[Remarks delivered October 6, 2017 at the Heyman Center of Columbia
University]
It is a great pleasure to return to Columbia after an
absence of forty-six years, and to speak in this lovely building, which did not
exist when I lived just three blocks south of where we now sit. The Sixties were a good time for the Liberal
Arts in America. The dramatic expansion
of higher education after World War II created so many entry level Assistant
Professorships across the curriculum that doctoral students were being offered
teaching positions even before they had begun to write their dissertations. The Cold War prompted the Congress to pass
the National Defense Education Act, and although most of the money went to
military research and Area Studies, enough spilled over into the Humanities,
and even into the Libraries, to create a seller’s market for Philosophers,
Literary Critics, Historians, Classicists, and Comparative Linguists.
Alas, half a century later, the balloon has deflated. Teaching positions are scarce, commercial
publishers no longer rush to sign up scholarly books, and a corporate model of
management has taken over America’s college and university administration
buildings. I have even been told by a
Columbia friend that thirty percent of Columbia College’s graduating seniors,
have been blessed by a truly remarkable liberal education, choose investment
banking as their career. No longer do
the Liberal Arts have the unquestioning support of alumni/ae and state
legislatures. So this is perhaps a good
time to ask, once again, an old and familiar question: What good is a Liberal Education?
In the next hour or so, I shall offer a new and rather
unexpected answer to this question. But
although what I have to say has never, to my, knowledge, been said in quite
this way before, it is not at all entirely original with me. Rather, I shall be expanding on some deep
insights offered more than half a century ago by my old friend and comrade and
one-time co-author, Herbert Marcuse. I
shall lay before you today a politically radical defense of Liberal Education. But Before turning to that defense, I thought
it might be helpful to review briefly three familiar defenses of Liberal
Education that have been offered by its champions.
The oldest is a claim popular at Oxford and Cambridge four
hundred years ago. A study of the classics, it was thought, would
give gentlemen of high estate the proper finish, or patina, that would allow
them to move gracefully in polite circles. A command of Greek and Latin, like a
well-turned leg and a well-filled codpiece, was an evidence of good bloodlines. It was even suggested
that a familiarity with ancient tongues and literatures might deepen
a young man's understanding of human affairs,
although that was, to be sure, more of a tutor's hope than a
realistic expectation. I say “gentleman” because a gentle
lady was expected to exhibit skill with the needle, perhaps to play a bit on
the spinet, and of course to have mastered Oeconomics, which in those days
meant the management of a household.
It might be thought that in these democratic times, when the
rich masquerade in designer jeans and tie dyed skirts, this defense of liberal
education has passed away, but it continues to crop up in unexpected
places. My favorite example is the
Massachusetts Institute of technology, or MIT, as it is know throughout the
world. About sixty years ago or more, MIT
was turning out class after class of superbly trained engineers, who secured
good jobs in America’s great corporations, when the MIT deans discover ed that
they had a problem. Their students
rapidly climb the corporate ladder
until, roughly ten years after graduation, they would become eligible for
management positions in the higher reaches of their corporate employers. At that point, they would be expected to
exhibit some fluency with the written word and an easy familiarity with the
writers, poets, philosophers, and painters whose names were dropped at
executive cocktail parties. MIT’s finest
were losing out to competitors from Harvard, Columbia, Yale, or Princeton had
conferred upon them the appropriate stigmata of a liberal education. The deans decided they had to go out and buy
MIT some humanists and social scientists to prepare their students for
corporate success. And, being MIT, they
bought themselves Paul Samuelson, they bought themselves Noam Chomsky. In 1980, they even bought themselves my first
wife, Cynthia Griffin Wolff, an accomplished literary scholar, who was offered
a professorship in the Literature Section of the Humanities Department at MIT.
