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The existentialist philosophy of Lana Del Rey
The existentialist philosophy of Lana Del Rey

New Indian Express

time04-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • New Indian Express

The existentialist philosophy of Lana Del Rey

Speaking to Myspace as an upcoming artist in 2013, Lana Dey Rey said that the 'vision of making [her] life a work of art' was what inspired her to create her music video for her breakthrough single, Video Games (2011). The self-made video, featuring old movies clips and webcam footage of Del Rey singing, went viral. It eventually led her to sign with a major record label. For many, the video conveyed a sense of authenticity. However, upon discovering that 'Lana Del Rey' was a pseudonym (her real name is Elizabeth Grant), some fans began to have doubts. Perhaps this self-made video was just another calculated marketing scheme? The question of Del Rey's authenticity has puzzled many throughout her career. Consider, for instance, the controversial Judah Smith Interlude from her latest album, Did You Know That There's a Tunnel Under Ocean Blvd? (2023). Both fans and critics – including her sizeable LGBTQ+ fanbase – were surprised and troubled by her decision to feature the megachurch pastor Judith Smith, who's been accused of homophobia. However, the meaning of Del Rey's inclusion of Smith's sermon soundclips, layered under a recording of Del Rey giggling, is unclear. Is this meant to mock Smith, or even Christianity itself? Or is it an authentic expression of Del Rey's own spirituality? After all, she repeatedly makes references to her 'pastor' in the same album's opening track The Grants, about her family in real life. Before she became a singer-songwriter, Del Rey gained her philosophy degree at Fordham University. It was the mid-2000s, when the eminent existentialism scholar Merold Westphal would have been on staff, so she probably studied theories of authenticity by existentialists such as Jean-Paul Sartre (1905–80) and Martin Heidegger (1889–1976). Heidegger spoke of human existence as a 'being-towards-death'. Or as Del Rey sings in the title track of her first major-label album, 'you and I, we were born to die'.

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