Microhistories
Aug. 4th, 2005 03:37 pmSalon in an article about Rebecca Solnit new memoir makes the following comment:
"At a time when the trend in nonfiction publishing favors microhistories -- the current file under "C" alone yields popular books on cod, cocaine and caffeine -- Solnit's interests remain expansive. "Wanderlust," her sprawling history of walking, covered everything from early hominids stepping out on the savanna to latter-day tourists promenading along the postmodern wonderland of the Vegas Strip."
Now I've read Wanderlust, and I've also read my share of so-called microhistories. And I'd just like to say that Solnit's book shares just about all the same aspects as the best of the so-called microhistories. Taking a topic and expanding upon all its beautiful complexities. I think its rather snobbish to decry one because they are emant as popularizes and put on a pedestal the other because its written by an academic darling.
"At a time when the trend in nonfiction publishing favors microhistories -- the current file under "C" alone yields popular books on cod, cocaine and caffeine -- Solnit's interests remain expansive. "Wanderlust," her sprawling history of walking, covered everything from early hominids stepping out on the savanna to latter-day tourists promenading along the postmodern wonderland of the Vegas Strip."
Now I've read Wanderlust, and I've also read my share of so-called microhistories. And I'd just like to say that Solnit's book shares just about all the same aspects as the best of the so-called microhistories. Taking a topic and expanding upon all its beautiful complexities. I think its rather snobbish to decry one because they are emant as popularizes and put on a pedestal the other because its written by an academic darling.
no subject
Date: 2005-08-04 08:11 pm (UTC)