• Death Of The Novel As An Artform

    From LowRider44M@1:229/2 to All on Thursday, March 12, 2020 18:46:12
    From: intraphase@gmail.com

    Books About Next to Nothing
    by John Waters
    3 . 10 . 20


    In The Decline of the Novel, Joseph Bottum puts words to something every reader
    of fiction has long sensed in his bones: The novel is dying, if not dead; fiction is no longer a useful means of grappling with reality.

    “For almost three hundred years,” he begins, “the novel was a major art form, perhaps the major art form, of the modern world—the device by which . .
    . we tried to explain ourselves to ourselves.” The novel represented a maturation of
    storytelling—the adulthood of fiction, taking the reader into the interior of
    the human person. Now, the form is on its deathbed. Lingering readers are seeking in it something other—diversion, entertainment—than what the readers of Jane Austen or
    the Brontes, Dickens or Kafka, were seeking back in the day.

    Bottum first conceived his psychoanalysis of the novel as a case study of Protestantism’s weakening cultural significance in American and European life. A Catholic, he pleads that the novel started out and sustained itself for
    300 years with a mission
    to reveal the “thick self in a thin universe.” Its beginnings were driven by the Reformation, “a Protestantism of the air,” breathed in even by those
    who were not Protestants.

    Conceding that the “first novel,” Don Quixote by Cervantes, was “Catholic,” Bottum proposes that the form eventually emerged as the art form of the modern Protestant West. “The modern novel . . . came into being to present the Protestant story
    of the individual soul as it strove to understand its salvation and achieve its
    sanctification, illustrated by the parallel journey of the new-style characters, with their well-finished interiors, as they wandered through their adventure in the exterior
    world.”

    The novel’s growth was propelled by a belief that societies were thrusting forward in confidence, sustained by a cult of progress thought to be taking humanity somewhere rather than nowhere.

    Most of all, the novel grew into a great art form because it promised something more than detailed stories of modern selves...They were describing, with increasing urgency, what seemed the crisis of those modern selves. And at their highest and most
    serious level, they were offering solutions to the crisis. . . . the novel as an art form aimed at re-enchantment. It hungered to find or create with its stories a kind of glow to the objects of the world, a thickness of essential meaning in realities
    that had been rendered down to nothing more than thin existence by the modern world's turn to technological science, bureaucratic government, and commercial economics.

    If the natural world is imagined by modernity as empty of purpose, then the
    hunt for nature’s importance is supernatural, by definition. If the physical order is defined by its sheer scientifically measured presence . . . then the search for
    meaning in the physical order is necessarily metaphysical. And if the secular realm is understood as merely arbitrary social arrangements enforced by the powerful, then the attempt to uncover social value must prove to be religious.

    But novels no longer feel like they are practical devices for addressing an era
    in which metaphysics have lost their traction. “The decline of the novel’s prestige reflects and confirms...a new crisis born of the culture’s increasing failure of
    intellectual nerve and terminal doubt about its own progress.” As modernity marched on, “the thick inner world of the self increasingly came to seem ill-matched with the impoverished outer world, stripped of all the old enchantment that had made
    exterior objects seem meaningful and important. . . . This is what we mean by the crisis of the self: Why does anything matter, what could be important, if meaning is invented, coming from the self rather than to the self?”

    He traces the beginning of the disintegration to the last decade of the twentieth century, when Protestantism began failing throughout the West. “Of the authors who have published novels since the early 1990s,” he writes, “none are mandatory
    reading.”

    Snap! I have felt of late that a great many writers I continue to read are endowed with tremendous gifts of characterization, dialogue, poeticism, plotting, inspiration, etc., but lack the most vital capacity required of the novelist: the ability to
    inject a meaning that transcends the book’s pages. Their books start well, spurt down to the first fence, offer huge promise even beyond the halfway stage—but then seem to start looking around themselves for a direction home, usually introducing the
    literary equivalent of a shoot-out or a car-chase to get their authors off the postmodern hook. It is as if these writers can write anything except something that promises anything worth promising. They seem afraid of writing anything that might stab at
    a metaphysical meaning, preferring to retain their button-downed, black-shirted
    front of nihilism, in case the word gets around among their peers that such and
    such has “gone a bit religious.”

    The Hungarian novelist Laszlo Krasznahorkai is among the few interesting voices
    still working at the coalface, those who have waded through the postmodern cesspit and saturated themselves in its stink and illogic in the hope of accidentally breaking
    through to what's on the other side. I would mention also the American George Saunders and the Frenchman Michel Houellebecq—post-postmodernists in that they seek to think their way to the very end of postmodern evasiveness, with a view, perhaps, to
    building a new city on the far side.

    In his 1989 novel The Melancholy of Resistance, as though intent upon expressing the ultimate redundancy of the form, Krasznahorkai ended his story of apocalypse and godlessness with a lengthy description of the chemical decomposition of a human body.
    Bottum identifies what may be a related syndrome in the late American writer Tom Wolfe (whom he admires), a metaphysical block arising from the absence of a
    moral framework by which to measure the distance of events and actions from an ideal. Wolfe, he
    says, “needs a greater thickness than the world seems to possess.” He needs
    that “Protestantism of the Air,” the sense of a background paradigm of ethics against which he, the writer, might place his characters and their experiences, and against
    which we, the readers, may measure what he tells us. But it doesn’t exist. “What he discovers instead is the culture’s failure of nerve, and it ruins the attempt to go where he wants to go,” Bottum writes. “The ending of a Tom Wolfe novel is
    usually a disaster, or at least a minor fall, because the resources necessary to conclude a story of justification and sanctification simply do not exist for
    him.”

    Still, shortly before Wolfe’s death in 2018, Bottum described him as “America’s greatest living novelist. Kind of.” I would say that, for entirely differing reasons, Krasznahorkai and Houellebecq are the two greatest and most relevant novelists
    in the world right now. Kind of. Both seem implicitly to understand the problem
    Bottum has spelled out, and each in his own way seeks to solve the dilemma by postulating a metaphysics of the imagination to fill the empty space. Houellebecq builds worlds
    in which transcendence is despaired of and yet appropriated; Krasznahorkai elides the problem, but in doing so creates a monument in writing to the condition of modernity such as no other artist I have encountered approaches.

    Whereas the art of the novel has mostly been left to decay on a tiphead of ego,
    nihilism, and pseudo-aesthetics, the uses of novelism have been pilfered by less exalted platforms incapable of filling the novel’s shoes: popular biography, New Journalism,
    graphic novels, genre fiction. Each in turn has insinuated itself as the heir apparent, but soon revealed itself as another waster son of the shaman, a blood
    relative without The Gift. Novels continue to be published but—though occasionally engaging,
    acclaimed, successful, or even controversial—do not move the world as Dickens
    or Austen did. This failure, writes Bottum, “signals...an end of confidence, about the past values and future goals of what conceived itself as Western culture.” The
    novel is hooked up to a drip in Intensive Care and the family (just about everyone) has been summoned to the bedside.

    For these reasons and some others, today’s novels are mostly books about next
    to nothing, written by imitators obsessed with the role rather than the art of writing, devoid of artistic ambition and surviving on the fumes of past glories. But Bottum
    does not claim that the decline of the novel means that writers of the past necessarily exhibited greater genius than those of the present. He namechecks recent writers we might think of as successors of the greats: Naipaul, Vargas Llosa, Byatt, Pynchon,
    Roth, DeLillo, Coetzee, Robinson, Amis, Rushdie, McCarthy, Murakami, Eugenides.
    Talented as they are, he says, they represent something different in our times than what Defoe, Dickens, Austen, Faulkner, Hemingway, Steinbeck, or Mann signified in theirs.

    “All this is testimony, I think, to the current problem of culture's lack of belief in itself, derived from the fading of a temporal horizon....Without a sense of the old goals and reasons...all that remains are the crimes the culture committed in the
    past to get where it is now. Uncompensated by achievement, unexplained by purpose, these unameliorated sins must seem overwhelming: the very definition of the culture.” Where, then, is there to go? “Why, indeed, should we write
    or even read book-
    length fiction for insight into the directions of the culture and the self?”

    Three decades ago, you might have thought thrice before sitting down at a dinner party without having read the latest Tom Wolfe or David Foster Wallace, but no such risk obtains with the work of any fiction writer today. Nor does anyone feel especially
    bad about this. A grounding in literature is no longer a prerequisite for an acceptable education.