The second traditional justification of a Liberal Education
is that, in the steeply pyramidal and profoundly unequal American economy, it
separates the Suits from the Shirts, as we used to say. Without a liberal education, you can get a
job that leaves you sweaty and tired at the end of the day, a job that pays a
wage weekly, and which offers few benefits unless you are unionized. With a liberal education, you can secure a
position in which you end each day neither tired nor sweaty, receive an annual
salary disbursed monthly, and enjoy a variety of benefits, including a paid
vacation. When I was a college Freshman
in 1950, only 5% of American adults had a four year college degree. Sixty-seven years later, that number has
climbed to 35%, which means that two out of three Americans are forever barred
from being doctors, lawyers, professors, high school teachers, elementary
school teachers, corporate executives, or FBI agents.
My description might suggest that I am scornful of this
justification of liberal education, but I must not be too dismissive, for I am
myself its very exemplar. My
grandfather, Barnet Wolff, arrived in America as a babe in arms in 1880. He never finished elementary school and
worked as a cigar salesman while devoting his life to the Socialist Party here
in New York City. His oldest son, my
father, graduated from Boy’s High School, got a free college education at
C.C.N.Y., and went on to become a high school teacher and, eventually, high
school principal. And here I am, the
fulfilment of my family’s dream, a college professor who writes books.
I often think this must be what it is like for a young
Catholic boy who honors his father and mother by becoming a priest. Except that I did not have to give up sex.
There is, third, the justification for liberal education
which I have always associated most immediately with the University of Chicago
under the guidance of Robert Maynard
Hutchins, but which has been given expression, in one form or another, in
Harvard's General Education and Core Curriculum programs, in Columbia's
Contemporary Civilization course, in the Great Books curriculum of St. John's
College, and in countless other curricula and institutions besides: the
conception of liberal education as an initiation into the two millennia long
Great Conversation.
When I was
a boy, I found in my parents' attic, buried under a mound of ancient science
textbooks, a slender volume entitled "Heavenly Discourses," by
Charles Erskine Scott Wood. This consisted, as the title perhaps suggests, of a
series of imaginary conversations in heaven among famous men and women of the
western cultural tradition who could not, under normal historical circumstances,
have encountered one another here on earth.
The book
made an enormous impression on me - so much so that my very first college paper
was an imaginary heavenly discourse, featuring John Stuart Mill, T. S. Eliot,
Zarathustra, and Carl Sandburg, on the issues posed by Ortega y Gasset's REVOLT
OF THE MASSES. [As you might perhaps guess, Sandburg won.]
The ideal of the Great Conversation is merely an elaborate formalization of Wood's charming conceit. Western Civilization is conceived as a perpetual debate about a number of timeless questions, conducted by the great minds of the Judeo-Christian, Graeco-Roman tradition, with its medieval Arabic variants, through the medium of a small, but continuously growing, library of great works of philosophy, tragedy, poetry, fiction, history, political theory - and, more recently, sociology, anthropology, economics, and anthropology. Homer and the nameless authors of the Old Testament, Sophocles and Euripides, Plato and Aristotle, Herodotus, Thucydides, Cicero, Caesar, Paul and the Evangelists, Ovid, Sappho, Philo, Tertullian, Aquinas, Maimonides, Averroes, Avicenna, Erasmus, Luther, Chaucer, Calvin, John of Salisbury, Jean Bodin, Machiavelli, Hobbes, Bacon, Montaigne, Descartes, Spinoza, Shakespeare, Donne, Herbert, Locke, Galileo, Newton, Berkeley, Hume, Leibniz, Kant, Rousseau, Hegel, Fichte, Schelling, Herder, Marx, Smith, Bentham, Mill - on and on they come, quibbling, quarreling, drawing distinctions, splitting hairs, proving the existence of God, refuting the proofs for the existence of God, reading one another, referring to one another - a grand faculty seminar, captured for all time in no more than several hundred immortal books.
A liberal education - so this story has it - is a ticket of admission to the Conversation. Most of us are mere auditors, much as I was when, as a boy of ten, I sat on the steps of the staircase leading from my parents' living room and listened to my parents, my uncles and aunts, and the neighbors debating politics, literature, and the bureaucratic insanities of the New York City School System in which they worked. An inspired few actually enter the Conversation, and make to it contributions that will be taken up into the immortal lists of Great Books. But for the rest of us, it is enough that we have been initiated into its rituals and shibboleths. Throughout our lives, that eternal debate will be the intellectual accompaniment of our quotidien lives.
