Daemonyx contest #2: We have a winner!

July 30, 2006 at 10:55 pm (Daemonyx)

And once again it’s Andrew. Well done! The challenge was to listen to my song “Road to Olduvai” at Daemonyx’s MySpace page and identify a musical motif that I built into it. Andrew correctly identified the tune as the Dies Irae. For that, he will receive a copy of the 1998 edition of editor Stephen Jones’ Mammoth Book of Best New Horror. So again, congratulations, Andrew.

Incidentally, the Dies Irae or “Day of Wrath” is one of the most famous ancient Latin hymns. It probably dates from the 13th century and was originally sung in Gregorian fashion. The words talk about the end of the world and God’s final judgment on earth and humankind, and are probably based on some Hebrew prophetic writings. More than any other song in the Western musical tradition, the Dies Irae is the one that has come to connote apocalyptic doom, gloom, and despair. It’s easy to see why, considering what the words say. Here’s one English translation of the first two stanzas, which paint a typically dire picture of Old Testament-flavored divine wrath:

Day of wrath and terror looming!
Heaven and earth to ash consuming,
David’s word and Sibyl’s truth foredooming!

What horror must invade the mind,
when the approaching judge shall find,
and sift the deeds of all mankind.

This touches on a theme or meme that has occupied and even devoured my attention for a great many years, namely, the possible horrific nature of God or the divine. One of the main places where this meme can be found exerting an influence in the biblical tradition is in the type of thing represented by the Dies Irae: the frequent shrieks and lamentations over the fact that God Is Coming and this spells nightmare for the whole world. Eh? What? The full arrival of God in his unveiled glory is an occasion for horror? “And they shall cry to the mountains, ‘Fall on us and hide us from the face of him!’” and all that. Of course mainstream Jewish and Christian theology have always framed this in terms of the idea of god’s holiness, which is too awesomely pure to be endured by any aspect of a sinful world. But in a case like this where divine holiness is conceived as eliciting a horror that seems not so far removed from what’s associated with the primal chaos monsters of biblical and other mythologies, or even from Lovecraft’s cosmic monsters — well, suffice it to say that I’m more than a little intrigued, as evidenced by my many writings about such things in my fiction collection Divinations of the Deep and elsewhere.

But returning to the subject at hand, over the centuries the Dies Irae has been incorporated by a veritable army of composers into musical works of various types. One of its most famous uses is in Mozart’s Requiem, but he’s only one of many classical giants who have tapped this vein. The song has also appeared in many movie and game soundtracks.

You can find out a lot more via a simple Google search. The Wikipedia article about it is particularly informative with its history of the song and its appearances and uses. But I must say I was surprised to see that in the article’s extensive and useful catalog of the song’s many cameo appearances, it failed to mention two of my favorites: first, the use of the theme in composer Basil Poledouris’ brilliant soundtrack to the film Conan the Barbarian, where it plays distinctly as a violin section that soars over the pounding attack music in the opening village slaughter sequence; and second, on Mannheim Steamroller’s album Fresh Aire II, where an analog synth plays the theme in the song “The Second Door” (if I’m remembering correctly).

Of course, if you want to hear a “pure” — and exquisitely beautiful — version of the original Gregorian chant, you can just click here. In “Road to Olduvai” I used only the music that goes with the very opening words, “Dies irae, dies illa,” and repeated it several times.

Oh — and “Road to Olduvai” is so named because I was thinking about Richard Duncan’s Olduvai Theory when I composed it. Look it up. Consider the possible end of the world, or at least of industrial civilization, in our lifetime. For real. If you want to read my song in light of this apocalyptic theory and in terms of sections and structure, then the opening portion might be interpreted as the “gearing up” and launching of technological/industrial civilization. The body of the song might represent all the variations and permutations that this civilization has assumed in its exuberant ascendance. The slowdown at the end might represent the winding down of things with the death of the power grids, leading to a kind of crash. And then the return, in the final few seconds, of the shimmering opening techno-flavored theme might signal the birth of something new and unknown after the big crash. But then again, people who make creative works are never the final or even the best interpreters of their meanings.

* * *

Note that I’ll be incommunicado for the next few days. Real life is intruding. No more blog updates for the rest of the week, probably. So until next time, be well.

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Interview with Thomas Ligotti

July 29, 2006 at 9:45 am (Authors, Books)

I’ve just finished conducting an interview with Thomas Ligotti. This is something I’ve meant to do for years, and Tom was most generous with his time over the past week as we bounced emails back and forth. I hope you enjoy the results.

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Daemonyx contest clues, plus MySpace troubles

July 26, 2006 at 3:07 pm (Daemonyx)

An online friend contacted me today to let me know that he had visited the MySpace page for Daemonyx but couldn’t get the music to load. Obviously, it’s hard to participate in a contest based on answering a question about a song when you can’t hear the song.

Apologies to all of you who have encountered the same problem. My timing for this contest might have been bad, or perhaps my choice to house the music for it at MySpace, which appears to have developed some sort of neurological disease over the past week. Lots of weirdnesses have been cropping up there whether you’re just browsing or trying to log into your own account.

So if you tried to listen to the music but couldn’t, I urge you to write to me at mgcardin@hughes.net so I can send you an mp3.

* * *

As for the contest itself, yesterday I reviewed the page I created for it and noticed that I had somehow left out some important information. I’ve fixed it now, but here it is again anyway: What you’re listening for in the song is the ancient melody that I incorporated into it beginning at around seven and a half minutes and lasting for 30 or 40 seconds. The melody appears first with orchestral instruments and choir and is then doubled for a few bars by a lead electric guitar. Your challenge is to Name That Tune.

I also promised to give some clues if nobody had guessed the answer by Wednesday, so here they are:

  • The tune comes from a famous thirteenth century Latin hymn.
  • The words (which naturally don’t appear in my instrumental song) talk about the end of the world and God’s final judgment on earth and humankind.
  • A huge number of classical composers have written their own variations of it or have worked it into other compositions, including Mozart, whose Requiem features a famous setting of it.
  • It has featured prominently in many movie and game soundtracks, including quite a few horror and horror-related ones. For example, Wendy Carlos based her music for the opening sequence to Kubrick’s The Shining on it.

So there you have it. I hope this helps. The prizes await the winner!

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New DAEMONYX contest - win free stuff!

July 24, 2006 at 1:36 pm (Daemonyx)

I decided it’s about time for me to hold another contest to promote my musical project Daemonyx. Visit the contest page for details. Up for grabs this time are two movies and a book (your choice of any one of them). Good luck!

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Hit counters and haunted couches

July 22, 2006 at 9:45 pm (General Comments)

Well, the hit counter here at The Teeming Brain broke the thousand mark this weekend. I’m gratified to see how much interest the blog has generated. Thank you to everybody who has stopped by in the past six weeks or so since I started this thing, whether you’ve commented or not. I appreciate your patronage (or indulgence, as the case may be).

I’ve only had a single experience in the past where I was involved in something that turned into a really enormous traffic generator. That was back in the spring of 2003 when I mentioned to my brother-in-law that somebody had sold a “ghost in a jar” on eBay for over $50,000, and he and I started joking that we should think of something we could milk like that. Then we both looked at each other and realized that we had something almost as good: a haunted Victorian fainting couch that his mother owned. She had experienced a ghostly encounter associated with the couch many years before, after buying it at an antiques store in Eureka Springs, Arkansas, the popular tourist town that is famed not only for its natural hot springs, restored 19th century hotels, live passion play, and bohemian arts atmosphere, but also for its many supposed hauntings.

More recently my brother-in-law’s daughter, age three, had spontaneously started acting disturbed by the room where the couch was kept. Some of the coincidences between the older and younger lady’s stories were indeed striking. My little neice, who had never been told about the supposedly haunted couch, kept talking about a “lady” in the room with it. Over a decade earlier, it had been a nocturnal vision of a luminous Victorian woman wearing a dress and large hat that had terrified her grandmother.

