Costly Irony: What Flannery O'Connor Can Teach the Hipster Generation
Michael Hammond
Irony is everywhere. Or
so we would be led to believe by advertisements, clothing, trendy foods, music,
and every part of our culture. This defining ethos of the 21st
century requires a cheap version of irony that is really cynicism at its
core…and there is a difference between the two. What we often term irony is
really a self-defensive cynicism.
In
the past few weeks, two of my friends—both United States historians with
research interests in religion—sent me links to a new collection of art
featuring the quaint country cottages of Thomas Kinkade under attack by Star
Wars battleships and Stormtroopers. These pictures by artist Jeff Bennett started
with the finished canvas of original Kinkade paintings such as “Moonlight Lane”
and “Sweetheart Cottage III” and brought the full fury of the Sith Lord’s
Empire on them.
These pictures reminded
me of many lively conversations with my students on Christian marketing and
religious products, which often end with recognition of their ironic attitudes
toward this subculture. This common citing of irony is often attributed to hipster
culture, which has been described in articles that were critical,
investigative,
confused,
meta-critical,
welcoming,
or defensive.
A good example is “How
to Live Without Irony,” published just about one year ago in The New York Times by Princeton professor Christy
Wampole.
Wampole describes irony as a “shield against criticism;” a coping
mechanism for a world marked by disappointment. For those afraid of committing
or believing in anything, the realm of sarcasm and ironic humor offers safe
space marked with long beards, oversized glasses, fixed gear bicycles, and Dora
the Explorer backpacks. Even for those who don’t adopt hipster fashion, it has
become the defining aspect of culture today. Like many other observers, Wampole
believes that this is different today than in previous eras, perhaps due to
technological changes, and a new geopolitical landscape. Despite the cultural
popularity of photobombs and ironic product T-shirts, It is not always clear
that students have learned how to use irony in their work. A
self-defensive outlook that is cynical and distrusting is not something that
was dreamed up in Park Slope or Williamsburg in the 21st Century. Everyone who has “been had” vows to not get
fooled again (perhaps that is why there
are so many cynics in New York City). The natural inclination is to avoid belief,
commitment, and trust.
The article also raised an important question for all scholars of American religion: Is religious belief out of step with irony? Wampole suggested that irony permeates the culture, but is lost only on “very young children, elderly people, deeply religious people, people with severe mental or physical disabilities, people who have suffered, and those from economically or politically challenged places where seriousness is the governing state of mind.” The list includes the innocence of youth, the acceptance of old age, and the trials of suffering. Why does devout religion belong on this list? And if religious subjects—or scholars who are personally religious—are not in step with irony, will they not be limited in their academic research?
The article also raised an important question for all scholars of American religion: Is religious belief out of step with irony? Wampole suggested that irony permeates the culture, but is lost only on “very young children, elderly people, deeply religious people, people with severe mental or physical disabilities, people who have suffered, and those from economically or politically challenged places where seriousness is the governing state of mind.” The list includes the innocence of youth, the acceptance of old age, and the trials of suffering. Why does devout religion belong on this list? And if religious subjects—or scholars who are personally religious—are not in step with irony, will they not be limited in their academic research?
Not to quarrel with the use of words, but what many of these writers are calling “hipster irony” may be more accurately labeled “hipster cynicism.” The distinction is important, and preserves a higher bar for identifying irony. That distinction brings a new challenge for scholars of faith who also happen to be studying religious subjects. Is it true that sincere religious beliefs are largely incompatible with irony? If so, then scholars who are personally religious and even those who give their subjects some benefit of earnestness may miss out on a powerful interpretive theme in their work. Does a fear of commitment to something that will fail prevent scholars from sincerely committing to religious faith? Academic study of religion, valuing “skepticism over assertion” is a much safer commitment in hipster culture than a life of faith. Perhaps this means that studying the complex and ironic themes of religion in historical interpretation “requires not faith, but empathy” as was recently argued by Oxford theology student Tara Isabella Burton. Maybe the best religious scholars are those who have the least religious beliefs.
