On Losing My Father

Photo taken at Highlander Folk School in Tracy City TN in 1957. Founder Myles Horton and Martin Luther King are in the front row. My father is the man with glasses about four rows back in the center of the photo. For the record, Highlander was not communist but an integrated space—the only one in the south–where Civil Rights activists could gather to share strategies.

Friday – A Life Lived in Literature, 35th Installment

In 2012-13 my first two grandchildren were born, assuring my father—who died the following year—that life continues on. Scott Bates, the man most responsible for my being who I am, died at 90, and the memorial service we had for him (as he had requested) was filled with poetry and red wine. Many of us read poems that he had either written or that he had loved. Before he passed, I spent two summers, two Christmases, and a sabbatical fall semester with him. He was my blog’s #1 fan, and I, knowing he would read it daily, loved occasionally surprising him with his own poems. Those times together were special as he became increasingly incapacitated.

I have one memory from this time that sums him up nicely. One night he fell out of bed (he was now sleeping downstairs), and unable to get up, he pushed his medical alert button. Although the EMT unit was supposed to call us before showing up, for some reason they didn’t—or perhaps my mother slept through the telephone call—but at any rate the ambulance was suddenly at our door. The two men helped my father back into bed (which I could have done) and then asked him about the various nail and hardware artworks that he had painted, which were strewn around the house. Although it was 2 am, my father saw this as an opportunity to share one of his many passions and, for the next 30 minutes, proceeded to share his vision. Although my mother and I were ready to collapse, the men were fascinated.

The memory brings back another one from when he was being cross-examined by the defense counsel in our 1962 desegregation trial. Along with other white and Black families, we had sued the Franklin Board of Education for failing to comply with the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision and were pleading our case before a judge in a courtroom reminiscent of the one that appears in the movie To Kill a Mockingbird. “Are you associated with that Communist organization Highlander Folk School?” the attorney asked at one point, earning a sustained objection from our attorney and the judge. My father, however, wanted to answer the question: not knowing or caring how courts worked, he figured that this was the perfect opportunity to share his knowledge of Highlander. Give him the chance to deliver a lecture and he would grab it.

It was unsettling, of course, to see him lose first his mobility and then, for a couple of months, his mind. When he returned from a brief bout of senility, brought on by a bladder infection, he vividly remembered his unit being strafed by a German plane on Omaha Beach shortly after they landed there in July of 1944. My graduate professor Jerome Beaty once said that, to understand an author’s vision, look at the historical moment when he or she was 21, and my father arrived in France just after his 22nd birthday. In the remaining months of his life, he couldn’t couldn’t stop talking about his World War II experiences, and I took the time to record some of them—from the University of Chicago (where he was trained as a translator) to England to Normandy to Paris to Germany. He arrived in Munich three days after Dachau was liberated, and one of his jobs was taking Germans through required tours of the camp so that they couldn’t dismiss the Holocaust as U.S. propaganda.

When parents enter the final years, it is unsettling because roles are reversed as children begin caring for them. The children also lose their perceived buffer: suddenly there is no one left between us and the abyss. I think of the Flannery O’Connor short story “Everything That Rises Must Converge” in which Julian, an adult who lives with his mother and who is perpetually irritated by her, comes face to face with that abyss when she unexpectedly dies. O’Connor concludes her story with Julian panicking:

“Wait here, wait here!” he cried and jumped up and began to run for help toward a cluster of lights he saw in the distance ahead of him. “Help, help!” he shouted, but his voice was thin, scarcely a thread of sound. The lights drifted farther away the faster he ran and his feet moved numbly as if they carried him nowhere. The tide of darkness seemed to sweep him back to her, postponing from moment to moment his entry into the world of guilt and sorrow.

I cite the passage for contrast purposes because it is nothing like what I experienced with my father’s death. Since I had established my own independent identity by this time, and since I could fully appreciate the rich life that he himself had led, it was clear to me that his was the natural end of a beautiful arc. Furthermore, I was consoled by the fact that much of what was best about him—his kindness, his intellectual curiosity, his love of books, his wonderful wit and playfulness, his commitment to the environment, his passion for justice, his concern for the marginalized, his integrity and generosity—I can see in myself, in my sons, and in my grandchildren. We each embody these traits in our own particular ways, of course, but there’s enough of a throughline for me to trace them all back to Scott Bates. In conjunction with my mother, this member of the “greatest generation” (a description my father hated) established a foundation for those who came after. 

For that, I am deeply, deeply grateful. 

Note: The Scott Bates poem I read at his memorial service captures some of the themes I have been mentioning.  In “The Boy with the Golden Crown,” my father draws imagery from Greek mythology, Judaism, Christianity, and various sun and earth religions. Death, the poem assures us, does not get the last word: the “boy with the golden crown” always rises again at dawn, just as the spirit moves on the waters, the phoenix rises from the ashes, and Jesus emerges from the tomb. I saw my father, who was always boyish in his enthusiasms, as this boy. As I told those assembled, although physically he was longer with us, his spirit rises again and again–in his poetry, in the lives of those he touched, and in the lineages he set in motion.

The Boy with the Golden Crown
By Scott Bates

In the beginning I was the sun
the chaos and the father
my spirit moved upon the deep
I made the earth my mother

She married me and gave me birth
I died my name was Jesus
In three days I was born again
I was as rich as Croesus

I flew my father’s ashes home
I fell in love with Venus
I loved my neighbor as myself
my mother and my penis

Each evening I go down in flames
I rise again at dawn
I am the bird the flesh the word
the boy with the golden crown 

Past Installments of A Life Lived in Literature
A Life Lived in Literature: How It All Began (Sept. 5, 2025)
Early Reading Memories (Sept. 12, 2025)
Childhood Confusion: Reading to the Rescue (Sept. 19, 2025)
Confronting Segregation (Sept. 26, 2025)
School Reading vs. Real Reading (Oct. 10, 2025)
Childhood in Paris (Oct. 17, 2025)
My Time at Sewanee Military Academy (Oct. 24, 2025)
Existentialism for High School Seniors (Oct. 31, 2025)
Why I Majored in History, Not English (Nov. 7, 2025)
My College Search for Authenticity (Nov. 14, 2025)
On D. H. Lawrence and a Sexual Awakening (Nov. 21, 2025)
My Life as a Bildungsroman (Nov. 28, 2025)
Grad School: Literary Baptism by Fire (Dec. 5, 2025)
Early Scenes from a Marriage (Dec. 12, 2025)
Bringing Up Baby in Grad School (Dec. 19, 2025)
Grappling with Racism (Jan. 2, 2026)
Journal of a Young Teacher (Jan. 16, 2026)
Teaching and Reading in Yugoslavia (Jan. 23, 2026)
Life at 40: Barely Controlled Chaos (Jan 30, 2026)
From Secular Humanist to Christian Believer (Feb. 6 2025)
Looking Back at a Lifetime Together (Feb. 13, 2026)
To Ljubljana with Love (Feb. 20, 2026)
Forging a Separate Identity from My Father (Feb. 27, 2026)
“Better Living” Emerged from a Midnight Epiphany (March 6, 2026)
The Golden Years before Tragedy Struck (March 13, 2026) 
Using Lit to Grapple with a Death (March 20, 2026) 
Lit in the Year following Justin’s Death (March 27, 2026)
My Eldest Son, Named after a Keats Sonnet (April 3, 2026)
Sterne’s Uncle Toby and My Own Toby (April 10, 2026)
After the 2nd Death, a Book Project (April 17, 2026)
Making Lit Meaningful for Students (April 24, 2026) 
Horizons Broadened (May 1, 2026) 
Obama’s Election and a Blog Launched (May 8, 2026)
Expanding Outward at 60 (May 15, 2026)
On Losing My Father (May 22, 2026)

