Conversations with Tyler - Ruth Scurr on the Art of Biography
Episode Date: December 1, 2021The most challenging part of being a biographer for Ruth Scurr is finding the best form to tell a life. "You can't go in there with a workmanlike attitude saying, 'I'm going to do cradle to grave.' Yo...u've got to somehow connect and resonate with the life, and then things will develop from that." Known for her innovative literary portraits of Robespierre and John Aubrey, Scurr's latest book follows Napoleon's life through his engagement with the natural world. This approach broadens the usual cast of characters included in Napoleon's life story, providing new perspectives with which to understand him. Ruth joined Tyler to discuss why she considers Danton the hero of the French Revolution, why the Jacobins were so male-obsessed, the wit behind Condorcet's idea of a mechanical king, the influence of Adam Smith's Theory of Moral Sentiments during and after the Reign of Terror, why 18th-century French thinkers were obsessed with finding forms of government that would fit with emerging market forces, whether Hayek's critique of French Enlightenment theorists is correct, the relationship between the French Revolution and today's woke culture, the truth about Napoleon's diplomatic skills, the poor prospects for pitching biographies to publishers, why Montesquieu's Spirit of the Laws would be her desert island read, why Cambridge is a better city than Oxford, why the Times Literary Supplement remains important today, what she loves about Elena Ferrante's writing, how she stays open as a biographer, and more. Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links. Recorded July 12th, 2021 Other ways to connect Follow us on Twitter and Instagram Follow Tyler on Twitter Follow Ruth on Twitter Email us: cowenconvos@mercatus.gmu.edu Subscribe at our newsletter page to have the latest Conversations with Tyler news sent straight to your inbox. Thumbnail photo credit: Dan White
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Hello, everyone, and welcome back to Conversations with Tyler.
Today I'm here with Ruth Skir, historian at Cambridge.
Ruth's latest book has received rave reviews, and it's called Napoleon, a life told in gardens and shadows.
She is also a biographer of Robes-Pierre, has written a wonderful book on 17th century British figure John Aubrey,
and is a frequent writer for Times Literary Supplement and Just About Everywhere Else.
Ruth, welcome.
Thank you so much, Tyler.
Who was the hero or heroine of the French Revolution?
I'm going to say it was Danton.
because he was a revolutionary who saw the error of his ways after he had directly participated in setting up the revolutionary tribunal.
And before he went to his death, he begged forgiveness for the part that he had played.
So for me, he is a hero because he travels the full spectrum of the revolution.
and he also takes very clear responsibility for what had happened.
Ropes Pierre is more complicated figure.
By the end of his life, I think he was in no position to be taking responsibility.
And for me, he also was far more deluded by the end of his life than Dantan ever was.
Is there a counterfactual path where the French Revolution simply works out well
as a liberal revolution. And if so, what would have needed to have been different?
So in terms of counterfactuals, the one I thought most about was what would have happened
if Robespierre hadn't fallen at Thermidor and the relationship between him and Saint-Jus had
continued. But that's not the triumph of the liberal revolution. That would have merely been a
continuation of the point they had gotten to. For a triumph,
of the liberal revolution, that would have needed to be much, much earlier. I think that it was
almost impossible for them to get a liberal constitution in place in time to make that a possibility.
So what you have is 1789, the liberal aspirations, the hopes, the declaration of rights,
And then there is almost a hiatus period in which they are struggling to design the institutions.
And that is the period which, if it could have been compressed, if there could have been more quickly a stability introduced.
Some of the people are most interested in in that period were very interested in what has to be true about a society in order for it to have a stable constitution.
But obviously when you're in the middle of a revolution and you're struggling to come up with those solutions, then there is the opening to chaos.
Was Crane Brinton correct that all revolutions impose some kind of period of Puritanism?
I think that depends on what you mean by Puritanism.
If you mean something approaching political fanaticism or a moralistic expectation,
of not just the people participating in the revolution,
but also those in whose name the revolution is being carried out,
then yes, absolutely, that is a necessary part of the revolution.
Is that what you meant by Puritan?
Yes, so you see it after the Russian Revolution, for instance.
Rose-fierre, who seems quite rigid, right?
He rises to power.
He's not that old.
He's not really a member of the previous elite.
And why is it other than his ability to give a lot of,
of ideological speeches, does he become, at least for a while, the apparent leader?
Well, you're talking about a very, very short space of time. I mean, that was the thing
that struck me most working on his life. You could say there was elements of luck and timing
involved in that. He did have a very distinctive rhetoric, the rhetoric of speaking for the people,
of sacrificing his personal interest for those of the people,
That was powerful in the circumstances. It resonated with some of his fellow revolutionaries.
