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Endnotes | David Foster Wallace | BBC Documentary 

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Professor Geoff Ward discusses the life and works of David Foster Wallace
"When David Foster Wallace hanged himself in 2008, at the age of 46, he was considered by many to be the most gifted and linguistically exuberant American novelist and short story writer of his generation. His books include the 1,000-page Infinite Jest, a novel of grand ambition and stylistic experiment that came complete with 388 endnotes. (Footnotes, digressions, constant second guessing of every thought are features of Wallace's signature style).
In April The Pale King, Wallace's final, unfinished novel will be published. Few literary novels have been more eagerly anticipated in recent years. Its great subject is Boredom. Wallace set himself big challenges. Infinite Jest attacked the entertainment industry while trying to entertain and The Pale King engages with boredom as a path toward transcendence.
This Sunday Feature is presented by Professor Geoff Ward, author of a literary history of America. He, like many, was convinced Wallace would be the preeminent American writer to reckon with in the years ahead, and was shocked by his tragic early death. He assesses Wallace's legacy, themes and preoccupations, talking to the precursor Wallace admired most, Don DeLillo, and to friends, collaborators and contemporaries such as Mark Costello and Rick Moody. In the company of the writer's sister, Amy Wallace, Ward travels to the Midwest of America where the writer grew up, and considers the impact of place on his imagination. He also talks to Wallace's publisher and editor Michael Pietsch about the difficult task of assembling Wallace's final fragments into The Pale King.
The programme also contains some rare archive reflections by a young David Foster Wallace, recorded a year before the publication of Infinite Jest, on the role of the writer in an age of media saturation." (BBC Radio 3)

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26 мар 2011

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Комментарии : 252   
@deansparks6753
@deansparks6753 2 года назад
As a creative type struggling with 10+ years of depression it is unimaginable to me the effort DFW had to muster to find windows to write. There are weeks on end when just rising from bed is attuned to summiting Everest. I do find brief windows to create. That said, it would have taken me 30 years to write Infinite Jest. Pushing past the crippling disease to be brilliant in spite of it will be his greatest achievement.
@notsocrates9529
@notsocrates9529 2 года назад
I've had it for about 25 years, it never goes away. I work with the geriatric population and they confirmed my biggest fears, depression is lifelong. I have spoken to adult children who are their parents legal guardians or power of attorney, they tell me how their mom or dad was always depressed or struggling with mental health issues. For some people, it is something that you will take to your grave. Imagine, living 70+ years battling depression and constant mood swings.
@jan_Travis
@jan_Travis 2 года назад
Do you have anything published Dean? I would love to read some of your writings.
@deansparks6753
@deansparks6753 2 года назад
I write for me, or some obscure publishers who find my crate well after I've become cat food. Sorry. I do paint and can send you images if you like. Send me your email.
@Johnconno
@Johnconno 2 года назад
Yes, it's a bastard. 🕳️
@ahmetdogan5685
@ahmetdogan5685 Год назад
Writing Infinite Jest would have taken me infinity to write.
@ethanhernandez9889
@ethanhernandez9889 4 месяца назад
27:24 as someone born in the year 2000, this is something I find myself discussing with many of the people closest to me. Most people just brush it off as pretentious cynicism, but this right here is everything I feel in my heart. If you’re out there David, just know that this is the reason you became a writer, to give people like me a language to communicate my psychosis with, and someday maybe as a species we can create or conceive a new and broader understanding of reality. Thank you
@thenowchurch6419
@thenowchurch6419 8 лет назад
His life reminds me of Nietzsche. A talented, hardworking hyper-sensitive, hyper-intellectual ,overwhelmed by the chaos of our times and who never found inner peace.
@widgertrevor
@widgertrevor 8 лет назад
and hated jews.
@thenowchurch6419
@thenowchurch6419 8 лет назад
widgertrevor I don't know about Wallace, but Nietzsche did not support hatred of Jews.
@widgertrevor
@widgertrevor 8 лет назад
nietzsche hated the jews. he's a racist hack.
@mrzed2349
@mrzed2349 8 лет назад
+widgertrevor NOT TRUE.
@charleslynching
@charleslynching 7 лет назад
NO I think he was uglier than Nietzsche
@Theomastus
@Theomastus 12 лет назад
What a loss we have all suffered. Goodbye, David- you are missed by many people.
@EarthtonesCymbals
@EarthtonesCymbals 2 года назад
What a gain we have enjoyed. Hello David-you remain present and alive to so many people.
@beesheer3761
@beesheer3761 5 лет назад
R.I.P. David Foster Wallace a true legend. I truly hope you find peace brother.
@AntonSlavik
@AntonSlavik 7 лет назад
I have profound love for this man. This life couldn't be confined to the brief moment one occupies in history. I hope this as much for men like him as I do for myself and my loved ones.
@scoon2117
@scoon2117 11 месяцев назад
This is how I feel exactly.
@JamesJoyce12
@JamesJoyce12 9 месяцев назад
you love a dude playing a role - read a good DFW bio
@CraigStCyrPlus
@CraigStCyrPlus 8 месяцев назад
Makes zero sense.
