Lewis Lapham’s Antidote to the Age of BuzzFeed
With his erudite Quarterly, the legendary Harper’s editor aims for an antidote to digital-age ignorance
- By Ron Rosenbaum
- Smithsonian magazine, November 2012, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
It took Lapham a while to find his way into that role himself. His great-grandfather had co-founded the oil giant Texaco and his grandfather had been mayor of San Francisco. After graduating from Yale, he got his first job as a reporter for the San Francisco Examiner, where he got a grounding in life outside books from covering the police beat, crime and punishment on the streets. He also found himself in the golden age of bohemia. “Jack Kerouac and Ken Kesey were already gone but Allen Ginsberg was still there, Kenneth Rexroth was still there and so was [beat poet icon Lawrence] Ferlinghetti.”
He left the Examiner to do a stint at the legendary New York Herald Tribune, known then as “a writer’s paper” (Tom Wolfe, Jimmy Breslin, Charles Portis, et al.). “I liked the raffishness” of that kind of newspapering, he says, but it wasn’t too long before he found himself disillusioned by the world of journalism and media.
“The election of Kennedy changed everything,” Lapham recalls. “No longer were people interested in talking about ideas—it was about access. After Kennedy’s election suddenly you had journalists wanting to be novelists and thinking that they are somehow superior to politicians. There once was [thought to be] some moral grace to being a journalist—which is of course bullshit....”
When I suggest to him that journalists had at least an edge on moral grace over, say, hedge-fund operators, he says, “Jefferson and Adams, though on opposite sides of policy, always supported the right of unhindered speech. Though they regarded journalists as vicious.”
“You believe in viciousness?”
“Yeah I do. In that it’s [journalism’s] function. But I just don’t think that’s necessarily moral grace.”
As the editor of Harper’s from 1974—with a brief interruption—to 2006, Lapham attracted a unique cast of new and celebrated writers (Tom Wolfe, Christopher Hitchens, Francine Prose and David Foster Wallace, among others) and freed them from the shackles of the third person to write in their own voice and offer readers their own truths. (It’s remarkable how many of the excerpts from the classical age in the Quarterly are in the first person. It’s ancient as well as modern.) I was fortunate to write for him, so, not being entirely objective myself, I asked New York University professor Robert S. Boynton, head of the literary reportage program there and author of The New New Journalism, to describe Lapham’s significance: “He pushed the idea that the memoir form might influence ANY piece—an essay, report, investigation—and make it more, rather than less, true. Another way to put it is that he attacked the false gods of ‘objective journalism,’ and showed how much more artful and accurate writing in the first person could be.”
Lapham left Harper’s in 2006 to found the Quarterly; he says he’d been thinking about the idea for the magazine since 1998. “I had put together a collection of texts on the end of the world for the History Book Club,” he recalls. “They wanted something at the turn of the millennium and I developed this idea by looking at the way the end of the world has ended [or been envisioned to end] many, many times and how predictions of doom have been spread across time. Whether you’re talking about the Book of Revelation or tenth-century sects. So I had this wonderful collection of texts and I thought what a great idea.
“Also it was fun,” he says.
“Here history was this vast resource; I mean truly generative. I figure that if we’re going to find our way into answers to, at least hypotheses to, the circumstances presented by the 21st century, that our best chance is to find them floating around somewhere in the historical record. I mean Lucretius, for example, writes in the first century B.C. and was rediscovered [in a monastery!] in 1417 and becomes a presence in the main work not only of Montaigne and Machiavelli but also in the mind of Diderot and Jefferson. So that history is...a natural resource as well as an applied technology.” An app!
Actually then, to call Lapham a Renaissance man is more metaphorically than chronologically accurate. He’s an Enlightenment man who embodies the spirit of the great encyclopedist Diderot, each issue of the Quarterly being a kind of idiosyncratically entertaining encyclopedia of its subject. A vast repository of clues to the mystery of human nature for the alert and erudite detective.
“In some ways you are finding a way to recreate a vision of Garside’s—your mentor at Yale....”
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Comments (13)
And how wonderful it is to have my hunch confirmed that LHL is indeed leading the charge for, if I may say it, resurrecting (or re-booting in a more sustainable way) the American Dream. What a gift to the process of civilization he is. Now if only he could share some political prescriptions that might occur to him…. Thank you, Ron Rosenbaum.
Posted by Jim Dustrude on December 7,2012 | 08:05 AM
How wonderful it is to read that my beloved and brilliant Uncle Chuck, Charles Garside Jr. as he is mentioned here, helped to inspire and influence someone as brilliant in turn as Lewis Lapham. He really was one of a kind.
