Folgen
-
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit grandhotelabyss.substack.com
Welcome back to The Invisible College, my series of literature courses for paid subscribers. The 2024 syllabus can be found here. This episodeâover two hours for paid subscribers, with a 15-minute preview for free subscribersâis the second in a three-week sequence on Herman Melvilleâs Moby-Dick. First we discuss the unity and disunity of Moby-Dickâwhether or not the novel is, as Melville said, a âbotchââwith remarks on its relation to 20th-century critical trends like New Criticism and deconstruction. I offer my own view as a novelist about the question of whether or not works of literature should seek coherence or contradiction, unity or aporia. Then we consider the strange identity of the novelâs three main personaeâIshmael, Ahab, and the titular whale itselfâand the novelâs vein of Orientalism centered on the figure of Fedallah. Next we explore the mood of pessimism and misanthropy that marks the novelâs middle third, abrading the revolutionary cosmopolitan optimism of the first third, and investigate the themes of fate, free will, and chance. For the rest of the episode, I examine Ishmaelâs cetology chapters and their metafictional relation to realism and allegory, their theological implications, and their anti-philosophical bias. I further detect unexpected elements of the sentimental and the feminineânot to mention the ecologicalâin this otherwise radical, masculinist, and gnostic epic. Finally, I note the novelâs ambitious civilizational syncretism, uniting Greek, Hebrew, Hindu, and Christian myth. Please like, share, comment, and enjoy!âand please offer a paid subscription so you donât miss the rest of the American literature sequence, including the finale of Moby-Dick, not to mention the archive of episodes on modern British literature from Blake to Beckett and our previous sequences on the works of Joyce, including Ulysses, and on George Eliotâs Middlemarch. The slideshow corresponding to the lecture can be downloaded below the paywall:
-
Welcome back to The Invisible College, my series of literature courses for paid subscribers. The 2024 syllabus can be found here. This episode, free in its entirety, is the first in a three-week sequence on Herman Melvilleâs Moby-Dick. First I make some general remarks about Moby-Dick, its multiple genres and influences (the King James Bible, Shakespeare, Milton), and how difficult it is to read relative to other âdifficultâ classics. Then I discuss Melvilleâs biography, with an emphasis on âthe tormented psychology of the decaying patrician,â to quote a critic, as well as his experiences with non-western cultures and his struggles with family and authority, and I make some remarks on his other works. I give a primer on the Biblical precedents for Moby-Dickâs three central charactersâIshmael, Ahab, and Leviathanâand summarize Melvilleâs radical redaction of Judeo-Christian tradition: his siding against the chosen and with the outcast and his speculations on a covenant with nature. I note the bookâs multiple modes and traditions: epic, romance, satire, anatomy, tragedy, and realism. I then summarize the first third of Moby-Dick and consider its âEtymology,â âExtracts,â and opening paragraph. I survey themes of wonder and sublimity, the escape from domesticity and femininity, cosmopolitanism and queer desire, democracy and kingship, the modernization of tragedy, relativism vs. absolutism, and Melvilleâs proto-modernist critique both of Romanticism and Enlightenment. Finally, I try to solve the puzzle of the novelâs most esoteric passage: what is âthe old State-secretâ? Please like, share, comment, and enjoy!âand please offer a paid subscription so you donât miss the rest of the American literature sequence, including parts two and three on Moby-Dick, not to mention the archive of episodes on modern British literature from Blake to Beckett and our previous sequences on the works of Joyce, including Ulysses, and on George Eliotâs Middlemarch. The slideshow corresponding to the lecture can be downloaded below the paywall:
This is a public episode. If youâd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit grandhotelabyss.substack.com/subscribe -
Fehlende Folgen?