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GOP’s Faustian Bargain May Backfire

Thursday

The Faustus story has been invoked so often in politics as to lose some of its force. Since Trump has now spurned some of those who sold their souls to serve him, however, it’s worth returning to Christopher Marlowe’s 1594 play to see what we can expect of them going forth. I have in mind Kentucky representative Tom Massie and Louisiana senator Bill Cassidy, who lost to Trump-endorsed challengers, and Texas senator John Cornyn, who looks as though he will lose to Texas’s corrupt attorney general Ken Paxton, also endorsed by Trump. These men are learning what Faustus learns: not only is it bad to sell out your principles and your integrity but you get very little in return.

Of course, how little you get shouldn’t matter compared to what you have given up. “For what shall it profit a man,” Jesus asks in Mark, “if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?” (8:36). These Congressmen, however, didn’t get the whole world. After a brief thrill-ride of power, they will now be held in contempt by practically everyone.

The good news, according to the play, is that soul selling doesn’t have to be forever. Even though Faustus signs his contract in blood and the devil informs him that the deed is forever, he is then given multiple opportunities to repent. At one point late in the play, an old man informs the despairing doctor what he must do:

I see an angel hovers o’er thy head,
And, with a vial full of precious grace,
Offers to pour the same into thy soul:
Then call for mercy, and avoid despair.

The question now is whether our three GOP pols can find their way back to salvation—which is to say, will they call out Trump’s corruption and stand up for the rule of law and the Constitution. Although they will have little to lose going forward, however, Marlowe shows us why they may not.

A brief review of the play is useful. As the leading physician/theologian/scientist of his age, Faustus is a man of immense potential. Rather than being content with having saved entire cities from the plague, however, he dreams of exerting total power over the world:

All things that move between the quiet poles
Shall be at my command:  emperors and kings
Are but obeyed in their several provinces,
Nor can they raise the wind, or rend the clouds;
But his dominion that exceeds in this,
Stretcheth as far as doth the mind of man;
A sound magician is a mighty god:
Here, Faustus, tire thy brains to gain a deity.

 The evil angel sitting on his shoulder, meanwhile, instructs him,  

Be thou on earth as Jove is in the sky,
Lord and commander of these elements.

Now think of what Massie, Cassidy, and Cornyn might have done with their power. Recognizing Trump for what he is—and all three do—Massie and Cornyn might have voted for his impeachment. While Cassidy, to his credit, did so (which is how he earned Trump’s enmity), he did not have the courage to prevent Robert F. Kennedy from becoming Health and Human Services secretary, even though he himself is a doctor and understands the necessity of vaccines. Instead, to retain the perks of power, they twisted themselves into pretzels to prove their loyalty to Trump. Now they are just pathetic losers.

As is Faustus after signing his deal with Satan. Rather than following through on any of his ambitions (for instance, “I’ll have [my spirits] wall all Germany with brass,/ And make swift Rhine circle fair Wertenberg”), he travels to Rome to play pranks on the pope and then serves out the rest of his life as a court magician doing tricks in return for applause. Although he has second thoughts at the end of his life, he finds he cannot repent.

The reason: his pride gets in his way. Better eternal damnation than admitting to having been a patsy and a fool. Think of the devil’s threat in the following passage as Faustus’s own sense of shame:

Oft have I thought to have [repented]; but the devil threatened to tear me in pieces, if I named God, to fetch both body and soul, if I once gave ear to divinity:  and now ’tis too late. 

Instead of repenting, in a classic Trumpian move Faustian blames the messenger, who tells him that it is not too late. The old man, who cares for Faustus’s soul, must be delivering fake news and should be punished for having done so. Faustus instructs his devil assistants to “torment that base and crooked age,/ That durst dissuade me from thy Lucifer,/ With greatest torments that our hell affords.” When caught up in a prideful stance, we hate no one so much as those who tell us what, in our heart of hearts, we know to be true.

I’ve lumped Massie in with Cassidy and Cornyn but, as I noted yesterday, he actually lost the election because he fought a good fight: appalled at how Trump’s justice department has been covering for Jeffrey Epstein’s collaborators, he has relentlessly held people accountable. It appears that he will become an even more vocal critic in the months to come.

Now that he’s lost his election, Cassidy too has started pushing back, albeit modestly. If these legislators can join with Democrats to keep Trump from hijacking the 2026 elections, which increasingly appears to be his plan, then they will have accomplished more than Faustus, who never repents and goes screaming off to hell as devils tear him apart.

Do these men really want to be accessories in the death of the republic? Do they want to end their days torn apart by regret over what they could have done?

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A GOP Pol Pays for Relinquishing the Ring

Elijah Wood as Frodo

Wednesday

Weakened though he may be, Donald Trump sent another strong message to Republicans who consider opposing him: Tom Massie, who bucked the president over the release of the Epstein files, went down to defeat at Trump’s bidding. I mention him here because he once made a perceptive allusion to Lord of the Rings.

Writing for MS Now Daily, journalist Matt Fuller remembers back ten years ago when he invited Massie to a congressional correspondents’ dinner. Before entering, “Massie asked me if he should put on ‘The Precious.’” Fuller explains,

“The Precious” referred to his congressional member’s pin. And just like in “The Lord of the Rings,” Massie contended that The Precious had special powers. It can get you around security lines and out of speeding tickets and a drink faster at the bar. But keep it on too long, Massie liked to joke, and it would start to turn you into a worse version of yourself — like Sméagol transforming into Gollum.

Because he failed to heed his own advice, the pin worked as Massie predicted. In subsequent years Fuller says he watched “Thomas Massie, the principled libertarian most likely to vote no, turn into Rep. Thomas Massie, the Trump-supporting good soldier who voted yes with every other Republican.”

And:

I watched Massie become a strong advocate for Speaker Kevin McCarthy. I watched him vote for spending bills that the old Massie would have screamed about. I watched him construct tenuous explanations as to why the latest Trump outrage wasn’t really that outrageous. And, having kept his Twitter on alerts for at least a decade, I watched him accuse people over and over again of “Trump derangement syndrome” — a disease that only those who give the diagnosis actually have.