So after kicking the idea around for awhile — and after I had done some soul searching to determine whether my involvement in such a scheme would violate my conscience — we created a sellers’ account at eBay and wrote up an item description for the couch that told the history of the family’s experiences with it. It wasn’t necessary to embellish the facts at all since the real story was so interesting (and since I had announced that I would absolutely refuse to exaggerate the truth). I wrote the actual text for the auction and framed it as if my brother-in-law were telling the story in the first person.

The auction received quite a few page hits during its first few hours. As I’ve since learned, there’s quite a large crowd of people who regularly peruse the items in eBay’s “paranormal” section, so this alone would have meant a lot of traffic. But what really got the ball rolling was the white orb that appeared hovering over the couch in one of the photos we posted:

Haunted Couch 1
Amazingly, neither of us noticed it until an excited eBayer sent us a message saying, “You can see the ghost!” And then the emails started pouring in as self-proclaimed psychics, ghost hunters, and laypeople interested in paranormal stuff pointed out the same thing. Quite a few of them claimed that in addition to the clearly-visible orb, they could also make out a portion of a woman’s face in the wood on the back of the couch. I was surprised to find that when I had another look, I could see the same thing. But I don’t think I would have seen it unless it had first been pointed out to me, which speaks volumes.

Of course we found the whole thing interesting and exciting, so we started posting daily additions to the item description in the form of further information about the couch, listings of people’s questions and comments along with our responses, and new photos. Interestingly enough, many of the further photos we snapped showed more orbs, as in the following, which achieved a truly weird effect:

Haunted Couch 2
A couple of them even showed ectoplasmic-looking streaks or trails:

Haunted Couch 3
This last type of photo proved especially exciting to the cybercrowd who had gathered to watch the auction, since, as we were informed by more than one person, mere lens flares will never show apparent motion like that, and since the camera we were using didn’t have a shutter speed control that would allow the intentional creation of such effects. I didn’t doctor up any of the photos in any way, other than to decrease the brightness or increase the contrast on a couple of them in order to render the visual artifacts more visible. So I didn’t know, and still don’t know, what to make of it, although I think a combination of lens flares and dust motes illuminated by the flash bulb makes a likely explanation.

Oh — one weirder fact was that these visual oddnesses would only show up in photos that I had taken myself. Three other family members shot multiple photos but couldn’t get any orbs or trails, whereas they showed up in about a third of the ones I took. When we mentioned this fact in one of our auction updates, more than one person wrote to say that that ghosts and spirits will often “sit” for some people but not others. Such claims always trigger my natural skepticism, which in these kinds of cases feels like a sharp distaste or disgust. But of course I didn’t say anything publicly. And of course I didn’t have any explanation for the photos anyway.

Our little auction was rapidly becoming a phenomenon. But the floodgates didn’t really open until mid-week, about three days into the seven-day auction, when my brother-in-law convinced me to call Coast to Coast AM, the long-running, massively popular, paranormal-themed radio show that had formerly been hosted by Art Bell and had recently gained a new host in George Noory. Astonishingly, I got through on the first try and ended up describing the entire couch story, along with the news about our eBay auction, to George on the air.

The next morning I awoke to find that our auction had been linked to from the main page for Coast to Coast AM’s website. (You can still see the link on the archived page for that night’s show, although the page that it points to is of course long since dead.) Millions of people around the world listen to that show and visit the site. To make a long story short, thousands of hits per day started pouring in to the auction. By the time it ended — and yes, someone indeed bought the couch, although only for the modest sum of $1500, which was about what it was worth as an antique — the auction had amassed over 25,000 hits and become one of eBay’s top 50 most viewed auctions of all time. When I did a little looking around on the web, I found people talking about the couch on ghost hunter websites. When I created a separate webpage for additional photos, it received nearly 2000 hits.

So that’s all related to nothing in particular. It’s just that I can’t think about the issue of web traffic and page counters without remembering that bizarre and rather fun experience. (And to think that I posted a recent essay about anti-intellectualism. James Randi would be ashamed of me.)

So thanks again for visiting The Teeming Brain. I’m having a good time with it and I hope you are, too. I invite you to visit again and visit often. l promise I’ll do my best to continue entertaining us both, in a more substantial sense of the word than what’s current in most pop entertainment.

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Movie news: THE HANDS OF SHANG-CHI

July 20, 2006 at 9:55 am (Movies)

I just stumbled across the news that a movie adaptation of one of my favorite comic books is in the works. The announcement appears at IMDB, The Movie Insider, and elsewhere. One of the most detailed announcements I’ve found is at cinematical.com. The working title for the project is The Hands of Shang-Chi, and the one-sentence plot synopsis says, “Based on the Marvel Comics hero, a young Kung-Fu master learns his father is the world’s worst criminal.” The screenwriter is listed as Bruce McKenna, who at one site is quoted as giving a tiny amount of further information: “A young kung fu master learns his father is the worst criminal in the world and the drama becomes ‘The Godfather’ in reverse, ‘because Shang Chi doesn’t want to be like Michael Corleone,’ said McKenna. ‘There’s this contemporary world of Chinese billionaire industrialists, but it’s a bit like the Wild West or the robber baron era because the influence of the mafia is so strong.’

What has me more psyched than anything is that Ang Lee and Woo-ping Yuen are attached to the project. Woo-ping is of course the near-legendary action choreographer (and sometime director) behind some of the best martial arts movies in history, including Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, the Matrix movies, the Once Upon a Time in China series, and scores of others.  (He also choreographed the action for the Charlie’s Angels movies and Quentin Tarantino’s Kill Bill duology, which may fall into a less-exalted category, but not because of his contributions.) He’s simply the man. Ang Lee, for his part, entered martial arts territory when he directed Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon. And of course he has also directed The Hulk, The Ice Storm, and several other fine films. So this bodes well and portends that The Hands of Shang-Chi will turn out to be something special.

The only thing that worries me is the sliding date that’s been attached to it. Apparently it was first announced in Variety all the way back in 2003 and, as reported by the cinematical.com article, has been an on-again, off-again affair from the beginning. Presently the announcement for it is dated 2006 or 2007 depending on where you look. So I certainly hope the project’s very long journey through development hell doesn’t indicate that it’s going to end up as a miscarriage.

Incidentally, if you’re unfamiliar with Shang-Chi, there’s a very informative Wikipedia article about the comic. (Wikipedia has rapidly become my second brain, as indicated by the numerous links to it that I’ve peppered throughout my Teeming Brain posts. The recent, highly publicized report by Nature magazine that announced Wikipedia’s science articles compare favorably in their accuracy to Britannica’s science articles has helped to assuage my guilt feelings over this.) And a great site titled The Shang Chi Chronology features a summary of the entire series.

The short version is that the character of Shang-Chi first appeared in 1973 in Special Marvel Edition #15 and then returned in the next couple of issues, and proved so wildly popular that he was given his own series. The popularity of a kung fu-based character was of course bound up with the explosion of popularity that Asian martial arts received in America during the 1970s. ABC’s Kung Fu series was tops on television. Bruce Lee achieved immortality by dying in July of 1973, followed by the posthumous release and roaring success of his only English-language movie, Enter the Dragon, on August 24 (my third birthday, incidentally). Shang-Chi’s debut came just four months later, in December.

Moreover, Shang-Chi arose not only as an attempt to cash in on the craze, but as an actual creative and business child of it all. As recounted in the Wikipedia article, “The character was conceived in late 1972 when Marvel Comics acquired the comic book rights to Sax Rohmer’s pulp novel villain Dr. Fu Manchu while they also held the rights to the Kung Fu television program. Instead of producing a straight adaptation of either source, the decision was made to combine them. The result was Shang-Chi, a master of Kung Fu, who was introduced as the (previously unheard of) son of Fu Manchu.”