-
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit grandhotelabyss.substack.com
Welcome back to The Invisible College, my series of literature courses for paid subscribers. The 2024 syllabus can be found here. This episode, the fourth in a 16-week sequence on American literature, focuses on Nathaniel Hawthorneâs novel of American radicalism, American occultism, and American aestheticism, The Blithedale Romance. First, I make general remarks about Hawthorne, especially The Scarlet Letter, and his role in high-school and college curricula, with a recommendation that The Blithedale Romance might be the young readerâs best introduction to the author considering its more immediate first-person narration and its perennially controversial themes. I also explore Hawthorneâs influences and affinities, ranging from Henry James and William Faulkner to Franz Kafka and David Lynch. Then I recount Hawthorneâs biography, review Henry Jamesâs famous comments on the rudimentary American civilization he confronted, and evaluate his consequent insistence that he wrote âromancesâ rather than ânovels.â Then I read D. H. Lawrenceâs maliciously satirical plot summary of The Blithedale Romance before surveying themes of Puritanism, radicalism, feminism, conservatism, occultism, and aestheticism in the novel. Finally, with Irving Howe, I consider the question of whether or not this novel is an artistic failure. Please like, share, comment, and enjoy!âand please offer a paid subscription so you donât miss the rest of the American literature sequence, including Moby-Dick, not to mention the archive of episodes on modern British literature from Blake to Beckett and our previous sequences on the works of Joyce, including Ulysses, and on George Eliotâs Middlemarch. The slideshow corresponding to the lecture can be downloaded below the paywall:
-
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit grandhotelabyss.substack.com
Welcome back to The Invisible College, my series of literature courses for paid subscribers. The 2024 syllabus can be found here. This episode, the third in a 16-week sequence on American literature, focuses on the writings of Edgar Allan Poe. With help from writers as diverse as Borges, MallarmĂ©, and Lovecraft, I emphasize Poeâs extraordinary influence on world literature across several different domains from pulp fiction to avant-garde poetry. From his poem âThe Ravenâ and his literary theoretical manifesto âThe Philosophy of Composition,â I derive Poeâs formalist and polysemous aesthetics that would go on to influence modernist poetry and postmodernist literary theory, a conflict with the Transcendentalists cleaving the root of modernism and leading to further divisions like those between poets Pound and Stevens or critics Guy Davenport and Harold Bloom. In the Gothic stories âThe Fall of the House of Usherâ and âLigeiaâ I identify his parodic recasting of older narrative forms, his aestheticism and exoticism, his cultural syncretism, his dark animism and vitalism, and his pervasive irony. In his mystery âThe Purloined Letter,â I trace his invention of the detective genre and his theory of a poetry of the surface as reasonâs highest form, surpassing mathematics and science. Finally, in his experimental tale âThe Man of the Crowd,â I find the origins of urban and psychological fiction that looks forward to Dostoevsky, Kafka, and Joyce. In passing, I remark upon the ironized and commercialized simulacrum of traditionalism that places Poe at the origin of a uniquely American right-wing politics. Please like, share, comment, and enjoy!âand please offer a paid subscription so you donât miss the rest of the American literature sequence, including Moby-Dick, not to mention the archive of episodes on modern British literature from Blake to Beckett and our previous sequences on the works of Joyce, including Ulysses, and on George Eliotâs Middlemarch. The slideshow corresponding to the lecture can be downloaded here:
-
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit grandhotelabyss.substack.com
Welcome back to The Invisible College, my series of literature courses for paid subscribers. The 2024 syllabus can be found here. This episode, the second in a 16-week sequence on American literature and the second of two on the Transcendentalist movement, focuses on essays by Henry David Thoreau and Margaret Fuller. The first 10 minutes are available as a free preview. We consider Thoreauâs libertarianism, his anti-sentimental radicalism, his influence on passive resistance, his heroic vitalism, his classicism, his startling hatred of nature, and his final vision of nature as an excremental mother. Then we turn to Fullerâs feminism, her survey of ideal cultural images of women from antiquity to her own time, her insistence that womenâs development of Emersonian self-culture and self-reliance will necessarily lead them away from motherhood, her view of the masculine and feminine as principles and forces, and her concept of the two leading feminine archetypes, Muse and Minerva. Please like, share, comment, and enjoy!âand please offer a paid subscription so you donât miss the rest of the American literature sequence, including Moby-Dick, not to mention the archive of episodes on modern British literature from Blake to Beckett and our previous sequences on the works of Joyce, including Ulysses, and on George Eliotâs Middlemarch. The slideshow corresponding to the lecture can be downloaded here:
