Harold Bloom on Ralph Waldo Emerson
Résumé
TLDRLa diskuto enfokusigas la daŭran gravecon de Ralph Waldo Emerson en la moderna mondo, esplorante liajn ideojn pri memfidado, individuismo, kaj la eterneca spirito en naturo. Harold Bloom emfazas kiel Emerson influis diversajn flankojn de usona kulturo kaj literaturo, inkluzive de figuroj kiel Walt Whitman kaj Emily Dickinson. Dum la konversacio, Bloom kontrastas Emerson kun aliaj historiaj kaj modernaj figuroj, analizante la suprenajn tendencojn en amerika intelekta vivo. Emerson, kvankam respektata pro lia literatura kaj filozofia heredaĵo, estas ankaŭ kritikita pro siaj malmolaj opinioj pri politiko kaj potenco. Bloom festas Emerson kiel antaŭulo de usona literaturo kaj klarigas kiel lia laboro ankoraŭ resonas, formante modernajn konceptojn de individua potenco kaj kultura identeco.
A retenir
- 📚 Emerson influis multajn usonajn verkistojn kiel Walt Whitman kaj Emily Dickinson.
- 🤔 Emerson estas admiritaj pro liaj ideoj pri individuismo kaj spirita naturo.
- 💡 Harold Bloom konsideras Emerson kiel fundamentan figuron en usona kulturo kaj literaturo.
- ⚡️ Emerson havis fortajn opiniojn pri potenco, ofte ignorante moralajn juĝojn.
- 🚶 Emerson havis unikan kapablon rilati la intelekton de Ameriko al siaj verko.
- 🗣️ Emerson estas vidata kiel saĝulo kaj antaŭulo de multaj modernaj intelektaj movadoj.
- 🌟 Lia pensmaniero instigas personecon kaj individuan esprimon.
- 🌍 Emerson havas heredaĵon en diversaj kampoj inkluzive de filozofio, politiko kaj kulturo.
- 📝 Liaj eseoj kaj ĵurnaloj restas valoregaj por kompreni lian pensadon kaj mondon vidon.
- ✨ Emerson ankoraŭ influas modernan pensadon per liaj universalaĵoj pri fido kaj memfido.
Chronologie
- 00:00:00 - 00:05:00
Harold Bloom priparolas sian admiron por Ralph Waldo Emerson kaj la gravecon de Emerson hodiaŭ. Li komentas pri la diverseco de interpretadoj de Emerson en la moderna socio, notante la ekziston de "emersonianoj" de la maldekstro kaj la dekstro. Krome, Bloom diskutas la komplikan rilaton inter Emerson kaj aliaj intelektuloj kiel John Dewey kaj Henry Ford, kaj li spekulas pri modernaj figuroj kiel Richard Rorty kaj Dick Cheney, kiuj enkarnigas emersonajn principojn.
- 00:05:00 - 00:10:00
Bloom plonĝas en la personan kaj intelektan influon de Emerson sur Sheldon Sacks kaj aliaj sudaj amerikanoj, kiuj ofte montras profundan malamikecon kontraŭ Emerson. Li diskutas la rolon de Emerson en la formado de usona literaturo, menciante figurojn kiel Poe kaj Warren. Intertempe, Bloom esploras la longdaŭran efikon de Emerson sur sia propra laboro kaj la pli vastan amerikan kulturon. Bloom atestas la malkomfortan sed signifoplenan rilaton inter Emerson kaj siaj kritikistoj.
- 00:10:00 - 00:15:00
Emerson estas priskribita kiel la origina usona menso, kiu esence formis la intelektan pejzaĝon de la nacio. Bloom klarigas, ke la influo de Emerson estas simile videbla en la verkoj de Dickinson kaj Whitman, kaj en la romano de Melville "The Confidence Man." Emersonaj temoj de individua konekto al dia estaĵo kaj gnostikismo estas centraj por lia ideo de la "usona religio," kio estas la bazo de la esploro de Bloom en tiu temo.
- 00:15:00 - 00:20:00
Bloom diskutas la pozicion de Emerson en la morala kaj literatura pejzaĝo de sia epoko, precipe kontraŭ homa sklaveco kaj la politike malkompetentaj sudaj influoj en Usono. Li notas la koleron de Emerson kontraŭ politikaj figuroj kiel Webster kaj sian firman kredon en personaj kaj socialaj reformoj. Plue, Emerson estis tre influa en sia morala sinteno kontraŭ sklaveco, kio estis reflekto de sia netolerebleco por korupto kaj sociaj maljustaĵoj.
- 00:20:00 - 00:25:00
Bloom parolas pri sia persona rilato kun Emerson, sian profundan legadon de Emerson dum kriza periodo en sia vivo, kaj kiel Emerson parolis rekte al li tra siaj skribaĵoj. Emerson estas priskribita kiel centra figuro en formado de la usona intelekta tradicio, kaj Bloom emfazas la daŭran gravecon kaj ĉarmon de Emerson en la hodiaŭa mondo, ekzemple en la apliko de Emersonaj ideoj al diversaj formoj de arto kaj literaturo.
- 00:25:00 - 00:30:00
Bloom emfazas la permanentan karismon kaj influon de Emerson kiel preleganto, esprimante ke Emerson, eĉ se ne ŝatanto de romanoj, estis komprenema al kreivaj kontemplado kaj originalaj ideoj. Bloom mencias la influon de Emerson sur aliaj grandaj figuroj kiel Whitman kaj la graveco de Emersonaj paroladoj kaj leteroj kiuj formis literaturan historion. Li substreki kiel Emerson ankoraŭ ŝanĝas la percepton pri literaturo kaj kreemo en Usono.
- 00:30:00 - 00:35:00
Ĝenerala diskuto pri la ideoj de Emerson pri la potenco de individuoj kaj socio, precipe en lumo de politika kaj socia korupteco. Bloom reliefigas kiom Emerson kredas je la nocio de individuo kiel potenca agentejo en socia ŝanĝo kaj plibonigo. Li analizas la aktualecon de Emersonaj ideoj en la moderna tempo, specife en la maniero kiel Emerson vidis transiron kaj potencon kiel centralon al kresko kaj progreso.
- 00:35:00 - 00:43:23
Bloom diskutas kiel Emerson antaŭvidis multajn modernajn konceptojn kiel la interreta kaj tutmonda konscio. Li kontemplas pri la kapablo de Emerson riskiĝi trans limoj kaj kunfandi diversajn kulturojn en tutmondan dialogon. Bloom pridiskutas kiom Emerson konservas altajn normojn de intelekta strebado kaj kreema esprimo, kontraŭ la foje misgvida informfluo de nuntempaj platformoj kiel la interreto.
Carte mentale
Vidéo Q&R
Kial Ralph Waldo Emerson estas grava en la moderna mondo?
Emerson restas grava pro siaj ideoj pri memfido, la spirita naturo kaj individua potenco, kiuj daŭre inspiras kaj influis multajn pensulojn kaj movadojn.
