Moral Minority

Nota Bene: The Moral Passion of David Foster Wallace’s The Pale King with Hannah Smart

12 snips
Jan 9, 2026
Hannah Smart, a talented writer and critic known for her work in the Los Angeles Review of Books, dives deep into David Foster Wallace's posthumously published novel, The Pale King. They discuss how Wallace wrestled with issues of attention and boredom, proposing that enduring tedium could be seen as a form of heroism. The conversation touches on Wallace’s unique literary style, religious motifs, and the moral implications of his work, highlighting the intersection of civic responsibility and personal meaning in modern life.
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INSIGHT

Sincerity Beyond Irony

  • Wallace uses postmodern techniques to recover sincerity, resisting irony's cultural co-option by entertainment industries.
  • He aims for fiction that reconnects intellectual play with genuine moral seriousness.
INSIGHT

Sentence Form Models Attention

  • Wallace's long, digressive sentences force readers to delay gratification and practice concentration.
  • The prose models resisting instant-gratification culture to cultivate deeper appreciation and attention.
ANECDOTE

How The Pale King Was Published

  • The Pale King was compiled from polished sections and notes after Wallace's death and published posthumously in 2011.
  • Michael Pietsch edited the manuscript from Wallace's incomplete draft into the book we read.
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