    The problem resides with readers first, with writers as a consequence. Nowadays, Bottum says, we all walk with our heads down.

    Of course I know, as you know, any number of dedicated novel-readers today.
    But I do not know—and I suspect you do not know—many who still read novels in the older senses: novel-reading as a necessary part of participation in public life, akin to
    (and more important than) the news. Or novel-reading as the great hunt for insight into the human condition, akin to (or, at least, providing the raw material for) serious intellectual analysis of ethics, political theory, and psychology. Or novel-
    reading as the chance to observe authors performing heroic acts of cultural hygiene.

    The Decline of the Novel has some architectural flaws, most relating to the fact that it is constructed around a number of pre-existing essays inadequately
    absorbed into the book’s thoughtstream. It is easy to quibble with the broad-stroke thesis, but
    it exposes a great deal of crystal truth.

    Some may counter that many of the reasons for the decline of the novel are more
    obvious, relating to the technologization of information. Sure: Mass communication has indeed diverted people into more superficial ways of apprehending reality, which has
    lost much of its prior sense of limitless complexity. The reduction of understandings to manmade polarities has destroyed the mysteriousness that was once the forte of great fiction. It is odd that Bottum makes no references to Freudianism and its effect
    on the West’s public imagination. Psychoanalysis rendered instrumental everything about the human person, reducing the possibilities concerning human action to comprehensible pathologies and crypto-mechanical processes. In this realm, the once revered
    novelist was demoted to bumbling amateur.

    We should also remember that the novel grew its teeth for chewing meanings in times otherwise devoid of forms of general communication and cultural interchange. From the beginning it was above all useful. Only later did it require an aesthetic, cultural
    significance, a sense of artiness—and by then it had already started to become an artifact of a diminishing curiosity concerning what appeared to be mysterious in the human.

    The art of writing, too, has undergone a metamorphosis. Once a way to engage with reality, it has become primarily a status-seeking activity. The idea of “being a writer” nowadays seems more important than learning a craft, perfecting a talent, or
    honing a worldview. The wannabe writer now offers himself to the ideological architects of the media and academe, providing fodder for their deterministic interventions in a discourse increasingly more about remaking the world than investigating it.

    Meanwhile, reality as presented through the media takes on an increasingly supra-fictional quality, daily trumping the most far-fetched efforts of even the most creative artists. The conventional novel came to seem strait-laced and
    slow, and only genre
    literatures like crime, horror, and sci-fi seem capable of sustaining the heightened attentions of a reading public strung out on escalation.

    In sum, in abolishing God, man obscured mystery, including the mystery of himself. Marooned in his self-created world-without-wonder, hunchbacked by the low ceilings he had installed above his own head, he became more convinced of his growing
    intelligence, until his imagination shrank and dried up. His story, incapable of achieving a lucid ending, stuttered to a halt.

    John Waters is an Irish writer and commentator, the author of ten books, and a playwright.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From slider@1:229/2 to All on Friday, March 13, 2020 08:39:38
    From: slider@anashram.com

    LowRider wrote...

    Books About Next to Nothing
    by John Waters
    3 . 10 . 20

    In The Decline of the Novel, Joseph Bottum puts words to something every reader of fiction has long sensed in his bones: The novel is dying, if
    not dead; fiction is no longer a useful means of grappling with reality.

    “For almost three hundred years,” he begins, “the novel was a major art form, perhaps the major art form, of the modern world—the device by
    which . . . we tried to explain ourselves to ourselves.” The novel represented a maturation of storytelling—the adulthood of fiction,
    taking the reader into the interior of the human person. Now, the form
    is on its deathbed. Lingering readers are seeking in it something other—diversion, entertainment—than what the readers of Jane Austen or the Brontes, Dickens or Kafka, were seeking back in the day.

    Bottum first conceived his psychoanalysis of the novel as a case study
    of Protestantism’s weakening cultural significance in American and
    European life. A Catholic, he pleads that the novel started out and
    sustained itself for 300 years with a mission to reveal the “thick self
    in a thin universe.” Its beginnings were driven by the Reformation, “a Protestantism of the air,” breathed in even by those who were not Protestants.

    Conceding that the “first novel,” Don Quixote by Cervantes, was “Catholic,” Bottum proposes that the form eventually emerged as the art form of the modern Protestant West. “The modern novel . . . came into
    being to present the Protestant story of the individual soul as it
    strove to understand its salvation and achieve its sanctification, illustrated by the parallel journey of the new-style characters, with
    their well-finished interiors, as they wandered through their adventure
    in the exterior world.”

    The novel’s growth was propelled by a belief that societies were
    thrusting forward in confidence, sustained by a cult of progress thought
    to be taking humanity somewhere rather than nowhere.

    Most of all, the novel grew into a great art form because it
    promised something more than detailed stories of modern selves...They
    were describing, with increasing urgency, what seemed the crisis of
    those modern selves. And at their highest and most serious level, they
    were offering solutions to the crisis. . . . the novel as an art form
    aimed at re-enchantment. It hungered to find or create with its stories
    a kind of glow to the objects of the world, a thickness of essential
    meaning in realities that had been rendered down to nothing more than
    thin existence by the modern world's turn to technological science, bureaucratic government, and commercial economics.

    If the natural world is imagined by modernity as empty of purpose,
    then the hunt for nature’s importance is supernatural, by definition. If the physical order is defined by its sheer scientifically measured
    presence . . . then the search for meaning in the physical order is necessarily metaphysical. And if the secular realm is understood as
    merely arbitrary social arrangements enforced by the powerful, then the attempt to uncover social value must prove to be religious.

    But novels no longer feel like they are practical devices for addressing
    an era in which metaphysics have lost their traction. “The decline of
    the novel’s prestige reflects and confirms...a new crisis born of the culture’s increasing failure of intellectual nerve and terminal doubt
    about its own progress.” As modernity marched on, “the thick inner world of the self increasingly came to seem ill-matched with the impoverished
    outer world, stripped of all the old enchantment that had made exterior objects seem meaningful and important. . . . This is what we mean by the crisis of the self: Why does anything matter, what could be important,
    if meaning is invented, coming from the self rather than to the self?”

    He traces the beginning of the disintegration to the last decade of the twentieth century, when Protestantism began failing throughout the West. “Of the authors who have published novels since the early 1990s,” he writes, “none are mandatory reading.”

    Snap! I have felt of late that a great many writers I continue to read
    are endowed with tremendous gifts of characterization, dialogue,
    poeticism, plotting, inspiration, etc., but lack the most vital capacity required of the novelist: the ability to inject a meaning that
    transcends the book’s pages. Their books start well, spurt down to the first fence, offer huge promise even beyond the halfway stage—but then
    seem to start looking around themselves for a direction home, usually introducing the literary equivalent of a shoot-out or a car-chase to get their authors off the postmodern hook. It is as if these writers can
    write anything except something that promises anything worth promising.
    They seem afraid of writing anything that might stab at a metaphysical meaning, preferring to retain their button-downed, black-shirted front
    of nihilism, in case the word gets around among their peers that such
    and such has “gone a bit religious.”

    The Hungarian novelist Laszlo Krasznahorkai is among the few interesting voices still working at the coalface, those who have waded through the postmodern cesspit and saturated themselves in its stink and illogic in
    the hope of accidentally breaking through to what's on the other side. I would mention also the American George Saunders and the Frenchman Michel Houellebecq—post-postmodernists in that they seek to think their way to
    the very end of postmodern evasiveness, with a view, perhaps, to
    building a new city on the far side.

    In his 1989 novel The Melancholy of Resistance, as though intent upon expressing the ultimate redundancy of the form, Krasznahorkai ended his
    story of apocalypse and godlessness with a lengthy description of the chemical decomposition of a human body. Bottum identifies what may be a related syndrome in the late American writer Tom Wolfe (whom he
    admires), a metaphysical block arising from the absence of a moral
    framework by which to measure the distance of events and actions from an ideal. Wolfe, he says, “needs a greater thickness than the world seems
    to possess.” He needs that “Protestantism of the Air,” the sense of a background paradigm of ethics against which he, the writer, might place
    his characters and their experiences, and against which we, the readers,
    may measure what he tells us. But it doesn’t exist. “What he discovers instead is the culture’s failure of nerve, and it ruins the attempt to
    go where he wants to go,” Bottum writes. “The ending of a Tom Wolfe
    novel is usually a disaster, or at least a minor fall, because the
    resources necessary to conclude a story of justification and
    sanctification simply do not exist for him.”

