The Painted Word by Tom Wolfe, Elwood

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(Paperback)

  • Pub. Date: October 1999
  • 112pp
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: October 1999
    • Publisher: Bantam Books
    • Format: Paperback, 112pp

    Synopsis

    Tom Wolfe's The Painted Word is an incandescent, hilarious, and devastating piece of writing in the tradition of Radical Chic, his unforgettable depiction of strange courtship between the Black Panthers and what were called (B.W.: Before Wolfe) limousine liberals. If anything, The Painted Word is more scathing, more brilliant, and funnier than its famous predecessor, and is destined for the same sort of scandalous renown. The Painted Word charts the erratic course of the social history of Modern Art from its beginnings in revolution-- a revolution against literary content in art-- to its present state, in which it has become, quite unconsciously, a parody of itself, obsessedly devoted to the pronouncements of certain guru-critics, to the point of reductio ad absurdum, to the point where-- turnabout being fair play-- it has become as literary, as academic, as mannered, as clubby, as the salon painting against which it first rebelled. Soon after Modern Art developed, it became fashionable Society (le beau monde, Cultureburg) and art critics attached themselves to it like pilot fish; but then they grew, and grew, and grew, until-- as Abstract Expressionism gave way to Pop, as Pop spawned Op, as Op fell before Minimal opposition, as what was Minimal become no more than Conceptual-- Art began to serve fashion and theory. The shark vanished and left the pond to le beau monde and to the critics, custodians of the painted Word. Clement Greenberg, Harold Rosenberg, Leo Steinberg: these are the big fish, Wolfe argues, not Jackson Pollock, Willem de Kooning, or Jasper Johns, The argument is utterly convincing.... ... and wildly entertaining. Tom Wolfe is our premier social historian, and he is writing at the top of his form. Whether he is describing the Art Mating Ritual (in two parts, the Boho Dance and Consummation) or taking the census of Cultureburg, he writes with an energy and irony all his own. His style has never been more dazzling, his wit has never been more keen. For everyone but his targets, the publication of The Painted Word is cause for celebration.

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    Biography

    Tom Wolfe's high-wire act of language has provided a sort of cultural funhouse mirror ever since he started publishing in the mid-1960s, first as a journalist and later as the acclaimed author of novels The Bonfire of the Vanities and A Man in Full. Wolfe occasionally raises hackles, and he always provokes a response.

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