Pullman’s Warning about Closed Societies

Philip Pullman

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Wednesday

You’re getting a lot on Philip Pullman’s Book of Dust trilogy this week because, after years of waiting for the final installment, I was finally about to finish the series and am still vibrating. Tomorrow I will be posting an essay on the author’s connection with high Romanticism, a knowledge of which helps us appreciate the depth of his project. 

For today, however, I want to apply an insight from The Rose Field to the white supremacist and Christian nationalist groups that are attempting to take over America and the Muslim clerics that, in Iran, have long held sway. Both are characterized by an intolerance for anyone who looks, thinks, or worships differently than they do, so much so that they are willing to brutalize, imprison, and kill anyone who fails to buckle under. It has been much, much worse in Iran than here, of course, but we can see in Iran’s history where our own rightwing would like to take us.

A similar madness has seized the world in which Lyra operates so that an autocratic church—a blend of intolerant Calvinism and Opus Dei Catholicism—wishes to shut down portals to other worlds. In doing so, it makes common cause with “the Men from the Mountains,” who are Islamic terrorists characterizing themselves as “the clean wind of God.” While nominally at odds with Christianity, they share the church’s suspicion of the portals. If these reactionary forces have their way, they will create closed systems, the ultimate goal of ideological purists.

Lyra invokes a mathematical principle to expose the flaw in their vision:

“In any system, there are things you know are true, but you can’t prove that they are if you only use arguments from inside the system…”

“Gödel’s theorem. How does that fit in?”

“Well, if that’s true, then that means If you find a system that seems perfect and complete, where you can prove everything—then you’re wrong. You’re not looking properly.”

A healthy system, she goes on to say, requires gaps:

We need the holes where one world opens up to another. A system isn’t complete unless there’s a hole in it. We need the things we can’t explain, things we can’t prove, or else we die of suffocation.

Other worlds, she continues

are necessary, and so are all the windows and doors and openings, to let the wind blow through all the world…That’s why all the authorities want to block up the openings, and that’s why we must fight to the death to stop them.

Immigration, multiculturalism, liberal engagement with the world—these are all ways of opening ourselves to that wind. It’s that or suffocate.

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Pullman’s Resounding Fantasy Defense

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Tuesday

My Christmas present this year was Philip Pullman’s The Rose Field, the last volume of his Book of Dust trilogy (which in turn followed the His Dark Materials (or Golden Compass) trilogy. Pullman fans like myself have been anxiously awaiting this book for a while, given that it was supposed to have appeared in 2022. Indeed, I would have stood in a bookstore line at midnight, like a Harry Potter fan, if that’s what it took to speed things up. Anyway, I’ve now read the Lyra Silvertongue’s story arc in its entirety, which has given me a clearer sense of Pullman’s project. Major spoilers ahead.

In the first trilogy, Pullman appears to be working through his beef with organized religion in general and with fundamentalist Calvinists and Opus Dei Catholics in particular. The Magisterium is a cross between Calvin’s Reformation and the Spanish Inquisition’s Counter Reformation. More generally, however, Pullman objects to those religions that demand that their members be mindless followers, allowing the church to dictate their thinking.

Key to his vision is “dust,” which appears, when all is said and done, to be consciousness. Since consciousness is associated with original sin (the tree of good and evil), the church regards it as evil. And because this dust is not detected on human beings until they become adults, it is associated with puberty and sexuality and declared sinful. 

Integral to this drama are the animal daemons, the most captivating element in Pullman’s fantasy. These function as some combination of animal spirit guide and the anima/animus side of ourselves that (according to Carl Jung) we must open ourselves to and accept if we are to find completeness. The daemons of children can be a variety of animals but, once their human has entered puberty, they settle upon a single form, a way of signaling that the basic structure of the individual has become more or less fixed. As they are thus connected with the end of childhood experience, Mrs. Coulter in Golden Compass seeks to render children perpetually innocent by separating them from their daemons, a gruesome experiment resulting in death for some, zombi existences for others.

In his second trilogy, Pullman widens his focus. His critique of repressive orthodox religion hasn’t ended—in fact, Magisterium has joined forces with fundamentalist Islamists, who share some of the same goals—but now he is interested in threats to the imagination as well as to independent thought. Thus we are introduced to three other villains: soulless materialism, empty skepticism, and predatory capitalism. The Magisterium finds ways to co-opt or make use of the first two, even though it has radically different goals. It doesn’t appear to have fully registered the threat represented by the third, however, which threatens to dissolve everything.

Let’s step back for a second. By attacking both religious orthodoxy and various forms of godless materialism, Pullman shows that he believes spiritual forces to be at work in the universe. Orthodox religion, unfortunately, cares more for power than in connecting people with those forces. As bad as the Magisterium is, however, at least it doesn’t threaten people’s daemons, which skepticism, blinkered science, and global capitalism do. 

Let’s look at each of these three in turn. Simon Talbot is the radical skeptic or Berkeleyan idealist who sees everything as a construct and nothing as real. (There are deconstructionists who think this way.) In his essay “On the Non-Existence of Daemons,” he contends,

From our earliest childhoods we are encouraged to pretend that there exists an entity outside our bodies which is nevertheless part of ourselves. These wispy playmates are the finest device our minds have yet developed to instantiate the insubstantial. Every social pressure confirms us in our belief in them: habits and customs grow like stalagmites to fix the soft fur, the big brown eyes, the merry tricks in a behavioral cavern of stone.

And all the multitudinous forms this delusion takes are nothing more than random mutations of cells in the brain.

Although Talbot himself has a daemon—a blue macaw—it seems perpetually nervous and we never see them interacting.

As an aside, I note that one of the funnier lines in the novel is when Talbot, who has been spying for the Magisterium, realizes that he is functioning as their tool or useful idiot:

He stood and shook hands, and Talbot gathered his cloak and his briefcase and left, obscurely humiliated, although he wasn’t sure how; but his philosophy soon made that feeling disappear.

If Talbot is slippery, able to bend his rhetoric in whatever way will serve him, materialist philosopher Gottfried Brande is rigid and entrenched. In his mind, daemons are irrational delusions that only the weak-minded believe in. When Pan attempts to initiate a conversation with him, he closes his eyes and ears and thinks he is being attacked by ghosts (even though he doesn’t believe in ghosts either). His own daemon, meanwhile, is a large dog tormented with misery, as is the case with any creature that is thoroughly neglected.

The daemons of the industrialists and capitalists in the book, meanwhile, are in zombie states. Essentially they are ignored by their humans, who deny their own complex humanity as they tear apart beauty, custom, and tradition on their way to maximizing profits. Their daemons, unable to converse with them or with anyone else, essentially shrivel up.

Lyra’s daemon Pan, who has settled into the form of a pine marten, sees her human falling under the spell of both skepticism and soulless materialism, schools of thought that she encounters as a student at Oxford. In the process, Lyra loses the ability to imagine, which she had as a child. Pan therefore separates from her—an agony to both of them—in order to find where her imagination has gone. Put another way, if Lyra is to be healthy and whole, she must reconnect with this side of herself that she has lost. And she must do so in a world that is increasingly hostile to the imagination.  

I’ll do a deeper dive into the imagination in a post later this week. Suffice it to say that Pullman draws on the great Romantic poets to articulate its power—I pick up allusions to Blake, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Shelley and Keats in the course of the novel—and that he sees it the way that 18th and 19th centuries saw it, a force that could change history. If Lyra is to save the world a second time (the first time her embrace of sexuality and sensuality saves both the living and the dead from orthodoxy), she will need to prevent religious fundamentalism, soulless materialism, empty intellectualism, and predatory capitalism from destroying the portals through which the imagination works.

It is through these portals that come Pullman’s own marvelous creations, so in a sense he is making a case for the urgency of his own fantasy. A genre that some dismiss as fanciful and others as ungodly (he contends) in actuality reveals a deep and urgent truth: we must have the rich products of the imagination if we are not to end up a dry, desiccated husks living meaningless lives. At the end of the novel, when the Magisterium appears to have closed the final portal, Lyra as artist finds a way to open it back up.

In the act of doing so, Lyra finally reconnects with Pan in a moment of ecstatic joy. This is what it feels to overcome inner alienation and step into the real and full self. Just as she provides us with one model of wholeness at the end of the first trilogy, so she provides us with another model of wholeness in the second.

