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Susan Sontag

The Complete Rolling Stone Interview

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

The candid and far-reaching interview with the public intellectual and author of Illness as Metaphor, conducted in 1978 Paris and New York.
Over the summer and fall of 1978, Susan Sontag engaged in a series of deeply stimulating, provocative and intimate conversations with Jonathan Cott of Rolling Stone magazine. While the printed interview was extensive, it covered only a third of their twelve hours of discussion. Now, for the first time, the entire transcript of Sontag’s remarkable conversation is available in book form, accompanied by Cott’s preface and recollections.

An acclaimed author of novels and essays, a renowned cultural critic and radical anti-war activist, Sontag was at the height of her powers in the late 1970s. Her musings and observations in this interview reveal the breadth and depth of her critical intelligence and curiosities at the time. These hours of conversation offer a revelatory and indispensable look at the self-described "besotted aesthete" and "obsessed moralist."

 
 
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 26, 2013
      Cott (Days That I Remember: Spending Time with John Lennon and Yoko Ono), a founding contributing editor of Rolling Stone, presents the full text of an interview he conducted in 1978 with Sontag, which was excerpted in the magazine in 1979. Conducted over several months, in Paris and New York, the interview provides a compact, complex, and critical portrait of the author of Against Interpretation and On Photography, who died in 2004. Through his insightful questions, as well as in his preface and recollections, Cott shows Sontag as a force of cultural consciousness. The interview takes readers through her views on a range of subjects, including physicality and illness, rock and roll, feminism, love and relationships, sexuality, spirituality, geography, and the writer’s life. Though at times, Sontag’s tendency to speak “not in sentences but in measured and expansive paragraphs” makes it difficult to follow the discussion, the book will be a great resource for longtime followers of the critic and novelist, as well as for those encountering this great mind for the first time.

    • Kirkus

      September 1, 2013
      A humanizing interview with the late cultural icon, who was often perceived as a fiercely aggressive and polarizing intellect. In 1978, Rolling Stone contributing editor Cott (Days that I'll Remember: Spending Time with John Lennon and Yoko Ono, 2012, etc.) conducted this interview with the woman he had known as a professor when he was a student, and RS published it the following year. It is reminiscent of a time when popular magazines would commit what now seems an unthinkable number of pages to the profile of a serious author. Though it ran long in the magazine, it runs much longer here, offering a conversational warmth that some might find more inviting than Sontag's published work. Though she says, "I'm not really a polemicist," she maintains that the writer's mission is "to be in an aggressive and adversarial relationship to falsehoods of all kinds." What she perceived as falsehoods were often controversial, but her interviewer never offers a hint of challenge. Cott is more like an acolyte, occasionally fawning, asking questions that reflect his own erudition. This interview ran a quarter-century before Sontag's death, but it captured her at the peak of her cultural prominence, discussing Illness as Metaphor and On Photography, showing how slack metaphors and reductive interpretation misrepresent the essence of reality. Most illuminating is the personal detail--e.g., how she started reading seriously at 3 and "was writing up a storm by the time I was eight or nine years old." What made her perfect for that magazine at that time was her pivotal role in the bridging of high and popular culture: "When I go to a Patti Smith concert at CBGB, I enjoy, participate, appreciate and am tuned in better because I've read Nietzsche." Or, as she had previously written, "If I had to choose between the Doors and Dostoyevsky, then--of course--I'd choose Dostoyevsky. But do I have to choose?" Another side of a significant 20th-century writer, preserved from the archives.

      COPYRIGHT(2013) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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