As I suggested eleven months ago in a Highbrow memorandum, there is a "risk" in taking William Blake too seriously. Further thoughts along these lines:
I find him inspiring, full of
anthropological and psychological insights, but I am also weary of
where he can lead his admirers. The more I read about him the more I am
skeptical. As a philosopher, he is not as rigorous as his exuberance might suggest. On Locke, for
example, his criticisms are over the top and he is dead wrong, and
then on top of his haughty and sanctimonious declamations he equivocates--perhaps he realized he was in over his head? A survey of his work and his "claims" demonstrates that he does a lot of
equivocating. Along these lines, somewhere he says he is not interested in being
precise or accurate, but is rather interested in "consistency"--I
take it that he means he is more interested in producing an "impressive composition" than he is in expressing philosophical understanding. I think
his claims concerning his superiority to Milton have deceived people.
He is no where near Milton as a scholar, a theologian, a historian, a
politician, a psychologist, a philologist, a philosopher, an anthropologist, a poet, a
professional, a well-connected man of the world, a revolutionary, or
what have you. Also, his stuff in The Marriage of Heaven and Hell about
Milton being of the devil's party is absurd... But many people take
this as a point of departure for claiming Satan is the hero of Paradise
Lost. There is a little too much Rousseau in Blake. At a
Blake conference someone more knowledgeable than me explained that as
the French Revolution went south and plunged into violence, Blake
stopped printing Marriage of Heaven and Hell. Blake was withdrawing from the moral relativism and claims
for the veracity of "passion" that Marriage espouses.
Also, the biographers present ample evidence that Blake wrote some pretty absurd
advertisements for his shows in which he made over-the-top claims about
himself, his genius, and his prophetic powers. People in the late-18th century art word
laughed at this horn blowing, and it seems to me their laughter was justified.
Friday, December 19, 2014
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4 comments:
Blake might be 'academically inaccurate,' but the center of his life was not some funny visionary doctrine, it was the Gospel. Consistenly with which, he, who could have become very rich, died in poverty instead, and happily so. (Some 10 years ago, having to restart my life from zero, I was psychologically helped and encouraged by his poems.) This imho means much more than publishing pretty essays On Whatever Nice Stuff.
I agree that Blake is very inspiring. My point is that inspiration only takes you so far.
And my comparisons aren't rooted in academics, but politics, aesthetics and common sense.
I know, I am hopelessly square. Bourgeoisie? No. But I reserve the right to believe lunacy is not a virtue. Moreover, it is a short walk from Blake to Thomas Hobbes, or Max Weber, at least as far as I can tell.
Hi, I am from Australia.
I agree with Dario.
In my opinion William Blake is highly under rated, as indeed are all "mystic" visionaries. Some of his stuff turned out to be very prophetic. He was one of the very few artists, poets and philosophers of his time who was not afflicted by the the baneful influence of Newton's Sleep.
If he were alive today he probably could have appreciated, or even written these essays or Artists Statement and the work of the Artist too.
www.aboutadidam.org/readings/transcending_the_camera/index.html
www.aboutadidam.org/readings/art_is_love/index.html
www.daplastique.com/reviews/gary_coates.html
And agreed with the Quantum world-view introduced via these references:
www.dabase.org/Reality-Itself-Is-Not-In-The-Middle.htm
http://spiralledlight.wordpress.com
Jesus & Quantum Reality
www.beezone.com/AdiDa/ScientificProof/christ_equals_emsquared.html
www.beezone.com/AdiDa/Aletheon/there-is_a_way.html
Profound somatic ontology
www.beezone.com/AdiDa/touch.htm
The Kingdom of God
www.dabase.org/up-5-3.htm
Thanks for the links, Anonymous!
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