Wednesday, December 9, 2015

Debating Protests, Safe Spaces, Jefferson


May I be forgiven for posting from the National Review. The article was a nice gloss on some of the logic operating...
Posted by Laura Bilhimer on Tuesday, December 8, 2015

Saturday, December 5, 2015

Part II of "We're Worried About Thomas Jefferson Again, or Why Progressive Social Justice Agendas Should Not Always Be Taken Seriously"

I continued the post as follows:
Gordon Wood says it best: "Everyone, it seems, sees America in Jefferson. So the shame and guilt that Jefferson must have suffered from his involvement in slavery and racial mixing best represent the shame and guilt that white Americans feel in their tortured relations with blacks….Jefferson for this present generation has become the problem. The Jefferson that emerges out of much recent scholarship therefore resembles the America many critics have visualized in the past four decades: self-righteous, guilt-ridden, racist, doctrinaire, and filled with liberal pieties that under stress are easily sacrificed." ("Revolutionary Characters", p97) 
And then I noticed the Online Petition from U Missouri:
Sloppy, sloppy handling of history: https://www.change.org/.../the-university-of-missouri...
 They quote scholarship on Sally Hemings without ever including Sally's closest, most careful scholar Annette Gordon-Reed. Gordon-Reed is African American Pulizer Prize winning historian of great reputation. They just casually drop in "This was a man that raped 16 year old Sally Hemings, a young innocent house slave (Burstein, 2005)." Burstein is a guy who wrote a book with the titilating title of "Death and Desire at Monticello." Great. No one knows or will ever know the nature of the relationship between Sally and TJ. She could have stayed in France, but came back to Virginia with him in 1789 after earning wages and living as a free woman for about two years. We'll never be sure, but these people seem comfortable using Sally for their argument without real responsibility. 
And I went on because at this point I was all wound up:

Our first clue as to the intellectual seriousness of the petition is the hyperbolic first sentence: "The need to project a progressive environment is just as important as food and shelter to survive." NO, not quite. I have to eat before I care about Foucault and structures of power. Let me be clear that I agree college campuses are places where a continual questioning of many things should take place: our assumptions, our history--really, how we see ourselves. The whole point of a liberal arts education is to realize that how you think you see the world is not merely "how it is" but that that perspective is shaped by culture and history among various other factors. But to breezily assert that a statue of Jefferson is sending out micro-aggressions of nothing other than hypocrisy, racism and sexism--this is intellectual thuggery at its worse, especially when it poses as the enlightened assertion of Social Justice. Talk about hypocrisy. Everyone has the right to an opinion. We've been calling out TJ for slavery for as long as he's been dead, as we should. But there are informed opinions and there are opinions informed by breeze-reading, intellectual editorializing, and cultural bandwagoning. 

My mentor outside the English department at KU commented that she was "proud" of me. Which would move me to tears had I some scotch on hand. Besides the many classes I took with the inimitable Dr. Valk, the two seachanges of my college education were Western Civ II and Islam in Europe--both with Dr. Urie. Her classes were oases of intellectual diversity and independent thinking.

I'm trying to--right now--write a term paper on Jefferson, and a lot of this stuff about the recent protests and intellectual coddling has made it into a footnote.

We're Worried About Thomas Jefferson Again, or Why Progressive Social Justice Agendas Should Not Always Be Taken Seriously


I would love to rant about how much of a joke salon.com is getting to be. That historian is cut out to be one of their...
Posted by Laura Bilhimer on Friday, December 4, 2015

Wednesday, November 18, 2015

Kolenda Peek



Prelude: A Telegram
He would later say that “[w]e experience death too much” (). And so to this young philosopher the Western Union telegram looked like any other; looked, indeed, not unlike one very dear to him received just over two years earlier.  But now as he pulled the thin paper from its envelope his [] eyes flicked over his own name, comically misspelled, to the message itself, to the first four staccato beats of the brief violet words that meant so much. He was being told, he realized, that on this Wednesday afternoon of November 2, 1949, Mr. Hill had died:
            MR KONSTANTINE KOLENDER
                                                827 BYRNE ST HOU
            MR HILL DIED THIS AFTERNOON AT GREENVILLE SOUTH CAROLINA
            PLEASE CONTACT PIETER CRAMERUS TELEPHONE JACKSON 8695
                              PIETER
George A. Hill Jr. was fifty-seven years old when a blood clot to the brain stopped his heart almost a thousand miles from home.  It was reported that the stroke was “caused by overwork—a word which friends said was never in George Hill’s vocabulary.”[1] Konstantin Kolenda would live for another forty-two years until his own heart gave out; but now, twenty-six years old and six months away from taking a bachelor’s degree in a country not yet his own, Konstantin thought he owed this man everything.



