4.6 • 836 Ratings
🗓️ 28 April 2023
⏱️ 52 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Mark is a journalist, political scientist, historian of ideas, and a longtime friend since my twenties, when we studied political thought together. He has taught at NYU and the University of Chicago, and he’s currently a professor of humanities at Columbia. His many fine books include The Once and Future Liberal, The Reckless Mind, and The Shipwrecked Mind, and his forthcoming book is Ignorance and Bliss: On Wanting Not to Know. In this episode we focus on his essay, “On Indifference,” and the introduction he wrote for Thomas Mann’s Reflections of a Nonpolitical Man. It was a fantastic conversation.
For two clips of our convo — on whether political indifference is unjust, and the political consequences of the decline of novel reading — pop over to our YouTube page. Other topics: Mark’s working-class upbringing in Detroit; “falling in with Jesus freaks” as a teenager; making it to Harvard; absorbing Thomas Mann and The Magic Mountain; Isaiah Berlin; the rivalry between Sartre and Aron; Orwell’s willingness to break ranks; The Lord Chandos Letter and walking away from writing; the moral hysteria after Trump’s election; Mark signing the Harper’s letter; the lack of perspective among young people who feel oppressed; how the most “privileged” are often the most depressed; rising levels of loneliness among teens; the dwindling of connections with extended family; the impact of the Internet and Covid on interacting with bodies; the importance of facial expressions; the need for silence and meditation; the problem of tourists using phones and drones; Johann Hari’s Stolen Focus; slowing the pace of capital for the sake of community; Rod Dreher’s The Benedict Option; the cultural impact of Vatican II; the reaction to wokeness in France and Italy; and my 2016 essay, “My Distraction Sickness and Yours.”
Browse the Dishcast archive for another discussion you might enjoy (the first 102 episodes are free in their entirety — subscribe to get everything else). Coming up: Nigel Biggar on his qualified defense of colonialism, Tabia Lee on her firing as a DEI director, Chris Stirewalt on Fox News, Ben Smith on going viral, John Oberg on veganism, and Patrick Deneen on a post-liberal future. Send your guest recs and pod comments to [email protected].
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0:00.0 | The Hi there. Here we are. It's beautiful spring in Washington, D.C. Just today, it's gorgeous. 70 degrees. The blossoms are finally fading. |
0:38.3 | And I am thrilled to say that we have one of my oldest friends. |
0:44.3 | We go back a very long way. |
0:46.3 | On the podcast today, I just cast, Mark Lila. |
0:50.3 | He's a journalist, political scientist, and historian of ideas. |
0:58.5 | He's also a quite brilliant and beautifully pollucid writer. |
1:04.7 | He's taught at NYU, the University of Chicago, and he's currently professor of humanities at Columbia. |
1:09.4 | And now he's on his sabbatical, so Mark is speaking to us from Rome. |
1:14.6 | He's a frequent contributor to the New York Review of Books and Liberties, Leon Nuisalteer's, excellent long-form journalism and on-paper magazine and The New York Times. |
1:21.6 | He's written many books, including, famously, we talk about this, the once in future liberal after identity politics, |
1:29.1 | and two beautiful monographs, really. One, the reckless mind, intellectuals in politics, |
1:36.0 | about radicals and the shipwreck mind on political reaction, a really wonderful detour through |
1:43.4 | some of the big shots of reactionary thought, |
1:47.0 | as it were. Today we're going to just talk more generally, but also he's written two rather |
1:51.3 | beautiful recent essays. One is on indifference, which appeared in liberties, which I want to talk to |
1:56.3 | him, another introduction to Thomas Mann's reflections. Forgive me, what's the full title of that? |
2:02.1 | Just reflections. Reflections of a non-political man. Thank you. Reflections of a non-political man, |
2:07.9 | which I learned a lot about Thomas Mann in that, I have to say, I had no idea about his |
2:12.2 | crazy relationship with his brother. Jesus. Anyway, Mark, welcome. |
2:17.7 | Oh, it's good to see you, old friend. I'm looking forward to this. |
2:21.0 | We met, right, at Harvard in 1984, when we were both about to embark upon a PhD. |
2:31.0 | Well, actually, I didn't know I was going to be embark on a PhD, but you did. |
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