Is the News Replacing Literature?
In the early nineteen-nineties, David Mamet’s play “Oleanna,” in
which a female student accuses a college professor of sexual harassment,
had audiences erupting into screaming matches during the intermission.
As with Farrow and Allen, there was no clear answer to the question of
what actually happened between professor and student. Almost a quarter
of a century later, the impossible complexity is on the other side of
the stage. Instantaneous news of what happened, or might have happened, has become our art, and, like the chorus in ancient Greek tragedy, we are all part of the swelling roar.
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