In his appearance, personality, and fighting style, the character of Shang-Chi was largely a hybrid of Bruce Lee and Kwai Chang Caine (the protagonist of the Kung Fu TV series), a fact that seems eerily appropriate given that Lee developed the Kung Fu series with producer Fred Weintraub for ABC and was slated to play Kwai Chang until the network scrubbed him, fearing that American audiences weren’t ready for an Asian leading man on primetime television, and cast David Carradine in the role instead. Shang-Chi fought like Bruce Lee and engaged in frequent inner philosophical reflections like Kwai Chang, who frequently recalled words of wisdom that he had received during his training at the Shaolin Temple in China.  Artistically, philosophically, sociologically, and thematically, it was quite sophisticated, as were so many other Marvel comics from the same period.

I loved every bit of it, and this love played out in various ways. From age 11 to 17 I studied Japanese goju-ryu, a martial art that mingles hard-style Japanese karate with a few softer-styled kung fu techniques. During the same period I ate up the Shang-Chi comics series, Bruce Lee’s movies, and the Kung Fu series, which I watched religiously when it played in reruns on WGN every Saturday (I had been too young to remember or appreciate the series’ original run). That’s why I’m so eager to see the new Shang-Chi movie come to completion. A number of my childhood loves have already seen successful big-screen treatments in recent years, including Spider-Man and The Lord of the Rings. A great Shang-Chi movie would make a wonderful extension of this trend.

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High tide for anti-intellectualism

July 18, 2006 at 4:44 pm (Authors, Books, Society & Culture)

This post is in response to a query somebody made at the Shocklines forum. In various conversations at that board, people have recently been mentioning a supposed surge of anti-intellectualism in America today. One person responded with the following:

“I’ve been hearing a lot about this ‘wave of anti-intellectualism’. I’m curious about it.

“All artistic ventures aren’t immediately dismissed by the general public. Memento springs to mind; it was certainly a different sort of film, but it also had reasonable legs as a movie which didn’t even break 600 screens, and its DVD sales seemed pretty strong. While it’s undeniably true that the most innovative movies do not have corresponding box office receipts (hey, Shallow Hal beat out Memento by a long shot) it’s also true that this is not a new thing. I don’t recall a time when the most innovative films racked up the best box office.

“What is the root of the anti-intellectualism argument?”

I could go on and on about this topic all day, and would end up thanking you for the provocation to vent. But I’ll restrain myself, relatively speaking. Apologies in advance if I sound smotheringly didactic at points. I’ve recognized that fact about my writing for years but have thus far been unable to overcome it.

I think the basic idea behind the anti-intellectualist argument presents at least two aspects. One of these is the simple recognition that “dumb is in.” I remember seeing Saturday Night Live’s Tina Fey mention this in an interview a couple of years ago. When the interviewer brought up the subject of Ms. Fey’s reputation for intelligence and wit, she jumped on the opportunity to express serious concerns about the fact that in American pop culture, which for several decades has been synonymous with (prepackaged) youth culture, it’s become hip to be stupid. She talked about kids, and especially girls, feeling pressured to suppress their intelligence and appear stupid and vapid in order to fit in. And she contrasted this with her parents’ generation, when the counterculture was in full swing and it was hip to be über-intelligent and well-read so that you could effectively criticize the American government or the radical commie sympathizers or whomever, depending on your stance.

So this is the first and easiest-to-get-at arm of the argument, this pointing-out of what might be called the Bill & Ted syndrome, or the Harry & Lloyd syndrome, or the Jesse & Chester syndrome. Especially among the under-thirty crowd, there’s a cultural pressure to act stupid even if you’re not, and this is hostile to intelligence.

The deeper and more extended aspect of the argument represents a kind of medical diagnosis of a peculiarly American pathology that has now infected the rest of the world by means of cultural imperialism — that is, via the aggressive exporting of a lifestyle centered around consumerism and mass media entertainment. The idea is that America is in the throes of a systemic crisis that is largely economic in nature, the effects and implications of which have inevitably spun off into a detrimental effect on the American intellectual character. Then there’s also the related recognition of America’s longstanding bias in favor of what might be called “down home-ism” and against anything perceived as highfalutin, a tendency that has been alternately muted and dominant at various periods in the nation’s history. People who point to current anti-intellectual trends like to say the tendency has now moved dramatically and perhaps definitively to the fore, with youth culture’s “dumb is in” phenomenon representing just the tip of the iceberg.

Please pardon me while I let other people do much of my thinking and speaking. When I first started writing this reply to your query, I was just out of bed and my brain was quite foggy. (I’ve never been able to fathom how or why so many writers find this time of day to be the best for doing their work, since I myself can barely put two words together until mid-morning.) So I’m just going to offer some quotations from, summaries of, and links to a number of books and articles whose ideas have amplified, shaped, and/or coincided with my own.

1. The Twilight of American Culture by Morris Berman was published in 2000 and advanced the argument that America is pretty much running parallel to late-empire Rome. Berman’s argument hinges on four factors that he thinks are primarily signaling and bringing about the collapse of America. One of these is the decline of intelligence. And when he says “collapse,” he’s not just talking moral or social degeneration; he’s talking about an actual, all-out cultural collapse and transformation into an entirely different type of social-political-cultural entity, again as in ancient Rome.

I loaned my copy of his book to a friend for the summer so I don’t have it on hand to quote from, but here’s one online reviewer’s partial summary of Berman’s analysis of America’s current intelligence level: “The statistics about the ignorance of American adults cited by Morris Berman in The Twilight of American Culture are stunning. Roughly 60 percent of us have never read a book of any kind, and only 6 percent read as much as one book a year. One hundred twenty million are illiterate or read no better than at a fifth-grade level. A majority of us cannot say what a molecule is, don’t understand that the earth revolves around the sun each year and don’t know that Germany was the enemy of the United States in World War II. Many of us cannot even locate ourselves on a world map.”

Of course, this familiar litany of statistics doesn’t really identify anti-intellectualism so much as ignorance. Ignorance is surely a guaranteed result of anti-intellectualism, but it’s not the same thing. Anti-intellectualism itself is an attitude, an outlook, a posture towards knowledge and the world that tends to glorify crudeness, brutality, stupidity, vapidity, and the like, while holding a complementary attitude of disdain toward anything that smacks of subtlety, sophistication, and nuance. It especially refuses to recognize or tolerate subtle qualifications and distinctions between intellectual positions and points of view. In this regard, Berman wrote a follow-up article to his book titled “Waiting for the Barbarians,” which appeared at The Guardian. Here’s a relevant excerpt in which he summarizes the intellectual situation of fifth century Rome and cites it as a near parallel to contemporary America:

“For centuries, the aim had been to hellenise or romanise the rest of the population — to pass on the learning and ideals of Greco-Roman civilisation. But as the economic crisis deepened [that is, the crisis formed by Rome's overextending itself with a bloated standing army and massive government bureaucracy, and also by runaway inflation and a shrinking middle class], a new mentality arose among the masses, one based on religion, which was hostile to the achievements of higher culture.

“In addition, as in contemporary America, the new ‘intellectual’ efforts were designed to cater to the masses, until intellectual life was brought down to the lowest common denominator. This, according to the great historian of Rome, M.I. Rostovtzeff, was the most conspicuous feature in the development of the ancient world during the imperial age: primitive forms of life finally drowning out the higher ones.

“For civilisation is impossible without a hierarchy of quality, and as soon as that gets flattened into a mass phenomenon, its days are numbered. ‘The main phenomenon which underlies the process of decline,’ wrote Rostovtzeff, ‘is the gradual absorption of the educated classes by the masses and the consequent simplification of all the functions of political, social, economic, and intellectual life, which we call the barbarisation of the ancient world.’