-
Welcome back to The Invisible College, my series of literature courses for paid subscribers. The 2024 syllabus can be found here. This free episode, the first in a 16-week sequence on American literature and the first of two on the Transcendentalist movement, focuses on the essays of Ralph Waldo Emerson. First I review the origins of American intellectual culture in Puritanism and its historical connections to the Unitarianism of young Emersonâs milieu. Then I examine the nature and influences of the broader Transcendentalist movement, with an emphasis on the paradox of an attempt to create a uniquely American culture by assimilating global influences from British Romanticism to German Idealism to the broader western and eastern metaphysical traditions. I look at three essays of Emersonâs, stressing the underlying spiritual convictions neglect of which has led his concept of âself-relianceâ to be misunderstood. I consider their historical context in the Jacksonian populist moment, their prose-poetic style of expansion and contract, and some of their potential self-contradictions, particularly around the self-relying Americanâs public obligations. I conclude with a discussion of his call for a new poet-as-prophet to capture modern American realities. Please like, share, comment, and enjoy!âand, if you enjoyed this free episode, please offer a paid subscription so you donât miss the rest of the American literature sequence, including Moby-Dick, not to mention the archive of episodes on modern British literature from Blake to Beckett and our previous sequences on the works of Joyce, including Ulysses, and on George Eliotâs Middlemarch. The slideshow corresponding to the lecture can be downloaded here:
This is a public episode. If youâd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit grandhotelabyss.substack.com/subscribe -
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit grandhotelabyss.substack.com
Welcome back to The Invisible College, my series of literature courses for paid subscribers. The 2024 syllabus can be found here. This lecture, of which the first 10 minutes are free, is the fourth of four on George Eliotâs Middlemarch (1871-2). We consider the status of Middlemarch in the 21st century amid controversies about religion and public life and an emphasis on literature as offering an ethic of âempathy,â an ethic Middlemarch, with its emphasis on what constrains and therefore enframes the feeling self, may complicate; we consider Joyce Carol Oatesâs relative demotion of the novel among its rivals; we discuss Eliotâs portrayal of women in marriage and her portrayal of marriage itself as a practice of necessary self-sacrifice; we revisit the question of the novelâs politics and its âconservative reformismâ; we revisit the question of its Christian ethics without Christianity; and, in conclusion, we link these post-Christian Christian ethics to a potential politics of culture, literature, and education akin to that of other Victorian intellectuals, all in service to âthe growing good of the world.â Please like, share, comment, and enjoy!âand please offer a paid subscription so you donât miss our upcoming focus on American literature, including Moby-Dick, beginning next week with Emerson, not to mention the archive of episodes on modern British literature from Blake to Beckett, our previous sequence on the works of Joyce, including Ulysses, and the first three episodes on Middlemarch. The slideshow corresponding to the lecture can be downloaded here:
-
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit grandhotelabyss.substack.com