And so we come, at last, to the real subject of this
lecture, a new, radical, and thoroughly unexpected defense of Liberal
Education. I take as my text today one of Marcuse’s most profound and provocative
phrases: “surplus repression,” which makes its appearance in his early work, Eros
and Civilization. By an explication of the notion of surplus repression,
and a close reading of a single paragraph from the chapter on repressive
desublimation in Marcuse’s most famous work, One-Dimensional Man, I can,
I think, lay before you a deep justification of liberal education that will
explain both how it plays a central role in the critique and reformation of
society, and why it is so appropriately undertaken at that moment in late
adolescence and early adulthood which we in the United States identify as the
undergraduate years.
Marcuse, who as a member of the Frankfurt
Institute of Social Research, participated in the great early twentieth century
attempt to fuse the central insights of Marx and Freud, begins Eros and
Civilization by accepting the pessimistic thesis of Freud’s Civilization
and Its Discontents, that some measure of psychic repression is the
necessary precondition for the organised social existence of humanity. Let us begin therefore, where Freud does,
with the earliest stages of childhood development.
The new-born infant does not possess a
coherent rational self or ego with which to negotiate its relationship to the
external world. Indeed, it does not yet so much as possess a conception of
itself in contradistinction to its surroundings. What we think of as the
ordinary thought-processes of reality orientation – the distinction of self and
other, the recognition of relations of space, time, and causality, the
distinction between desire and satisfaction, between wish and actuality – all
these are in fact secondary accomplishments, painfully acquired in the wake of
initial and continuing frustrations. Each of the stages of normal childhood
development has a profoundly ambivalent significance for the child, at one and
the same time a source of power, satisfaction, and self-esteem, and a suffering
of frustration, pain, and rage.
The new-born infant is put to the breast and
responds with a natural suckling instinct, gaining warmth, food, and
comfort. It is happy. [Incidentally Freud, like other typical late
nineteenth century Viennese professional men, probably spent virtually no time
with his infant children. His brilliant
theorizing was derived from the interpretation of the dreams and associations
of his adult patients. But I am, if I
may adapt the words of Gilbert and Sullivan, the very model of a modern
American father, and I have actually spent many hours caring for my new-born
sons, so I can attest to the accuracy of Freud’s account.] The next time the infant is hungry, or so
Freud hypothesizes, it conjures the image of the breast, but the image, alas,
gives neither warmth nor milk. The
infant suffers frustration and feels rage at this failure, the first of many,
and it cries. Anyone who has actually
watched a tiny baby cry will acknowledge that it is as disappointed, as
frustrated, as outraged as a human being can be. It grows red in the face with anger. [What, you will ask, has any of this to do
with a liberal education? Patience,
patience. I remind you that Rousseau’s
great educational work, Émile, begins with an extended discussion of
swaddling and breast-feeding.] And then,
something quite astonishing and unexpected happens, or at least it does in the
early life of a normal, healthy baby:
the baby is picked up, soothed, and fed.
This is a profoundly important moment, the first of many similar moments
to come. Again and again, the baby, and
then the young child, learns the deeply ambivalent truth that although it is
incapable of achieving the instantaneous and effortless gratification that it
desires, there are things it can learn to do that will, with delays and
frustrations along the way, to be sure, bring the pleasure it seeks. This elementary fact is, Freud teaches us,
the basic template of all human existence.
One example can perhaps stand for the entire
years-long process. Little babies, as I have said, are at first unable to express
their desires, save by the painful and inefficient method of crying. Still, a
fortunate baby will succeed in getting its parent’s attention by crying, and
the parent will become hyper-sensitively attuned to those slight variations in
the cry which indicate whether it is hunger, fatigue, colic, or teething that
is the cause. Eventually, a baby learns to sit up in a high chair and eat with
its hands or with a spoon, and (we may suppose) it learns as well that when it
waves its hands and makes a demanding noise, it gets a cookie. The baby, let us
remember, will be deeply ambivalent about this learned behaviour, for what the
baby wants (or so Freud persuasively tells us) is to have its hunger, or its
desire for a cookie, instantaneously gratified, without even the temporary
frustration of waiting until the parent decodes the cry and responds. But
though this state of affairs has come about at the cost of frustration and
pain, it is also a source of power and gratification. By learning how to
command its parent’s response, the baby can get the cookie. What is more, the
parent is likely to respond with manifest pleasure to the baby’s ability to sit
up and communicate its wants.
