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Essayist
Benaroya Hall, 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday,
March 2, 2005
Biography
Excerpt
Selected Works
Links
Underwritten by Christianson O'Conner Kindness PLLC
Biography
A writer for the New Yorker since 1986, Adam Gopnik has come to be known
as one of the preeminent, wittiest, and most charming interpreters of
contemporary life writing today. His recent essays have tackled subjects
ranging from the state of New York department stores ("like luxury
liners becalmed in a lagoon"), to menus of long-gone restaurants
("a lovely paper monument to hope"), to busyness ("our
art form, our civic ritual"). But before New York, there was Paris.
For five years, he and his family lived in this city of myth and history,
of bureaucracy and beauty, and for five years he chronicled their daily
delights and exasperations to suggest larger truths about France, America,
and culture in general. From these essays he compiled the bestseller Paris
to the Moon (2000), which has been described as "the finest book
on France in recent years." His most recent accomplishment was editing
Americans in Paris: A Literary Anthology (2004), a compilation of three
centuries of writing about Paris.
Born in
Philadelphia, Gopnik grew up in Montreal where his parents were both professors
at McGill University, and from which he received a B.A. He received an
M.A. from the Institute of Fine Arts. His work for the New Yorker has
won both the National Magazine Award for Essay and the George Polk Award
for Magazine Reporting. Gopnik lives in New York City.
Excerpt
from Paris to the Moon (2001)
In Paris explanations come in a predictable sequence, no matter what is
being explained. First comes the explanation in terms of the unique, romantic
individual, then the explanation in terms of ideological absolutes, and
then the explanation in terms of the futility of all explanation. So,
for instance, if your clothes dryer breaks down and you want to get the
people from BHV--the strange Sears, Roebuck of Paris--to come fix it,
you will be told, first, that only one man knows how it works and he cannot
be found (explanation in terms of the gifts of the romanticized individual);
next, that it cannot be fixed for a week because of a store policy (explanation
in terms of ideological necessity); and, finally, that you are perfectly
right to find all this exasperating, but nothing can be done, because
it is in the nature of things for a dryer to break down, dryers are like
that (futility of explanation itself). "They are sensitive machines;
they are ill suited to the task; no one has ever made one successfully,"
the store bureaucrat in charge of service says, sighing. "C'est normal."
And what works small works big too. The same sequence that explains the
broken dryer also governs the explanations of the French Revolution that
have been offered by the major French historians. "Voltaire did all
this!" was de La Villette's explanation (only one workman); an inevitable
fight between the bourgeoisie and the aristocrats, the Marxists said (store
policy); until, finally, Foucault announced that there is nothing really
worth explaining in the coming of the Reign of Terror, since everything
in Western culture, seen properly, is a reign of terror (all dryers are
like that).
Selected
Works
Paris to the Moon (2001)
American in Paris: A Literary Anthology (2004) (editor)
Web
Site Links
Interview
with Adam Gopnik
"Times
Regained," an article from the New Yorker by Adam Gopnik
Review
of Paris to the Moon
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