Welcome back to The Invisible College, my series of literature courses for paid subscribers. The 2024 syllabus can be found here. This lecture, of which the first 10 minutes are free, is the third of four on George Eliotâs Middlemarch (1871-2). We consider the representation of early democratic politics in the novel and perhaps the birth of political moderation (âBurke with a leaven of Shelleyâ); Eliotâs depiction of technological and social progress as typified by the coming of the railroad, with a comparison to the contemporary political archetype of the âhicklib,â and a discussion of the universal Christianity Eliot seems to promote; the novelâs view of art itself as frivolous and damaging when not connected to reality and to a higher purpose; and Eliotâs ambiguous portrayal of love and marriage, rooted and rootless, realist and Romantic, conservative and rebellious. Finally, we consider some early criticism of Middlemarch: an anonymous Victorian reviewers and Leslie Stephen (AKA Virginia Woolfâs father) pronouncing it too didactic and theoretical, and a young Henry James deeming it excessively attentive to the trivial. Please like, share, comment, and enjoy!âand please offer a paid subscription so you donât miss the rest of our reading of Middlemarch, not to mention the archive of episodes on modern British literature from Blake to Beckett, our previous sequence on the works of Joyce, including Ulysses, and our upcoming focus on American literature, including Moby-Dick. The slideshow corresponding to the lecture can be downloaded here:
-
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit grandhotelabyss.substack.com
Welcome back to The Invisible College, my series of literature courses for paid subscribers. The 2024 syllabus can be found here. This lecture, of which the first 14 minutes are free, is the second of four on George Eliotâs Middlemarch (1871-2). I discuss Middlemarchâs indirect portrayal of history in the context of Georg LukĂĄcsâs theory of historical fâŠ
-
Welcome back to The Invisible College, my series of literature courses for paid subscribers. The 2024 syllabus can be found here. This lecture, free in its entirety, is the first of four on George Eliotâs Middlemarch (1871-2), sometimes called the greatest English novel. I discuss Eliotâs biography and her context in a secularizing intellectual milieu; compare her to Dickens among great Victorian novelists; and consider Middlemarchâs place in the history of fiction. Then I summarize Books I and II of Middlemarch, address its themes of gender and of vocation, explore its approach to the mutually constitutive interplay of individual and society, and investigate the narratorâs implicit theory of the novelist as social and natural scientist and renovated Romantic poet. This episode is the only free one in the Eliot sequence. Please like, share, comment, and enjoy!âand please offer a paid subscription so you donât miss the rest of our reading of Middlemarch, not to mention the archive of episodes on modern British literature from Blake to Beckett, our previous sequence on the works of Joyce, including Ulysses, and our upcoming focus on American literature, including Moby-Dick. The slideshow corresponding to the lecture can be downloaded here:
This is a public episode. If youâd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit grandhotelabyss.substack.com/subscribe -
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit grandhotelabyss.substack.com
Welcome back to The Invisible College, my series of literature courses for paid subscribers. The 2024 syllabus can be found here. This lecture is the seventh in an eight-week sequence on James Joyce. This one covers episodes 13 through 15 of Joyceâs Ulysses. First, I consider Ulysses as less a book than a sequence of experimental short stories and novellas; then I recapitulate the argument that the style of the novel becomes more autonomous as it goes on, its form swallowing its content. Next we turn to the âNausicaaâ chapter, which first attracted the bookâs proscription by American authorities; I explain Joyceâs proto-feminist mockery of womenâs domestic sentimental fiction and his portrayal of Bloomâs masturbatory sexuality. Then we investigate the comparison made between the gestation of a fetus and the development of the English language in âOxen of the Sunâ with its panoply of parodies and pastiches. I criticize this conceit and suggest it hints at a Joycean desire to make artistic creation superior to sexual reproduction. Finally, in the phantasmagoria of âCirce,â we consider Leopold Bloom and Stephen Dedalusâs hallucinationsâsexual, political, artistic, and otherwiseâincluding Bloomâs transgender masochism and utopian fantasy of the New Bloomusalem and Stephenâs triumph over his motherâs shade and epiphany about where and how to âkill the priest and the king.â The first 15 minutes are free to all; the rest requires a paid subscription. Please like, share, comment, subscribe, and enjoy! The slideshow corresponding to the lecture can be downloaded behind the paywall:
-
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit grandhotelabyss.substack.com