    Still, shortly before Wolfe’s death in 2018, Bottum described him as “America’s greatest living novelist. Kind of.” I would say that, for entirely differing reasons, Krasznahorkai and Houellebecq are the two greatest and most relevant novelists in the world right now. Kind of.
    Both seem implicitly to understand the problem Bottum has spelled out,
    and each in his own way seeks to solve the dilemma by postulating a metaphysics of the imagination to fill the empty space. Houellebecq
    builds worlds in which transcendence is despaired of and yet
    appropriated; Krasznahorkai elides the problem, but in doing so creates
    a monument in writing to the condition of modernity such as no other
    artist I have encountered approaches.

    Whereas the art of the novel has mostly been left to decay on a tiphead
    of ego, nihilism, and pseudo-aesthetics, the uses of novelism have been pilfered by less exalted platforms incapable of filling the novel’s
    shoes: popular biography, New Journalism, graphic novels, genre fiction.
    Each in turn has insinuated itself as the heir apparent, but soon
    revealed itself as another waster son of the shaman, a blood relative
    without The Gift. Novels continue to be published but—though
    occasionally engaging, acclaimed, successful, or even controversial—do
    not move the world as Dickens or Austen did. This failure, writes
    Bottum, “signals...an end of confidence, about the past values and
    future goals of what conceived itself as Western culture.” The novel is hooked up to a drip in Intensive Care and the family (just about
    everyone) has been summoned to the bedside.

    For these reasons and some others, today’s novels are mostly books about next to nothing, written by imitators obsessed with the role rather than
    the art of writing, devoid of artistic ambition and surviving on the
    fumes of past glories. But Bottum does not claim that the decline of the novel means that writers of the past necessarily exhibited greater
    genius than those of the present. He namechecks recent writers we might
    think of as successors of the greats: Naipaul, Vargas Llosa, Byatt,
    Pynchon, Roth, DeLillo, Coetzee, Robinson, Amis, Rushdie, McCarthy,
    Murakami, Eugenides. Talented as they are, he says, they represent
    something different in our times than what Defoe, Dickens, Austen,
    Faulkner, Hemingway, Steinbeck, or Mann signified in theirs.

    “All this is testimony, I think, to the current problem of culture's
    lack of belief in itself, derived from the fading of a temporal horizon....Without a sense of the old goals and reasons...all that
    remains are the crimes the culture committed in the past to get where it
    is now. Uncompensated by achievement, unexplained by purpose, these unameliorated sins must seem overwhelming: the very definition of the culture.” Where, then, is there to go? “Why, indeed, should we write or even read book-length fiction for insight into the directions of the
    culture and the self?”

    Three decades ago, you might have thought thrice before sitting down at
    a dinner party without having read the latest Tom Wolfe or David Foster Wallace, but no such risk obtains with the work of any fiction writer
    today. Nor does anyone feel especially bad about this. A grounding in literature is no longer a prerequisite for an acceptable education.

    The problem resides with readers first, with writers as a consequence. Nowadays, Bottum says, we all walk with our heads down.

    Of course I know, as you know, any number of dedicated novel-readers today. But I do not know—and I suspect you do not know—many who still read novels in the older senses: novel-reading as a necessary part of participation in public life, akin to (and more important than) the
    news. Or novel-reading as the great hunt for insight into the human condition, akin to (or, at least, providing the raw material for)
    serious intellectual analysis of ethics, political theory, and
    psychology. Or novel-reading as the chance to observe authors performing heroic acts of cultural hygiene.

    The Decline of the Novel has some architectural flaws, most relating to
    the fact that it is constructed around a number of pre-existing essays inadequately absorbed into the book’s thoughtstream. It is easy to
    quibble with the broad-stroke thesis, but it exposes a great deal of
    crystal truth.

