The Duty of Ritual Obeisance

Published on March 27, 2011

From Lewis Lapham's introduction to the Celebrity issue of Latham's Quarterly (Winter 2011, p. 16): In place of the gods who once commanded the heights of Mount Olympus, the media present a repertory company of animated tropes enthroned on a never-ending talk show, anointed with the oil of sweet celebrity, disgorging showers of gold.  It doesn't matter that they say nothing of interest or consequence.  Neither did Aphrodite or Zeus.  Celebrity is about being, not becoming.  Once possessed of the sovereign power to find a buyer, all celebrity is royal.  The images of wealth and power demand nothing of their votaries other than the duty of ritual obeisance.  The will to learn gives way to a being in the know, which is the instant recognition of the thousands of logos encountered in the course of the day's shopping and an evening's programming.

From Lewis Lapham’s introduction to the Celebrity issue of Latham’s Quarterly (Winter 2011, p. 16):

In place of the gods who once commanded the heights of Mount Olympus, the media present a repertory company of animated tropes enthroned on a never-ending talk show, anointed with the oil of sweet celebrity, disgorging showers of gold.  It doesn’t matter that they say nothing of interest or consequence.  Neither did Aphrodite or Zeus.  Celebrity is about being, not becoming.  Once possessed of the sovereign power to find a buyer, all celebrity is royal.  The images of wealth and power demand nothing of their votaries other than the duty of ritual obeisance.  The will to learn gives way to a being in the know, which is the instant recognition of the thousands of logos encountered in the course of the day’s shopping and an evening’s programming.

Explore 21 years and 4,058 articles of

The Revealer