Christopher Hitchens has died

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indra

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The influential writer and cultural critic Christopher Hitchens died on Thursday at the age of 62 from complications of cancer of the esophagus. Hitchens confronted his disease in part by writing, bringing the same unsparing insight to his mortality that he had directed at so many other subjects.

Over the years, Hitchens' caustic attention was directed at a broad range of subjects, including Henry Kissinger, Prince Charles, Bob Hope, Michael Moore, the Dalai Lama and Mother Teresa.

"If you're at Vanity Fair and you're talking about some of the things that Christopher has taken on, at the top of the list is going to be Mother Teresa," said Graydon Carter, editor at Vanity Fair and a longtime friend.

In 1994, Hitchens co-wrote and narrated a documentary on her called Hell's Angel.

"This profane marriage between tawdry media hype and medieval superstition gave birth to an icon which few have since had the poor taste to question," he said in it.

Hitchens wrote about her for the magazine, too. Carter says it didn't go over so well.

"That's a tough topic to go after," he said. "It was quite negative, and we had hundreds of subscription cancellations, including some from our own staff."

Christopher Eric Hitchens was born in 1949 — the son of a British naval commander and a navy nurse — and by his own account was trained to join the British elite. He studied at a prestigious private school and then at Oxford, picking up along the way a love of smoking, drinking, politics, philosophy and argument. In 2010, Hitchens reviewed his life's path on NPR's Talk of the Nation as he talked about his latest memoir.

"I mean I thought of, at one point, entitling the book Both Sides Now, to describe the various ambivalences and contradictions that I've been faced with, or that I contained: English and American, Anglo-Celtic and Jewish, Marxist and — what shall we say — I've been accused of being this, accused of being a neoconservative and not always thought of it as an insult; internationalist but in a way patriotic," he said.

In his student days, he was a leftist, opposed to the Vietnam War; he later wrote for the New Statesman before coming to the U.S. in the early 1980s to write for The Nation magazine. His anti-American writings, informed by his socialism, yielded over time to a muscular defense of Western and particularly American values. During another of his frequent NPR appearances, Hitchens said he sought to counteract people he considered apologists for Islamo-fascism.

"Because I think it's the principal threat and because I think that it tests our readiness to say that we think our civilization is worth fighting for and is better than those who attack it," he said. "And I look — not just with politicians but full time with commentators, intellectuals, friends, for any note of apology, any sort of weakness or indecision on that point which I've come to consider to be morally and ideologically central."

Hitchens was diagnosed with metastasized esophageal cancer in June 2010. He told NPR that while doctors say he has a chance of remission, his chances of living longer than five years are slim.

There was a certain performative element to the certainty he projected in his work for Vanity Fair, Slate and the Atlantic Monthly, among other publications. Sometimes it came across as a stunt, as in his claim in Vanity Fair that women could not truly be funny.

"For most men, if they can't make women laugh, they are out of the evolutionary contest," he said. "With women there's no need to be rendering yourself attractive to men in that way. We already find you attractive, thanks."

The New York Times critic Alessandra Stanley called Hitchens "polymorphously polemic" for that one, but his stunts sometimes spanned to more serious issues as well, such as, in 2008, subjecting himself to waterboarding. He lasted for all of 16 seconds.

"It's annoying to me now to read every time it's discussed in the press — or in Congress — that it simulates the feeling of drowning," he said at the time. "It doesn't simulate the feeling of drowning. You are being drowned, slowly."

Hitchens had all too vivid a glimpse into his own mortality — cutting short a lecture tour by explaining that he had been diagnosed with throat cancer. He borrowed a line from a character in a novel written by his friend Martin Amis: "I lit another cigarette. Unless I specifically inform you to the contrary, I am always lighting another cigarette."

His friend Graydon Carter said in fall 2010 that, if anything, Hitchens' ordeal — which he has chronicled vividly — made the always entertaining dining companion a better listener.

"It slowed it down so he's not as pyrotechnic as it was before," he said. "You get all the great stuff but without all this blinding sort of wizardry with his intelligence in the language."

For years, Hitchens had toured the country debating religious figures about his utter disbelief in the existence of a God. He didn't waver in the face of his inability to treat his disease. To the very end, whatever the argument joined, Hitchens' voice was an original. He is survived by his wife, the writer Carol Blue, and their three children.
 
I'd been thinking he must be near the end, as I'd seen several columnists and bloggers refer to him being very ill over the last couple weeks.

Cancer sucks, great writing endures...especially in terms of literary criticism, he certainly produced more than his fair share of the latter.