@marshalmcdonald7476
@marshalmcdonald7476 4 месяца назад
It means he was living in a persona, a role more than his authentic self@@CraigStCyrPlus
@jamespotts8197
@jamespotts8197 5 лет назад
I'm in the amazingly blissful state of discovery of David Foster Wallace as well as noticing his subtle interaction from the standpoint that's between author and reader, how he takes me "fully" into the microcosm of the worlds David creates. I love the intricate details that are never omitted, the picturesque landscapes, the barely seen physical characteristics that become unconscious in obsessive mannerisms, they are such a delight to read about. I feel overwhelmed by the amount of readings available for me to learn from. Thank you Mr Wallace for your dedication and love of writing. Powerfully influential so say the very, very least!
@Bix12
@Bix12 7 лет назад
"....A person who is clinically depressed or in chronic pain cannot even perceive any other person or thing as independent of the universal pain that is digesting her cell by cell...everything is part of the problem, and there is no solution. It is a Hell for one." Well, there it is. I've never heard it said better.
@peterfaulstich6758
@peterfaulstich6758 6 лет назад
everything is part of being. There is no solution. clinical depressed people maybe stay short before "enlightment" - ironically seriosly and de-solate.
@mikekallos9248
@mikekallos9248 5 лет назад
Yes I call it a black hole of despair.
@bluegregory6239
@bluegregory6239 4 года назад
It is a Hell for one. Best thing ever written about depression. Ironic that reading DFW's work made me less depressed...
@salvadorfernandez3013
@salvadorfernandez3013 4 года назад
He was unique too sensitive to overcome his malady. Analyzed things too deeply
@franknakasako7255
@franknakasako7255 5 лет назад
I really love Wallace's conversational voice... It would've been lovely to have audiobooks done by him.
@georgeadam8737
@georgeadam8737 4 года назад
Matt is AaMarcoux eew
@reinarforeman6518
@reinarforeman6518 3 года назад
He did make audiobooks
@taramilton8695
@taramilton8695 3 года назад
There is a highly recommended reading by D.F.W of his essay 'Consider The Lobster.'
@Johnconno
@Johnconno 2 года назад
'In it's sheer scope, Infinite Jest is almost equal to anything I've attempted.' Martin Amis. 😂
@gregbogan7639
@gregbogan7639 13 лет назад
Finished reading 'The Pale King"...BRILLIANT!!...DFW has me looking at everyday life differently.Boredom is good.
@AI-Hallucination
@AI-Hallucination 3 года назад
I am just about to read it
@cjbrown1979
@cjbrown1979 2 года назад
Not if you're clinically depressed it's not. Boredom can lead to bad things happening to good, even genius-level, people.
@kellerglee
@kellerglee Год назад
@@cjbrown1979 well said. “Be unborable.”
@scoon2117
@scoon2117 3 месяца назад
This book is breaking my heart. I read it at work on my breaks. It is literally my boredom survival training.
@Barushia
@Barushia 2 года назад
His take on irony around the 19,20 mark is absolutly spot on!
@wolvesetc
@wolvesetc Год назад
In Minnesota, tornado sirens were always going off at like 2pm. I can’t recall ever hearing one go off in the middle of the night. I seem to remember it was always mid to late afternoon. And the skies turn almost a deep eerie green. Very dark ominous green way in the distance and the clouds looming and obviously everything getting very dark for that hour in the summer as it comes through. We always had really bad ass thunderstorms in the summer in Minnesota. I can’t recall anything that truly compares here in VA or DC.
@bhuvidya
@bhuvidya 7 лет назад
thx so much for the upload. this was very enjoyable, one of the best explorations of this great writer i've heard....
@antonietto1
@antonietto1 12 лет назад
A so sweet,brilliant and lovely person. What a huge lost for the world literature...we'll never forget him
@llebieck
@llebieck 13 лет назад
Thank you so much for posting this. This is the best piece about DFW I've heard or read since his death. Ward provided much insight. The narrated selections from Dave's writing were perfect. The contributions from his sister Amy and friend Mark Costello were touching and illuminating. DFW was so much more than his depression. A great place to learn more about the kind of person DFW was is McSweeney's Internet Tendency: Memories of David Foster Wallace.
@AyaxTelemonio
@AyaxTelemonio 9 лет назад
Man, i almost cried while hearing this 16:46, and i never cry.
@Ianoxen
@Ianoxen 5 лет назад
We are pawns in the chess of life and he is the grandmaster that sees all moves.
@pezushka
@pezushka 3 года назад
beautiful comment
@jamezburgundy
@jamezburgundy 12 лет назад
thank you so much for posting this
@alexbroGellungaRunga
@alexbroGellungaRunga 11 лет назад
often we lie to ourselves, we fool ourselves into believing one thing will make us happy once we get there, out of anxiety, due to fear of realizing that we dont know what ACTUALLY makes us happy. or that what we're doing and how we're doing it, isn't going to make us happy. but of course we're insistent on reaching the "goal", without truly knowing why, yet somehow very deep down, we know we aren't being totally honest with ourselves, but again, we proceed out of anxiety.
@sculpt3218
@sculpt3218 3 года назад
it's the actual pursuit that is rewarding, not achieving.
