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Eduardo C's avatar

"I used to say when I was teaching that the "meaning" of a novel is the novel itself, beginning with the first word and ending with the last word. That's what the author wrote, didn't they? If they wanted to write a six-sentence pithy summation of event and theme, don't you think they would have? It sure seems a whole lot easier. Thus, in some very real sense, the "meaning" of a novel is composed of every single word used to tell that story. No more and no less. There is a way in which it cannot be reduced or condensed, because to begin dropping words and scenes and events, the way one does if one is to offer a summary on any level, is to begin changing the meaning of the whole."

THANK YOU. Most of the people in my life are not art-oriented in the slightest and this is something that I struggle to convey to them. I wonder if it's one of those things that either you get or you don't. Whenever someone asks me if a film is 'good', it makes me queasy. I just don't know how to even begin to answer a question like that.

"We have spent several decades thinking that glorifying the STEM disciplines will bring about economic nirvana; what we're now seeing is that if you do not teach people about ethics and morality and art and literature and history, they will tend to not have a conception of what is involved in living a good life. They will tend to not be able to think about what it takes to create a good society, or about the difficulties and responsibilities involved in actually governing themselves."

This 100%, but I would even take things further. Even just economically speaking, the "STEM will save us" thing has always been fool's gold. It's a strategy for increasing the amount of labor that is available to corporations, and lowering salaries.

It's difficult to quantify how much of an effect the generalized apathy towards ethics, morality, history and the arts has in a society, but I suspect that the effect is noticeable in the midterm and absolutely devastating in the long-term. My alma mater in the US recently shut down the entire gender studies department (among others) for budgetary reasons and I wrote one of those entirely useless STRONGLY WORDED LETTERS trying to make some of these same points, but what are you gonna do? When it rains, it pours.

"Art and literature, history and philosophy, coming to terms with the lowest and highest aspects of our own nature, trying to see them clearly – these are no trifling matters to be condescendingly cast aside while we teach our kids and ourselves how to count money and build machines.

They are the way we come to an understanding of who we are and what we value.

And it's by fighting for this, resolutely, on every front, that we might be able to put the world back into joint."

You make me want to write. Or make a film. Maybe the very act is a form of resistance.

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