Theodore Dalrymple

The man is moving to France. I don’t care about this one way or the other, but I’m curious as to why Arts & Letters Daily feature practically everything he writes, and more generally I’m curious as to why so many people seem to rate him. It’s all the same Britain-is-going-to-the-dogs stuff from the perspective of an old patrician bore, though no doubt a very cultivated patrician bore. One of his gripes:

Furthermore, I doubt that many French patients address their doctor by the equivalent of ‘mate’, as young British patients now do.

He takes offence when a patient calls him “mate”? Hmm, I can imagine that attitude would be something of a handicap as a doctor, especially a prison doctor, which I believe is what he was.

But maybe I’m missing something here. That name….the stereotypical old-fogey attitude….is this all some sort of hoax? I think we should be told.

Comments

  1. mgl Avatar
    mgl

    Mick, “Theodore Dalrymple” is a pseudonym chosen partly, I believe, to convey the air of stuffy fogeyness you complain about. That’s not to say that “Dalrymple” (Anthony Daniels) isn’t entirely serious about his going-to-the-dogs opinions, but I perceive some impishness behind the crusty persona. His essay on tattoos on British youth (from his collection “Life at the Bottom: The Worldview That Makes the Underclass”) is pretty funny, in that sputtering way of his.
    Daniels has written a number of books under his own name, as well. Most of them are hard-to-find travelogues about journeys in the developing world, but I’ve read his Utopias Elsewhere: Journeys in a Vanishing World–in which he travels through Albania, North Korea, Romania, Vietnam, and Cuba in 1989, just as communism was beginning its collapse–and quite enjoyed it. Daniels and “Dalrymple” (who both write occasional columns for the Telegraph) are pretty obviously the same writer, but the former seems less pompous and more human.

  2. Mick H Avatar
    Mick H

    mgl, hmm, interesting, thanks for that. Knowing there is a hint of impishness behind his articles adds some spice, but I’m still curious about his frequent appearances in AL Daily.

  3. David Avatar
    David

    Mr D is a great poker of fun at the new British establishment + institutions where there is much material – due to some of the resulting folly of constant schemes that foist PC style social engineering onto unwitting state employees – just tailor-made for satire and downright ridicule.
    He plays up the ‘old-fogey’ aspect in his writings as he is neither ‘old’ nor a ‘fogey’. Many of his articles contain elements of hilarity and he has a brilliant turn of phrase.
    I feel much more sympathy for the ‘good doctor’ (who has spent years working in decrepit inner-city hospitals trying relentlessly to deal with the victims at the bottom of the underclass) than for most moan-at-the-state-of-modern-Britain taloid columnists who would not know a real victim if they fell over one.
    All power to Dr D’s future writings…de La France…!

  4. Amos Avatar
    Amos

    Yeah. Dalrymple = Tha man
    Maybe he just thinks the UK is going to hell beacuse he works in a prison. On the other hand, maybe he is exactly right and the decline is slow enough that you don’t register it, like the frog in the gradualy warming pot of water on the stove.
    I live in Australia and visted the UK last year, a culture shock you might say. Maybe you guys don’t notice any more, but a good segment of the English population behaves like fucking dogs. Like animals.

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