@mercyde0
@mercyde0 12 лет назад
thanks for uploading this
@tjo1984
@tjo1984 9 лет назад
Too bad this is only on radio. I lived in Urbana when I attended the University of Illinois. Would be nice to see the places they describe here. Wow, David Foster Wallace. What can you say? So sensitive, aware, real. Had integrity about his writing. Was not going to dumb it down for the masses. He expects you to do your homework. Terrible thing he was tormented enough to make that decision.
@jsfueston1
@jsfueston1 8 лет назад
Much agreed. I like the interviews with his sister. She gets me as close to those places as I can get without actually going to Urbana (nothing against Urbana; I'd actually like to visit).
@rossjohnson1872
@rossjohnson1872 Год назад
Someone needs to do a serious computer analysis of the patterns (think loom weaving) especially of "Infinite Jest." I met Davey in Montessori. He was two years behind me. At four he mastered the program in a couple of months and went away to read encyclopedias. At fourteen you could open a volume of the Brittanica and start reading anywhere and he could pick it up from across the room and orally finish the section exactly word for word memorized. He was THE smartest person I have known in my life. I had advanced algebra class with him as I was a senior. I have met others with higher I.Q.s, but they were nonfunctionally social at thier level. I kept weirdly bumping onto Davey at intervals over the next 30 years. I know secrets. Do not local idolize Urbana. Champaign-Urbana has darkness. The house he grew up in was outside of town down Philo Rd. God bless the English teachers at Urbana High and UJHS. (Bonnie Blair's Mom was a great one, and yes, I had to sing the Blunder Dog song in Mrs. Wallace's class.) --Grateful Grammer Noodnik
@tjo1984
@tjo1984 Год назад
@@rossjohnson1872 I lived on East Michigan in Urbana when I was at the U of I.
@rossjohnson1872
@rossjohnson1872 Год назад
@James Wagner I grew up 3 blocks east of U of I. Yes I miss the good things, but it is a strange small world. I dare not name the coach who tormented us beginning in 4th grade, a WW2 vet, my swimming coach, Davey's for tennis, but the hellish things he said are word perfect repeated in Infinite Jest.
@troydaum4728
@troydaum4728 Месяц назад
@@rossjohnson1872 Could you share any more stories about him?
@oheymardyjay
@oheymardyjay 13 лет назад
Just finished Infinite Jest. Gave me a major case of the Howling Fantods.
@KatJ3st
@KatJ3st 3 года назад
That book changed my life
@detriplea
@detriplea 12 лет назад
Recognise the narrator from a certain Skyarts show. Great voice. Wallace, your value is immeasurable. Rest in super creative peace.
@francescaruby1150
@francescaruby1150 3 года назад
Wonderful. Thank you
@michaelgarza8271
@michaelgarza8271 Год назад
So moving to hear the great Don Delillo's voice speaking on Wallace. I love both writers, but am more familiar with Delillo.
@fabianhauser708
@fabianhauser708 7 месяцев назад
Thank you very much! 👏
@daviddoch4872
@daviddoch4872 5 лет назад
He continually talked about how post modern deconstruction and relativism led only into despair and then to have these people here doing exactly that.
@PoetlaureateNFDL
@PoetlaureateNFDL 5 лет назад
Fascinating person. I believe he was quite brilliant and sensitive but also quite insecure. Sorry that he could not be saved from his own depression. I’ve enjoyed learning about his life. Thank you David.
@BrentMinder
@BrentMinder 2 года назад
I think he was a gritty genius valuing humility, privacy, and authenticity while loathing pretention - which some mistake as insecurity.
@ghagzor
@ghagzor Год назад
Infinite Jest saved me while in prison.
@schmetterling4477
@schmetterling4477 Год назад
Paying attention in high school would have saved you from prison. It would also have been much more useful in other ways.
@fanaticist
@fanaticist 2 месяца назад
​@@schmetterling4477wow.
@schmetterling4477
@schmetterling4477 2 месяца назад
@@fanaticist I am living proof. I was paying attention in high school and I never went to prison. ;-)
@kevnev342
@kevnev342 7 дней назад
@@schmetterling4477 imagine having to no context into why he went to prison and jumping to that conclusion. What a stupid individual you are.
@MastanehNazarian
@MastanehNazarian 5 лет назад
19:00 so applicable to 'modern' music composition.
@destroydate7887
@destroydate7887 7 лет назад
Read The Pale King very carefully. It contains every trope of David's work.
@Chironex_Fleckeri
@Chironex_Fleckeri Год назад
He's very good at deconstructing a much more complex culture than a writer of the past had to deal with.
@schmetterling4477
@schmetterling4477 Год назад
There is nothing complex about the late 20th, early 21st century. Well, maybe the Windows APIs, but he wasn't writing about those.
@scoon2117
@scoon2117 3 месяца назад
Man i wish i had a birdseye view timelapse of dfw just writing.
@barsouk
@barsouk 3 года назад
Imagine is DFW lived to see today's social media and array of entertainment available from all these apps to be viewed on your "portable phone" as mentioned in Infinite Jest and you don't even need to rent "cartridges".
@barnas26
@barnas26 6 лет назад
I loved his works. I really had difficulty to understand his works while doing research.