In short, I watched him become just another Republican, with a subcommittee chairmanship and a staff of people making sure he had a good seat on the plane back to D.C.

Precious, Fuller observes, “had turned Frodo Baggins.” Perhaps he has in mind the scene where Sam, thinking Frodo dead, has salvaged the ring, only to be forced to relinquish it when Frodo discovers he has it:

‘You’ve got it?’ gasped Frodo. ‘You’ve got it here? Sam, you’re a marvel!’ Then quickly and strangely his tone changed. ‘Give it to me!’ he cried, standing up, holding out a trembling hand. ‘Give it me at once! You can’t have it!’

‘All right, Mr. Frodo,’ said Sam, rather startled. ‘Here it is!’ Slowly he drew the Ring out and passed the chain over his head. ‘But you’re in the land of Mordor now, sir; and when you get out, you’ll see the Fiery Mountain and all. You’ll find the Ring very dangerous now, and very hard to bear. If it’s too hard a job, I could share it with you, maybe?’

‘No, no!’ cried Frodo, snatching the Ring and chain from Sam’s hands. ‘No you won’t, you thief!’ He panted, staring at Sam with eyes wide with fear and enmity. Then suddenly, clasping the Ring in one clenched fist, he stood aghast. A mist seemed to clear from his eyes, and he passed a hand over his aching brow. The hideous vision had seemed so real to him, half bemused as he was still with wound and fear. Sam had changed before his very eyes into an orc again, leering and pawing at his treasure, a foul little creature with greedy eyes and slobbering mouth.

When you are a Republican legislator in love with your Congressional power, suddenly journalists and Democratic colleagues become foul little creatures with greedy eyes and slobbering mouths out to steal your treasure.

Sam, of course, is the archetype of loyalty. Imagine him as an American who prizes the Constitution above all. He even, in the brief time that he wears a ring, gets an insight similar to that of Massie before he turned into a worse version of himself:

Without any clear purpose he drew out the Ring and put it on again. Immediately he felt the great burden of its weight, and felt afresh, but now more strong and urgent than ever, the malice of the Eye of Mordor, searching, trying to pierce the shadows that it had made for its own defense, but which now hindered it in its unquiet and doubt.

Trump may be losing it—he may be increasingly caught up in his own bubble—but he is very aware of any Republican who shows signs of independent thought. His flunkies spent millions to defeat Massie, making it the most expensive House primary battle in history.

For his part, Massie had felt freed up by challenging Trump, at least with regard to the Epstein files. It is as though that mist had cleared from his eyes:

But now the vision had passed. There was Sam kneeling before him, his face wrung with pain, as if he had been stabbed in the heart; tears welled from his eyes.

‘O Sam!’ cried Frodo. ‘What have I said? What have I done? Forgive me! After all you have done. It is the horrible power of the Ring.”

Fuller predicts that Massie will be okay with losing. As he puts it, 

Massie doesn’t need The Precious anymore. He told me he hasn’t even taken the newest congressional pin out of its wrapper. 

I’ve been struck by how many Trump-tolerating Republicans have felt liberated once they cast their personal rings into Mountain Doom, although sometimes they did so with as much initial reluctance as Frodo. It’s refreshing to reconnect with one’s remaining principles.

If only they had all done so in concert with each other rather than one by one. If only they had stood firm following January 6 and voted for impeachment. If only Isildur has cast the ring into the fire the moment he obtained it.

George Washington did when he stepped down after two terms. The founding fathers, especially James Madison, attempted to forestall people using the ring by setting up a system whereby Congress would check executive power. Unfortunately, our Sauron has turned Congressional Republicans into his Nazgul, and yesterday they claimed another victim.

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The 100 Greatest Novels (or Not)

Tuesday

To present a ranked list of best books to a booklover is like throwing chum to sharks. Suddenly we begin frothing and biting and thrashing around. Which is to say, we are at our entertaining best.

The latest list to send us into a frenzy is the Guardian’s 2026 poll to determine the “top 100 novels of all time,” which it conducts every ten years. To compile this list, the Guardian asked 172 authors, critics, and academic for their ten favorite novels “in English or translated into English.” The results were then tallied and weighted. Among those polled were Stephen King, Salman Rushdie, Anne Enright, Yiyun Li, Elif Shafak, Ian McEwan, Maggie O’Farrell, Colm Tóibín, Lorrie Moore, and Katherine Rundell.

For me, there were more delights than disappointments with the list. The biggest omission was Victor Hugo’s Les Misérables, a book of titanic imagination that, for me, ranks up there with War and Peace and The Brothers Karamazov. With each of these novels, I was in awe at what human beings are capable of. Each, to borrow a word from Lisa Simpson, embiggened me. 

I was pleased to see that the four Jane Austen novels were the three I would have chosen—Pride and Prejudice, Emma, Mansfield Park, and Persuasion—and I thought that five by Virginia Woolf were too many (To the Lighthouse and Mrs. Dalloway would have done). In past years I wouldn’t have ranked Nineteen Eighty-Four so high but I now agree that it belongs in the top twenty. I’m sorry not to see Daniel Defoe’s Moll Flanders, Henry Fielding’s Tom Jones, Nathaniel Hawthorne’s Scarlet Letter, or anything by Anthony Trollope or Elizabeth Gaskell on the list but appreciated the inclusion of Tristram Shandy and several Dickens novels (with Bleak House, David Copperfield, Great Expectations, and Our Mutual Friend as the ones I too would have chosen). I would have chosen one novel, not two, for Nabokov and Ishiguro (Lolita and Remains of the Day respectively), and selected Tess of the d’Urbervilles over Jude the Obscure for Thomas Hardy, but believe that those polled got it right when they awarded three to novels to Toni Morrison.

Which leads me to my two greatest delights. Beloved coming in second was gratifying—it’s a magnificent book, perhaps America’s greatest novel—and George Eliot’s Middlemarch coming in first is testimony to the depth of George Eliot’s masterpiece. My favorite female protagonist in all of literature is the novel’s Dorothea Brooke.

Incidentally, my favorite male protagonist, who appears in the novel that would have topped my list, is Alyosha Karamazov. Obviously I believe that Dostoevsky’s work should be considerably higher than its #28 placement. On the other hand, I was pleased to see Tolstoy place two in the top ten. And then, of course, I loved seeing the prominence accorded to Jane Eyre and Pride and Prejudice (#8 and #9 respectively). And it’s wonderful to see James Baldwin, Zora Neal Hurston, and Ralph Ellison honored.

If I can be given full credit for only having read the first volume of Proust, I can report that 29 of the top 30 appear on my life list (only Nabokov’s Pale Fire has escaped me). After that, of course, I drop off: I’m missing six of the next 30 and twelve of the final 40. Perhaps my new goal will be to read them all, especially those post-colonial works that I could include in a course I will be teaching at the University of Ljubljana this coming fall (Tsitsi Dangarembga’s Nervous Conditions, Zadie Smith’s White Teeth, Ngozi Adichie’s Half of a Yellow Sun, V.S. Naipaul’A House for Mr Biswas). In past iterations of that course I’ve taught other works on the list, including Salman Rushdie’s Midnight’s Children, Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart, Arundhati Roy’s God of Small Things, and Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness.

All in all, it’s a great list. I’d love to hear back from readers about their own reactions.

Here’s the list:

Guardian’s 100 Best Novels of All Time (2026)

1.George Eliot, Middlemarch
2. Toni Morrison, Beloved
3. James Joyce, Ulysses
4. Virginia Woolf, To the Lighthouse
5. Marcel Proust, In Search of Lost Time
6. Leo Tolstoy, Anna Karenina
7. Leo Tolstoy, War and Peace
8. Charlotte Bronte, Jane Eyre
9. Jane Austen, Pride and Prejudice
10. Gustave Flaubert, Madame Bovary
11. F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby
12. Charles Dickens, Bleak House
13. Jane Austen, Emma
14. Virginia Woolf, Mrs. Dalloway
15. Herman Melville, Moby-Dick
16. George Orwell, Nineteen Eighty-Four
17. Gabriel Garcia Marquez, One Hundred Years of Solitude
18. Jane Austen, Persuasion
19. Laurence Sterne, The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman
20. Emily Bronte, Wuthering Heights
21. Henry James, Portrait of a Lady
22.  Chinua Achebe, Things Fall Apart
23. Salman Rushdie, Midnight’s Children
24. Kazuo Ishiguro, Remains of the Day 
25. Vladimir Nabokov, Lolita 
26. Cervantes, Don Quixote 
27. Franz Kafka, The Trial 
28. Fyodor Dostoevsky, The Brother Karamazov 
29. Nabakov, Pale Fire 
30. Mary Shelley, Frankenstein
31. Muriel Spark, The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie 
32. Arundhati Roy, The God of Small Things 
33. Charles Dickens, David Copperfield 
34. Hilary Mantel, Wolf Hall 
35. Charles Dickens, Great Expectations
36. Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid’s Tale 
37. Ralph Ellison, The Invisible Man
38. Edith Wharton, The Age of Innocence 
39. Zora Neal Hurston, Their Eyes Were Watching God 
40. Toni Morrison, Song of Solomon 
41. Joseph Conrad, Heart of Darkness 
42. Thomas Mann, The Magic Mountain 
43. Marilynne Robinson, Housekeeping 
44. James Baldwin, Giovanni’s Room 
45. Doris Lessing, The Golden Notebook 
46. Giuseppe de Lampedusa, The Leopard 
47. William Makepeace Thackeray, Vanity Fair 
48. Franz Kafka, The Metamorphosis 
49. Rohinton Mistry, A Fine Balance 
50. Jean Rhys, Wide Sargasso Sea 
51. Elena Ferrante, My Brilliant Friend 
52. Henry James, The Golden Bowl
53. Shirley Hazzard, The Transit of Venus 
54. Virginia Woolf, Orlando 
55. Virginia Woolf, The Waves 
56. Jane Austen, Mansfield Park
57. William Faulkner, The Sound and the Fury
58. 58. J.M. Coetzee, Disgrace
59. Kazuo Ishiguro, Never Let Me Go
60. E.M. Forster, Howards End
61. W.G. Sebald, The Rings of Saturn
62. Ngozi Adichie, Half of a Yellow Sun
63. Zadie Smith, White Teeth
64. Ford Madox Ford, The Good Soldier
65. Alice Walker, The Color Purple 
66. Mikhail Bulgakov, The Master and Margarita
67. Robert Musil, The Man without Qualities
68. Cormac McCarthy, Blood Meridian
69. Fyodor Dostoevsky, Crime and Punishment
70. Thomas Hardy. Jude the Obscure
71. Octavia Butler, Kindred
72. Charles Dickens, Our Mutual Friend
73. W.G. Sebald, Austerlitz
74. Tsitsi Dangarembga, Nervous Conditions
75. Toni Morrison, The Bluest Eye
76. Bram Stoker, Dracula
77. D. H. Lawrence, The Rainbow
78. V.S. Naipaul, A House for Mr Biswas
79. James Baldwin, Go Tell It on the Mountain80. Daphne du Maurier, Rebecca
81. Thomas Mann, Buddenbrooks
82. Graham Greene, The End of the Affair 
83. Ernest Hemingway, A Farewell to Arms 
84. Patricia Highsmith, The Talented Mr. Ripley 
85. Han Kang, The Vegetarian 
86. Henry James, The Turn of the Screw 
87. Alan Hollinghurst, The Line of Beauty 
88. E. L. Doctorow, Ragtime
89. Ursula K. Le Guin, The Left Hand of Darkness
90. Virginia Woolf, Jacob’s Room
91. Vassily Grossman, Life and Fate
92. Gustave Flaubert, Sentimental Education
93. Italo Calvino, Invisible Cities
94. Edward P. Jones, The Known World
95. Thomas Hardy, The Return of the Native
96. Juan Rulfo, Pedro Páramo
97. Joseph Heller, Catch 22
98. Jack Kerouac, The Road
99. L.P. Hartley, Go-Between
100. Willa Cather, My Antonia

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Leo: Reading Trumps Reductive Views of Reality

Pope Leo

Monday

Pope Leo continues to impress, most recently with a rousing endorsement of literature. To be sure, the endorsement doesn’t match that of his predecessor, with Pope Francis’s writing that literature is “absolutely essential to our spiritual, intellectual, and physical well-being.” In my post about Francis’s encyclical, I wrote that it was “one of the most extraordinary defenses I have encountered, up there with those of Sir Philip Sidney and Percy Shelley.”

Although Leo is no Francis when it comes to literature—in his defense, he is a mathematician—his words are nevertheless welcome. Speaking on the occasion of Turin’s International Book Fair, which ends today, he wrote, “There is a need for literature that helps recognize the dignity of every person, especially the most vulnerable, and that increasingly becomes a school of fraternity and peace.”

Leo didn’t specifically single out novels, but fiction, going back to the Romantic poets, has expanded empathy for vulnerable groups. As I note in my book, figures like William Wordsworth entered the lives of the vulnerable, setting in motion sympathy for

the urban poor (Charles Dickens), American slaves (Harriet Beecher Stowe), Dorset dairy maids (Thomas Hardy), French coalminers (Emile Zola), Nebraska pioneers (Willa Cather), Harlem residents (Langston Hughes), African American sharecroppers (Jean Toomer), African American homosexuals (James Baldwin), bankrupted Oklahoma farmers (John Steinbeck), Laguna Pueblo war veterans (Leslie Marmon Silko), transplanted Pakistanis (Hanif Kureishi), West Indian immigrants (Zadie Smith), American lesbians (Alison Bechdel), and on and on.

I should also have mentioned children, a particular focus of Leo’s. The book festival’s theme was “The World Saved by Kids,” a reference to the work by Italian novelist and children’s author Elsa Morante, leading Leo to observe, “In a time that seems suffocated by the horrors of war, and by the chill of indifference, children, with their innate ability to see the world with fresh eyes, ignite a light of hope in society.”

Morante wrote World Saved by Kids in 1968 in the wake of “the great youth movement exploding against the funereal machinations of the organized contemporary world.” She believed that only the young could truly hear her revolutionary call.

Leo concluded his message with the hope “that the event may inspire renewed awareness of the importance of culture in fostering dialogue and concord.”

Vatican News concluded the news item by noting the Leo’s words echoed comments he made earlier to the Vatican Publishing House. There he said that “reading nourishes the mind, helps cultivate a conscious and well-formed critical sense, and guards against fundamentalisms and ideological shortcuts.” He added that everyone should read books, which are “an antidote to closed-mindedness, which manifests in rigid attitudes and reductive views of reality.”

Yes, yes, yes!

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Intimate with Heaven, as Light

Giotto di Bondone, The Ascension

Ascension Sunday

As I’m visiting grandchildren this weekend, I am reposting my Ascension Sunday post from two years ago. If you wish to receive, via e-mail, (1) my weekly newsletter or (2) daily copies of these posts, write to me at rrbates1951 (at) gmail (dot) com. Comments may also be sent to this address. I promise not to share your e-mail with anyone. 

Reposted from May 11, 2024

In celebrating the moment when Jesus ascended into heaven, we come to the next stage of that momentous journey that began with Christmas and Epiphany. If Epiphany represents the moment when people came to realize that divinity can be found within the world—incarnate in a human being—then Ascension shows Christ modeling what it means to step fully into that divinity. As Malcolm Guite puts it in “A Sonnet for Ascension Day,” “We saw him go and yet we were not parted/ He took us with him to the heart of things.”

There may be an echo here of lines from Wordworth’s Tintern Abbey, where the poet talks about the moment when, “with an eye made quiet by the power/ Of harmony, and the deep power of joy, /We see into the life of things.” For contrast purposes, poets writing about the Ascension always dwell upon what it is they are stepping beyond. For John Donne, who is always wrestling with his recalcitrant heart (“Batter my heart, three-personed God”), Ascension washes or burns away our “drossy clay.”

Salute the last, and everlasting day,
Joy at the uprising of this Sun, and Son,
Ye whose true tears, or tribulation
Have purely wash’d, or burnt your drossy clay.

In this, the final lyric in Donne’s seven-sonnet sequence known as “The Crown,” Donne sees Christ paving the way to heaven. “Bright Torch, which shinest, that I the way may see!” he writes.

In his own Ascension poem Henry Vaughan too talks about earthly clay ascending “more quick than light.” He also uses a clothing analogy. “Who will ascend, must be undrest,” he asserts before noting how we have soiled the clothes we were given:

But since he
That brightness soiled,
His garments be
All dark and spoiled,
And here are left as nothing worth,
Till the Refiner’s fire breaks forth.

“He,” in this instance, is Adam, who in his naked innocence was “intimate with Heav’n”:

Man of old
Within the line
Of Eden could
Like the Sun shine
All naked, innocent and bright,
And intimate with Heav’n, as light

With Christ’s arrival and then with the Ascension, the Fall doesn’t get the last word as “stained man” is made “more white than snow”:

Then comes he!
Whose mighty light
Made his clothes be
Like Heav’n, all bright;
The Fuller, whose pure blood did flow
To make stained man more white than snow.

For his part, Malcolm Guite talks about how “the heart that broke for all the broken-hearted” is now “whole and Heaven-centered.” This Jesus heart “sings in the strength that rises out of weakness,/ Sings through the clouds that veil him from our sight.”

The result is that we, as witnesses, can “sing the waning darkness into light.” Jesus’s light is in us, just as our light is in him, with the barriers between heaven and earth coming down. As Guite explains,

The mystery of this feast is the paradox whereby in one sense Christ “leaves” us and is taken away into Heaven, but in another sense he is given to us and to the world in a new and more universal way. He is no longer located only in one physical space to the exclusion of all others. He is in the Heaven which is at the heart of all things now and is universally accessible to all who call upon Him.

And further:

His humanity is taken into heaven so our humanity belongs there too, and is in a sense already there with him. “For you have died,” says St. Paul, “and your life is hidden with Christ in God.

Here’s Guite’s sonnet:

A Sonnet for Ascension Day

We saw his light break through the cloud of glory
Whilst we were rooted still in time and place
As earth became a part of Heaven’s story
And heaven opened to his human face.
We saw him go and yet we were not parted
He took us with him to the heart of things
The heart that broke for all the broken-hearted
Is whole and Heaven-centered now, and sings,
Sings in the strength that rises out of weakness,
Sings through the clouds that veil him from our sight,
Whilst we our selves become his clouds of witness
And sing the waning darkness into light,
His light in us, and ours in him concealed,
Which all creation waits to see revealed.

As I’ve been noting recently (here and here), John Gatta in Green Gospel: Foundations of Ecotheology observes that “all creation” involves far more than humans. When we open ourselves to God’s bigness, we develop in ways that are beyond human imagining.

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Expanding Outward at 60

Eugenio Zampighi, A Happy Family

Friday – A Life Lived in Literature, 34th Installment

As I entered my sixties, I found a new clarity entering my life as my perspective both focused and expanded. Certain things which had once seemed important dropped away while, at the same time, I began looking more at the world beyond St. Mary’s. A review of the years 2009-2016 will clarify what I mean.

In the spring of 2009, the second semester of my sabbatical, I taught Italian cinema for six weeks in the picturesque city of Alba—St. Mary’s had a study abroad program there—and then traveled to Slovenia, where I delivered a series of five film lectures on “Women’s Studies and Film” to the University of Ljubljana’s sociology and philosophy departments. I then returned to the States and, at Darien’s suggestion, began blogging.

I read once that when some professors reach their sixties—I did so in 2011—they start looking for new audiences. No longer satisfied with confining themselves to their specialized disciplinary field, they want to apply it more broadly. This was certainly the case with me, and blogging provided me a way of doing so. I have at times had interactions with readers, mostly nonacademic, in Britain, Australia, Israel, India, Uganda and other countries. Profound friendships have resulted. 

I reached my largest audience through my Saturday sports posts. When a football commentator on the ESPN website shared an essay on Indianapolis quarterback Peyton Manning, my readership exploded. It would come down again when, after a few years, I stopped writing about sports, which I did because I don’t like repeating myself. At that point I felt like the old grandmother in Leslie Marmon Silko’s Ceremony, who says at the novel’s end, “I guess I must be getting old because these goings-on around Laguna don’t get me excited any more. It seems like I’ve already heard these stories before…only thing is, the names sound different.”

The stories in sports—promising rookie, exciting comeback, wasted potential, aging veteran—vary only in that the names sound different. While Ralph Hodgson’s poem “The Bull” is often a perfect poem for players in their twilight years, after a while I got tired of posting the final stanza:

And the dreamer turns away
From his visionary herds
And his splendid yesterday,
Turns to meet the loathly birds
Flocking round him from the skies,
Waiting for the flesh that dies.

In 2009-10 I also taught my last film course, deciding to focus thereafter exclusively on literature. Like my father at Sewanee, I had started film instruction at St. Mary’s and had taught a range of film courses. I had been fully immersed in film scholarship, publishing three substantive articles in Cinema Journal, and at one point I headed the teaching committee for the Society for Cinema and Media Studies. I was particularly proud of a challenging “Film Genre” course I was teaching at the 400-level.

My interest fell off because, once one starts focusing on commonalities among works—after all, that’s how genres come into being—some of their individuality drops away. As a result, I found that the student essays were becoming too predictable. (Too predictable for me, that as, as the students themselves were learning new things.) I would spend two weeks on each genre, including an old classic, a modern example, a foreign example, and an experimental example, and out of that we would examine both the genre’s conventions and how filmmakers could break with them. For the western, for instance, we might look at John Ford’s Stagecoach, Clint Eastwood’s Unforgiven, Akiri Kurosawa’s Yojimbo, and Jim Jarmusch’s Ghost Dog, while the romantic comedy section could include His Girl Friday, Pillow Talk, Amélie, and Annie Hall. For the final essay, the students were to select three films from a genre of their choice, with the stipulation that the first film had to be at least 30 years older than the last. 

That 30-year period gave them an opportunity to write about the immensely popular zombie films given that the genre has been kicked off by Night of the Living Dead in 1968. While I understood what drew them to zombies—in 2009, prospects for a fulfilling career looked bleak and they worried that their individuality would be swallowed up by a faceless society—I didn’t see the exploring going any deeper. The same was true for the romantic comedy essays, in which my women students especially would chart out the tensions between career and family, which were as pressing to them in the 21st century as it is for the Rosalind Russell character in His Girl Friday (1940)With the students producing generic responses to genre, I didn’t see them in their full individuality, as I did when they responded to individual works of literature.

Part of the problem may have been with me. When I studied film in graduate school under David Cook, he taught it as preeminently a narrative art form. While this made film acceptable to English departments—it helped me sell film offerings to my own department—it relegated to secondary status the visual, auditory and performative artistry of cinema. If one limits oneself to narrative, literary classics outshine most films. Austen’s novels are far more complex than any filmic rendition and elicit far more complex responses.

I mention Austen because, thanks to the new curriculum I had helped shape before sabbatical, I could teach her in a first-year seminar. “Jane Austen and the Dating Game” was my first topic and I was gratified to see my students coming to love Austen as much as I did.

In the process of looking outward, I can report that momentous things were also happening with Darien and Toby. Toby married Candice Wilson from Trinidad, whom he met in the University of Pittsburgh’s graduate English program. Although Toby then transferred to the U.C. Davis’s excellent program in Victorian Lit, they stayed in touch and got married in the summer of 2011. The following year, they had Esmé, who conjured up for me J.D. Salinger’s healing child that a war veteran turns to as he grapples with PTSD in “For Esmé–with Love and Squalor.” 

Earlier that year Darien and Betsy, having started a marketing company in Manhattan, also had a son. With the name Alban, a variation of Albion, he had me thinking of the ancient symbol of Britain that William Blake dreams of transforming into a new Jerusalem:

I will not cease from Mental Fight,
Nor shall my sword sleep in my hand
Till we have built Jerusalem,
In Englands green & pleasant Land.

If names are destiny—an idea I explore in my posts on Darien’s and Toby’s names (here and here)—then my first two grandchildren will be instrumental in healing a broken world.

Toby and Candice then had Etta, a name I associate with singer Etta James’s joyous “At Last” (and our Etta is indeed joyous), after which Toby came to his alma mater for a year as a sabbatical replacement. Among his courses at St. Mary’s were “Victorian Time Machines” (his dissertation topic), “The Rise of the Machine,” and “Charles Dickens,” and his interest in technology would, the following year, land him a post-doc at Georgia Tech, where he connected well with engineering students. He taught there for (I believe) three years before landing his current position at Georgia Gwinnett. Candice, meanwhile, teaches Film Studies and Asian Studies at the University of North Georgia. Since we have retired to southern Tennessee, they are within easy driving distance.

Parents find few things more satisfying than seeing their children flourish. Grandchildren are also pretty cool.

Past Installments of A Life Lived in Literature
A Life Lived in Literature: How It All Began (Sept. 5, 2025)
Early Reading Memories (Sept. 12, 2025)
Childhood Confusion: Reading to the Rescue (Sept. 19, 2025)
Confronting Segregation (Sept. 26, 2025)
School Reading vs. Real Reading (Oct. 10, 2025)
Childhood in Paris (Oct. 17, 2025)
My Time at Sewanee Military Academy (Oct. 24, 2025)
Existentialism for High School Seniors (Oct. 31, 2025)
Why I Majored in History, Not English (Nov. 7, 2025)
My College Search for Authenticity (Nov. 14, 2025)
On D. H. Lawrence and a Sexual Awakening (Nov. 21, 2025)
My Life as a Bildungsroman (Nov. 28, 2025)
Grad School: Literary Baptism by Fire (Dec. 5, 2025)
Early Scenes from a Marriage (Dec. 12, 2025)
Bringing Up Baby in Grad School (Dec. 19, 2025)
Grappling with Racism (Jan. 2, 2026)
Journal of a Young Teacher (Jan. 16, 2026)
Teaching and Reading in Yugoslavia (Jan. 23, 2026)
Life at 40: Barely Controlled Chaos (Jan 30, 2026)
From Secular Humanist to Christian Believer (Feb. 6 2025)
Looking Back at a Lifetime Together (Feb. 13, 2026)
To Ljubljana with Love (Feb. 20, 2026)
Forging a Separate Identity from My Father (Feb. 27, 2026)
“Better Living” Emerged from a Midnight Epiphany (March 6, 2026)
The Golden Years before Tragedy Struck (March 13, 2026) 
Using Lit to Grapple with a Death (March 20, 2026) 
Lit in the Year following Justin’s Death (March 27, 2026)
My Eldest Son, Named after a Keats Sonnet (April 3, 2026)
Sterne’s Uncle Toby and My Own Toby (April 10, 2026)
After the 2nd Death, a Book Project (April 17, 2026)
Making Lit Meaningful for Students (April 24, 2026) 
Horizons Broadened (May 1, 2026) 
Obama’s Election and a Blog Launched (May 8, 2026)
Expanding Outward at 60 (May 15, 2026)

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Childhood Imagination: Encourage It or Lose It

N.C. Wyeth, The Giant

Thursday

Teacher and author Brendan James Murray has written a lovely Guardian article about how our society and our schools are failing to foster childhood imaginations and what we must do to compensate. The article has me revisiting both my own childhood and how I parented my children.

