Was Paul M's Eagleton tidbit on THE UNCONSCIOUS
Ian Livingston
igrlivingston at gmail.com
Thu Oct 18 08:50:13 CDT 2012
Recently read an article (Guardian? BBC?) suggesting all creativity is
proximate to mental illness. The argument was poorly structured and
unrevealing, ultimately claiming that the most creative people, the
creative genii, generate their work either resultant of direct efforts to
manage illness or to deal with proximate illness in others in a manageable
context. (My summary, of course, and unreliable.) It didn't seem to me news
enough to pay much attention to. Artists are crazy? No shit? Gee, who'd
a-thunk it? It's a thin line between madness and genius? Wow.
The Freud / (Jung) / Burke / Jameson link seems much more profitable. What
is Eagleton's title? I'd like to read it. He occasionally rings true, if
difficult.
Burke's pentad often proves useful.
On Thu, Oct 18, 2012 at 4:46 AM, Paul Mackin <mackin.paul at verizon.net>wrote:
> On 10/17/2012 4:09 PM, Mark Kohut wrote:
>
> Can't find the email but if I remember, Paul said that Terry Eagleton
> has written that it may be THE UNCONSCIOUS that is the creativeness
> that unites writers. Been thinkin' on that.
>
>
> Actually I kind of misrepresented the great Terry E and left out his final
> point.
>
> The unconscious was a first stab at tying things together. It works well
> for psychoanalytic theory of course, also political theory (meaning
> Marxist), structuralism, post structuralism, and semiotics.
>
> However he next goes on to develop sort of a theory of everything and
> comes to the conclusion that in ALL literary work, in a certain sense, the
> text doesn't merely represent proper action, but also that action is
> perfectly realized because the reality to which it is faithful is no other
> than the one it creates itself.
>
> The above depends on the idea of textuality--writers don't go to work on
> raw reality but rather on the always already textualized. Very French
> although the authors he relies on are Kenneth Burke and Frederic Jameson.
>
> The route to his conclusion involves a style of thinking some people might
> not find persuasive. But it's all very interesting.
>
>
> P
>
>
>
> While I read a good esssay on Kenneth Burke since he was mentioned
> (by Monte and Wayne Booth, I believe). Burke seemed to believe that
> all great writers (in recent centuries anyway) can be seen as articulating
> values somehow---almost by definition---different from the prevailing,
> largely tacit, structural
> values of a society. That is their necessary tension (or else they are
> just PR-like journalists).
> this summary is obviously mine, fyi.
>
> Anyway, Burke's pattern-finding leads one--me--to thoughts of the
> countervailing
> symbols in TRP, from W.A.S.T.E/Trystero to CounterForce, etc...
>
> and how with a tight but wide understanding of 'the prevailing ideas of a
> society'
> almost any tension and insight might have to come from an Unconsciousness
> outside of
> it. And, to loop TRP back in, we know he has some Freudian-Jungian notions
> about history
> and the societies that make that history.
>
>
>
>
--
"Less than any man have I excuse for prejudice; and I feel for all creeds
the warm sympathy of one who has come to learn that even the trust in
reason is a precarious faith, and that we are all fragments of darkness
groping for the sun. I know no more about the ultimates than the simplest
urchin in the streets." -- Will Durant
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