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Lord Byron’s Call to Battle Tyrants

Nicole Renee Good

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Monday

When I heard the news about ICE murdering Nicole Renee Good in Minneapolis, followed by Border Patrol killing two more in Portland, Oregon, the lyrics of an old Phil Ochs protest song came to mind. While the blood of martyrs, most notably Emmitt Till eight years earlier, may have been the seed of the Civil Rights Movement, in the “The Ballad of Medgar Evers” the dispirited singer just sees another meaningless death: 

Too many martyrs and too many dead
Too many lies, too many empty words were said
Too many times for too many angry men
Oh, let it never be again

Evers died in June of 1963 and, as it turned out, there would be many more martyrs before Congress would pass significant legislation. Victims would include the four girls killed in the Birmingham church bombing and various voting rights activists. Although I was only twelve at the time, I remember sharing Ochs’s pessimism. It seemed like segregation would be with us always.

The good news is that both he and I were wrong. All those martyrs awakened even indifferent members of the public to the horrors of Jim Crow while spurring others to action. The ultimate result was the passage of the Civil Rights Act in 1964 and the Voting Rights Act in 1965, titanic achievements that changed the American landscape. While they didn’t eradicate white supremacism (as we know to our sorrow), they made possible many of the advances we have seen over the past 50 years.

Rather than stay with Ochs, then, here’s a lyric by Lord Byron, written after leaving comfortable surroundings in Italy to agitate for Greek independence from the Turks: 

The dead have been awakened – shall I sleep?
    The World’s at war with tyrants – shall I crouch?
The harvest’s ripe – and shall I pause to reap?
    I slumber not; the thorn is in my Couch;
Each day a trumpet soundeth in mine ear,
    Its echo in my heart…

The thorn of Nicole Renee Good’s murder will not allow sleep. As a recent Atlantic article put it, “What is now overt, in a way that it hadn’t been Wednesday morning, is that these agents are at war with the public, and have been for some time.” A trumpet is sounding and its echoes are reaching American hearts.

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In Ordinary Time, Search for Marvels

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Sunday

In the Episcopal Church we have entered the season of Epiphany, which apparently in the Roman Catholic Church is called “Ordinary Time.” According to W. H. Auden’s For the Time Being: A Christmas Oratorio, “the most trying time of all” is the interim between Christmas and Lent. “For the time being” (a phrase so commonplace as to be almost invisible) is a time of tepid emotions, humdrum compromises, and low expectations.

“The happy morning is over. The night of agony still to come,” the poet observes, adding “the time is noon.” Missing the intensity of Christmas, when “everything became a You and nothing was an It,” we find ourselves thrown back into unpleasant self-reflection.

As we return to household chores and workday commutes—back to the Aristotelian city, where everything is matter-of-fact measurable—the marvelous sense of having stepped out of time is fading. Rather, we now operate according to Euclid’s geometry and Newton’s mechanics. Auden asks whether great suffering would be preferable to this time when the Spirit doesn’t seem to be showing forth in force but is merely practicing his scales?  What could be less inspiring than these days when there are “bills to be paid, machines to keep in repair, irregular verbs to learn”? The streets appear to have shrunk and the office to have become more depressing, while the Christmas feast is but a distant memory and a clean-up job. Echoing Samuel Johnson’s refutation of Berkeleyan idealism, the poet tells us that “the kitchen table exists because I scrub it.”

For the Time Being: A Christmas Oratorio
III

Well, so that is that. 
Now we must dismantle the tree, 
Putting the decorations back into their cardboard boxes — 
Some have got broken — and carrying them up to the attic. 
The holly and the mistletoe must be taken down and burnt, 
And the children got ready for school. There are enough 
Leftovers to do, warmed-up, for the rest of the week — 
Not that we have much appetite, having drunk such a lot, 
Stayed up so late, attempted — quite unsuccessfully — 
To love all of our relatives, and in general 
Grossly overestimated our powers. Once again 
As in previous years we have seen the actual Vision and failed 
To do more than entertain it as an agreeable 
Possibility, once again we have sent Him away, 
Begging though to remain His disobedient servant, 
The promising child who cannot keep His word for long. 
The Christmas Feast is already a fading memory, 
And already the mind begins to be vaguely aware 
Of an unpleasant whiff of apprehension at the thought 
Of Lent and Good Friday which cannot, after all, now 
Be very far off. But, for the time being, here we all are, 
Back in the moderate Aristotelian city 
Of darning and the Eight-Fifteen, where Euclid’s geometry 
And Newton’s mechanics would account for our experience, 
And the kitchen table exists because I scrub it. 
It seems to have shrunk during the holidays. The streets 
Are much narrower than we remembered; we had forgotten 
The office was as depressing as this. To those who have seen 
The Child, however dimly, however incredulously, 
The Time Being is, in a sense, the most trying time of all. 
For the innocent children who whispered so excitedly 
Outside the locked door where they knew the presents to be 
Grew up when it opened. Now, recollecting that moment 
We can repress the joy, but the guilt remains conscious; 
Remembering the stable where for once in our lives 
Everything became a You and nothing was an It. 
And craving the sensation but ignoring the cause, 
We look round for something, no matter what, to inhibit 
Our self-reflection, and the obvious thing for that purpose 
Would be some great suffering. So, once we have met the Son, 
We are tempted ever after to pray to the Father; 
“Lead us into temptation and evil for our sake.” 
They will come, all right, don’t worry; probably in a form 
That we do not expect, and certainly with a force 
More dreadful than we can imagine. In the meantime 
There are bills to be paid, machines to keep in repair, 
Irregular verbs to learn, the Time Being to redeem 
From insignificance. The happy morning is over, 
The night of agony still to come; the time is noon: 
When the Spirit must practice his scales of rejoicing 
Without even a hostile audience, and the Soul endure 
A silence that is neither for nor against her faith 
That God’s Will will be done, 
That, in spite of her prayers, 
God will cheat no one, not even the world of its triumph.

The greatest enemy to faith in this season, Auden seems to be saying, is indifference. God is not going to step in and prevent the world as it is from triumphing if we let it.

It is up to us, then, to redeem time from insignificance—which is to say, we must seek the divine no less now than at other times of year. God’s presence shouldn’t be dependent on the season. 

To bolster our sagging spirits, Auden follows up section III of his Oratorio with a luminous section IV. He suggests a way to transform ordinary time into extraordinary time:

IV
CHORUS

He is the Way.
Follow Him through the Land of Unlikeness;
You will see rare beasts, and have unique adventures.

He is the Truth.
Seek Him in the Kingdom of Anxiety;
You will come to a great city that has expected your return for years.

He is the Life.
Love Him in the World of the Flesh;
And at your marriage all its occasions shall dance for joy.

Apparently, “Land of Unlikeness” is taken from a quotation of Saint Bernard and refers to the human soul’s unlikeness to God and unlikeness to its own pre-awakened state. Poet Robert Lowell, who also uses the phrase, has it symbolize how modern man, cut off from the sight of God, wanders through the land driven by greed and cruelty.

Despite the challenges, however, Auden’s wonderful images reassure us that magic and adventure can still be there for us. We have but to love Christ “in the World of the Flesh.” Even though we may dwell in “the Kingdom of Anxiety” (or “Age of Anxiety,” as Auden wrote three years earlier), by following the Truth we will come “to a great city that has expected your return for years.”

Expect a dance.

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Wheezles and Sneezles

E.H. Shepard, “Sneezles”

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Thursday

I’m flat on my back with a bad head cold (I think that’s what it is) so you’ll have to make do with minimal commentary on today’s poem. Christopher Robin, to whom I partially owe my name, has a case of the wheezles and sneezles and unfortunately I feel his pain. Also unfortunately, I lack his miraculous powers of recovery as I’m in the second day of this and see no sign of it letting up.

Wish me well. Achoo!

Sneezles
By A.A. Milne

Christopher Robin 
Had wheezles
And sneezles,
They bundled him 
Into 
His bed.
They gave him what goes
With a cold in the nose,
And some more for a cold
In the head.
They wondered
If wheezles
Could turn
Into measles,
If sneezles 
Would turn
Into mumps;
They examined his chest
For a rash,
And the rest
Of his body for swellings and lumps.
They sent for some doctors
In sneezles
And wheezles
To tell them what ought
To be done.
All sorts and conditions
Of famous physicians
Came hurrying round
At a run.
They all made a note
Of the state of his throat,
They asked if he suffered from thirst;
They asked if the sneezles
Came after the wheezles,
Or if the first sneezle
Came first.
They said, “If you teazle
A sneezle
Or wheezle,
A measle
May easily grow.
But humour or pleazle
The wheezle
Or sneezle,
The measle 
Will certainly go.”
They expounded the reazles 
For sneezles
And wheezles,
The manner of measles
When new.
They said “If he freezles
In draughts and in breezles,
Then PHTHEEZLES
May even ensue.”

Christopher Robin
Got up in the morning,
The sneezles had vanished away.
And the look in his eye
Seemed to say to the sky,
“Now, how to amuse them to-day?”

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For Jan. 6 and Venezuela, Read 1984

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Wednesday 

Yesterday David Corn of Mother Jones made perfect use of Nineteen Eighty-Four to explain what has happened to memories of Donald Trump’s January 6 coup attempt five years ago. His column sent me back to George Orwell’s dystopian masterpiece, where I discovered that the novel also provides insight into Trump’s motivations for invading Venezuela and threatening other countries in the western hemisphere.

First, January 6 amnesia. Here’s Corn: 

In 1984, George Orwell observed that a fascist state relies upon its ability to control—or obliterate—memory. As Winston Smith, the ill-fated protagonist, ponders the Party’s ability to manipulate reality and history, Orwell writes, “Everything faded into mist. The past was erased, the erasure was forgotten, the lie became the truth.” Another passage in the novel describes the Party’s relentless effort to construct the dominant narrative: “Every record has been destroyed or falsified, every book has been rewritten, every picture has been repainted, every statue and street and building has been renamed, every date has been altered. And that process is continuing day by day and minute by minute. History has stopped. Nothing exists except an endless present in which the Party is always right.”

Sound familiar?

In a small news item that shows how thorough the erasure has been, the GOP is refusing to mount a plaque honoring the Capitol police who protected legislators and staff from the mob of Trump supporters. 

Corn continues,

Like the Party in Orwell’s dystopia, Trump and the Republicans have sought to rewrite history and erase the stain of Trump’s profound betrayal of America. He pardoned the violent marauders, and his henchmen in charge of the FBI and Justice Department have fired agents and prosecutors who participated in the investigation and prosecution of these thugs. And Trump’s MAGA legions mounted a disinformation campaign that advanced various conspiracy theories—the FBI did it! Antifa did it!—to absolve Trump and his thugs.

Most important is that

an entire political party and tens of millions of American voters memory-holed Trump’s war on American democracy and his embrace of political violence. What is perhaps the gravest transgression ever committed by a US president has been airbrushed out of the picture and the perp allowed (by a majority of voters) to return to the scene of the crime. This is one of the most worrisome turns in American history. If our democracy cannot protect itself from such peril and repel such a dangerous threat, can it survive?

In a clear instance of Newspeak, some Republicans are even attempting to defend Trump’s incitement to riot as freedom of speech, a kind of “freedom is slavery” jiujitsu. Special counsel Jack Smith, who would have brought insurrection charges against Trump has our rightwing Supreme Court not intervened, refused to back down when questioned by Republicans. Corn reports,

A key exchange occurred when a Republican staffer (whose name is redacted in the transcript) asked, “The President’s statements that he believed the election was rife with fraud, those certainly are statements that are protected by the First Amendment, correct?” This has been a central contention of the Trump cult: You cannot prosecute Trump for stating his opinion that the election was rigged against him. But Smith fired back: “Absolutely not. If [these false statements] are made to target a lawful government function and they are made with knowing falsity, no, they are not.” Statements made to promote a fraud are not protected by the First Amendment.

Somewhat ironically sharing a name with Winston Smith, Jack Smith insisted that 2+2=4 as he reported to the Congressional committee:

“Our investigation developed proof beyond a reasonable doubt that President Trump engaged in a criminal scheme to overturn the results of the 2020 election and to prevent the lawful transfer of power,” Smith said at the start. He added, “Our investigation also developed powerful evidence that showed that President Trump willfully retained highly classified documents after he left office in January of 2021, storing them at his social club, including in a ballroom and a bathroom. He then repeatedly tried to obstruct justice to conceal his continued retention of those documents.”

