Stephen Crane
In the Desert
In the desert
I saw a creature, naked, bestial,
Who, squatting upon the ground,
Held his heart in his hands,
And ate of it.
I said, "Is it good, friend?"
"It is bitter - bitter", he answered,
"But I like it
Because it is bitter,
And because it is my heart."
the content of this poem by Crane has always been a mystery to me. The imagery plays the imagination towards the fantastic, but the fact that this is an allegory is plain. But the exact representation of these various tropes are left to the reader to interpret.
One could abandon oneself to analysis or simply take in the fact that there is a raw emotion here waiting to chew on your brain cells.
Maybe.
It was soon after the Fatwa against Salman Rushdie was released and when Cat Stevens publicly supported this the group decided to leave it out.
One of Natalie Merchants more thrilling vocal performances.
From Huckleberry Finn
CHAPTER XXI
...but you have to ROFL the fact that he managed to piece together misquotations from so many of his works.To be, or not to be; that is the bare bodkin
That makes calamity of so long life;
For who would fardels bear, till Birnam Wood do come to Dunsinane,
But that the fear of something after death
Murders the innocent sleep,
Great nature's second course,
And makes us rather sling the arrows of outrageous fortune
Than fly to others that we know not of.
There's the respect must give us pause:
Wake Duncan with thy knocking! I would thou couldst;
For who would bear the whips and scorns of time,
The oppressor's wrong, the proud man's contumely,
The law's delay, and the quietus which his pangs might take,
In the dead waste and middle of the night, when churchyards yawn
In customary suits of solemn black,
But that the undiscovered country from whose bourne no traveler returns,
Breathes forth contagion on the world,
And thus the native hue of resolution, like the poor cat i' the adage,
Is sicklied o'er with care,
And all the clouds that lowered o'er our housetops,
With this regard their currents turn awry,
And lose the name of action.
'Tis a consummation devoutly to be wished.
But soft you, the fair Ophelia:
Ope not thy ponderous and marble jaws,
But get thee to a nunnery -- go!
Identified so far : Hamlet, Romeo and Juliet, Macbeth and I'm way too lazy to look for others so if you spot one just comment. Those first three are fairly easy to spot, but please cite/quote which line.
If you are interested in the entire chapter...
Huckleberry Fomm Chapter XXI
Yes it's been a hiatus of sorts. Blustering about stumbleupon does that to you.
And there never was a clear purpose for this, not that such is necessary. But that fact that Zip showed up means that this may at least provide me with something
So some purpose will have to be created for this thing.
Maybe I'll review every goddamn movie I ever see?
(sounds good)
You may think that all this mumbo-jumbo about Postmodernism was just something thought up in the middle of the previous century. It isn't, though this currently popular oft-misused word seems to be getting all the attention. So here I am to deal with this (not so very) pressing issue.
(Very) Early Classical Philosophy on the Problem of Knowledge
It all goes back to Thales and Pythagoras (and I'm not trying to repeat the entire history of Western Philosophy here) who started two independent, though related, streams of thought. Thales introduced the idea that knowledge could flow merely from observation, and that mystical elements were an unnecessary feature (he didn't actually say that but it was implied) of any system of organizing knowledge. Pythagoras (who didn't care jack about Thales) had something else in mind - there is a real world of numbers floating about that represent true reality, and that these had mystical properties. You may be thinking 'huh?" but you are wearing your modernist hat when you think that because a great many people still believe in numerology and such and so it hasn't gone away (in fact it’s constantly being revived.)
Knowledge Warfare Begins
This brings us to that little sub-title up there about out two favorite Athenians. Plato was very wise about many things, so people took him seriously when he suggested that the reality we deal with day to day, is not the essential reality, but merely a imperfect representation of Idea. So the orange you are eating is not the real orange (I love oranges by the way) but just a translation of an idealized orange (something you can’t eat) which actually exists in a metaphysical sense, and defined by certain 'oranginess' qualities such as color, perfect sphericalness (how could it be 'ideal' otherwise), sweetness (sourness you may think as well) and a whole host of etceteras that define the term. Aristotle (who was Plato's friend despite their age and philosophical differences) said, "Rot!" (In Greek of course.) There is no 'idealized' orange. We simply observe enough fruit and categorize them by certain qualities, and those that conform to our mental category of 'orange-like' qualities qualify to be included in a list of things called 'oranges'.
The Longest Dialectic
As you might imagine, these two diametrically opposed views of knowledge led to much argument, one which in the interim between the slow decline of the Roman Empire and it's eventual collapse eventually led to the victory of Platonism (or Neo-Platonism as we call it today), wherein the world was looked upon as a series of ascension from the gross imperfection of everyday reality up to the height of a transcendent and perfect One. A reasonable compromise was reached by Augustine of Hippo in his 'The City of God' where he allowed for divine perfection, as well as our own imperfection, and allowed for Science to extend knowledge without necessarily rejecting the metaphysical origins of knowledge. Despite this however, Western Thought took a decidedly metaphysical approach to everything, a state of affairs which ensured that Plato would be remembered and Aristotle virtually forgotten.
