At the bottom of a box of odds and ends I found a printout of an essay published more than eighteen years ago at a site called Truthdig. I don’t remember reading it but must have found it interesting. The author is Cristina Nehring (about whom I know nothing else), her the title is “What’s Wrong With the American Essay” and you can still read it online. It’s pure provocation:
“The problem, of course,
is not merely our essayists; it’s our culture. We have grown terribly—if
somewhat hypocritically—weary of larger truths. The smarter and more
intellectual we count ourselves, the more adamantly we insist that there is no
such thing as truth, no such thing as general human experience, that everything
is plural and relative and therefore undiscussable. Of course, everything is
plural, everything is arguable, and there are limits to what we can know about
other persons, other cultures, other genders. But there is also a limit to such
humility; there is a point at which it becomes narcissism of a most myopic
sort, a simple excuse to talk only about one’s own case, only about one’s own
small area of specialization.”
Things have only gotten
worse in the subsequent decades. Contemporary essays are characterized
principally by the writer’s desire to impress readers with his sensitivity and
virtue, usually of a political nature, as though the essay were a form of
loyalty oath. Of course, a few first-rate essayists are still at work, still getting
published: Cynthia Ozick (age 98), Joseph Epstein (89), Gary Saul Morson (78),
Theodore Dalrymple (76), Peter Hitchens (74). All are lineal descendants of the
father of essays, Montaigne, whom Nehring goes on to cite:
“Montaigne thought it the
essayist’s duty to cross boundaries, to write not as a specialist (even in
himself) but as a generalist, to speak out of turn, to assume, to presume, to
provoke. ‘Where I have least knowledge,’ said the blithe Montaigne, ‘there do I
use my judgment most readily.’ And how salutary the result; how enjoyable to
read -- and to spar with -- Montaigne’s by turns outrageous and incisive
conclusions about humankind. That everything is arguable goes right to the
heart of the matter.”
Well, yes and no. Argument
without wit or style is tiresome. It’s at this point that Nehring’s assessment
of the essay applies to that endangered species, the blog (a name I still find ugly
and amusing). After all, the best blogs are those closest in form to essays,
and they are sadly rare. They embody the essay (to try, to attempt) impulse without being "formal" essays.
I place “formal” in quotes because since its birth in the sixteenth century
(yes, I know there are ancient precursors) , in the sensibility of Montaigne,
the essay has remained notoriously slippery, though its mercurial nature is
part of its glory and charm. In “On Vanity,” Montaigne writes, “My style and my
mind alike wander.”
I’ve read first-rate
essays disguised as book reviews, travelogues, sermons, op-ed pieces,
philosophy, letters, biographies, poems, culinary criticism, medical and
scientific texts, dictionary entries, diaries and journals, and passages in
novels (see George Eliot). Essay writing is an impulse, the sensibility's mingling of experience and learning,
more than a sophomoric screed or polemic.
Jacques Barzun reviewed
Donald Frame’s translation of The Complete Essays of Montaigne when it
was published in 1957. He writes:
“Tastes, feelings, instincts, come into play and incite the passion for diversity. Montaigne finds in himself a taste for books, but not for bookishness; he can think and write for weeks or months together without reading. He loves travel and the immediate sensation of things. Truth being his delight, he loathes the life of a courtier. Yet its opposite, the philosopher's, should not be withdrawn or vexatious by design. Philosophy is a gay science, to which the satisfaction of the senses is a proper minister. Money is to buy pleasure, and Montaigne ‘hates poverty as the peer of pain.’ But human condition or no, there are terms on which alone it is it is fitting to live: ‘by right and authority not by permission or as a reward.’”
The energizing freedom of
the essay, its resistance to formalization and even definition, invites abuse.
Just as everyone is certain of his rightness for parenthood, so is everyone
convinced he can write an essay. Give the Nehring the last word:
“Our essayists have
defected, leaving us on our own, with the impression that to traffic in
boldness and generality is to be a blowhard or a huckster. The moderation of
these triflers is immoderate, and it is only right that readers allow their
work to rot in basements.”
[You can find Barzun’s article at Isaac Waisberg’s invaluable IWP Books.]
