Passing  the Gladwell Point
By Tom Scocca
The Malcolm Gladwell Piece was an identifiable and successful form of its own: a  closely reported portrait of a person or phenomenon, stretched to billboard  significance on an academic or conceptual framework. It made something make  sense.
So why, lately, has the Malcolm Gladwell Piece become irritating? Why does a  reader flap the magazine in agitation on the subway, or go onto a blog and start  castigating the author for elementary errors of fact and interpretation? Why  does spending a weekend with Mr. Gladwell’s best-selling books, The Tipping  Point and Blink, lead to unhappiness and a pathological fixation on writing in  rhetorical questions?...
The problem with the Malcolm Gladwell Piece, in part, is that it always seems to  contain phrases like “the problem with the Malcolm Gladwell Piece.”  Something has happened to Mr. Gladwell’s style of argumentation over time—it  has become more self-referential, till the framework dominates the portrait.  Here’s Mr. Gladwell, writing recently on the question of Allen Iverson’s  basketball ability: “In order to measure something you thought was fairly  straightforward, you really have to take into account a series of things that  aren’t so straightforward.” On pit-bull attacks: “Another word for  generalization, though, is ‘stereotype,’ and stereotypes are usually not  considered desirable dimensions of our decision-making lives.” On pension  policy: “This is an important point.”
Meanwhile, the specifics are sliding around. Mr. Gladwell has blamed the  University of Oklahoma for irrationally kicking the quarterback off its football  team, when it was actually obeying an official NCAA rule. He has been caught  reversing the meaning of remarks by Albert Speer on the efficacy of Allied  bombing. He has been dragged into an online brawl with an Economist writer about  whether or not he understands pension policy. At times, lately, Mr. Gladwell  sounds like someone trying to tell other people about something he read once in  a Malcolm Gladwell piece, after a few rounds of drinks...
The Tipping Point, published in 2000, was a sort of apotheosis or  self-immolation of Gladwellism: It was Mr. Gladwell’s own tipping point, and  it made it impossible to describe that particular phenomenon in any other way.  Before the book came out, Mr. Gladwell was a well-respected byline; after, he  was a full-on literary celebrity and, more impressively, a business guru...
The job of the business writer is to supply answers. So the ineffable and the  absurd give way to case studies and classificatory jargon, with capital letters  (Paul Revere’s ride, Mr. Gladwell writes in The Tipping Point, succeeded  because of “a few Salesmen and a man with the particular genius of both a  Maven and a Connector”).
Even the sentence structure has gone flat, the playful strings of clauses  snipped into tidy lengths. The latter-day Gladwell uses the second person the  way Mr. Rogers does, to make sure that you, the audience, are never confused  about what your host is telling you. What he is telling you is this: You can  understand the world, if you follow along with Malcolm Gladwell....
But the more authoritative Mr. Gladwell sets out to be, the less persuasive he  is. Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking, his 2005 book about  unconscious cognition, draws on a variety of studies about the ways that people  make snap judgments, wisely and unwisely.
“Next time you meet a doctor … if you have the sense that he isn’t  listening to you, that he’s talking down to you, and that he isn’t treating  you with respect, listen to that feeling,” Mr. Gladwell writes, summing up one  study of snippets of doctor-patient conversations. Yet that study, by the book’s  own account, was prompted by the discovery that patients filed malpractice suits  based on their feelings about their doctors, rather than the doctors’ error  rates.   [More]
As a writer gets more popular, his audience gets broader, stupider, and more worshipful. That's good for the wallet but not for the work.
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
 Posts
Posts
 
 
 
 
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment