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Tom Wharton

The Weekly Wrap for Saturday, 19 May 2018

DEEP DIVE
Novelist and journalist Tom Wolfe died this week aged 88. The eccentric, sardonic and supremely talented Wolfe leaves a legacy that touches just about every corner of the english-speaking world. As the features pages of any newspaper will confirm, he left an indelible mark on journalism. But more importantly, he also altered the way in which America saw itself. 
A jauntily dressed Wolfe on release of 'The Bonfire of the Vanities'. PHOTO: Mark Richards
His subjects
The cross-section of society that Wolfe interviewed and portrayed is baffling. It stretches from the acid-downing proto-hippies of the Merry Pranksters all the way to the suicidally brave astronauts of Project Mercury.

The essay - or rather, the series of notes - that propelled Wolfe to minor stardom is '"There Goes (Varoom! Varoom!) That Kandy-Kolored (Thphhhhhh!) Tangerine-Flake Streamline Baby (Rahghhh!) Around the Bend (Brummmmmmmmmmmmmmm)…" Written for Esquire in a single overnight sitting in 1963, it delves into the lives of the mechanic-cum-artists of the Kustom Kulture movement, primarily Ed Roth and George Barris.

He also wrote "The Right Stuff", a portrait of the seven pilots who were the first Americans to strap themselves atop rockets during the space race. It's an account of the grit and know-how that drove the Mercury team. With equal dedication (though a great deal more frivolity) Wolfe also documented the Grateful Dead's romps in a psychedelic bus handing out LSD to anyone who looked like they might be interested. "The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test" is not simply canon in America, it is considered the starter-pistol for a generational change that crossed the globe. 

His language
Wolfe's mastery of the english language was expressed through the destruction of - rather than the adherence to - the literary norms of the day. While he was an inheritor of America's Beat tradition and an acolyte of Emile Zola, Wolfe developed a style that included a healthy peppering of exclamation marks and ellipses. It was expansive, meandering and highly detailed; all the qualities that came to define the New Journalism movement which narrowed the chasm between journalism and literature.

Take, for example, his use of "aw shucks" as an adverb (describing the performative handwringing at upper crust New York social events). Or his essay that was aimed at the "radical chic" of liberal socialites (again in New York) who adorned themselves with Black Panther militants at dinner parties. Such status-conscious behaviour remained a key fascination of Wolfe's. Another essay within the same series "Mau-Mauing & The Flak Catchers" bore two great phrases into the world ("Mau-Mauing" is to intimidate and "flak catcher" is a colourful term to describe the job of, say, the current White House press secretary). 

He coined the term "the Me generation" to describe the indulgences of Boomers in the 1970s and was critical of the popular lionisation of wealth with "plutography" (a portmanteau of pornography and plutocracy).

His practice
As a journalist and magazine writer Wolfe spent much of his time on the road, and ingratiated himself to a degree that his hosts would often invite him along to family dinner events. While not particularly novel now, this notion of embedding oneself within a story for extended lengths of time - coupled with the recording of natural conversation rather than interviews  - was a breakthrough.

Yet it was in his later years as a novelist that the benefits of these habits paid off. Wolfe's early practice allowed him to enmesh himself with Wall Street stock brokers for the research of his first book, "The Bonfire of the Vanities". Through exhaustive research and countless hours spent listening to people talk about their lives, fears and wishes, Wolfe painted a picture of these powerful men with extraordinary detail. These self-proclaimed, 'masters of the universe' were constructed around the core human behaviour that had amused and occupied Wolfe for his entire career; the measurement, attainment and promulgation of status.

Whether he intended it (let alone wanted it) or not, Wolfe too has attained a rare status for himself as one of the great writers of his era.
WORLDLYWISE
Luckily this only caused a broken ankle to the driver. PHOTO: AP
Following the crash of another Tesla vehicle in self-driving mode a now-familiar routine has played out: news networks have attacked the competency of Tesla's autopilot technology and the carmaker in turn has blamed the driver. The crash happened on Wednesday when a Model S slammed into the back of a fire truck while travelling at nearly 100 kmph. The 29-year-old driver had engaged the self-driving feature a minute earlier and was looking at her phone; luckily she only suffered minor injuries. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has opened an investigation into Tesla (which makes for three concurrent inquiries). 

Tesla-related accidents are reliable fodder for news organisations who pounce on the company's safety record with each new story. But Tesla's CEO Elon Musk believes the treatment his company gets is unfair. He once again took to Twitter to attack the perceived hypocrisy of the fact that the latest crash landed on the front page while the 40,000 or so automobile related deaths each year in America remain largely unheralded. In this he has a point: statistically speaking there were another 15,000 car crashes that day. 