[1] Houston Post, “G.A. Hill Jr Dies of Stroke.” 3 November 1949, No. 213. 

Monday, November 16, 2015

Upcoming Project on Konstantin Kolenda


Excellent Facebook Debate on Privileged Mourning (15 November 2015) in which I get in some nice Zingers and side with some Right-wingers

Oh boy. a Facebook Debate! What fun.

Full names are withheld--using initials or first names only. The original conversation was on facebook, a somewhat public medium. But I try here to maintain a reasonable level of anonymity, removing all hyperlinks as well. I also did my best to level the field by removing any "likes." Which was hard on my vanity since I did receive a few...I hope you enjoy.

This reaction came from quite a lot of thinking on my part about where I stand politically today, and why I don't feel much solidarity with the Left these days. I've been reading and listening to a lot of Sam Harris and Richard Rorty, as well as David Brooks. Also the recent Yale and Mizzou protests have been in my brain, covered so well recently by The Atlantic. Really weird calls from young academics for "safe spaces" in lieu of calls for intellectual integrity/intellectual freedom. College campuses SHOULD be a place of confrontation. Ideas are difficult, and really powerful ideas can and should be discomforting, even painful. There IS real racism in this country--Halloween costumes just don't merit the kind of hysterics we've been seen the last few weeks. The Paris attacks have given us another opportunity to rethink the relationship between religion and terrorism. The link is real, no doubt about it. Islam doesn't need to disappear, but it does need real reform. The Left continues to deny any real connection between Islam and Islamism--the Left resorts to name-calling and buzz words and charges of racism or Islamophobia. Toxic environment for actual debate. Anyway, lot on the mind lately. The following is a nice demonstration of what I see as a rather irrational, even hysterical reaction to a reasonable feeling of solidarity with France. Even if I change my mind down the road (smart people should continue to continually rethink positions over time) this was a chance for me to test out some opinions, and to have a bit of fun (not everyone here enjoyed themselves as much). I'll give the full conversation:


Original Post:

 · 
KL: Folks, you know why we notice it more when people die in Western countries than in non-western countries? Is it because of prejudice? Is it because of hate?
No.
It's because, like any sane person, we recognize attacks on our "family" more than on those who aren't "family." Also, tragedies of this magnitude are much more common in developing countries than the West, so while they are still tragic, they are more expected and normal. The West is very imperfect, but it gives billions and billions in aid to the rest of the world to help alleviate such things. But the simple fact is that human nature is surprised by the uncommon. Terrorist attacks in Western countries are not common. Unfortunately, such violent episodes are very common in other countries.
Additionally, chances are that more people recognize a horrible incident in Paris than Beruit, et al, because:
1. Most of us are much more likely to have visited Paris than Beruit;
2. Paris is a comparatively far more famous city than Beruit and other places;
3. Most of us are much more likey to visit Paris at some point in the future if we have not visited it already, as it holds a place in the West's (indeed the world's) psyche;
4. France is part of our civilizational "family" of the West.
Is this wrong?
No. Like anything else, it can go too far and become wrong, but no, this is not wrong in and of itself.
Now, if the West hadn't given so much aid, if it wasn't the first to give aid and provide logistical support in developing countries struck by tragedy, if it hadn't provided billions in debt forgiveness to poor nations, etc. if, in fact, it showed that it was only concerned about itself, and not at all for these other places, then there would be a point to all of this.
But alas, the exact opposite has happened.
So enough please. Unless you are prepared to take the tragedies of billions of other human beings as seriously as you take your own family's, state's, or country's tragedies, can we please stop with the really strange and self-defeating narrative of "Well, we can only mourn Paris if we equally mourn every other tragedy that can possibly befall mankind from here on out"? Of course other people dying is a tragedy, but you know, human beings have limits to how much they can take upon themselves, and clearly, with all the money given by the West to the rest of the world, we clearly don't believe that other lives lack value.
Most of this talk is psychological navel-gazing in the extreme.
----------------------------------


Replies follow:

First Comment Thread:

HH This is just a euro-centric and bigoted argument that places more importance on so-called 'civilised' and 'western' countries over what is seen as the 'other'. I would expect more from you Kodi as an ambassador for the ISS office at KU. This sentiment shows a lack of understanding and care for some of the students you are supposed to represent.