But I think when you look at the period and you reconstruct it on a day by day, week by week, month by month basis,
what you understand is this is a tremendous scrabble. And his ascendancy was always insecure.
I don't think it's correct to ever describe him as a tyrant. He's basically one of the people
struggling to ride that revolutionary wave.
If we think of the thought of Robespierre, it seems in some areas he was extremely radical,
but in other areas such as family and gender, he was remarkably conservative,
arguably more conservative than the status quo ex ante.
What's the principle that delineates where he becomes radical and where he becomes conservative?
It's much easier for him, and I think for everybody else, to be radical in opposition.
So in the early years of the revolution, he is an ardent critic of those people who are trying, for example, to defend some kind of distinction between active and passive citizens.
He's an advocate of more public surveillance of the debates. He's a pioneer. He's definitely a radical at that point.
once he is himself in power, once he is trying to stabilize the revolution, then he becomes
much less radical. He's basically recognizing the need to impose order because he is now on the
inside. He is a person who has taken on the role and the responsibility for trying to impose
order on the revolution. Why were the Jacobins in general so male,
obsessed. It's a very male movement ideologically. There's not much talk about freedom for women.
For all the changes that were made, it seems reactionary on that issue.
Well, certainly you have other intellectuals who identify themselves in the opposing group,
the Girondin, Condorcet, for example, who right from the very beginning is fighting the
gender distinctions. I mean, he is the person.
who says very, very clearly straight off from the Declaration, a Universal Declaration of the Rights
of Man and Citizen, it makes absolutely no sense not to extend these to women. But he's arguing
in a context where there are the usual excuses for not doing that. So you have very forward-thinking
members of the Jacobin Party saying, well, you know, in principle we would like to do this. But, you
and now is not the time, you know, that can wait.
Should we adopt Condorcet's idea of a mechanical king?
Why did that make sense to him?
Well, that's a humorous contribution from him.
And actually, I'm completely with him on that.
I have no problem.
We have these debates in Britain about the role of the monarch and how important.
And Condorcet was like, hey, you know, you just need an automaton,
and you can bring him out or her at Easter and any other.
time you feel like Wimbledon or for the football. And it doesn't need to be an actual person. I think
he was obviously being very sort of witty, but he's a Republican. He's one of the first to come out
as a straightforward Republican. How was Adam Smith's theory of moral sentiments influential during
the terror? Well, that is a really interesting question. Actually, I did some work on this exact
topic. There were people who had been influenced by Adam Smith before the revolution. The Abbe
Sears is one of the most prominent. His archive is full of notes and annotations to the theory
of moral sentiments. The Abbeziers has colleagues and friends who have been influenced by him
and they are interested in trying to understand how you think about the stability
in a society that occurs naturally and spontaneously, and what the gap is between that and political
order. So how you tailor your political institutions to effectively fit with your expectation
of spontaneous sociability or social order. And definitely they look to Adam Smith,
Connoisse's wife, Sophie translates the theory of moral sentence,
It's not quite finished during the terror. Condole'sé does not survive the terror. He dies in prison, either a suicide or an assassination. But afterwards, his widow continues with that translation. And the people who do survive and are interested in social theory build on what they think Adam Smith had already understood.
If we think about 18th century French thinkers, they seem obsessed with the particular theme,
the notion of what kind of virtue is required for commercial states to persist.
Why is that such an important question at that time?
They're trying to understand the forms of government that are going to fit with the emerging markets.
So they are very aware that international competition for trade,
is becoming hugely politically important.
And they want to understand what needs to be true
about a society and its political institutions
in order to fit with those market forces.
As you know, France is right next to Switzerland, right?
The Swiss have no king or queen.
There are plenty of reports coming from the Jesuits and others
that the Native Americans in the new world typically don't have kings,
they might have chiefs. So why wasn't the notion of dispensing with the monarchy more central
to French liberal thought leading up to the revolution? So the physiocrats, they're obsessed with the
king, right? Why is the king so important to the French? In the lead up to the revolution,
it's absolutely right that there are very, very few people who even consider that you could get rid
of the monarchy. In contrast to America, they recognize that this is.
a very well-established, old monarchy, that it's integrated into the society. They can see
that in America there has been an opportunity to experiment with a completely new form of government,
and they recognise that they're not going to have that opportunity in that completely pure form,
that they've got a monarchy and they're focused upon reforming it. That's the energy that's going into it,
the physiocrats, as you mentioned, other groups.