“Religion played a critical role in these developments. By the third century, if not before, there was an attitude among many Christians that education was not relevant to salvation, and that ignorance had a positive spiritual value (an early version of Forrest Gump, one might say).

“The third century saw a sharp increase in mysticism and a belief in knowledge by revelation. Charles Radding, in A World Made By Men, argues that the cognitive ability of comparing different viewpoints or perspectives (quite evident in Augustine’s Confessions, for example) had disappeared by the sixth century.

“Even by the fourth century, he says, what little that had survived from Greek and Roman philosophy was confused with magic and superstition (much as we see in today’s new age beliefs or in the so-called philosophy section of many bookstores). Only a warped version of the classical culture of antiquity remained.

“‘Short of the mass destruction of the libraries,’ writes Radding, ‘a more complete collapse of a classical civilisation is hard to imagine.’ And so the proverbial lights went out in western Europe. The parallels with contemporary America are not identical, but they do seem disturbing. The factors of hype, ignorance, potential bankruptcy and extreme social inequality are overwhelming, and they make a kind of spiritual death — apathy and classicist formalism — ultimately unavoidable.”

I find it revealing and unfortunate that a great many people grow livid with anger when they encounter this type of argument because they perceive it as hideously elitist and snobbish. I want to ask them: What’s wrong with elitism if the word refers to a hierarchy that forms naturally and spontaneously based on differentiations in quality, in whatever field of endeavor? The alternative is a Harrison Bergeron-type world, a situation like the ones Ayn Rand wrote about in Atlas Shrugged and Anthem.

Tangentially, I just discovered that Berman had a new book published three months ago, Dark Ages America: The Final Phase of Empire, which extends his argument from the former book. I also just discovered that he’s started a blog to accompany the book. The New York Times savaged the book in its review. Berman has posted an interesting response in which he basically calls the Times piece a hatchet job and frames it as further evidence of the decline of authentic, reasoned journalism in America.

2. A 2000 article by Todd Gitlin for The Chronicle of Higher Education titled “The Renaissance of Anti-Intellectualism” makes for interesting reading. Gitlin refers repeatedly to Richard Hofstadter’s 1963 book Anti-Intellectualism in American Life, which outlined the anti-intellectual tendencies that have always been a part of America’s collective personality, in order to point out that contemporary Bush-dominated America has plunged into the anti-intellectual abyss. Gitlin’s updating of Hofstadter’s analysis goes far deeper than the relatively insignificant (but highly entertaining) issue of Bush’s well-known butchering of the English language, to focus on the more substantial issue of his overall intellectual posture: “None of the easy charges against Bush [after his somewhat ridiculous showing in the 2000 presidential campaign] touched upon his more substantial incapacities: his lack of curiosity about the world (he has scarcely traveled outside the United States and Mexico City) and the ample evidence that he does not reason. During the debates, he was unresponsive to questions the answers to which he had not memorized. In public appearances, he spoke in sloganistic lists, not arcs. It would seem that, precisely because his thinking was disordered, the governor lost track of his points, so that items came out nonsensical, as in: ‘Drug therapies are replacing a lot of medicines as we used to know it.’”

The most significant portion of Gitlin’s summary of post-Hofstadter American anti-intellectualism focuses on the rise of “faux cerebration,” i.e., fake intellectualism, which gives the appearance of real thinking while in truth being nothing of the sort, and thus does incalculable damage to the people who are hoodwinked into believing that such behaviors as name-calling, demonizing, scapegoating, simplifying, and polarizing constitute actual, critical thought. “A central force,” writes Gitlin, “boosting anti-intellectualism since Hofstadter published his book has been the bulking up of popular culture and, in particular, the rise of a new form of faux cerebration: punditry. Everyday life, supersaturated with images and jingles, makes intellectual life look hopelessly sluggish, burdensome, difficult. In a video-game world, the play of intellect — the search for validity, the willingness to entertain many hypotheses, the respect for difficulty, the resistance to hasty conclusions — has the look of retardation.

“Again, there is a continuity to the earlier nation. Long before Hollywood or MTV, Tocqueville observed that Americans were drawn to novelty, turnover, and sensation. How much more so in a world of cascading, all-pervasive images, where two-thirds of children grow up with 24/7 access to television in their bedrooms, where video and computer games flourish, where mobile phones guarantee access when and where one chooses, where the right to be instantly entertained and in-touch seems to preoccupy more of the citizenry than the right to vote and to have their votes properly counted.

“There is a seeming paradox that Hofstadter did not anticipate, but would have appreciated. In the torrent of popular culture, there emerges more talk about public affairs than ever before — virtually nonstop talk about political concerns, debate on burning questions available at all hours of the day and night. But the talk that fills the channels amounts mainly to signals, gestures, and stances — not reasoning.

“Television reporting and punditry are the tributes that entertainment pays to the democratic ideal of discourse. The political talk does not, in the main, evaluate or research: It ‘covers.’ When CNN’s Washington bureau chief can say casually, ‘The Texas governor hammered home some of his major themes, including Social Security,’ this is shorthand, but not only shorthand — it is a surrogate for reasoning. Positions are signaled — candidates ‘position themselves’ — rather than defended; no defending is demanded of them. A topic is a ‘theme’ is a ‘position’ is an ‘issue’ is news.

“All the more so does punditry diffuse a debased version of intellectual life, cornering intellect in the name of chat, operating by a sort of Gresham’s law of discourse. Punditry is concerned with reviewing performances, rating ‘presidentiality,’ itemizing themes, relaying and interpreting spin, not thoughtfully assessing politicians’ claims, evaluating their evidence, judging their reasoning. To assess the quality of what politicians say would require intellectual work for which the pundits do not demonstrate competency. Pundits are hired, rather, for the facility and pungency of their presentations and the ferocity and acceptability of their opinions.”

This phenomenon of course forms a complement to youth culture’s exaltation of stupidity. On the one hand, you have all the kids who think it’s so cool to be idiots that they’ll actively squash their own intelligence. On the other hand, you have the mass media’s faux version of intelligent discourse saturating the collective consciousness, so that anybody who dares to indulge in intellection has this for his or her model. The result is a lose-lose situation.

3. The above line of thought works nicely in tandem with an essential book, the late Neil Postman’s Amusing Ourselves to Death (1985), in which the author pointed out that the mass media, and in particular television, has contributed to a transformation in American and world culture that is positively Huxleyan in its implications, by devolving every aspect of public discourse — i.e., the ongoing conversation we have with ourselves, by means of which we develop and share our understanding of who we are and what the world is — into entertainment. As Postman effectively put it, the problem is not that television presents entertaining subject matter, but that it presents all subject matter as entertaining. And since it has displaced written texts to become our primary medium for knowing, remembering, and thinking about the world (a claim which Postman devotes several chapters to supporting), the damage is vast, as seen in Gitlin’s identification of fake intellectualism, the illusion that one is thinking. For example, Postman calls television news “disinformation” in the exact sense that the term is used by government intelligence agencies: not false information but “misleading information — information that creates the illusion of knowing something but which in fact leads one away from knowing. In saying this I do not mean to imply that television news deliberately aims to deprive Americans of a coherent, contextual understanding of their world. I mean to say that when news is packaged as entertainment, that is the inevitable result. And in saying that the television news show entertains but does not inform, I am saying something far more serious than that we are being deprived of authentic information. I am saying we are losing our sense of what it means to be well informed. Ignorance is always correctible. But what shall we do if we take ignorance to be knowledge? . . . I do not mean that the trivialization of public information is all accomplished on television. I mean that television is the paradigm for our conception of public information. As the printing press did in an earlier time, television has now achieved the power to define the form in which news must come, and it has also defined how we shall respond to it. In presenting news to us packaged as vaudeville, television induces other media to do the same, so that the total information environment begins to mirror television.”

