In fact, another maxim I have offered myself at certain moments is that ideological critique has to end up being a critique of the self. You can’t recognize an ideology unless, in some sense, you see it in yourself. Making critiques from the outside is like reading books you don’t like because you want to denounce them. Sometimes that can be politically important, and I would never knock that. There are political things one has to do, judgments one has to make, quarrels one has to have. But with literature, it’s much better to deal with things that you like, that you associate yourself with. And then, if there are ideological nuances to that association, it becomes a self-judgment. That is to say, you recognize the role of the ideology in yourself, your own racism or something, and then, from that, you evolve a judgment, if you like.