For them, the question is, how do we reform?
We can take ideas from the Republican tradition.
We can think about how to maybe come up with some sort of hybrid.
But essentially, for them, it's a reform project until suddenly it's not.
Here's a thinker near and dear to your heart.
Forgive my pronunciation.
But Pierre de Louis wrote error.
Why is he still a political thinker of relevance?
Well, he is one of the people I was referring to earlier.
He really tries to find a political application for some of these ideas of stabilising the Constitution.
He's someone who's giving public lectures during the terror,
and he's really trying to take what his inheritance from the Enlightenment,
which includes exposure to Adam Smith, but also Montesquieu,
Voltaire, Rousseau as well, obviously.
And he's trying to use those ideas and the landscape of intellectual contributions
to actually work through the practical political problems in the middle of the terror.
I mean, I've found that very, very interesting.
But what's his theory of political economy?
Like, why is some particular system more stable in his view
compared to what others thought?
How does the model differ?
He has, I would say, it's fair to say, a very optimistic view of political economy. He's a liberal
through and through. He thinks that you need to facilitate the free markets, that if you do that,
you will see the principle of work, integrate people into a harmonious society. So he and someone
exactly contemporary to him, Benjamin Constant. They're both interested in this possibility that actually
the free markets are going to really prosper and it will be possible to have stable societies
that fit with that. Very broad question, but if we look at the Enlightenment as a whole,
and not just the French Enlightenment, but what is the underlying principle that gives it a unified
flavor. I mean, what is enlightenment, to paraphrase Kant?
For me, it's liberty. It's the evaluation of liberty above all else. And I mean, I see this
most in Tokfiel, because he is obviously first generation who has no personal memories of
the revolution, but when he looks back on the revolution and he tries to explain what has
happened, and in fact to explain not just the beginnings of democracy in France, but also, of
course, in America, he sees a fundamental conflict between liberty and equality. And he is always
prioritizing, if he can, liberty whilst expecting that equality will win out as the stronger
value. Was Hayek correct that the French Enlightenment theorists were two
rationalistic, assigned too strong a power to human reason, and thus inevitably were led
down a kind of slippery slope where their liberty was self-undercutting, and that the British
empiricist tradition is far superior. Agree or disagree? I disagree with that, actually. I don't
think you can be too rational. In that regard, I'm a real signed-up enlightenment person. I think
You have to be very careful about thinking that, I mean, I recognize, of course, there are limits to reason and what it can achieve.
I think Edmund Burke was exactly right about that, a profound political thinker.
But ultimately, I think we have to be very careful about accepting, and the first instance, that there are limits to what reason can achieve.
That's where I disagree with Burke.
I mean, I have more sympathy for the revolutionaries and what they were trying to do than he.
he did. Are the origins of today's woke and cancel culture found in the French Revolution?
I don't think the origins of it are. I think there are resonances and I think that's a very
important difference. I think you can definitely look at the revolutionary rhetoric, the
prescription of certain views and the radical attempt in the French Revolution to cancel the
past. I mean, this was absolutely explicit right down to changing the calendar. They said, we do not
want to continue with this oppressive framework that we have inherited from the church. And
therefore, we are going to have a new calendar based upon the natural world and etc. And that's just
one example of the determined attempt to cancel what was by the revolutionaries perceived as
inextricably oppressive past. So of course it's very interesting to use the revolution as a prism.
You can look at it. You can see what happened as a result of that. You can think about the resonances.
But I don't think what we see today is directly related or in any sense caused by that.
What do you think of the common criticism of Napoleon, that he lacked diplomatic talent
and always had to make up for that with battlefield advantage?
I think that's part of the anti-Napoleonic kind of group.
He's a very divisive figure.
You're going to have people who attempt to diminish him.
That would be one way to say, you know, this guy is basically some kind of yorpe, you know.
He can't negotiate.
He doesn't even have great French.
And therefore he has to start going for battles.
I don't think that's right.
I think he absolutely does diplomacy.
You could argue that a lot of the battles are started by other people, not necessarily by him.
But what we're hitting here, the moment we bring his name up, is the very, very polarized attitudes to him.
Now, if we view Napoleon's life through his gardens, which is a main theme in your new book, Napoleon, a life told in gardens and shadows,
what do we learn about Napoleon that we don't learn by viewing Napoleon through the lens of his artistic emissions?
David, Kanova, many others. What's the difference?
By situating him in the gardens, I broaden the cast list.