Welcome back to The Invisible College, my series of literature courses for paid subscribers. The 2024 syllabus can be found here. This lecture is the sixth in an eight-week sequence on James Joyce. This one covers episodes 10 through 12 of Joyceâs Ulysses. First, we recapitulate Joyceâs writing so far and examine the ways his works exemplify all the many meanings and practices of modernism, from the use of myth to the stream of consciousness to the mapping of the metropolis. We explore the 19 vignettes of the Ulysses-in-miniature that is âWandering Rocks,â with a focus on the depiction of authority (the Catholic Church, the British Empire) and the characters of Stephen Dedalus and Leopold Bloom in the labyrinthine city. Then we consider the fugue structure of âSirensâ and its omni-musical use of language to create the joyful Joycean nation, as well as its focus on fathers and children. Finally, we examine Joyceâs fierce satire of a bigoted and essentialist cultural nationalism in âCyclops,â and Bloomâs humanistic passive resistanceâall of it adding up to Joyceâs utopian horizon of the cosmopolitical enlightened nation. The first 15 minutes are free to all; the rest requires a paid subscription. Please like, share, comment, subscribe, and enjoy! The slideshow corresponding to the lecture can be downloaded behind the paywall:
-
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit grandhotelabyss.substack.com
Welcome back to The Invisible College, my series of literature courses for paid subscribers. The 2024 syllabus can be found here. This lecture is the fifth in an eight-week sequence on James Joyce. This one covers episodes seven through nine of Joyceâs Ulysses. First, we hear James Joyceâs voice, reading from the âAeolusâ episode. Then I consider the following: the formal anti-realist turn represented by the use of interpolated headlines in âAeolus,â plus the chapterâs motif of comparing and contrasting various empires and peoples and the way they are represented in the novel (Greek, Jewish, Roman, English, Irish); the narratively dense âLestrygoniansâ and the information it relays about Bloomâs life and times, especially in one of the novelâs most moving, passionate, and beautiful passages; and âScylla and Charabdys,â with its return to philosophical themes (Plato vs. Aristotle; idealism vs. empiricism; Romanticism vs. realism) and Stephenâs strikingly proto-postmodern theory of Shakespearean authorship, what I call âDark Stratfordianism.â (You wonât want to miss my digressive tirade on Shakespeare authorship theories, nor my answer to the question: who is Shakespeare in Ulysses?) The first 15 minutes are free to all; the rest requires a paid subscription. Please like, share, comment, subscribe, and enjoy! The slideshow corresponding to the lecture can be downloaded behind the paywall:
-
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit grandhotelabyss.substack.com
Welcome back to The Invisible College, my series of literature courses for paid subscribers. The 2024 syllabus can be found here. This lecture is the fourth in an eight-week sequence on James Joyce. This one covers episodes four through six of Joyceâs Ulysses. I begin by characterizing the lower-middle-class cultural milieu of the Bloom sections of the novel with its focus on popular and middlebrow as well as high culture, as opposed to the highbrow sections devoted to Stephen Dedalus. I more closely consider the novelâs possibly almost occult use of Homeric correspondences with help from Stuart Gilbertâs James Joyceâs Ulysses: A Study. Then I investigate âCalypso,â particularly the introduction of Leopold Bloom as curious, kind, artistic, science-minded, socially outcast, and lower-middle-class Odysseus; the ambivalent-to-hostile evocation of Zionism; the subversive if potentially disturbing act of sexualizing domestic women, domestic children, and domestic spaces; and the theme of metempsychosis. In âThe Lotus Eaters,â I focus on Bloomâs skeptical view of religion as opiate of the masses, as well as his pornographic correspondence as Henry Flower and his fancied erotic bath. Finally, I consider âHades,â with its theme of fathers and sons, its pioneering use of the trauma plot, its secular conception of death, and the possibility that Ulysses overall is not just a revision of The Odyssey but also of Danteâs Inferno and Defoeâs Robinson Crusoe. Please like, share, comment, and enjoy! The slideshow corresponding to the lecture can be downloaded here:
-