@ryanmusa8223
@ryanmusa8223 11 лет назад
This is an extremely well-written comment that I have no choice but to disagree with in the strongest terms possible, either because it professes an idea that I fundamentally reject, or because I can't embrace the levels of irony. But it is beautiful, whether intended to be or not.
@awlomax
@awlomax 11 лет назад
How does one escape irony in a civilization inundated by irony? I felt he employed irony to draw our attention to authenticity.... Which I suppose is ironic, and why he's a genius
@christophersavidge9138
@christophersavidge9138 4 года назад
Look to William Styron. His voice on depression is appreciated by many.
@phillylifer
@phillylifer Год назад
I wonder what David would say these days. So much earnestness and urgency in what he said then about a then that led to now and he saw it coming to be. What would he tell us now?
@schmetterling4477
@schmetterling4477 Год назад
The same bullshit that he told you back then, presumably.
@acajudi100
@acajudi100 10 лет назад
fantastic!
@Bix12
@Bix12 7 лет назад
DFW's comments about our mediated culture, and how it would be a good thing for us to remember the entire reason we are immersed in this "thrice removed" version of reality (all for the sole purpose to be sold material "things"), were thoughts and words he had in the mid-90's. Now, 20 years later, we have the host of a reality TV show as our president. Television, and now, social media, has eviscerated our humanity, and no amount of "clicktavism" will save us..
@tedl7538
@tedl7538 7 лет назад
Echoed by George Carlin's proclamation years ago that this country is done.
@whit2642
@whit2642 5 лет назад
William L. I am actually currently reading his essay E Unibus Pluram from early 90s. It is about the exact thing you mention. And it’s so unnervingly accurate and insightful. Us watching them knowing they know we know we Are watching. Following suit.
@joshuacolburn471
@joshuacolburn471 2 года назад
without a doubt
@travisnealtodd70
@travisnealtodd70 13 лет назад
Picked up a copy of The Pale King at Powell's today, surprised to see it out so soon. I thought it was being released on tax day. Can't wait to dive in. Too bad it's his last work.
@patrickobrien8851
@patrickobrien8851 4 года назад
Wallace asks the question: "Who would want to live, when you can watch?", in reference to TV's ability to suck you in and perhaps disable your interest in living in the real world. Of course, those people in the world who "live" (i.e. live as well as watch, or instead of watching) know that the experience of doing is far deeper than simply the experience of watching someone else doing, for the majority of people, for the reason that more senses are involved in real experience, and we are, after all, in the world in a very real physical sense (despite any philosophical claim that experience is only perception.) In addition, each new generation encounters technology that potentially threatens to upend the world as they know it when growing up. DeLillo says it in this documentary: Wallace’s voice is always a young voice. Perhaps he is being kind, as that might also be rephrased as: Wallace’s voice is often an immature voice. Information technology - admittedly a broad classification - despite its association with our brains more than with our bodies is, nonetheless, just another set of tools. We have the choice to cherrypick what we want from that tech; we have the choice to turn off or get rid of the TV, as Wallace did at times during his life. Yet he was still addicted to the medium, and this personal addiction was magnified by him into an almost conspiratorial assault on the culture by the threat of mindless entertainment. This is nothing new. Edward R Murrow, the great investigative journalist from the 1950s, warned us about corporations and the dumbing-down of TV by the power of advertising and dollar wielding corporations. This is very much echoed in Infinite Jest as if it were something new: it is not new, though it has certainly spread since the 1950s. Wallace was also preoccupied by cleverness, self-worth, and the precedents of prior generations of writers. Clinical depression is an awful thing: it is the great deadener, and those who have experienced it understand what it can do to a person over time. When in a state of deep depression, the only option a person appears to have is to “watch, and not to live”, to turn the first statement above on its head. Wallace only began to write after his first major bout with depression, and so it is not unexpected that he wrote of a world in which he was - to quote Wallace - “stripped of agency”. But that does not mean, a priori, that the modern world, filled with technology and distractions as it is, is becoming a place where agency is absent for everyone. Wallace clearly felt it was this way for him, at times, but his addictions and in particular his addiction to self-reference, to solipsism as he called it, was a very personal thing, and perhaps not a universal malady of our times. Which brings me, naturally, to the statement that perhaps an inordinate percentage of Wallace’s American generation, and the generations that followed it are self-centered, solipsistic, selfish, shallow, trivial, and completely self-absorbed. Coupled with this, however, is a growing awareness among members of the youngest generations that are currently alive in the US, is that the patriarchal values of prior generations are not sustainable, either for society or for the physical world itself. It appears that young people at present are more accepting of difference in the world, and are more aware that experience in one locale does not necessarily equip one to understand experience in another locale, and hence the need for interaction and actually experiencing the world elsewhere before we legislate or arbitrate on behalf of populations we do not know. This we certainly cannot do by simply “watching”, as Wallace would have it. My personal concern with Wallace and his generation of writers is that - distilled over a little more time - they might not amount to more than a slightly better educated Beat Generation. The Beats and the Hippies went out into the world to experience it, that is, they pushed back against the claustrophobia and conformity of the late 1940s and 1950s, but in the process they often abandoned solid learning, and the shallowness of their knowledge was glaring once the bright novelty of their rebellion was dimmed by its ubiquity. In contrast to, but in many ways in concert with, the Beats and Hippies, the overly self-aware and technique-proficient artists of Wallace’s generation have walked away from experience and into their studies with their world-processors and TVs, and they have confused diffuse knowledge and information with the deeper understanding that comes from non-indulgent self-reflection. The world is not their interest: they themselves are their interest, and they confuse personal pathologies with pathologies that might or might not exist in the real world. And by “exist” I mean exist without a sufficient quantity of counter-pathologies that might very well help to restore the balance of a socially and economically sustainable culture. In short, I still find that Camus, Mann, Woolf, Conrad, Kafka, Beckett, Joyce, et al. present and synthesize the world of experience, without resort to cheap irony or solipsism, in a deeper way than does the generation of Wallace (or Pynchon or Barth, for that matter.) Uncertainty is an integral part of experience and the world - one might say that it is the central understanding of people in the real world. Mature adults, paradoxically, do not keep referring to the underlying uncertainty of all action, the uncertainty of value of each action, the uncertainty of the purpose of self, in spite of the manifest uncertainty that is all around us. Being in the modern world, with all our experiences and understandings is about how to manage these paradoxes through meaningful compromises. There isn’t a solution to the conundrum of being sentiently human; there is only the understanding that we approximate understanding as best we can, without constant reference to those approximations. Beckett says it well, and with a poetry I find absent in most modern writers: “For to know nothing is nothing, not to want to know anything likewise, but to be beyond knowing anything, to know you are beyond knowing anything, that is when peace enters in, to the soul of the incurious seeker.”
