Time-Tunneling Into a Different Brooklyn with Jonathan Lethem
The author joins Harry Siegel and guest host Brian Berger for a deep dive into his latest book, the excellent and almost undefinable Brooklyn Crime Novel.
Re-Examining Brooklyn
Lethem digs into his reasons on re-examining the Brooklyn he wrote about 20 years earlier in The Fortress of Solitude, but doing so this time with the tools of a journalist, including long interviews conducted amid the dislocation and isolation of the COVID lockdown, and much more:
Collective Psychic Experience
One of the things I was really interested in was the idea of collective psychic experience, that people go through things in a space together and then they don’t even know what part of it is really in their own head, and what was pushed in, stuck in there, from someone else. In a way, it is a typical New York thing. We were all there, right, when Mike Piazza hit the home run after 9/11? Every one of us, 9 million people were in the stadium that day. Well, we weren’t all there. We didn’t even all have the TV on. But somehow, retroactively, you fit yourself to this experience because it’s been had so intensely by other people that you’re confused about whether it was you or someone else who was there.
A Produce Seller in Carroll Gardens, 1970s
A produce seller shows his goods in Carroll Gardens in the 1970s.
Myths of a Neighborhood and the Myths on the Street
And this was true for me in exploring the myths of a neighborhood and the myths on the street: individual moments of violence or confrontation or trauma on the street like that day that this guy put this other guy in a head lock and then he pulled out a knife. Somehow, we were all on that street corner. “I saw it with my own eyes!” Well, that isn’t true. There wasn’t some, stadium full of people watching this thing. It happened in a fugitive instant, but somehow we were all firsthand witnesses. So this idea that this transmission of mythic collective experience, this was a lot of what my questions for people were about: Did something that we all remember really happen? And if so, who did it happen to? Maybe I was the victim or maybe I was just a bystander. I don’t know…
Conclusion
Lethem’s latest book is a thought-provoking exploration of the collective experience, delving into the myths and legends of a neighborhood and the myths on the street. By re-examining the Brooklyn he wrote about 20 years earlier, Lethem sheds new light on the complexities of collective memory and the power of myth.
FAQs
- What was the main theme of Jonathan Lethem’s latest book?
- The main theme of Lethem’s latest book is the collective experience, exploring how people go through things in a space together and how memories can be shared and distorted.
- How did Lethem approach re-examining Brooklyn in his latest book?
- Lethem approached re-examining Brooklyn by using the tools of a journalist, including long interviews conducted amid the dislocation and isolation of the COVID lockdown, and more.
- What is the concept of collective psychic experience?
- Collective psychic experience refers to the idea that people go through things in a space together and then they don’t even know what part of it is really in their own head, and what was pushed in, stuck in there, from someone else.