Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Introduction: Split in Two
- 2 Hypocrisy and Jesus
- 3 Antihypocrisy: Looking Bad in Order to Be Good
- 4 Virtues Naturally Immune to Hypocrisy
- 5 Naked Truth: Hey, Wanna F***?
- 6 In Divine Services and Other Ritualized Performances
- 7 Say It Like You Mean It: Mandatory Faking and Apology
- 8 Flattery and Praise
- 9 Hoist with His Own Petard
- 10 The Self, the Double, and the Sense of Self
- 11 At the Core at Last: The Primordial Jew
- 12 Passing and Wishing You Were What You Are Not
- 13 Authentic Moments with the Beautiful and Sublime?
- 14 The Alchemist: Role as Addiction
- 15 “I Love You”: Taking a Bullet versus Biting One
- 16 Boys Crying and Girls Playing Dumb
- 17 Acting Our Roles: Mimicry, Makeup, and Pills
- 18 False (Im)modesty
- 19 Caught in the Act
- Afterword
- Notes
- Works Cited
- Index
Afterword
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Introduction: Split in Two
- 2 Hypocrisy and Jesus
- 3 Antihypocrisy: Looking Bad in Order to Be Good
- 4 Virtues Naturally Immune to Hypocrisy
- 5 Naked Truth: Hey, Wanna F***?
- 6 In Divine Services and Other Ritualized Performances
- 7 Say It Like You Mean It: Mandatory Faking and Apology
- 8 Flattery and Praise
- 9 Hoist with His Own Petard
- 10 The Self, the Double, and the Sense of Self
- 11 At the Core at Last: The Primordial Jew
- 12 Passing and Wishing You Were What You Are Not
- 13 Authentic Moments with the Beautiful and Sublime?
- 14 The Alchemist: Role as Addiction
- 15 “I Love You”: Taking a Bullet versus Biting One
- 16 Boys Crying and Girls Playing Dumb
- 17 Acting Our Roles: Mimicry, Makeup, and Pills
- 18 False (Im)modesty
- 19 Caught in the Act
- Afterword
- Notes
- Works Cited
- Index
Summary
This journey through the land of faking it has been something of an antipilgrimage, it having no earthly or celestial city as its end point. But it is only an antipilgrimage because there is no exit, no real conclusion to the journey. As for worshipfulness, though, there is plenty. The book is an homage to the extraordinary richness and deep interestingness of the most mundane matters in psychic and social life. We did indeed get mired in the Slough of Despond, as when I contemplated the boundlessness of anti-Semitism, but for most of the time we settled in at Vanity Fair, taking day trips into its suburbs and nature preserves (which are testimonies to man getting nature to fake it too). The tour guide obviously is not Bunyan's Christian. He is, instead, a wandering, and occasionally a meandering, Jew. Yet I bet his sensibility is not unfamiliar to most readers.
I have taken “faking it” colloquially. I have tried to let the notion exfoliate as it does in conversation, the style revelatory and expansive rather than strictly logical and restrictive. If the exposition appears at times to proceed by free association, that freeness is, trust me, contrived. I have not so much set out to prove a thesis as to give the reader, as I indicated in the introduction, a feel for the terrain, for the custom of the country. The point of the book is that faking it is no simple point, but many points.
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- Information
- Faking It , pp. 232 - 238Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003