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Post a Comment On: Bruce Charlton's Notions

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Blogger Wurmbrand said...

Note that popular culture often acknowledges and even celebrates the grimness of modern life. It's as if the agenda is, not so much the idea of our Wonderful Time as opposed to all earlier (and miserable) times, but rather that the very expectation of, even the desire for, happiness should be foregone. May it not be part of the Evil One's strategy to make suspect the very idea that we should be happy? The very words that express innocent, trusting happiness are made dubious. There was a loss not merely to poetry but to consciousness when "gay" was stolen by advocates of homosexuality. And how often do people speak or write of being "merry" or "mirthful"? The very words sound suspect. I have taught Milton's "L'Allegro" to college students, and -- never mind the difficulties of the allusions, I have to wonder how much the experiences have been available to them. I don't want to overstate my point, but it does seem that much in popular culture (and no doubt in education) seems as if it were intended to kill the ability to experience uncomplicated happiness. Chesterton somewhere suggests that God may be likened to a child who experiences something delightful and says "Do it again!" -- as if He makes the sun to rise every morning with an analogous delight. Perhaps the devil is (in his own mind) much more "grown up."

As I like to point out, you almost never hear people whistling tunes any more. Popular music, as Roger Scruton pointed out, is largely rhythmic, not melodic. Melody naturally associates itself with natural emotions, whether of joy or of longing. I'm not very knowledgeable about music but I'm not so sure that highly rhythmic music is the natural expression of such states of the soul.

30 May 2011 at 17:28

Blogger Bruce Charlton said...

Re: Whistling - Many years ago I supervised a delightful, quiet female student from southern Africa who told me that she had been used to singing as she walked and worked, but had to stop in Britain because she attracted too much attention - maybe she was too obviously happy?

Wittgenstein was a very keen whistler, but (of course) took it terribly seriously - he would whistle classical music duets with friends who played instruments.

Another great whistler was the great 18th century Newcastle wood engraver and artist Thomas Bewick. In his memoir (which I recommend) he advocates whistling becoming a public phenomenon, and having competitions.

30 May 2011 at 18:20

Blogger Wurmbrand said...

I'm delighted by the three points in your comment above!

30 May 2011 at 19:54

Anonymous dearieme said...

I still whistle. And I hum. Alas, my wife says that she can recognise the tunes solely by the rhythm, so feeble is my melodic accuracy. Yet I can hear melody perfectly well. It's so unfair!!!!

31 May 2011 at 00:52

Anonymous Hugo said...

Is there a source for Deary being "explicit that his books have a subversive and Leftist purpose"?

2 June 2011 at 10:01

Blogger Bruce Charlton said...

Source for Deary - this edition of the Radio Times - the biggest selling weekly magazine in the UK. But it's no secret - look at any interview.

2 June 2011 at 14:41