So, of course, you could look at him and his influence on the arts, the high arts.
David Kanova, they enter into my book.
But so does a whole cast.
of lesser known, literally more down-to-earth people, botanist, scientists, other people in his
household, architects, etc. And the point really was to have a broadcast but a principle of
selection as well, which would enable a more diverse set of perspectives on him.
There's a common stereotype of the differences between English and French gardens,
that the English supposedly like gardens to be wild, diverse, spontaneous,
the French insist on a kind of top-down control, almost a mirror eye-ex portrait of the thinkers.
Is that overdrawn or do you agree?
I think it was in that period a very definite difference.
There was a fashion for picturesque English-style gardens,
which actually also drew upon an Italian and Chinese inheritance
is not just that it's English,
but it became known as the English style,
and it became very popular in France,
in contrast to the formal and regulated style,
which was associated with traditional French gardens,
especially in very grand places.
By the time you get to the end of your journal,
Aubrey book, which is called My Own Life, titled by you, you describe Aubrey as, and I quote,
a wonderful friend. Could you say the same about Napoleon?
Absolutely not. And by the way, that description of Aubrey is picking up on my first book
with Robespierre, where at the very beginning of the book, I say that he has friends and
enemies, even to this day. Like Napoleon, he's a very, very divisive figure. And,
that I had tried to be his friend to see things from his point of view, but that friends, as he
always suspected, have opportunities for betrayal that enemies only dream of. And actually, my editor
was quite nervous about, this was my first book, and she was very nervous about me putting
that sentence into my introduction because she thought people might just think this was a mad to
try and be Robespier's friend. And I insisted, I really mattered to me that if you give someone
the benefit of the doubt, if you don't start off vilifying them, even if they have been responsible
for the terror, then the portrait that you construct at the end of the day is going to be
far, far more damning because you've included the good, you've included the things. You've included
the things that there are to approve of, you've included those sites and you haven't started off
basically telling people, you know, we're going to write a book from this particular position.
So when it came to Aubrey, I had obviously a huge contrast in topics for these books.
Aubrey was a wonderful friend and I felt that being in his company,
I had actually, and this is literally true, made new and wonderful friends through him
because he still continues to attract friends. He is just that kind of charming guy, you know,
and nobody's really going to say this about Robespierre or Napoleon.
But Napoleon did charm people, right? That was part of how he rose to success.
He absolutely did charm people, but there's something I quote in my book that I keep thinking about,
which Madame de Stahl said about him, which is that his eyes and his smile were never actually
synchronised. And she said, people have said he had a charming smile. But actually it was more like
a grimace. It wasn't a genuine smile. And you could see he was kind of calculating what he was
going to need or how he was going to, you know, advance his purposes through this person. She takes a very,
very negative view of him. And she says, you know, actually for Napoleon, other people don't really
exist. They are means to an end for him. Now, she had reason to be extremely negative about him,
but she did represent the deep liberal voice of the French Revolution. And it's very interesting to me,
although she says people claim he had a charming smile, people claim he was charming. Actually,
what she sees is manipulation. And actually, a lot of
power there. Insofar as we make history more biographical, how would that bias history itself?
I don't think history can be too biographical because at the end of the day, we are interested in people
who went before us and understanding the frameworks of their lives and the choices they made.
I think it's important to be as broad and inclusive in who we are.
interested in, and that is very, very important to me. Certainly it was one of the ideas behind
the shadows. It was about the people that Napoleon's shadow fell upon that I began really trying
to think about him to get away from the idea that, you know, he is the centre, he's the son,
he's the ego, and that we can think about history as a series of great egos, great men.
And obviously that is something I am deeply opposed to, and I'm very interested in trying to broaden
the biographical approach. And many other people are doing this as well, which brings me huge pleasure
to actually acknowledge that, you know, for every one of these iconic figures was situated densely
amongst other people whose lives were actually as important to them as Napoleon or Robespier's was to them.
What makes Keynes's essays and biography so good? So this is a biography of Marshall, of Malthus, right?
Yeah, sure.
The Versailles figures. Why does that book work so well?
I'm sorry to say, I have not read that book very recently. I have read it in the past,
so I wouldn't like to tell you, as one biographer is speaking to another, what he does.
So what do you think works so well?
Keynes puts himself into the book.
He was remarkably perceptive as an observer of features he knew.
And with the other Cambridge economists, such as Malthus and Marshall,
you can read Keynes' account as a running rivalry that he's afraid to admit up front,
but he's always comparing himself to them.
