Monday 18 June 2007

Roman Summer

What European literary culture has offered in the creation of European morality was the subject of a 2 day conference at La Sapienza, Rome’s oldest university.
Most of Europe’s ancient seats of learning contributed (an inquiry into what made the European spirit can only be investigated seriously in Rome in June). The Bible (and scriptures of some other major faiths) was taken as the frame in which the study was set; so was Homer.

As Ulysses went to the borders of the known universe, not just those of Europe, to encapsulate Ulysses’ human predicament we Europeans were advised to pursue “virtude e cognoscenza” “fatti non fummo per viver come bruti”. Il Contrapasso - that wonderful assertion that punishment should fit the crime - is such a satisfying contribution to our European culture (or it should be); certainly it was acclaimed as such when Benigni packed the piazza S.Croce for nights on end as he preached Dante to the Florentines, native and adopted, and held thousands in absorbed, breath- held silence as, at the end of each glorious evening, he read the best bits.

The brains powered on in Rome: Shakespeare, who gave us Doubt, took up more time than most, though any pause given to authoritarian socialist righteousness, the plague of the last 100 years and with us still in England, is welcome.

Bigotry met its end in the Dictionnaire philosophique, and Candide; here Europe arrived, laical and at the end of ipse dixit, enlightenment and reason re-take their place. On we galloped, Cervantes and idealism, Goethe, Kafka... but we had parted ways.

A group beckoned to me that others did not heed:

Cesare Beccaria whose Dei Delitti e delle Pene brought the rule of law, no torture, and no death penalty - all the most basic of civil rights and their guarantees we watch destroyed today, disgraced by their abolition.

Maynard Keynes - discoverer of the determinants of income and employment in capitalist societies, (of course Richard Kahn was feeding him potted Marx which is why, chewed and digested (though indigestible to most) it is used in keynesian understanding.

Beveridge - whose ideas and policies ended absolute poverty in Europe.

Gramsci, whose rational version of communism inspired or antagonised us all, whatever degraded version has reached us.

The prize for wrongest of all yet so influential goes to Freud. No women here? Ask him.

7 comments:

Nick Drew said...

This is a cracker HG but am on the road & can't do it justice: perhaps later ...

Nick Drew said...

BTW, do philosophers count as contributors to literary culture?

Why do I ask: of course they do!

hatfield girl said...

Wovon man nicht sprechen kann, darüber muß man schweigen, ND

Nick Drew said...

Well then, back to the beginning before he ran out of platitudes:

Die Welt ist alles, was der Fall ist

but from the great roll of our German-speaking friends (be they Austrian or Polish) I would propose rather, Nietzsche for his influence on several branches of European morality:

Gott ist todt: but also of course many more subtle offerings laid before the altar of the spirit of Europa - all steeped in deep learning on those seminal Greeks

(and yes, Homer! thousands are the cities of men that I have seen ...)

((verification is ecxia, I jest not, which must be the echo of a message from Greek gods))

Anonymous said...

I never really understand your posts - and now you have started speaking in Spanish and what may be German - really could you try and simplify things a bit, I am only here because Mr Newmania recommended you, was it just showing off or a trick on his part?

hatfield girl said...

Mutley, you are living with aggressive turnips, radioactive howler monkeys, your local restaurant is serving mixed nightmare and chips;
and you don't understand my posts?

If Newmania misled you that's between you and him, you're always welcome anyway.

hatfield girl said...

Word verifications obviously has an office staffed by quick-minded allusionists ND, lots of commenters on lots of blogs have mentioned it.

Give us a moment on Nietzsche, he's standing in a lot of places, most of which are patrolled by the politically correct police.