Merv Emre writes for the April 24, 2025 New York Review of Books about the Tom Wolfe novel I am Charlotte Simmons.
The introduction reads: “This essay appears, in somewhat different form, as the introduction to a new edition of Tom Wolfe’s I Am Charlotte Simmons, to be published by Picador in May.”
The sub-head reads: “Tom Wolfe’s I Am Charlotte Simmons summons the romantic vision of the university as an unblighted Eden to mock it through the downfall of one of its deceived mortals.”
Every romantic vision gets pierced by reality. Anyone who conceives of any place on this earth as an unblighted Eden will be disappointed. Charlotte Simmons is not destroyed by her time at DuPont.
Tom Wolfe is doing what he always does — paying close attention to status details with scene-by-scene construction, multiple points of view and liberal use of realistic dialogue. He doesn’t mock the university any more than he mocks his average subject.
Emre begins:
“I am Charlotte Simmons, which many people believe to be Tom Wolfe’s crudest and most offensive book, played an important part in my moral education.”
The construction “which many people believe” is pathetic. Anyone who thinks this is Wolfe’s crudest and most offensive book hasn’t read many Wolfe books.
The rescue framing is the original sin of the piece. Wolfe sold millions of books, won the National Book Foundation Medal in 2010, and shaped American journalism for fifty years. He does not need Emre’s permission to be read. The premise that a literary critic at Wesleyan must rehabilitate him for the NYRB audience treats the literary critical establishment as the legitimacy gate. The reading public walked past that gate twenty years ago and bought the book anyway. Emre’s “I read it on the bookstore floor” pose tries to claim authentic access to a book that needed no such mediation.
The romantic vision argument is sentimental. Every institution disappoints idealization. Marriage. The Church. The Army. The Family. Treating the university as a special case requires either ignorance of other institutions or a special investment in this one. Emre teaches at Wesleyan. She has the investment. Her readers do too. The framing flatters them by pretending the disappointment is specific to the institution they paid for and now work in.
Charlotte does not come down because of the university. She arrives with a pride her parents and teachers cultivated. The university supplies new material for the pride and new venues for it. The corruption was already there in Sparta. Wolfe says so. “Her parents and her teachers, outwardly afraid of sin, cannot see how they have planted it deep in Charlotte’s soul.” Emre quotes the line and then ignores its implication. If Sparta planted the seed, the university only watered it. The university did not cause the harvest.
The “crudest and most offensive” framing is a class signal. Offensive to whom? To the literary academic class that felt the book was about them. Back to Blood (2012) is more provocative on race and ethnicity. Bonfire of the Vanities was harder on the Black urban political machine than Charlotte Simmons is on anyone. The reason Charlotte gets singled out as offensive is that the academic class read the book as a portrait of their own institution and felt named. Offensive is subjective and the subject here is the offended class.
The moral education claim is guild flattery. The empirical case that literature makes readers morally better is thin. Heavy readers do not score higher on honesty, kindness, or compassion than non-readers. Hitler read widely. Stalin annotated novels. The English professoriate maintains the literature-improves-character story because that story funds the department. When a former English major says a novel played a part in her moral education, she is reaffirming the guild belief. Emre is paying her tribe.
Emre writes about herself and the protagonist:
Lacking money and culture and connections, she possessed nothing but her simple faith in the university as the place where she would finally be recognized for what she was: exceptional in mind and body, and pure of heart.
What an infuriatingly obtuse sentence from America’s most privileged about America’s most privileged. The “nothing but simple faith” description fits neither Charlotte nor Emre. Charlotte is valedictorian, Presidential Scholar, intellectually proud, calculating about her competition. She arrives at Dupont with substantial cognitive capital. Emre arrived at her East Coast university with whatever it took to get in. Both were already on track to elite institutions before they walked through the gates. The pose of innocent striver-from-nowhere is romantic projection. The girls who get to those schools are not random poor kids from a river town. They are local stars with cultivated abilities, supported parents, and helpful teachers. Charlotte’s poverty is Wolfe’s narrative device, not a sociological portrait of elite admissions.
Emre writes: “The students did very little reading or writing.”
How do you know? That is an impossible claim. You can’t graduate from an elite college with very little reading or writing (unless you’re a valuable athlete who’s treated with kid gloves). Wolfe focused on parties and sex because that was his subject. The students at Dupont also read enough to pass exams and wrote enough to earn degrees. The novel is selective realism by design. Treating Wolfe’s selections as the totality of student life misreads the form. A novel about a fishing village does not show the people sleeping. A novel about campus parties does not show the people studying.
Emre writes: “Charlotte Simmons tried to rise above the lure of sex and money and social status, the fatal desire to be someone whom everyone knew and talked about.”
The desire to be someone everyone knows and talks about is not fatal. It drives human achievement. Thymos in Plato (428-348 BC). Megalothymia in Fukuyama (b. 1952). The desire for recognition produces entrepreneurs, athletes, scientists, politicians, artists, soldiers, and writers. Without it, civilization runs on subsistence work and family love and not much else. Treating it as pathology is the standard English-department moralism, and it sits oddly in an essay by someone who teaches at Wesleyan and writes for the NYRB and has cultivated her own visibility. The literary critic who decries status-seeking while seeking status performs a familiar move and undermines herself. Emre wants Charlotte’s ambition to be tragic so the essay has a moral. The ambition is normal. Most readers of the essay share it. Most of the people in the room at the New York Review of Books share it.
On “wasting opportunities”: where is the evidence Charlotte wasted hers? She kept her grades up enough to stay enrolled. She joined a sorority, which produces lifelong networks and marriage prospects. She became the girlfriend of the star basketball player, which produces social location and access. She made friends. She learned how to read a campus. She acquired the soft skills of elite passing her parents could not teach her. By any measure elite parents use to evaluate their children, Charlotte did well her freshman year. The only frame on which she wasted her time is the Platonic-clerical frame where college exists for contemplation of the truth and anything else counts as failure. Almost no one operates by that frame, including the people writing essays in NYRB. They send their children to elite universities for the networks and the credentials. They just write about it as if they did not.
The deeper problem in Emre’s essay: it participates in the elite posture where the only acceptable relationship to one’s status is performed ambivalence. Oxford should make you feel bad. Caring what people think should make you feel bad. Wanting to be known should make you feel bad. The performance launders the privileges of the people performing it. Wolfe spent his career satirizing this posture. Emre’s essay reproduces what Wolfe satirized.
Charlotte ends the novel socially located and adapted to her environment. She has not died. She has not lost her mind. She has not been ruined. She has joined the world. Emre invites the reader to view this with pity because the moralist frame requires pity for any character who chooses social life over the life of the mind. One can read the novel with pity. One can also read it with congratulations. Wolfe leaves the door open. Emre walks through only one of them.
Emre writes: “The girl I knew returned to the bookstore to read and reread the novel, hoping perhaps for a different ending. Each time it was the same, and each time its finality angered her, then strengthened her resolve.”
That makes no sense. The passage falls apart on inspection.
Books do not change between readings. The ending stays the same. A reader who returns to a book hoping for a different ending performs a behavior no reader performs. People reread to understand better, to revisit pleasure, to mine for craft. They do not reread expecting plot changes. Emre is reporting a fictional emotional state to demonstrate her literary sensitivity. The behavior described is irrational. The pose is the point.