One day, something inexplicable, terrible,
frustrating, painful happens. The baby makes its demanding noise, with the
cookie in full view just outside its reach, and the parent, instead of
immediately handing it over, as has happened every day for as long as the baby
can remember, now picks up the cookie, holds it tantalisingly before the baby,
and says in what can only be construed as a deliberately sadistic voice, “Can
you say ‘cookie’?”
Well, all of us know the rest of this story,
for all of us have lived through it. The acquisition of language, the mastery
of one’s bowels, the control of one’s temper – all of the stages in development
that make one an adult human being who is recognisably a member of a society –
all have a negative side, a side associated with shame, rage, pain,
frustration, resentment, a backside, as we learn to think of it, as well as a
positive side associated with praise, self-esteem, public reward, power,
satisfaction – a front, which, as our language very nicely suggests, is both an
officially good side and also a pretence, a fake.
By and large, we do not forget the
frustration, the pain, the rage, nor do we ever forget those infantile
fantasies of omnipotence and instantaneous gratification. We repress those fantasies, drive them out of
consciousness, deny them, put them behind us, as we like to say. But, like our
own backsides, and the faeces which issue from them, they remain, and exercise
a secret, shameful attraction for us.
This brief reminder of our common heritage
makes it clear that the repression of “unacceptable” wishes – as Freud so
quaintly and aptly labelled them in his earlier writings – is an essential
precondition for our development of the ability to interact effectively with
the world, and with one another. Mastery of our own bodies, mastery of
language, the psychic ability and willingness to defer gratification long
enough to perform necessary work, the ability to control destructive, and
self-destructive, rages or desires – civilisation, society, culture, survival
all depend upon them. But necessary though they are, they are painful; throughout
our lives, we carry, repressed, those delicious, illicit fantasies of total,
immediate, uncompromised gratification, of instantaneous, magical fulfilment,
of the permission to indulge the desires that have been stigmatised as
negative.
With great flair, Marcuse combines Freud’s
thesis, of the necessity of some repression for the existence of human
civilisation, with the central concept of Marx’s political economy – surplus
value. According to Marx, it is the labour required for the production of commodities
that regulates their exchange in a capitalist market. Inasmuch as workers sell
their own capacity for labour in the market like a commodity, through the wage
bargain, competition eventually sets its price – the wage – at a level equal to
the amount of labour required to produce that capacity, which is to say the
amount of labour required to produce the workers’ food, clothing, and shelter.
This labour, Marx says, can be called “necessary labour,” for in every economic
system, including socialism, of course, it must be performed if the workers are
to be able to remain alive and continue their labours. But, Marx argues, the
workers are forced, by the conditions of the labour market, to work more hours
than is embodied in their consumption goods, and the extra labour time, through
the processes of market exchange, is transmuted into surplus exchange value.
That surplus value, Marx demonstrates, is the source of the profits, interest,
and rents that the propertied classes appropriate. In sum, Marx asserts, capitalism
rests upon the capitalist appropriation of surplus value, or, more succinctly,
upon exploitation.
Marcuse transfers these concepts of necessary
and surplus labour to the sphere of the psyche, and rechristens them “necessary
and surplus repression.” Just as there is a certain quantum of necessary labour
that must be performed in any society, so there is a certain amount of
necessary repression, as we have seen, that is the precondition of human
existence as such. But in some societies, just as workers are forced to perform
more than merely necessary labour, its fruits being appropriated by a ruling
class, so in those same societies, and most particularly in capitalist society,
workers, and indeed others as well, have inflicted upon them extra, or surplus,
repression, whose function is not to make human society in general possible,
but rather to serve and support the particular exploitative, unjust, repressive
economic and political institutions and policies of the ruling classes.