Fast Forward to the Late Middle Ages & Renaissance
Thomas Aquinas wasn't the first to revive Aristotle, but his 'Summa Theologiae' (controversial at the time) brought church thinking in line with an Aristotelian viewpoint, by essentially stating that the world as we see it (knowledge) is not inconsistent with the divine, it being our perceptions of the divine that are at fault. So any observation of nature is how things actually are, not the other way around. This was also cause for much argument, especially those who saw the Bible as Essential Truth, and those unhappy with the Catholic Church's adoption of Aquinas as canonical rebelled to the point that a Protestant movement (and nailing of theses to church doors) occurred. But by and large, mainstream thought took a decidedly Deterministic turn and the progress of Science a faster pace, leading eventually to Modernism.
So what exactly is that Enlightenment Thing Anyway?
Immanuel Kant's formulation of epistemology (we're modern now so let's use that word) considered the ideas underlying Enlightenment and was expressed in his concept of Transcendental Idealism, that what we know of things is how they appear to us, rather than as an idealized concept ('I could have told you that!' said Aristotle's ghost.) Arthur Schopenhauer tried to mix-up the issue by including a concept of Will into the equation, but science as a whole simply ignored him.
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel argued with him on the point and described the history of knowledge as a dialectical process.
Friedrich Nietzsche ignored them both centered his thoughts on an entirely humanistic perspective, putting human intellect as the center of knowledge.
Meanwhile, the technological revolution went its merry way, discovering new knowledge and inventing useful things.
Ah! Modernism
While we tend to view Modernism as an Aesthetic movement, we must recognize that this movement had its roots in the Modernist attitude in Philosophy. This point of view was exemplified by Bertrand Russell who changed epistemology and attempted to systemize thought ("I thought I already did that with my Logic!" said Aristotle's ghost). Extending Aristotle (bleh! to you oh ghost) Russell’s 'Principia Mathematica' was essentially a mathematical sense of how we organize numbers and attempted an axiomatic approach to the problem. This in itself was a noble (though failed) Deterministic approach to the problem, but did extend the Aristotelian concept into modern terms. Ludwig Wittgenstein went even further in taking an axiomatic approach to understanding Language in his 'Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus'. This is important because this work (considered on of the most important works of 20th Century Philosophy) would lead directly towards our current postmodernist path.
Structuralism, Post-structuralism, the advent of the Postmodern viewpoint and Why A Tomato Soup Can is Art
Because of Wittgenstein, the argument about knowledge became an argument about Language. This is where we start to get Postmodernist in our view of things, since Knowledge is expressed as Language, the proper study of which extends to a study of Symbols; an essential perspective introduced by Ferdinand de Saussure as Semiotics. Structuralism was extended by the Post-structuralism of Jacques Derrida, Michel Foucault and Jean Baudrillard.
Derrida introduced the concept of Deconstruction as a means of analyzing our linguistic and cultural artifacts. Foucault toppled our brief flirtation with metaphysical Existentialism by ignoring it completely in his "The Order of Things" but also demolished any possible approach towards Determinism by studying the organization of knowledge not in itself but by how concepts like knowledge change with history and how this relates to and is expressed by Power (stabbing Hegel in the heart with his own weapon as it were.) Baudrillard extended Foucault be saying that the proper study of symbols needs no relationship to anything materialistic (Smith and Marx – Bang!) but allowed for an Object-Value system on multiple approaches that resulted in structural semiology.
The essential postmodern argument stands both Aristotle and Plato on their respective heads. So tomatoes become neither essential nor merely observable, but are perceived by us in cultural terms, that is, we cannot ignore our cultural baggage in any classification system, and the effects of culture on our thinking becomes the essential reality. Enter Warhol and paintings of Campbell Soup cans, a statement of essential reality as symbolism.
So What Was That About Tomatoes Again?
This path led directly to Jean-François Lyotard who
looking again at Wittgenstein realized that Kant's Enlightenment was just so
much philosophical hoo-hah. In his seminal 'The Postmodern Condition: A Report
on Knowledge' (1979), Lyotard essentially demolished any remaining claims to
Universal Knowledge and said the word Postmodern for the first time in the
currently poplar sense there.
So here we are today.
Though I chose this (rather attractive) image to illustrate the site, this Brazilian photo-artist (photographer seems a bit lame) uses herself as a model for an eclectic assortment of images in various themes. Wonderland, her largest (and most interesting) collection pays homage to the works of Lewis Carrol.
You must like Philosophy to begin with if you want to experience this novel fully.
Or you can watch reality TV while vegging out.
A Disclaimer
This is a creative writing testbed for styles
and ideas that may eventually find publication.
Where tagged as 'Fiction' the content of this site represents creative work and may be assumed as fiction without explicitly declaring it to be so. No actual person’s are or will be referred to here except inadvertently and may not represent the true views of the author as expressed through any of the characters. If any person feels they are being referred to unfairly then they may post a comment here to the author so that proper steps may be taken to rectify this if necessary.
If you are unhappy with this then you may try something along the lines of shuffling off your mortal coil.
It's up to you.


No. But I do enjoy reading it. read more
on A (Very) Brief History of Western Thought Leading to Our Current Postmodernist Conundrum