July was a month that saw an enormous row about race and social media as England lost the final of Euro 2020, the return of mask mandates in the United States, and the “pingdemic.” These have been the headline making events that British newspapers have dutifully recorded.
But elsewhere — especially in the expanding digital ecosystem of Substack — writers and journalists less tethered to the news cycle have been following their own interests, and producing superb work. Over the course of the month, UnHerd staff collected some of the best new writing.
Essayist Wesley Yang began his deep-dive into what lazier writers call wokeness, and what he calls the successor ideology:
What happened to culture? The critic Angela Nagle wondered whether the impermanence of globalisation has removed the preconditions that allowed great works of art to flourish. She writes:
N.S. Lyons considered the rise of China as the foremost ‘megatrend’ of our time. What does China really want? Lyons knows it’s a silly question — but recognises that China’s leaders have been answering it for years. They call it the ‘China Dream’:
Elsewhere, Freddie de Boer wrote about the new Gawker — a gossip blog with nothing to gossip about. Henry Oliver examined the career a forgotten Prime Minister — Andrew Bonar Law — a complicated, effective politician, who brought Britain to the edge of civil unrest with his remarks in support of Ulster Unionism. And the philosopher Justin E.H. Smith critiqued liberal ideas about speech and violence under digital conditions:
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SubscribeThis is the cream of the crop? I guess I am glad I never heard of substack, seems like a real wan* fest of dancing around ideas and concepts they cannot quite figure out well enough to express.
“The afterglow of what ever it was that made us create culture seems to have been finally extinguished. The financial models of the institutions that used to create popular culture still exist and so movies, books, clothes are still being made but they’re artistically dead”
This is so obviously because morality has been replaced by correctness. Morality gave truth, it was Right / Wrong, morality gave solid ground to work from, a foundation to build on. The flexible codes of honour, situational ethics, and moral relativity mean art is dead, it has no ability to find truth. “”Art is a lie that makes us realize truth.”” Picasso said, Lies, like truth, have been killed by Liberalism, all is merely grey, all is merely more correct or less correct. With no ultimate standards there is no meaning.
Really the same can be said of the Yeats thing on art “‘”Beauty is truth, truth beauty,” – that is all/Ye know on earth, and all ye need to know.’ Beauty is now so degraded and cheapened it no longer gives the basis to build art. Sordid, faked, photo-shopped, CGI, squalid, depravity, degenerate….
Art is dead, beauty and truth dead, killed by Liberalism. Culture is what art mirrors; modern culture is like Dracula looking into a mirror, and seeing nothing there.
The Dracula analogy is brilliant – and should perhaps replace the emporer’s new clothes !!
To My Down Vote person (first vote) sorry, but Liberal ‘High Style writing (and who can forget Waugh’s ‘Scoop’ example so long ago…”“Feather-footed through the plashy fen passes the questing vole.””) leaves me a bit blank, this one exceedingly so:
““Social-media discourse is no more an ordinary exercise in free speech than modern industrial slaughter of cattle is a sacrifice in some ancient temple.”
I mean, come on….like what we are doing here – is our slaughter of speech here in a temple or in a abattoir?
“governing and chattering classes in America during the Trump years. Its subject is the bourgeois moral revolution, many decades in the making, that flowered at the midpoint of the decade, composed in equal measure of new political propositions, new moral premises, and new psychological underpinnings , in pursuit of what it declares to be “social justice”.”
This one I stumbled on ‘bourgeois’. I am assuming he is referring to the White Lefty/Liberals, mostly in Academia, Education, Arts, Human Resources, MSM, Entertainment, and Lefty Politics, as well as the student/ post student layabouts who tend to march and be anti West. Well I think those guys are not really bourgeois, as, at least in Marx based Liberalism – bourgeois is the business folk, the Capitalists as it were, tho ones who own the means of production the Proletariat must toil under, sort of like Trump voters. I do not what ‘Collective noun’ would best describe the Liberalgencia, but do not think it is bourgeois.
“It consists of its decomposed remains in a news-shaped coffin.”
I apologize for by first post, I must learn to not take Liberal Essays as more than verbal fun and mood, to not think of them as reporting or arguing on issues, but as literary things.
Substack and Medium have become places for essays often overly long, but often refreshing. The Kim piece was good enough for me to follow him. I do follow several Substacks but not much of the more ideological Medium. Sadly, I don’t seem to find many guides to topics on either platform. I truly do value Alex Berenson on Substack, even more now that Twitter has decided his writings are bad for we plebes.
Read the last quoted Walter Kirn rant in full – absolute gem…