The “strengthened her resolve” line has its own problem. Resolve to do what? The implied answer is resolve to not become Charlotte. Resolve to remain intellectually serious. Resolve to choose the life of the mind over social adaptation. But Emre became a professor at Oxford. She writes for the NYRB. She has cultivated elite literary visibility for twenty years. She is not the woman who rejected the Charlotte Simmons arc. She is the woman who completed it at a higher altitude. The resolve to be different from Charlotte produced an Emre who is a more credentialed Charlotte. The essay rests on a premise the essay’s own author refutes.
The bookstore mechanics deserve a second look. She did not own the book. She read it on the bookstore floor, behind a column, hiding from the clerks. Emre presents the hiding as practical concealment. It reads more like shame about reading Wolfe at her elite university. Reading the campus novelist who satirizes elite universities required hiding. If true, the scene diagnoses the institution. Emre does not pursue the diagnosis. She uses the scene only to position herself as a humble outsider, which she was not. A student at an old East Coast university trained to read Wolfe critically is not Charlotte Simmons. She is a junior version of Emre at Oxford.
The whole rhetorical setup wants the reader to see her as both Charlotte-adjacent (poor reader on the floor) and Charlotte-superior (the reader who saw through the seduction). The self-positioning requires a younger self who suffered Charlotte’s temptations without falling for them. The evidence in the paragraph contradicts this. Emre fell for the same things Charlotte fell for. She just won the version of the game played at a higher level.
The passage performs literary sensibility. A young intellectual reads with such fervor she rebels against the author’s conclusion. This is the literary critic’s self-image. Emre narrates a hagiographic version of her own reading life. The narration does not survive contact with her biography.
Emre writes:
Twenty years later I can look at my young self and wonder that she should have understood so little—about the novel, and about the university, the relentless pressure it exerts on the souls of its inhabitants. A person who prided herself on withstanding this pressure would not only end up surrendering to it like everyone else but also experience her surrender as tragic, while everyone else would merely smile at her naiveté and self-importance. I had failed to understand this because, like Charlotte Simmons, I believed in the university. I believed in it in the same way that many people believed in the church, as a place of the purest and highest purpose. Walking through its gates had seemed to me an act of rebirth. Everyone was washed clean. Nothing that came before counted against you—not where you were born, or where you went to high school, or how much money your family had—and everything that came after depended only on your innate and enduring gifts: your discipline, your intuition, the sheer velocity of your thought. I had also failed to understand it because, like Charlotte Simmons, I maintained a stubborn sense of my own exceptionality. I believed that my mind and my character were as inviolable as the university I had entered. Or rather, I believed that our fates were entwined in some grand human drama in which I played a vital role, and whose outcome I could imagine only as triumphant.
Emre has been given 20 years of evidence that reality is porous, but she still clings to her buffered identity because it pays. Emre makes her living pretending that we are buffered individuals navigating life through the power of reason.
The passage is a structured confession of porousness that the essay treats as a foundation for buffered analysis.
Emre’s confession. The university exerts “relentless pressure” on the souls of its inhabitants. Anyone who prides herself on withstanding this pressure ends up surrendering to it. The surrender feels tragic to her and ridiculous to everyone else. She believed in the university like a church. She thought walking through its gates meant rebirth. She thought everyone was washed clean. She thought her gifts alone would carry her. She believed her mind and character were inviolable. She maintained a stubborn sense of her own exceptionality. The list reads as a self-portrait of a young person formed by an institution she thought she had merely entered. She names the religious form (church, rebirth, washed clean). She names the meritocratic ideology (discipline, intuition, velocity of thought). She names the personal pride (inviolability, exceptionality). She names the dramatic frame (grand human drama, vital role, triumphant outcome). The young Emre was a textbook case.
Then the essay carries on as if her current vantage point sits outside the pressure she just described. The mature Emre writes from Wesleyan for the NYRB about how the young Emre was deluded. The mature Emre’s position requires a deeper buffered claim than the young Emre’s. The young Emre thought she was inviolable inside the university. The mature Emre thinks she is inviolable above the university while still inside it. The pressure continued to operate. It just produced more sophisticated forms of self-presentation.
The literary critic’s job description requires the pretense of analytical distance from the institutions she analyzes. NYRB pays for that pretense. Wesleyan pays for that pretense. The literary critical profession sells buffered analysis of porous lives. Emre cannot abandon the pretense without abandoning the paycheck. So she confesses porousness at the young-self level and reasserts buffered analysis at the present-self level. The confession functions to license the analysis.
Status-claiming evolves with sophistication. The frat boy claims status through the fight response. The basketball player claims status through dunking. The student journalist claims status through prize-winning articles. The literary critic claims status through introductions that announce her superiority to the prizes she once chased. Same desire. More sophisticated form.
The Emre passage is also a concession that universities work the way Wolfe said they work. The “relentless pressure” line grants the diagnosis. The novel is right about institutional formation. Emre cannot say so without conceding she has been formed by the same pressure. So she stages the concession at the level of her young self and exempts her current self. The exemption is the literary critic’s standard move. It does not survive the scrutiny you give it.
Emre confesses the reality of porousness and but writes from buffered status because she is paid to do so. The essay performs the ideology it claims to expose.
Writings lies for money and status does not strike me as an inspiring example of an elite moral education.
The moral education claim was the flattering premise. The essay is the test of the premise. The output reveals what the moral education produced: a critic who can admit the reality of porousness while writing from buffered status, who can name the relentless pressure while pretending to stand outside it, who can confess past delusion while building a new delusion at a higher level. If this is moral education, the term has lost its content.
Three readings of what happened. Literature does not morally educate, and Emre’s opening claim is guild flattery. The essay’s output confirms it. She had twenty years and the best literary training available and still produced a piece that reenacts what Wolfe satirized. Reading Wolfe did not save her from anything Wolfe described.
Or the moral education worked as designed. Elite literary institutions provide a moral education that socializes their alumni into the legitimate forms of self-presentation for the credentialed class. It teaches how to confess porousness in ways that license continued buffered analysis. It teaches the chastened-critic pose. It teaches when to perform humility and when to assert authority. Emre got this education. She uses it well. The product matches the design.
The harshest reading: she got the moral education the university provides, which is socialization into a class of people who launder their privileges through performances of self-awareness. Wolfe spent his career documenting this class. Emre joined it. Her essay is the alumni newsletter.
Pick any of the three. They all reach the same destination. Emre’s moral education claim does not survive contact with the moral education’s product.
Emre writes:
Wolfe has cultivated the myth of Charlotte’s exceptionality for us, and the inhabitants of Sparta have cultivated it within her. Her parents and her teachers, outwardly afraid of sin, cannot see how they have planted it deep in Charlotte’s soul and encouraged it to grow. Her longing for the university is the first sign of her pride—her desire to have her superior character consecrated by “the real Dupont,” where, she believes, she will forget the people of Sparta. “The simple truth is that Charlotte Simmons exists on a plane far above them,” Wolfe reports, through her eyes.
This is how communities treat anyone with astonishing gifts.
The basketball player gets praised for basketball. The accountant gets called on for accounting. The smart kid gets praised, encouraged, and pushed toward where smart kids go. This is the normal function of community. It identifies what its members can do well and reinforces them in doing it. Sparta did this for Charlotte. Sparta does this for every kid who shows aptitude in something Sparta values. Emre treats Charlotte’s situation as if Sparta committed some moral error by recognizing her abilities and encouraging them. The encouragement was the system working.