Murray begins with an N.C. Wyeth painting of six children on a beach rapturously gazing up at a cloud giant. With no adults in sight, the children have the freedom to let their minds roam where they will. There are no tests here, no carefully scheduled activities, nothing but the power of the imagination.

I’m thinking that Murray could also have included in his piece—and perhaps does in Childhood, the book from which the article is excerpted—the opening paragraph of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland:

Alice was beginning to get very tired of sitting by her sister on the bank and of having nothing to do; once or twice she had peeped into the book her sister was reading, but it had no pictures or conversations in it, ‘and what is the use of a book,’ thought Alice, ‘without pictures or conversation?’

At this point, Alice’s mind goes down a rabbit hole, as it were, and we’re off and running as Lewis Carroll pushes back against his increasingly pragmatic society. It’s a reminder that suspicion of the imagination has a history: the Victorians’ Puritan work ethic has a lot to answer for. Carroll’s nonsense takes constant aim at poems meant to teach stern moral lessons and rigid educational programs designed to teach practical knowledge.

In the topsy-turvy world of Wonderland, education is turned on its head. When Alices asks the Mock Turtle and Gryphon what they were taught in school, she gets a wondrous response:

‘Well, there was Mystery,’ the Mock Turtle replied, counting off the subjects on his flappers, ‘ – Mystery, ancient and modern, with Seaography; then Drawling – the Drawling-master was an old conger-eel, that used to come once a week; he taught us Drawling, Stretching, and Fainting in Coils.’

‘What was that like?’ said Alice.

‘Well, I can’t show it you myself,’ the Mock Turtle said, ‘I’m too stiff. And the Gryphon never learnt it.’

‘Hadn’t time,’ said the Gryphon, ‘I went to the Classics master, though. He was an old crab, he was.’

‘I never went to him,’ the Mock Turtle said with a sigh, ‘he taught Laughing and Grief, they used to say.’

‘So he did, so he did,’ said the Gryphon, sighing in his turn; and both creatures hid their faces in their paws.

‘And how many hours a day did you do lessons?’ said Alice in a hurry to change the subject.

‘Ten hours the first day,’ said the Mock Turtle, ‘nine the next, and so on.’

‘What a curious plan!’ exclaimed Alice.

‘That’s the reason they’re called lessons,’ the Gryphon remarked, ‘because they lessen from day to day.’

Contrast this with the educational system as depicted by Murray:

The truth is that all very young children do have rich imaginations and navigate rich imaginative worlds. However, almost all will lose this faculty by their mid-teens, or have it dimmed nearly out of existence.

This is something that is accepted and largely unquestioned in our culture, as though loss of imagination is an inevitability of growing up. Through this lens, imagination becomes associated with immaturity.

Murray wonders whether western culture’s reprioritization can be attributed to an industrialized society in which unfettered imagination didn’t appear to serve capitalist needs. “To invite children into an activity free of demands,” he writes, “is to face the adult anxiety of those children achieving nothing”:

The need for students to create products and demonstrate measurable skills is predicated on the belief that we can only know that a child has developed if we are able to gather objective data. Were we to say, “Those children benefited from imagining a giant in the sky,” a modern educator (myself included) might be tempted to counter: “What data do you have to support that?”

Murray complains that the emphasis on data and criteria even crop up in classes designed to teach creativity:

With the introduction of criteria to assess any of the create-ivity emerging from the students’ closely surveilled efforts, we have perhaps the most stifling and sanitized imaginative space conceivable. Write a story, but it must follow the conventions of science fiction. Write a poem, but it must employ the poetic style of Emily Dickinson. Write a paragraph, but it must begin with a topic sentence. Must. Instruction; structure; walls and barriers and limits.

Murray calls out himself in the process:

Teachers like myself are so focused on the power of criteria to guide students that we almost never acknowledge the absolutely unavoidable reality that every criteria has a shadow criteria, that which implies all the infinite things the students cannot do. In some sense, criteria are imagination’s opposite, its antonym. Give us what we want. Imagination blotted out by insistence on a specific product demanded by an authority figure. All the freedom of water poured into a concrete aqueduct. Learn the rules so you can break them? Only if the rules don’t break you first.

Looking back at my own childhood, I realize how lucky I was to have a father who encouraged non-stop creativity. Mostly he conveyed this through reading to us every night, but we also witnessed his poetry and his paintings, which often involved nails, hinges, and other hardware. At times he appeared more a child than an adult, especially at Christmas. 

I remember how the stories we encountered would shape our childhood activities. Thanks to living in the small and safe mountaintop community of Sewanee, Tennessee, we could bicycle everywhere, and I remember thinking of myself as Lucy Fitch Perkins’s Scottish Twins as I explored Sewanee’s caves and as E. Nesbit’s Bastable children as I played with my brothers. Meanwhile, my grandparents’ Peoria mansion, with its mysterious servant stairways and spacious attic, was rendered especially magical because we saw it through the lens of The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe and The Magician’s Nephew.

With this upbringing, I understood what drove Tom Sawyer when he incorporates his reading into his play. There’s the oath he has his gang swear at the beginning of Huckleberry Finn (inspired, Huck says, by his “pirate-books and robber-books”) and the elaborate escape he engineers for Jim. When Huck is confused as to why they need to bake a pie to smuggle in a saw to free the prisoner, Tom reveals his sources:

“Why, you just said a body could lift up the bedstead and slip the chain off.”

“Well, if that ain’t just like you, Huck Finn. You can get up the infant-schooliest ways of going at a thing. Why, hain’t you ever read any books at all?—Baron Trenck, nor Casanova, nor Benvenuto Chelleeny, nor Henri IV., nor none of them heroes? Who ever heard of getting a prisoner loose in such an old-maidy way as that? No; the way all the best authorities does is to saw the bed-leg in two, and leave it just so, and swallow the sawdust, so it can’t be found, and put some dirt and grease around the sawed place so the very keenest seneskal can’t see no sign of it’s being sawed, and thinks the bed-leg is perfectly sound. Then, the night you’re ready, fetch the leg a kick, down she goes; slip off your chain, and there you are. Nothing to do but hitch your rope ladder to the battlements, shin down it, break your leg in the moat—because a rope ladder is nineteen foot too short, you know—and there’s your horses and your trusty vassles, and they scoop you up and fling you across a saddle, and away you go to your native Langudoc, or Navarre, or wherever it is. It’s gaudy, Huck. I wish there was a moat to this cabin. If we get time, the night of the escape, we’ll dig one.”