And:

Smith patiently explained how Trump’s (alleged) crime related to January 6: “January 6th was an attack on the structure of our democracy in which over 140 heroic law enforcement officers were assaulted. Over 160 individuals later pled guilty to assaulting police that day. Exploiting that violence, President Trump and his associates tried to call Members of Congress in furtherance of their criminal scheme, urging them to further delay certification of the 2020 election.”

In its own attempts at erasure, the GOP-run committee refused to allow Smith to testify publicly (as he requested) and then released the report of the hearing at a time when it would be most overlooked—which is to say, on New Year’s Eve.

Now to the Venezuela invasion and to the threats Trump is making against Colombia, Cuba, Canada, and Greenland. In Nineteen Eighty-Four there are three countries that have absorbed the rest of the world. Oceania, Eurasia, and Eastasia are involved in forever wars whose purpose, in part, is to keep their populations impoverished and docile. While Orwell doesn’t get everything right, we can see our own situation in how the three countries use showy wars to distract the public from extreme wealth inequality:

But it was also clear that an all-round increase in wealth threatened the destruction — indeed, in some sense was the destruction — of a hierarchical society. In a world in which everyone worked short hours, had enough to eat, lived in a house with a bathroom and a refrigerator, and possessed a motorcar or even an airplane, the most obvious and perhaps the most important form of inequality would already have disappeared. If it once became general, wealth would confer no distinction. It was possible, no doubt, to imagine a society in which wealth, in the sense of personal possessions and luxuries, should be evenly distributed, while power remained in the hands of a small privileged caste. But in practice such a society could not long remain stable. For if leisure and security were enjoyed by all alike, the great mass of human beings who are normally stupefied by poverty would become literate and would learn to think for themselves; and when once they had done this, they would sooner or later realize that the privileged minority had no function, and they would sweep it away. In the long run, a hierarchical society was only possible on a basis of poverty and ignorance. 

In short, after passing a Big Beautiful Bill that elevates billionaires while hammering everyone else, Trump attempts to take the public mind off the economy by invading Venezuela and promising a Donroe Doctrine reminiscent of the 19thcentury—a world where the United States in fact becomes Oceania.

The irony is that, before Trump, the United States commanded more influence that any of the three superpowers in Nineteen Eighty-Four, what with NATO in Europe and alliances with those countries worried about China in the Pacific Rim. But I guess Orwell’s point is that an increase in global prosperity brought about by this political stability was bad for the elites. Kleptocrats prefer chaos. 

Further thought: After writing this piece, I noted an Anne Applebaum article in the Atlantic where she too references the three countries in Nineteen Eighty-Four and makes the same point about Trump weakening America:

If America is just a regional bully, after all, then our former allies in Europe and Asia will close their doors and their markets to us. Sooner or later, “our” Western Hemisphere will organize against us and fight back. Far from making us more powerful, the pursuit of American dominance will make us weaker, eventually leaving us with no sphere, and no influence, at all.

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Why Aren’t More Kids Reading?

Walter MacEwen, Young Girl Reading by the Window

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Tuesday

“Reading is a vice,” Adam Kirsch provocatively proclaims in a recent Atlantic article. Intending to push our buttons, he argues that reading means “cultivating a relationship with the world that, by most standards, can seem pointless and counterproductive.” Since my blog and my book assert just the opposite, today’s post is my response.

Observing that reading is on the decline—Kirsch notes that, in 2023, “just 14 percent of 13-year-olds read for fun almost every day”—he observes that educators are taking the wrong tack to reverse the trend:

If people won’t read books because they enjoy it, perhaps they can be persuaded to do it to save democracy. The International Publishers Association, which represents publishers in 84 countries, has spent the past year promoting the slogan “Democracy depends on reading,” arguing that “ambitious, critical, reflective reading remains one of the few spaces where citizens can rehearse complexity, recover attention and cultivate the inner freedoms that public freedoms require.”

Philosopher Martha Nussbaum makes the most eloquent case for this position, contending that reading great literature can produce good citizens and good voters. Kirsch, however, says that it doesn’t matter whether or not this is true (as I believe it is). The problem is that such arguments

don’t actually persuade anyone to read more, because they misunderstand why people become readers in the first place. Telling someone to love literature because reading is good for society is like telling someone to believe in God because religion is good for society. It’s a utilitarian argument for what should be a personal passion.

