Reflections in the Evening Land

The celebrated critic Harold Bloom, despairing of contemporary
America, turns to his bookshelves to understand the trajectory of his
country

Saturday December 17, 2005
The Guardian

Excerpt:
At the age of 75, I wonder if the Democratic party ever again will
hold the presidency or control the Congress in my lifetime. I am not
sanguine, because our rulers have demonstrated their prowess in
Florida (twice) and in Ohio at shaping voting procedures, and they
control the Supreme Court. The economist-journalist Paul Krugman
recently observed that the Republicans dare not allow themselves to
lose either Congress or the White House, because subsequent
investigations could disclose dark matters indeed. Krugman did not
specify, but among the profiteers of our Iraq crusade are big oil
(House of Bush/House of Saud), Halliburton (the vice-president),
Bechtel (a nest of mighty Republicans) and so forth.

All of this is extraordinarily blatant, yet the American people seem
benumbed, unable to read, think, or remember, and thus fit subjects
for a president who shares their limitations. A grumpy old Democrat, I
observe to my friends that our emperor is himself the best argument
for intelligent design, the current theocratic substitute for what
used to be called creationism. Sigmund Freud might be chagrined to
discover that he is forgotten, while the satan of America is now
Charles Darwin. President Bush, who says that Jesus is his "favourite
philosopher", recently decreed in regard to intelligent design and
evolution: "Both sides ought to be properly taught."

I am a teacher by profession, about to begin my 51st year at Yale,
where frequently my subject is American writers. Without any
particular competence in politics, I assert no special insight in
regard to the American malaise. But I am a student of what I have
learned to call the American Religion, which has little in common with
European Christianity. There is now a parody of the American Jesus, a
kind of Republican CEO who disapproves of taxes, and who has widened
the needle's eye so that camels and the wealthy pass readily into the
Kingdom of Heaven. We have also an American holy spirit, the comforter
of our burgeoning poor, who don't bother to vote. The American trinity
pragmatically is completed by an imperial warrior God, trampling with
shock and awe.

These days I reread the writers who best define America: Emerson,
Hawthorne, Whitman, Melville, Mark Twain, Faulkner, among others.
Searching them, I seek to find what could suffice to explain what
seems our national self-destructiveness....

http://www.guardian.co.uk/usa/story/0,12271,1669277,00.html

--
Gary Denton
http://www.apollocon.org  June 23-25, 2006
"The budget should be balanced; the treasury should be refilled; public
debt should be reduced; and the arrogance of public officials should be
controlled." -Cicero. 106-43 B.C.
Easter Lemming Liberal News Digest -
http://elemming2.blogspot.com
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