“The Perfection Trap” decries what it calls a “hidden epidemic”
Thomas Curran finds some unusual culprits for the scourge of perfectionism
In Nathaniel Hawthorne’s short story “The Birth-Mark”, a chemist called Aylmer marries a young woman, Georgiana, whose sole imperfection is a red blemish on her left cheek. He considers it a “fatal flaw”; she pleads with him to use his skills to remove it. Stumbling on his journal, however, Georgiana is astonished to find it is a catalogue of scientific mishaps. Might his loathing of her birthmark stem from his professional disappointment? At length Aylmer concocts a potion that has the desired effect—and promptly kills her.
This article appeared in the Culture section of the print edition under the headline “The enemy of the good”
Culture May 27th 2023
- Art made by artificial intelligence is developing a style of its own
- In Javier Marías’s final novel, an agent confronts his conscience
- “The Perfection Trap” decries what it calls a “hidden epidemic”
- Rome fell. Will the modern-day West follow suit?
- As it spreads across the world, who owns English?
- August Wilson was and remains a bard of black life in America
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