Heroic Poets
Jun. 2nd, 2007 09:37 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Don't tell the girlfriend, but -- I've fallen in love with someone else.
He's bald, chubby, and pushing 70. But oh, what a magnificent mind.
Yes. I'm reading Clive James's Cultural Amnesia.
Listen. This is what he has to say on the Russian poet Anna Akhmatova:
"...she was an inspiring symbol, but when a poet becomes better known than her poems it usually means she is being sacrificed, for extraneous reasons, on the altar of her own glory. In Ahkmatova's case, the extraneous reasons were political. It should be the mark of reasonable politics that a woman like her is not called upon to be a heroine."
Think about that last sentence. What does "reasonable politics" mean? What are unreasonable politics, and why do they force poets to become heroes?
And that's just from the first essay. There are a hundred more in the book.
*happy sigh*
(There's an abridged version of the Anna Akmatova essay up on Slate.)
He's bald, chubby, and pushing 70. But oh, what a magnificent mind.
Yes. I'm reading Clive James's Cultural Amnesia.
Listen. This is what he has to say on the Russian poet Anna Akhmatova:
"...she was an inspiring symbol, but when a poet becomes better known than her poems it usually means she is being sacrificed, for extraneous reasons, on the altar of her own glory. In Ahkmatova's case, the extraneous reasons were political. It should be the mark of reasonable politics that a woman like her is not called upon to be a heroine."
Think about that last sentence. What does "reasonable politics" mean? What are unreasonable politics, and why do they force poets to become heroes?
And that's just from the first essay. There are a hundred more in the book.
*happy sigh*
(There's an abridged version of the Anna Akmatova essay up on Slate.)
no subject
Date: 2007-06-02 01:01 am (UTC)The first two parts of his autobiography made me want to write when I first read them. Re-readings make me keep going.
no subject
Date: 2007-06-02 01:35 am (UTC)Although I must say, what I've read of his actual fiction is a little disappointing. Not *bad*. Just neither as witty nor as deep as his other works might lead you to expect.
Still... He speaks Russian, Japanese. And Spanish. Slate has his essay on Borges up as well.
no subject
Date: 2007-06-02 03:29 am (UTC)When he's good he's sublime, when he's bad he's mediocre. :/
no subject
Date: 2007-06-02 01:48 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-02 01:43 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-02 02:01 am (UTC)Although you may have the edge, here. Like many brilliant intellectuals, he does seem to have an eye for the pretty girls. Witness the number of times he had Kylie on his shows.
no subject
Date: 2007-06-02 08:10 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-02 01:58 am (UTC)