{"id":1119417,"date":"2023-11-18T19:12:57","date_gmt":"2023-11-19T00:12:57","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/uncategorized\/the-moon-people-assimilation-and-the-jewish-literary-transvestite-tablet-magazine\/"},"modified":"2023-11-18T19:12:57","modified_gmt":"2023-11-19T00:12:57","slug":"the-moon-people-assimilation-and-the-jewish-literary-transvestite-tablet-magazine","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/transhuman-news-blog\/moon-colonization\/the-moon-people-assimilation-and-the-jewish-literary-transvestite-tablet-magazine\/","title":{"rendered":"The Moon People: Assimilation and the Jewish Literary Transvestite &#8211; Tablet Magazine"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>      Perhaps entirely by accident, Sofia Coppolas Marie      Antoinette (2006) turned into one of the best and most      prophetic films about celebrity decadence, rampant income      inequality, and the widening gulf between elites and everyone      else that defines contemporary America. Ostensibly a      sardonic, womens history retelling of the last queen of      ancien rgime France, the movie unfolds more like a      costume party than a costume drama. Kirsten Dunst, Jason      Schwartzman, Marianne Faithful, Asia Argento and a host of      other actors prance around playing their      more-or-less-clueless selves, drenched in champagne, eating      gateaux, and trying on Manolo Blahnik shoes to an      anachronistic punk soundtrack. The party scenes look      gloriously unscripted, like were watching royals just      hanging outthe film even predated (barely) Keeping Up      With the Kardashians. This is how it felt to be young,      glamorous, and afloat on seas of unearned wealth and      celebrity during the early 2000s. Watching it is akin to      experiencing a translation or transposition of time periods      and mores: Was the whole purpose of the French Revolution to      replace the aristocracy of birth with the aristocracy of      celebrity? What was the difference?    <\/p>\n<p>      A similar gestalt characterizes the outset of Adam      Thirlwells fourth novel, The Future Future.      Celinethere are no last names or titlesis a young      aristocrat, wed at 18 to the abusive and violent Sasha, who      is 27 years her senior; when the novel opens she is the      subject of prurient rumors and flat-out pornography, which      circulate in the form of pamphlets. One of them imagines her      and several Jewish billionaires conspiring to take control      in America during their orgies. Defenseless, Celine at first      responds in the only way she knows how: to dress with an      increased sense of alertness, her private idea of armour.      Shed started to sew little slogans into the sleeves of her      dressesfragments like AS IF or IF YOU MUSTor to add extra      folds and loops multiplying a system of false openings.    <\/p>\n<p>      Thirlwell refers to these as punk outfits, part of an array      of intentional anachronismsbillionaire is another, as is      the epithet fascist applied to Sasha, and the endearment      babyeach of which serves to unsettle and displace the      readers sense of time and place, even though its gradually      revealed that we are somewhere in France, in or about the      year 1775, in a universe similar but not identical to both      the universe of Coppolas Marie Antoinette and our      own.    <\/p>\n<p>      In one of many highly recondite jokes played on the      historical record, Thirlwell has Celine hatch a conspiracy to      bring together the first lady, Antoinette, with her friend,      a Jewish stockbroker called Rosen. This is done by staging a      drawing room theatrical with the successful aim of getting      Rosen appointed finance minister. Rosen here stands in for      the historical figure of Jacques Neckerthe banker tasked      with saving Louis XVIs tottering state from bankruptcy in      1777and the father of the noted salonnire and      early feminist novelist Germaine de Stal. The joke in this      case is that Necker, a Swiss Protestant, was subsequently      labeled a Judeo-Mason by reactionary Catholic conspiracy      theorists after the Bourbon restoration, which in turn fed      various streams of 19th-century European Jew hatredthe myth      of shadowy Jewish bankers controlling capitalthat would      later stimulate the 20th-century Jew-hating ravings of the      French novelist Louis-Ferdinand Cline, namesake of      Thirlwells maligned heroine, who becomes a de Stal-like      figure of literary resistance.    <\/p>\n<p>      None of this, however, is directly mentioned in the novel.      Whether from residual modesty, good comic instincts (jokes      are only funny if they dont have to be explained), or a      reluctance to avoid anything that might look like      mansplaining in a work that tries very hard to prove its      male authors feminist bona fides (more on that later),      Thirlwell doesnt risk the sort of knowing footnotes that      appear in David Foster Wallaces Infinite Jest      ormore relevant to this kind of counterfactual historical      novelVladimir Nabokovs late masterpiece Ada, or      Ardor.    <\/p>\n<p>      Its this latter novel that The Future Future      finally resembles most. Ada is set in an alternate      historical universe where Russia never sold Alaska to the      United States, time is reversible, and death is imagined as      just one more form of emigration. The novel is also an old      aristocrats last fantasy of good breeding in every sense, an      overstuffed Faberg egg into which the aged exile poured all      his multilingual wordplay, genealogical obsessions, passions      for butterflies and other pretty things, along with his      enduring consanguineous sexual fantasies. Thirlwell,      likewise, comes across much of the time as a sensualist. His      previous novel, Lurid and Cute (2016), was indeed      both: a tale of a marriages unraveling after a one-night      stand gone wrong, but also an enthusiastic homage to the      partying habits of Britains gilded, Euro-hopping bright      young things of the pre-Brexit 2010s. The setting was a vague      no-place place that combined elements of London, Oxford, and      Berlin with various Mediterranean holiday destinations into a      trans-European, radiant city of the privileged.    <\/p>\n<p>      Behind every historical novel, even a counterfactual      historical novel like The Future Future, is a philosophy of      history and an implied politics.    <\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>                    Facebook        <\/p>\n<p>                    Email        <\/p>\n<p>      Thirlwells prose can feel like being tickled, precious and      pointed at the same time: He had brought a giant pale green      ice cream as a present. It was already melting and subsiding      ... This is how the head of the secret police shows up to      visit Celine to discuss the matter of the revenge-porn      pamphlets. The scene goes on in this register, advancing      through a series of staccato, short sentences where      Thirlwells mid-20th-century precursors would have gone with      longer, lugubrious legatos: \"[Celines] dress felt sticky. A      plate of pastries had gone stale. A congealed bowl of      pici cacio e pepe was on the floor, being licked by      Martas dogwho Marta had left behind while she went out of      town for a while. In packing crates around her was a newly      delivered set of porcelain, a series of circles and      rectangles, severely painted in an international blue. Each      of these figures, the melting ice cream, the stale pastry,      the overly precise Italian pasta dish being eaten by the      friends lap dog, the porcelain, are more than just      signifiers of class or atmosphere, but also allusions to a      saturated, thickly descriptive style that has come to feel      out of reach in recent novels: either reduced, staled,      congealed, or, quite literally, chintzy.    <\/p>\n<p>      Here, too, Thirlwell echoes late Nabokov in the desire to      carve out a space for intimate and sensual aesthetic      experience in the midst of a literary moment and publishing      climate oriented to the supposedly engaged and ethical.      Everything that is flippant in this novel is also serious,      and vice versa: Its a fearful thing to fall into the hands      of something this supernatural ... the way its also fearful      when youre left alone at a party with a celebrity and      suddenly cant see your friends, so Celine thinks during a      comic set-piece voyage to the moon where the lunatic      inhabitants are tall with darkly colourful skin, dine on      pills, have transcended gender and say things like Hang out      with us. The objects speak in human voices and engage Celine      in philosophical dialogues on the nature of reality and      appearance. The episode is a mashup of 18th-century      interstellar voyages (in the style of the Adventures of      Baron Munchausen) with the later Alices Adventures      Underground, and a revision of both. Ada, its      first line an infamous inversion of Anna Karenina      (All happy families are more or less dissimilar, all unhappy      ones are more or less alike) also shares this meta-literary      playfulness, offering a counterhistory of the modern Russian      novel the way Nabokov would have preferred it, with the      strictures of 20th-century socialist-realism neatly excised,      along with the troublesome moral melodramas of Dostoyesky and      late Tolstoy.    <\/p>\n<p>      Thirlwell comes across as less grandiosely revisionist but is      up to something similar with respect to both literary and      political history. It all began with writing, is the      novels first sentence. Another chapter begins, There was      literature everywhere. The world was a jungle called writing.      In this world writers became politicians and politicians      wrote for newspapers and meanwhile everyone wrote to each      other every day, as if an experience were not an experience      until it had acquired its own image in words ... Thirlwell      is describing the atmosphere of late-18th-century print      culture: an era in which Thomas Paines democratic pamphlets      Common Sense and The Rights of Man coexisted alongside      aristocratic epistolary novels like Choderlos de Laclos      Les Liaisons Dangereuses, which mimicked the      everyday living art of intimate letter writing of a kind      found in the 17th-century correspondence between Madame de      Sevign and her daughter. But his description is blurred in a      way that could just as easily refer to the Twitter-saturated      culture of Thirlwells native time and place, 21st-century      Great Britain, where a foppish journalist-politician or      politician-journalist (Boris Johnson) eventually became prime      minister.    <\/p>\n<p>      Even though Celine and her adventures remain always at the      center of the novel, Thirlwell also uses her to stage an      exhibition and clash of literary subcultures: the salona      space governed by women where people perform plays and write      letters and novelsagainst the caf\"a space governed by      misogynists who write the libels and tracts that become      journalism. One of these antagonists, Yves, is an improbable      portmanteau of the incendiary Jacobin journalist Camille      Desmoulins and the cold-blooded lawyer, Robespierre, along      with every caricature of a cultural commissar in every      possible historical iteration thrown in for good measurean      ugly man devoted to stamping out beauty wherever he sees it.    <\/p>\n<p>      In addition to trying to abolish privacy and establish a      perfect system of information retrieval (fans of Terry      Gilliams Brazil will enjoy Thirlwells evocation of      the cubicles at the new Ministry of Information), Yves also      targets literature itself. At a conference in a room that      smells of terrible meatpork skin and hot sauce a detail      with more than a whiff of Cultural Revolution ChinaYves      accuses the playwright Beaumarchais (of The Marriage of      Figaro fame and one of several real historical      personages in the novel) of having produced      counterrevolutionary work in part because he has been friends      with too many women. Yves ultimate public sanction of      Beaumarchais plays the typical activist tune about novels and      literature that are somehow too feminine, too focused on      private experience and the interior, there was no sense of      the revolutionary army as an entire mass, there was no      attempt to represent thousands of armed soldiers advancing      like lava, he yells, just individual people, with their own      neuroses.    <\/p>\n<p>      Behind every historical novel, even a counterfactual      historical novel like The Future Future, is a      philosophy of history and an implied politics. Sometimes its      laid out in the open: Sir Walter Scotts early Whig      Progressivism animated his Waverley novels, the      prototype of the first modern historical novel, and Tolstoys      War and Peace offers several explicit refutations of      Hegelianism. Thirlwells philosophy and politics are harder      to track. On the one hand, The Future Future might      be the first novel written explicitly from the standpoint of      writing systems or discourse networks, a way of looking      at literary history in particular and history in general that      enjoyed a brief vogue in British and American literature      departments during the mid to late 1990s, spearheaded by the      German critic Friedrich Kittler. Literature as well as      events, in this view, were as much a creation of social      networks, informal institutions, and techniques of      dissemination (the post office, the news kiosk, etc.) as any      single authorial consciousness. A timely zetz to the      patient scholarship of the Germans was then delivered by the      Franco-American literary critic Pascale Casanovas World      Republic of Letters (1999), which reframed literary      history both in terms of network systems and as a struggle      for institutional domination in an endless war of positioning      and posing that criss-crossed national and linguistic      boundaries. Literature for Casanova wasnt a politics by      other means, just another institution subject to a logic of      petty politickingan argument familiar to anyone who has ever      spent time in a university literature department. What had      begun as an attempt to write the history of sociability, as      carried out in writing, had taken the cynical form that has      come to color so much contemporary criticism of literature      and the arts, where everything is seen through the lens of      careerismand careerism is then elevated to a necessary      realpolitik of artistic and even physical survival.    <\/p>\n<p>      Thirlwell, then, as an aesthete making a case for aesthetics      in an age of near total cynicism about the arts, has      nonetheless made the choice to write from within the      perspective of one of the more cynical theories of literary      production currently in circulation. Literature is just      another power game, with the cultivation of certain writers      and the demoting of others being part of that game. At the      beginning of the novel, Celine is a woman trying to make her      way in a mans world, so her instrumentalization of      literature and the authors she patronizes to get what she      wants makes a certain sense. But the more power Celine      acquired, the more she realised how little she actually had.      It was possible, she was discovering, to have power in one      context and in another to have none. To make moves was a very      delicate process.    <\/p>\n<p>      And heres where Thirlwells distant mirroringthe past as      present, the present as past, the future as repetitiontakes      a fascinating turn that elevates the novel out of the realm      of ordinary curiosity into something, well, truly new. On the      surface, at the level of plot and jacket copy, The Future      Future can sound like a dutiful post-#MeToo novel by a      man trying rather hard to show that he knows how to write      women. The novel pleads a case for its author: He, just like      poor old Beaumarchais on trial, should be allowed to continue      publishing in a climate in which male writers (the      zoologism male is telling on its own), especially so-called      cis-white-male writers, face historically unprecedented      skepticism about the social utility and market viability of      their work. (That Thirlwell and many of his white male      contemporaries happen to be Jews is a distinction without a      difference to most publishers; and for some it is no doubt      worse.)    <\/p>\n<p>      Thirlwells feminist novel thus returns us to another moment      in time when women effectively ruled the literary world, that      of the late-18th-century French salons. He chronicles      Celines intense female friendships, sometimes turned into      love affairs; the men are secondary characters, abusive      husbands, absent fathers, including the man with whom Celine      eventually has a daughter. This allows Thirlwell to display      his ability at scenes of intense mother-daughter bonding. Men      are obstacles: Sasha, Yves, eventually Napoleon; writerly      allies like Beaumarchais and Lorenzo Da Ponte, another      famous Judeo-Mason; moneymen like Rosen; or loyal servants.    <\/p>\n<p>      To make this setup even more complicated, the novels      progressive feminist politics comes with a dose of apparently      reactionary class politics. Celine and her friends are all      aristocrats, and the feminine space of the literary      imagination is that of the salon, the boudoir, or the      beautiful country houses where Celine takes refuge from      persecution. The enemies of this beautiful world are apostles      of the Enlightenment andnominally, at leastgreater      equality: They are measurers, improvers, explorers, and      would-be engineers of history, like Napoleon, who gets a star      turn in the novels final act. To further stir the political      pot, Thirlwell includes two weird parallel subplots: the      first about a Mohawk translator and his daughter, who Celine      meets when exile takes her to America, and the second about      the Haitian revolutionary Toussaint Louverture. These dangle      in short chapters, pseudo-meaningfully, as if to suggest that      neither aristocracy nor Western Enlightenment liberalism are      truly sustainable once you take out colonization and      slaverybut its pretty clear which party or parties have the      authors sympathies.    <\/p>\n<p>      Yet Thirlwells focus on censorship, the post-revolutionary      reprisals of the terror and the states control over      literature and lives cant help but awaken parallels to      contemporary cancellations and decanonizations of male      writers. In the contemporary reputational economy of the      internet, where anyones life can be made miserable by a      rumor or tweet, Thirlwell seems to be saying, we are all      women nowor, perhaps, writers are women, too, meaning      writers of any gender. The Future Future teaches you      to read it as both a historical novel and an act of literary      transvestism. The surrogate or analogue of the sensitive      aesthete and nominally not-queer male author who would still      try to get published in 2023 turns out to be a woman from the      18th and early 19th centuries whose life resembles Madame de      Stals. Only by putting on this costume can the novelist      appear as himself.    <\/p>\n<p>      This is indeed an ingenious solution to the perils and      pitfalls of contemporary male writing, but at what price?      The Future Future is a work of doubled assimilation:      on the one hand, an assimilation to the ethical demands of      the woke novel to provide us entertainments featuring      virtuous women and awful dudes in settings critical of the      limits of the near enemy that is Western Enlightenment      liberalism. On the other hand, the novel performs a      counterassimilation, by borrowing the tropes and trappings of      feminism to stage the precarious balancing act that a      would-be contemporary Beaumarchais must pull off in order to      succeed and be recognized (or be misrecognized and therefore      succeed) in todays virtue-driven world of arts and letters.    <\/p>\n<p>      It helps that Thirlwell is a British Jewish writer and      already comfortable with this kind of self-effacement. Unlike      American Jewish writing, postwar literary novels by      native-born British Jewish writers, with the exception of      Howard Jacobsons comedies, have been mostly assimilated from      their origins. Anita Brookner, Muriel Spark, Will Self, Alain      de Botton, are all British Jewish novelists, but you wouldnt      necessarily know it by reading them. Literature, for British      Jews, has mainly been a way to suppress or submerge the      Jewish aspects of their authorial identity, rather than, as      with the masters of the postwar American generation, a means      toward its vibrant assertion.    <\/p>\n<p>      Jewishness in British literature, and also in Thirlwells      novel reimagining of the literary sphere, functions instead      as a kind of privileged ontological status, like the      inhabitants of Thirlwells lunar pavilions, who have been      cured of desire and other lesser human emotions through      sexless, omniscient voyeurism. It should go without saying      that these abstracted moon people are stateless cosmopolitans      of the highest refinement, true aristocrats of the spirit,      and all quite happy in their own way.    <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>View original post here:<br \/>\n<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.tabletmag.com\/sections\/arts-letters\/articles\/the-moon-people\" title=\"The Moon People: Assimilation and the Jewish Literary Transvestite - Tablet Magazine\" rel=\"noopener\">The Moon People: Assimilation and the Jewish Literary Transvestite - Tablet Magazine<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> Perhaps entirely by accident, Sofia Coppolas Marie Antoinette (2006) turned into one of the best and most prophetic films about celebrity decadence, rampant income inequality, and the widening gulf between elites and everyone else that defines contemporary America. Ostensibly a sardonic, womens history retelling of the last queen of ancien rgime France, the movie unfolds more like a costume party than a costume drama. Kirsten Dunst, Jason Schwartzman, Marianne Faithful, Asia Argento and a host of other actors prance around playing their more-or-less-clueless selves, drenched in champagne, eating gateaux, and trying on Manolo Blahnik shoes to an anachronistic punk soundtrack.  <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/transhuman-news-blog\/moon-colonization\/the-moon-people-assimilation-and-the-jewish-literary-transvestite-tablet-magazine\/\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[29],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-1119417","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-moon-colonization"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1119417"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=1119417"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1119417\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=1119417"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=1119417"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=1119417"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}