4B - Thursday, September 18, 2008 TRIBUTE Infinitely missed The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com By ANDY KROLL DailyArts Writer Early on in his masterful 1999 essay "Authority and American Usage," David Foster Wallace breaks from his explanation of the Descriptivist-vs.-Pre- scriptivist Usage Wars of modern linguistics (this is already a departure from the essay's primary task of reviewing Bryan A. Garner's A Dictionary of Mod- ern American Usage for Harper's magazine) to dis- cuss, of all things unrelated, abortion. In a typically Wallace-esque footnote, running 468 words long in the kind of fine print normally reserved for check-cashing service ads, the author explains that "the only really coherent position on the abortion issue is one that is both Pro-Life and Pro-Choice." Though at first perplexing, he soon proves why this position is, in fact, the only one that makes any sense. And just as quickly as he veered off into the Culture Wars, DFW steers us back to the Usage Wars, crafting in the essay's remaining 44 pages an illuminating, gripping and accessible description of the "seamy underbelly" of American lexicography. Wallace, who tragically committed suicide last week at age 46, was quite frankly, a genius. In his writing, a dizzyingly complex and brilliant mind is let loose on the page. Often an essay or story of his will, mid-page, careen off into a page-length foot- note or endnote - a meditation on Balthazar Getty on the set of David Lynch's "Lost Highway," per- haps, or a quick description of the "Bizarro-Sleaze" porn film genre - but this adventure is involved in reading his work. A piece of writing might begin in CONSIDER THE T BS TE Arad other Enys David Foster Wallace RYF " U COURTESY OF HACHETTE BOOK GROUPUSA a certain direction (on a cruise liner, or walking the grounds of the Illinois State Fair), but it certainly never ends there. And though at first we might feel sidetracked choosing to follow his footnotes, inter- polations, etc., we soon recognize that with Wallace, the final destination doesn't matter. The fun is in the detour. Yet for Wallace, who often seemed uncomfortable in his own skin, the footnotes, endnotes and detours are there to guard against condescension or elitism. To avoid sounding patronizing, he instead scruti- nized himself, whether in comparison to the sub- jects of his non-fiction or through the characters in his novels and stories. Neil, the deceased narrator of "Good Old Neon," one of Wallace's finest short sto- ries, painfully illustrates this scrutiny when he tells He staggered under the weight of American culture - and made sense of it us, "My whole life I've been a fraud." Neil explains his suffering in trying to impress everyone around him, a suffering that ended only when he kills him- self. Like much of his fiction, Wallace's prose in "Good Old Neon" is cerebral and staggering, and resembles the unceasing thoughts that are always running through our heads. Wallace won awards for both his fiction and non- fiction, and was equally regarded in both genres. Nonetheless, arguments rage over whether he was better crafting imagined worlds or wrapping his mind around the real one. Many cite his magnum opus, the 1,079-page "Infinite Jest," as evidence supporting the former, arguing that the book is one of the Great American Novels of the postmodern 1990s, or ever, and making Wallace an heir to novel- ists like DeLillo and Pynchon. Yet others argue that when untethered to reality, Wallace's imaginative fiction overwhelms and leaves readers lost in his staggering prose. Reality is already surreal enough. Porn conven- tions, presidential campaigns, Caribbean cruises, lobster festivals - allace's dispatches from the more bizarre fringes of our culture are some of the best American nonfiction writing in decades. To watch Wallace grapple with the "zeppeli-nesque" breasts of the 1998 Adult Video News Awards, or to experience the week he spent on the campaign trail with John "anticandidate" McCain, circa 2000, is to witness the most brilliant among us plunged into what he described as this country's "Total Noise" culture - "a culture of info and spin and rhetoric and context" - and make sense of it. Which is in part why the loss is so gutting. See WALLACE, Page 6B Nas-Luda'08. Or Luda-Nas'08? 