Sections of the left-wing intelligentsia appear to believe the Eleanor Catton brouhaha says something disturbing about New Zealand. It doesn't. It does, however, say something disturbing about sections of said intelligentsia: that they can look at a thing and see something else altogether.
This isn't new. For much of the 20th century, some left-wing intellectuals had great difficulty acknowledging the obvious reality that the Soviet Union was a totalitarian monolith designed to crush the human spirit, a Nelsonian posture that led to the cul de sac of moral equivalence: insisting there wasn't really much to choose between the West and the USSR.
We saw it during last year's election campaign in the strenuous attempts to inflate the molehill of Dirty Politics into a mountain of corruption likened to Watergate. Some of the inflaters went on to portray the Internet Party as something it wasn't: a legitimate political force operating in the national interest.
And now Catton. Take this excerpt from Herald columnist Bryce Edwards' review of the reaction to the writer's remarks in India: "The hollowness of public debate and of the media and politics is increasingly of concern to some academics, researchers and journalists. Hence the Catton controversy has become a lightning rod for various dissident public intellectuals to vent their concerns. By standing up for Eleanor Catton, a critique is made against what appears to be yet another attempt to suppress dissenting voices and criticisms."
A couple of things to note here: first, the assumption of intellectual superiority - "the hollowness of public debate and of the media and politics" consigns pretty much everyone else to the dunce's corner; second, the transformation of a normal event - the debate triggered by Catton's remarks - into something sinister - an attempt to suppress dissent.