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The Friday Article Roundup

The FAR is under the influence

Be swayed by the week's best pop culture writing.

This week, you will be persuaded that:

  • Hamilton is better than you remember
  • Books won’t save you
  • Legacies aren’t guaranteed
  • Vibes aren’t movies
  • Cracker Barrel is stupid

No persuasion needed to recognize the contributions of Bridgett Taylor! Send articles throughout the next week to magpiesfar [at] gmail, post articles from the past week in the comments for discussion, and have a Happy Friday!


On Hamilton’s tenth anniversary, Emily St. James makes the case for the play as art, not politics:
In Hamilton, [Lin-Manuel] Miranda was fairly ruthless at cutting out anything that got in the way of his core character study, to the degree that it was his choice to largely eschew the arguments over slavery that so divided Founding Fathers. Does that make the show worse as history? Yes. Does it make it better as a narrative? Also, yes. For the most part, in fact, the leftist critiques of Hamilton largely avoid the show’s second act, which is mostly about how Alexander Hamilton sucks, how his inability to simply chill out meant he destroyed so many things he held dear, and how he could not ever leave well enough alone… For better or worse, the show’s outwardly neoliberal trappings are necessary for the story to work at all, and too often, critiques of the trappings avoid the things about the story that are undercutting or even subverting the trappings.

At Literary Hub, Maris Kreizman pours cold water on the empathetic power of books:
Every time I answered a question about the importance of books, I wanted to make very clear that I donโ€™t believe that books have the power to enlighten everyone all the time. Iโ€™ve read so much about studies that show, in some form or another, that reading fiction is meant to make you more empathetic, that considering someone elseโ€™s point of view might help you to gain greater understanding of people who are different from you. I donโ€™t believe that reading is a secret shortcut to empathy. It never was. My pat answer is something like, โ€œI know tons of morally reprehensible people who read good books all the time.โ€

Natalie Weiner shines a light on a neglected singer at her Don’t Rock The Inbox newsletter, and looks at why she’s been overlooked and by whom:
Legacy requires respect, and typically respect from (white) men โ€” otherwise known as the ones most often in position to create canons and litigate legacies. It’s why there are thousands of books on the Beatles and the Stones and just two extremely recent ones on Big Mama Thornton; why Dolly had to get old enough to no longer be threatening before she was truly recognized as a legend (and still, it’s mostly the ferocity of her female fanbase that’s put her in this position more than any sea change from the men who too often write our histories).

Jesse Raub criticizes Civil War as part of a larger breakdown in what movies are offering viewers:
In the grander scheme of things, Civil War belongs to the โ€œShit Happensโ€ Cinematic Universe. On paper, thereโ€™s a premiseโ€”what if a civil war broke out?โ€”and on screen, the filmmaker rarely gets past the premise into an actual narrative. Things happen on screen, weโ€™re not really sure why, we donโ€™t know what itโ€™s supposed to mean, and the filmmaker doensโ€™t seem to really understand either. The movies are shot beautifully, capture images and scenes that play for big emotions, but ultimately donโ€™t have a perspective that leaves you leaving the theater having felt anything true. These are the โ€œpure vibesโ€ movies that beg audiences to ascribe meaning to the images they saw on screen.

In a discussion at N+1, A.S. Hamrah digs into what Cracker Barrel and its logo change represent today:
Itโ€™s a question of a civilizational difference between Cracker Barrel and KFC, one that still tries to maintain a connection to its community, and the other, which is deracinated and generic. One represents a certain kind of gathering of citizens, in a residual form, even if itโ€™s a damaged or historically racist one. The other, more dominant one just represents the maw of capitalism, destroying everything as it makes what are basically poisonous products for people to eat all over the world.