And the Strowsian reading of that book is that half of it is about Keynes.
Yeah, I think that's absolutely right.
And I don't have any kind of problem with that.
You could say, is he explicit enough about that?
I mean, perhaps since Keynes, we've reached a state of biographical writing where people feel freer to be more honest about that, to actually highlight it, to say, you know, I very much approve of the idea that the biographer is going to present a portrait that they can of whoever.
So if Keynes is writing about people he feels competitive with, he's going to.
He's going to be motivated to do that in a particular way. I personally don't feel competitive with my
biographical subjects. And insofar as I would put myself into the text, it is through what I've
seen rather than in any sense paralleling their lives and mine. I mean, perhaps Keynes,
perhaps rightly, had a much higher opinion of himself.
Why in Cambridge in particular do you think there's a preoccupation with biography?
There isn't, to be honest.
There absolutely is not.
Who were you thinking of?
You?
Well, I mean, it's very kind of you.
Eminent Victorians, right?
Yeah, well.
The Bloomsbury Circle, Virginia Woolf.
Yeah, but they are outsiders.
They are absolutely outsiders.
I was so, so flattered that one of my friends who read an early draft of my book said she couldn't
at first think what it reminded her of and then she suddenly thought it was like Jacob's Room.
And of course it's nothing like Jacob's Room in so many ways, but I know kind of the resonance
and the thought that I was in any way building on the deep and profound biographical achievements of Virginia
Wolf, which, by the way, I think they cross the boundaries between nonfiction and fiction,
certainly in her case, and I'm sure, in other peoples. But she and straight-cheate, I mean,
I see them as subversive outsiders. I don't see them as Cambridge. And I don't think they
would have seen themselves like that. Do you find it striking how much Virginia Woolf is no longer
known for her writings on biography? And she wrote herself, quote, even Dr. Johnson is created by Boswell,
will not live as long as false staff as created by Shakespeare.
Is that true?
And if biography is not so enduring, why is it so important?
Because it is about how we understand another life.
For me, it's a relationship.
I mean, it is trying to find the form in which to capture something that you have been able to see in another life.
I think that you're right.
You know, people do know that Virginia Woolf is very interested in biography. They know, for example, clearly, you know, that Orlando is one of the greatest experimental essays on biography and many of her other writings. I mean, they're so rich and very numerous. Maybe we should be more optimistic. I mean, perhaps people are very engaged with this. I really hope so. She means an enormous amount to me.
Should we worry that possibly biography, especially long biography, is the least red genre today relative to purchases?
So people will buy a biography of Eisenhower, Theodore Roosevelt, they put it on their shelf, it signals something about what kind of person they are, but they don't read very much of it, if any.
Does biography have that problem more than history or fiction or smart nonfiction?
I doubt it. That kind of person probably buys the Pulitzer Prize winners and puts some,
them on their shelf, ready for their guests to arrive. And as an author, well, good luck to them.
If that's how they want to furnish their rooms, then that's absolutely fine by me. I think one of the
concerns is with publishers and their fear about biography. Now, you know, people will not invest in
reading a long life. And perhaps it's difficult for writers to get these books commissioned.
writers in general are struggling very much indeed to survive. I mean, you know, I have an academic job. I could
not possibly live off my writing. I need to have another job. I'm fortunate that I do. I think perhaps
there are publishers who would be reluctant to give even a small advance to what they saw as a
traditional biography. And you can't really, the problem with biography is it's hard to win. I mean, you come along,
and you say, oh, I would like to write about Robespierre. And they say, well, surely there's
enough books on Robespierre. We, what? You know, we don't need another Napoleon book. We don't
need another Robespierre book. We have many, many biographies of them already. And then you come
along and you say, I'd like to do a biography of John Aubrey. And they're like, who's that?
I mean, nobody's going to buy that because nobody knows who he is. So it's very difficult to pitch
the biographical project. You've either got to be saying, listen, nobody's heard of it.
this woman or this guy, and I'm going to write the book that changes that, and maybe someone will
take a punt on it or not, or you've got to convince someone, listen, I know this has been done
before, but I want to bring something new to the table. Well, that's a tall order, actually. It's
probably easier to just sit there and write your novel and hope that somebody likes it enough to
publish it. I went to the Arlington County Public Library this morning, and there they have it, a
separate section called biographies. And in that section are all the biographies.
And that's actually a funny kind of segregation. Should they do that?