Then he makes his “vice” argument:

It would be better to describe reading not as a public duty but as a private pleasure, sometimes even a vice. This would be a more effective way to attract young people, and it also happens to be true. When literature was considered transgressive, moralists couldn’t get people to stop buying and reading dangerous books. Now that books are considered virtuous and edifying, moralists can’t persuade anyone to pick one up.

And further on:

Reading is not profitable; it doesn’t teach you any transferable skills or offer any networking opportunities. On the contrary, it is an antisocial activity in the most concrete sense: To do it you have to be alone, or else pretend you’re alone by tuning out other people. Reading teaches you to be more interested in what’s going on inside your head than in the real world.

Kirsch’s point here reminds me of an article by my dissertation director, J. Paul Hunter, who in “The Loneliness of the Long Distance Reader” notes that many husbands in the 18th century were threatened by the million-word novel Clarissa because their wives would disappear into it for days, neglecting household responsibilities. 

Kirsch goes on to argue that young people are more likely to read novels if their elders attack them, citing Madame Bovary, Ulysses, and Lady Chatterley’s Lover as instances.

I won’t say this is entirely wrong. My eldest son read Huckleberry Finn on his own in high school—he even wrote an essay on it–after reading a Washington Post column contending that it shouldn’t be taught in high school as teenagers couldn’t understand the irony. Justin wanted to prove that he could get the irony. But Kirsch has it mostly backwards: teenagers don’t read books because adults condemn them. Rather, adults condemn books because teenagers like them. Samuel Johnson fulminated against the wildly popular Tom Jones because he feared it made vice look attractive, and German parents attacked the similarly popular Sorrows of Young Werther because they feared it would lead their teens to commit suicide. Similarly, kids aren’t reading Judy Blume novels or The Perks of Being a Wall Flower because Moms for Liberty are out to ban them—although that being said, knowing that the books are under attack can add to their allure.

But okay, let’s say that official approval doesn’t help matters. This is a point that Horace made back in 19 BC, noting in Ars Poetica that “the tribes of the seniors” (by which he means grumpy old men) “rail against everything that is void of edification” whereas “the exalted knights” (young men) disregard poems which they find to be “austere” (preachy and moralistic). But Horace doesn’t agree with Kirsch that reading should only be seen as a “private pleasure” or that we should promote books by labeling them transgressive and dangerous. Whereas Kirsch’s standard is whether a book will draw us in so much that we’ll read it under the covers with a flashlight, Horace, after agreeing, adds that it should also be instructive. The best poets, he wrote, “deliver at once both the pleasures and the necessaries of life.”

By focusing exclusively on delight—and by attacking utilitarians who think that literature can make us better people—Kirsch ignores the instructive side. It seems to matter little to him that the examples he gives are books that render a person mad (Don Quixote’s chivalric romances) or so discontented with life as to lead to suicide (Emma Bovary’s 18th century Harlequin romances). He appears to be saying that reading’s only purpose is to immerse us.

It seems of no concern to him, for instance, that the book that turns Emma’s head–Jacques-Henri Bernardin de Saint-Pierre’s 1788 novel Paul and Virginia–is schlock. Emma is besotted with “the little bamboo-house, the nigger Domingo, the dog Fidele, but above all of the sweet friendship of some dear little brother, who seeks red fruit for you on trees taller than steeples, or who runs barefoot over the sand, bringing you a bird’s nest.” Such a work, however, fails to move Emma beyond her shallow, materialist desires.

And what about two 20th century works that have pulled readers in. Ayn Rand’s Atlas Shrugged so engaged Speaker of the House Paul Ryan that he used it as his inspiration to slash America’s social safety net. Jean Raspail’s Camp of Saints, meanwhile, continues to fuel rightwing xenophobia with its racist depictions of dark-skinned immigrants. Now that is reading as a vice, instances of books ruining lives. If Kirsch used these examples rather than Cervantes and Flaubert, he’d have to complicate the nature of delight and write a less edgy article. 

As I learned from writing my book, there has always been a tension between literature as entertainment and literature as instruction. Whenever one side has had the upper hand, the other has struck back. When 19th century utilitarians like John Stuart Mill argued for literature as a social good, movements like art for art’s sake countered that literature should be an end itself. Kirsch is replicating that debate in his article.