0 Lots of rap, little talk Nas, Ludacris and Young Jeezy endorse Obama for the wrong reasons By CHRIS GAERIG Daily Arts Writer I'm officially tired of "Black President" songs. Incidentally, I also happen to be a right-lean- ing moderate. Though, as some mightsuggest, my distaste for the recent outcropping of politically- charged, and primarily hip-hop, activist tracks has absolutely nothing to do with my political affiliations. In most regards, I'd be perfectly content if Barack Obama wins this year's presiden- tial election, but the uprising of Obama support tracks - spear- headed by the always-outspoken Nas and frequent cultural con- trarians Ludacris and Young Jeezy - are an incredibly inter- esting intersection of politics and art, if also forehead-slappingly obnoxious. The most obvious issue to be filed against these songs is the sheer societal ignorance of the artists presenting them. Not to say that Nas hasn't always been a cultural sounding board, but rather these rappers are ignoring the 20 years of work that legiti- mate organizations like Rock the Vote and the more recent, Diddy-led Vote or Die campaigns have done. Both organizations, started and run by notable musi- cians and socialites, have been attempting to motivate America's youth to vote. As such, these songs (both Nas and Jeezy's own "Black Presi- dent" and Ludacris's "Politics As Usual") boil down to one mes- sage: Vote for the black guy. Not that I don't understand where this sentiment stems from - obviously, these artists have an invested interest in'the country and feel Obama is the better can- didate. But Obama himself has even spoken out against this con- cept as something that is not only somewhat inept, but also not par- ticularly palatable and profitable for the United States. Moreover, each of these songs, save for .the somewhat respect- able Nas cut, are incredibly parochial and, at times, wildly offensive. Ludacris, on his DJ Drama-produced mixtape The Preview - a record in which he colloquially calls Obama, Barack O-Drama -actually utters the line, "Hillary hated on you so that bitch is irrelevant," with the word "bitch" being overpow- ered by the sound of a silenced pistol. Surely, the implication of a violent oligarchy is the kind of support Obama needs in his campaign and the real way to persuade young voters to get out to the polls. Luda continues to repeat, "Get off your ass, black people, it's time to get out and vote," a line that implies, unless there is a black candidate run- ning, there's no reason for blacks to vote. Jeezy's track disappoints on even more -levels. The chorus, which hardly sounds like a polit- ical statement, is reminiscent of his typical thugs-to-riches fare: "My president is black, my Lam- bo's blue /And I'll be goddamned if my rims ain't too." The prob- lems with this line are nearly innumerable: Your president is not black even if your candidate is? How does Obama relate to your cars? Your rims are blue? Or black? No one ever accused Jeezy of being intelligent because he never tried to be. Now we can all see why. Nas, who samples an Obama speech in an old-school break- beat style, flows - whether appropriately or not - more on the struggles of African Ameri- cans than about Obama, save for a few lines in the second chorus (".What's the black prez think- ing on election night / Is it how I can protect my life, protect my wife, protect my rights?"). But where Nas's slipup occurs is in his portrayal of Obama as, essen- tially, the black savior. His lines about African American strug- gles become more depressingly idealistic, as Nas seems to truly believe that Obama will miracu- lously solve all these issues; the stock he places in the candidate is mindlessly utopian and, frank- ly, a little disturbing: "If he dies we die too." The irony of closing the track with a sample of Nas's own, "The World Is Yours"/ Jay-Z's "Dead Presidents II," is apparently lost on Nas. Even more bothersome than a few poorly-conceived tracks, though, is the way in which politics seem to be dictating art rather than simply coloring it. In a somewhat disturbing argu- ment I had with a fellow critic, he revealed to me that he only listens to music that appeases his political inclinations, allowing the artist's political views decide what music he listens to. He cited Sly & the Family Stone, Jimi Hen- drix, U2 and Funkadelic, among others, that never would've made the albums they had were it not for their politics. But what he, See PRESIDENTIAL, Page 5 Tickets available at the Michigan Union Ticket Office, Charge by Phone 734-763-TKTS, or www.ticketmaster.com Special thanks to g 1*tId I4f1iU EkiIi