@jamesdoctor8079
@jamesdoctor8079 4 года назад
Patrick O'Brien Jesus dude, get a room and write a book. Ain’t nobody got time to read that shit
@josefstahlhammer5558
@josefstahlhammer5558 4 года назад
@@jamesdoctor8079 I read it
@bryguyseventeen
@bryguyseventeen 4 года назад
Incredibly well put and salient in both literary and broader cultural contexts
@nealpearson5855
@nealpearson5855 4 года назад
This is a great comment. I like that it's been edited. I gotta offer a little criticism to be fair, so I will say that to group DFW's generation of writers as "slightly better educated" beats misses the whole point of this particular existential crisis. I believe the juxtaposition in time validates this generation's respect for the beats, but I think this will last on its own. Also, I must say that, in possibly the worst forum for comment which I visit regularly, you have done a lot of heavy lifting to give me faith to carry on. Cheers.
@erikgordonolson8995
@erikgordonolson8995 3 года назад
Thank you for elevating RU-vid’s comments. This is at least 6 standard deviations above the mean in clarity * complexity. Thanks again. Makes me think that this type of thing is more common in our culture than I had estimated.
@coreycox2345
@coreycox2345 7 лет назад
"It has to be the truth...and, it has to be the truth." :)
@OmtaThien
@OmtaThien 11 лет назад
how he describe TV influence is I think very accurate. The Avant Garde decided long ago that art's objective is to offend the middle class. But they keep on beating a dead horse , as the middle class stopped paying attention to art when they have trash TV like Maury Povich show.
@ceruchi2084
@ceruchi2084 5 лет назад
Even worse is when the middle class starts to watch class-bashing ironic TV like "Always Sunny."
@potowogreedo
@potowogreedo 6 лет назад
"Nevertheless, Wallace stands alone" Aye...
@TheEccentricHippie
@TheEccentricHippie 11 лет назад
I am a die-hard fan, but I actually laughed out loud at this. By the way, if anybody has yet to hear, Michael Pietsch put together a new essay collection of DFW's work called Both Flesh and Not.
@donaldogrady3504
@donaldogrady3504 2 года назад
“He’d have a breakdown, then he’d have an explosive growth forward.” Yeah. That’s what it’s like.
@Searchinmano
@Searchinmano 11 лет назад
servono a tutti i costi i sottotitoli in italiano!
@drewp9819
@drewp9819 4 месяца назад
Really interesting
@RoundMidnight111
@RoundMidnight111 11 лет назад
does anyone know any video documentary on DFW?
@8xngc
@8xngc 13 лет назад
7:10 tennis, trigonometry, tornadoes
@ernststravoblofeld
@ernststravoblofeld 5 лет назад
Does anyone else enjoy listening to DFW talk in interviews, but not enjoy his writing? I don't know why I feel that way.
@markkennedy7404
@markkennedy7404 5 лет назад
Agreed, I can't read his work.
@BelatedCommiseration
@BelatedCommiseration 10 лет назад
David Foster Wallace definitely sounds like someone I want to read...although I knew nothing of him until I heard of his suicide...such a shame to see a lifes work through that prism...got find Infinite jest and give a good read through
@nickthomas6206
@nickthomas6206 10 лет назад
read infinite jest, you will never be the same.
@tomitstube
@tomitstube 10 лет назад
it's the same with me, i discovered wallace after his death, i think people here are making too much of a "looking for clues" with his suicide, it's where he came from and it's impossible not to notice. 25:10. wallace takes you on these cascading descriptions of tedium, the mundane, and everyday life that leave you with a foreboding you weren't aware of, you can feel his despair, it's very real. enjoy, the man was a literary genius.
