Posted on 12/16/2004 8:41:53 PM PST by Stoat
You're quite welcome! I'm delighted to know that you've found it helpful.
This book may well well force historians to revise the history of the Cold War.
It looks like a great one, thanks very much for adding to the list. It's always a sure bet that it's a great book when the Leftists at Publisher's Weekly try to rip it apart, as they do in the review at the book's Amazon page (linked here).
Amazon.com Books The Mass Psychology of Fascism Third Edition
This looks wonderful also, thanks very much! :-)
Thanks for the thread/posts...Love the ten year reading plan...
You're quite welcome, and I'm delighted that you liked the reading plan so much! I regret that I must make a confession....I'm still on the first year, but I also haven't applied myself to it as I really should....so many books, so little time!
I am so very thankful to the editors of the Great Books series for providing this reading plan...in the 1950's, it probably provided a framework of sorts for many college curricula, but these days one can go through many years of English and Literature courses with few of these classics even being mentioned, much less taught. I believe that only a very few extremely expensive private colleges are even offering literature courses stressing the Classics anymore, and I regret that I haven't attended such a school. Fortunately, the Great Books Reading Plan allows those of us who value the ancient knowledge to pursue a structured learning approach that has proven itself over time. Although it lacks some helpful perspective (when studying Kant, as an example, I often wish that I had an instructor to help me along in my understanding) but it's certainly better to have the Reading Plan than to depend upon the majority of universities for a true classical education these days.
Since you liked the Ten Year reading plan so much, there are a few additional resources that may also be of interest.
I've found this book particularly helpful, as the section on Ulysses (p. 251-253) may illustrate:
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"With Ulysses we at last meet a novel that seems impenetrable. It is best to admit that this mountain cannot be scaled with a single leap. Still, it is scalable; and from the top you are granted a view of incomparable richness.
Here are five simple statements. They will not help you to enjoy or understand Ulysses. I list them merely to remove from your mind any notion that this book is a huge joke, or a huge obscenity, or the work of a demented genius, or the altar of a cult. Here is what a large majority of intelligent critics and readers have come to believe about Ulysses since its publication in 1922.
1. It is probably the most completely organized, thought-out work of literature since The Divine Comedy.
2. It is the most influential novel (call it that for lack of a better term) published in our century. The influence is indirect - through other writers.
3. It is one of the most original works of imagination in the language. It broke not one trail, but hundreds.
4. There is some disagreement here, but the prevailing view is that it is not "decadent" or "immoral" or "pessimistic." Like the work of most of the supreme artists listed in the Plan, it proposes a vision of life as seen by a powerful mind that has risen above the partial, the sentimental, and the self-defensive.
5. Unlike its original, the Odyssey, it is not an open book. It yields its secrets only to those willing to work, just as Beethoven's last quartets reveal new riches the longer they are studied.
These statements made, I have three suggestions for the reader:
1. Read Joyce's A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man. This is fairly straightforward, as compared with its greater sequel. It will introduce you to Stephen Dedalus, who is Joyce, and to Joyce's Dublin, the scene of both novels.
2. In this one case, read a good commentary first. The best short one, I think, is Edmund Wilson, the best long ones by Stuart Gilbert and Anthony Burgess.
3. Even then Ulysses will be tough going. Don't try to understand every reference, broken phrase, shade of meaning, allusion to something still to come, or buried in pages you've already read. Get what you can. Then put the book aside and try it a year later.
As you read it, try to keep in mind some of Joyce's purposes:
1. To trace, as completely as possible, the thoughts and doings of a number of Dubliners during the day and night of June 16, 1904.
2. To trace, virtually completely, the thoughts and doings of two of them: Stephen Dedalus, the now classic type of the modern intellectual, and his spiritual father the more or less average man, Leopold Bloom.
3. To give his book a form paralleling (not always obviously) the events and characters of the Odyssey of Homer. Thus Stephen is Telemachus, Bloom Odysseus (Ulysses), Molly an unfaithful Penelope, Bella Cohen Circe.
4. To invent or develop whatever new techniques were needed for his monumental task. These included, among dozens, interior monologue, stream of consciousness, parody, dream and nightmare sequences, puns, word coinages, unconventional punctuation or none at all, and so forth. Ordinary novelists try to satisfy us with a selection from or summary of their characters' thoughts. Joyce gives you the thoughts themselves, in all their streamy, dreamy, formless flow.
Even the attempt to read Ulysses can be a great adventure. Good fortune to you.
At this writing probably the best edition to use is the 1986 Vintage Books (Random House) paperback, described as "The corrected text edited by Hans Walter Gabler with Wolfhard Steppe and Claus Melchior." Perhaps even better is the edition by John Kidd (Norton, 1994)"
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Additionally, I would recommend:
Amazon.com Books Great Books (David Denby - Great Books: My adventures with Homer, Rousseau, Woolf, and other indestructible writers of the Western World)
Amazon.com Books The Western Canon The Books and School of the Ages
Good luck to you in your pursuit of the Reading Plan, and thank you for your kind words :-)
Here are my top 5 that I have read many times:
1. The Brothers Karamazov, Fyodor Dostoevsky
2. Atlas Shrugged, Ayn Rand
3. Common Sense, Thomas Paine
4. Think a Second Time, Dennis Prager
5. Fear & Loathing in Las Vegas, Hunter S. Thompson
It's hard to imagine that there are actually topflight Ivy League universities that don't require non-English majors to take courses in Shakespeare.
Unfortunately, academe-ever since the radicals seized power in the late 60s-has been subsumed by postmodern, faddish, socialist doctrine.
Therefore, there's little room left to teach the standard literary cannon of Western civilization.
An "I just wanted to bookmark this thread" BUMP!
Same here.
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Hardcover - (September 2004) - $27.95 In this tour de force on the most important issue of our time, David Horowitz, confronts the paradox of how so many Americans, including the leadership of the Democratic Party, could turn against the War on Terror. He finds an answer in a political Left that shares a view of America as the ?Great Satan? with America?s radical Islamic enemies. |
fyi
Thanks for the pings. :')
Unholy Alliance:
Radical Islam and the American Left
by David Horowitz
I still haven't gotten around to cracking his last collection, Left Illusions.
Though, a lot of the essays included in that book are reprinted from other publications.
About half of them, I've never read before.
UH....it's the thought that counts....now I remember what I need to do to fix that....tomorrow.....
What's that about?.....A Murder mystery?
-good times, G.J.P.(Jr.)
A "Tuesday" BUMP!
It's hard to imagine that there are actually topflight Ivy League universities that don't require non-English majors to take courses in Shakespeare.
Agreed, and it's also hard to imagine people considering themselves to be fully educated without a grounding in classical literature. Particularly these days when computers are omnipresent, I am frequently encountering people who consider themselves to be quite brilliant because they know how to build a website or code a program, as if this is the ultimate litmus test of worthwhile intelligence. So many people are going through life thinking quite a bit of themselves when in reality their narrow expertise will be completely out of date in another thirty years, whereas the wisdom of Shakespeare, Plato and Socrates will live through eternity.
Unfortunately, academe-ever since the radicals seized power in the late 60s-has been subsumed by postmodern, faddish, socialist doctrine.
Therefore, there's little room left to teach the standard literary cannon of Western civilization.
Yes, and the insular world of academia prevents their outdated and endlessly-disproved ideas from ever receiving a proper airing in the arena of reality. They feel quite comfortable with their tenure and their pensions, telling our children and young adults all about how Communism really is the enlightened path, and would have been successful, of course, if it hadn't been for the evil, capitalist United States interfering with the supreme purity of the Socialist ideal.
Thankfully, and in large measure due to the internet, many young people are questioning this indoctrination and fighting back. It's very hard when your grade depends upon the instructor believing that he/she has successfully brainwashed you, but many students are heroically standing up for what's right, and that's great to see.
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