David Foster Wallace on the Free-Love Revolution

I'm unsure if the past week's epistolary thumb-wrestling match did anyone anywhere any good. But it did lead someone to dig up this book review David Foster Wallace wrote for the Observer:
I'm guessing that for the young educated adults of the 60's and 70's, for whom the ultimate horror was the hypocritical conformity and repression of their own parents' generation, Mr. Updike's evocation of the libidinous self appeared redemptive and even heroic. But the young educated adults of the 90's-who were, of course, the children of the same impassioned infidelities and divorces Mr. Updike wrote about so beautifully-got to watch all this brave new individualism and self-expression and sexual freedom deteriorate into the joyless and anomic self-indulgence of the Me Generation. Today's sub-40's have different horrors, prominent among which are anomie and solipsism and a peculiarly American loneliness: the prospect of dying without once having loved something more than yourself.




Oct 16, 2009, 02:51 AM     American literature · argumentation · David Foster Wallace · The Awl · The Shadow Editors


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