  • LH He isn't saying he doesn't care or that people from other non-western countries don't have value. He already recognizes the value of non-western people and cultures by living and studying in China. Your response is pretty heavy-handed and without justification.

  • HH Not really. I know Kodi from working with him as an international orientation leader. As an ambassador for international students this was a very euro-centric thing to post. By sharing this post it can be perceived by others that he doesn't care which is what I was pointing out.

  • JC Hollie, I said it. I love traveling, and I have friends in every portion of the world, including Asia, the Middle East, Africa, and Australia. I happen to also appreciate my particularly Western culture, which has produced many good fruits of which myself, you, and many other people who are not Western have benefited from, not because those values are only meant for Western people, but because they are human values: values of human rights, tolerance, an open exchange of ideas, etc. Those do NOT exist in many parts of the globe. That is a fact. I love experiencing other cultures, and have engaged in quite a bit of criticism of our own culture, which is profoundly imperfect. But whenever I come back to America or back to somewhere in the "West," I do feel great gratitude at the many blessings we have, many of which are not matched elsewhere on the globe. Whatever YOU mean by "Euro-centric," what I, as the author of this post mean, is that there are countries with which we share a more common culture and heritage. The United States is one of the most diverse societies on earth, and Europe itself is incredibly diverse. But they all partake of a very similar heritage created by many forces. It's just common sense! Most Americans have more in common with people in Europe than people in Africa. That doesn't mean we think Africans are less human or what not. How absurd (particularly given all the aid we have given to them)! Our culture is simply more similar. That is a FACT.

  • Laura Bilhimer This is actually a really fascinating dilemma. Ideally, Hollie's moral figure would be right: all human kind would care for each other equally. But that's not how we think, for better or for worse. I think it's a matter of logistics and psychology and common sense: given the unfortunate habit humans seem to have of harming each other, what would daily life be like if we really, deeply agonized over every global catastrophe, every catastrophic loss of human life? It would be pretty hard to enjoy a cup of coffee over the Sunday New York Times. We really wouldn't have the time or psychological energy to be that empathetic. I think we have to admit we're fundamentally pretty tribal, which in the 21st century translates into nationhood. Which doesn't mean we shouldn't try to be more empathetic. But admitting that we tend to care more about other countries with similar values or countries with which we have cultural-historical ties---this seems to be a very common sense, even very decent thing to admit.

  • KC Say what you say, but keep in mind there is a difference between Intent vs Impact

  • JC What impact? We're grieving with Parisians for God's sake. Oh yes, and we clearly don't give a damn about Kenyans, who we give billions to! This is extreme sensitivity looking for fights where there shouldn't be any run amok.

  • HH ^'giving billions to' is a paternalistic and euro-centric way to view other countries. Educate yourself about the impact of your prose.

  • Laura Bilhimer Rem acu tetigisti. I would say the same to the "bigoted argument" remark.

  • Laura Bilhimer OH GO BACK TO YOUR CHOMSKY

  • Laura Bilhimer LOL

  • JC Hollie, you are overly sensitive. Educate yourself about how nonsensical you are being. I don't think the millions of people who benefit from PEPFAR and the state of the art anti-retro viral drugs we provide to fight AIDS and which has saved millions of lives and is preventing the death of millions more would have patience with your babbling about "paternalism." Snap out of it for God's sake!

  • Laura Bilhimer Yeah Kodi, educate yourself!!! We all know you hate reading books!! lol

  • Laura Bilhimer I haven't had me a good facebook debate in a real long time.

  • HH I'm overly sensitive and you're overly ignorant.

  • JC I'm not trying to be mean. I'm sure Hollie is a nice person. But this is truly absurd thinking. It's the type of thinking that suburban well-to-do white kids typically are quite comfortable with. Meanwhile, in the real world, no one has time for this nonsense, let alone those whose lives are being saved. Hollie, you should speak this nonsense in the presence of a Kenyan whose life has been saved by PEPFAR. I'd love to see the reaction. It's not paternalism. It's called caring about those who are in a tough position and doing something about it. "I'm overly sensitive and you're overly ignorant." This is the state of intellectual life on college campuses these days. As an alumni of KU I was hoping for better. This amounts to nothing more than "You're wrong because I say you're wrong; oh, and I'll just give you a bad label and hope that alleviates my need to actually make an argument, provide evidenced, and all the normal formalities usually associated with educated discussion."

