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Publicado: Saturday 04 de April de 2026, 17:06
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B ehind this ambitious collection of essays on art, creativity, sexuality and the mind is CP Snow’s old question: why is there such a wide chasm between the world of literary intellectuals and that of empirical scientists? Snow, married to a novelist and with friends working across all disciplines, was critical of the limits of rigid specialisation – a problem Hustvedt recognises from her own life: “In the last decade or so, I have repeatedly found myself at the bottom of Snow’s gulf, shouting up to the persons gathered on either side of it.” Drawing on insights from the humanities and the sciences, Hustvedt divides the book into three parts. The first section focuses on a range of male artists, extending from Picasso to Mapplethorpe and Almodóvar.

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In one of my favourite essays, she examines Pina by Wim Wenders, which is essentially an “artist’s gift to another artist”, a homage by Wenders to the fabulous Pina Bausch. It is here that Hustvedt delves into an analysis of art and perception, asking how we judge works of art and creativity. Our criteria changes constantly as we move from one culture to another or one historical period to the next and yet we tend to assume that what constitutes “good art” is not only universal but also timeless and immutable. Now and then, Hustvedt’s voice rings emotional, almost lambasting, but it is clear that she prefers questions to answers, keen to open up new spaces of free discussion, inviting the readers to see things from alternative angles but ultimately leaving the answers to them. “The history of art is full of women lying around naked for erotic consumption by men,” she says. “Those women are mostly unthreatening, aren’t they?” She is a passionate reader and therein lies the secret of this book – in the act of reading, rethinking, reconnecting. Among the best essays are the ones in which Hustvedt skilfully weaves her personal stories (about her mother, her daughter, her own childhood) with the state of the world, academia and technology. With the advantage of her knowledge of psychoanalysis and fascination with the “writing self”, Hustvedt digs into the mother-daughter relationship, the journey from girlhood to womanhood, the construction of gender patterns and experiments in sexuality. “Girls have more leeway to explore masculine forms than boys have to explore feminine forms.” Combining familiar observation (eg, braiding her daughter’s hair before sleep) with Freud’s interpretation of Medusa and her snaky mane or rereading of the folk tale Rapunzel , Hustvedt slips effortlessly between the spheres of culture, society and self. The book then digresses slightly as it moves on to inspect the delusions of certainty. Hustvedt inveighs against the dualistic framework of “body versus mind”, which has been a central teaching in western philosophy for many centuries. Although she is right on her criticism of the psyche/soma split, she might have referred further to the rich academic literature (postmodern, post-structuralist, post-feminist, post-colonialist) of the late 20th century, in which the same teaching has been absorbed.













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