, something of a Luddite who even found it impossible to make the change from a manual to an electronic typewriter (she didn't care for the sound it made or the pesky way it would repeat letters if a key was struck too hard). She may have been suspicious of social media and may have thought it was just too confoundedly newfangled to bother with. Personally, I'm glad it wasn't around during O'Connor's lifetime. Otherwise, we wouldn't have all those wonderful letters (even though I'm fairly certain Flannery would not have wanted them published). Thank you to Paige Henson for providing a lively topic for discussion.
- Mark
Friday, November 29, 2013
Friday, November 22, 2013
Farewell Craig
Craig Amason |
- Mark
Friday, November 15, 2013
Promoting Literacy
Attention Flannery O'Connor Scholars! As you know many of the seminal books in O'Connor criticism are no longer in print (e.g. Carter Martin's The True Country). Fortunately, they are still readily available through on-line used booksellers. Recently, I had the good fortune to stumble upon one that not only provides excellent service, but also promotes literacy. Better World Books is an on-line retailer that sends a portion of the proceeds from sales to programs around the country that promote literacy. This is certainly a venture Flannery O'Connor would have endorsed. A few weeks ago I purchased Simone Petrement's authoritative biography of Simone Weil from Better World Books for just $3.47. Not bad for a hardcover, first edition (with dust jacket) of a 576 page book that arrived in pristine condition. In addition to the millions of dollars BWB has raised for literacy, they have also saved tons of books from landfills, created jobs for hundreds of people, and provided scads of great books to readers around the world. For more information on this most worthy endeavor, check out their website.
- Mark
- Mark
Friday, November 8, 2013
White Girls
Hilton Als's first book in fourteen years, White Girls, will be released next Tuesday. This tome has been getting a lot of critical praise, most recently in the New Yorker. Why do I bring this to your attention? Well, for one thing, Hilton Als has written insightful articles on Flannery O'Connor in the past and, while White Girls is not just about her, there is an essay on Flannery in this cultural study which touches on a cornucopia of hot-button issues. "White girls," as Als dubs them, are not just female. Included under this label are writers such as Truman Capote and Malcolm X. From what I've read, it's pretty hard to characterize this work. According to the blurb on Amazon, Als essays "hairpin between critique and meditation, fiction and nonfiction, high culture and low, the theoretical and the deeply personal." The reviewer goes on to say that, "Als presents a stunning portrait of a writer by way of his subjects, and [is] an invaluable guide to the culture of our time." These accolades are echoed in reviews in Publishers Weekly and Booklist. Coinciding with the release of White Girls, Nov. 12th is also the launch of Flannery O'Connor's much-anticipated prayer journal. There is soon going to be a piece on it in the New York Times Book Review by Marilynne Robinson (Housekeeping, Gilead). Seems only fitting that an author of O'Connor's stature merits such a heavy-hitter to review her little book of letters to God.
- Mark
- Mark
Friday, November 1, 2013
Grace and Art
- Mark