    Some may counter that many of the reasons for the decline of the novel
    are more obvious, relating to the technologization of information. Sure:
    Mass communication has indeed diverted people into more superficial ways
    of apprehending reality, which has lost much of its prior sense of
    limitless complexity. The reduction of understandings to manmade
    polarities has destroyed the mysteriousness that was once the forte of
    great fiction. It is odd that Bottum makes no references to Freudianism
    and its effect on the West’s public imagination. Psychoanalysis rendered instrumental everything about the human person, reducing the
    possibilities concerning human action to comprehensible pathologies and crypto-mechanical processes. In this realm, the once revered novelist
    was demoted to bumbling amateur.

    We should also remember that the novel grew its teeth for chewing
    meanings in times otherwise devoid of forms of general communication and cultural interchange. From the beginning it was above all useful. Only
    later did it require an aesthetic, cultural significance, a sense of artiness—and by then it had already started to become an artifact of a diminishing curiosity concerning what appeared to be mysterious in the
    human.

    The art of writing, too, has undergone a metamorphosis. Once a way to
    engage with reality, it has become primarily a status-seeking activity.
    The idea of “being a writer” nowadays seems more important than learning a craft, perfecting a talent, or honing a worldview. The wannabe writer
    now offers himself to the ideological architects of the media and
    academe, providing fodder for their deterministic interventions in a discourse increasingly more about remaking the world than investigating
    it.

    Meanwhile, reality as presented through the media takes on an
    increasingly supra-fictional quality, daily trumping the most
    far-fetched efforts of even the most creative artists. The conventional
    novel came to seem strait-laced and slow, and only genre literatures
    like crime, horror, and sci-fi seem capable of sustaining the heightened attentions of a reading public strung out on escalation.

    In sum, in abolishing God, man obscured mystery, including the mystery
    of himself. Marooned in his self-created world-without-wonder,
    hunchbacked by the low ceilings he had installed above his own head, he became more convinced of his growing intelligence, until his imagination shrank and dried up. His story, incapable of achieving a lucid ending, stuttered to a halt.

    John Waters is an Irish writer and commentator, the author of ten books,
    and a playwright.

    ### - great article + enjoyed reading it...

    although, would hotly debate it's the 'novel' that's dying rather than the writers themselves running out of things to say? there having always been
    2 types of writers: the ones who write because they like writing as a
    perhaps clever + respectable means to earning a living, versus those who
    write because they feel they actually have something to say of benefit to humanity...

    and that accordingly, it's not the novel or art form itself that's dying,
    so much as a humanity that's running out of people with something they
    feel is important enough to need to be communicated as opposed to that of
    just being merely entertained, that it's poets & deep thinkers with

    [continued in next message]

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From LowRider44M@1:229/2 to All on Friday, March 13, 2020 17:31:18
    From: intraphase@gmail.com


    ### - great article + enjoyed reading it...

    although, would hotly debate it's the 'novel' that's dying rather than the writers themselves running out of things to say?

    The idea of refusing to go on that quest that might lead the writer
    to undiscovered territory. Writers are to worried about the tribal
    peripheral aspects of the works acceptance and publishable potential
    Many great works were not instant successes, or went through 50-100
    rewrites to arrive at the quintessential core story.

    Most of the greatest movies started as books.
    Small amounts of people would take the time and effort to read them
    and if the achieved a "sense of immersion" or as you might say "felt transported into a different reality" they would spread awareness of the
    books existence by word of mouth.

    The purest form of the novel has and shall always exist as long form story telling with a depth of fabrics and textures to the world and characters described. I think your spot on that the critique is more an accusation
    of a lack of vision and the courage to express and give birth to the vision.

    .
    there having always been
    2 types of writers: the ones who write because they like writing as a perhaps clever + respectable means to earning a living, versus those who write because they feel they actually have something to say of benefit to humanity...

    Those express the craft aspects, and some people just being clever, and the opposite as the artistic visionary. A third type exists as both you and I
    and that is the world builders, a pursuit of epic stories and adventure.


    and that accordingly, it's not the novel or art form itself that's dying, so much as a humanity that's running out of people with something they
    feel is important enough to need to be communicated as opposed to that of just being merely entertained,

    Also reaching into the soul of the common man woman or child in a way
    that is insightful and leads to the character understanding something new
    in their inner world, regardless of whether the quest-task that is used
    as a backdrop and pacing mechanism is won, lost or stalemated.
    The key element is how did the main character journey from inner point 'a'
    to inner point 'b' thru 'z' depending on the degree of the characters adaptation or maladaptation.

    that it's poets & deep thinkers with
    something to actually 'say' that we're running out of as the form itself becomes increasingly diluted by trivial pursuits and 10-minute intermissions and break-times from a life of endless physical toil...