My own view is that teachers and librarians have a role to play in introducing to young readers to works that will both entrance and educate them and that, by listening to their pupils’ needs, they can generate the enthusiasm that both Kirsch and the International Publishers Association desire. I think reading aloud in class, putting less emphasis on testing, and ignoring rightwing attacks on beloved young adult novels will help in the endeavor.

Allowing kids free rein in uncensored libraries is also essential. Reading specialist John Holt has written that the more kids read, the more discriminating they become and that quantity is more important than quality at the beginning. Early in my childhood I devoured the abysmally written Hardy Boy and Bobbsey Twin series but eventually started looking for more variety. I watch my own grandchildren veering between formulaic dreck and substantive books without consciously noticing the difference. They’ll gravitate naturally towards the better stuff the more they read and will be readers for life.

Oh, and thanks to their encounters with books, they’ll also grow up to be complex and reflective citizens. I saw it in myself and in my three sons, and I’m beginning to see it in Alban, Esmé, Etta, Eden, and Ocean.

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Blake on Venezuelan Kidnapping

Maduro, Trump

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Monday

Whenever the United States intervenes to topple the corrupt ruler of another country, I always think of William Blake’s “The Grey Monk.” Not that the parallels are exact since the Grey Monk is complaining about actual injustice whereas there’s no sign that Trump cares that Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro is corrupt and stole an election. Trump has made no mention of protecting democracy, focusing instead on Venezuela’s vast oil reserves—which is not surprising since Trump too is corrupt and attempted to steal an election.

Even in those cases where the United States has claimed to support democracy, however, its interventions have been disastrous. Is the world better off because we invaded Afghanistan, Iraq, and Libya, even though all three were run by genuinely evil men (as is the United States at the moment)? In all three, citizens were suffering as they suffer in Blake’s poem.

“I die, I die!” the Mother said, 
“My children die for lack of bread. 
What more has the merciless Tyrant said?” 
The Monk sat down on the stony bed. 

The monk is a Christ figure who bears witness to tyranny’s oppression and feels in his bones the misery of the people: 

The blood red ran from the Grey Monk’s side, 
His hands and feet were wounded wide, 
His body bent, his arms and knees 
Like to the roots of ancient trees. 

His eye was dry; no tear could flow: 
A hollow groan first spoke his woe. 
He trembled and shudder’d upon the bed; 
At length with a feeble cry he said: 

“When God commanded this hand to write 
In the studious hours of deep midnight, 
He told me the writing I wrote should prove 
The bane of all that on Earth I lov’d. 

My Brother starv’d between two walls, 
His Children’s cry my soul appalls; 
I mock’d at the rack and griding chain, 
My bent body mocks their torturing pain. 

The poem then articulates the fantasy that violence can avenge “the wrongs thy Children feel.” Blake may once have had this fantasy himself, being a supporter of the French Revolution, but he became disenchanted when it descended into the reign of terror:

Thy father drew his sword in the North, 
With his thousands strong he marched forth; 
Thy Brother has arm’d himself in steel 
To avenge the wrongs thy Children feel.

Violence, however, is not the solution. Only prayer, empathy, and sacrifice—the tear of understanding, the sigh of compassion, the groan of the martyr–“can free the world from fear”: 

But vain the Sword and vain the Bow, 
They never can work War’s overthrow. 
The Hermit’s prayer and the Widow’s tear 
Alone can free the World from fear. 

For a Tear is an intellectual thing, 
And a Sigh is the sword of an Angel King, 
And the bitter groan of the Martyr’s woe 
Is an arrow from the Almighty’s bow.

And now for the lines which have been going through my head for the past two days after hearing about the American air strikes and the kidnapping of Maduro: 

The hand of Vengeance found the bed 
To which the Purple Tyrant fled; 
The iron hand crush’d the Tyrant’s head 
And became a Tyrant in his stead.

Okay, so Trump started out as a tyrant rather than turning into one. Nevertheless, Blake’s point still applies: military power such as that possessed by the United States can turn a country into a monster, regardless of its claim to be “leader of the free world.”

It’s why the real source of American strength has been USAID, global alliances, AIDS outreach, the Peace Corps, Climate Change leadership, multiculturalism, liberal immigration policy, health research, and other such programs. Tyrants don’t understand this.

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