  • Laura Bilhimer Oh god, we shouldn't even begin talking about the Yale protests. Hey I think we won, Josh. I used latin once, and also got in a Noam Chomsky dig.

  • Laura Bilhimer But she did get in her buzz words. We must give them that.

Second Comment Thread (also responding to first comment by HH):
Laura Bilhimer And nothing that you do would ever be "euro-centric"? Of course we're culturally closer to France than many places in the world, of course this hits home to us more than a tragedy in Beirut. It's nothing to be ashamed of. It's admitting a history. They helped us win a little skirmish with England back in the 18th century, and those blood ties go deep. It doesn't make him a cultural snob to admit that that affects us in a very real way.


Third Comment Thread (or a continuation of the second. Continued response to HH).

Laura Bilhimer And you really did just call Kodi a bigot.
  • HN Thanks Laura. Sometimes people just want to call people names...it seems to be the country we live in.
  • Laura Bilhimer Hi Hans! Yeah, and I know there was no direct name-calling, but this whole discussion Kodi is pointing to has pissed me off. I still generally consider myself a liberal, but it's getting more and more difficult, since that term automatically alligns one with this easy-button politics of "point to your privilege." Which IS important to do, but it's too often a conversation stopper, as well as a "point me to the next hysterical BS you can think of" move. Kodi was bringing up a valid and commonsensical point, and he automatically gets carded as a white-privileged western imperialist bigot (or a person carrying those ideas...) Bring on the finger pointing from the Left! The Hysterical Left as I've taken to calling it--Sam Harris calls it the Regressive Left. I'm becoming my own political party I guess, which is usually a good thing I suppose. Carry on with the interesting ideas, Kodi.
  • JC Laura, I'm more conservative, but I completely agree with you and Sam Harris in this regard. The fact that we have different ideas is not the problem: it is that we can't talk about them in an honest, civil way, and we'd rather label our opponents before we have even given their ideas a fair shake! You are completely right.
  • Laura Bilhimer Cheers to that Josh! Wouldn't it be nice to see more of that kind of debate? No more buzz words, more thoughtfulness, more humbleness.

Fourth Comment Thread

KS I would hardly say events such as these are normal. As they happen often, it's hardly normal. At least, in my opinion, they should not be perceived as "normal."

  • JC Violence in other parts of the world is far more normal than in the West. That is a fact.
  • Laura Bilhimer Yes, indeed.
  • KS I understand that violence is more rampant in other parts of the world. But I would hardly call the events that took place Friday "normal." Terrorism, regardless of where it takes place, shouldn't be considered normal. Do we expect it to happen in other parts of the world? Unfortunately, yes. But we shouldn't have to expect it.
  • JC Kristen, I think everybody agrees with you, so I'm not sure of your point. Saying something is "normal" doesn't mean we approve: it means we recognize it happens with a good deal of regularity.

Fifth Comment Thread

MS I completely agree although I would've selected my words a little more carefully. You seem to care about international people more than the average Westerner, however you understand that it would be natural for Westerners to react with more shock at the Paris attacks because they feel a closer historical and cultural connection to Paris than Beirut or Kenya. Maybe people care less about Beirut and other locations as a result, but that doesn't make them necessarily bad people. I wish that the media would give more equal coverage though.
  • Laura Bilhimer Yeah I agree there. I don't remember a Presidential address after the earthquake in Nepal for example. 9000 people dead! I know it's not terrorism, but more solidarity there would have been nice. Not as sexy to our media as ISIS is though.


[I've omitted a thread making a more bizarre claim that no one cared about the Russian plane bombing. It went nowhere, despite a brave attempt to reason with the person by JC. I did not have to patience to get involved.]

Last Comment Thread
[KL posts photo of Stephen Colbert eating popcorn, seeming to observe this conversation with much amusement.]

JM After any tragedy Facebook just turns into one great big compassion contest.

