Monday, October 17, 2005

Quote of the Day

Via Powerline:
Harold Pinter's early writing for the stage was correctly described -- with no objection from him -- as "the theater of the absurd." But it has been left to the selectors of the Nobel in literature to make that definition postmodern and thus to drain it of all irony...The sheer puerility of [Pinter's poetry] is precisely a combination of banality with evil: a preference for dictatorship larded with obscenity and fatuity. (And scrawled, I might add, by a man who helped found the International Committee for the Defense of Slobodan Milosevic.) One has had more enlightenment, and been exposed to more wit, from the walls of public lavatories..."

~ Christopher Hitchens, on Harold Pinter's Nobel Peace Prize win

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