The framing requires religious vocabulary to make ordinary cultivation sound corrupt. “Planted in her soul.” “Pride.” “First sign of her pride.” “Outwardly afraid of sin.” This language imports sin-and-fall categories into a situation that does not need them. A valedictorian wants to attend an elite university. Her parents want her to. Her teachers want her to. No one in Sparta thinks this is a problem. The narrator’s voice that calls it pride is Wolfe doing free indirect style, channeling Charlotte’s internal monologue. Emre reads the narrator’s voice as Wolfe’s moral diagnosis. The reading is technically wrong.
When Wolfe writes “The simple truth is that Charlotte Simmons exists on a plane far above them,” that is Charlotte thinking, not Wolfe declaring. Wolfe shows how she thinks. The line is the sort of thing a smart eighteen-year-old tells herself. Wolfe’s irony stays gentle. He shows the thought. He does not endorse it and does not denounce it. Emre converts the shown thought into an authorial judgment. She needs the judgment because her reading requires Charlotte’s exceptionalism to be moral fault rather than measurable fact.
Charlotte is valedictorian. She is a Presidential Scholar. She is going to an elite university while her classmates stay in Sparta. By every metric communities use to assess intellectual performance, Charlotte outperforms her community. The thought “I exist on a plane above them” reads as arrogant in tone and accurate in content. Emre treats the accuracy as if it were the arrogance. The two are separate questions. Charlotte can be both accurate and prideful. She can also be accurate without pride. Emre collapses the distinction.
Underneath the framing sits a particular elite progressive assumption: ambition and meritocratic striving are inherently corrupting. Wanting to leave your community is suspect. Wanting to rise is pride. Cultivating exceptional gifts is selfish. Letting the kid leave the river town is communal sin. This view exists. It is not universal. Sparta does not hold it. From Sparta’s perspective, sending the valedictorian to Dupont is a triumph. The community celebrates her. The teachers feel rewarded. The parents feel proud. Charlotte’s pride sustains the effort she needs to make the trip work. The whole town cheers her on the day she leaves.
Emre writes as if everyone agrees that pride and ambition are bad. Most communities do not. Most people do not. The literary critical class pretends to. The framing assumes consensus that does not exist outside the small group Emre writes for.
The essay is a performance of horror at ordinary human motivation.
The list of normal things Emre treats as charged: people want recognition, communities cultivate their talented members, smart kids leave small towns, college students drink and have sex and chase status, strivers strive, ambition motivates effort, recognition feels good, sex happens, alcohol gets consumed, people adapt to environments. None of these should shock anyone. All of these are how human beings have always lived.
But the essay treats each as charged, fatal, tragic, corrupting. “Fatal desire.” “Relentless pressure.” “Surrender.” “Tragic.” “Naïveté.” “Self-importance.” “Pure of heart.” “Squalor.” The vocabulary maintains a sustained tone of horror at things that should not horrify anyone who has lived.
So either she is pretending or she has lost the ability to see straight. Both options reflect badly.
The performance reading: Emre cannot be shocked. She is forty. She teaches at Wesleyan. She has watched two decades of students drink, hook up, chase status, and graduate. She knows how universities function. She knows what motivates her colleagues. Her own career was built on the same drives she now finds tragic in fictional characters. The shock is theater. The theater serves several functions. It positions her as morally sensitive. It signals membership in the class of people who can be shocked by normalcy. It performs the literary critic’s role, which requires the pose of someone who sees what others miss. It launders her own participation by signaling distance from what she does. The NYRB audience pays for this theater because the theater is what the publication sells.
The deformation reading: she has spent enough time in literary moralizing that the moralism has become her perception. She cannot see normal motivation as normal anymore. Her training taught her to see ambition as sin and recognition-seeking as fatal, and the training stuck. The performance became the person. She is not pretending. She is what the training made her.
The third reading is the saddest: both at once. She started performing because the role required it. The performance became the perception. The mask became the face. This is what institutional life does. People who keep playing the part for long enough turn into the part.
Wolfe documented this throughout his career. He wrote about radical chic patrons performing solidarity until they could not distinguish the performance from belief. He wrote about masters of the universe performing concern until they could not distinguish the concern from the calculation. He wrote about journalists performing objectivity until they could not see the bias. Emre’s essay is the literary critic’s version. She performs horror at ordinary motivation until the horror feels real to her. The product is the essay you just read.
Whether the horror is cynical or sincere does not change the diagnosis. The horror is wrong. Normal human motivation is not horrifying. It is what makes civilization run. Emre’s essay treats the engine as the pathology. Wolfe spent his career insisting the engine is the engine.
Emre presents herself as the girl who could not afford the book, who read it on the bookstore floor, who came from somewhere humble enough to identify with Charlotte’s situation. The autobiographical setup positions her as a striver. Her biography reveals she struck out from that humble origin and arrived at Harvard undergrad, Yale PhD, Oxford professorship, and a regular byline at the New York Review of Books. She made the same journey as Charlotte. She arrived at a more credentialed destination than Charlotte ever reaches in the novel. And she writes from that destination condemning anyone who makes the journey.
Three logical options.
Either her striving was good and Charlotte’s was bad. Then Emre owes the reader an account of what distinguishes them. She does not provide one. Charlotte is exceptional, ambitious, leaves a small town for an elite university, joins the right social groups, adapts to the environment. Emre did the same. The essay names no principle that separates the two paths.
Or both were bad. Then Emre should give back the credentials, resign the position, return to wherever she came from. She has not done this. The condemnation does not extend to her own case.
Or both were normal. Then the essay’s moral framing collapses. Striving for elite credentials and social position is what humans do who can do it. Sparta encouraged Charlotte to do it. Emre’s family and teachers encouraged her to do it. The encouragement worked. The encouraged child became the credentialed adult. No tragedy. No fall. No corruption. The system worked as designed.
The essay relies on the reader not noticing the contradiction. Emre wants the reader to identify with her against Charlotte. But the identification only works if you accept Emre’s premise that her path was different from Charlotte’s. The premise is not defended. The essay assumes the reader grants it.
Christopher Lasch (1932-1994) named this move the revolt of the elites. The new elite class secures its position and then attacks the values that produced its position. The attack is a class signal. It distinguishes the higher elite from the lower middle class that still believes in striving. Emre belongs to this class. The essay is its standard product. Climb the ladder. Pull the ladder up. Write an essay denouncing ladders.
Wolfe spent his career documenting people who use their hard-won positions to denounce the position-seeking that got them there. Radical chic patrons. Limousine liberals. The journalist who attacks the institutions she works inside. Emre’s essay is the literary critic’s version. She got everything Charlotte wants and uses her vantage point to suggest Charlotte should not want it.
The honest version of the essay defends her own striving as good or apologizes for it as bad. She does neither. She just performs horror at striving in fictional form while continuing her own striving in real life. The pose is incoherent.
Emre writes:
When I am Charlotte Simmons was first published in 2004, it seemed impossible to set aside his conservative politics, his outrageous persona, and, quite simply, his age—he had just turned seventy-four—and imagine him proclaiming, “I am Charlotte Simmons.”
No normal reader had this problem. Only someone in Merv Emre’s elite social set had this reaction.
