There's an account of craving the bad in those thinkers. They're just compulsively drawn to some things that are bad. For milosh, i don't think he did crave the bad. Ver, no, he didn't. But he portrays other people as craving the bad. Why has putten still got support in russia after what he's doing? I mean, why are the trump supporters? Bt, tol you if i read froud or i read rich, there's some account of why people might crave thebad. Crave the bad as a bad, a bad thing that it's good. What's the missing part of the theory the bad things are attractive
As a little girl, Cynthia Haven loved reading classic works of literature. At sixteen, she began her career as a reporter. And years later, those two interests converged as they led her to interview and write books about three writers and thinkers whom she also came to call mentors: René Girard, Czeslaw Milosz, and Joseph Brodsky.
Cynthia joined Tyler to discuss what she’s gleaned from each of the three, including what traits they have in common, why her biography of Girard had to come from outside academia, Milosz’s reaction to the Berkley Free Speech Movement, Girard’s greatest talent—and flaw—as a thinker, whether Brodsky will fall down the memory hole, why he was so terrible on Ukraine, why Cynthia’s early career was much like The Devil Wears Prada, the failings of Twitter, and more.
Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links.
Recorded May 18th, 2022 Other ways to connect