I think about that in bookshops a lot. I'm not sure. I think it's better to integrate them with
the history books. I mean, I don't want to tell other people either how to do their jobs. I mean,
sometimes I go into a bookstore or a library and I'm thinking, what is this? You know, why is it
organized that way? Maybe there's something I'm not seeing. But I'm always very disappointed
if I go to the biography section, because apart from anything else, it kind of looks so random.
You know, it's just like the recent biographies and you're jumping between periods.
And I think it would be much more interesting to have, at least with the historical biographies, them integrated by period.
That's what I would do.
But, I mean, I'm not running a bookstore or a library.
As you may know, daunt books in London, in fact, organizes by country.
So a biography of Napoleon is in the France section.
That to me seems much better.
Don'ts is a wonderful bookshop. I'm very grateful to don't. And indeed, to many other bookstores as well.
One good thing is that bookstores are having some independence and creativity on an individual level, especially the independent ones.
They can put unusual combinations together. They can experiment a bit more. I think that's very, very valuable.
Which other historical figure, if you would name one, might we understand better through the lens of his or her gardens?
Oh wow, that's a very interesting question.
Coleridge, Hardy, Kipling, Newton, Churchill, someone else.
I mean, Hardy, I don't think we'd understand him better.
I've been to Hardy's cottage.
I've seen the remnants there of what must have been his garden.
It is a very interesting question, but the point here is that the method, the idea of doing it this way,
came from the material, not the other way around.
So it's difficult for me because I didn't actually someone asked me the same question about my Aubrey book.
They said, okay, so if you were going to imagine a diary based on the historical evidence for another figure, who would that be?
And I was just like, well, I can't answer that because I invented that approach to fit Aubrey.
And actually, even now, in Napoleon, I think if you said to me, well, your next book has to be in the same mode, you have to do it.
another figure and it has to be through their gardens, I would really struggle with that.
Now, in most of these conversations, we have a middle segment called underrated versus overrated.
Are you ready for some of that?
Okay.
Okay, I toss at something. Montesquieu, overrated or underrated, as a thinker.
Underrated. He's my desert island choice. I love the spirit of the laws.
And what is the depth in there that most people fail to see?
They don't read it. It's huge.
That's one reason for it being a desert island. Montesquieu is a brilliant, brilliant man. He's a true, true liberal. And I absolutely adore that text. And he's also one, I think he's probably in France, the very earliest social scientist as well.
Stonehenge has a monument, overrated or underrated. You know, it's a megalith, right?
Stonehenge could never, ever be too overrated. It is so important and I am part of the dismayed group of people who are having to fight and trying to fight this plan to sink a tunnel under Stonehenge and cause God knows what kind of destruction. I mean, it's really, really terrible. And the idea that we would do this to those megaliths that,
we have actually so fortunately and largely also with help in some very important respects
from Warbury, they're part of our posterity. I can't believe that we would underrate them
enough to be doing this road traffic system. Tom Stoppard's Arcadia, the play. I love Tom Stoppard's
plays and especially Arcadia. That's my favorite. That's absolutely brilliant play.
Everything's underrated. Here's another easy one.
Everything's underrated.
The composer Robin Holloway.
He has the office downstairs to me.
Of course Robin Holloway should be much, much more famous and much, much more rated.
Actually, he is pretty rated.
He doesn't have a bad time compared, by the way, to a lot of musicians and composers.
Very often he has a prom.
You know, this guy has attention, but I think he should have more.
Distute de Trassee, the French ideologue, overrated or underrated or unres.
Underrated.
Also underrated.
I love him too.
He's a very important figure in continuing the development of social science in that early period after the revolution.
Obviously, you can criticize some of his ideas, but for me, without him, Comte and Saint-Cimant, they don't even make sense.
Okay, here's maybe the only tricky one.
Oxford, the town.
Yeah.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah, okay.
You don't have to be polite on this podcast, you know.
Yeah, okay.
So I infinitely prefer living in Cambridge.
Why?
It's the way the river goes through the center of the city for me.
Water is very important to me.
It's the way the colleges back onto the river.
My college, for example, is divided by the river.
So we have some on one side, some of the other.
I think at a certain level, it reminds me of Paris a little bit.
Whereas Oxford, you have to go slightly hunting.
you know, that it's there, of course, but it seems more peripheral to the city.
A city seems closer to London.
And the other thing that's interesting is in Cambridge, the colleges house all of their
student, even our graduate student.
We have a lot of investment in doing that.
Whereas in Oxford, they don't.
Not even their undergraduates.