I submit that this description of the situation, which was scarifyingly accurate in 1985, has only become more relevant in the succeeding two decades. Nor is its significance limited to America; as Benjamin Barber has pointed out in his famous characterization of the post-modern American ideology as “McWorld,” American corporate consumerism has now been exported so successfully to so many different countries that a huge portion of the world population has been and is being Americanized in its consumption and entertainment activities. This has in fact become America’s de facto foreign policy. So it’s anti-intellectualism and eternal life in a plastic paradise of disposable consumer goods for all.

4. Mark Edmundson’s 1997 essay for Harper’s on “The Uses of a Liberal Education” specifically as “Lite Entertainment for Bored College Students” points out that in the universities, where one would generally hope the tide of anti-intellectualism would find its nemesis in the form of intellectual passion and a strong drive to develop critical thinking skills, nothing of the sort is happening. Or at least it’s far from being the dominant attitude. According to Edmundson, not only have American universities been invaded by the consumerist entertainment culture that prevails outside their walls, but they have actively capitulated to it. By transforming themselves into marketing machines on a mission to woo potential students based on this cultural mindset, the universities have begun a slow suicide. Writing in this context, Edmundson describes his conflicted emotions upon receiving positive evaluations from his students at the end of a semester course on Freud. His words resonate with Postman’s and Gitlin’s:

“I have to admit that I do not much like the image of myself that emerges from these [evaluation] forms, the image of knowledgeable, humorous detachment and bland tolerance. I do not like the forms themselves, with their number ratings, reminiscent of the sheets circulated after the TV pilot has just played to its sample audience in Burbank. Most of all I dislike the attitude of calm consumer expertise that pervades the responses. I’m disturbed by the serene belief that my function — and, more important, Freud’s, or Shakespeare’s, or Blake’s — is to divert, entertain, and interest. Observes one respondent, not at all unrepresentative: ‘Edmundson has done a fantastic job of presenting this difficult, important & controversial material in an enjoyable and approachable way.’

“Thanks but no thanks. I don’t teach to amuse, to divert, or even, for that matter, to be merely interesting. When someone says that she ‘enjoyed’ the course — and that word crops up again and again in my evaluations — somewhere at the edge of my immediate complacency I feel encroaching self-dislike. That is not at all what I had in mind. The off-the-wall questions and sidebar jokes are meant at lead-ins to stronger stuff — in the case of the Freud course, to a complexly tragic view of life. But the affability and the one-liners often seem to be all that land with the students; their journals and evaluations leave me little doubt.

“I want some of them to say that they’ve been changed by the course. I want them to measure themselves against what they’ve read. It’s said that some time ago a Columbia University instructor used to issue a harsh two-part question. One: What book did you most dislike in the course? Two: What intellectual or characterological flaws in you does that dislike point to? The hand that framed the question was surely heavy. But at least it compels one to see intellectual work as a confrontation between two people, student and author, where the stakes matter. Those Columbia students were being asked to relate the quality of an encounter, not rate the action as though it had unfolded on the big screen.

“Why are my students describing the Oedipus complex and the death drive as being interesting and enjoyable to contemplate? And why am I coming across as an urbane, mildly ironic, endlessly affable guide to this intellectual territory, operating without intensity, generous, funny, and loose?

“Because that’s what works. On evaluation day, I reap the rewards of my partial compliance with the culture of my students and, too, with the culture of the university as it now operates. It’s a culture that’s gotten little exploration. Current critics tend to think that liberal-arts education is in crisis because universities have been invaded by professors with peculiar ideas: deconstructionism, Lacanianism, feminism, queer theory. They believe that genus and tradition are out and that P.C., multiculturalism, and identity politics are in because of an invasion by tribes of tenured radicals, the late millennial equivalents of the Visigoth hordes that cracked Rome’s walls.

“But mulling over my evaluations and then trying to take a hard, extended look at campus life both here at the University of Virginia and around the country eventually led me to some different conclusions. To me, liberal-arts education is as ineffective as it is now not chiefly because there are a lot of strange theories in the air. (Used well, those theories can be illuminating.) Rather, it’s that university culture, like American culture writ large, is, to put it crudely, ever more devoted to consumption and entertainment, to the using and using up of goods and images. For someone growing up in America now, there are few available alternatives to the cool consumer worldview. My students didn’t ask for that view, much less create it, but they bring a consumer weltanschauung to school, where it exerts a powerful, and largely unacknowledged, influence.”

Speaking personally, what disturbs me the most about Edmundson’s self-description is that it hits close to home. In fact, it describes me perfectly. For the past four years I’ve taught high school English and have given exactly the same performance that Edmundson says he has given, right down to the urbane tone, the endless affability, and the frequent use of humor as an attempted lead-in to deeper things. My students have almost unanimously loved me. I’m hugely popular at that school. Is this necessarily a good thing?

5. In an article from late 2005 titled “Lack of Curiosity is Curious,” J. Peder Zane describes a growing dearth of intellectual curiosity among college students. It’s a brief article that’s well worth reading in full, and that is variously infuriating and disheartening depending on one’s current mood. Here are some excerpts:

“Over dinner a few weeks ago, the novelist Lawrence Naumoff told a troubling story. He asked students in his introduction to creative writing course at UNC-Chapel Hill if they had read Jack Kerouac. Nobody raised a hand. Then he asked if anyone had ever heard of Jack Kerouac. More blank expressions.

“Naumoff began describing the legend of the literary wild man. One student offered that he had a teacher who was just as crazy. Naumoff asked the professor’s name. The student said he didn’t know. Naumoff then asked this oblivious scholar, ‘Do you know my name?’

“After a long pause, the young man replied, ‘No.’

“‘I guess I’ve always known that many students are just taking my course to get a requirement out of the way,’ Naumoff said. ‘But it was disheartening to see that some couldn’t even go to the trouble of finding out the name of the person teaching the course.’

“The floodgates were opened and the other UNC professors at the dinner began sharing their own dispiriting stories about the troubling state of curiosity on campus. Their experiences echoed the complaints voiced by many of my book reviewers who teach at some of the nation’s best schools.”

“. . . [I]n the past, ignorance tended to be a source of shame and motivation. Students were far more likely to be troubled by not-knowing, far more eager to fill such gaps by learning. As one of my reviewers, Stanley Trachtenberg, once said, ‘It’s not that they don’t know, it’s that they don’t care about what they don’t know.’

“This lack of curiosity is especially disturbing because it infects our broader culture. Unfortunately, it seems both inevitable and incurable.”

Zane goes on to attempt an explanation of what might motivate young people to be this way. He focuses on the post-modern explosion of information that makes the available pool of knowledge seem overwhelming, and also on America’s obsession with job and career as coupled with a sense of economic insecurity brought about by the rise of globalization. The result, he says, has been the transformation of education, as traditionally conceived, into job training. And the culture is failing miserably to respond in a way that would fill the gap: “In comforting response to these exigencies, our culture gives us a pass, downplaying the importance of knowledge, culture, history and tradition. Not too long ago, students might have been embarrassed to admit they’d never heard of Jack Kerouac. Now they’re permitted to say ‘whatever.’ When was the last time you met anyone who was ashamed because they didn’t know something?

“. . . In fairness, the assault on high culture and tradition that has transpired since the 1960s has paid great dividends, bringing long overdue attention to marginalized voices.

“Unfortunately, this new freedom has sucker punched the notion of the educated person who is esteemed not because of the size of his bank account or the extent of his fame but the depth of his knowledge. Instead of a mainstream reverence for those who produce or appreciate works that represent the summit of human achievement, we have a corporatized and commodified culture that hypes the latest trend, the next new thing.