Kio faras Emerson tiel influan en usona kulturo?
Emerson priskribis la unikan amerikan spiriton kaj pensmanieron, kreante intelektan fundamenton por multaj postaj usonaj verkistoj kaj pensuloj.
Kiel Emerson influis aliajn verkistojn kiel Walt Whitman kaj Emily Dickinson?
Emerson inspiis Whitman kaj Dickinson per sia emfazo sur individua esprimo kaj spirita libereco, kio estis centra en ilia laboro.
Kion Harold Bloom pensas pri Emerson?
Harold Bloom admiras Emerson kiel fundamenton de amerika kulturo kaj kiel antaŭulo de multaj literaturaj kaj filozofiaj ideoj.
Kion Emerson opiniis pri potenco kaj moraleco?
Emerson malkvalifikis moralajn juĝojn en sia eseo 'Potenco' kaj esploris la naturon de potenco sen morala taksado.
Voir plus de résumés vidéo
- 00:00:00Harold Bloom I'd love to take a kind of
- 00:00:02modern walk with Ralph Waldo Emerson of
- 00:00:06course I've read you and I know your
- 00:00:08devotion as you know the sacred
- 00:00:10Emerson's usual walking companions were
- 00:00:13either Nathaniel
- 00:00:14hathorne of whom Emerson gently
- 00:00:17complained they never said a word to one
- 00:00:19another as they walked there in
- 00:00:20conquered or Henry David thoro who in
- 00:00:23one of his letters know actually it's in
- 00:00:25his journal says my relationship with
- 00:00:28Waldo is one long
- 00:00:31tragedy and in his journals Emerson
- 00:00:33remarked when I'm out walking with Henry
- 00:00:37tho I would as soon think of taking his
- 00:00:41arm as I would in reaching up and
- 00:00:44grasping a branch of a tree my closest
- 00:00:48friend in this life for 30 years from
- 00:00:50the day he was first my student to the
- 00:00:53time when As baseball commissioner he
- 00:00:55suddenly died was Angelo bartett giomari
- 00:01:00um we quarrel perpetually about Emerson
- 00:01:03and so many people and I have quarrel
- 00:01:05perpetually and B one
- 00:01:08day when I was complaining that people
- 00:01:11had this absurd notion that Emerson was
- 00:01:13sweet said sweet Harold he was as sweet
- 00:01:16as barbed wire which is I think quite
- 00:01:18true he was not particularly sweet but
- 00:01:21let's begin at the beginning what
- 00:01:23fascinates me
- 00:01:25is why we care about Emerson
- 00:01:28today what what is the modern meaning of
- 00:01:34trust thyself the infinitude of the
- 00:01:37private man
- 00:01:39Emerson's Devotion to the idea of spirit
- 00:01:42in nature all that self-reliance what's
- 00:01:46the modern meaning of all that and who
- 00:01:49are the modern emersonians well it has
- 00:01:52split in half as you know Chris uh there
- 00:01:55are amazonians of the left and
- 00:01:57amazonians of the right direct directly
- 00:02:00contemporary with one another were John
- 00:02:02dwey and am masonian of the left and the
- 00:02:04first Henry Ford publisher in the United
- 00:02:07States of the protocols of the Learned
- 00:02:09Elders of Zion who was the Amazonian
- 00:02:12rights and who had signs from
- 00:02:14self-reliance plasted all over the Ford
- 00:02:17uh Motor plant uh and this is something
- 00:02:21uh which goes on until this day uh you
- 00:02:24could at the moment argue that on the
- 00:02:26one hand my very dear old friend Richard
- 00:02:29Ry the post pragmatic philosopher is our
- 00:02:33leading living
- 00:02:35Amazonian and yet you could argue in
- 00:02:37another sense that the horrible Cheney
- 00:02:41or the horrible rummy though they
- 00:02:43wouldn't know it of course are our
- 00:02:45leading amazonians because they seem to
- 00:02:47be acting exactly on the principles of
- 00:02:50the conduct of life where where does
- 00:02:52rumel or chinii uh connect with Emerson
- 00:02:55or anything he spoke about if you look
- 00:02:58at what he has to say about power in the
- 00:03:02essay called
- 00:03:04Power he absolutely refuses to make even
- 00:03:08the slightest moral judgment or
- 00:03:10evaluation of the whole question of
- 00:03:13power that's true in that essay on power
- 00:03:16there's a celebration of hardheads of
- 00:03:20something like thuggery of the dominant
- 00:03:23of what he calls the bruisers and that
- 00:03:25piece I wrote for the guardian in London
- 00:03:28I said he could be talking about
- 00:03:31the oligarchic and plutocratic gang who
- 00:03:35are currently running the United States
- 00:03:37you know the bruises dya Cheney Ry and
- 00:03:42the whole horrible gang Ashcroft and so
- 00:03:44on and though himself a permanent man of
- 00:03:47the left Emerson nevertheless says that
- 00:03:51of the those who are trying to oppose
- 00:03:53them he says he shakes his head and says
- 00:03:56they're just sniveling and that I'm
- 00:03:59afraid is very much where we are now in
- 00:04:01this country he also says I pray that
- 00:04:03General Clark is going to save us from
- 00:04:05all
- 00:04:06this he says in that essay that those
- 00:04:09people know the crimes that they know
- 00:04:12exactly how much crime the people will
- 00:04:15bear yes and and it remains absolutely
- 00:04:19true we have the most blatantly corrupt
- 00:04:22and crooked Administration in our entire
- 00:04:24history look let us not forget I was up
- 00:04:26on the stage of the 92nd Street w in New
- 00:04:30York back in
- 00:04:31April and somebody in the audience asked
- 00:04:34a question about Emison and I laughed
- 00:04:36cheerfully and said Not only did he hate
- 00:04:38the South and there's a great deal more
- 00:04:40to be said about that I he had been very
- 00:04:42unhappy indeed about what currently has
- 00:04:44happened in the United States where the
- 00:04:46southern Republican party has taken over
- 00:04:48the entire country but he ferociously
- 00:04:52opposed the admission of Texas into the
- 00:04:55Union prophesying accurately that it
- 00:04:58would destroy the United
- 00:05:00States He also called his house in
- 00:05:03conquered Bush that was the name of the
- 00:05:05family house whatever that Prov I know I
- 00:05:07I I think though it has nothing to do
- 00:05:09with our current rather degenerate
- 00:05:11bushes his relationship to everything
- 00:05:14that comes after him in this country is
- 00:05:16so multiform so various uh so much
- 00:05:20across the
- 00:05:22board that it is almost impossible to
- 00:05:25summarize the one thing about it which I
- 00:05:27can say which is absolutely clear and
- 00:05:29based this on my own personal experience
- 00:05:33every Southern American I have ever
- 00:05:36known including Southern literary men
- 00:05:39poets and novelists and critics who were
- 00:05:41close personal
- 00:05:43friends have hated Emison with a
- 00:05:47ferocity which is almost unbelievable
- 00:05:50and of course he would have more than
- 00:05:51returned the ACC compliment it actually
