Showing posts with label posted by Kurt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label posted by Kurt. Show all posts
Wednesday, September 2, 2015
Ad Fontes and Petrarch: H & P Forever
Well, I think that it is abundantly clear who Petrarch's favorite classical author is. Homer, the father of Western literature, is certainly an important figure to know about and to study. Personally I have read his Odyssey and his Iliad and I find that he is a very talented and proficient story teller. Though I am less familiar with the works of Cicero, the passion that Petrarch feels about his writings is unmistakable.
Petrarch laments that the people of his day and age are too caught up in the world, caught up in making money and gaining fleeting fame, to appreciate the masterpieces of the past. He also seems to indicate that it is through his own study of Homer and Cicero that he has been able to write things worthy of imitation, and so one can see the buddings of the idea of Ad Fontes in the Renaissance. Because his own creativity is fed by the creativity of classical authors, the implication is that any writer or poet or artist can be inspired if they would only return to the past, to the sources of their initial desires.
I believe that what we decide to make our life's work is largely determined by the works of others that we have experienced in our lives. We are inspired by the art that we see or the music we hear to become artists and musicians. Art (and by extension, literature) does not spring fully formed from a vacuum like Athena of old; rather, it is created by the previous generations, just as the Gods were influenced and shaped by the Titans in Greek mythology. Perhaps I could spark my own cultural Renaissance even more by copying and imitating the works of classical authors like Homer and more contemporary ones such as Shakespeare.
Tuesday, September 1, 2015
A Brief History of Kurt Anderson
This is just going to have to work for now. As you may have surmised, I like panda bears. In fact, one of the most thoughtful gifts I have ever received from a friend was the symbolic adoption of a panda cub, who I dubbed XiaoWeiXiao. He loves me and I love him. Aside from that, I've been an English major for a couple of years now, and I recently returned from a study abroad in the UK, so I most certainly do have strong feelings about the Renaissance, feelings which I will briefly share with you now.
I love the Renaissance.
Going into a little more detail, I think that the age that brought about the startling literary variance of poet/playwright Shakespeare and the metaphysics of Donne is something intensely interesting. In a time when popular culture is being reimagined, authors and writers such as these, Spencer, Montaigne, Milton, and More all demonstrated that what had previously been defined as high or low culture was meaningless.
Equally, today the definitions of what literature really is are changing. A worldwide network of communications has shattered presupposed cultural barriers and exposed all of us to viewpoints and ideas that are radically different. So yes, I do believe that we are in a cultural Renaissance and ebooks (or the internet in general) are to us what the printing press was to Tyndale, a medium through which a vastly greater audience may be reached and influenced.
That is all.
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