“A fundamental truth about people is that they are shaped by the world around them. In the here and now, get-the-job-done environment of modern America, the knowledge for knowledge’s sake ethos that is the foundation of a liberal arts education — and of a rich and satisfying life — has been shoved to the margins. Curiously, in a world where everything is worth knowing, nothing is.”

Again, I can confirm these claims from my several years of experience in a public school classroom.

6. Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451 summarizes and totalizes all of the above. The scene where he has Captain Beatty explain to a bedridden Montag the social history that led to a dystopian “paradise” of book burning, zombified ignorance, and vapid entertainment is so relevant to present anti-intellectual and pro-idiocy trends that it’s still amazing after half a century: “The fact is, we [i.e., the book-burning firemen] didn’t get along well until photography came into its own. Then — motion pictures in the early twentieth century. Radio. Television. Things began to have mass. . .. And because they had mass, they became simpler. Once, books appealed to a few people, here, there, everywhere. They could afford to be different. The world was roomy. But then the world got full of eyes and elbows and mouths. Double, triple, quadruple population. Films and radios, magazines, books leveled down to a sort of pastepudding norm, do you follow me?

“. . . Classics cut to fit fifteen-minute radio shows, then cut again to fill a two-minute book column, winding up at last as a ten- or twelve-line dictionary resume. I exaggerate, of course. The dictionaries were for reference. But many were those whose sole knowledge of Hamlet. . . was a one-page digest in a book that claimed: now at last you can read all the classics with your neighbors. Do you see? Out of the nursery into the college and back to the nursery; there’s your intellectual pattern for the past five centuries or more.

“. . . School is shortened, discipline relaxed, philosophies, histories, languages dropped. English and spelling gradually neglected, finally almost completely ignored. Life is immediate, the job counts, pleasure lies all about after work. Why learn anything save pressing buttons, pulling switches, fitting nuts and bolts?

“. . . What more easily explained and natural? With school turning out more runners, jumpers, racers, tinkerers, grabbers, snatchers, fliers, and swimmers instead of examiners, critics, knowers, and imaginative creators, the word ‘intellectual,’ of course, became the swear word it deserved to be. You always dread the unfamiliar. Surely you remember the boy in your own school class who was exceptionally ‘bright,’ did most of the reciting and answering while the others sat like so many leaden idols, hating him. And wasn’t it this bright boy you selected for beatings and tortures after hours? Of course it was. We must all be alike. Not everyone born free and equal, as the Constitution says, but everyone made equal.

“. . . If you don’t want a man unhappy politically, don’t give him two sides to a question to worry him; give him one. Better yet, give him none. Let him forget there is such a thing as war. If the government is inefficient, topheavy, tax-mad, better it be all those than that people worry over it. Peace, Montag. Give the people contests they win by remembering the words to more popular songs or the names of state capitals or how much corn Iowa grew last year. Cram them full of noncombustible data, chock them so damned full of ‘facts’ that they feel stuffed, but absolutely ‘brilliant’ with information. Then they’ll feel they’re thinking, they’ll get a sense of motion without moving. And they’ll be happy, because facts of that sort don’t change. Don’t give them any slippery stuff like philosophy or sociology to tie things up with. That way lies melancholy.”

Obviously, the main thing that differentiates our actual present situation from Bradbury’s vividly imagined one is the absence of overt censorship. Books are everywhere. They sell by the millions. But as Berman noted in “Waiting for the Barbarians,” and as Postman noted in Amusing Ourselves to Death, and as the other authors I’ve included here have noted in their various ways, what really matters is the tone and mode of public discourse. It’s possible for some books to be no better than their absence. And also, as Bradbury himself has noted in a famous quote or quip, you don’t have to burn books to destroy a culture, since the destruction will happen on its own if people simply stop reading books and remembering the past. And that, of course, is the shocking revelation that Beatty really gives to Montag in Fahrenheit 451: Originally the censorship didn’t come from the top down as a government edict. It came about because people wanted it to. As in Huxley’s Brave New World, people wanted to forget about seriousness and gravity, and about memory and knowledge, in favor of simply losing themselves in mindless distractions and entertainments.

Of course, there’s nothing at all wrong in principle with pure entertainment. But when it’s magnified as something else, or worse, when we reach a point where things that are important but not necessarily fun are deemed unpalatable unless they’re distorted and eviscerated by being packaged as entertainment – then we definitely have a problem. And that’s where we are in America right now, in large measure.

So all of that, I think, plus a lot more, sits at the heart of the anti-intellectualist diagnosis. There are at least two general ways to approach and regard American culture at present. One is represented by the above criticisms, which mingle disgust with despair. The other is represented by Stephen King’s loving description of the sloppiness and garishness of it all in his famous Entertainment Weekly column of a year or two ago, in which he explained why he personally loves American pop culture.

Personally, I share some of both attitudes, and find myself unable to settle fully on either side. See my previous blog entry “The Passion of Rob Zombie” for more about my conflictedness. You can also check out some of the entries at my former blog, Confessions of a Conflicted Cultural Skeptic, for more about the themes addressed above.

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ABC’s “Fallen”: Return of the Nightmare Angel?

July 16, 2006 at 10:11 am (Authors, Books, Movies, Philosophy & Religion)

Sorry to all for having missed my normal Saturday update. Naturally I would never willingly fail to meet a self-imposed deadline.

Naturally.

In case you haven’t heard, one week from today the ABC television network will premier a limited series titled Fallen, which is based on a series of young-adult books about angelic warfare. A recent press release at Sci Fi Wire contained the following:

Fallen is based on Thomas Sniegoski’s young-adult book series The Fallen, about a young man (Paul Wesley) who discovers he’s half-human and half-angel, a member of a race called the Fallen. He and his family have been tracked down by a group of killer angels. Fallen will premiere as a two-hour film on July 23, then return next summer as a four-hour limited series.

“Sniegoski said he based the series on his research into the biblical history of angels. ‘I’d always wanted to do something with angels at some point in my career and accumulated a ton of stuff about the Old Testament writings and even older stuff than that and found some really wild stuff that I used to build the mythology of the four books,’ he told reporters. He added: ‘It’s a much scarier interpretations of angels. But at the same time, you look at the biblical stuff, and. . . what did God send when he was ticked off?’”

I find Sniegoski’s final comment-slash-rhetorical question about terrifying angels to be fascinating, not only because it’s entirely true, but also because it’s not original. And that’s not to slam him. I just can’t help but wonder what he’s been watching and reading over the years that might have inspired him to devote such attention to the ancient Nightmare Angel, as Emily Hahn called the figure in her quirky and interesting little book, Breath of God: A book about angels, demons, familiars, elementals, and spirits. Throughout most of world history, in every culture where people have believed in angels or their equivalents, these beings have been conceived as terrifying creatures that possess tremendous power. Even people who have believed that angels are basically benevolent have still feared them, as evidenced by the notable example of the terrified reactions angels invariably receive when they appear to people in biblical stories.

The Prophecy series of movies did much to resurrect this creature for the modern media-drinking public. Now perhaps Sniegoski and ABC will further the cause. I can’t help but think that Sniegoski has been watching the Prophecy movies, since his comment so closely echoes a brilliant bit of dialogue that Gregory Widen, the writer-director of the original The Prophecy, put into the mouth of one of his characters: “Did you ever notice how in the Bible whenever God needed to punish someone or make an example, or whenever God needed a killing, he sent an angel? Did you ever wonder what a creature like that must be like? A whole existence spent praising your God, but always with one wing dipped in blood. Would you ever really want to see an angel?” Not only is this a surprisingly intelligent piece of dialogue for a Hollywood horror movie, but it’s one of the most crystal-clear and concentrated statements of a very significant religious-cultural truth that anybody has ever penned. You’d be hard-pressed to find the matter expressed so succinctly in theological literature.