- 00:05:53started back in the days when uh he and
- 00:05:57po were having at one another and he
- 00:06:00permanently and wonderfully dismissed po
- 00:06:02as the jingle
- 00:06:04man uh but the late Robert pen waren who
- 00:06:08was a very dear personal friend for
- 00:06:11perhaps seven years in a row once a week
- 00:06:15before I went off to give my graduate
- 00:06:17seminar and red went to across the way
- 00:06:20to the library to do research red and I
- 00:06:22would have lunch in moris and for seven
- 00:06:25years we fought like cats and dogs
- 00:06:27drinking a great deal in the process of
- 00:06:29course about Emison he assured me on
- 00:06:33more than one occasion that Emison was
- 00:06:35the devil and I finally said R what do
- 00:06:38you mean you don't literally think that
- 00:06:40he was Satan you have no theological
- 00:06:42beliefs whatsoever he said I'm almost
- 00:06:44persuaded to have some he was so
- 00:06:46diabolic he then wrote a poem which he
- 00:06:49specifically said he had directed
- 00:06:51against me called reading Emison on a
- 00:06:53night flight to New York in which one
- 00:06:56line rather bitterly snaps at 50,000 ft
- 00:07:01Emerson is dead right uh red Warren's
- 00:07:04first book was called John Brown the
- 00:07:06making of a Mara she once gave me a copy
- 00:07:08of and I read it it blames John Brown on
- 00:07:11Emerson and indeed John Brown and
- 00:07:14Emerson and thoro were all very close
- 00:07:16they had raised money for brown to go
- 00:07:19off to his bloody work in uh Lawrence
- 00:07:23canas and indeed in an oration
- 00:07:27practically a sermon preached after the
- 00:07:29hanging of John Brown Emerson actually
- 00:07:32cried out in a great Passion John Brown
- 00:07:36has made The Gallows as glorious as the
- 00:07:39cross so let let us set the South and
- 00:07:42the Southwest aside to this day the
- 00:07:45Texans hate Emison he would have been
- 00:07:47delighted the southerners hate Emison he
- 00:07:49would have been delighted but otherwise
- 00:07:52the whole phenomenon of American culture
- 00:07:54on every level down to popular culture
- 00:07:58even with tens of millions of people
- 00:07:59who've never heard of Emon let alone
- 00:08:01read him is a profoundly Amazonian
- 00:08:04Affair he has prophesied everything
- 00:08:07explain that he is the mind of America
- 00:08:10he is not only the first absolutely
- 00:08:13original mind to appear in the United
- 00:08:15States but he usurped I think everything
- 00:08:19that could be peculiarly American about
- 00:08:22thought as such by which I do not mean
- 00:08:25philosophy because he was not interested
- 00:08:27in being a philosopher I mean in terms
- 00:08:30of the total process of what you might
- 00:08:32want to call
- 00:08:34imaginative cognition Emison moved in
- 00:08:37and took over all the space that is why
- 00:08:40for instance in the generation just
- 00:08:42after him you had only two choices you
- 00:08:44could either be ammonian even if for
- 00:08:47some descent like Emily Dickinson or
- 00:08:49directly ammonian like Whitman and thoro
- 00:08:53or ostensibly anti- masonian like
- 00:08:58hathorne and melv
- 00:08:59and yet look at that uh Hawthorn's hrin
- 00:09:03is a pure Amazonian otherwise the novel
- 00:09:06would make no sense Melville twice
- 00:09:14sazesh in Pierre and then as the
- 00:09:18confidence man himself and yet not only
- 00:09:22did Melville cover his pages of his
- 00:09:26personal additions of everything Emerson
- 00:09:28had written up to the time that Melville
- 00:09:30died uh with endless annotations every
- 00:09:34time Emerson gave a lecture Series in
- 00:09:37New York City there was in fact Melville
- 00:09:41in the audience eagerly taking notes
- 00:09:44Ahab is a pure Amazonian in mid dick
- 00:09:48both Ishmael and Ahab are the purest of
- 00:09:52amazonians meaning meaning what though
- 00:09:55the idea that the best and oldest parts
- 00:09:58of ourselves and this is St Emerson that
- 00:10:02the best and oldest parts of ourselves
- 00:10:05are the God
- 00:10:06within is pure
- 00:10:09Emison and is pure gnosticism I wrote a
- 00:10:12book called The American religion uh
- 00:10:14Emison indeed might well be called the
- 00:10:17Theologian of what we should call the
- 00:10:20American religion which was my starting
- 00:10:21point in that book and in that sense and
- 00:10:26he's not actually a theologian anymore
- 00:10:28than he is a philosoph opher he's a sage
- 00:10:31he's a sear he's a he's an essayist in
- 00:10:34Monte he's a wisdom writer might perhaps
- 00:10:37be the best thing to say we should never
- 00:10:39forget that his great work is not even
- 00:10:42the conduct of life it's not even the
- 00:10:44two serious vesses it's not the handful
- 00:10:46of great poems it's not the occasional
- 00:10:49great lecture or sermon his great work
- 00:10:51are those endless and magnificent
- 00:10:54notebooks which really have to be read
- 00:10:56from the beginning to the end and then
- 00:10:58back again I think I've spent a good
- 00:11:00part of my life since I was in the
- 00:11:02middle of the life crisis when I was 35
- 00:11:06and partly got myself out of it by
- 00:11:07literally all day long ultimately
- 00:11:10reading Freud and emis in a very strange
- 00:11:12combination uh but on the whole uh
- 00:11:15Emerson has stayed with me better than
- 00:11:16Freud has um there a curious difference
- 00:11:20I must say the only time in my life that
- 00:11:22I contracted myself to write a book and
- 00:11:25just could not write it or ever finish
- 00:11:27it it's a yellowing manuscript up in the
- 00:11:29Attic somewhere was when I was supposed
- 00:11:30to write a book and it accept in advance
- 00:11:32for writing a book called Freud with the
- 00:11:34subtitle transference and Authority but
- 00:11:36I found myself getting so ambivalent
- 00:11:38about Freud the more deeply I went that
- 00:11:40I couldn't write on the other hand I've
- 00:11:42been asked again and again to write a
- 00:11:43book on himem and said there must be
- 00:11:47something about Emison in every book
- 00:11:50I've written in my entire life but I
- 00:11:52don't think I I feel Emerson would not
- 00:11:54have wanted people to write books about
- 00:11:56Emerson in fact he says so he says in
- 00:11:59fact do your work and I shall know you
- 00:12:03do your own thing is in fact an
- 00:12:05Amazonian motto before it becomes a
- 00:12:07model and of course there is the heart
- 00:12:09of it again our high culture and our
- 00:12:12Counter Culture equally can legitimately
- 00:12:16claim Emison as ancestor even though I
- 00:12:19have now spent the last 33 years of my
- 00:12:21life ranting against the C of the way in
- 00:12:25which
- 00:12:26the counterculture has taken over and
