Ann Althouse Summary:
“Reading it today, I find that I Am Charlotte Simmons agitates and excites me once more. It is a profoundly pessimistic novel…”
“… not because of its interest in conservative ideas or its sex panic, but because it refuses to grant its characters a moment’s reprieve from the social system that it so brutally and correctly indicts. Perhaps my optimism is simply self-protective; I have taught college students for over a decade now, and I like to believe that they have experiences that cannot be reduced to the quest for social dominance, that their desire to belong does not always end in the dreariest conformity.”
Writes Merve Emre, in “An Unsentimental Education/Tom Wolfe’s I Am Charlotte Simmons summons the romantic vision of the university as an unblighted Eden to mock it through the downfall of one of its deceived mortals” (NYRB).
I know you’re unlikely to have the needed subscription, but that essay will appear in a new edition of the novel, coming out next month (so wait for that edition if you’re thinking of buying the book).
And I would encourage you to click that link if only to see the top of the article, which is illustrated with an Elliott Erwitt photograph, “Women with a sculpture personifying the alma mater at Columbia University, New York City, 1955.”
That’s one of the best photos I’ve ever seen! And it is evocative today, with Columbia so much in the news.