And that means that there is a huge market in basic kind of landlords who are making money
out of the students. They are housing them in very, very shabby accommodation. It's, you know,
really run down lots of Oxford, even quite central Oxford for this reason. And I think that does
make a big difference. So I think the colleges and their approach to looking after the housing
of the undergraduates in Cambridge is actually a big contribution here. Now, you've reviewed a
great deal for the Times Literary Supplement. We live in an internet-driven world. And although there's
online TLS. It doesn't actually circulate that much. The links are not always open. How would you articulate
how and why the TLS remains important today? Well, it's partly the readership. It's interesting.
Academics all over the world really, really care about their reviews in the TLS. I remember my supervisor
explaining this to me. You know, you can be in a university in Israel and your book
comes out, it really matters what happens to the book in the TLS in a way in which arguably it doesn't
so much matter in the broadsheets or the literary magazines. So I think that's one argument. There's
that sense of, you know, it's not peer review. It's better than peer review because peer review is
always so fraught and, you know, you're basically trying to find people to find fault or something.
there's a certain amount of that in the TLS, but there is also a platform for an international exchange of ideas and books.
And, you know, noting, I mean, when I started writing for the TLS, I was, and I still do a lot of fiction for them.
And sometimes that would be the only review that a first novel would get.
And then maybe that person went on to write other things.
And you look back on that and you think, well, yeah, you know, the TLS was, I remember it,
Mary Kay Wilmers once saying to me, because she was obviously the London Review of Books,
and she had previously worked at the TLS, and she said that what she really valued in the TLS was
that it was a journal of record, and I think that's right.
Why is Elena Ferranti special to you?
Like, you know, millions of other people, I was completely captivated by the quartets,
the brilliant friend in ways in which I almost haven't been since.
childhood reading. I'm kind of nervous to go back and read those books because I had the most
intense, immersive experience with them. And then I read her other shorter fiction, and I'm reading
her in translation, obviously, by the way. But she's a terrific writer. She reflects upon language,
the power of language, deeply, deeply feminist. I was absolutely enthralled by discovering her.
On a second read, they held up quite well for me, but I would say one in two rows in status and three and four fell a bit.
Yeah, I can imagine that. I haven't done it yet, so I don't know, but that makes sense.
You know, there is a recent machine learning study that suggests they were written by a man, Dominico Starnone.
It may or may not be true, but it's plausibly true. I find that disturbing as a thought, but...
I didn't see this study. I did follow the outing of her and all of the controversy around
the fact she had wished her real name not to be published.
Starnoni is the husband of the woman who was outed.
Yeah, I'm not really on board with this idea at all.
Apart from finding it disturbing, I would need very, very strong proof to even start engaging with that.
Is there any proof?
Do you believe in machine learning?
I don't know.
A computer says it's the same style.
Take that as you wish.
I'm going to be passing over that.
Now a few questions about the Ruth Skir production function for our final segment.
In one of your essays on Finela, which is the house you work in, you said, and I quote,
I am attracted to calm, order, and symmetry.
If so, why write a biography of Napoleon?
Why?
Well, he's attracted to symmetry and order.
Maybe not calm, but actually I think he does like calm when he can get it.
But I'm talking there aesthetically about my surroundings.
I kind of have a real aversion to a lot of clutter around me.
I mean, one of the reasons I have so many books here in my office is that I made a deal with
myself when I bought my first house, that I would only have books in it that I was either
working on or would want to read if I came awake in the middle of the night, and that's it.
And that's because I didn't want that sense of being overwhelmed by books.
them being kind of out of control, et cetera.
So sometimes people are very surprised when they come to my house
and they're like, well, where are your books, you know, where are you, etc.
But there was something about maintaining an orderly environment
that was very important.
I mean, to be fair, in that article, I mean, I have caused chaos in Fenella
in my office in order to have this calm environment at home.
You also wrote, and I quote,
when I was an adolescent, Wuthering Heights appealed to me much more than sense and sensibility.
But now the reverse is true.
Yeah.
How did that happen?
Age.
Thank God.
Why does age flip you away from Wuthering Heights?
Wuthering Heights is over the top, right?
High passion, you know, Heathcloth, Kathy out on the Moors.
I mean, I thought that was it.
You know, I thought that was what it meant to love someone with to the extent where they'd be visiting you after their death
and trying to get in through the window.
But actually, I completely changed my understanding
of what's involved in loving another person
and actually being gentle with another person,
whoever they are, you know, my children,
my relationships with my parents,
and other significant relationships in my life.
I think the Wuthering Heights model has not weathered well.
How has continuing to live in Cambridge shaped how you think,
speaking of environment?