Wolfe‘s conservatism is mostly aesthetic. He criticized modernist architecture in From Bauhaus to Our House. He criticized modernist art in The Painted Word. He defended American achievement in The Right Stuff. He voted Republican and dined with George W. Bush. None of this makes him a conservative intellectual in the William F. Buckley (1925-2008) or Russell Kirk (1918-1994) sense. He did not write political polemic. He did not edit a conservative magazine. He did not advance a policy agenda. He was an American satirist who happened to vote Republican, the way Mark Twain (1835-1910) was an American satirist who voted whatever way Twain voted. His method was status realism applied to every group he wrote about: stock car drivers, astronauts, acid heads, Black Panthers, bond traders, college students, Miami immigrants. He skewered everyone. The political reading exists. It overstates his ideological commitment.
Emre projects her literary class’s hangups onto a general reading public that did not share them. The book sold hundreds of thousands of copies. Those readers picked it up because they wanted to read a Tom Wolfe novel about college life. They did not need to set aside his politics, his persona, or his age. They were not embarrassed to read him. They just read the book.
The framing creates a manufactured obstacle for Emre to overcome. The setup goes: “Wolfe’s conservative politics, his outrageous persona, and his age make it hard to imagine him saying ‘I am Charlotte Simmons.'” The implied next move: “But here is how we can imagine it, by reading him as Flaubertian.” The obstacle exists so the achievement of overcoming it can be announced. Emre is doing literary critic work, which requires obstacles to overcome. If the obstacles do not exist she has to manufacture them.
Look at the components. The white suit. Yes, distinctive. Not an obstacle to reading the book. The Republican voting. Yes, on record. Not an obstacle to reading the book. The age. Yes, 74. Not an obstacle to reading the book. Novelists write past 70. Saul Bellow wrote Ravelstein at 85. Philip Roth wrote into his late seventies. Updike, McCarthy, Naipaul all kept writing late. Inhabiting young characters at 74 is what novelists do. Tolstoy (1828-1910) was 76 when he wrote Hadji Murat. Hardy (1840-1928) wrote poetry into his eighties.
So the obstacles Emre names are obstacles for her literary class, not for the reading public. The general reader buys the book, reads the book, has opinions about the book. The literary critic has to first establish that reading the book is difficult because the author is conservative or old or wears strange clothes, then overcome the difficulty through superior critical technique. The work of the essay is producing the difficulty so the critic can perform the overcoming.
Wolfe satirized this exact move. The avant-garde critic who needs to make routine appreciation look difficult so the critic’s apparatus can appear necessary. He named this move in The Painted Word.
Emre writes:
What James Wood decried as the “enormous excitability” of Wolfe’s prose—his crowded sentences, his noisy passion for italics, exclamation marks, ellipses, and capital letters—threatened to drown out the distinctive thoughts of his characters. By accident, this style proved better suited to representing college students than any of Wolfe’s other subjects.
Has Emre read anything else by Tom Wolfe?
This is the silliest claim in the essay.
The Wolfe style is the Wolfe style. Italics, exclamation marks, ellipses, capital letters, crowded sentences, free indirect style, status-anxious interior monologue, vivid descriptive prose. He used this style for test pilots in The Right Stuff (1979). He used it for acid heads in The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test (1968). He used it for stock car driver Junior Johnson (1931-2019) in "The Last American Hero" (1965). He used it for bond traders in Bonfire of the Vanities (1987). He used it for Atlanta plutocrats in A Man in Full (1998). He used it for Miami immigrants in Back to Blood. The style worked in every case because the subject was status-anxious humans operating at high intensity. College students are one example. They are not the example.
The claim that the style suited college students better than astronauts is hard to defend on any axis. Test pilots in The Right Stuff push aircraft to Mach 2 and die in flames if they get it wrong. The stakes are higher. The status pyramid is steeper. The performance demands are more extreme. Wolfe’s noise fits Chuck Yeager (1923-2020) breaking the sound barrier as well as it fits Hoyt and Vance walking through the Grove. Possibly better. Bonfire’s trading floor is louder than any frat party. McCoy’s panic when he hits Henry Lamb runs more frantic than Charlotte’s deflowering. Atlanta’s Croker pushing through his real estate empire while his life collapses gives Wolfe at least as much to work with as Dupont’s freshmen.
The “by accident” framing is wrong. Wolfe was deliberate. He picked his subjects. He picked them because they fit his style. He did not stumble onto college students and discover his prose had been waiting for them. He sought out high-energy status environments for forty years because that is what his prose required.
Either Emre has read only I am Charlotte Simmons among Wolfe’s books and cannot honestly make this comparison, or she has read more and noticed the consistency, which makes the “by accident” claim dishonest. Pick one.
The deeper move in her sentence: she needs the style to work in I am Charlotte Simmons in a special way so her recuperation of the novel has a craft argument. Wood made a general attack on Wolfe’s prose. Emre cannot defend Wolfe’s prose in general because then she has to defend it against the Wood critique. So she carves out a special case for this novel. The prose is bad in general but accidentally good here. The maneuver lets her keep Wood’s verdict on most of Wolfe while rescuing one book. It is a critic’s dodge.
A more honest move: Wolfe’s style is what it is, Wood overstated his case, the prose works on its own terms for the subjects Wolfe chose, and I am Charlotte Simmons is one application of the style, not its unique destination. But that defense requires Emre to disagree with Wood. She does not disagree with Wood. Wood is the higher status critic. She does not contradict higher status critics.
Emre writes: “It was as if, in the figure of the drunk, arrogant boy marveling at his own reflection, Wolfe had finally found the emblem of his style.”
Wolfe’s style was fully formed by the late 1960s. The The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test shows the mature Wolfe. Forty years of major work follow. Then in his fourteenth or fifteenth book he finally finds the emblem of the style he wrote for half a century. The timeline does not work.
Pick any number of Wolfe scenes that better serve as emblems. Ken Kesey (1935-2001) on the bus tripping with his Pranksters. Chuck Yeager nursing the X-1 through Mach 1 with broken ribs. Sherman McCoy hitting Henry Lamb on the Bronx expressway. Junior Johnson running moonshine through North Carolina back roads. Leonard Bernstein (1918-1990) entertaining Black Panthers in his Park Avenue duplex. Any of these scenes carries more Wolfe DNA than a drunk freshman looking in a mirror. The mirror scene is fine. It is not the emblem.
The “finally found” framing exposes Emre’s project. She wrote an introduction for a new edition of I am Charlotte Simmons. The introduction needs to make a case for the book’s importance. The easiest way to make the case is to claim the book sits at the top of Wolfe’s hierarchy. So Emre invents a narrative where Wolfe spent his career building toward this novel and discovered his signature moment inside it. The narrative serves the introduction. It does not describe the career.
The hierarchy of Wolfe’s books, as readers and most critics see it, puts The Right Stuff and Bonfire of the Vanities ahead of I am Charlotte Simmons. Emre inverts the consensus to make her introduction carry more weight. If she is introducing the book Wolfe was building toward for fifty years, her introduction is more important than if she is introducing his eleventh-best book.
This is the standard introduction-writer’s move. The book I am introducing is the most important book by this author. Every introduction makes some version of this claim. Most readers see through it. The “emblem of his style” formulation is just a fancier version of “this is the great book.”
The mirror scene works as Emre uses it. The drunk boy seeing himself with detachment, the first person looking through two pairs of eyes, the free indirect setup. Fine reading of the scene. The leap from “this scene illustrates free indirect style” to “this scene is the emblem of Wolfe’s fifty-year career” requires evidence the essay does not provide. The leap performs rhetoric. It does not deliver analysis.
