Nonfiction writer Paul Elie joins co-hosts Whitney Terrell and V.V. Ganeshananthan to discuss his new book The Last Supper: Art, Faith, Sex, and Controversy in the 1980s and Pope Leo XIV. Elie compares the new pope to John Paul II, whose conservative views shaped the 1980s. He explains how and why ’80s artists like Andy Warhol, U2, and Bob Dylan produced art he considers “crypto-religious,” a term coined by poet Czesław Miłosz. He analyzes limbo and purgatory in the work of writers of the period, including Louise Erdrich and Toni Morrison, and recalls the culture wars, including iconic incidents like Sinéad O’Connor tearing up the pope’s picture on Saturday Night Live, as well as the controversy over Andres Serrano’s Piss Christ. He reads from The Last Supper.
Selected Readings:
Paul Elie
The Last Supper: Art, Faith, Sex, and Controversy in the 1980s
Reinventing Bach: The Search for Transcendence in Sound
The Life You Save May Be Your Own: An American Pilgrimage
The Down-to-Earth Pope: Pope Francis Has Died at Eighty-eight | The New Yorker
Others
Madame Bovary
Mystery and Manners: Occasional Prose
Love Medicine
The Handmaid’s Tale
Striving Towards Being: The Letters of Thomas Merton and Czeslaw Milosz
U2 - Gloria
“The Controversial Saturday Night Live Performance That Made Sinéad O'Connor an Icon,” Time Magazine, July 26, 2023
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