Adam Gopnik on writing about politics now

SALISBURY, Conn. — Polymath is the perfect word to describe Adam Gopnik, the long-time, prize-winning New Yorker magazine writer on subjects as disparate as art, books, humor, even fiction and foreign affairs. Now he has chosen the provocative title, “Notes of a Reluctant Pundit: Writing About Politics in a Less–Than–Sane America,” for his presentation to a Salisbury Forum on Friday, Dec. 2, at Housatonic Valley Regional High School.

Gopnik joined the magazine immediately after receiving a master’s degree from New York University’s Institute of Fine Arts, where he studied with Kirk Varnedoe, a MacArthur genius prize recipient, who became curator of sculpture and painting at the Museum of Modern Art. He and Gopnik co-curated Varnedoe’s first big show at the museum, “High and Low,” which mixed high art and the popular art that Gopnik championed.

After serving as the magazine’s art critic for eight years, Gopnik was dispatched to France to continue the famous “Letter from Paris,” created by the first New Yorker editor, William Shawn, and written (until her death) by Janet Flanner. 

Gopnik and his wife and young son lived in Paris for five years. He wrote about food and everyday life, government and the shenanigans of politicians. His essays, especially those about sharing the wonders of Paris with his young son, were later collected in a book, “From Paris to the Moon,” a New York Times bestseller.

Gopnik, apparently like the entire New Yorker staff, expected Hillary Clinton to win the presidency. On Nov. 9, he posted a short essay on how to talk to children about Donald Trump’s victory. He cited the necessity for emphasizing community, ongoing life, daily pleasures and shared enterprises. Connection, even one born in collective pain and disappointment, is a “balm for trauma of any kind.”

Although he had selected the title of his forum presentation before the election, he has chosen to keep it. 

He is fascinated by ‘how Trump’s strange rise and Obama’s high approval rating” can have coincided.

Adam Gopnik will speak for The Salisbury Forum on Friday, Dec. 2, at Housatonic Valley Regional High School, 7:30 p.m. There will be a question-and-answer period after his talk. As with all forum programs, admission is free and open to all.

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