Over and above the deferral of gratification
demanded by the exigencies of nature and human intercourse, the capitalist
workplace demands an additional level of work discipline, of self-denial, of
obedience, of surplus repression. Marcuse notes, by way of rough proof, the extraordinary
fact that despite the doubling, trebling, quadrupling of worker productivity
achieved by technological advance, the average work week has shortened only
slightly, if at all, in the past three-quarters of a century.
In One-Dimensional Man, in what has
always seemed to me one of the truly inspired texts of twentieth century social
theory, Marcuse deploys this insight to explain the structure and conditions of
social protest, and the subjective psychological sources of the energy that
fuels social change. The argument goes like this: The energy on which we draw
for work, for art, and for politics, as well as for sex, is the fund of
originally undifferentiated libidinal energy with which we are born, and which
we attach to various objects through the psychic processes of sublimation,
displacement, and cathexis. The gratifications we obtain are, as Freud
poignantly shows us, always somewhat diminished, compromised, shadowed by the
unavoidable adjustments to reality. The pleasures of useful, fruitful,
unalienated labour, the satisfactions of artistic creation, even the sensuous
delights of sexual intercourse, necessarily fall short of what is longed for in
our repressed fantasies. To give a single, elementary example: all of us who
write books of philosophy will acknowledge, I imagine, that in our most secret
dreams, we lust after a review that begins something like this: “Not since
Plato wrote The Republic has a work of such power and brilliance burst
upon the scene” – after which, we become instantaneously rich, young, thin, and
flooded with absolutely risk-free offers of polymorphic sexual satisfaction.
What actually happens, if we are fortunate, is that we are moderately
favourably reviewed, by someone with his or her own fantasies of instant gratification,
and then have the genuine, but subdued pleasure, in years to come, of stumbling
on references to our production, or of encounters with a praising reader.
Now, Marcuse suggests, there is real surplus
psychic repression inflicted on all of us in our society, most particularly on
those at the bottom of the economic pyramid, and the established,
institutionalised structures of political and economic repression being what
they are, it takes an enormous, painful, dangerous mobilisation of psychic
energy to fight those structures and reduce the quantum of surplus repression.
But since the dangers of revolt and resistance are so great, and most
especially because the repression has been internalised in each of us in the
form of an unnecessarily punitive set of self-inflicted restraints, a reasoned,
measured, realistic call for incremental improvements is unlikely to elicit the
burst of revolutionary energy needed for any change at all. “Workers of the
world, unite! You have nothing to lose
but your chains! You have a modest reduction in surplus repression to win!” is
not a slogan calculated to bring suffering men and women into the streets and
to the barricades.
What in fact happens, Marcuse suggests, is
that revolutionary change is energised by the utopian, siren call of
liberation, which, whatever the language in which it is couched, is experienced
subjectively as a promise of the gratification of those infantile fantasies of
instantaneous, magical, total gratification that lurk within us all. Workers’ liberation,
Black liberation, Women’s liberation, Gay liberation – all appeal, necessarily,
meretriciously to be sure, and yet productively, to these universal repressed
fantasies. Only the tapping of such powerful wellsprings of psychic energy can
move us to the heroic feats required for even modest reductions in surplus
repression.
The upshot of every revolution is therefore
inevitably disappointment, for no matter how successful the revolution, it
cannot, in the nature of things, liberate us from necessary repression. After
the victory celebrations, we must still go to work, use the toilet, submit
ourselves to some code or other of dress, of speech, of sexual conduct.
Nevertheless, despite these repeated disappointments, we must keep alive the
fantasies, and attach them to our political aspirations, for they are the
essential motor of real world social, economic, and political progress.
In this project, the great works of art,
literature, philosophy and music of our cultural tradition play an essential,
and rather surprising, role. Regardless of their manifest content and apparent
purpose, these works, which we customarily consider the appropriate subject of
a liberal education, play a continuingly subversive role. They keep alive, in
powerful and covert ways, the fantasies of gratification, the promise of
happiness, the anger at even necessary repression, on which radical political
action feeds.