To address these
questions, all of us shaped by cynicism and hipster culture would do well to
examine the life and work of Flannery O’Connor, whose use of irony was not a
shield against religion, but demonstrated the earnest reality of her devout
Catholic faith. A new collection of her written prayers offers insight on the
questions and spiritual longing she faced while participating in the
prestigious Iowa Writers Workshop in 1946 at age 21. Titled A Prayer Journal, these writings demonstrate a sense of frailty that
would be expanded later in life as she wrote in the midst of physical
suffering. The journal collection goes
on sale tomorrow, but is excerpted here
(subscription required). Some of the
most moving passages include these excerpts:
“What
I am asking for is really very ridiculous. Oh Lord, I am saying, at present I
am a cheese, make me a mystic, immediately. But then God can do that—make a
mystic out of cheeses. But why should He do it for an ingrate slothful &
dirty creature like me. I can’t stay in the church to say a Thanksgiving even
and as for preparing for Communion the night before—thoughts all elsewhere.”
“Dear
Lord, please make me want You. It would be the greatest bliss. Not just to want
You when I think about You but to want You all the time, to think about You all
the time, to have the want driving in me, to have it like a cancer in me. It
would kill me like a cancer and that would be the Fulfillment.”
“My
mind is in a little box, dear God, down inside other boxes inside other boxes
and on and on. There is very little air in my box. Dear God, please give me as
much air as it is not presumptuous to ask for. Please let some light shine out
of all the things around me so that I can.”
Flannery O’Connor wrote with a sharp wit and sense of irony in many of her stories such as “A Good Man is Hard to Find.” Yet her prayer journal shows that she had little use for a cynical shield that would protect her from the pain of disappointment with God. Her sharpest criticism was reserved for herself. It’s hard to imagine her as a hipster today, if that culture requires protecting the soul with a jaded and cynical cycle of ridicule and defensiveness.
These writings provide readers of the hipster culture with a model of true faith that demanded risk, pain, and work. Flannery O’Connor’s prayer journals provide a beautiful glimpse into a vulnerable soul open to the rigor of life, confident that God would use trials to shape and press her into something more. Those prayers were answered through O’Connor’s life of fighting disease and practicing her craft of writing. Her strong irony did not lead her to doubt that God was with her.
The model of Flannery O’Connor challenges the prevailing ideas of modern life and challenges us to personally assess how we reconcile our own beliefs with our scholarship and use of irony. O’Connor wielded irony as an effective weapon in her writings. Her prayer journals demonstrate her ability to harness the power of irony without allowing it to define her soul. Such an approach today would be threatening to the culture of cheap irony that surrounds us.
Flannery O’Connor wrote with a sharp wit and sense of irony in many of her stories such as “A Good Man is Hard to Find.” Yet her prayer journal shows that she had little use for a cynical shield that would protect her from the pain of disappointment with God. Her sharpest criticism was reserved for herself. It’s hard to imagine her as a hipster today, if that culture requires protecting the soul with a jaded and cynical cycle of ridicule and defensiveness.
These writings provide readers of the hipster culture with a model of true faith that demanded risk, pain, and work. Flannery O’Connor’s prayer journals provide a beautiful glimpse into a vulnerable soul open to the rigor of life, confident that God would use trials to shape and press her into something more. Those prayers were answered through O’Connor’s life of fighting disease and practicing her craft of writing. Her strong irony did not lead her to doubt that God was with her.
The model of Flannery O’Connor challenges the prevailing ideas of modern life and challenges us to personally assess how we reconcile our own beliefs with our scholarship and use of irony. O’Connor wielded irony as an effective weapon in her writings. Her prayer journals demonstrate her ability to harness the power of irony without allowing it to define her soul. Such an approach today would be threatening to the culture of cheap irony that surrounds us.
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