Texarkana Gazette

Michelle Dean on the women writers who held their own

“Sharp: The Women Who Made an Art of Having an Opinion” by Michelle Dean; Grove Press (362 pages, $26)

- By Matthew Price

The 10 writers Michelle Dean surveys in her new book—Dorothy Parker, Mary McCarthy, Joan Didion, Hannah Arendt, Susan Sontag and Nora Ephron among them—were variously called “sharp” throughout their lives. The epithet described a forceful mode of speaking and writing. But it was also used as a rebuke: “Sharp” implied speaking and writing out of turn; behaving improperly, even rudely.

But these women more than held their own in the boys’ club of American letters. They wrote books and articles for The New Yorker and other prestigiou­s outlets and made argument a way of life. “Through their exceptiona­l talent, they were granted a kind of intellectu­al equality to men other women had no hope of,” Dean writes at the beginning of “Sharp: The Women Who

Made an Art of Having an Opinion.”

Combining biography and criticism, Dean is often shrewd in her judgments. If early chapters on Parker and English journalist Rebecca West feel thin, Dean does show that these figures were nobody’s victims. The book picks up steam with Arendt and the debate over totalitari­anism and the Holocaust. (Arendt covered the trial of Nazi Adolf Eichmann and wrote “The Origins of Totalitari­anism.”)

Arendt found an unlikely ally in novelist anda critic Mary McCarthy, a central figure here. McCarthy’s fiction (“The Group,” “Cannibals and Missionari­es”) has not aged terribly well, but she wrote memorable sentences and literary eliterary criticism still worth reading. She was a notorious talker who shined ini social settings yet had to put up with being called catty. Her critics, Dean writes, “did not like what she saw when she looked at the world, or at least they found her somehow impolite for recording it in prose.”

Film critic Pauline Kael, who got up everybody’s nose, was also accused of impolitene­ss. It’s a silly charge, of course—an instance of a woman being called out for behavior that would go unremarked upon in a man. In the New York literary world where most of these figures circulated, writing criticism meant pulling no punches.

Central to the arguments of their time, these writers are canonical figures, whose writing endures, period. Dean could stress this more robustly. Sontag’s musings on high culture were passionate­ly discussed, while Joan Didion brought a cool touch to her reportage about California and elsewhere. Janet Malcolm’s controvers­ial writings have called into question the very nature of journalist­ic practice.

Others, like Renata Adler, who famously eviscerate­d Kael in a New York Review of Books takedown, suffered a decline in reputation— she is now enjoying a much-deserved revival with reissues of her nonfiction and the cult novels “Speedboat” and “Pitch Dark.”

Dean is sometimes at pains to place these figures in relationsh­ip to the feminist movement of the late 1960s and early ’70s. “I ran into quite a lot of people who wanted to cut these women out of history precisely because they took advantage of their talents, and did so without turning those talents to the explicit support of feminism,” Dean writes.

None were cause joiners in the convention­al sense. Spectators and commentato­rs, yes; sloganeers, no. Didion took on the politics of feminism in a 1972 essay. She found much what she heard to be childish if not naive.

Dean hardly underplays the sexism and the condescens­ion meted out to Kael and Co. “But sisters argue, sometimes to the point of estrangeme­nt,” she observes. The strength of “Sharp” lies in the way Dean stands up for the “individual personalit­y” of each of her subjects. And they were individual­s, all.

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