Harp
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 8,508
- Location
- Chicago, IL US
Maguire said:I read Kahlil Gibran's The Prophet about an hour ago...
Any thoughts?
Maguire said:I read Kahlil Gibran's The Prophet about an hour ago...
carter said:I just finished reading the 1937 edition of Last Flight by Amelia Earhart.
Harp said:Searching for John Boyer's recommended,
Three Outsiders: Pascal, Kierkegard, Simone Weil
by Diog Allen.
Just wandering through the subzero PhD postmodernism thesis jungle. :whip:
Doran said:And Harp, I am sorry about the postmodernism jungle ...
I shall be happy when we all decide (as I have already done) that we have learned what we can from the "linguistic turn" and then declare the "linguistic turn" kind of over-exaggerated and useless and move on to other things...
Harp said:Consentiere amicus.
ut Virgil inquit, "Non ragionam di lar, ma guarda e passa"
Inferno, iii
Ever read Saul Bellow's posthumous tribute to Allan Bloom, Ravelstein?
Doran said:I haven't, but I have read and found interesting Bloom's Closing of the American Mind, and I also have found his protegée Camille Paglia interesting.
Bloom himself was a student of Leo Strauss, and although Strauss is beloved by the neocons these days, no less a giant than Robert Bellah told me in a personal communication that that's not the Strauss he knew.
Harp said:I devoured Closing, it had an effect on me. I searched all over
Hyde Park for Bloom; whom had skipped Chicago for Paris.
One of my profs, George Anastaplo, a friend of Bloom's, hated Closing,
was openly sarcastic, and ripped a paper of mine to shreds....lol
I've read some of Camille Paglia, wouldn't mind meeting her.
Bloom wrote highly of Strauss, and whatever other views may be
regarding Closing's content, his book shook things up at Chicago.
Harp said:I devoured Closing, it had an effect on me. I searched all over
Hyde Park for Bloom; whom had skipped Chicago for Paris.
One of my profs, George Anastaplo, a friend of Bloom's, hated Closing,
was openly sarcastic, and ripped a paper of mine to shreds....lol
I've read some of Camille Paglia, wouldn't mind meeting her.
Bloom wrote highly of Strauss, and whatever other views may be
regarding Closing's content, his book shook things up at Chicago.
John Boyer said:I, too, am a great fan of The Closing of the American Mind by Allan Bloom. I just recently loaned by old tattered first edition to a young high school english teacher, who has since requested to keep the book (this is good news). I ordered a new copy; I hate to be without it. Where should I start with Camille Paglia? John
John Boyer said:I, too, am a great fan of The Closing of the American Mind by Allan Bloom. I just recently loaned my old tattered first edition to a young high school english teacher, who has since requested to keep the book (this is good news). I ordered a new copy; I hate to be without it. Where should I start with Camille Paglia? John
Harp said:I had a similar experience with a favorite college student/waitress.
Sadly, inquisitive kids who read these days are few; or perhaps this is
just my impression, but she had never heard of Bloom, which I found
surprising since his Closing and its resultant campus furor is not
that dated.
I would echo Doran's lead regarding CP. I must confess I regret not
paying her more attention.