RIP
 
We are all dying.

Some don't want to believe it. He accepted it.


his last essay was about that:

I am attracted to the German etymology of the word “stark,” and its relative used by Nietzsche, stärker, which means “stronger.” In Yiddish, to call someone a shtarker is to credit him with being a militant, a tough guy, a hard worker. So far, I have decided to take whatever my disease can throw at me, and to stay combative even while taking the measure of my inevitable decline. I repeat, this is no more than what a healthy person has to do in slower motion. It is our common fate. In either case, though, one can dispense with facile maxims that don’t live up to their apparent billing.

Christopher Hitchens Takes on Nietzsche: Am I Really Stronger? | Culture | Vanity Fair
 
Normally I'm fairly unaffected when a celerity dies, but I'm really bummed about Hitch's death :(
 
Christopher Hitchens is dead. His writing has influenced the way I think. I value his contribution to the argument.
 
Jive Turkey said:
Normally I'm fairly unaffected when a celerity dies, but I'm really bummed about Hitch's death :(

Same, very sad, and I'm surprised by how stunned I was this morning when I first saw the news, despite obviously knowing for such a long time that it was coming, and a few clues in the last few weeks that it was probably coming very soon. Huge hole left behind, can't think of anyone who comes close.
 
He was a great man, and, as others have said, i felt genuinely sad upon learning of his death, despite knowing it was coming.
But even though he's gone now, i like to focus simply on the wonderful fact that he existed at all - what a great thing it was to have someone like him in our world!
 
Finally a thread worth of mourning, unlike Amy Winehousefuck or whatever, this guy actually contributed something meaningful and thereby should be remembered.
 
I always like reading his take on current events such as the death of Bin Laden or the Arab Spring. He drew upon so much breadth of experience from books and first hand experience. It is a shame that his brain wasn't used by the US Gov't to solve foreign policy issues.
 
One good thing that came of his death that I assume he would be very happy about is that it seems to have exposed people to him that, for some reason, had not already been. I'm a little shocked to find that a sizable number of my friends had no idea who he was until a day ago. Of those friends, a lot have since watched hours of Hitchens speaking on youtube. A couple of those have even just bought a book or two today after being left so impressed by him.
 
One good thing that came of his death that I assume he would be very happy about is that it seems to have exposed people to him that, for some reason, had not already been. I'm a little shocked to find that a sizable number of my friends had no idea who he was until a day ago. Of those friends, a lot have since watched hours of Hitchens speaking on youtube. A couple of those have even just bought a book or two today after being left so impressed by him.

I mentioned Hitchens in passing a few months ago to some friends and they hadn't heard of him. If you ask me we live in a profoundly anti-intellectual age. Surely the ordinary person was aware of the existence of Boswell and Pepys in their day? Maybe not. I hope it is not the case that Hitchens turns out to be the last of the great public intellectuals.


A finely judged, moving tribute from Peter Hitchens:

We got on surprisingly well in the past few months, better than for about 50 years as it happens. At such times one tends to remember childhood more clearly than at others, though I have always had a remarkably clear memory of much of mine. I am still baffled by how far we both came, in our different ways, from the small, quiet, shabby world of chilly, sombre rented houses and austere boarding schools, of battered and declining naval seaports, not specially cultured, not book-lined or literary or showy but plain, dutiful and unassuming, we took the courses we did.

Christopher Hitchens death: In Memoriam, my courageous sibling, by Peter Hitchens | Mail Online
 
That article is actually as disappointing as if Hitchens found God on his death bed. I really thought Christopher was a 'fatal hemlock' sort of guy.

But now I know Hitchens did not grow up in comfortable circumstances.
 
Finally a thread worth of mourning, unlike Amy Winehousefuck or whatever, this guy actually contributed something meaningful and thereby should be remembered.

Its pretty shitty to categorize people's deaths like that
 
I thought the comments by his brother were beautifully expressed.
The references to C.S.Lewis and T.S.Eliot tells me he knows the
truth is, indeed, out there.

Christopher Hitchens death: In Memoriam, my courageous sibling, by Peter Hitchens | Mail Online


Prayers to family and friends


I think you are not wrong. FYI, Peter Hitchens was a Christianity-sympathetic agnostic for a long time but in recent years has identified as Christian.

I personally think, as a non-believer, that the C.S. Lewis and T.S. Eliot references were intended as an elegant way of bringing the path he chose, and his brother did not, into his assessment of his brother's life without offending anyone.
 
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