Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Eula Biss’ ‘Having’ confronts contradict­ions of capitalism

- By Ann Levin

When it comes to capitalism, Eula Biss is a skeptic. Yet, as a university professor and homeowner, she’s invested in the system. Out of those contradict­ions, she’s written a sensationa­l new book, “Having and Being Had,” which tries to figure out whether it’s possible to live an ethical life in a capitalist society.

Biss, whose “On Immunity” explored the myths and science of vaccines, begins this book in 2014, when she bought her first house in a historical­ly Black Chicago neighborho­od where whites were starting to move in.

She kept a diary and, when the time came to write the book, gave herself a set of rules. Each section had to start in the present tense, include an exchange with another person, etc. It might sound arbitrary, but the rules grounded her abstractio­ns in the nitty-gritty of domestic life.

“My adult life,” she writes, “can be divided into two distinct parts — the time before I owned a washing machine and the time after” — and that’s because the so-called

labor-saving appliance gave her more time to write.

At the end, she wonders whether she’s written “a collection of poems” or “an essay in episodes.” Ultimately, it doesn’t matter — the results are enthrallin­g.

Her allusive blend of autobiogra­phy and criticism may remind some of “The Argonauts” by Maggie Nelson, a friend whose name pops up in the text alongside those of other artists and intellectu­als who have influenced her work. Yet, line for line, her epigrammat­ic style perhaps most recalls that of Emily

BOOK REVIEW

Dickinson in its radical compressio­n of images and ideas into a few chiseled lines.

Happily for readers, Biss wears her erudition lightly. Since she evidently slogged through Thomas Piketty’s mammoth “Capitalism in the Twenty-First Century,” not to mention works by Karl Marx and Adam Smith, that means we don’t have to.

Also, she’s really funny, with a barbed but understate­d wit. At an ice rink where she’s taken her son for a skating lesson, another mother watching from the bleachers notices she’s reading John Kenneth Galbraith’s “The Affluent Society.” When Biss expresses her reservatio­ns about our economic system, the woman, whose husband is a financial analyst, “seems slightly offended on behalf of capitalism.”

Keenly aware of her privilege as a white, well-educated woman who has benefited from a wide network of family and friends, Biss has written a book that is, in effect, the opposite of capitalism in its willingnes­s to acknowledg­e that everything she’s accomplish­ed rests on the labor of others.

 ??  ?? “Having and Being Had” by Eula Biss (Riverhead, $26)
“Having and Being Had” by Eula Biss (Riverhead, $26)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States