Wolfe’s career has many candidate emblems. The man in the white suit. The phrase “the right stuff.” The radical chic title. The italicized Status! repeated through the trading floor scenes. The frat boy in the mirror is one candidate among many. Emre picks it for this introduction. The career does not point to this scene.
Emre writes: “If adopting Flaubert’s narrative technique was relatively straightforward, then adapting the plot of Madame Bovary—a provincial woman with outsized social ambitions is seduced and ruined—posed a challenge.”
The borrowing claim collapses on inspection.
The plot of “provincial young person comes to elite environment with ambitions and faces seduction” is not Flaubert’s plot. It is the universal novel-of-ambition plot. Every major literary tradition has versions. Stendhal (1783-1842) wrote Julien Sorel into Le Rouge et le Noir in 1830. Balzac (1799-1850) wrote Lucien de Rubempré into Lost Illusions in the 1830s. Dickens (1812-1870) wrote Pip into Great Expectations in 1861. Hardy wrote Tess into Tess of the d'Urbervilles in 1891. Theodore Dreiser (1871-1945) wrote Sister Carrie in 1900 and Clyde Griffiths in An American Tragedy in 1925. F. Scott Fitzgerald (1896-1940) wrote This Side of Paradise about Princeton in 1920 and The Great Gatsby in 1925. Edith Wharton (1862-1937) wrote Lily Bart into The House of Mirth in 1905. The provincial-comes-to-elite-environment-and-falls plot is older than Flaubert.
Saying Wolfe borrowed it from Flaubert is like saying every restaurant that serves chicken borrowed the menu from KFC. The plot is common property. Singling out one source as the model requires evidence Wolfe drew on that source. No such evidence exists. Wolfe himself did not claim Madame Bovary as his model. He mentioned it because Charlotte reads it in the novel. The mention is a Wolfe game, not a confession of source.
The sources for I am Charlotte Simmons sit closer to home. Wolfe’s own reporting on college campuses. The American provincial-at-elite-college plot is well established before Wolfe wrote. Mary McCarthy (1912-1989) wrote The Group about Vassar graduates in 1963. Erich Segal (1937-2010) wrote Love Story at Harvard in 1970. Henry James (1843-1916) and Theodore Dreiser and John O'Hara (1905-1970) handled provincial-to-elite transitions for a century. Journalism about hookup culture by writers like Caitlin Flanagan (b. 1961) ran in the major magazines through the 1990s and 2000s. Wolfe had American models available without crossing the Atlantic.
The Madame Bovary framing serves Emre’s elevation project. She wants Wolfe inside the literary canon at the highest level. Flaubert is the highest level. So she connects them. The connection runs through the plot. But the plot is not Flaubert’s. It is everyone’s. The elevation works only if you accept the false attribution.
The framing also makes Wolfe sound derivative. He sounds like an American satirist drawing on a European master. Wolfe was not derivative. He was a confident American voice working in American materials. He took his subjects from American life and his style from his own decades of journalism. Calling him a Madame Bovary adapter makes him a junior partner in the literary enterprise. Wolfe was a senior partner. The framing demotes him to elevate him, which is incoherent.
Last problem. Emre’s description of the Madame Bovary plot does not fit Charlotte. Madame Bovary is seduced and dies. Charlotte joins a sorority and becomes a popular girlfriend. Emma Bovary takes arsenic and convulses through her last hours. Charlotte sits in the basketball arena clicking on the appropriate face. The arcs do not match. Emma’s story ends in literal death. Charlotte’s story ends in social rebirth. The plot Emre claims Wolfe adapted is not the plot Wolfe wrote.
Three failures in one sentence. The plot is not Flaubert’s. Wolfe did not borrow from Flaubert. The plot does not match the book Wolfe wrote. The Madame Bovary framing fails on every axis.
Emre writes: “For Wolfe to stand a chance in 2004, he had to convince the reader that there was something at stake in our heroine’s chastity. He had to make us believe that our heroine was just that—a heroine, beautiful, blameless, and unworldly to the point of stupidity.”
The framing is bogus and overwrought on several axes.
“For Wolfe to stand a chance” puts a multi-millionaire bestselling author in a position of struggle. Wolfe had no struggle in 2004. He commanded a massive audience. His previous books had sold millions of copies between them. Picador paid for this introduction because his name still moves books. The phrasing positions Wolfe as a writer fighting for survival when he was a writer at the top of his commercial reach.
“Something at stake in our heroine’s chastity” assumes a 2004 reader who finds chastity weightless. The assumption is false. Plenty of readers in 2004 cared about sexual ethics. Catholics. Evangelicals. Orthodox Jews. Mormons. Mainline Protestants. Many secular readers as well, for non-religious reasons. The American reading public in 2004 was not uniformly post-chastity. Emre projects a hyper-secular literary critic onto the whole audience and then announces Wolfe had to overcome the projection.
“He had to make us believe that our heroine was just that—a heroine, beautiful, blameless, and unworldly to the point of stupidity.” Novelists do not have to make readers believe their characters are what the novel says they are. Novelists write characters. Readers accept the writing or do not. Wolfe wrote Charlotte as beautiful, ambitious, intellectually capable, and naive about social mores. He did not have to convince anyone of anything. He just wrote.
“Unworldly to the point of stupidity” is Emre’s projection, not the book’s portrait. Charlotte is not stupid. She is the valedictorian and Presidential Scholar from her high school. She reads Madame Bovary. She studies neuroscience. She thinks about evolutionary biology. She executes a sophisticated social campaign to win back social standing after her hookup. The book gives her interior life with detail and care. Calling her stupid is a critic’s contempt for the character. The book does not call her stupid.
The “in 2004” framing assumes 2004 was uniquely hostile to chastity narratives. It was not. The 1990s had Bridget Jones’s Diary and Sex and the City. The 1990s also had The Rules and the True Love Waits movement. Sexual ethics were contested terrain in 2004 as they are now. Wolfe was writing into an audience that included plenty of readers ready to find Charlotte’s loss of virginity consequential. He did not need to convince them. He just had to write the book.
Wolfe gave Emre the framing in his “Hooking Up” essay. He wrote that a Tolstoy or Flaubert “wouldn’t have stood a chance in the United States” in 2000. Emre takes this seriously. Wolfe said it rhetorically. He then wrote the book and succeeded with it. The book’s success refutes the framing Wolfe deployed in the essay. Emre uses the essay framing without noticing the book refutes it.
The deeper move positions Emre as the sophisticated reader who understands obstacles Wolfe faced. The framing implies Wolfe had to overcome modern skepticism with clever literary technique. Emre’s reader is supposed to feel advanced for noticing what stood between Wolfe and success. But the difficulty is manufactured. Wolfe sold the book. Readers responded. The hookup culture conversation in 2004 was active and contested, and many readers took sexual ethics seriously. No clever workaround was required. The framing flatters the literary critical class by pretending its outlook represents the public’s outlook. The public’s outlook is more various than that.
Emre writes:
Adam, whose language is more florid and, in turn, more repulsive, admires the “absolutely clear, open, guileless beauty” of her face: “It was opening, opening, opening like the tender virginal bud of the most gorgeous flower revealing its virginal petals to the world with a sublime innocence and at the same time a sublime invitation.”