Posted by Jon Garside on November 17,2012 | 06:52 PM
I am a great fan of the Quarterly and grateful for the dedication of its editors to collect and curate the world's classics. I caution you however--and the Smithsonian--to abstain from framing this effort in a way that makes it seem elitist and inaccessible to those who could be enjoying your efforts. I urge you to connect to contemporary experts in digital scholarship who somehow manage to preserve the old and classic with the new and modern in order to attract and inspire a whole new generation of polymaths. When the likes of Lapham die off, it may be partially their fault that not enough got to enjoy the fruits of their labor. Sometimes to preserve, one must invest in an effort to "port" the essence of the curatorial effort into formats that can be disseminated far and away. The few thousand copies you sell speak of an endangered practice. If you love what you do so much, why not set it free? Why not take the next step to having the digital Lapham's to a Google Scholar list of your inspired sources? We all wish we could afford an apartment of house with the physical space to have an amazing printed book library at our disposal, but we don't have that luxury. When I read your gems, I want to link out to the most inspired sources of further interest to where they came from. A curated semantic web of Lapham's would make me the happiest scholar alive. Give us some more insight into the interconnectedness of your beloved sources and you can harness all the ills of Google and transform them into something all of us could enjoy.
Posted by Marientina Gotsis on November 11,2012 | 05:17 PM
I would take issue with one statement in Ron Rosenbaum's otherwise excellent article "Lewis Lapham's Antidote to the Age of Buzzfeed". In the portion describing the influence that Charles Garside, Jr. had on Lapham while he was at Yale, Rosenbaum refers to Garside as "largely forgotten" As a former student of Garside at Rice University 1966-1970 who had a lasting impression made on me by Dr. Garside's eloquence, I would offer the following: 46 years after Garside left Yale and 20 years after his death, Timothy Dwight College at Yale still awards the Garside cup annually to "that senior in colege who has most highly distinguished him/herself in the field of history. The History Department at Rice University annually awards the Charles Garside, Jr. prize to a distinguished student of history. The Garside Papers in Fondren Library, Rice University are 9 linear feet in all. Gone but hardly "mostly forgotten>
Posted by Michael Tibbets on November 6,2012 | 12:02 PM
Editors slipped on including this article in their magazine, topic great author horrible. The Mr. Rosenbaum was too busy trying to use his thesaurus he forgot what he was writing about.
Posted by Roy Froebe on November 3,2012 | 06:25 AM
The problem I've had with reading Lapham's Quarterly is that I just want to go out and read the books they quote from. Every volume is a fresh reminder of how little time I have. So I feel like I'm wasting precious time reading sound bites when I should be reading sources. I guess it's a happy problem to have.
Posted by Daniel Urbach on October 31,2012 | 05:03 PM
Thanks so much for writing this. Mr. Lapham has been my hero for many years dating back to his earliest days at Harper's. He's one of the few people I think would be worth meeting and taking to lunch!
Posted by Ruth Speake on October 31,2012 | 10:57 AM
After decades of delivering information systems my concern has become information obesity. People consuming reams of data of all stripes and presenting it undigested as a substitute for decisions. Quality is one concern but quantity can bring an otherwise capable group to a grinding halt.
Posted by Jim Brennan on October 31,2012 | 08:18 AM
Way to bury the lede, Rosenbaum.
Posted by Edward R. Murrow on October 28,2012 | 04:59 PM
This is one of the most profound longreads I have come across online in many, many years. I arrived here not via social media, but via a 'River of News' feed which in itself aims to remedy many of Lapham's critiques of Buzzfeed et al. Thank You. HiMY SYeD / Toronto
Posted by HiMY SYeD on October 28,2012 | 04:14 PM
Very well-written. Thank you.
Posted by Ester de Beer on October 28,2012 | 03:37 PM
What is intriguing in the extreme about this article is that in its internet incarnation there are no hyperlinks to any of the writers/documents Lapham and Rosenbaum discuss and make reference to. That is how it used to be in humanity's past when your wisdom's depth was often both a function of your library's reach and the printed page's intrinsic opacity. It's not like that today in a digital information universe. And in that the pathway to and from information has profoundly been altered, our definition of what wisdom is may also be profoundly different. A wise 21st century person blazes a hyperlinked trail we readers can follow to arrive at the mental place they have gotten to in their rhetoric - or maybe somewhere else. And the latter sentence is quite important. Or maybe somewhere else.
Posted by stephen strauss on October 28,2012 | 02:46 PM
Nice piece, left me wanting to read Lapham’s. You’re mildly misquoting Eliot, though: you have "These fragments I shore against my ruin" but the line from The Waste Land is “These fragments I have shored against my ruins”.
Posted by Christopher M on October 27,2012 | 11:08 PM