To explain somewhat how even the most
seemingly abstract works of art perform this function, let me read to you a
single paragraph from Marcuse’s discussion, and then explicate it by reference
to a Bach fugue. Here is the passage:
The tension between the actual and the possible
is transfigured into an insoluble conflict, in which reconciliation is by grace
of the oeuvre as form: beauty as the “promesse de bonheur.” In the form of the
oeuvre, the actual circumstances are placed in another dimension where the
given reality shows itself as that which it is. Thus it tells the truth about
itself; its language ceases to be that of deception, ignorance, and submission.
Fiction calls the facts by their name and their reign collapses; fiction
subverts everyday experience and shows it to be mutilated and false. But art
has this magic power only as the power of negation. It can speak its own
language only as long as the images are alive which refuse and refute the
established order.
Consider now a Bach fugue, which can stand, in
our analysis, for any work of art or literature that submits itself, as all
true art must, to some canon of formal constraint. We could as well consider a
sonnet, a portrait, a statue, or indeed a Platonic dialogue. The rules
governing the composition of a fugue are extremely strict. They constitute,
psychologically speaking, a repression of the composer’s instinctual, creative
energies. In the hands of novices, the fugue-form is a straitjacket, painfully
forcing them to adjust their musical line in unnatural ways. It is, speaking at
the very deepest psychological level, the equivalent of being required to use
the toilet, or to say “cookie” before being fed. But in the hands of Bach, all
is transformed. Bach’s fugues seem effortless. They magically transcend the
constraints of the form, all the while rigidly conforming to them. Thus, we may suppose, God played as He
created the world, laughing in delight at the effortless production of a cosmos
ruled by inflexible universal laws.
The result is sheer, sensuous beauty which is,
at one and the same time, liberated from the constraints of form and completely
consonant with those constraints. The fugue thus holds out, magically, the promise
of total satisfaction, the “promesse de bonheur,” that is to be found in the
unconscious of each of us. In the same fashion, a Dickinson poem, a Rodin
sculpture, a Platonic dialogue, a van Gogh still life reawaken in us the
fantasy of perfect, effortless gratification. These works of art and literature
keep alive in us the possibility that there is a life better than the network
of compromises in which we are enmeshed, a second dimension to existence in
which freedom replaces necessity, happiness replaces suffering.
The great works of humanistic writing, be they
philosophy, history, theology, or criticism, accomplish the same end. The pure,
rational arguments of Spinoza’s Ethics recall for us the image of a
world in which reason is an instrument of liberation, not of domination. The
sheer formal beauty of a mathematical proof, the effortless derivation of the
most powerful conclusions from apparently innocent premises, holds out to us
the hope of instantaneous ecstasy.
In all seriousness, I suggest to you that this
is the real justification for keeping alive the great tradition of liberal arts
and letters in our colleges and universities. Not as a patina for modern
aristocrats, not as an instrument of upward mobility, not even as an
introduction to the Great Conversation, but as a way of putting young men and
women in touch with their repressed fantasies of gratification, in such a
fashion as to awaken in them the hope, the dream, the unquenchable thirst for
liberation from which social progress must come.
By way of illustration, let me tell you a true
story. More than forty years ago, I taught for a year as a visiting professor
at Rutgers University, in New Jersey. One semester I was assigned an
Introduction to Philosophy that met, thanks to the peculiar schedule pattern
then in use at Rutgers, on Monday mornings at 8:00 a.m. and Thursday afternoons
at 4:00 p.m. For the only time in my teaching career, I assigned a casebook – a
collection of readings from the great philosophers – instead of a group of complete
original works, and each Monday morning and Thursday afternoon, I soldiered
away, “covering” the material, as we delicately put it in the trade.
Sometime in the late Fall, I got to Hume, who
was represented by a few well-chosen pages from Part III of Book One of the Treatise
– which, as some of you will know, is the locus for his famous sceptical
critique of causal reasoning. I was dead bored with the material, with the
course, and with myself by this time, and I can confidently assure you that I
was not doing a superlative job of teaching. I had studied Hume first as a
Freshman, then as a Sophomore, then while writing my doctoral dissertation, and
innumerable times since. I was so thoroughly inoculated against the force of
his arguments that I could scarcely recall a time when I had found them even
mildly provocative.
