That Hideous Strength (New Year’s Resolution, Book Seventeen)


I finished the final book in C.S. Lewis’ Space Trilogy – That Hideous Strength.

I was trying to figure out what it reminded me of; even more than its predecessors, it felt derivative. But derivative of what.

Then it hit me. Madeleine L’Engle.

But that really means that she was derivative of Lewis (it should be noted that, like Lewis, L’Engle was a devote Anglican).

But… I think L’Engle was better.

Frankly, Lewis muddles up what makes him good. He references (and acknowledges) some ideas stolen from his friend J.R.R. Tolkien. Specifically, the ancient race of ‘Numinor.’ Of course, Tolkien, when he eventually published his opus, spelled it ‘Numenor.’

Lewis inserted a bunch of faux Arthurian ideas which, frankly, muddled his Christianity with a bunch of ideas and plot devices that he simply was not in control of. That, and the climax was… I don’t know. What did it have to do with the rest? What actually happened? A bunch of magical rules never before referenced were, apparently, the cause of the good guys winning. And a pretentious reference to Trahison des Clercs (Treason of the Intellectuals) was pointlessly inserted. Don’t know why that bothered me, but it did.

And the hero of the two previous books is transformed from a more fully fledged man of early middle age into a permanently handsome and young icon and a nearly perfect messianic figure. Ugh.

Look. Read the first two books and call it day. Skip this one and, instead, go back and read my favorite Narnia novel, The Horse and His Boy.

‘Selections and Essays’ (New Year’s Resolution, Book Sixteen)


photo (1)At the Lantern, in Georgetown, a fantastic (and cheap!) used bookstore filled with high quality, interesting books, I gathered up a whole mess o’ reading, including this collection by the nineteenth century art critic, John Ruskin.

Ruskin was a cheerleader for the Pre-Raphaelite painters.

In fact, when I was buying the book (books, in truth; five to be exact), the sweet young girl (I’m guessing a Georgetown student) at the desk and I got into a conversation about him and the Pre-Raphaelites. She was planning on seeing the exhibit and asked, rather pointedly, where I found the book. I think she had been looking for a collection of Ruskin’s writings and was a little miffed that I, a stranger to this place, had found it first. Then the conversation moved to Andrew Lloyd Webber (the older woman who runs the shop joining in at this point). In case you were wondering, I like Jesus Christ Superstar and that’s it. The rest is trash.

So, Selections and Essays dives very quickly into selections that get into the heart of what informed Ruskin’s taste and his theory of art.

Firstly, in some autobiographical pieces, he returns again and again to how his mother required him to read deeply into the Bible, memorizing passages and reading the whole thing from cover to cover several times as a child. There’s also some stuff about reading Sir Walter Scott’s Waverly novels over and over again as a family, but I think that’s less relevant (which no doubt means it is the coda to all of Ruskin’s later thought).

Then, in his rapt discussions of the appearances of nature in nature (first, the thick, creamy, curdling, overlapping, massy foam, which remains for a moment only after the fall of the wave), you can see how Ruskin could have appreciated Turner’s later and more impressionistic (small ‘i’ – Turner was no Impressionist) landscapes.

Ruskin believed that personal, moral feelings were imparted to art (and therefore necessary for art?) and that art called for an accurate, yet also naturalistic depiction of the natural world, by which I mean, the rural world (no urban cityscapes, for him, no thank you, please). The moral is especially critical. He ultimately see aesthetics as a moral science (he even prefers to call it theoria or the theoretic faculty to distinguish it from traditional aesthetics).

He is almost prescriptive. When ostensibly writing about art, he is actually writing about nature, but, really, he is writing how artists ought to depict nature by describing how nature appears to the viewer (sometimes, from several different viewing angles).

Let us have learned and faithful historical paintings – touching and thoughtful representations of human nature, in dramatical painting…

Because of his relation to the Pre-Raphaelites, I noticed that he called Michel Angelo [sic] the ‘Homer of Painting,’ Michelangelo being, as it were, Raphael’s immediate predecessor, a true ‘Pre-Raphaelite.’

To ramble a bit, have you read Elaine Scarry’s On Beauty and Being Just? Because she must have read Ruskin. They’re coming at from different angles, in the sense that Scarry begins with the idea that, these days, there is a need to justify beauty and uses moral reasoning to do so. Ruskin, of photocourse, is not justifying beauty, but he still finds its core in moral reasoning.