The fact remains that Tesla has built its reputation on selling the idea that self-driving cars are safer than human-driven cars. The company says that as of next quarter it will start publishing accurate and in-depth statistics about its safety record. But whether its cars are in fact four times safer (as Musk often claims) is as yet unproven.
An interceptor missile is launched from a burning Damascus. PHOTO: The Independent 
A deadly string of suicide attacks have rattled the Indonesian cities of Surabaya and Pekanbaru. The world's most populated muslim nation has a long history of grappling with fundamentalism and suicide bombers but locals were appalled by the use of minors. On Sunday a family of six (including children) detonated explosives at three different churches; the attacks claimed 14 lives and injured many more people. But before the country could grapple with the moral conundrums that these attacks pose; another family of five bombed a police station in Surabaya. This time one of them - a seven-year-old daughter - survived the attack. Yet another family was killed when a bomb was accidentally detonated.

The government has blamed the terror network Jemaa Ansharut Daulah (JAD), an ISIS-inspired group of extremists. The elite Kopassus special forces unit has been deployed while the government is edging closer to passing sweeping anti-terror laws (which had been shelved since 2016). This latest flurry of violence is the worst in more than a decade for Indonesia. Locals now must ask themselves how three middle-class and seemingly well-adjusted families managed to evade the country's robust anti-terror authorities.
WHAT ELSE HAPPENED
An injured protester is carried to safety. PHOTO: Mahmud Hams / AFP / Getty
  1. Israeli troops shot dead 60 protesters and wounded another 2,700 in Gaza as Palestinians marked 'Nakba' (the ethnic cleansing of their homelands in 1948)
  2. Venezuelan political prisoners seized their detention facility in downtown Caracas in protest ahead of Sunday's presidential election; it's expected Nicolas Maduro will be returned
  3. European leaders vowed to keep the Iran nuclear deal alive but could not guarantee companies protection from American sanctions
  4. Taliban fighters launched a brazen attack on the contest city of Farah; they briefly overran the city before US air strikes pushed them back out again
  5. Confusion reigned in Washington as the White House and Congress released contradictory statements on the current ban on Chinese telecommunications giant ZTE
  6. The CIA has closed in on a former employee who is believed to have blown the whistle on the Agency's vast and illegal mass surveillance program; meanwhile, Gina Haspel won approval
  7. The World Health Organisation warned of a 'worst case scenario' after the recent Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo spread into urban areas
  8. Britain girded itself for another royal wedding; However this weekend's nuptials between Prince Harry and Meghan Markle have not been without scandal
  9. The ACLU and Planned Parenthood sued Iowa to halt the enactment of an anti-abortion bill which would see the window for the procedure narrow to the 6th week of pregnancy
  10. Researchers discovered that someone in Southeast Asia is pumping huge amounts of the banned ozone-depleting CFC chemicals into the atmosphere
THE BEST OF TIMES...
This has been a great result for Iraq. PHOTO: Haidar Hamdani / AFP
For the first time since ISIS began its devastating campaign Iraqis have voted in major elections. While the likely victory of the former Shia militia leader Moqtada Sadr has alarmed some Western analysts, democratic elections must be respected regardless of whether one likes the result. More importantly, the citizens of Mosul - a city that first suffered under ISIS rule only to be flattened by Western airstrikes - turned out on election day and there was no violence, no bombs and no threats. It's a stunning turnaround in one short year.

It's time for a sea change or a tree change: people living in rural areas are happier than city folk. That long-held assumption now has a scientific base to it thanks to an exhaustive survey of 400,000 people from 1,200 communities across the length and breadth of Canada. We're inviting suggestions from our Canadian readers as to which small town we should relocate to!
THE WORST OF TIMES...
One malnourished child amongst hundreds of thousands.  PHOTO: Thomas Mukoya / Reuters
Ongoing violence between rival militias and government troops in the Democratic Republic of Congo has sparked a growing catastrophe. The fractious Kasai province has been partially depopulated after some 1.3m people were displaced from their homes by clashes. Some 700,000 children are suffering from acute malnutrition; of these, nearly 400,00 have been described as having severe acute malnutrition. In short they are starving to death. The United Nations is facing an uphill battle to keep the children alive while President Joseph Kabila obstinately clings to power in Kinshasa. 

Last week it was Beijing demanding international airlines stop referring to Taiwan, Hong Kong and Tibet as separate entities, preferring their own term, "Greater China". This concept - not recognised diplomatically or legally - is a source of great pride and consternation for Chinese citizens. This week the latest outrage spilled into public over the clothing brand Gap selling a t-shirt on which the three aforementioned territories are missing from a map of the PRC emblazoned on the front. 
P.S.
Your weekend long read... This is superb writing from Bloomberg Businessweek. A thought-provoking and wry look at automation in journalism, "I Tried To Get An AI To Write This Story".

Quote of the week... “We do not hide our feelings of repugnance towards him” - North Korean officials are clear about their feelings towards Trump advisor John Bolton. Perhaps it's because Bolton has suggested pursuing a 'Libya model' for denuclearisation on the Korean peninsula (that model saw Muammar Gaddafi holding up his end of the bargain only to be overthrown, tortured and summarily executed by Western-backed forces).

What we're reading... Here's a deeply unnerving look at the pathologies of the incel movement from The New Yorker's Jia Tolentino.

One last thing... If you haven't purchased an inkl plan as yet, we're offering you a month for just 99c. That's just 3 cents a day to read the world's best news coverage. Help us help the news help you.

Tom Wharton for inkl.
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