President Amy’s Halloween Party
The president of the University of Pennsylvania, Amy Gutmann, hosted a Halloween party at her home last week. One of the revelers dressed up as an Arab suicide-bomber and posed for a picture with her. The student posted the photo, along with a number of other photos from the festivities (including mock executions of fellow students), on his Facebook page. There they were noticed by Winfield Myers, who drew attention to them on his blog at democracy-project.com. “An obvious question” occurred to Myers: “Would Gutmann have posed with a guest–or even allowed him into her house–if he’d dressed as Adolf Hitler or a Nazi SS officer? A KKK member?” No, he concluded. “But in modern liberal circles, posing as a Palestinian suicide bomber . . . is just fine.”
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A lively discussion ensued on other websites. Libertarian law professor Eugene Volokh of UCLA took the much-ado-about-not-much view:
Many of the commenters at volokh.com were of like mind, arguing that this was just harmless mockery, a student poking fun at terrorists. The student himself later posted a statement expressing “condolences and sympathy to all affected by our costumes. We wish to make it clear that we do not support terrorism, violence, or anything that is against society. There is no agenda or statement associated with our behavior shown in these pictures.”
No agenda? Among the captions written by the student himself for his photos were “Another hostage shot,” “Influencing future Mujahideen,” and “freedom fighter . . . pose[s] for a picture.” We’re picking up a vibe here, and it’s not Charlie Chaplin dropping a banana peel in front of a goosestepping Hitler.
The images are, in fact, disturbingly familiar: Sympathizers of suicide-bombers in the Middle East routinely show solidarity with their “freedom fighters” by dressing children up in the same type of costumes, complete with plastic dynamite and fake AK-47s.
Amy Gutmann, for her part, is smart enough to recognize a bad career move when she finds herself in the middle of one. She released a statement on the Penn website:
A SCRAPBOOK friend notes, “This may clinch her appointment as the next president of Harvard University.”
William Styron, R.I.P.
THE SCRAPBOOK doubts that obituary writing is taught in America’s journalism schools. But if it is, we would recommend that Christopher Lehmann-Haupt’s New York Times obituary for William Styron (Nov. 2) be added to the syllabus. As an example of extolling a minor gentleman of letters as a major figure in American literature, it is very nearly letter-perfect.
In the headline, readers were informed that, to his everlasting credit, Styron “transcended roots.” That is to say, this Virginia native surveyed the whole human condition in his work, not just daily life in New York City (Edith Wharton), Massachusetts (Nathaniel Hawthorne), or Mississippi (Eudora Welty). And speaking of Mississippi, while Styron was politely compared to William Faulkner early in his career, he “balked at being pigeonholed as an heir to Faulkner. ‘I don’t consider myself in the Southern school, whatever that is,’ he told the Paris Review in the spring of 1953.” Fair enough: Styron was no Faulkner–or, as the Times would have it, Faulkner was no Styron.
The truth is that Styron was a novelist of modest gifts, deployed in a handful of works of diminishing distinction. He might also have personified the low ebb of the contemporary American novel, captured (unwittingly, of course) in the Times‘s assertion that “critics and readers alike ranked him among the best of the generation that succeeded Hemingway and Faulkner. His peers included James Jones, Gore Vidal and Norman Mailer.”
Styron was distinct from William Faulkner in other ways. He wrote a therapeutic account of his own depression and alcoholism, and his last significant public appearance was to testify before the Senate Judiciary Committee against the Supreme Court nomination of Robert Bork.
Most poignant, he is likely to be remembered, if he is remembered at all, as the owner of a waterfront estate on Martha’s Vineyard where, in the admiring words of the Times, “his circle of friends grew over the years to include Lillian Hellman, Art Buchwald, Philip Roth, James Jones, James Baldwin, E.L. Doctorow, Candice Bergen, Carly Simon, John F. and Jacqueline Kennedy, Bill and Hillary Clinton, Mike Wallace and even Norman Mailer, with whom he had feuded fiercely early in their acquaintanceship.” Imagine what Faulkner might have accomplished if he had only known Jackie Onassis!
