Susan Sontag

Rieff’s Grief: Sontag’s Son, On Her Death

Susan Sontag (1933-2004).
Getty Images
Susan Sontag (1933-2004).

There’s something obscene about sitting at a desk, in a chair that corrects the posture, sipping warm, sugary tea, yawning or scratching, barely aware of the fug of felt life, all the while getting ready to give the thumbs-up or thumbs-down to a book that records a mother’s desperate losing battle against disease and her son’s numb grief when she dies. I am in the realm of the living, foolishly taking it for granted as most of us do; David Rieff has been immersed in death ever since the day nearly four years ago when his mother, Susan Sontag, was diagnosed with a rare, particularly lethal cancer of the blood. Who am I to pass judgment on her mortal struggle, on his howl of pain?  read more »

Regarding the Writing of Others

Susan Sontag.
Getty Images
Susan Sontag.

In FSG’s posthumous collection of essays by Susan Sontag, an alert reader finds unattributed borrowings from Roland Barthes, Laura Miller.  read more »

Why We Miss Susan Sontag, Volume I

Susan Sontag (1933 - 2004) in the offices of her publisher in 1978.
WILLIAM E. SAURO/NEW YORK TIMES CO./GETTY IMAGES
Susan Sontag (1933 - 2004) in the offices of her publisher in 1978.

At first glance, the cover of Susan Sontag’s final book—the  almost-complete manusc  read more »

The Emotional Spark: What’s That Thing We All Long For?

Through the glass door at the W Hotel Bar in Union Square, I saw him: the screenwriter from L.A.  read more »

Annie Leibovitz, Having Seen

Annie Leibovitz, the grand dame of Vogue, Vanity Fair and Rolling Stone covers, was the one facing flashbulbs. The other morning she gave a private press tour of her new show at the Brooklyn Museum.

"Walk slowly. Watch your cameras," she said. Microphone booms swung through the air, nearly knocking the photos off the wall. "Careful, we have lots of time," she said as she was followed.

Ms. Leibovitz has recently been profiled in Newsweek, The New York Times, and The Washington Post. She has a new book, "Annie Leibovitz: A Photographers Life, 1990-2005," and a retrospective of her work that will travel the world.

"It was time to look back at my work," Ms. Leibovitz said. She wore a faded black button-up shirt, tapered black jeans, and heavy work boots. "It was like being on an archeological dig finding these pictures," she said.

One entire wall was snapshots of her family at the beach, her parents in bed, her children wet with afterbirth in the delivery room, and hotel rooms with rumpled bed sheets, Susan Sontag included.

On another wall Donald Trump sat in a sports car and a hugely pregnant Ivana sported a gold lame bikini on the stairs of a gigantic jet. A portrait of Colin Powell in full military regalia hung near the Clintons on election night.

Ms. Leibovitz said the idea for the exhibit "came out of a moment," when she faced the deaths of Sontag and her father, plus the birth of her twins, by a surrogate mother.

On one wall Sontag battles cancer in a hospital bed, another shows her being wheeled on a gurney to a private plane in Seattle to be air-evacuated to a hospital in New York. A small print in a corner shows Sontag's corpse at a funeral home. She is dressed in Italian silk.

In "On Photography," Sontag had written: "To photograph people is to violate them, by seeing them as they never see themselves, by having knowledge of them they can never have.""

With every photo, regardless of the narrative, it's clear that sometimes Ms. Leibovitz was an intruder in her own life. The exhibit, which gives such a remarkable window into Ms. Leibovitz's private world, also shows the limits of that view.

Ms. Leibovitz said that she enjoys how her magazine assignments create a sense of history, but that her personal work is her strongest work, in fact because she is know to her subjects.

"Most people don't like to have their picture taken," Ms. Leibovitz said. "They have to confront themselves." Every photo involves problem solving. "It's never easy."

