Category Archives: Problem Practices

Communication behavior or analysis that is often counter-productive

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Do Biographies Shrink their Subjects?

Maybe it is enough to revel in the miraculous achievements of a larger-than-life figure.

Biographer Nell Painter remembers working on a study of the former slave and abolitionist, Sojourner Truth, who led a remarkable life of advocacy over a period spanning the mid-1800s. But several years ago Painter told a C-Span interviewer that her “closeness to me receded” as she worked her way deeper into Sojourner’s life. She respected her subject to the end, but finally doubted they would connect in a conversation. Sometimes the great and good are better left to be appreciated for works in their time.  Pick the right moments from our own lives and we can all look a little strange to future generations.

If this happens with even a pivotal and influential leader, I wonder if there is a general pattern that dictates that a hero who triggers the writing or reading of a full biography will look a little less amazing after sustained attention.

Over many years of reading I’ve sensed this effect, sometimes because of documented lapses of judgment that began to accumulate. More or less honest chronicles of another life are bound to bring even the most lauded subject back to earth. Clearly, biographies ‘humanize’ their subjects.

Reading about another’s life can rise from the simplest of motives. We want to know more about how someone pieced together an exemplary existence. What luck or brilliance worked to their benefit?  What friends or associates were influential, or lucky to have them in their lives? These kinds of questions lead me to books written by or about Joan Didion, Griffin Dunne, Frank Sinatra, Woodrow Wilson, Steve Jobs, Riccardo Muti, Dimitri Shostakovich, Oliver Sacks, Jim Henson and many others. Even at the hands of a first-rate biographer, and perhaps because of the writer, some luminaries can lose their luster. In a few cases I’ve encountered enough documented boorishness to happily put the book aside. In our current moment we probably don’t learn as much from someone’s character faults. We have Donald Trump for that. I take the fickle reader’s option of moving onto something that is likely to be more affirming.

It is easy to see why some distance opened up between Painter and her subject, or why I never made it to the final pages of biographical details of Elon Musk, Frank Lloyd Wright or Griffin Dunne. It is certainly not just the subject’s fault that chapters of their documented existence show a person that might be a bore, even if we had the chance to share a lunch with them. We all have our stories. Even so, it can be a long slog to follow a narcissist through a 500-page history of their personal and professional experiences.

There is also the very real chance that a biographer is a bad match for their subject, incapable of doing justice to the life they sought to illuminate. Think of Kitty Kelley’s unauthorized and widely criticized biography of Frank Sinatra (1986).  In sharp contrast, David Maraniss seemed to be a good match for his biography of the younger Bill Clinton, First in His Class (1996). Maraniss marveled at how this quick study was able to so easily connect with others. The documentation of these instances was compelling enough to shape my research for several years, growing into a  book-length study (The Rhetorical Personality, 2010).

Maybe it is enough that figures like Didion or Sinatra had such miraculous talents that their work is reason enough to be an admirer. When life happens, its myriad details can easily get messy.

There is another issue that may arise more from the reader than the original writer. We live in an age when many of us are living through episodes of what is sometimes called “moral injury.”  This occurs when a person is forced to witness physical or psychological atrocities. Writing about political influence was most of my life’s work, possibly leading to the development of a habit of quitting a study about a political leader who exhibited massive failures of character. I seemed to have had my fill. Perhaps a more analytic reader than I would persevere and be the better for it.

When “Best” is Lazy Verbal Overreach

Tastemakers and reviewers obviously have power, but they should resist scoring someone into unearned anonymity.

During this season too many in the publishing and performing arts communities follow the ritual of labeling “the best” of the year in—you name it—non-fiction books, historical novels, film performances, live concerts, recordings and so on. End of the year reviews by news and information platforms are the most obvious enablers of these closed category “best of” lists.

We should worry about the limitations of this ragged and overused term, a locution made worse when it is used to suggest just one or two dozen favorites. To be sure, this is an obvious complaint; nothing really new here. But what is less apparent is the conceptual slight of hand that allows sloppy thinking to be disguised behind a eulogistic language.

A limited list of “best” selections is bad. Rankings make it worst. It may be in an appreciator’s blood to come up with lists of works that excite them, but their sampling has surely been incomplete, recognizing known talent to the detriment of those in the same category who were not even considered.

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It is entirely possible that a small press in Omaha has published a brilliant first novel. That source is far from the centers of corporate-owned publishing, music and marketing industries that curate a relatively small number of pieces that come down their pipelines.

To cite one instance, The New York Times likes to list the “best” films, novels, film performances, and performances of the year.  For example, their “Ten Best Novels” of the year is a witless reduction of an estimated 100,000 that are published in the United States. And thousands more are self-published: a pattern that is also duplicated in recorded music.

In actual fact, there are gems everywhere. Any critic given this task of selection has to concede that they don’t know what they don’t know. A declaration of a few ranked choices shouldn’t be the last word.

To be sure, we have metrics to help determine the overall quality of a nation’s health care services, the reading levels of 3rd graders in particular states, or the median price of a house in a given city. But numbers that suggest exactitude can easily intrude in places where they don’t belong. Tastemakers and reviewers obviously have useful roles to play, but they should resist scoring someone into unearned anonymity.

We can solve the problem of phony rankings and scores by amending articles to offer the huge proviso that the list is made from what the author has actually seen or heard. Even better, banish rankings altogether and go to a more honest listing of “excellent” or “very good” offerings. Unlike “best” these terms can easily suggest the idea of open categories, promising no more than a considered judgment of works known to the critic, rather than the faux precision of a top ten list. That process would be intellectually less arrogant, representing what good criticism can look like.