- 00:12:29destroyed intellectual study of
- 00:12:32literature in our universities
- 00:12:34nevertheless I would have to admit that
- 00:12:36in his
- 00:12:37extraordinarily uh complex and diverse
- 00:12:40way Emison is equally the ancestor of if
- 00:12:44on the one hand Wallace Stevens and Hart
- 00:12:48Crane as he had been of Walt Whitman on
- 00:12:51the other alas alas alas of people who I
- 00:12:55firmly believe though I was personally
- 00:12:56fond of them like Alan Ginsburg also
- 00:13:00could not write their way out of a paper
- 00:13:01bag Charming Man Alan but not not a poet
- 00:13:06but he would come around and we would
- 00:13:08discuss Emerson by the hour and he loved
- 00:13:10Emerson I don't think he ever understood
- 00:13:12what Emerson was talking about but he
- 00:13:13had a great love of Emerson he had
- 00:13:15Emerson all mixed up with Buddhism in
- 00:13:17some mad way but then I can't understand
- 00:13:20Buddhism and I've stopped trying I'd
- 00:13:22love you to talk some more about the
- 00:13:23people who hate Emerson like Robert
- 00:13:25penir and I'd love you to sort of let us
- 00:13:27in on those conversations and then also
- 00:13:29want to talk about people like you like
- 00:13:31me like Stanley Cavell Richard Ry dubo
- 00:13:37John Dewey William James Oliver wend
- 00:13:39Holmes the judge who adored that man du
- 00:13:42boy web what if if it were not for that
- 00:13:46great passage in
- 00:13:48Emison about the double Consciousness we
- 00:13:53would not have gotten the boys his
- 00:13:55entire theory of what he calls The Souls
- 00:13:57of Black Folk is the purest
- 00:14:00Emerson and to that extent indeed
- 00:14:02Emerson is the direct ancestor of what
- 00:14:05we now call African-American
- 00:14:07studies
- 00:14:09Emerson and you can see it happening in
- 00:14:12his Pros I I'm convinced that
- 00:14:14Emerson that his mind finally started to
- 00:14:16go during the Civil War years and
- 00:14:19afterwards simply because he hated the
- 00:14:21South and Southerners as much as he did
- 00:14:24um Emerson had been a close friend and a
- 00:14:27fierce supporter of Senator Daniel
- 00:14:30Webster uh he
- 00:14:33had supported Webster again and again
- 00:14:36they were personal
- 00:14:37friends when
- 00:14:39Webster as part of the Missouri
- 00:14:42Compromise voted for the fugure the
- 00:14:45Slave
- 00:14:46Act all hell broke Lo uh you wouldn't
- 00:14:50have thought that Emerson was capable of
- 00:14:52such hatred but he allowed Webster to
- 00:14:56know through third parties that this
- 00:14:58lovesome creature was not to come into
- 00:15:00His presence again and then he gave a
- 00:15:03magnificent public speech in front of
- 00:15:05the Massachusetts state house after
- 00:15:09under web's influence momentarily though
- 00:15:11eventually they repealed it the state of
- 00:15:14Massachusetts actually voted that the
- 00:15:16Fugitive Slave Act was to be enforced in
- 00:15:19Massachusetts Emerson stood up and he
- 00:15:21didn't like in public and UT sentence he
- 00:15:24said this filthy law has been enacted in
- 00:15:27the 19th century by human beings who
- 00:15:30could read and write I will not obey it
- 00:15:33by God and of course none of the people
- 00:15:37in concrete or none of the people in
- 00:15:38Boston were willing to obey it and
- 00:15:40eventually they swept that government
- 00:15:41out and eventually they got rid of
- 00:15:43Webster but I think it was the hatred of
- 00:15:46the slave driver it was the hatred of
- 00:15:49human slavery which made Emison an
- 00:15:54implacable enemy of the South and the
- 00:15:57southern is reciproc replicated the
- 00:15:59Webster business had to be the
- 00:16:00Touchstone of his contempt for politics
- 00:16:02the notion that they could all be bought
- 00:16:04that that it was just a a cheap
- 00:16:07Marketplace well Webster here thought
- 00:16:09had integrity and Webster turned out to
- 00:16:11be a crook and indeed had been bought
- 00:16:14and they all get bought and we know that
- 00:16:15they all get bought uh uh Emerson knew
- 00:16:18it very well and we know it very well
- 00:16:20also and it is never going to stop I'm
- 00:16:22afraid look I one reason why I'm
- 00:16:26passionately I have broken from all my
- 00:16:28friends on this I I pray that indeed on
- 00:16:30September 15th General Wesley Clark will
- 00:16:33announce for the presidency that he will
- 00:16:35get the Democratic nomination as he
- 00:16:37deserves to that he beats the hell off
- 00:16:39the the subhuman creature we now have as
- 00:16:42president of the United States but look
- 00:16:45at politicians we have all been thinking
- 00:16:47that there was something to Howard this
- 00:16:49current strike at Yale which keeps going
- 00:16:52on forever is being run by a crooked
- 00:16:54Union the hotel and restaurant employe
- 00:16:58employees of America who are part of the
- 00:17:01teamsters who are totally dominated by
- 00:17:03the mafia and I'm not a supporter of the
- 00:17:07University I assure you I have been in
- 00:17:09descent from y for my whole half century
- 00:17:11here but it is disgusting that in
- 00:17:15successive days Jesse Jackson the one
- 00:17:17would expect nothing else from him that
- 00:17:19Joseph Lieberman a crook from the word
- 00:17:22go who used to be in bed when he was
- 00:17:25Attorney General of Connecticut with the
- 00:17:26big Harford Life Insurance Company
- 00:17:29but the final straw is that at this
- 00:17:31moment as we are sitting here
- 00:17:32Christopher Howard is down here
- 00:17:35supporting the strike and the strikers
- 00:17:38yeah that's a sorry business but it's
- 00:17:40it's time that Yale figured out how to
- 00:17:42get along with its working class I mean
- 00:17:45it's been going on for as long as I can
- 00:17:47remember and excuse me and not every
- 00:17:49university has this chronic problem
- 00:17:51allow me Chris to descent from you on
- 00:17:54this okay well I I I wouldn't what would
- 00:17:56Emerson say here's what Emerson would
- 00:17:58say about politics at the end of the
- 00:18:00essay on Montaine he says although naves
- 00:18:04win in every political struggle although
- 00:18:06Society seems to be delivered over from
- 00:18:08the hands of one set of criminals into
- 00:18:10the hands of another set of criminals as
- 00:18:12fast as the government has changed and
- 00:18:14the march of civilization is a train of
- 00:18:17felonies yet General ends are somehow
- 00:18:21answered we see now events forced on
- 00:18:23which seem to or retrograde the
- 00:18:26civility of Ages but the World spirit is
- 00:18:29a good swimmer and storms and waves
- 00:18:32cannot drown him he snaps his fingers at
- 00:18:34laws and so throughout history Heaven