  • SR fully aware that OP is present and engaged, "... the simple fact is that human nature is surprised by the uncommon." is the only sentence worth keeping. (IMO) Completely sufficient on it's own. The rest is just distraction from that truth.
  • KL Some good things have already been said, I just have a few things: Hollie, while I welcome critique of anything I say or post, I think that you have unfairly overstepped your bounds. There is a big difference between pointing out something that may be "perceived" wrong by others, and labeling something as bigoted. There is a big difference between calling for caution, and calling into credibility my care for and ability to represent internationals. I have reread the quote, and I have detected no bigoted speech, nor anything that would call for such critique of my credibility. So I can't point out an undeniable and sociologically verified part of human nature without cries of bigotry? My credibility as a representative of internationals is in question if I defend something I see as pure and natural human reaction to world events? You know, "eurocentric" is an overused term. So is "bigoted." Both of these terms are important and have their place, but the way you have used them today I find to be irresponsible. I feel that you have displayed an inability to read into the actual legitimate points in the post, and rather displayed overly reactionary and accusatory behavior that shuts down discussion right from the start.Karen, "intent vs. impact;" actually, I like that. I think this is an important thing to remember, and you have encouraged me to reflect on this (as you always do). At the same time though, I have a concern:Can't a concern for impact before intent lead to certain captivity of intellectual discussion? Don't you think that being overly concerned with people's feelings in our discussions can lead to a strangled ability to express good ideas? At least, if you will, if we take it too far? 
  • KL I appreciated Milvi's comment the most of all. Her approach is cautious, yet supportive of the legitimate points made. Thank you Milvi.Karen and Hollie, I don't seek to attack, I seek to engage. I honestly want your thoughts on what I have just said. I always want to learn from others, as I assume you do too.


[the conversation went on, mostly further nit-picking of KL's terms in original post]






So while I do not agree fully with KL's original post, the knee-jerk reaction from HH set me off. Quite a fun evening for me overall.

Bottom of Form

Sunday, November 15, 2015

On David Brooks

http://www.cjr.org/the_profile/the_transformation_of_david_brooks.php


"People who believe Brooks beats up on the poor often point to ethical spinelessness of politicians or corruption on Wall Street as evidence that immorality is multicultural, maybe even skewed toward the elite. Yet, this underscores why a popular journalist with conservative dispositions but liberal open-mindedness might be valuable to morally stimulate the “upper-middle class” and “upscale establishment.” In today’s America, a middle-aged, privileged, urban white man is needed at the table of moral dialogue. He represents a morally beleaguered constituency, which is why, to borrow from one forceful column, the proper course is not to banish people like Brooks from making such commitments to moral reflection. It is to expect that they make such commitments."

Wednesday, November 4, 2015

Reflections on Jefferson's First Inaugural Address


Principles, Opinions, and Promise in Jefferson’s First Inaugural Address

Today the new political year commences—The new order of things begins.
-John Marshall, morning of March 4, 1801
    Writing to America’s freshly inaugurated third president in March 1801, Benjamin Rush congratulated a very dear, old friend on a different kind of inauguration—that of “a new era” in American political life:
You have opened a new era by your speech on the 4th of March in the history of the United States….Old friends who had been separated by party names, and a supposed difference of principle in politics for many years, shook hands with each other, immediately after reading it, and discovered for the first time, that they had differed in opinion only, about the best means of promoting the interests of their common country. (Cunningham 40)
“It would require a page,” Rush continued indulgently, “to contain the names of all the citizens (formerly called Federalists) who have spoken in the highest terms of your speech” (40). Not everyone, of course, was so optimistic. Thomas Rodney, a Continental Congressman from Delaware, admitted in his diary that although Jefferson “pours out oil on the Pot that has been boiling over so long….where parties are so inveterated…as in America, perhaps he will fail, and by Endeavouring to gain his adversaries, loose his friends” (Cummingham 40). He would lose some.
    But to Jefferson the possibility of healing political wounds was, he confided to Elbridge Gerry, “almost the first object of my heart” (WTJ 1089). “It will be a great blessing to our country if we can once more restore harmony and social love among its citizens,”; for such a reconciliation Jefferson would “sacrifice everything but principle” (1089).  Jefferson refers, of course, to the widening political division between Federalists and Republicans: between those who believed the Tenuously United States required above all an authoritative central government for which the people should and would put up with a certain degree of necessary tyranny; and those who remembered, and felt still the fetters of monarchy, of tyranny, of authoritarianism, of civic enslavement. For the latter, anything would be pledged to keep the experiment of democracy alive; anything, says Jefferson, but the abandonment of principles, principles Jefferson would claim as common-ground with Federalists. And yet he also knew that the fate of the American experiment depended on who would next sit in the hot seat in 1801: which vision of America would win? The surety of centralized power, or the risks of a more delicate democracy?
    So we dance between tyranny and liberty. The stakes couldn’t have been higher for Jefferson, and for the country. The tang of tyranny was still in the mouths of most Americans, a taste left over after the monarchial flirtations of the Adams and Washington administrations. If not exactly elated to have been elected to the highest office of his country, I think he was relieved. “[T]his Government,” Jefferson softly spoke out on that March morning, is “the world’s best hope” (WTJ 493). Its strength comes not from an overbearing central authority, but from the physically dispersed yet culturally—principally—united hearts and minds of its citizens. America’s government was “the only one where every man, at the call of the law, would fly to the standard of the law, and would meet invasions of the public order as his own personal concern”: here would be found the well of our enduring strength (493). Jefferson speaks here of a general sense of civic duty, but he speaks also of his own call to office (we might remember Kant’s remarks on duty: “Duty! Thou sublime and mighty name that dost embrace nothing charming or insinuating, but requirest submission” (Kant 92)). Jefferson felt this all-encompassing call to serve his country, to do what would be asked of him. The country needed, he knew, a Republican in the (brand new) White House.
    From among the stated “invasions of the public order” came a most serious breach of civil liberties enacted by his own friend John Adams. Adams had taken a hard line during his own presidency in quelling activities he saw as unpatriotic, and, so, dangerous: radicalism, disloyalty, insurrection, protests and slurs on the government (and, worse, on himself). He retaliated with The Sedition Act of 1798, which Jefferson happily allowed to expire at the end of Adams’ presidency. Jefferson cites “freedom of the press” as an “essential principle[] of our Government”: this difference of opinion would sever his friendship with John and Abagail for about a decade. “I cannot agree,” writes a bitter Abagail to Jefferson in 1804 (in what would be the last Adams-Jefferson letter mailed until 1812), “in opinion, that the constitution ever meant to withhold from the National Government the power of self defense, or that it could be considered an infringement of the Liberty of the press, to punish the licentiousness of it” (Cappon 281-82). In particular, Jefferson’s pardoning of James Callendar, the rather outrageous political writer jailed until the Sedition Act, was to the Adams’ “a personal injury” (Cappon 274).
    The Adams-Jefferson falling-out gives us, I think, a taste of the political climate Jefferson was stepping into: it must have been toxic.  Thus on that March morning in 1801, Thomas Jefferson knew he had to do something impossible: in a single speech he had to mend, he had to have a vision; and he had to, in a couple thousand words, articulate the “creed of our political faith, the text of civic instruction, the touchstone by which to try the services of those we trust” (WTJ 495). For the Republican sensibility finding “the voice of the nation” would be tricky. How do you privilege national unity without minimizing the Republican virtues of liberty and difference? On this day, insists Jefferson, “[w]e are all Republicans, we are all Federalists” (WTJ 493). Jefferson turned differences of party principles into differences of party opinions: “every difference of opinion is not a difference of principle” (493). We may differ in opinions, but Americans must share common, essential principles. The primary circle of allegiance must be expanded from Republican or Federalist to a wider identity: American.
    We find this kind of patriotism today in rhetorical form in the mouths of many, and yet often we find it ringing a bit hollow: either too cheap or just insincere. The stakes were so much higher in 1801: the experiment had just begun, and no one, including Jefferson, knew where it would lead. In 2004 on a Tuesday night in Boston, a relatively unknown Senatorial candidate from Illinois looked back in order to look forward. He was giving us permission, I think, to feel a kind of qualified pride. Although he wasn’t yet running for president, Obama told an audience that “our pride is based on a very simple premise, summed up in a declaration made over two hundred years ago….we are called to reaffirm our values and our commitments, to hold them against a hard reality and see how we are measuring up to the legacy of our forbearers and the promise of future generations” (Obama 2). Obama was echoing Jefferson that night: “[T]here are those who are preparing to divide us, the spin masters and negative ad peddlers….Well, I say to them tonight, there’s not a liberal America and a conservative America, there’s the United States of America” (4). Delegates at the Democratic National Convention that night must have wondered, waving their blue and red Kerry-Edwards signs, whether they had just nominated the wrong man for the job.
    “The task is above my talents,” admits Jefferson. The man had a penchant for hyperbole and a sometimes misleading exaggeration of sentiment. But even if we’ll never know whether the admission is largely rhetorical or else deeply serious, the approach must have been incredible: he wore no ceremonial sword, and asked “indulgence for [his] own errors” in executing “the post you have assigned me” (WTJ 495).  He spoke of a “political faith” of which it’s hard not to be cynical. Two hundred years later Barack Obama invoked “the audacity of hope…the bedrock of this nation, a belief in things not seen, a belief that there are better days ahead” (Obama 5). Jefferson’s political reconciling did not endure long, and—like any politician—he soon got his hands necessarily dirty; the nation would be at war with itself in sixty years. But after two hundred or so, a black man, a “skinny kid with a funny name,” would take the same oath as did Jefferson that day in 1801 (5). Jefferson’s “essential principles,” and the promises held within his Declaration would come to fruition in a concrete way, even as the vogue of opinion continues to check and question the validity of such principles and such promises.   





