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BOOK REVIEWS: Sex, Drugs—And More Sex and Drugs
By Diane Ravitch
I Am Charlotte Simmons by TOM WOLFE
Prep by CURTIS SITTENFELD
I Am Charlotte Simmons by Tom Wolfe. Farrar Straus and Giroux, 2004,$28.95; 688 pages.
Prep by Curtis Sittenfeld. Random House, 2005, $21.95; 406 pages.
Reviewed by Diane Ravitch
Many years ago, it was generally acknowledged
that sociology had replaced the novel as a social microscope for
examining contemporary mores and behavior. Whereas readers in the
19th century looked to writers like Balzac, Dickens, and Trollope
for critical insight into the intricacies of social patterns, by
the mid-20th century we were looking instead to reports by
sociologists to gain similar understanding of our way of life.
Those who wanted to gain insight into
adolescent culture in the middle of the 20th century could
certainly find intriguing novels, like John Knowles’s A Separate Peace, J. D.
Salinger’s Catcher in the Rye, and William Golding’s Lord of the Flies, but such
books portrayed highly unusual situations rather than realistic
descriptions of the lives of teenagers. For anyone concerned to
understand adolescence, a more reliable source was James
Coleman’s The Adolescent Society. (For Coleman’s own words, see “The
Adolescent Society,” this issue, pp. 40-43.) High-school
students, he found, had created their own subculture, one that was
anti-intellectual and materialistic, wherein they honored athletic
prowess, looks, and popularity, but not academic achievement.
Nearly a half century has passed since the
publication of Coleman’s landmark study, and no sociological work
about today’s youth has taken its place. Oddly enough, it may be
necessary to turn again to fiction to find a representation of youth
culture that describes how much has changed since Coleman’s era.
Two recent books offer a searing critique of adolescent life today, and
both are worthy of attention for the portrait that they draw of the
culture in which young people are immersed.
Tom Wolfe’s I Am Charlotte Simmons
and Curtis Sittenfeld’s Prep describe life in, respectively, an elite
college and an elite boarding school. Both are stories about girls
who arrive in an academic setting where they feel out of place
because of their family’s social status. Lee Fiora attends
the highly selective prep school Ault as a scholarship student.
Charlotte Simmons is a scholarship student at a Duke-like
university called Dupont. Fiora’s family is solidly middle
class, yet gauche and awkward among the upper-class parents at
Ault. Simmons’s family is from the mountains, and they are
uneducated, dirt-poor, ignorant, and baffled by the sophisticated
culture that their daughter Charlotte has joined.
Wolfe Paints a Disturbing Scene
Of the two novels, Wolfe’s is by far the
more consequential. In a biting satire of student life in higher
education today, Wolfe describes, with relentless detail, a
debauched culture drenched in alcohol, sex, and play, where
athletic prowess is king, and fraternity boys while away the days
and nights boozing and notching new sexual conquests. In this
milieu, naive Charlotte is nothing more than fresh meat for
avaricious males. Within only a few months of her arrival at Dupont,
Charlotte has been seduced and abandoned by a handsome but vicious frat
boy. As long as she clings to the old-fashioned moral values of her
family, she suffers mightily for her sins. In his rich description of
the ways that students talk and interact, of their empty values and
their lack of idealism, Wolfe serves up an ugly but engrossing
depiction of “academic” life in which academics play an
insignificant part.
Perhaps not surprisingly, I Am Charlotte Simmons set off
a loud debate among critics. Some hated it, saying that it was
untrue or that it was so obviously true that it was not news. A
few, including some younger writers, said that Wolfe had held up a
mirror to higher education and captured its essence. I know that I
found it engrossing reading. By the time I finished it, I was glad
that my children had finished college. If they had not, I would be
tempted to home school them or send
them to a religious college after reading this book. To the extent
that Wolfe has captured reality, it is no wonder that our country
must import talent from other nations to enroll in advanced studies
in “hard” fields like science and engineering.
Prep is a
disappointment. Whereas Charlotte Simmons is a brilliant young
woman who wastes her mind and is corrupted by the culture of her
classmates, Lee Fiora is a mediocre student who is lazy and cheats
on her exams. One wonders why Ault gave Lee a scholarship, as she
seems undeserving. She drifts through her four years at Ault,
indifferent to her studies, lusting for the most popular boy in the
class. When he finally climbs into her bed late one night, she
welcomes him. Unlike Charlotte, who loses her values and her
idealism, Lee has neither values nor idealism to lose. Teachers and friends try to
help Lee, but she is resistant to change and impervious to their
efforts. The headmaster of Ault mistakenly permits Lee to be
interviewed by a reporter for the New York
Times for a story about diversity at
Ault, and Lee pours out her resentments toward her more accomplished
peers. In so doing, she betrays the family that sacrificed to send her
to a good boarding school as well as the institution that tried
valiantly but fruitlessly to educate her.
What can we learn about student life from
these novels? At Ault, teachers are dedicated, classes are
rigorous, and student misbehavior occurs but is not condoned. At
Dupont University, the academic offerings are splendid, but few of
the students seem interested in partaking of the grand intellectual
feast spread before them. The university is concerned mainly to
keep scandal out of the newspapers, but it turns a blind eye to the
casual and constant debauchery that characterizes student life.
Sexual encounters—or “hooking up”—have no
more significance to students at Dupont than a kiss on the cheek
meant to the college students of 40 years ago.
Together these books suggest to this reader
that we need a new round of sociological studies of youth. We
should not have to rely on novelists to
tell us what is happening to the younger generation. And if higher
education is, as Wolfe implies, little more than an expensive
setting for youthful bacchanalia, then we should be very worried.
Diane Ravitch is research professor of
education, New York University, and a member of the Koret Task
Force at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University.
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