- 00:18:37seems to affect low and poor means
- 00:18:40through the years and the centuries
- 00:18:42through evil agents through toys and
- 00:18:45atoms a great and beneficent tendency
- 00:18:48irresistibly streams very powerful and
- 00:18:52is right that it should appear in the
- 00:18:53essay on montain who together with
- 00:18:55Shakespeare were the two authors who
- 00:18:57must de deeply affected
- 00:18:59Emerson let's talk about the people who
- 00:19:01love Emerson and why starting with you
- 00:19:04and I'll even give you my own two bits I
- 00:19:06love Emerson because he taught me first
- 00:19:10of all since I care passionately about
- 00:19:13American literature of the highest
- 00:19:14imaginative quality and in particular
- 00:19:17about uh its poetry without Emerson
- 00:19:19there would have been no Walt Whitman it
- 00:19:21would even have been know Emily
- 00:19:23Dickinson even though she's a sort of
- 00:19:25heretic from Emerson but nevertheless
- 00:19:28deeply affected by him as she says but
- 00:19:31Walt Whitman Remains the new world's
- 00:19:33answer to the old world in the entire
- 00:19:36centuries now no one writing in the
- 00:19:39Western Hemisphere whether in Spanish
- 00:19:42Portuguese in French up there in
- 00:19:45Montreal or anywhere in American English
- 00:19:48or any kind of English no one is not in
- 00:19:53some sense the child of Emison whether
- 00:19:55they know it or not and of all of those
- 00:19:58writers is the most powerful in all of
- 00:20:00those languages remains Whitman and
- 00:20:02Whitman though he later tried to deny
- 00:20:04Emerson's influence and said actually
- 00:20:07said and it was a lie he said I hadn't
- 00:20:09read a single essay of Emison before I
- 00:20:12started to write Leaves of Grass he
- 00:20:14tells the truth in his journals in
- 00:20:161854-55 where he says magnificently I
- 00:20:19was simmering simmering simmering
- 00:20:23Emerson brought me to a boil and you can
- 00:20:25see if you look at those fragments which
- 00:20:27I've studied very very closely in the
- 00:20:291854 55 notebooks out of which song of
- 00:20:33myself as it came to be called
- 00:20:34eventually directly ues and the whole of
- 00:20:37the first Leaves of Grass comes you can
- 00:20:39see that without the essays the overa
- 00:20:43spiritual laws the poet and
- 00:20:45self-reliance in particular there would
- 00:20:48have been no Walt
- 00:20:49Whitman and you know I I regard myself
- 00:20:53as a very American literary
- 00:20:55critic uh my mentor in this was my late
- 00:20:59friend whom I still miss the Magnificent
- 00:21:01Kenneth Burke Kenneth and I on many
- 00:21:04occasions when we were drinking together
- 00:21:06would say to one another we are both the
- 00:21:09children of Emerson and that is
- 00:21:10absolutely
- 00:21:11true um if you are an American critic
- 00:21:15provided you are not a souer if you are
- 00:21:18an American poet if you're an American
- 00:21:20novelist there somebody like my friend
- 00:21:22Don Dilo knows perfectly well every
- 00:21:25moment of transcendence that breaks into
- 00:21:27white noise
- 00:21:29that breaks
- 00:21:30into
- 00:21:32underworld is quite frequently directly
- 00:21:34paraphrased by Dawn from the pages of
- 00:21:37Emerson the the question about Emerson
- 00:21:39is I mean there's this rumor about that
- 00:21:41Emerson never read M do you remember do
- 00:21:42you remember let me break in a moment I
- 00:21:45I doubt that very much by the way though
- 00:21:47on the whole Emerson did not like novels
- 00:21:49that's the question Emerson loved poems
- 00:21:52he loved essays he loved wisdom writing
- 00:21:55he did not like novels and he was not
- 00:21:57really with either Melville or Hawthorne
- 00:22:00I mean at the end I mean in the net
- 00:22:03after he went to Hawthorne's funeral he
- 00:22:05personally mourned for his own walking
- 00:22:08companion but he said as for his books
- 00:22:11they are good for
- 00:22:12nothing what he made out of Mobi dick we
- 00:22:15will never know but I think he did read
- 00:22:17it on the other hand first of all I
- 00:22:20would insist he get the permanent High
- 00:22:22marks as a literary critic in the entire
- 00:22:25history of American literature one of
- 00:22:27the things which made makes my life
- 00:22:28impossible is that every single day they
- 00:22:31flow in upon me at three different
- 00:22:33addresses and yeah I'd hear unsolicited
- 00:22:36manuscripts proof copies so on and so
- 00:22:39forth you know you know asking for
- 00:22:41endorsement so on and so forth I mean I
- 00:22:44am baguer and to try to read through
- 00:22:46this stuff and i' I've largely had to
- 00:22:48give up because I wouldn't be able to do
- 00:22:49any of my own work or lead my own life
- 00:22:52at all think of what Emerson did what
- 00:22:54would I make of I have to ask myself
- 00:22:57sometimes if they suddenly arrived in
- 00:22:59the mail without Preamble something from
- 00:23:02a personage Walter Whitman Jr of whom
- 00:23:04I'd never heard in this weirdly hand
- 00:23:08printed handd designed volume in these
- 00:23:13extraordinary kind of Alliance Emerson
- 00:23:15sat down read it read it again and wrote
- 00:23:20I think the greatest critical document
- 00:23:21in American history a letter to Walt
- 00:23:24Whitman beginning I greet you at the
- 00:23:26beginning of a great
- 00:23:28career and going on talking about the
- 00:23:31fact that this is the finest piece of
- 00:23:32WID and wisdom yet written in the United
- 00:23:34States which I believe is true right
- 00:23:36down to the present day Emerson included
- 00:23:39Emerson was a charismatic I I have read
- 00:23:41description after description Emerson
- 00:23:43you know supported himself as a lecturer
- 00:23:46a performance artist really a
- 00:23:47performance artist he he had immense
- 00:23:50stamina at it I think in one year in
- 00:23:53particular he went all over the United
- 00:23:55States and Canada and it wasn't easy to
- 00:23:57to travel in those days and gave 88
- 00:24:00separate lectures for money usually in
- 00:24:02series on every subject onto the sun we
- 00:24:05have many accounts of people who went to
- 00:24:09hear
- 00:24:10him he evidently was a total charismatic
- 00:24:13he he could so speak in a kind of High
- 00:24:18Sweet beautifully modulated piercing
- 00:24:20voice that the audiences were invariably
- 00:24:24sold out I mean he was in fact an
- 00:24:26amazing kind of f
- 00:24:28William James wrote two essays on
- 00:24:30Emerson which are full of great love for
- 00:24:32him Henry James wrote several different
- 00:24:35things about emson including you in a
- 00:24:37book about his childhood he's really
- 00:24:39quite snobbish about Emison he's saying