I didn’t quite know what to think about his political writings, which, apparently, were his obsession (in an early essay he is clear that he comes from a family of lifelong Tories and also so self-identifies, though he sounds to me like an advocate of what today would be called democratic-socialism or European style socialism). He claims to hate liberalism, which seems confusing (because he is surely advocating liberal ideas) until you remember that in the nineteenth century ‘Liberal’ meant more a sort of middle class libertarianism.

These were the days when ‘economics’ was called study of ‘political economy’ and he clearly shows the difference that makes (and also how poorly understood much of economics was; this is not a criticism of Ruskin, but things got a lot clearer post-Keynes). He rightly understands that wealth (riches, he says) is actually about power. I don’t know how widely understood or how widely stated that was, but if it was neither, here’s a fine example of how the mindset taken when the field is called ‘political economy’ can lead to some good insights.

I noted one passage on page 340 that stuck out because he seemed to be advocating for Glass-Stegall!

…that the private business of speculating with other people’s money should take another name than ‘banking.’

The most shocking passages are when he writes critically, dismissively of Greek art and architecture. I had never heard of a nineteenth century Englishman writing less than admiringly, fawningly about the glories of Greece. Frankly, I don’t know what to think. I mean, I like ancient Greek art and architecture and poetry and culture. I feel like I’ve been found out as some sort of Dwight McDonald style midcult bourgeois fraud. Once again though, you can see that connection to the ideas that inspired the Pre-Raphaelites, this deep love, almost to the exclusion of all else, of the art and architecture of the period in western Europe from the eleventh century until just before Raphael.

Good Bye, Friedrich


Three hundred and eight years ago today, Friedrich Schiller shrugged off this mortal coil. Just saw the WSC’s production of his Wallenstein. Perhaps I’ll listen to the Ninth today, in his honor.

Welcome, David Moyes


Welcome to Manchester United, David Moyes.

And Everton, say goodbye to Marouane Fellaini, Leighton Baines, and top six finishes. And probably Ross Barkley, too. And Kevin Mirallas if Moyes decides he wants a new winger.

Sunday Paper – Dissentnik


Last of the old guard ‘Dissentniks’ retires.

A theory of whiteness.

I knew it!

A regular constitutional is good for one’s creativity.

Weekend Reading – West Virginia Leads The Way


A Republican politician in West Virginia wants to put science fiction in schools.

A magical time, with sexual fetishists, future mass murderers, and radical intellectuals (sometimes, all three at once).

Decline of a once (surprisingly) great art museum.

Takeaway quote: ‘Philosophy – it’s a bag of d–ks.’

The bookishness of books.

Poetry & Utility


It’s poetry’s uselessness that excites me. Its hopelessness. All this talk of usefulness makes me feel I’ve suddenly been shanghaied into the helping professions. Prose is practical language. Conversation is practical language. Let them handle the usefulness jobs. But of course, poetry has its balms. It makes us less lonely by one. It makes us have more room inside ourselves. But it’s paralyzing to think of usefulness and poetry in the same breath.  – Kay Ryan

Your Daily Derrida


The idea of the book is the idea of a totality. It is the encyclopedic protection of theology and of logocentrism against the disruption of writing, against its aphoristic energy and … against difference in general.

 

The Flail At Twins Jazz


Saturday night, I saw the New York based jazz quintet, The Flail, at Twins Jazz on U Street. They were joined by a local guitarist (whose name, if I heard correctly, was John Lee; but don’t quote me on that).

They are clearly a very good group, with an innovative sound and great chemistry. You can hear the ‘but’ coming, can’t you? But… I was disappointed. Honestly, I thought the addition of the electric guitar was a bad thing. His sound was very demanding, very dominant. Except for one song, I felt it was distracting. The insistent noise of the guitar left little room for the band members to switch up and let others take the lead and solo, because it rarely seemed able to slip into the background and let others take center stage.

On another note, the pianist looked like a clean cut Allen Ginsberg – his wild, middle aged Ginsbergian mane pulled back in a pony tail and his thick, leftist beard well trimmed in its fullness. I had to go home and read Kaddish after seeing him.

Monday Morning Staff Meeting – Overrated Wonks


Wonks gone wrong.

Through the eyes of the ‘other.’

Still dead, I guess.

Better dead than red.