If you’ll forgive me the vanity of quoting myself, I’d like to offer a passage from my essay “The Angel and the Demon,” which will appear later this year in the reference work Icons of Horror and the Supernatural, edited by S.T. Joshi for Greenwood Press. I spent several months earlier this year researching and writing this essay about angels and demons as icons in supernatural literature and film, and so my attention is still hot on the topic. I’m hopeful that Fallen will represent a continuation of the Nightmare Angel’s resurrection out of the tomb of dreary-fluffy cuddliness that overtook the figure for more than a century. In my essay I explained this degradation as follows:

“A final bit of duality to enter into the figure of the Angel is found in [the] area of artistic representation. On the one hand, the image continued in its original majestic form down through the Middle Ages and into the Renaissance, arguably culminating in the paintings of the Dominican monk Fra Angelico (‘the angelic friar,’ c. 1400-1455), for whom angels were a favorite subject. C.S. Lewis voiced a widely held sentiment when he wrote that ‘Fra Angelico’s angels carry in their face and gesture the peace and authority of Heaven.’ It was these same Renaissance-style angels that television critic O’Connor noted had been ‘culled from art masterpieces” to populate NBC’s Angels: The Mysterious Messengers. That was in 1994, so obviously this type of angelic representation has survived to the modern day.

“But in the same breath when he was praising angels in the tradition of Fra Angelico and other, similar artists, C.S. Lewis also voiced a widely noted observation about a different artistic trend that produced a decidedly different sort of angel: ‘In the plastic arts these symbols [i.e., representations of angels] have steadily degenerated’ (Lewis 7). The specific degeneration he referred to is the steady birth of the cuddlier, cuter Angel that has carved out a distinctive niche for itself in Western popular consciousness and is most associated with the work of Fra Angelico’s near-contemporary Raphael (1483-1520). If the angels of the former call to mind ‘the peace and authority of Heaven,’ then those of the latter, which appear in the form of fat, naked babies adorned with candied white wings, call to mind the cloying sweetness of a Barney episode. They are also matched by another less majestic angel in the form of the pale feminine figure that arose to populate the art world during the 19th century. A few prominent artists such as William Blake may have labored to maintain a more transcendently serious vision of the Angel, but the shape of the future was nonetheless clear.

“Hahn links these changes to an impulse that arose with the advent of the Christian religion itself: ‘Taking stock of itself, the new Christianity made a change in all this [i.e., the fearsome angels of Middle Eastern religion]. The type of angel desired and needed by Christians, it became increasingly evident, was not the sort of Being the Jews had been satisfied with, so the authorities, viz., historians and illustrators, evolved a new concept of angel which, though we cannot all claim to love it, at least does not send us rushing off in screaming flight if we happen to encounter it in dreams’ (53).

“For Hahn, all Christian angels, even those of the Middle Ages, represent a kind of devolution of power. ‘[I]f we are to believe the medieval painters,’ she writes, ‘all was sweetness and light before the birth of jesus. After He made His appearance, the manger must have been full of the soft rustle of cherub wings, as little angels—not griffins or sphinxes, but amoretti—hovered over the crib, peering down lovingly at the Babe, between the ears of donkeys and the horns of cattle—two horns per animal, no more. Something new in religion came in with Jesus: prettiness, innocence, call it what you will. The Nightmare Angel’s sway was over’ (58).

“Obviously, Hahn was taking poetic license with history when she wrote that. The change did not occur immediately with the advent of Christianity. But occur it did, so that today, two millennia after the birth of Christ, Mark Edmundson can accurately observe in his Nightmare on Main Street that ‘America’s current angels are fluffy creatures, flown off the fronts of greeting cards,’ who compare unfavorably with the original biblical angels which are ‘beings of another order: an encounter with an angel transforms life—puts one on a harder, higher path’ (80).

“Lewis, for his part, brings the issue to a head and also summarizes the history of this degeneration in his typically inimitable way: ‘Later [i.e. in the wake of Fra Angelico’s angels] come the chubby infantile nudes of Raphael; finally the soft, slim, girlish, and consolatory angels of nineteenth century art, shapes so feminine that they avoid being voluptuous only by their total insipidity—the frigid houris of a teatable paradise. They are a pernicious symbol. In Scripture the visitation of an angel is always alarming; it has to begin by saying ‘Fear not.’ The Victorian angel looks as if it were going to say, ‘There, there’ (Lewis 7).

“One can only wish Lewis were still around to comment on the angel-oriented advertising campaign mounted by the American lingerie company Victoria’s Secret in the early 2000s, which featured images of nearly-nude female models decked out with large, white, feathery wings. This enormously profitable mockery of the iconic Angel both underscored the figure’s cultural prevalence and one-upped the ‘pernicious symbol’ of Victorian art by presenting a figure that managed to appear exceedingly voluptuous and artistically insipid all at once.”

So to reiterate, I’m hoping ABC’s Fallen will further the rescue mission represented by the Prophecy movies and a few other cultural items, such as Frank Peretti’s inclusion of warrior angels in some of his Milton-Lite evangelical horror-thriller novels. Maybe Sniegoski’s source novels have already kicked the project off; I don’t know, because I haven’t read them. But if I do, I’ll surely mention them and give my reaction here at The Teeming Brain.

Incidentally, if you end up reading my essay in Icons of Horror and the Supernatural and fail to find the above passage in its entirety, it’s because the essay initially turned out to be nearly twice the allotted length. I had to cut it way down. The passage I’ve quoted is from the full version, for which I’m still seeking publication.

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Lovecraftian bumper stickers

July 13, 2006 at 10:02 am (Authors, Books, General Comments)

Why can’t they make better bumper stickers? Are you as bored with most of them as I am? Over the past several decades bumper stickers have become an informal American institution, a mode of communication that sociologists would do well to study, and yet all too often they’re terribly banal and boring.

For no real reason, this morning I found myself idly thinking up the kind of bumper stickers I’d like to see. Below are some of the results. I invite you to add your own, if you’re so inclined. (And to think, in a post a few days ago I said something about not having enough computer time.)

  • I’d rather be staring into the reverberant blackness of the audient void
  • Cthulhu Sucks (your face off)
  • I brake for Night-Gaunts
  • My Shoggoth ate your honors student
  • Cthulhu Rules (eventually)
  • Honk if you eagerly await the return of the Old Ones
  • Save Shub-Niggurath and her Thousand Young
  • I ♥ the inability of the human mind to correlate all its contents
  • Honk if you’re inhuman below the waist
  • They can have my soul when they suck it from my rotten, desiccated corpse
  • Cthulhu Saves (not)

As somebody whose tastes have been definitively infected by the fiction and philosophical worldview of H.P. Lovecraft, I find these far more interesting than your average, run-of-the-mill religious, political, or humorous bumper stickers. At the very least I think they’d liven up travel along the Interstate Highway System.

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Recent reading (BURNT OFFERINGS) with attendant cultural blather

July 12, 2006 at 1:14 pm (Authors, Books, Philosophy & Religion, Society & Culture)

I just finished reading Robert Marasco’s Burnt Offerings last week. I had been expecting to read it some years ago when, if I’m remembering correctly, contemporary horror novelist/comic book writer/larger-than-life personality Brian Keene sent me a copy of it in the mail along with some comic books. But thanks to the ineptitude of the U.S. postal service, the shipment never made it to me. (I was particularly saddened by the loss of the comic books; Brian was generously attempting to send me some issues of Shang Chi: Master of Kung Fu since mine had all been stolen along with the rest of my comics collection, many hundreds of volumes strong, which I had been saving since I was a teen.) Then about three weeks ago I stumbled across a copy of Burnt Offerings being sold at garage-sale price in a local used bookstore, and I just couldn’t resist.

Burnt Offerings is one of those books that I heard about for many years before finally getting around to reading it. As you’re probably already aware if your grasp of popular culture extends beyond such crucial contemporary issues as who’s currently winning on Rock Star: Supernova, Marasco’s novel was quite popular back in the seventies and is today considered a minor classic of the horror genre. That said, I seem to recall having read or heard various criticisms of its prose style. I also seem to recall hearing various people downtalk it because of its supposedly unsatisfying plot resolution, and because its basic story elicits an inevitable and unfavorable comparison to another 1970s horror novel, Thomas Tryon’s Harvest Home. Both books tell of modern urban-dwelling families who forsake the city for a quieter, quainter life in the country. Both depict these families being overwhelmed by ancient pagan or pagan-esque horrors. Interestingly, both were made into well-received movies: Burnt Offerings, directed by Dan Curtis of Dark Shadows fame and starring Karen Black and Oliver Reed; and the television miniseries The Dark Secret of Harvest Home, which featured Bette Davis in one of the leading roles.

My overall reaction to Marasco’s novel is a positive one, tempered by a few reservations. For one thing, I did find myself distracted occasionally by a few stylistic lumps in his writing, especially by his egregious overuse of clauses based on the relative pronoun “which,” which sometimes devoured entire pages of the novel. For example, a single double-page spread contained the following: “Behind the glass which had a long hairline crack were several pieces of rose medallion. . . . [There] were five wide steps leading to the west wing of the house which could be closed off. . . . The old woman was obviously in her bedroom which should be to the left of the sitting room. . . . She opened the door wider and stepped into the room which was large and dim. . . . The table covered half the room, stretching back to the rear windows which would overlook the lawn and the bay. . . . The sound as well, which she had just become aware of, [was hypnotic].” This kind of thing galls me. Maybe I’ve just read too much literary horror fiction and therefore find myself noticing and wincing at minor stylistic issues, but the “rat-a-tat-tat” bullet quality of these streamlined descriptive passages – heirs to the Hemingway-esque simplification of popular prose fiction – combined with the clumsy overuse (and in some cases the arguable misuse) of relative clauses and such, can prove quite distracting at times.

On the question of the novel’s plot and resolution, I found it adequately satisfying, although I thought Marasco could have significantly enhanced the effectiveness of the climactic moment by offering a more detailed description or explanation of the Final Horror when it was revealed. The climax itself was fine, conceptually speaking. It just came and went too fast. Stephen King has cited the book as an influence on his own The Shining, and anybody who knows both books can see the obvious similarities between their stories of families who become caretakers of old mansions (or in the case of King’s novel, a hotel) and end up encountering supernatural horror and madness. The relative weakness of the denouement in Marasco’s novel is thus somewhat ironic since King has been repeatedly, and sometimes justifiably, criticized for his ongoing authorial weakness in this very area. In this regard it’s interesting to note especially the “What’s behind the door?” motif that Marasco employs for his novel’s climax. King has discussed this motif in his excellent survey of the horror genre, Danse Macabre, and has also employed it in his own novels, most notably in It. Both authors seem inclined to build up to big moments when a mysterious door opens, at which point the reader feels a little bit let down either by what’s revealed behind the door or by the author’s handling of the moment.

On the question of Burnt Offerings’ comparison to Harvest Home, I think the latter soundly trumps the former. Harvest Home is simply a richer reading experience, not least because of Tryon’s wonderful writing style, which effortlessly combines the straightforward, streamlined quality of modern popular prose with a satisfying stylistic lushness. Tryon also wins because of his deeper envisioning of his novel’s setting. Harvest Home creates a veritable alternate world for the reader to inhabit, whereas in Burnt Offerings the only setting that feels fully realized is the mansion where the main characters stay. The actual geographical locale, a small town or village on Long Island, is unsatisfyingly hazy, as if Marasco passed over this part in haste, and the novel’s effectiveness is accordingly blunted for it. Marasco’s novel is shorter than Tryon’s, and this corresponds to their respective merits when they’re held up together: Burnt Offerings feels considerably thinner, as an overall reading experience, than Harvest Home.

Having said all that, I’ll also say that Burnt Offerings managed to work up quite a charge for me as it gathered steam. A couple of its concluding incidents were truly shocking and horrific, and I found myself racing through the book’s final third in eagerness to discover how it ended. This page-turning quality is of course one of the major effects a popular novel seeks to achieve, so for me this one earns a positive score overall.

Although I don’t have much of an organized thought to offer about this, I thought I’d also mention that the book led me to reflect on its cultural origin in 1970s America. As mentioned above, it was published in the same decade as Harvest Home. It was also published in the same decade as Fritz Leiber’s Our Lady of Darkness, which won the World Fantasy Award in, I believe, 1979. I haven’t read Leiber’s book but I’ve heard about the way it successfully horrorizes (to adopt a neologism) San Francisco by depicting an ancient evil that dwells unsuspected among the modern buildings and peoples. I’m also led to think of Whitley Streiber’s The Wolfen, which was yet another horror novel from the late 1970s that envisioned ancient evil in an urban setting, this time in the form of werewolves. There are surely many more examples that could be cited. The idea of modern-day urbanites encountering ancient horrors caught fire and became a kind of craze during the seventies. Consider as well The Exorcist, which became a true cultural phenomenon in both its literary and cinematic forms, and which wrung its sense of horror from the idea of a sweet little girl’s being possessed by a demonic force whose existence had been discredited not only by modern science and secularism, but by modern religion as well (think of the “death of God” movement among secularistic theologians that peaked in the late 1960s, and also of the relative softening of many ancient Roman Catholic ideological positions by Vatican II, which convened from 1962-65). Like I said above, I don’t have a specific point to make about all this, but I do enjoy dwelling on it and mulling over the cultural portrait it provides.

As I do this, I’m gripped by half-formed, pseudo-Jungian speculations about the existence of an atavistic part of the human psyche — or if not atavistic, then at least primal and irreducible — that positively needs to find enchantment in the world, and that in the 1970s found it much more reasonable, and also much easier, to seek this enchantment in its darkest aspect, since various cultural events over the previous decade or two (e.g., the Kennedy assassinations, Martin Luther King’s assassination, the Vietnam war, Watergate, student uprisings and shootings, the turmoil at the 1968 Democratic National Convention, generalized cultural confusion and anomie, etc.) had imparted a tumultuous, cynical, and apocalyptic feel to the life in the Western world. I’m drawn to speculate about the resurrection of a kind of supernaturalistic / sacramental worldview that was, and still largely is, antagonistic to the modern Western scientistic-reductionist one. And not only that, but a specific variant of this worldview that finds its specific source of energy in the dark side of things. Maybe that was a factor in the rise of the modern-world-meets-ancient-horror craze. Maybe the movement can be understood, at least in part, as a cultural groping for magic and meaning.

Even as I write these words, I feel like they’re fairly dopey, that the whole line of thought may be just a bunch of mental masturbation. But I can’t help finding the idea fascinating: artistic horror as the reenchantment of the world, which operates by resurrecting and playing upon old fears and suspicions, sometimes in a setting that’s fearfully removed from modern urban antiseptic safety (as in Burnt Offerings and Harvest Home) and sometimes in the midst of the urban setting itself (as in The Wolfen, Our Lady of Darkness, The Exorcist, and just a bit later, Ted Klein’s novella The Children of the Kingdom; of course Klein also wrote about the horror encountered outside the urban cocoon in his novella The Events at Poroth Farm and its expansion into novel form, The Ceremonies).

It’s easy to see such things operating in retrospect. As always, the effort to do so makes me wonder what the present cultural cocoon will look like several decades or centuries from now, at a more removed vantage point from whence the characteristic cultural fears and neuroses of the early 21st century C.E. will be clearly visible. It also makes me wonder whether and to what extent it might be possible right now, from within the confines of that cocoon, to gain an approximation of the future-objective view — perhaps by, oh, say, blathering on and on about it extemporaneously in the hope that an unexpected insight or two might emerge.

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