To See or Not To See
"To see or not to see? That is the question." Grace discusses and dissects the psychological and philosophical meaning behind culturally impactful and personally inspiring classics: From films, to books, to art, to philosophy. ‘To See or Not to See’ was conceived to expand the perspective and the conversation on beloved media by entering from an angle that is usually overlooked or not discussed.
To See or Not To See
The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton — Our Gilded 'Errors'
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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*
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