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60. Fascinated to Presume: Zadie Smith's Powerful Essay on Fiction

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Manage episode 442163897 series 3603759
Content provided by Jan and Miles Menafee and Miles Menafee. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Jan and Miles Menafee and Miles Menafee or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

“I have closed novels and stared at their back covers for a long moment and felt known in a way I cannot honestly say I have felt known by many real-life interactions with human beings, or even by myself.” ~ Zadie Smith On this week’s episode of Real Ballers Read, we dive into one of the most thought-provoking essays by the brilliant Zadie Smith, “Fascinated to Presume: In Defense of Fiction”. Here’s a fun contribution to the conversation started by @booksarepopculture on Black bookstagram’s preference for fiction or nonfiction. What’s your go-to genre?? The bros got a whole *concept map* of all the connections we made to Zadie Smith’s essay. This was a fun conversation that somehow covered bell hooks, Toni Morrison, Captain Underpants and the new culture wars in the same episode. Tune in wherever you listen to podcasts. . . .

2:57 The Story Behind this episode

7:42 The first paragraph of “Fascinated to Presume”

9:24 Having fluid or “inconsistent” personalities

10:56 Ways we’ve felt more secure

12:26 Relating to fictional characters

13:34 To Kill A Mockingbird

16:05 Your Blues Ain’t Like Mine

19:36 Feeling seen by people vs. books

21:52 What happens to people when the news cameras leave?

23:47 The Dance of Human Interaction and its absence in reading

26:27 Trick Mirror

28:16 The Potential for Radical Change

32:44 American Dirt

38:02 Is it irresponsible to write from someone else’s point of view?

42:10 What does harm mean in a literary sense?

46:41 Trigger warnings at the start of books?

47:31 Sisters of the Yam by bell hooks

52:18 Stanley Crouch

54:16 John Howard Griffin and Black Like Me

55:45 Limits of empathy

57:38 The illusion of the self

59:30 Reading as a writer vs. as a casual reader

1:01 Consumerism as an identity

1:06 The Reader decides to believe or not

1:07 What we want from good fiction

1:14 Difference between acting and writing

1:16 Cultural Appropriation as a verbal container

1:23 Does this essay convince us to read more classics?

1:31 Hector Abad quote

--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/realballersread/support
  continue reading

100 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 442163897 series 3603759
Content provided by Jan and Miles Menafee and Miles Menafee. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Jan and Miles Menafee and Miles Menafee or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

“I have closed novels and stared at their back covers for a long moment and felt known in a way I cannot honestly say I have felt known by many real-life interactions with human beings, or even by myself.” ~ Zadie Smith On this week’s episode of Real Ballers Read, we dive into one of the most thought-provoking essays by the brilliant Zadie Smith, “Fascinated to Presume: In Defense of Fiction”. Here’s a fun contribution to the conversation started by @booksarepopculture on Black bookstagram’s preference for fiction or nonfiction. What’s your go-to genre?? The bros got a whole *concept map* of all the connections we made to Zadie Smith’s essay. This was a fun conversation that somehow covered bell hooks, Toni Morrison, Captain Underpants and the new culture wars in the same episode. Tune in wherever you listen to podcasts. . . .

2:57 The Story Behind this episode

7:42 The first paragraph of “Fascinated to Presume”

9:24 Having fluid or “inconsistent” personalities

10:56 Ways we’ve felt more secure

12:26 Relating to fictional characters

13:34 To Kill A Mockingbird

16:05 Your Blues Ain’t Like Mine

19:36 Feeling seen by people vs. books

21:52 What happens to people when the news cameras leave?

23:47 The Dance of Human Interaction and its absence in reading

26:27 Trick Mirror

28:16 The Potential for Radical Change

32:44 American Dirt

38:02 Is it irresponsible to write from someone else’s point of view?

42:10 What does harm mean in a literary sense?

46:41 Trigger warnings at the start of books?

47:31 Sisters of the Yam by bell hooks

52:18 Stanley Crouch

54:16 John Howard Griffin and Black Like Me

55:45 Limits of empathy

57:38 The illusion of the self

59:30 Reading as a writer vs. as a casual reader

1:01 Consumerism as an identity

1:06 The Reader decides to believe or not

1:07 What we want from good fiction

1:14 Difference between acting and writing

1:16 Cultural Appropriation as a verbal container

1:23 Does this essay convince us to read more classics?

1:31 Hector Abad quote

--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/realballersread/support
  continue reading

100 episodes

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