That is how many young men think. Wolfe captures this. Some men attach a premium to the possibility of sex with virginal women. Why is this repulsive?
Adam is a virginal nerd in his first major crush. The free indirect passage shows his interior monologue. Florid, over-the-top, mixing sexual and innocent imagery, treating his beloved as both holy and erotic. This is the standard texture of young male romantic obsession. Wolfe gets it right. The accuracy is the achievement.
The “tender virginal bud” imagery has a long literary history. Flower-as-female-sexuality goes back centuries. Adam thinks in inherited language because that is the language available to a literary-minded young man in love. Wolfe shows Adam thinking in this language. He does not endorse the language. He records it.
Emre calls the passage “repulsive.” She reacts to the content of Adam’s mind. The craft of the writing is a separate question. The same critical error appears throughout the essay. Emre confuses the character’s voice with the author’s endorsement.
The repulsion is also feminist-coded in a familiar way. Male desire articulated in detail gets called “repulsive” because it is male desire articulated in detail. The flowering-bud imagery does not strike anyone as repulsive in a Renaissance sonnet or a Romantic poem. It draws the repulsed reaction only when located in the head of a 21st-century young male character. The criticism targets the location. The imagery has a long literary lineage.
The novelist’s job is showing how people think. Wolfe shows how Adam thinks. Adam thinks this way because young men in love think this way. Emre wants Adam to think differently, or for Wolfe to make Adam think differently. But Wolfe is not in the business of producing model young men with reformed gazes. He is in the business of showing what young men are. Adam is florid. Adam is nerdy. Adam mixes sexual and reverent imagery. Adam is a 19-year-old virgin in love with an unattainable beautiful classmate. Wolfe writes him as he is.
The passage succeeds as characterization. The reader who finds Adam’s thoughts uncomfortable is responding to Wolfe’s accurate portrait of this young man. The discomfort is the point. Adam’s love letters from his head might embarrass him if anyone saw them. The novel makes us see them. That is what novels are for.
Emre writes:
We continue to believe in her worthiness even as Wolfe lets us glimpse her deficiencies. There is her pride, her vanity. There is her puritanism and what it conceals—a fascination with the flesh so intense that, were it ever to surface, it would force her to admit that she, Charlotte Simmons, was as hungry for sex as any sorority girl and as misogynistic as any frat boy in her derision of this desire.
The passage is bogus on several axes.
Pride and vanity get treated as moral deficiencies. They are normal traits in an 18-year-old high achiever. Charlotte is the valedictorian. She has earned her good opinion of herself. Calling pride and vanity “deficiencies” requires a moral framework Emre does not defend. Most readers do not share the framework. Pride and vanity are how the high-achieving young experience their achievements.
“Puritanism” is used pejoratively. Charlotte is not a Puritan. She is a young woman with intact sexual ethics from her religious small town. Calling this puritanism frames her ethics as pathological. The framing assumes everyone agrees that sexual restraint is a disease. Not everyone agrees. Most religious traditions and many secular traditions treat sexual restraint as a virtue. The “puritanism” charge presumes the literary critical class’s view as the default.
The hidden-libido reading is the major problem. Emre claims Charlotte conceals “a fascination with the flesh so intense that, were it ever to surface, it would force her to admit she was as hungry for sex as any sorority girl.” Where is the evidence? Charlotte is interested in sex the way normal young people are interested in sex. She is not hiding a wild secret libido. The novel does not give us a Charlotte boiling with concealed lust. It gives us a Charlotte with normal curiosity and traditional ethics. Emre invents the hidden hunger because she needs Charlotte to be equivalent to the sorority girls. Without the equivalence, the moral architecture of the novel becomes more complex than Emre’s reading allows.
The “misogynistic as any frat boy” charge is the central move. Charlotte calls her roommate Beverly a slut. Emre calls this misogyny. But Charlotte’s judgment of Beverly is not hatred of women. It is moral evaluation of Beverly’s behavior. Charlotte finds Beverly’s hookups degrading. She holds Beverly to a standard. The standard does not demand female silence and subservience. The standard asks for sexual integrity. Calling the application of this standard misogyny is the contemporary academic move where any negative female judgment of female behavior gets recoded as internalized patriarchy. The move requires us to believe Charlotte’s disgust at Beverly’s actions is hatred of women in general. That belief is unsupported.
Charlotte’s moral seriousness is the thing Emre cannot allow. If Charlotte has moral judgments about sex and they differ from Beverly’s, then Charlotte represents a moral alternative in the novel. Emre’s reading needs everyone to be the same underneath. So Charlotte’s morality has to be hypocritical, her judgment has to be misogyny, her chastity has to conceal slut hunger. The flattening is the agenda.
Wolfe does not flatten Charlotte. He shows her as morally serious, ambitious, intellectually proud, and naive about social mores. He gives her interior life with detail and respect. He lets her think “slut” about Beverly without diagnosing the thought. He records what she thinks. He does not call her misogynistic or hypocritical. Emre adds the diagnoses.
The Freudian/Foucauldian assumption underneath the passage: surface morality conceals what it forbids. The puritan secretly wants what she condemns. This model is old. It is also unproven. Some people who hold sexual ethics hold them because they believe them. The hermeneutics of suspicion treats every moral claim as a mask. Sometimes a moral claim is just a moral claim.
Emre’s passage performs critical sophistication. The sophistication consists of finding hidden flaws underneath surface virtues. The reader is supposed to nod at the depth of the reading. The reading has no depth. It just substitutes a leveling framework for the book’s moral architecture.
Emre writes: “It is hard for people who see this novel as a story of sexual morality to realize that Charlotte and her suitors are more alike than they seem.”
Who finds this hard? Who reads the book as a story of sexual morality? It’s about certain people in a certain situation dealing with certain challenges, including sex.
Emre writes:
All four are willful class traitors, outsiders who have worked hard to become insiders only to realize that what the university promised them—cultural ennoblement and social uplift, a comfortable middle-class existence as a banker or a writer or a professor at a university like Dupont—is, in fact, a mirage, shimmering and inaccessible on the East Coast.
“Class traitor” is European Marxist vocabulary. It comes from the tradition where the working class is supposed to have revolutionary solidarity and members who join the bourgeoisie betray their class. The framing makes sense in early 20th-century Europe with strong class consciousness and revolutionary politics. It does not fit America. American culture celebrates social mobility. The kid who leaves Sparta and makes it to Dupont is a hometown hero. His parents brag about him at church. His teachers put his picture on the wall. His siblings tell their friends about his college. The “class traitor” framing imports an alien sensibility into American material that does not support it.
Who in America talks like this? Academic Marxists. Cultural studies professors. The Verso Books crowd. Almost nobody outside the small left-wing academic milieu uses “class traitor” to describe upward mobility. The characters in the novel do not describe themselves this way. Their parents do not. Their teachers do not. Their employers do not. The framing is Emre’s imposition on the material.
The “cultural ennoblement and social uplift” language is also off. American universities do not promise cultural ennoblement. That is the older European model of the university as a Bildung institution. The American university promises career credentials, networks, and access to elite life. It promises a job and a contact list. The students at Dupont understand this. So do their parents. The promise is not cultural ennoblement that fails to materialize. The promise is a credential and a network that the characters get.