It's an enormous,
privilege to have spent so much time living here and to have brought up my children here. I mean,
they do in all seriousness. My younger one now is applying to university and she's like, oh my God,
you know, why did you bring us up in Cambridge? I mean, we don't want to go anywhere else. We love it so
much. How has it helped how I think? I constantly making new friends in Cambridge. It's a very
vibrant and also to a certain extent transient place. People come. They come for a year. They come for
three years. I've really have benefited from having the contacts through my college as well,
interdisciplinary. I have good friends with scientists, engineers. And I kind of feel I'm living
alongside their work as well as my work and trying to understand it as best I can.
Who first spotted your talent as a historian? Before
you were a historian. Oh, I don't know. But you ended up in your current job somehow, right?
Yeah, sure, sure. Yeah, I mean, I have a combination. I mean, talent as a historian is a very
specific question. I mean, I would say there would be some of my fiercer colleagues who would be
happy to recognize my talent as a biographer and as a writer. I remember my supervisor saying to me,
he was a brilliant, brilliant man, Isfahanhant, Hungarian. He came to Harvard and he was absolutely a huge
intellectual influence on me. And I remember him once saying to me when I would give him drafts
of my work, he said, well, you know, you've got this big disadvantage, Ruth, because you write so
well that it takes me quite a long time to realise that you actually don't know what you're talking
about. That was his contribution. So I would say he perhaps, but, you know, there are many different
kinds of history. And the first real deep support for my Robespier book came from Norman Hampson,
who was a brilliant historian and had written an experimental book about Robespier in his time.
And we had a very important exchange about that. So perhaps he was the first to really engage with
what I was trying to do as a historian as well as a biographer. And let's say a talented
young person, a prospective biographer comes to you. And they say, well, I'm thinking of having a
life where I'm essentially a biographer with some other job attached, maybe in academia, and you're
trying to figure out, does this person make sense as a biographer? Other than the obvious, hard work,
intelligence, what is it you look for in a good or great biographer to spot one?
You've got to be brave and completely open, in my view, to finding the form in which to tell the life.
You can't go in there with a workman-like attitude saying, well, you know, I'm going to do cradle to grave or I'm going to do it.
This is why you've got to somehow connect and resonate with the life and then things will develop from that.
That would be my advice.
But, you know, I'm not teaching biographical writing.
I'm not sure I would be particularly good at that.
I have friends who teach creative writing and I always kind of had the deepest respect for it.
but I can't begin to imagine how you do it.
So I always think of Muriel Sparks' novel,
The Finishing School, which was her last novel,
where she sends up a creative writing course.
And it's so, so brilliant.
It's one perfect first paragraph.
And she's explaining how you, you know,
in the voice of the creative writing teacher,
you've got to set the atmosphere,
you can say, you know,
the visibility is very poor, et cetera, et cetera.
And she says, yeah, it's much too early to write everything
was covered by the beep fog.
And what do you do personally to stay open as a biographer, if that's such an important
trade?
I wait for my subjects to find me in a strange way.
I'm open to jumping between periods, centuries, kinds of lives.
I have a kind of adventurous approach to what I might do next.
I feel very privileged to be able to pursue that.
I mean, remember when I finish my Robespierre book and I decided I was going to do this
Aubrey book and I was still married to my first husband and he was very kind about it,
but I think he thought I'd actually gone crazy.
I mean, I think he thought this was so inexplicable.
And lots of people do still say that to me.
How could you, what on earth, you know, why did you make that jump?
Why didn't you do one of Saussius?
Or even if I'd gone from Robespier to Napoleon, okay, that would have been,
a certain kind of conventional path. But that is not what happened. And I have absolutely no regrets
about that. Last question. What is it you will be working on next? I can't tell you. It's too
wild, I think. But you know what it is, right? I suspect what it is. I have to find out if that's
going to happen or not. I thought I was going to have a big gap. I just got married. And I thought,
okay, we came through the pandemic and I'm going to have a long rest now.
My children are pretty much grown up.
I'm starting this new life.
But then suddenly I'm starting to think quite seriously about another book.
Ruth Skir, thank you very much.
And again, everyone, I loved Ruth's latest book, Napoleon,
a life told in gardens and shadows.
I'm also a big fan of John Aubrey, my own life, also by Ruth.
And finally, her rubs pierre biography,
Fatal Purity, Rose Pierre and the French Revolution.
Ruth, thank you.
Thank you, Tyler.
Thank you.
Thanks for listening to Conversations with Tyler.
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