@BelatedCommiseration
@BelatedCommiseration 10 лет назад
I have just got a copy of Infinite Jest and am reading through it! Very interesting and I can see why he is compared a lot to Pynchon, although his descriptions of intellectual adults kind of remind me of the J.D Salinger Glass family novels. Still...only on page 40 out of nearly a 1000...so better reserve total judgement :)
@tomitstube
@tomitstube 10 лет назад
BelatedCommiseration happy reading.
@marioriospinot
@marioriospinot 8 лет назад
Nice.
@leonwatcher1
@leonwatcher1 9 лет назад
Hell of a thing to hear Postmodern and tradition in the same sentence.
@cougarboy1970
@cougarboy1970 6 лет назад
Again, IJ is a post postmodern novel and hyper-realistic. I believe Wikipedia classifies IJ as "hysterical realism and post postmodern" when listing its genre, if memory serves.
@SuperTrancend
@SuperTrancend 13 лет назад
can't wait for the pale king
@brandoncrow3944
@brandoncrow3944 6 лет назад
It's amazing
@mdqquinn2513
@mdqquinn2513 5 лет назад
unbelievable how DFW cult has made so much of Wallace's failures...it's almost as they need his intellectual-jock-sensitive anti-hero to be more than he is...or could be....cultists desperately assure us DFW is great and 'see" greatness in his work, like spiritualists reading tea leaves, that simply does NOT exist and is impossible to substantiate. his work doesn't support it. DFW would be the first to acknowledge his failure to achieve anything ever resembling great! No wonder he committed suicide. To fail to live up to 'boy genius' laurels, forever, each day, hour, and minute contributing it's mite to the solid accretions of failure is insupportable. He had intellect, but lacked the transformative imagination necessary for greatness. Like his tennis career, halfway great signified nothing in literature. A teacher, critic and essayist would have been a better metier...however, there is no glory in criticism...very sad. Zadie Smith's essay on DFW & Infinite Jest was the best...An A for participation.
@GinoTheSinner
@GinoTheSinner Год назад
40:10 wow
@DeadBoarHEAD
@DeadBoarHEAD 12 лет назад
how can one live : godly
@trylle2
@trylle2 12 лет назад
This doc. could be much longer
@mikdavis2944
@mikdavis2944 9 лет назад
+oblong, about 22 minutes into this interview with Christopher Lydon - he describes himself as "fortunate" after having seen the people around him in the halfway house (ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-qm_u3YoL8s8.html). As far as his depression goes, the "Trillaphon" essay from 1984 (in the new Reader of his work) does a lot to illuminate his problems and viewpoint..and with a very clever Joycean ear. Thank you.
@ivanpb1983
@ivanpb1983 10 лет назад
This is pure audio.
@ivailopetrov2827
@ivailopetrov2827 3 года назад
28:00 he is right, we used to wonder what other places were like, now I know without even having to go there at all.. therefore I don't want to do anything
@JC-og2rc
@JC-og2rc 8 лет назад
28:00 - 30:00
@debrasnook4714
@debrasnook4714 Год назад
18:00 mm - 19 Offending with irony 32:32 - 34:13 Parts work
@duewhit310
@duewhit310 2 года назад
Whats stopping me from reading IJ is that i feel footnotes in a novel are just such a digression. Like fuck it.
@digital_urn9250
@digital_urn9250 4 месяца назад
“Dooo doo doo doo doo doooo.” When I ever I think of DFW I think of that tick of his.
@Aiborz
@Aiborz 7 лет назад
Very interesting that the publisher Michael Pitsch(?) talks very much like David Foster Wallace. probably picked up his mannerism and tone from studying him and his work.
@Aiborz
@Aiborz 7 лет назад
35:30
@markschmidt5253
@markschmidt5253 2 года назад
*Peach
@worksforme7198
@worksforme7198 11 лет назад
Ok so where is the video?
@Misserbi
@Misserbi 7 месяцев назад
shell shock or separation anxiety hitting a wall
@silvanahhas1814
@silvanahhas1814 3 года назад
DFW would def have an invite to my tea party; he would be the first to stir the cream inside my teacup amongst the many others in line worthy of the spoon. 🃏👑 keep writing and keep kuming smiling 😊
@ankursingh1912
@ankursingh1912 2 года назад
He ded.
@silvanahhas1814
@silvanahhas1814 2 года назад
@@ankursingh1912 very aware that he is , but he’s still coming to my tea party. 🥰🐇💀
@AlexanderLaurence
@AlexanderLaurence 12 лет назад
photo by CARLA GAHR
@dunsbroccoli2588
@dunsbroccoli2588 4 года назад
And his ghost cringes from the other side.
@dunsbroccoli2588
@dunsbroccoli2588 4 года назад
Nothing is more self congratulating than the RU-vid comments of a DFW fan.
@edmoore
@edmoore 10 лет назад
The end notes being on just one stereo channel is extremely annoying if you're listening through headphones. Whoever is responsible for that should feel really bad.
@hotpastramisandwich
@hotpastramisandwich 10 лет назад
I think that's meant to take you out of things the same way flipping 600 pages back to find the note and read it would.
@nickthomas6206
@nickthomas6206 10 лет назад
jeburke exactly. watch the speaker. observe.
