Lena Dunham writes emotional op-ed about Caroline Flack’s death: ‘I know what it feels like to be cast out’
Girls creator said presenter’s death hit her with a ‘sickening power’
Lena Dunham has written an emotional op-ed about Caroline Flack’s death, saying the news hit her with a “sickening power”.
The Girls creator did not know the former Love Island presenter personally, but says she was a big fan of hers.
In February, Flack was found dead in her home aged 40 after having taken her own life.
“Her death hit me with a sickening power,” wrote Dunham in The Guardian. “While I am not often at a loss for words, I felt that weighing in – especially with a Twitter micro-tribute – would be useless and borderline disrespectful.”
Dunham used the op-ed to call out society for reserving its “deepest rage” for women, and for making “a sport of building up, then tearing down, the people we elect to entertain us”.
She said she does not “claim to know what Caroline Flack felt when she took her own life” but she does know “that none of us benefit from a culture in which young women are told that being revered by people who do not really know them… is the answer to ancient feelings of low self-worth”.
Dunham condemned “history’s habit of erecting monuments to women, and then dismantling them just as quickly”. S
he also urged people to “accept contradiction, complexity and grey areas in the women we idolise, and consider the violence of suspending them in mid-air above us and then cutting the harness”.
Caroline Flack: life in pictures
Show all 18The writer and actor acknowledged the fact that Flack was awaiting trial for an assault charge before her death, but maintained her point that “public vilification, especially as it follows public celebration, is almost too painful to bear for most, and a trauma like any other”.
She wrote: “I know what it feels like to be cast out and away, for some valid reasons and other arbitrary ones.”
If you are experiencing feelings of distress and isolation, or are struggling to cope, The Samaritans offers support; you can speak to someone for free over the phone, in confidence, on 116 123 (UK and ROI), email jo@samaritans.org, or visit the Samaritans website to find details of your nearest branch.
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