Crowdspring

Whether your audience wants to learn how to run a business or simply advance in their career, they will always turn to specialized business blogs for advice.

Friday, 27 January 2023

[New post] Daphne Sullivan’s Sunnily Subversive Hedonism is Best Described by Midcentury Writer Rebecca West

Site logo image Julia Cooke posted: "Meghann Fahy's performance as the "deceptively layered" peppy housewife Daphne Sullivan in season two of The White Lotus has been widely lauded. The character's marriage to cheating finance bro Cameron (Theo James) is oddly functional, one article noted, " Literary Hub

Daphne Sullivan's Sunnily Subversive Hedonism is Best Described by Midcentury Writer Rebecca West

Julia Cooke

Jan 27

Meghann Fahy's performance as the "deceptively layered" peppy housewife Daphne Sullivan in season two of The White Lotus has been widely lauded. The character's marriage to cheating finance bro Cameron (Theo James) is oddly functional, one article noted, despite their mutual duplicity. Her worldview appears "perversely powerful" as she tunnel-visions her way to contentment, another opined. Her "stoic chipperness" fascinates. She navigates betrayal and disappointment with "slightly mercenary wisdom." "Big Daphne Energy" has become a meme. She can't remember if she voted or not, but her blithe smile tells us she doesn't much care either way.

Daphne and Cameron are the characters that White Lotus fans polled most want to return for season three. So fresh, viewers seem to marvel, Daphne's determination to "do whatever you have to do not to feel like a victim," as she put it. In reality, not so new: the writer who best explained the dynamic behind Daphne's sunnily subversive hedonism did so in 1941. Whatever else Daphne and Cameron are, they are the modern-day personification of British midcentury writer Rebecca West's worldview of gender.

The female defect, West wrote, is idiocy, stemming from the Greek word idios, private person. "Intent on their private lives, women follow their fate through a darkness deep as that cast by malformed cells in the brain," she wrote in her 1941 opus Black Lamb & Grey Falcon. For their part, men, West thought, suffer from lunacy, "so obsessed by public affairs that they see the world as by moonlight, which shows the outlines of every object but not the details indicative of their nature."

Setting aside the gender essentialism—and understanding that West wrote as much about what society valued in women and men as what she considered to be their natures—West's maxim, in the present-day of reality TV and nouveau-riche ostentation, materializes into Daphne and Cameron. Daphne seeks private ways of asserting her own independence as Cameron jockeys for dominance with blunt, childish determination.

Throughout The White Lotus's second season, writer-director Mike White pits Daphne and Cameron against the couple they invited on vacation, Harper (Aubrey Plaza) and Ethan (Will Sharpe). Whose brand of nouveau-riche toxicity is worse: Harper and Ethan, who agree on how an individual should interact with the world around them but can't seem to find any pleasure in each other, or Daphne and Cameron, for whom the world around them exists only to fuel their own indulgences?

West's maxim, in the present-day of reality TV and nouveau-riche ostentation, materializes into Daphne and Cameron.

Honestly, West probably wouldn't have liked Harper much, either. After youthful engagement in suffragist and socialist circles, West developed an arch skepticism—born, some critics say, of getting rich herself—of people who claimed too ardent a faith in the power of unilateral political movements. By the time she wrote Black Lamb & Grey Falcon, as she approached 50, she didn't trust promises of sweeping social change.

West was for pleasure. Imagination and rebellion, not a dry sense of duty, brought about social change, she thought. And in a certain light, Daphne Sullivan reflects a collective fever dream of shifting tides. Maybe, beneath each Instagram-perfect rich housewife exterior, a woman subtly exacts revenge on a mediocre man. Cameron and Daphne offer a silent warning: if you are the kind of man so dismissive of women that you cannot even pay your sex workers until they threaten you with exposure, you may stand on such unsteady ground that even your own children are not yours. She's wreaking havoc on the patriarchy, articles gush. But to vaunt women's retreat from public life as the cost of this imaginary vengeance (Daphne doesn't vote, read the news, or cite interests beyond her children, shopping, and sleeping with her trainer) is to accept the antiquated binary of dour feminist and warm, exuberant handmaiden of the patriarchy.

In life, West shattered this binary. She perplexed people—H.G. Wells and Virginia Woolf among them—with apparent contradictions. Anyone could tell she was brilliant. West spoke her mind, earned her own money, pinged among novels, criticism, journalism, whatever she wanted, really. She also loved designer gowns, took her husband's name, and sent her era's version of cliché family Christmas cards. "I myself have never been able to find out precisely what feminism is," she once said. "I only know that people call me a feminist whenever I express sentiments that differentiate me from a doormat, or a prostitute."