@shawnburnham1
@shawnburnham1 Год назад
14:00
@madaleine0n864
@madaleine0n864 5 лет назад
Oh dear.....' which allows the reader to be not just someone else,.....but someone else.....
@DGMUSICisGOOD
@DGMUSICisGOOD 12 лет назад
also please upvote so others can get smarter too
@renzo6490
@renzo6490 Год назад
Why would it seem logical that Easterners would opt for a house without a basement? And why in Illinois, where the winters are harsh, would any structure have a shallow foundation?
@schmetterling4477
@schmetterling4477 Год назад
Somebody went cheap on the construction. :-)
@1SpiritEye
@1SpiritEye 6 лет назад
What a juxtaposition of such a depressed mind, set in neural pathways of deep intellect. ItsMost interesting how he says the depression is sometimes the catalyst for the deeper understanding. The bible says that pain makes you grow. Too bad his pain consumed him.I think hearing his story can help other depressed people. When you think of astronomy and dark matter, we are made if dark matter and light. The dark matter holds the light together, so although we want to be light mostly- the dark matter is still required outwisenthe light has no ability to stay grouped.His dark matter Consumed his light.
@dontpanic00xx
@dontpanic00xx 11 лет назад
Did you watch the whole video and then come on here to make a silly ironic tribute to him? You could very well consider him talentless, but I think this video shows at the very least he was pretty brilliant, and thoughtful about what he did. Where did you discover he was so bad to the people around him?
@sacredguineapig9397
@sacredguineapig9397 8 месяцев назад
He was no Vonnegut 😂
@saxophones
@saxophones 11 лет назад
RADIO, BRUV
@Waynekingftw
@Waynekingftw 11 лет назад
I don't agree with you, but I fucking loled. Well played.
@Bodybuddha
@Bodybuddha 11 лет назад
the sky is blue
@thejudgeholden
@thejudgeholden 12 лет назад
TLP rocks
@ryanhobson5414
@ryanhobson5414 7 лет назад
As a creative person, the cliche of depression giving the artist material to work with is just that, a cliche. Seems odd that someone obviously as smart and spiritually in-tune would believe this cliche.
@starofcctv94
@starofcctv94 7 лет назад
I'm not sure it is. Depression often makes people stay isolated on their own, for months at a time with nothing but their thoughts. A lot of time to think about life, happiness, loneliness etc... depression isn't required for these things obviously but it can force you to confront things you might not have done.
@More-than-ladyboys
@More-than-ladyboys 7 лет назад
ryan hobson On what do you base your statement?
@magneto44
@magneto44 7 лет назад
ryan hobson no one has ever created any lasting art out of happiness
@BaileySchoelen
@BaileySchoelen 7 лет назад
ya I think what people don't realize is it's the artist not the depression making the art and that its a common side effect to humans, not exculsively artists. It actual seems to get in the way a great deal more than inspire, I would imagine
@prettyprrrrettaygood
@prettyprrrrettaygood 7 лет назад
"in the day to day trenches of adult existence, banal platitudes can have a life or death importance. or so I wish to suggest to you on this dry and lovely morning" maybe some things can both be cliche and have validity..?
@DGMUSICisGOOD
@DGMUSICisGOOD 12 лет назад
There may not be something wrong with 6-8 hours of TV, but it is nice to remember that someone is trying to sell and offer seduction to you for 6-8 hours a day. In a time in our country when it is hard to find and commit to things that are important and good. Our experience is weird now, thrice removed from the real world. What at stake is, human agency, of how we experience the world. Would I go to the ocean or watch an amazing documentary about it? Who would want to live, when you can watch?
@tedcushman3209
@tedcushman3209 9 лет назад
Well I'll be dipped in sheep dip and launched into Vermont by frickin catapult.
@CaptainPancakes
@CaptainPancakes 8 лет назад
+Ted Cushman Technically it was Canada, as Vermont, NH, Maine are all now part of The Great Concavity (Canadian soil)..
@mrzed2349
@mrzed2349 7 лет назад
Nicholas Julian hahahaha since when
@audreyh6628
@audreyh6628 7 лет назад
What an unnecessary jab at Sylvia Plath at the end. We see here an attitude that is sadly redolent with so many others; that a man writing about the minutiae, repetitiveness and tedium of everyday depression makes him a brave genius of scope (just like Joyce!), but a woman of equal talent who does so is fobbed off as 'merely' obsessing over 'a small melancholy.' Plath's work is painted here as somehow myopic in the eyes of Costello, the apparently proud, self-affirmed bigot. He needs to give Brief Interviews With Hideous Men a closer reading as he obviously missed the many vital lessons Wallace laid so artfully there for him to find.
@Natopera
@Natopera 6 лет назад
Women can never feel as deeply as a man, nor be as rational. Yes I am being sarcastic. No need to make a comparison like that with Plath. Both were clearly deeply depressed people. Being a man doesn't make one some how magically more poetic due to depression nor women less. Hemingway might be a better comparison. Plath was writing more or less up to her death. Hemingway, like Foster Wallace, killed himself when he found he couldn't write any more. You don't have to tear down a woman to build up a man.