One day, after class, a young man came up to
talk to me, very agitated. He had been troubled by Hume’s arguments he said – I
found this rather astonishing, as you can imagine – and had gone to talk things
over with his priest. The priest, whose seminary training had not prepared him
for this sort of problem from his parishioners, referred him to the Office of
Information of the Diocese. The young man called the Diocese, and was referred
to a Monsignor, who, after listening to his concerns, said abruptly, “Well,
some people think that. But we don’t,” and hung up the phone. What should he
do?, the student wanted to know.
Let me tell you, I was humbled by the episode.
Despite my best efforts to deaden the impact of the text, and the utterly
unpromising conditions of an 8:00 a.m. introductory class, David Hume had
reached his hand across two centuries, seized that young man by the scruff of
the neck, and given him a shaking that bid fair to liberate him from a lifetime
of unthinking subservience to received authority.
That is what a liberal education can
accomplished, and that is why, in every college and university, a protected
sanctuary must be preserved for undergraduate liberal education.
What good is a liberal education? At its best, it can tap into deeply repressed
infantile fantasies of omnipotence and instantaneous gratification and fuel our
real world struggle for liberation. It
can give us courage to confront oppression and exploitation and to fight
against it. And as we struggle, it can
keep alive our hope, doomed though it is to disappointment, that one day, we
shall be able to cry, with Martin Luther King, “Free at last! Free at last!
Great God Almighty, Free At Last!”
7 comments:
Thanks.
I prefer the Great Conversation theory myself.
Somewhere commenting on May 1968, the great Marxist historian Eric Hobsbawm comments that revolutions are puritanical, not liberating in the way that the French students of May 1968 and Marcuse seem to believe. There's a ruling class and a group of people who have psychologically invested in the ideas and lifestyle of the ruling class, and they are not going to go gently or politely. The revolution is not a dinner party, says Mao Tse Tung nor is it instant liberation. It's hard work and some blood will undoubtedly be shed.
Hume did that to me as an undergraduate. And Homer. And Godel.
This made my morning. I won't say it's the best thing since Plato's Republic, but it's probably my favorite piece of yours so far. I've been reading your blog, and a couple others, for only about the past year - largely as post-election therapy - and it's made it a slightly less horrific year. Thanks for what you do!
> A command of Greek and Latin, like a well-turned leg and a well-filled codpiece
Ah ha ha! It's nice to start the day with a good laugh. Thank you.
and re: s wallerstein above - I personally didn't get from this address that Dr Wolff believes or disbelieves revolution to be genuinely liberating in a Freudian sense, but that in order to make progress *toward* reasonable, beautiful goals such as those held by revolutionaries, people need... HOPE.
Hope, inspiration, a reason to freakin' bother getting out of bed in the morning. And for those of us blessed with a love of words, discovery, and general nerdiness, inspiration and hope will leap across the centuries through the words of dead white men, will claw through the clutter of the burning landfill that is today's media landscape through the words of many people, of all genders and races and points of view, curated by the passionate and thoughtful souls who curate the syllabi and deliver the lectures. (Or , more realistically, by a handful of underpaid grad students and adjuncts.)
Magdalen,
I more or less agree with Spinoza (who if you see his portrait, was not so white) that hope is not a virtue (Ethics IV, p. 47).
Radical social change is a long, hard process and we'd better base our strategies on rational calculations than on hope, which tends to be fragile, fickle and, as Spinoza points out, mixed with irrational fear.
Dr. Wolff, you memory is ever so slightly off. Charles Erskine Scott Wood's famous book was called Heavenly Discourse - singular, rather than plural. I wonder if your childhood self was attuned to the satirical content of those dialogues? It's been a long time since I read that book, but, if I recall correctly, much of it was downright funny.
Professor Wolff,
don't you detect the irony in that you're as educated as any British gentleman?
Or is that something other and more than ironic?
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