Welcome back to The Invisible College, my series of literature courses for paid subscribers. The 2024 syllabus can be found here. This lecture, free in its entirety, is the third in an eight-week sequence on James Joyce. Its topic is the first three chapters of Joyceâs Ulysses: âTelemachus,â âNestor,â and âProteus.â I first make some general remarks about the novelâs context, its structure and form, and its textual history. I also discuss the nature of the bookâs notorious difficulty. I summarize the first three chapters for first-time readers and then closely examine select passages. Themes raised in âTelemachusâ include Stephenâs mourning for his mother and search for paternity, his sense of himself as a servant to three masters (the British Empire, the Catholic Church, and Irish nationalism), and his complex revision of Irish nationalist myth in the figure of the Shan Van Vocht; I also consider the formal interplay between stream-of-consciousness and more conventional narrative prose. In âNestorâ I dwell on history as nightmare and the affinity Stephen perceives between the Irish and the Jews as a usurped and oppressed people. In âProteus,â with its much more thoroughgoing stream-of-consciousness narration, I consider the war in Stephenâs mind between Plato and Aristotle, idealism and empiricism, Romanticism and realism, and their synthesis in the very form of this novel; I further investigate Stephenâs relationsâfilial, sexual, and amicableâwith men and women; and I pause to remark on the unparalleled beauty and significance of Joyceâs language. This episode is the only free one in the Joyce sequence. Please like, share, comment, and enjoy!âand please offer a paid subscription so you donât miss the rest of this summerâs tour through the most consequential novel of the 20th century, not to mention the archive of episodes on modern British literature from Blake to Beckett, a forthcoming sequence on Middlemarch, and the fall focus on American literature, including Moby-Dick. The slideshow corresponding to the lecture can be downloaded here:
This is a public episode. If youâd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit grandhotelabyss.substack.com/subscribe -
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit grandhotelabyss.substack.com
Welcome back to The Invisible College, my series of literature courses for paid subscribers. The 2024 syllabus can be found here. This lecture is the second in an eight-week sequence on James Joyce. Its topic is Joyceâs first novel, the autobiographical A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man. I discuss the novelâs history, from its first version, Stephen Hero, a 1000-page omnisciently narrated realist saga, to its revision as a dense, brief novel narrated entirely from within the language of consciousness of Joyceâs stand-in Stephen Dedalus, from the babytalk of his childhood to the philosophizing of his early adulthood. I explain Joyceâs modernist revision of the bildungsroman as genre: his schematic exposure of its structure and devices. I detail the paradoxes of a static portrait that is also a developmental bildungsroman, an interpenetration of time and eternity. I explore the relations between literature and painting. To demonstrate the type of close reading Joyce demands, I give a dramatic reading from a passage in my doctoral dissertation about the function of articles (a, the, a) in the novelâs title. Then I journey through the novelâs plot and structure, elaborating on themes, styles, and motifs, with attention to the narrativeâs mythic dimension in the story of Daedalus and to the themes of gender and sexuality the novel raises. I also link the novel to Romanticism as both a fulfillment and critique of that earlier movement, with reference to Joyceâs Blakean, Byronic, and Shelleyean allusions. Finally, I discuss Stephen as Luciferian rebel, anti-nationalist apolitical radical, and aestheticizing philosopher. Next week, we will rejoin Stephen in the first three chapters of Ulysses. The first 14 minutes are free to all; please offer a paid subscription for the full episode. Please like, share, and commentâand please enjoy. The slideshow corresponding to the lecture is below the paywall.
-
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit grandhotelabyss.substack.com
Welcome back to The Invisible College, my series of literature courses for paid subscribers. The 2024 syllabus can be found here. This lecture is the first in an eight-week sequence on James Joyce. I begin with some advice for reading Ulysses, which we will begin in two weeks. Mainly, however, this episode covers Joyceâs first major work, the short story collection Dubliners. I briefly discuss Joyceâs life. Then I explain the censorship troubles Dubliners faced, the influential theory of the âepiphanyâ informing its composition, and its structure as the bildungsroman of a city. I also consider the history and theory of the short story as a form. Finally, I examine select stories from the collection for their stylistic and thematic significance, from the decadent minimalism of âThe Sistersâ to the universal vision of âThe Dead,â with comments on Joyceâs religion, politics, and sexuality. Next week, we will turn to Joyceâs autobiographical novel, A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man. The first 20 minutes are free to all; please offer a paid subscription for the full episode. Please like, share, and commentâand please enjoy. The slideshow corresponding to the lecture is below the paywall.