And with that, Ms. Leibovitz left the room, accompanied by two women in black suits. "I mean, you wouldn't expect anything less," said a reporter, who wore a sticker that read Panarama. "She's a living legend." — Kaija Helmetag

Thursday: The Old Sontag Penthouse, The Old 'New Soho', and a Wall Street Journal Rip-Off

soho2.JPG
Soho! Just kidding.
  • Weeks ago we mathematically disproved the assertion that "The Garment District is the new Soho," though the Post apparently plugged its ears. So what does its cover story report to back up the age-old Garment claim? Only that the the neighborhood has "funky artists"--plus: it's "gritty and delicious." (NY Post)
  • For $3.75 million, the late Susan Sontag's penthouse at Chelsea's London Terrace could have been yours. (You would have had to act quickly, though: it stayed on the market for just a few weeks.) And alas you've also missed a chance at grabbing Britney Spears' four-level Silk Building abode (though that's old news). (WSJ)
  • Who had any idea that ritzy--and empty--Manhattan condo buildings were dangling gold-plated carrots to lure naive buyers? Those carrots come in shapes and sizes like Turkish baths (cough!--excuse me, sir) or borrowing libraries (lame.) Best of all: pandering to the lazy or gourmet or morbidly obese condo crowd are daily home-delivered meals at Slate on West 18th. (NY Sun)
  • It's about seventeen years too late to print a headline like: "The fight over Atlantic Yards heats up." And yet all journalistic sins are excused when a Yards article has Bruce Ratner quotes such as "It's a good cause, and we are going to win." Or any Bruce Ratner quotes at all. (NY Press)
  • What does 'Where were you when it happened?' mean? It means that it's been five years since the World Trade Center attacks, and that the WTC Foundation still needs $167 million for its museum and memorial. So of course the group is rolling out an ad campaign "designed to tug on people's heartstrings." And wallets. (Crain's)
  • - Max Abelson  read more »

Ozick’s Ongoing Argument, A Dip in the Rollercoaster

Cynthia Ozick, a vehement thinker.
Nancy Crampton
Cynthia Ozick, a vehement thinker.

This collection of 20 recent essays by Cynthia Ozick begins with a memorial appreciation of Susan So  read more »

Ozick's Ongoing Argument, A Dip in the Rollercoaster

This collection of 20 recent essays by Cynthia Ozick begins with a memorial appreciation of Susan So  read more »

Abuse Me! I Like It! The Weirdness of Hiring A Personal Organizer

“If you use anything except an ashtray to put your cigarette out in, I’ll come over ther  read more »

Rieff Encounter

"I think I'm American in all sorts of essential ways," said the 52-year-old war journalist David Rie  read more »

Editorials

Three extraordinary talents died in late December, all of whose roots were in New York and whose pas  read more »

Notes on Camp Sontag

"I can remember going to some very, very high-powered and glamorous parties, with her or because of  read more »

Two Cherished Critics, An Engrossing Odd Couple

Sontag & Kael: Opposites Attract Me , by Craig Seligman. Counterpoint, 192 pages, $23.  read more »

Eight Day Week

Wednesday 28th Fashion Week nips at our heels like a terrier, and it don't look pretty, sister girlf  read more »

Preview of Coming Attractions: Sontag Looks at Images of War

Regarding the Pain of Others , by Susan Sontag. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 131 pages, $20.  read more »

Mirroring Evil? No, Mirroring Art Theory

This is difficult, because I feel deeply conflicted in some waysabout the Jewish Museum's Mirroring  read more »

Mirroring Evil? No, Mirroring Art Theory

This is difficult, because I feel deeply conflicted in some waysabout the Jewish Museum's Mirroring  read more »

Mirroring Evil? No, Mirroring Art Theory

This is difficult, because I feel deeply conflicted in some ways about the Jewish Museum's Mirroring  read more »

When It Comes to War, The Sexes Are Still Split

Vietnam ended marriages. The husband was for the war and the wife was quietly against it.  read more »

Left Falls Apart as Center Holds

Fear the left, the center says."The middle part of the country-the great red zone that voted for Bus  read more »

My Brothers-in-Arms Are the Bouley Brigade

When the attacks came on Sunday, my friends were as unsettled asanyone.  read more »

After '63 and '68 Some of Us Can Be Useful

Decade of 'Buzz' Forgotten; The Chatterati Get 'Serious' The city is engulfed in emotion.  read more »

Susan Sontag Gets Jumpy; Pat Conroy Gets Left Out

In case it's unclear, Susan Sontag really is against interpretation. Of her own life, that is.  read more »

Leibovitz Sees Glitz and Grit, Sontag Broods on the Big Idea

Women , photographs by Annie Leibovitz, essay by Susan Sontag. Random House, 239 pages, $75.  read more »