Sign Up For Sexy Emails
Unbuttoned Twitter

INSIDE

Advertising

Don Draper

Betty Draper

Smoking

Fashion

Booze

Mad Men Bookshelf

Current Events

Frank O'Hara

Art

Peggy

Decor

Mad Men Movie Club

Playlist

John Cheever

Illustrators

BOOK CONTRIBUTORS

Alex Balk, Smoker

Carol Diehl, Art Critic

Matthew Gallaway , Novelist

Megan Lubaszka, Architect 

Angela Serratore, Historian

Tim Siedell, Ad Man

Natasha Simons, Writer

Christina Perry & Derrick Gee, Designers

Dave Wilkie, Ad Man


PALS

A Continuous Lean

A Modernist

Ad Rants

The Awl

Bad Banana 

Basket of Kisses

Charlie Allen

Dyna Moe

Illustration Art

Ivy Style

Make The Logo Bigger

Mid-Century Home Style 

My Vintage Vogue

Mid-Century Illustrated

Today's Inspiration

September 10, 2009

Red-eyed with grief over her grandfather’s death, Sally Draper hugs the floor as she watches the first televised self-immolation of a Buddhist monk. A spate of these suicides by fire will ensue in reaction to the ongoing war in Vietnam. In Buddhism and other Eastern warrior cultures, the practice of self-immolation is simultaneously a form of denouncement and of devotion.


Sally’s being glued to the television in the wake of a death and her parents’ inability to comfort her signifies an ongoing distancing of Sally from her surroundings, and, importantly, the atmosphere of 50s still pervading her home. Her witnessing such a tragic event at an early age can no doubt have an effect on her consciousness, especially in a time of grief. Another fictional character of some infamy witnessed, and became obsessed by, the very same Buddhist self-immolation: Merry Levov, from Philip Roth’s American Pastoral. 

If Sally Draper were just a few years older she could be going the way of a violent sixties radical. Could this be her baptism into political consciousness by fire? 

• footnote - by Natasha Simons

2:56pm  |   |  current events |  history