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P M Buchan's avatar

That Guardian roundtable made me reflect on one of Helen Lewis’s recent substacks about the politicisation of arts criticism and what a stifling bore it is to read aspiring intellectuals praise or condemn a film based on whether it reinforces their own moral viewpoints.

How difficult is it to engage with the a piece of art based on whether it achieves what it sets out to achieve, demonstrates great technical craftsmanship or ENTERTAINS rather than whether it flatters us and strokes our fragile egos?!?

I never thought I’d reach a stage in my life where I looked back fondly on the idea that art should challenge our preconceptions, but here we are, with 75% or critics seemingly determined to praise and reinforce only the dullest and least imaginative of achievements, and poised to condemn anybody who achieves something vaguely interesting.

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Rose George's avatar

It’s called civil inattention, the ability to ignore people in plain sight. Except of course the Höss family were engaging in hideously uncivil inattention. Such a great essay, missus, thank you.

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