The “mirage” claim is the deeper problem. Emre asserts that middle-class life is “a mirage, shimmering and inaccessible” for these characters. Where does this come from? The novel shows none of them failing. Hoyt graduates and enters finance through fraternity connections. JoJo continues as a basketball player with academic support. Adam writes prize-winning articles for the campus paper. Charlotte becomes a popular sorority girl with the star athlete as a boyfriend. The middle-class destination is not inaccessible to them. It is already in their grasp at the end of freshman year. They will reach it. The book gives no indication otherwise.
The “comfortable middle-class existence as a banker or a writer or a professor” line also blurs categories. A Wall Street banker is upper class, often rich. A Dupont professor is upper-middle-class. A writer ranges across class lines. Lumping these together as “comfortable middle-class” makes the destination sound modest so the failure to reach it is more poignant. The destination is not modest. Hoyt’s Wall Street job pays multiples of national median income. Calling that middle-class is uninformed or strategic.
Emre’s thesis requires the characters to be betrayed by the system. If they succeed at the system’s terms, the system is delivering what it promised. If they fail, the system is the villain. Emre needs the failure narrative for her critique. So she asserts a failure the book does not show. She calls them class traitors when their communities celebrate them. She calls the middle-class life a mirage when it sits right in front of them.
The book shows characters who get exactly what they came for. The cost is moral. The material outcome is success. Charlotte becomes socially adapted, popular, and dissembling. The book shows this and does not call it failure. Emre calls it failure because her framework requires the call. The framework precedes the reading.
Wolfe wrote about American social mobility for fifty years. He understood it as the engine of American life. He satirized its excesses but did not deny its existence. His characters strive and often succeed. Failure happens but is not the structural truth of American social life. Emre imposes a European leftist frame of doomed mobility on Wolfe’s American material. The frame does not fit.
Emre writes:
They struggle to make sense of their ferocious resentments, the fear that they will be denied their rightful rewards because the university has failed to do what it was supposed to: separate the best and most deserving from the rest of society. And so the ugliest tendencies—racist paranoia, sexism, contempt for the working class—are seeded in the brightest minds. I am Charlotte Simmons makes no attempt to predict the future, but twenty years after its publication we can well imagine how these tendencies will grow into a noxious strain of elite conservatism, how this naked resentment will cover itself with the “new sets of values” propounded by the governor of California, caught with his pants down in the Grove. We can even imagine, in 2025, one of these characters, maybe Charlotte Simmons herself, serving as vice-president of the United States.
The passage is overwrought because the underlying observation is mundane.
People feel resentment when they think they have been denied rewards they earned. People want their group to win. People develop suspicion of out-groups. People hold contempt for those they consider beneath them. These are universal human tendencies. They appear in every population, every era, every political coalition. Universities do not seed them. They emerge from how humans evolved as social primates.
Emre dramatizes the ordinary. “Ferocious resentments.” “Naked resentment.” “Ugliest tendencies.” “Noxious strain.” The vocabulary makes normal human emotion sound like extraordinary moral failure. The pitch is wrong for the material. Wolfe wrote social satire about status anxiety. Emre rewrites it as moral tragedy about elite formation. The genre shift is the move.
Two objections.
The “rightful rewards” framing treats Charlotte’s sense of earning her place as pathological. Charlotte earned her place. She is valedictorian. She is Presidential Scholar. She studied hard and produced results. She won admission to Dupont by work. Calling her sense of deserving rewards “resentment” denies the work that produced the deserving. She has no paranoia about denial. She has earned what she has and feels accordingly.
The “racist paranoia, sexism, contempt for the working class” list assumes these tendencies flow only rightward. They do not. The progressive academic class holds its own racial paranoia (everything is white supremacy), its own sexism (toxic masculinity, men as problem), and its own contempt for the working class (deplorables, white trash, flyover country). Emre treats these tendencies as right-coded sins when they appear across the political spectrum. Every coalition has its racial fears, its gender contempt, and its class disdain. Emre names the right’s versions while ignoring the left’s identical patterns.
The “noxious strain of elite conservatism” framing also requires us to redraw the political map. Critics have usually painted conservatives as non-elite. The rural poor. The working class. The deplorables. Now Emre frames them as elite. The reframing serves the Vance prediction. JD Vance went to Yale Law and works in finance and politics. He is elite. So contemporary conservatism gets recoded as elite resentment. The category lets academics keep their attack on right-wingers as low-status while also positioning them as the dominant powerful class. The category is incoherent but useful.
The Vance hook at the end is the political payoff. Emre wants the book to predict Vance. The book might bear on Vance the way any novel of class-anxious strivers might bear on any class-anxious striver who later wins power. The connection is loose. Wolfe died in 2018 before Vance reached national office. Wolfe did not write Vance. The connection is the presentist hook NYRB editors require for introductions to twenty-year-old books. It serves the essay’s purpose. It is not insight.
The deeper problem with the passage: it treats normal human nature as if it were the special pathology of one political faction. Resentment is universal. Status anxiety is universal. In-group preference is universal. The characters at Dupont feel these things because humans feel these things. They will feel them as conservatives or progressives, as bankers or professors, as Republicans or Democrats. The university does not seed these tendencies. Sparta has them. Dupont has them. The literary critical class has them. They are how humans operate.
Wolfe understood this. He wrote about resentment and status anxiety in every group he covered. Acid heads. Astronauts. Bond traders. Black activists. Limousine liberals. Stock car drivers. He showed the universal pattern. He did not claim it flowed only into Republican politics. Emre’s prediction narrows what Wolfe documented widely.
The overwrought language is a substitute for the harder argument Emre does not make. The harder argument: why is normal human resentment special when it appears on the right and ignorable when it appears on the left? Emre does not answer the question. She just keeps the dramatic vocabulary in place and hopes the reader does not notice.
Emre writes:
Reading it today, I find that I am Charlotte Simmons agitates and excites me once more. It is a profoundly pessimistic novel, not because of its interest in conservative ideas or its sex panic, but because it refuses to grant its characters a moment’s reprieve from the social system that it so brutally and correctly indicts. Perhaps my optimism is simply self-protective; I have taught college students for over a decade now, and I like to believe that they have experiences that cannot be reduced to the quest for social dominance, that their desire to belong does not always end in the dreariest conformity.
Wolfe’s novel is realistic about human nature. Emre calls it pessimistic. The label is wrong. Realistic and pessimistic are not the same thing. People are status-seeking social primates. They form coalitions. They want recognition. They adapt to their environments. They conform to group expectations. This is how humans operate. Wolfe portrays this accurately. Emre calls accuracy pessimism because she wants humans to be something other than what they are.
The “refuses to grant its characters a moment’s reprieve from the social system” line gives the game away. Why would a character be released from his environment? Characters in realist fiction are products of their environments because people are products of their environments. The release Emre wants is not available in nature. She asks Wolfe to write fantasy and calls his realism pessimistic when he refuses.
Humans evolved as status-hierarchical social animals. We seek position because seeking position improved reproductive outcomes for our ancestors. The drive for status is not a moral failure. It is biology. Universities do not create it. Sparta has it. Dupont has it. Yale has it. Oxford has it. The savanna had it. The desire to belong, to be recognized, to outrank rivals, runs through every human population that researchers have studied. Emre’s sustained horror at these drives is horror at the species.
“I like to believe that they have experiences that cannot be reduced to the quest for social dominance” tells you what is happening. She admits the belief is a preference. She likes to believe something. She does not claim to know it. She chooses optimism against the evidence she has watched accumulate over a decade of teaching. The choice is faith. The evidence does not earn it.
