To See or Not To See

The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton — Our Gilded 'Errors'

Grace Curley Season 1 Episode 15

Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.

0:00 | 16:50

Send us Fan Mail

In this episode, Grace takes a deep dive into Edith Wharton's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel The Age of Innocence — exploring why this gilded, devastating story of repressed love and social tyranny remains as razor-sharp and painfully relevant today as it was in the 1870s.

Topics covered:

  • The mechanics of falling in love as Wharton renders them — not grand declarations but subconscious identifying 
  • Newland Archer as the archetypal man of feeling without courage, and why readers across generations simultaneously pity and resent him
  • The Countess Ellen Olenska: what it means to be truly free in a society that punishes freedom
  • May Welland — not the innocent foil she appears, but a calculated political operator wielding the Tribe's rules with lethal precision
  • Cowardice as ritual: how habit and comfort become the scaffold of a half-lived life
  • The violence hidden inside a world of "Innocence" — and how polite society has always preferred the guillotine with good table manners
  • Memory, love, and the seduction of keeping beauty frozen rather than risking it in the open air

Music: Elmer Bernstein — The Age of Innocence Suite (1993)

*MAJOR SPOILERS AHEAD*

Support the show

Thank you for listening! Leave a comment and stay tuned.