Sentimentality
So what's the problem? Why is that word still used as a put-down? We all like a good cry, don't we? Speaking for myself I love it when Dickens emotes over a dead kiddy or Richard Curtis makes amends to Van Gogh. I don't find such moments embarrassing. I don't find them cheap. Life is sad and tears are the proper response to a lot of what goes on in it. Is making people weep any less respectable than making them laugh?
We've all been intimidated by Oscar Wilde- and his bon mot about Little Nell. He's made it uncool to be moved by fiction. And yet Wilde was the most sentimental writer going. Have you read the Selfish Giant or the Happy Prince? He makes Dickens look stoical.
Wilde- and the twentieth century opinion makers that followed him- had daddy issues with the Victorians. Their mockery isn't thought through. It's instinctive and defensive. The Victorians were sentimental, therefore sentimentality is bad. But it's the Twenty First century now, the Victorians are our great-great-great grandparents- and it's time we dropped our great-great grandparents feud with them.
We've all been intimidated by Oscar Wilde- and his bon mot about Little Nell. He's made it uncool to be moved by fiction. And yet Wilde was the most sentimental writer going. Have you read the Selfish Giant or the Happy Prince? He makes Dickens look stoical.
Wilde- and the twentieth century opinion makers that followed him- had daddy issues with the Victorians. Their mockery isn't thought through. It's instinctive and defensive. The Victorians were sentimental, therefore sentimentality is bad. But it's the Twenty First century now, the Victorians are our great-great-great grandparents- and it's time we dropped our great-great grandparents feud with them.
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Yesterday I was watching a DVD issued by my daughter's nursery school of footage taken of her classmates throughout the year. There was a slideshow with photos at the end set to about six country songs, which is a style of music I don't listen to much (not because I dislike it particularly, but because I'm not exposed to it). Six songs... and all of them about children. Two of them were men singing about how their little girls growing up make them want to cry.
Six songs about children and how we should let them be innocent. I think that's more tearjerkers about kids than rock music has produced in sixty years. It made me wonder: why doesn't rock and roll talk about being parents? Is it because rock is the province of teens and anger and a sort of permanent adolescence? Why do you have to switch musical genres to address an experience common to grown-ups?
It was just a powerful moment of 'wait, what'?
Jethro Tull, "No Lullaby"
But then, the process of Ian Anderson growing up is the process of him leaving the Neverland of Rock-and-Rule, though he continued to make good music.
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One reason the Beatles have lasted so well is because they transcended the genre.
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I do find it astonishing to come back to bands decades later and hear them singing the same kind of music they did when they were 18 and angry. It sounds rather ridiculous coming out of married men with children and sometimes grandchildren.
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The conclusion of Home Alone had me in tears
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BINGO:
Stealing this.
Re: BINGO:
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As to the Victorians, I suspect their issues were neither greater in number or complexity than our own. It certainly seems like they get put on the retroactive therapy couch more than any other historical group, however.
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I tear up at Shakespeare all the time, but, interestingly, no-one ever accuses him of sentimentality. Is the death of Little Nell any trashier than the death of Cordelia? I don't think so.
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It's the same reason I think the piss take is such a basic building block of Brit humor.
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(Anonymous) 2010-06-07 04:22 pm (UTC)(link)no subject
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Diana was, I think, almost a singularity, but if the tendency to feel personally threatened by anything that triggers empathic sorrow is on the decline in the UK, then I'm glad to hear it.
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There's a continuing debate in the British media over the significance of the public reaction to Diana's death. Some think it shows we're lightening up emotionally- and that's a good thing, others deplore it as unBritish.
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