Perhaps John Berger’s closest equivalent in the US is Susan Sontag. They were 
friends perhaps linked by 
being uncompromising public intellectuals operating in cultures generaly 
unsympathetic to intellectuals (though
Berger made his home in rural France). Both were also ambitious novelists who 
are in the end better remembered 
for essays and extended essays. 

Sontag’s On Photography and Berger’s Ways of Seeing could be productively read 
back to back for the way they overlap
and differ. 
The novelistic ambition is a key to the appeal of their writing along with an 
ability to transcribe and build on the ideas of 
central European intellectuals from Benjamin to Barthes without ever seeiming 
like mere popularisers. They offered an important 
set of keys with which to enter new worlds and explore for ourselves.
Berger routinely reffered to himself as a "story teller” and many of Sontag’s 
greatest essays exhibit the same quality 
and is part of the secret of their continued popular appeal. Below is a link to 
a conversation between the two friends 
discussing the role and importance of story telling and perhaps even touching 
on the dangers of the narrative fallacy, as 
the desire to turn everything into a story is as likely to distort as to 
clarify.

I miss them both but continue to hear their voices in the work they leave 
behind (present tense intentional)     

http://www.openculture.com/2017/01/john-berger-rip-and-susan-sontag-take-us-inside-the-art-of-storytelling-1983.html
 

David Garcia
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