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Timothy Burke's avatar

I think there's an argument to be made that what you're calling Left-Straussianism is awfully close to something that I think has a really different genealogy and intent, which is a sort of Habermasian understanding of what a public sphere ought to be. E.g., that an intellectual ought to try and operate within a democratic public sphere where there are boundaries of what is and is not acceptable to say. (With that public sphere not being the same as all *culture* or artistic work, where those boundaries might not apply.) There's also something in the mix that's about the "linguistic turn" typically ascribed to the influence of poststructuralist and postmodernist thought, which is not so much about policing the plebs as it is about believing that speech and representation are constitutive of social practice and social structure generally, and that an intellectual ought to be more conscious of and instrumentally deliberate about how they participate in that process. (A view that is at odds with the Habermasian idea of an ideal public sphere as a site of formal conversations between peers that ultimately constitute the substance of democratic life.)

While I agree with you that I dislike people feeling they have to apologize for attention to--or republishing of--odious figures, I feel as if you're edging here into implying that it's wrong to really dump on an odious figure, which older Podhoretz unquestionably is. I don't think anything that Moser says substantively about Podhoretz' sociopolitical views in his maturity is wrong in that sense. And if that's a fine and worthy thing to say, then the interesting problem is one that often comes into thinking about the lives of intellectuals and artists who seem to have been interesting people at one moment but who became monsters of one kind or another later on. And I think that problem admits to many different kinds of workings, including a sense that later monstrosity forces a new reading of what came before it. That is hardly a new quandry that afflicts contemporary leftists in a new way: it's a very old moral dilemma with deep roots in Western thought, and "Left Straussians" are hardly the first group of thinkers or leaders to believe that trying to separate the innocent seedling from the monstrous tree is a dangerous exercise that might make future monsters.

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Naomi Kanakia's avatar

I had never heard of Left Straussianism before! That is sort of what those nerds believe in though isn't it? I've never particularly understood why we can't simply trust people to make up their own minds and act in their own self-interest. And on a practical level, the ability of the center-left to brainwash people seems very limited--they mostly seem to persist in thinking things we don't want them too!

I didn't know that Podhorrors was so bad. When I read MAKING IT, I had no sense of him as being worse than Robert Novak or Will Safire or William B Fuckley or Charles Krauthammer or any of those other nerds who used to take up space on the Washington Post's op-ed page. In a world where Donald Trump was president, was it really such a big deal to 'platform' a relatively typical neo-con?

Excellent post, as always!

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