Works Cited
Cappon, Lester J. The Adams-Jefferson Letters. New York: Clarion Books, 1971.
Cunningham, Noble E. The Inaugural Addresses of President Thomas Jefferson, 1801        And 1805. Columbia: University of Missouri Press, 2001.
Jefferson, Thomas. Writings ed. Merrill Peterson. New York: The Library of America,       1984.
Kant, Immanuel. Critique of Practical Reason trans. Abbott. New York: Dover      Philosophical Classics, 2004.
Meacham, Jon. Thomas Jefferson: The Art of Power. New York: Randon House, 2012.
Obama, Barack. “Transcript: Illinois Senate Candidate Barack Obama.” The Washington   Post, 27 July 2004. <http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A19751- 2004July27.html>


Sunday, September 27, 2015

On Trollope's 'The Bertrams' and "understanding"

For an assignment in my 1859/60 seminar, we were to track a word throughout our reading of Trollope's The Bertrams. Wonderful novel, hardly ever read anymore. The assignment was fruitful, I think. Here are the results.


The Bertrams and “understanding”
    I chose to track some derivatives of “understanding” in The Bertrams since Trollope, it seems to me, shoos his characters through the plot primarily by means of a repetition of attempts—and often failures—by Trollope’s characters to understand/to know/to acknowledge the hearts and minds of their comrades and also, critically, of themselves.  I began searching recurrences of “understand,” more often than not finding the word in a negative mode e.g. “could not,” “cannot,” “will not,” “did not,” “do not,” or “hardly” understand etc. Other slight variations on this theme did catch my eye, however, and I tried to include a few in my catalogue such as “…he might not know his own mind….she hardly knew her own mind” (137).

    Thus we have a knowledge-problem spawning much pain and confusion for our lovers and friends. Though sometimes rendered brilliantly comic (as when Miss Todd and Adela visit Mrs. Leake) misunderstanding usually leads to suffering. And Trollope all the while gives us the sense that this suffering—by “stricken harts” and stricken hearts—is needless. In other words, this complex pain could have, indeed, should have, been avoided if George had tried harder to understand the complexity of Caroline; if Old Bertram had better known his own nephew’s character, or recognized better his own miserliness; if Arthur would have actually looked and actually understood Adela’s deep unswaying love (a love that had always been there for him); if Caroline had recognized her own capacity to love George, and her own need to be loved. This profound inability to know, to understand, to acknowledge one’s self and one another I actually do not find to be resolved by the end of the novel. Our lovers do find each other, do find a kind of understanding with one another. Recognition scenes, after all, are not absent from this very English tragicomedy: “Caroline Waddington had once flattered herself that that heart of hers was merely a blood-circulating instrument. But she had discovered her mistake, and learned the truth before it was too late. She had known what it was to love…” (445). But one senses from Trollope’s novel an inevitability: that to live is to suffer, to struggle, and to misunderstand.

    Two characters, Trollope’s heroes, escape this somewhat tragic condition: Adela and Miss Todd. Adela, “pure, true, and honest” always understood Arthur, and always understood herself. Similarly, the Falstaffian Miss Todd sees through the deceptions and misunderstandings of her friends and neighbors: all but once. Miss Todd does fail to understand Miss Baker’s attraction to Sir Lionel, and yet we might see here the success of that misunderstanding: Sir Lionel’s iniquitous seductions, we feel, are better kept far away from Hadley. Miss Todd we are told “does more good to others than others do to her”: to do so is to make a kind of heroic effort. Unlike Arthur’s orthodoxy, Miss Todd’s ethics requires not creeds but only an effort of understanding. 


