Alice_Rosaleen
Really Really Experienced
- Joined
- Nov 17, 2017
- Posts
- 418
So much to say...
First of all, I'm an Anthropologist, and I assure you. the notion that humans are unnatural is a dangerous bit of hubris. Art is a natural process, rooted in the structure of brains that learn and discover. The contrast between nature and culture is a cultural fiction that turns "nature" into the "other," to be used, abused, or stewarded by the higher beings that humans call humans. I had a colleague who taught "ecohiking - leave nothing behind." He even had his students cart out their own shit, in plastic bags, mind you. I'm sorry, human shit is no less natural than bear shit. And art is a natural part of that living, breathing, shitting, reproducing, and dying animal we call Homo sapiens.
Ulysses is great literary scholarship, but even greater in seeing the allegory in Ulysses and in Poldy and, by extension or metaphor or allegory, to all of us.
Now, I am truly tired of the prejudices against Finnegans Wake (and, apparently, those of us who aren't Fionn McCuahill, but nevertheless enjoy and understand any aspect of that tome), characterizing it as "a drunk codex of another language." Yes, it does help to be familiar with things Irish when reading it, and such is the case with any cultural-based work of art (and, be assured, all works of art are culturally based; try understanding the Sistine Chapel ceiling without a knowledge of the history of Christianity, of Western Art, and of Roman politics.
It is a delightful excursion into a literary manifestation of Abstract Expressionism, among much else, including a consideration of the history of history itself, while constantly playing with words and themes.
Its end is its beginning, and we can follow the ring road from Howth Castle around Dublin, including the stretch known as the Via Vico. Vico was the historian who gave us the circular view of history. Imagine, Tristan returned to Ireland from North Amorica. Amorica in the Latin name for the Norman Peninsula and also harks to the return from North America, not to mention that Tristan himself is a violer d'amores. It is circular, and far from linear. Try the section with the four voices to see something entirely new in literature as well, despite Baktin's view of the absence of polyvocal stories in the Western tradition. No, I don't mind if people don't understand it, but most people don't understand general relativity either, and I don't hear them suggesting that there's something wrong with it because they don't understand it (They probably think planetary orbits are curved, anyway).
Enough rant.
P.S. I started university in Molecular Bio with minors in Art History and Comparative Literature. When I discovered they were not disparate studies, I found the unity in Anthropology. The Academic distinction between arts and sciences is a recent one. and even in this day, you'll find non-Western art in Museums of Natural History.
Is English your first language? Because I never said humans are unnatural. And I highly doubt you've actually tried to read and decipher Finnegan's Wake, because otherwise you'd know what I'm talking about from a scholarly point of view (he WAS drunk, there are many allusions and shifts in language). It doesn't seem from your responses that you've understood what I'm saying at all.
This may be our barrier, or you might not have actually studied these things in an academic setting where published authors, digital artists, physicists and other leaders in their field from around the world specifically come to teach because of how beautiful and peaceful the area is. That's the university I went to- a liberal arts college where people are encouraged to think and discuss, not agree.
My comments are based on a 400 level (in the States, that's the highest level of courses in an academic environment) philosophy class, and yes- art and science have always been separated. I've taken an anthropology course and they also distinguish biology, genetics, geography- nature- from aspects of culture.
*At any rate, I see it as pointless to continue talking with someone who doesn't seem to actually be reading my side of the conversation.
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