MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop
MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
[A 1972 piece by Nora Ephron, who just passed away.] I have to begin with a few words about androgyny. In grammar school, in the fifth and sixth grades, we were all tyrannized by a rigid set of rules that supposedly determined whether we were boys or girls. The episode in Huckleberry Finn where Huck is disguised as a girl and gives himself away by the way he threads a needle and catches a ball — that kind of thing. We learned that the way you sat, crossed your legs, held a cigarette, and looked at your nails — the way you did these things instinctively was absolute proof of your sex. Now obviously most children did not take this literally, but I did. I thought that just one slip, just one incorrect cross of my legs or flick of an imaginary cigarette ash would turn me from whatever I was into the other thing; that would be all it took, really. Even though I was outwardly a girl and had many of the trappings generally associated with girldom — a girl's name, for example, and dresses, my own telephone, an autograph book — I spent the early years of my adolescence absolutely certain that I might at any point gum it up. I did not feel at all like a girl. I was boyish. I was athletic, ambitious, outspoken, competitive, noisy, rambunctious. I had scabs on my knees and my socks slid into my loafers and I could throw a football. I wanted desperately not to be that way, not to be a mixture of both things, but instead just one, a girl, a definite indisputable girl. As soft and as pink as a nursery. And nothing would do that for me, I felt, but breasts.
[There's also a link to an obit.]
Comments
The Girl Who Fixed the Umlaut
by Donal on Wed, 06/27/2012 - 3:20pm
I became a big fan circa 1979, when, having no idea of who she was, I picked up a paperback of Scribble Scribble, based on the cover reviews; it was a collection of some of her essays written in the 70's. I enjoyed it so much that I recommend it to friends who became fans too She was just a fun read, the kind of wryness that gave joy.
Her movie script work is shlocky compared to her print work, mho, but that's because she "got" general American culture and what would make for a blockbuster in the area of romance and comedy.
by artappraiser on Wed, 06/27/2012 - 4:09pm
Listening to NPR today, I would have liked to have known her personally.
by Resistance on Wed, 06/27/2012 - 5:17pm