The Bertrams and “understanding”
Volume One
·         Adela had never before known him to be solicitous about money for himself, and now she felt that she did not understand him. (Chapter 4, p44)
·         Indeed Mr. Bertram did not think very much about degrees. He had taken no degree himself, except a high degree in wealth, and could not understand that he ought to congratulate a young man of twenty-two as to a successful termination of his school-lessons. (55)
·         They did not understand each other; perceiving which, Sir Lionel gave up the subject. He was determined not to make himself disagreeable to his son. (89)
·         “…But you hardly understand me, or him either.”
I think I understand him, George…” (91)
·         “…I hardly think you know or realize what my feelings to you are. I can only meet you to tell you again and again that I love you. You are so cold yourself that you cannot understand my—my—my impetuosity, if you choose to call it so." (135-136)
·         …he might not know his own mind….she hardly knew her own mind. (137)
·         "Ah! my dear fellow, you do not know her…” (166)
·         "Ah! you say that because you do not understand her…” (166)
·         "And occasionally cheese," said Harcourt, who could not understand that any rising man could marry early, unless in doing so he acquired money. (176)
·         "Yes, I do; at times very, very much; but I fear the time may come when I may love him less. You will not understand me; but the fact is, I should love him better if he were less worthy of my love—if he were more worldly."
"No, I do not understand that," said Adela, thinking of her love, and the worldly prudence of him who should have been her lover.
"That is it—you do not understand me; and yet it is not selfishness on my part. I would marry a man in the hope of making him happy." (184)

Volume Two
·         "But it was a fault of yours. Do you think that I cannot understand? that I cannot see?...” (238) 
·         …she had acted foolishly in that, certainly; had not known him, had not understood his character… (244)
·         "Trouble—trouble! But I will not make a fool of myself. I believe at any rate that you understand me."
"Oh! perfectly, Mr. Bertram."
But she did not understand him; nor perhaps was it very likely that she should understand him. What he had meant her to understand was this: that in giving her up he was sacrificing only himself, and not her; that he did so in the conviction that she did not care for him; and that he did so on this account, strong as his own love still was, in spite of all her offences. This was what he intended her to understand;—but she did not understand the half of it. (251)
·         Bertram did not understand her, and he showed he did not by his look. (253)
·         Mr. Bertram turned towards the table, and buried his face in his hands. He did not understand it. He did not know whence came all this opposition. He could not conceive what was the motive power which caused his nephew thus to thwart and throw him over, standing forward as he did with thousands and tens of thousands in his hand. But he knew that his request was refused, and he felt himself degraded and powerless. (314)
·         "I believe much that I do not understand. I believe the distance of the earth from the sun. I believe that the seed of a man is carried in a woman, and then brought forth to light, a living being. I do not understand the principle of this wondrous growth. But yet I believe it, and know that it is from God. But I cannot believe that evil is good. I cannot believe that man placed here by God shall receive or not receive future happiness as he may chance to agree or not to agree with certain doctors who, somewhere about the fourth century, or perhaps later, had themselves so much difficulty in coming to any agreement on the disputed subject." (334)
·         "Ah! you do not understand, George." (336)
·         “I do not know what you wish me to understand, Mr. Bertram.”
“Yes, Adela, you do; I think you do. I think I am honest and open. At any rate, I strive to be so. I think you do understand me.” (344)
·         She was in a twitter of sentimental restlessness, but she did not understand the cause of her own uneasiness. (377)

Volume Three
·         “Ah! you little know me.”
“I should but little know you if I thought you could esteem me in that guise.” (449)
·         "What is it you mean?"
"I will not deserve the name again—even from you."
"Nonsense; I do not understand you. You do not know what you are saying."
"Yes, Sir Henry, I do know well what I am saying. It may be that I have done you some injury; if so, I regret it. God knows that you have done me much. We can neither of us now add to each other's comfort, and it will be well that we should part."
"Do you mean me to understand that you intend to leave me?"
"That is what I intend you to understand."
"Nonsense; you will do no such thing." (455)
·         “But, Adela, do not misunderstand me…” (461)
·         “Well, I don’t suppose you know your own mind, as yet.”
“Oh, sir! indeed I do.” (464)
·         "Well, all things are possible; but I do not understand how mine are to be cured. They have come too clearly from my own folly." (471)
·         But he knew himself to be a handsome man, and he could not understand how he could be laid aside for so ugly a lout as this stranger from England. (484)
·         Much as his uncle understood, he had failed to understand his nephew’s mind. (516)
·         His lordship had given directions at the lodge that she was not to come up, and could not understand how it had come to pass that the lady had forced her way to the hall-door. (534)
·         “My lord, if you’d only give yourself the trouble to understand me—“
“I don’t understand a word you say...” (537)
·         She felt sure that if Lord Stapledean would only be made to understand the facts of the case, he would yet take her part. (538)
·         “…Now we may fairly trust that we do know our own minds…” (541)
·         His uncle, he knew, had misunderstood him. (555)

·         “Father, you do not understand this matter.” (566)