- 00:24:41you know really it it it's it's very
- 00:24:44sweet New England likee but it's very
- 00:24:46provincial stuff and so on but the
- 00:24:48answer to that is Isabelle
- 00:24:51Archer Isabel Archer who is surely the
- 00:24:54most delightful personage in all of
- 00:24:57American fiction and certainly in James
- 00:24:59is the purest Amazonian imaginable quite
- 00:25:02overtly and if you contrast the way he
- 00:25:05presents her in the original Edition and
- 00:25:08then his immense rewriting of it for the
- 00:25:10New York Edition she becomes only more
- 00:25:12Amazonian the language of self-reliance
- 00:25:15is absolutely her language take that
- 00:25:17apart a little bit because Isabel Archer
- 00:25:20I I I love her too the movie seems to me
- 00:25:23completely miscast exactly that
- 00:25:24emersonian point about her I I think had
- 00:25:27the gorgeous Nicole Kidman but I I I
- 00:25:29wouldn't go see it because I just could
- 00:25:31not think of Nicole Kidman as Isabelle
- 00:25:33Archer well not only that but this
- 00:25:36victim and this Freudian IED female to
- 00:25:39me Isabelle Archer defines herself is
- 00:25:41this Amazonian when she tells Mrs tett
- 00:25:44she wants to know the rules and Mrs tett
- 00:25:47says Ah so you can break them she says
- 00:25:49no so as to choose yes but the idea of a
- 00:25:52self-made person choosing living with
- 00:25:55her mistake as she does um that's my
- 00:25:58emersonian notion of Isabel what's yours
- 00:26:00what makes Isabelle Archer emersonian
- 00:26:03for you exactly what you've just said
- 00:26:05that she is the ays of all the ages as
- 00:26:08James says that she is the American Eve
- 00:26:11except that Hester PR had been that
- 00:26:13before her just as Emerson always spoke
- 00:26:16of the American
- 00:26:17adom and Whitman incarnated that
- 00:26:20American adom uh for him um we were all
- 00:26:24invented by Emerson you cannot be it
- 00:26:27seems to me
- 00:26:28a person of literary or speculative
- 00:26:32imagination in the United States of
- 00:26:34America unless indeed you are a souer
- 00:26:37and hate him as the devil but you cannot
- 00:26:41uh exist without being Amazonian whether
- 00:26:44you know it or not he in the Deep sense
- 00:26:47he has invented Us in fact Whitman as
- 00:26:51usual put it better than anyone else in
- 00:26:54a long letter to Emerson which he
- 00:26:56prefaces is it to the second Leaves of
- 00:26:59Grass I'm not quite sure about that he
- 00:27:01says of Emerson you are the explorer who
- 00:27:04went before us and discovered the shores
- 00:27:08of America which is a marvelous pH there
- 00:27:11cannot be a thoro without Emerson there
- 00:27:14could not be Miss Dickinson uh without
- 00:27:16Emerson indeed it was she was rather
- 00:27:19shagrin in the course of her life in
- 00:27:21various magazines and newspapers six or
- 00:27:23seven of her poems were published
- 00:27:25anonymously every single time
- 00:27:28everyone thought they were by Ralph
- 00:27:29Waldo Emerson the Affinity between the
- 00:27:32two is that great um and I've always
- 00:27:36found it fascinating that Whitman had
- 00:27:38the courage to go directly to the
- 00:27:40Fountain Head and send the book to
- 00:27:43Emerson and a long complex and at times
- 00:27:47admittedly rather difficult relationship
- 00:27:49started between them though it
- 00:27:50culminates beautifully uh Whitman
- 00:27:53describes his last visit to Emerson
- 00:27:55Emerson had already been seen had
- 00:27:58Alzheimer's for years and Whitman
- 00:28:00visited the household and he says that
- 00:28:03he had stationed his chair so that he
- 00:28:06could have the best look of that beloved
- 00:28:08face and just stare at Emerson's face
- 00:28:12and then later when Horus tro said to
- 00:28:15him what finally is your attitude
- 00:28:17towards Emison Whitman replied
- 00:28:19magnificently and Whitman himself was
- 00:28:21crippled by a stroke he said loyal at
- 00:28:26last and that that that is beautifully
- 00:28:28said I
- 00:28:30mean Henry James he condescended to
- 00:28:33Emerson but never sto learning from him
- 00:28:37James is an Amazonian novelist Millie fi
- 00:28:41is as Amazonian as Isabel Archer is she
- 00:28:46is
- 00:28:47perhaps a more refined version a more
- 00:28:51elaborate version though not perhaps as
- 00:28:53vital a version as uh Isabel is the
- 00:28:56Bostonian is a profoundly
- 00:28:59Amazonian novel even the parts of it
- 00:29:01that saiz are basically sterzing
- 00:29:04amazonians I mean I hardly know in a
- 00:29:06sense where it ends Wallace Stevens if I
- 00:29:09can think of one phrase which utterly
- 00:29:12typifies Wallace Stevens it is that
- 00:29:15again and again he calls the poet or the
- 00:29:18man of imagination The Scholar of one
- 00:29:21candle or the scholar of a single candle
- 00:29:24that is the great sentence in the essay
- 00:29:26society and Solitude by Emison which I
- 00:29:29now quote forba him a Scala is that
- 00:29:33single candle which the love and
- 00:29:37admiration of all men will eventually
- 00:29:41enkindle uh Emison is everywhere in
- 00:29:45Wallace Stevens Emerson is everywhere of
- 00:29:48course in hard crane we we we can't get
- 00:29:52away from Amazon and we shouldn't try to
- 00:29:54I don't know that I would go as far as
- 00:29:56Richard porier who think thinks that the
- 00:29:58greatest WR of the United States has
- 00:30:00ever had is Ralph Waldo
- 00:30:02Emerson I would say that it is certainly
- 00:30:05Witman one would have to talk about
- 00:30:07Henry James one would have to talk about
- 00:30:08Emily Dickinson one would have to talk
- 00:30:10about haon and Melville one would
- 00:30:12certainly have to talk about William
- 00:30:13fauler the greatest of course of the
- 00:30:15Southern writers one would have to talk
- 00:30:17about uh Wallace Stevens and Hart Crane
- 00:30:21Robert Frost of course is hardly even
- 00:30:23worth talking about magnificent poet but
- 00:30:25the most overtly em sonian writer in our
- 00:30:28history at times as he happily says he
- 00:30:31just verifies Emison and he called
- 00:30:33yuriel the greatest Western poem ever
- 00:30:36and like his friend Edwin Arlington
- 00:30:38Robinson uh their Mutual favorite book
- 00:30:41which they used to meet and discuss
- 00:30:43together was the conduct of life which
- 00:30:45is a hard driving tough very tough
- 00:30:50book I'm not a Critic I'm not a scholar
- 00:30:53I'm not even an neonian scholar I just
- 00:30:55want to say though that I total
- 00:30:57nonprofessional I love the man because
- 00:31:00he speaks to me exactly so I mean when
- 00:31:03he that puts it far better than I've
- 00:31:05been able to put it because you've said