    The ability to achieve "immersion" in great acts of creation or artistic appreation of great art is stifled by the unchecked modernity of life's
    ever increasing demand to shrink our attention spans.


    that after 2 world wars the world has changed, and obviously not for the better as a humanity more interested in instant gratification increasingly rises to the fore, displacing Art altogether and replacing it with 30 seconds of factual concision

    Twitter a perfect example.

    and fashionable soundbites in a world
    increasingly dominated by material/factual science; that in that sense science didn't so much 'kill god' so much as rendered everything devoid of any metaphysical mystery;

    Yeah, aptly stated. God is a word used as a set of brackets to contain
    thought visions and thought equations related to the development of consciousness. By killing the set of thought brackets called God they
    opened the abyss of formlessness and meaninglessness that leaves no
    common understanding between both friends and strangers.

    that it is mankind's 'imagination' (and thus
    soul) that's fading as purely physical pursuits and endeavors increasingly become the dominant reality...

    This virus is a narrative twist that has derailed many false sub plots
    and laid bare many incorrect assumptions about life as a human on Earth.
    The quest to build an inner self as a mind as strong and flexible as a ship
    or sturdy house, should return into fashion and then mainstream.

    Inner dialogue is the key to a resilient powerful and beautifully comfortable mind. I believe consciousness and materiality are the core chicken and egg connundrum, they evolve simultaneously, like cell division.

    The article does define some of the conflicts well.
    I read it again and make comments paragraph by paragraph at first
    opportunity.

    A master class on the "craft" of writing I might take when time permits. https://www.masterclass.com/classes/dan-brown-teaches-writing-thrillers?utm_source=Paid&utm_medium=Youtube&utm_campaign=DBr&utm_content=Video&utm_term=Aq-Prospecting&gclid=CjwKCAjwq4fsBRBnEiwANTahcBuDf4SS4U_Sj9OxUtwXfN-
    4gTuNXhYYN7870nJNQbq9qrdiY3uBIhoCpk0QAvD_BwE

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From thang ornerythinchus@1:229/2 to All on Sunday, March 15, 2020 10:00:09
    From: thangolossus@gmail.com

    On Fri, 13 Mar 2020 08:39:38 -0000, slider <slider@anashram.com>
    wrote:

    LowRider wrote...

    Books About Next to Nothing
    by John Waters
    3 . 10 . 20

    <snip for brevity>

    John Waters is an Irish writer and commentator, the author of ten books,
    and a playwright.

    ### - great article + enjoyed reading it...

    although, would hotly debate it's the 'novel' that's dying rather than the >writers themselves running out of things to say? there having always been
    2 types of writers: the ones who write because they like writing as a
    perhaps clever + respectable means to earning a living, versus those who >write because they feel they actually have something to say of benefit to >humanity...

    and that accordingly, it's not the novel or art form itself that's dying,
    so much as a humanity that's running out of people with something they
    feel is important enough to need to be communicated as opposed to that of >just being merely entertained, that it's poets & deep thinkers with
    something to actually 'say' that we're running out of as the form itself >becomes increasingly diluted by trivial pursuits and 10-minute
    intermissions and break-times from a life of endless physical toil...

    that after 2 world wars the world has changed, and obviously not for the >better...

    Yep Brian the pessimist cunt at the fore here in all his bright and
    shining darkness.

    Mate, since the Japs were fried in late 1945, we haven't HAD another
    world war. That's something to celebrate.

    We have exterminated smallpox and almost elimated polio.

    We have transformed cancer into a curable disease in many many cases,
    from a former death sentence.

    We have increased the average life span of a person in the first world
    by about an additional 30 years.

    We have vastly improved conditions in the third world.

    These are a few things pessimistic welfare parasites like you
    conveniently forget. I'll say it again - fuck you. Get back on the
    taxpayer's teat.





    "Capitalism is the exploitation of man by man,
    whereas communism is the reverse"

    Old Russian joke

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