@willnill7946
@willnill7946 6 лет назад
Plath was psycho
@mdqquinn2513
@mdqquinn2513 5 лет назад
Ad Hoc. exactly... DFW was his generation's Holden Caulfield...the average bro marijuana culture mashup...long hair & top knot prob has its own wiki references & fan club...(laughing at how many fans & 'dudes' say he was ahead of his time for his hairstyle!)...with average bro sport culture, overlaid with the struggling intellectual weighed down by his mighty, troubled yet hidden visionary 'genius' (of course)...he hits all the 'cool' archetypes wo ever producing anything to live up to the boy genius or even, as he matured, any genius...yes, he was earnest and based on a few measly tidbits, his generation decided to adore him and award him their coolest bro writer participation trophy... once DFW realized he had hadn't anything to sustain the hero-worship or deserve hailing as a visionary, and would only fail and fail and fail, year after year to live up to the hype...I'm sure he saw an excruciating future for someone who had collected too easily & too early notice of future expectation & greatness he couldn't live up to...
@justamoteofdust
@justamoteofdust 3 года назад
@@willnill7946 yeah, a psycho who made damn sure that her kids are safe from the smoke of that oven before she killed herself. 🙄
@uslitmag6599
@uslitmag6599 12 лет назад
Big fans of DFW over here. Who's is the next big mind for us? maybe you? submit your work to uslitmag.co.nr
@Rob_132
@Rob_132 10 лет назад
Ironically -- Sorry David -- I'm learning more about this genius through this documentary (and/or interviews) on RU-vid. I don't watch too much TV; I do watch too many "pop-culture" movies. But isn't it interesting, especially apropos of his explanation of documentaries presenting life-near-the-sea versus actually visiting the sea, I'm learning about his man through a collage of 2min. to 1.5hr. documentaries/interviews never having read a piece of his work. Regardless, I'm appreciating his story, and at least (possibly more) aware of my consumeristic/comoditized life. Look forward to reading -- at least -- some of his short stories.
@harleygough
@harleygough 5 лет назад
"Nigga be a leader not a follower" - Master P
@mattisprettycool
@mattisprettycool 11 лет назад
your loss.
@ChrisDragotta
@ChrisDragotta 3 года назад
What would have said about the way it is now? Maybe he checked out because he know where it was going. And...Didn't Moody off himself, too? Lesson for all of you: Don't write if you want to not kill yourself.
@schmetterling4477
@schmetterling4477 3 года назад
Where is it going? Please enlighten us.
@sterlingwalter6225
@sterlingwalter6225 9 лет назад
This idea that I am alone with my thoughts and no one understands me is b.s ---l.Wittgenstein showed us we have no thoughts that are not put into words, and we all can learn the words, so we all can/do have your thoughts. why is it DFW gets more play than LW ? because LW was onto something, and DFW goes down a dead end trail....They don't want you learning anything.
@metatron5199
@metatron5199 7 лет назад
Not at all the case, Wallace is a post modern writer which takes directly after many of the traditions birthed from modernism one being the the limitation of language by Wittigestien , so to say Wallace is not aware of this is just flat out false. I'm not going to waste my time explaining the differences between modernism and post modernism, it essentially can be summed up as the modernist tended to be more optimistic about the human condition while the post modernist tend to be pessimistic, these core feelings are than expressed through the many different intellectuals tools we have to explain reality and in this specific case literary tools ect....
@audreyh6628
@audreyh6628 7 лет назад
@Sterlin Walter - lol. I'll give you a couple of blaringly obvious reasons that have nothing to do with your conspiracy theory. Wittgenstein is a philosopher...he wrote one book while he was alive...in the 1900's... Wallace is a contemporary fiction writer who wrote in English. That's enough. I don't know why I bother answering things like this. Sigh.
@sterlingwalter6225
@sterlingwalter6225 6 лет назад
you're right, Total Noise.
@cougarboy1970
@cougarboy1970 6 лет назад
You are mistaken about Wittgenstein. Yes, he once believed that we have no thoughts that are not put into words but that was before someone flipped him off and in his anger, suddenly realized he was wrong--we have a shared experience that often needs no words to convey. From that point on his ideas took a 180. As for DFW, he nails this early LW idea with Hal in IJ and the later LW with Don Gately. And what a beautiful trail DFW takes us down in IJ.
@sterlingwalter6225
@sterlingwalter6225 6 лет назад
thanks, I appreciate your update, and will keep this in mind when I pick up IJ again.
@user-ds6ov8jr5n
@user-ds6ov8jr5n Месяц назад
Suicide. Think of jumping from a burning building.
@joestratton
@joestratton 12 лет назад
You lose, SunStrokeCactus.
@HomeAtLast501
@HomeAtLast501 3 года назад
These excerpts from his writing sound like sophomoric quasi-insights presented in over-obvious ways. I'm not getting why he's revered as such a genius.
@schmetterling4477
@schmetterling4477 3 года назад
Because somebody needed book sales and did a wonderful PR job for him. I think he understood that.
@mechnomaniac
@mechnomaniac 2 года назад
truly, and sadly your own loss. but understandable.
@HomeAtLast501
@HomeAtLast501 2 года назад
@@mechnomaniac God bless you if you found this enlightening.
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