Two lectures look to unsettle audiences complacent about the role of politics in contemporary fiction.
Lebanese-born novelist Alameddine is the author of six novels, most recently The Wrong End of the Telescope. This slim volume consists of two essays that he delivered as lectures, the second of which was published in Harper’s Magazine in 2018. In both, he plays the role of political gadfly. The first essay begins with the assertion that “every time I talk politics in this country, I notice that people’s faces go blank. Never fails.” He goes on to question the assumption that political novels are necessarily inferior, and to make a case that all novels are in fact political. “If a novel reinforces the dominant culture’s values, that culture will not think of the novel as political; if it doesn’t, it will,” he writes. “If John Updike writes a novel about a white man’s life, is it not identity politics?” In the book’s second lecture, the author writes about himself and others involved in “this world literature thing”—including Amy Tan, Junot Díaz, and Salman Rushdie—as being coopted by American universities and of being “safe, domesticated, just exotic enough to make readers feel they are liberal.” They are, he says, “the cute other,” not the “utterly strange other, the other who can’t stand you.” Alameddine might not always be convincing, but he is consistently entertaining.
A provocative pair of essays.