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blamebrampton ([personal profile] blamebrampton) wrote2010-01-09 11:52 pm
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Cultural literacy, I likes it!

I had a strange discussion with a person on the internet (god forbid!) over the concept of cultural literacy. Her thesis was that it wasn't important, that popular culture was more useful, and that no one could agree on what one needed to know to be culturally literate anyway.

We exchanged a number of comments, and she was a thoroughly decent person to argue with, but I can't help thinking that we come from opposing starting positions on this one. To start with, she's literally half my age. But she also went to school all through the period where one text was interchangeable with another, whereas I went to school in the days when you had to learn about great literature before they let you mess around with the other stuff.

And yeah, I do mean great and other. I know this will have some of you demanding I turn in my Credentialled Postmodernist badge, but some texts are better than others. They last longer, they impact more, they're Penicillin rather than Cialis, the Periodic Table as opposed to Phlogiston. To my mind, there are certain texts you should have a grounding in if you want to be a culturally literate person.

The problem is, of course, that the idea of their being 'certain texts', a canon, if you will, has become problematic. Harold 'Groper' Bloom's The Western Canon is often held up to ridicule by people who call it a roll-call of dead white men. But I think that's because they couldn't be arsed reading it. He talks positively about Austen and Woolf, Mary Shelley and not one but two Brontës (though how he could choose Emily over Anne is a mystery to me), among other women, and has a good set from the Ancient world as well as Persian and Asian sources. He is weaker on the Orient, I wanted The Tale of Genji at least, but when he sat down to think 'Who has influenced what we think about literature in the West', he genuinely seems to have done so on the basis of the works, not who wrote them.

To me, the idea that we should not privilege some texts over others is ridiculous. No one would argue that there is no difference between a Skoda Octavia and a Bugatti Veyron, or between salad cream and hand-made mayonnaise. It's fine to like and enjoy trashier texts, Skodas and salad cream, but to argue that they should be given the same weight as their opposing numbers is something I cannot agree with.

And the case is more certain with literature than with salad cream. If you only know salad cream, you don't know how delicious aioli is. But, to use an example given, if you are familiar with Harry Potter and not Hamlet, not only do you miss out on Hamlet, but you miss out on the myriad Shakespearean references and jokes within Harry Potter. And while I think it's certainly possible to enjoy Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire if you have no classical education, I suspect it is not possible to do so without a constant feeling that there are certain levels of the text that are passing over your head. Without the cultural literacy that allows you to do so, some authors are wholly unapproachable: Laurence Sterne, Jasper Fforde and the entire Monty Python output, to start with.

Some people have absolutely no urge to cultural literacy, which I can see as a valid choice, but it cuts you off from a lot of reading. I would argue that you cannot say that you are a keen reader or keen consumer of film and television if you are also avowedly against cultural literacy, because it is like saying that you are a biochemist who doesn't believe in valences. However, this could all just be another sign of me becoming an old fogey.

What about you lot? Especially you young folk? Do you still have that frisson of glee I used to have when I uncovered secret references in texts as I read and learned more and more? Or is that so appallingly 20th century that I should just dig out a corset and start worrying about those commies?

On a final pomo note, Happy 50th Birthday, Severus, and Happy 75th Elvis! May you continue to bring joy to your fans for many years! And happy Real Birthday to [livejournal.com profile] tnumfive ! You're in good company ;-)

[identity profile] blamebrampton.livejournal.com 2010-01-14 02:28 am (UTC)(link)
I think the 'manual' concept is an outmoded one, though. One of the reasons I make a point of saying that I like postmodernism as well as canon texts is that, since the mid 20th century, I don't think that you can make a legitimate case for 'X must be Y' anymore.

You're right that for much of history, art and literature were both taught in a way that gave you 'for distress, show twisted', or, in the language of theatre, 'for evil, show justice being meted out at the end'. The problem with this has always been that those ways of reading texts weren't about the texts (whether the text is a novel, play, sculpture, painting ...), they were really about the genres and people wanting to construct rules from them.

Great texts have always broken the rules. At the end of King Lear, Regan and Goneril are dead, but so is the virtuous Cordelia. There is no justice. Donatello's Mary Magdalene is tension filled and anguished and not the least bit beautiful, she doesn't even have an ointment jar, as Renaissance Magdalenes 'should', but she's brilliant (just as your composed despairing woman sounds brilliant, for myself, at the blackest moments, I always make jokes).

The big problem with the whole X means Y way of thinking about canon works is that it builds a prescriptive and proscriptive language out of texts that are really all about buidling fresh languages. Canon texts become canon texts because they build, or rebuild, the way that we think about literature or art. For the English canon, Gilgamesh tells us about the basics of story through the world of kings; The Canterbury Tales tells us that story can be about ordinary people as much as kings; Joyce's Ulysses shows us that you can take a story about kings and remake it for an ordinary man and lose nothing. Each of these things revolutionised the way we thought, and what we could do afterwards.

You're right that this is often badly taught: even when I was at school we had some teachers who wanted to push us into the corset you describe. But I think that this is a failure of teaching, perhaps even a political push to constrain and conform, rather than something that naturally arises from the study of the canon.

Looked at in themselves, canonical texts challenge and inspire, giving us access to language that makes other texts richer and more rewarding, while helping to give you the foundation that let you tackle anything. They're the sports bra, rather than the corset, if you will ;-)