- 00:31:06something that's crucial for me you were
- 00:31:08asking me before why Emon for me because
- 00:31:12when I was helping to spark that Revival
- 00:31:14in
- 00:31:1564 and when a year later in the middle
- 00:31:18of the journey at 35 I fell into the
- 00:31:20deepest depression of my life I read and
- 00:31:24read and read Emerson morning noon and
- 00:31:26night and all night
- 00:31:28and I read all through the journals and
- 00:31:30I felt that every phrase he had ever
- 00:31:32written he was speaking directly to me
- 00:31:35and he'd written it for me and I still
- 00:31:37feel that way and of course this is pure
- 00:31:39emersonian Doctrine because think of
- 00:31:41that magnificent sentence early on and
- 00:31:43that extraordinary rapid self-reliance
- 00:31:46in every work of Genius we recognize our
- 00:31:50own rejected thoughts they come back to
- 00:31:52us shining with a certain alienated
- 00:31:56Majesty
- 00:31:57isn't that wonderful fantastic and my
- 00:31:59own Definition of reading which I take
- 00:32:01straight out of him even though this is
- 00:32:03not his wording is to say so far as I I
- 00:32:05said this in a book called how to read
- 00:32:06and why I think I said what reading
- 00:32:09really
- 00:32:10is is coming upon it recognizing it and
- 00:32:14taking back what is already your
- 00:32:16own and that is pure ammonian ISM I
- 00:32:20think now now we're getting there I mean
- 00:32:22this and he talks about the the book
- 00:32:25reading the person or or or it all being
- 00:32:28one book one I just want to come back to
- 00:32:30my own apprehension of the he said that
- 00:32:32is very strange he say bores aonian
- 00:32:35takes this directly from him that all
- 00:32:38the books seem to have been written by
- 00:32:39one person amen but when he says you
- 00:32:42know only in so far as we are unsettled
- 00:32:45is there any hope for us at all he's
- 00:32:47speaking to me when he says trust
- 00:32:49thyself he's speaking to me when he says
- 00:32:52uh claim your idea before you read it in
- 00:32:55somebody else's name is a sentence many
- 00:32:59many sentences in which I feel that
- 00:33:01Emerson is more than speaking to me I
- 00:33:04mean he is he's gotten inside my inner
- 00:33:06ear and has become indeed the best and
- 00:33:08oldest part of myself indeed the God
- 00:33:12within as it where that speaks ah but
- 00:33:15two sentences in particular one of them
- 00:33:17is in self-reliance where he says and
- 00:33:20what a shattering sentence as men's
- 00:33:23prayers are a disease of the will
- 00:33:28so are their Creeds a disease of the
- 00:33:31intellect that is a magnificent sentence
- 00:33:35and the other one is that great sentence
- 00:33:38it's not in the essay power
- 00:33:40interestingly enough it's in the essay
- 00:33:42experience but it is the best thing he
- 00:33:44ever said about power power he says does
- 00:33:47not reside in any instant of repose it
- 00:33:51takes place always in the shooting of
- 00:33:53the gulf and the darting to an aim that
- 00:33:57is to say pure transition as such that
- 00:34:00and that surely again is the most
- 00:34:02American of sentences because this
- 00:34:04country which is why I think it will yet
- 00:34:06shed the horrible Bush
- 00:34:09uh this is a country which is an
- 00:34:11Amazonian
- 00:34:13country absolutely stick with Emerson
- 00:34:15the modern he speaks to you he speaks to
- 00:34:18me I love him because he keeps alive a
- 00:34:20language of spirit I'm also fascinated
- 00:34:22that he anticipates a kind of global
- 00:34:25technology he anticipates the internet
- 00:34:27in many ways I mean as a sort of
- 00:34:29metaphor for a global Consciousness for
- 00:34:33the interactivity of cultures for a
- 00:34:36democratic World in which every person
- 00:34:38every blogger can speak for him and
- 00:34:40herself it is true I'm myself not a
- 00:34:45great appreciator of that great gray
- 00:34:47ocean of the internet in which I think
- 00:34:50too many young people with inadequate
- 00:34:52educations drown because how out of that
- 00:34:55massive information
- 00:34:57are they to know the difference between
- 00:34:59information and knowledge let alone
- 00:35:01knowledge and wisdom he understands
- 00:35:03about Shakespeare what I've been saying
- 00:35:05for a long time and I think I take this
- 00:35:08from Emison though he doesn't put it in
- 00:35:09so many words that Shakespeare is the
- 00:35:12first and truest Multicultural author he
- 00:35:15had this curiosity that the internet
- 00:35:17somehow connects with about distributed
- 00:35:20knowledge in in circles or some place he
- 00:35:23he also he he speaks of our capacity for
- 00:35:27infinite
- 00:35:28expansions in that
- 00:35:30ways he seems to be sometimes a prophet
- 00:35:33of this new Global community of
- 00:35:39universal information but do not forget
- 00:35:43that he insists that at all times let's
- 00:35:45set him aside on the novel but let's
- 00:35:48think of him in the realm of ideas let's
- 00:35:50think of him in the realm of speculation
- 00:35:52let's think of him in the realm of
- 00:35:54wisdom literature and of poetry he
- 00:35:57insisted upon the highest cognitive and
- 00:35:59aesthetic standards yes and I do not
- 00:36:02find them manifested in what you are now
- 00:36:05discussing well it does take a critical
- 00:36:07mind to use the internet right it takes
- 00:36:10an educated mind and as you know our
- 00:36:14universities do not educate anymore in
- 00:36:16the English speaking world oh well
- 00:36:19that's an
- 00:36:20overstatement I wish it were let me let
- 00:36:23me ask you the the sort of qu show um
- 00:36:26question who was the 20th century
- 00:36:28Emerson who has these qualities of
- 00:36:31spirit of community of learning of
- 00:36:34originality um we haven't got one we
- 00:36:37haven't got one well I mean I I have a
- 00:36:39couple of candidates but I wonder who
- 00:36:41you would think of that has that kind of
- 00:36:43deeply American my friend Richard Ry
- 00:36:46would be my best candidate for it but
- 00:36:48Richard would be the first to say that
- 00:36:50uh that's ridiculous over praise and he
- 00:36:52would be embarrassed by it his lips have
- 00:36:54not been touched by that burning call of
- 00:36:57fire that ignited the lips of the
- 00:36:59prophet Isaiah and of the Prophet Emison
- 00:37:02I cannot think of a figure alive there
- 00:37:04was Freud but that's a different sort of
- 00:37:07a matter and he died in 1939 was it or
- 00:37:10whenever can I try an odd one on you yes
- 00:37:13well Stanley Cavell said Frank Capra
- 00:37:15that's in your
- 00:37:16MB Stanley and I don't always see eye to
- 00:37:19eye I'm sorry okay my candidate would be
