How to Read a President, with Carlos Lozada, Vinson Cunningham, and Curtis Sittenfeld
May 3, 2024
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Guests Carlos Lozada, Vinson Cunningham, and Curtis Sittenfeld discuss mining political memoirs for truths about politicians, imagining private lives of former presidents, and exploring political figures through fiction. They cover insights from memoirs, complexities of portraying Obama in fiction, and challenges of crafting intimate scenes in novels based on public figures.
Political memoirs offer insights into politicians by revealing both included and omitted information, allowing for deeper understanding of public figures.
Fictional novels like those by Curtis Sittenfeld provide thought-provoking explorations of public figures' lives through alternate scenarios, challenging reader perceptions.
Deep dives
Exploring the Depths of Political Figures through Fiction
Fiction offers a unique lens to delve into the minds of political figures, as seen in novels by Curtis Sittenfeld that speculate on the lives of public figures like Hillary Clinton and Laura Bush. Sittenfeld's approach combines two years of research with careful gossip, crafting plausible characters grounded in real events but woven with imaginative narratives.
The Intrigue of Reimagining Alternate Political Histories
In works like 'Roddam,' where Hillary Clinton's life takes an alternate path, and 'American Wife,' based on Laura Bush, Sittenfeld constructs narratives that navigate the complexities of these figures by considering plausible scenarios shaped by fictional alterations in the timeline. By subtly changing names and timelines, Sittenfeld creates thought-provoking explorations of key political figures.
Probing the Intimacy of Political Personalities in Novels
Sittenfeld's novels underscore the unique intimacy and resonance of exploring public figures' lives through fiction compared to visual media adaptations. The personalized narratives written in first-person perspective delve deeper into the characters' inner worlds, fostering reader participation and challenging preconceptions of these public figures.
Novelistic Liberation from Insider Constraints
Sittenfeld's position as an outsider in the political sphere allows her the creative freedom to venture into uncharted territories, unencumbered by insider affiliations or potential social repercussions. This freedom enables her to craft intricate narratives that challenge and engage readers in thought-provoking explorations of the lives and minds of prominent political figures.
When politicians publish their autobiographies, often they reveal more than intended. On this week’s On the Media, find out how one reporter sifts through political memoirs for truths about politicians and the people they lead. Plus, in vivid detail, a novelist imagines the private lives of former presidents.
[01:00] Host Brooke Gladstone speaks with Carlos Lozada, New York Times Opinion columnist and a co-host of the weekly “Matter of Opinion” podcast. Lozada explains how he mines political memoirs for deeper understanding of our political figures by examining what they include and what they omit.
[16:59] Brooke speaks with Vinson Cunningham, author of the new novel Great Expectations. Cunningham, who is now a theater critic at The New Yorker, worked on the 2008 Obama campaign and later in the White House. Great Expectations is inspired by that time in his life, and the difficult-to-read candidate for the presidency.
[35:19] Brooke interviews novelist Curtis Sittenfeld about her exploration of the minds of political figures through fiction, first in American Wife (inspired by Laura Bush) and next in Rodham, which considers what Hilary Clinton’s life would have looked like if she had never married Bill. They discuss the questions that led Sittenfeld to write those novels and why fiction based on real people makes readers so uncomfortable — especially the sex scenes.
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