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Good Work Done Well: Teaching Literature to the Glory of God
BreakPoint ^ | 20 June 03 | Chuck Colson

Posted on 06/22/2003 2:48:39 PM PDT by Mr. Silverback

A professor at Yale for nearly five decades and the author of more than twenty books, Harold Bloom is one of the world's best-known literary critics. He has also amassed one of the world's greatest personal libraries. The NEW YORK TIMES says that his "collection of some 25,000 volumes encompasses most of American and British poetry, criticism, and literary history, some with his handwritten notes in the margins. There are rare first editions," as well as great artworks and personal letters from famous writers.

But the seventy-two-year-old professor has shocked the academic community by deciding to give all of this collection, not to a prestigious university, but to St. Michael's College, a small, obscure, Roman Catholic school in Vermont.

Part of the reason is that Yale and other large colleges already have enormous libraries and wouldn't have room for all of Bloom's collection. But there's more to it than that.

Bloom classifies himself as "an unbelieving Jew of strong Gnostic tendencies." He's criticized traditional religion and chastised religious thinkers for reading literature for its moral value rather than its aesthetic value. Nonetheless, he finds much to admire in St. Michael's Christian heritage.

And his aversion to our elite institutions is well known. He has been a critic of some of the most popular trends in literary criticism. The postmodern academic world is a hotbed of fads like deconstructionism, feminist criticism, Marxist criticism -- approaches that look for hidden bias in literature, to the neglect of nearly everything else. Critics who adopt such approaches believe that a work of literature has no ultimate meaning beyond what the reader brings to it, and that its only real value lies in taking it apart and exposing its oppressive ideologies.

He dismisses this kind of criticism as "the school of resentment." Instead, Bloom believes in studying literature for its intrinsic value, not in using it to advance a social agenda. At St. Michael's, he's found people who agree. His former student John Reiss taught English there until last year, and Bloom calls him "someone who cares very passionately, has spent a lifetime teaching English and American literature for their intrinsic aesthetic, intellectual, and I suppose, in a very broad sense, spiritual values."

In fact, Bloom told the NEW YORK TIMES, "With rare exceptions the universities and colleges in the English-speaking world that have sustained some sense of literature as a matter of powerful cognition and extraordinary aesthetic beauty tend to be the Roman Catholic institutions." So Bloom wants St. Michael's to have his library because the school teaches literature the way it ought to be taught.

That's not surprising. Christian thinkers, Catholic and Protestant, because of their worldview, have always believed in the intrinsic value of things and placed an emphasis on eternal, unchanging values. It's the worldview that we explain here daily on BreakPoint.

Christian writer Dorothy Sayers stated, "The only Christian work is good work done well." The faculty at St. Michael's believes this, and their work is a testimony to the One who gives meaning and value to all things. That is something even a prominent agnostic can respect.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events; Philosophy; US: Connecticut; US: Vermont
KEYWORDS: catholicchurch; chuckcolson; haroldbloom; judeochristian; library; stmichaels
Somebody should send this down to Ann-Marie Slaughter at Princeton. Anti-Catholics, eat your heart out. Maybe if we try hard enough, we can scare up a few copies of Fulton Sheen and G.K. Chesterton for the folks at Yale and Pinceton!
1 posted on 06/22/2003 2:48:40 PM PDT by Mr. Silverback
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To: Believer 1; billbears; Cordova Belle; DeweyCA; jude24; MalcolmS; MHGinTN; nothingnew; ...
BreakPoint/Chuck Colson Ping!

If anyone wants on or off my BreakPoint Ping List, please notify me here or by freepmail.

2 posted on 06/22/2003 2:49:21 PM PDT by Mr. Silverback (A lot of people, deep down, are really shallow.)
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To: Mr. Silverback
Well,I'll be darned!!!! Good news for St Michael's, a great school,small but mighty!!
3 posted on 06/22/2003 3:03:49 PM PDT by Mears (.)
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To: Mr. Silverback
Please add me to the BreakPoint Ping!
4 posted on 06/22/2003 3:30:24 PM PDT by Jemian
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To: Mr. Silverback
The postmodern academic world is a hotbed of fads like deconstructionism, feminist criticism, Marxist criticism -- approaches that look for hidden bias in literature, to the neglect of nearly everything else. Critics who adopt such approaches believe that a work of literature has no ultimate meaning beyond what the reader brings to it, and that its only real value lies in taking it apart and exposing its oppressive ideologies.

He's got that right. I'm related to a student who bailed out of an English major after getting one too many English professors whose syllabi consisted of nothing but tendentious Marxist polemics.

5 posted on 06/22/2003 4:26:23 PM PDT by rhema
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To: Mr. Silverback
An interesting and welcome surprise! I have always assumed that Bloom is Mormon, based on a couple of sentences in the preface to his book The Western Canon: "...Perhaps some day, well on in the twenty-first century, when Mormonism has become the dominant religion of at least the American West, those who come after us will experience as fourth such shock when they encounter the daring of the authentic American prophet Joseph Smith in his definitive visions, The Pearl of Great Price and Doctrines and Covenants.

I'm fully prepared to admit that I missed the point of his paragraph, of course... :-)

Full disclosure: I am a life-long Catholic and a number of my friends are LDS. I hate bigotry, so please don't use this quote to slam either religion (or any other for that matter).

6 posted on 06/22/2003 4:44:02 PM PDT by Gang of Five
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To: Jemian
Done!
7 posted on 06/22/2003 6:06:31 PM PDT by Mr. Silverback (A lot of people, deep down, are really shallow.)
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To: Gang of Five
Full disclosure: I am a life-long Catholic and a number of my friends are LDS. I hate bigotry, so please don't use this quote to slam either religion (or any other for that matter).

Wouldn't dream of it. Thanks for including the quote, that's an interesting take Bloom had.

8 posted on 06/22/2003 6:08:04 PM PDT by Mr. Silverback (A lot of people, deep down, are really shallow.)
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To: Mr. Silverback
Oops, I apologize, I didn't aim that last comment at you. I was just trying to head off some of the foolishness I've seen inserted in other threads. After I read your reply, I realized that I'd replied to you specifically and that you quite reasonably interpreted it in a way I didn't mean. I am clumsy but am a nice guy once you get to know me... :-)

Best regards!
9 posted on 06/22/2003 6:24:07 PM PDT by Gang of Five
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To: Mears
Very interesting! I'd never heard of St. Michael's until now.
10 posted on 06/23/2003 3:02:25 AM PDT by livius
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