- 00:37:21Duke Ellington for range for both
- 00:37:25Darkness and Light if we are going to go
- 00:37:28into the realm of jazz where I'm very
- 00:37:30happy to go my candidate would be
- 00:37:32Charlie Parker that's interesting or
- 00:37:34maybe a combination of Charlie and his
- 00:37:36disciple the Magnificent Bud Paul now
- 00:37:38that's interesting too I would say more
- 00:37:40DIY Gillespie for his universality for
- 00:37:43his International Big B this is very
- 00:37:45shallow compared to bird and Bud who are
- 00:37:49both of them very great musical figures
- 00:37:52I mean Jazz the great figure in jazz
- 00:37:54remains Armstrong after that you would
- 00:37:56have to say include Ellington Mingus
- 00:37:59Thelonius Charlie Parker Bud Co train a
- 00:38:02few others Le young MH okay this is a
- 00:38:06good list but I would say but but
- 00:38:08nevertheless it's very difficult to
- 00:38:09transpose you know to music Kenneth
- 00:38:12Burke would be my own nomination for the
- 00:38:15best American literary critic of the
- 00:38:1620th century and he was a very dear
- 00:38:19friend and I revered him and learned a
- 00:38:21great deal from him and we meant a lot
- 00:38:24to one another
- 00:38:25but it's a long road uh down from Ralph
- 00:38:30Waldo Emerson to Kenneth BG I I don't
- 00:38:33think we have such a fig I I I wish we
- 00:38:35did stick stick with the music and I Do
- 00:38:38Not For a Moment entertain the absurdity
- 00:38:40of believing that I am such a personage
- 00:38:42I I am a rather different phenomenon but
- 00:38:44go on Duke for one thing he has the
- 00:38:46circle as Emerson had a conquered Circle
- 00:38:48he had the band he had these other
- 00:38:50voices that he enabled he had a long
- 00:38:52life he had long forms short forms dance
- 00:38:55forms sacred forms
- 00:38:57he had that acquaintance with the dark
- 00:38:59side and yet an exuberant triumphant
- 00:39:02continuing sort of persevering Spirit
- 00:39:04know it's missing from Ellington you
- 00:39:07know an
- 00:39:09amazing piece of Bud Pals called unco
- 00:39:12Loco oh
- 00:39:13amen you listen to those three versions
- 00:39:16in a row of when Poco Loco and you hear
- 00:39:18what does not get into Ellington there's
- 00:39:21a marvelous recording that I have over
- 00:39:24there the one thing that
- 00:39:27no no no no no I'm talking about
- 00:39:28something about Ellington uh Ellington
- 00:39:31and Charlie Mingus and one of our
- 00:39:32closest friends is Su Mingus the Widow
- 00:39:35of Charlie
- 00:39:37uh Allington and mingas did a marvelous
- 00:39:40record together called money jungle with
- 00:39:43Ellington on piano and with Max on the
- 00:39:46drums and with um Mingus had his most
- 00:39:49magnificent on the base mind you we are
- 00:39:52talking about the Great American art
- 00:39:54form of the 20th century I mean we have
- 00:39:57had great poets we have had Wallace
- 00:39:58Stevens and Har crane we have had
- 00:40:01Faulkner uh there are alive four
- 00:40:05American novelists I think or quazi
- 00:40:08novelists of Genius Mr
- 00:40:11Pinchin U corm mcarthy if only for Blood
- 00:40:14Meridian which
- 00:40:15is a book worthy of Melville worthy of M
- 00:40:19dick um Philip Roth especially for
- 00:40:22sabah's theater and American Pastor D
- 00:40:24delilo for underworld
- 00:40:26not sure that we well we have ashbery
- 00:40:28among living poets Archie Ammons is dead
- 00:40:31and Jimmy merrow is gone and Miss Bishop
- 00:40:33is long gone and Miss swon is long gone
- 00:40:36um I would suppose that if if you take
- 00:40:39the whole history of 20th century
- 00:40:41American Jaz then it would be the great
- 00:40:44contribution of American aesthetic
- 00:40:46culture in the 20th century but look of
- 00:40:49course what's happened to
- 00:40:51it it's lost its audience the young men
- 00:40:54and young women of Y were very very rare
- 00:40:56exceptions do not listen to Charlie
- 00:40:59Parker and Duke Ellington and Bud pow as
- 00:41:01for the African-Americans they have lost
- 00:41:03this Heritage completely it has been
- 00:41:05replaced by the sloppy glop of Hip Hop
- 00:41:08no I was just going to say but thinking
- 00:41:09of the 20th century um was there an
- 00:41:12emersonian figure among them I'm a
- 00:41:14jasine I think of range affirmation it
- 00:41:16is deep sorrow after all in Emerson I
- 00:41:19mean we we forget it but he had lost
- 00:41:20everyone he loved the best his brother
- 00:41:22Charles his first wife Ellen his little
- 00:41:25son Waldo say he refuses to let himself
- 00:41:28be dominated by mourning and grief he's
- 00:41:31too strong for that too much a Survivor
- 00:41:35and also you know the family malady was
- 00:41:39tuberculosis somehow by a toughness of
- 00:41:41will he outlasted that and lived a long
- 00:41:44life Ellington has a lot of wisdom
- 00:41:46Ellington is magnificent but there's
- 00:41:48nothing in him like Parker's mood or
- 00:41:51unoco my late friend Ralph Ellison who
- 00:41:54wrote that one great book was really
- 00:41:56quite right in the end despite fol and
- 00:41:59despite har crane whom I love Beyond
- 00:42:01love the Great American Art of this
- 00:42:03century is jazz from Armstrong's
- 00:42:06breakthrough right down to almost its
- 00:42:09last stand in the great still living
- 00:42:12figure like Sunny Rollins who is so
- 00:42:14isolated you're right that Ellington is
- 00:42:16the most comprehensive figure for one
- 00:42:19thing in terms of aesthetic achievement
- 00:42:21I suppose I would have to put Louie
- 00:42:23first and uh Parker second and in the
- 00:42:27end if it's a choice of course bud fa
- 00:42:30for me is like hard crane you know I
- 00:42:31used to go here bud all the time in New
- 00:42:34York at minons at
- 00:42:36Birdland when I was both a coral
- 00:42:38undergraduate and then when I was a
- 00:42:39graduate student and a young teacher
- 00:42:41here I got to know him he was an
- 00:42:42immensely literate man and I gave him
- 00:42:45the collected poems of heart crane to
- 00:42:47read and we discussed them I told him I
- 00:42:50deeply Associated him with
- 00:42:52crane the the Doom eess of both the
- 00:42:56and Poco Loco is sort of like the broken
- 00:42:58Tower is really there at the outer
- 00:43:00limits
- 00:43:02of I I don't think we've had that single
- 00:43:05figure in jazz I know Emerson is a man
- 00:43:09who keeps notebooks and journals and out
- 00:43:11of it he engenders the essays the
- 00:43:13lectures the sermons the whole stce we
- 00:43:17haven't got anyone like that we're not
- 00:43:18going to have anybody like
- 00:43:21that
- Ralph Waldo Emerson
- Harold Bloom
- amerikaj verkistoj
- kulturo
- literaturo
- influo
- filozofio
- individuismo
- spiritualeco
- politikaj opinioj