The “quest for social dominance” phrasing also misframes the activity. Normal status seeking is not domination. It is the universal human concern with position, recognition, and belonging. Calling it dominance makes it sound aggressive and pathological when it is sociality. People want their efforts noticed. People want their gifts recognized. People want their place in the group. These are the basic facts of social existence. They are not “quests for dominance.”
The “self-protective” hedge admits the problem. Emre senses her optimism does not survive scrutiny. So she labels it self-protective and moves on. The hedge is honest about the motivation but does not change the picture. The picture remains: she has watched ten years of college students confirm Wolfe’s portrait, and she chooses to believe otherwise. She wills the choice. The evidence does not earn it.
“Agitates and excites me once more” is performative. Critics signal renewed engagement with the books they introduce. The reader is supposed to feel the critic’s pulse quicken. Emre’s pulse may or may not quicken. The performance is required either way.
Wolfe wrote about humans as humans are: status-anxious, coalition-forming, environment-shaped, sex-driven, position-conscious. The accuracy was the achievement. Calling accuracy pessimism is the move of someone who needs reality to be different from what it is.
Emre is at war with reality and losing. She wants humans to be something other than what biology made them. The realism of Wolfe is the obstacle. So she labels his realism pessimism and proceeds with her hopes intact. Hopes intact and reality unchanged.
Emre teaches college students. She has watched the patterns Wolfe describes for over a decade. The evidence supports Wolfe. She chooses to believe against the evidence because believing against the evidence is part of her professional identity. Literary critics are supposed to hope for human transcendence of the social order. Hoping for it does not make it happen. The hoping is the job. Wolfe declined the job.
Emre’s essay hits every mark the literary critical class scores for. The autobiographical opening that places her as both humble striver and wise critic. The recuperation project rescuing a previously dismissed writer for the canon. The Flaubert comparison elevating the work into the European tradition. The class reading that gives the analysis a politically respectable lens. The Vance hook providing the presentist payoff that 2025 readers expect. The moralistic framing treating normal human behavior as tragic indictment. The hedge at the end performing critical humility. The free indirect style discussion deploying technical literary apparatus.
These are the moves that signal membership. Each one tells the reader: I am one of you. I do what we do. Peers praise the essay because praising it confirms their own positions. If Emre’s framework holds, their frameworks also hold. If her framework collapses, their frameworks also become suspect. Mutual praise is mutual self-defense.
Picador publishes this as the introduction because Picador wants the imprimatur of a respected academic critic. The introduction is a marketing tool. It signals to literary readers that the book is worth taking seriously. Emre’s name does the work. The analytical quality of the introduction is a secondary consideration. The credentialed name is the asset.
The system runs on credentialed signaling, not on truth. It rewards people who can perform the right moves. Most participants do not notice the substitution because they sit inside the system performing the moves they were trained to perform.
This is what Wolfe satirized for fifty years. The Painted Word documents the art world version. The Right Stuff documents the test-pilot version. Bonfire of the Vanities documents the Wall Street version. The literary critical version operates by the same logic. The class praises its members for performing the class’s preferred moves. The praise reinforces the class’s position. The class membership produces the praise.
Wolfe’s own dismissal in 2004 followed this pattern. The literary critical class dismissed him because dismissing him was the class move at the time. He was too commercial, too popular, too conservative, too old, too dandy. The dismissal worked as class signaling. Twenty years later, the class needs to rehabilitate him because rehabilitating dismissed conservative writers serves a new political purpose. So Emre rehabilitates him. The analysis follows the class’s current needs.
The system is sealed. External critique does not penetrate. Your blog can document what is wrong with the Emre essay. Other independent writers can do the same. The literary critical class will not read this critique. The class talks to itself. NYRB readers are mostly other literary academics. Emre’s introduction will reach a few thousand people. Most of them will praise it because praising it is the class move. The praise will appear in the Times Literary Supplement and Bookforum and the London Review of Books. The praise will not engage with the substantive errors.
The deeper point: the literary critical class is a small status hierarchy that uses publications like NYRB and Picador to credential its members and certify their work. The work has to perform the class’s preferred moves. Truth is not the criterion. Class membership is the criterion. Emre’s essay succeeds at class membership. Its substantive errors are secondary.
Wolfe documented this exact pattern for fifty years. Now the pattern documents him.
Wolfe wrote about race patterns and group behavior more frequently and more frankly than any of his peers, and he kept doing it across forty years.
Radical Chic and Mau-Mauing the Flak Catchers (1970) showed Black Panthers fawned over by Leonard Bernstein’s set and Black activists working welfare bureaucrats through racial intimidation. Wolfe treated white liberal racial guilt as performance and Black activist behavior as strategy.
Bonfire of the Vanities (1987) gave the Reverend Bacon (an Al Sharpton stand-in), the Bronx courthouse running on racial coalition arithmetic, and the white liberal capitulation in real time.
A Man in Full (1998) put Atlanta’s Black mayor at the center of a racially explosive sexual assault case, with white Southern resentment treated honestly alongside Black political organizing.
I am Charlotte Simmons (2004) showed JoJo’s racial anxiety on the basketball team, the white king fantasy on the court, and the racial composition of elite college athletics.
Back to Blood (2012) took Miami as an ethnic stew of Cuban, Anglo, Black, Haitian, and Russian populations and treated each group with frank attention to behavior patterns and group interests.
Across all five projects Wolfe wrote race as substantive variable in social life. He showed group interests, coalition behavior, and racial performance.
The comparable American novelists either avoided race or treated it through coded characters. Saul Bellow (1915-2005) had Mr. Sammler watch a Black pickpocket and wrote some racial passages with frankness, but mostly through Jewish protagonists observing. Philip Roth (1933-2018) wrote The Human Stain about passing but treated race as identity construction. John Updike (1932-2009) used Skeeter in Rabbit Redux but filtered race through Rabbit’s WASP anxiety. Norman Mailer (1923-2007) mythologized the Black hipster in "The White Negro" but the writing reads as romance more than realism. Joan Didion (1934-2021) handled Cuban-Black-Anglo tension in Miami (1987) before Wolfe got to it, but as one book. Cormac McCarthy (1933-2023) did not sustain racial themes. Toni Morrison (1931-2019) and Ralph Ellison (1913-1994) wrote race from inside Black experience.
Globally, two writers match or surpass Wolfe. V.S. Naipaul (1932-2018) wrote about race and ethnicity worldwide with a frankness that put him outside polite literary opinion. His treatment of post-colonial Africa in A Bend in the River and Islamic societies in Among the Believers runs more unflinching than Wolfe’s. Michel Houellebecq (b. 1956) has done similar work on European immigration in Submission and Annihilation.
Within American letters since the civil rights era, Wolfe stands first or close to first. Naipaul is his only clear superior at global scale.
Three qualifications. Wolfe’s race realism ran sociological more than biological. He did not write about cognitive differences. His framework was status, class, ethnic coalition, and behavior patterns. He worked as a status realist first and a race realist within that.
He wrote in a journalistic-comic register that critics dismissed as caricature. Some called him racist for what he wrote. He did not back off. The hostile reviews of Bonfire, Charlotte Simmons, and Back to Blood were partly about the race material.
He treated race as one variable among many. Class, region, religion, and status anxiety carried as much weight for him as race.