West wrote her opus in a milieu uncomfortably similar to the context in which White writes The White Lotus today.

West wrote her opus in a milieu uncomfortably similar to the context in which White writes The White Lotus today. Populist and nationalist movements surge around the world. A very few enjoy economic ascendance amid widespread refugee crises. International order is threatened by a faraway land war. Women continue to struggle to live autonomous lives. And now it's winter and Europe faces an energy crisis.

In The White Lotus's Sicily, it's summer, awash in sensuality: wine glasses reflect distorted sand behind leggy liquid, the sun warms bare shoulders and gold lamé. In an interview, Fahy described her character offering "lightness" to the people around her. She remembered White describing Daphne as "sunshine."

Sure. But from another perspective, Daphne's get-your-own, "Zen mommy" existence is the heaviest manipulation on a show replete with mind games and facades. She represents a deeply cynical insistence on clinging to the private insularity that money can offer.

West liked her Rolls-Royce, yes, and her big estate, but she also took in Yugoslavian refugees during WWII and wrote in clear-eyed prose about the costs of colonialism, economic disempowerment, and structural misogyny. The true subject of Black Lamb & Grey Falcon might really be human duality, our essential unknowability—which is also the subject of Fahy's gorgeously performed final monologue in the season finale. "You don't have to know everything to love someone," Daphne says with sincere intelligence. And yet her commitment to "lightness" leads only to her own pleasure. The fact that we elevate Daphne to icon status says something much darker about the moment we're in.

Comment

Unsubscribe to no longer receive posts from Literary Hub.
Change your email settings at manage subscriptions.

Trouble clicking? Copy and paste this URL into your browser:
https://lithub.com/daphne-sullivans-sunnily-subversive-hedonism-is-best-described-by-midcentury-writer-rebecca-west/

Powered by Jetpack
Download on the App Store Get it on Google Play
at January 27, 2023
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest

No comments:

Post a Comment

Newer Post Older Post Home
Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Specific Friendship Plans and the Fear of Leaving People Out

Why smaller gatherings can feel meaningful but complicated ͏     ­͏     ­͏     ­͏     ­͏     ­͏     ­͏     ­͏     ­͏     ­͏     ­͏    ...

  • [New post] Zazen
    Lit Hub Excerpts posted: " I went to work and a guy I wait on said he was leaving. He said everyone he knew was pu...
  • [New post] Opinion: Accounting for homelessness takes more than a homelessness count
    Freel...
  • [New post] Canceled! Is Cancel Culture Good or Bad?
    Sheri K posted: " #*insert person/company name*isoverparty or #*insert person/company name*iscancelled How often do you ...

Search This Blog

  • Home

About Me

Whether your audience wants to learn how to run a business or simply advance in their career, they will always turn to specialized business blogs for advice.
View my complete profile

Report Abuse

Blog Archive

  • May 2026 (3)
  • April 2026 (11)
  • March 2026 (8)
  • February 2026 (7)
  • January 2026 (8)
  • December 2025 (12)
  • November 2025 (10)
  • October 2025 (9)
  • September 2025 (6)
  • August 2025 (8)
  • July 2025 (10)
  • June 2025 (8)
  • May 2025 (12)
  • April 2025 (11)
  • March 2025 (10)
  • February 2025 (9)
  • January 2025 (9)
  • December 2024 (8)
  • November 2024 (6)
  • October 2024 (10)
  • September 2024 (1181)
  • August 2024 (1340)
  • July 2024 (1412)
  • June 2024 (1376)
  • May 2024 (1481)
  • April 2024 (1409)
  • March 2024 (1440)
  • February 2024 (1483)
  • January 2024 (1516)
  • December 2023 (1164)
  • November 2023 (1295)
  • October 2023 (970)
  • September 2023 (756)
  • August 2023 (750)
  • July 2023 (665)
  • June 2023 (814)
  • May 2023 (602)
  • April 2023 (549)
  • March 2023 (755)
  • February 2023 (704)
  • January 2023 (713)
  • December 2022 (775)
  • November 2022 (1220)
  • October 2022 (724)
  • September 2022 (724)
  • August 2022 (724)
  • July 2022 (696)
  • June 2022 (857)
  • May 2022 (1094)
  • April 2022 (851)
  • March 2022 (541)
  • February 2022 (357)
  • January 2022 (424)
  • December 2021 (812)
  • November 2021 (2514)
  • October 2021 (2677)
  • September 2021 (2825)
  • August 2021 (992)
Powered by Blogger.