-
Welcome back to The Invisible College, my series of literature courses for paid subscribers. The 2024 syllabus can be found here. This lecture is about the life and work of Samuel Beckett, with a focus on his play Waiting for Godot. We begin by considering Beckettâs place in literary history as an experimentalist trying to find a way to write after Joyce. Then I consider his biography in more detail, including his relationship with Joyce, his work with the French Resistance, and his turn to both minimalism and the French language. Finally, I read Waiting for Godot itself, his most famous play, as a drama of âpostsâ: post-Christian, post-Romantic, post-political, post-theatrical, post-modernist, and post-life, with nonetheless a minimal ethic counseling us against total despair. Donât miss my shocking theory about the true identities of Pozzo and Lucky. This episode is free to all. If you enjoy it, please offer a paid subscription, especially if you want access to our summer reading of Ulysses and Middlemarch. Please like, share, comment, subscribeâand please enjoy! The slideshow corresponding to the lecture is here:
This is a public episode. If youâd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit grandhotelabyss.substack.com/subscribe -
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit grandhotelabyss.substack.com
Welcome back to The Invisible College, my series of literature courses for paid subscribers. The 2024 syllabus can be found here. This lecture is about the life and work of W. H. Auden. I consider the poetâs reputation as the third of the three great modern poets in British literature after Yeats and Eliot. I read from a Virginia Woolf essay introducing Audenâs â30s generation of young, privileged, radical writers, including Christopher Isherwood, Louis MacNeice, Stephen Spender, and others. I discuss Audenâs biography, with a focus on his travels, both geographical and ideological, especially his journey with Isherwood to the U.S. and his journey from Marxism to Christianity. Then I turn to three themes of his anti- and incipiently post-modernist poetry, a poetry oriented toward âthe mortal worldâ as against the occultism and obscurantism of high modernists like Yeats, Joyce, Eliot, Lawrence, and Woolf: the reality of love in âLullabyâ and âAs I Walked Out One Evening,â the reality of politics in âSpain 1937,â âSeptember 1, 1939,â and âThe Unknown Citizen,â and the reality of poetry itself in âIn Memory of W. B. Yeatsâ and âThe Shield of Achilles.â I quote Orwell on Audenâs political dereliction in the Marxist â30s and elaborate on Audenâs revisions of his own past work. I discuss his changing analysis of the causes of war (is âwhat all schoolchildren learnâ adequate knowledge? must we love one another or die?) and how his view in the Yeats elegy that âpoetry makes nothing happenâ separates poetry from politics. Above all I consider his attitude toward love. I conclude with his rebuke to the modern and ancient worlds for their totalizing brutality, a brutality his poetryâs orientation toward the real may ameliorate, in the anti-Homeric, anti-Romantic ekphrastic poem, âThe Shield of Achilles.â Please like, share, comment, subscribeâand please enjoy. The slideshow corresponding to the lecture is below the paywall.
-
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit grandhotelabyss.substack.com
Welcome back to The Invisible College, my series of literature courses for paid subscribers. The 2024 syllabus can be found here. This lecture is about the life and work of Virginia Woolf, with a focus on her novel To the Lighthouse. I open by considering Woolf as more poet than novelist. Then I discuss Woolfâs biography, especially her distinguished lineage, her participation in the Bloomsbury Group, and what she called her âmadness.â I further explore her literary life as critic and novelist, her shift from mainstream publishing to independent publishing, and her move from realist fiction to various kinds of experimental fiction. I also examine her feminist politics and deepening radicalism, and her modernist and feminist manifestoes. I explain the stream-of-consciousness technique governing To the Lighthouse. Borrowing from my own academic advisor, I then read the novel as a portrayal of the 20th-century artistic woman usurping and extending the function of the 19th-century domestic woman in her affective literacy, her social sympathy, and her ability to bring people together. Borrowing from Erich Auerbach, I inquire whether this apotheosis of the modern artist portends a humanist utopia or an elitist dystopia. Finally, countering those socio-political readings, and borrowing from James Wood, I interpret art in To the Lighthouse as a confrontation with and a vision of the raw void or vortex at the heart of lifeâa confrontation and a vision even unto death, whether the death of the individual artist or of the social order at large. Please like, share, comment, subscribeâand please enjoy. The slideshow corresponding to the lecture is below the paywall.
- Mehr anzeigen