To these works I would add the sequel to Alexander Dumas’s Three Musketeers, which features such an escape.

Of course, the scene seems less funny to me now that I can see how Tom is using a grown man as a toy (not unlike how the South at the time was infantilizing African Americans). But as a child, I saw Tom’s imagining as simply what one did.

I’ve written about how, in third grade, I distinguished between “school reading” and “real reading”—school reading had a deflating set of questions at the end, which further ruined an already boring and agenda-driven story—and that I remember few assignments that spurred my imagination indicates just how seldom it happened. But I do remember my otherwise awful sixth grade teacher (Miss Esther) telling us to bring in items inspired by Roman history. (I created a Roman scroll, from which I read Twain’s humorous piece in Innocents Abroad on gladiatorial combat.) And there was Audrey Goldfinch, my seventh grade homeroom teacher, who had the entire class (all 38 of us) write a Halloween horror story, in which we were only allowed to read the paragraph written by the person directly ahead of us.  (It meandered wonderfully and had a boffo ending that I still remember: “I knew I was to become one of those floating bodies.”) So it’s not as though school didn’t have potential. It just seldom lived up to it.

The opportunity to indulge the imagination was one of the most rewarding aspects of fatherhood. Not only did I read every night to my three sons, but I made up stories as we commuted to soccer and baseball practice. When we would pass an old African American man walking near the “Honey Bunny Daycare Center” (honestly, that was its name), I informed them that the center was an undercover CIA operation and the man was actually a spy. The stories spiraled from there. 

I also learned that I could trigger their imaginations and then get out of the way. When Justin, at 12, informed me that Julia and I weren’t his real parents. I asked him to tell me about his actual parents and got an extended story that provided insight into some of his frustrations. (As I recall, after allowing Justin to vent, the story ended on a forgiving note with him concluding that Julia and I were adequate as substitutes.) All of which is to say that there is a role for adults in their children’s imagining lives. After all, those Wyeth children on the beach would not be imagining a giant if some adult hadn’t told or read them fairy tales. Our job is to listen, to respect, and to encourage.

Oh, and regarding the issue of practicality? My sons are gainfully employed–one in marketing, one in teaching—and their fellow employees love working with them. They light up every room they enter.

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Antigone Taught Mandela Leadership

Frederic Leighton, Antigone

Wednesday

Spurred by false reports of “white genocide” in South Africa, the Trump administration has been granting refugee status to white Afrikaners while denying it to others in far more desperate straits. While the country does suffer from high crime rates, whites are not suffering more than anyone else, and one only has to look at our own nation following the Civil War to realize how difficult such transitions can be. I find myself thinking how much worse it could have been had it not been for Nelson Mandela.

When Mandela died in 2013, I wrote a post on how he and his fellow Robben Island prisoners felt supported by various passages in Shakespeare, including Julius Caesar, Tempest, and Merchant of Venice. Only recently, however, did I register that Mandela also played Creon in a prison performance of Antigone. An old Guardian article notes that while Mandela appears more Antigone than the Theban king, nevertheless he may have learned leadership lessons from Creon that served his country.

For a refresher, Oedipus’s two sons have died fighting who is to rule Thebes. Next-in-line Creon decrees that the brother who attacked the city is a traitor and orders that his body remain unburied, contrary to divine law. Antigone, answering to a higher calling, violates the edict and performs funeral rites. As a result, she is buried alive in a tomb, and although Creon repents, he does so too late: Antigone, his son (who loves her), and his wife all commit suicide. At the end, as Creon is lamenting “on my head I feel the heavy weight of crushing Fate,” the Chorus weighs in with its moral:

There is no happiness where there is no wisdom;
No wisdom but in submission to the gods.
Big words are always punished,
And proud men in old age learn to be wise.

Antigone’s principled stand would have resonated with Mandela and his fellow prisoners, as would her arguments with her sister. Many South Africans were as fearful of joining the African National Congress (ANC) as Ismene is in joining Antigone’s rebellion. Note the following interchange, in which Ismene has just reminded her sister how they have already lost their father, mother, and both brothers:

Think how much more terrible than these
Our own death would be if we should go against Creon
And do what he has forbidden! We are only women,
We cannot fight with men, Antigone!
The law is strong, we must give in to the law
In this thing, and in worse. I beg the Dead
To forgive me, but I am helpless: I must yield
To those in authority. And I think it is dangerous business
To be always meddling.

To which Antigone responds: 

If that is what you think,
I should not want you, even if you asked to come.
You have made your choice, you can be what you want to be.
But I will bury him; and if I must die,
I say that this crime is holy: I shall lie down
With him in death, and I shall be as dear
To him as he to me.

And further on:

I am not afraid of the danger; if it means death,
It will not be the worst of deaths ––death without honor.

In reading this last response, I am put in mind of a passage from Julius Caesar that bolstered Mandela during his long imprisonment:

 Cowards die many times before their deaths;
 The valiant never taste of death but once.

In the Guardian article, author André Brink notes that Mandela had an “Antigone streak” from an early age:

But the Antigone streak that was to become in a way his trademark soon asserted itself – whether in defying his guardian by refusing the bride assigned to him, or in standing up to police, prison warders or the leaders of the apartheid regime by refusing to obey orders he regarded as unfair. These occasions never demonstrated a mere disregard for authority, but a considered refusal to condone the abuse of power; an assertion of personal dignity that not even the harshest punishment in prison could dent.

Yet for all his Antigone qualities, I find even more interesting how Mandela was also a Creon. Here’s a passage that Mandela would have delivered when he was acting out the king:

I am aware, of course, that no Ruler can expect complete loyalty from his subjects until he has been tested in office. Nevertheless, I say to you at the very outset that I have nothing but contempt for the kind of Governor who is afraid, for whatever reason, to follow the course that he knows is best for the State; and as for the man who sets private friendship above the public welfare, ––I have no use for him, either. I call God to witness that if I saw my country headed for ruin, I should not be afraid to speak out plainly; and I need hardly remind you that I would never have any dealings with an enemy of the people. No one values friendship more highly than I; but we must remember that friends made at the risk of wrecking our Ship are not real friends at all. 

Creon’s words on the responsibilities of a leader resonate with us now. Because our leaders didn’t hold Trump accountable for attempting to wreck our ship in 2021—because they didn’t put public welfare first—he is taking us all down in 2026. Mandela, on the other hands, echoes Creon in the following statement, found in his autobiography The Long Walk:

There are times a leader must move out ahead of the flock, go off in a new direction, confident that he is leading his people the right way.

Brink lays out the risks Mandela was taking when he initiated meetings with South Africa’s white leadership, thereby moving out ahead of the ANC:

He knew only too well, he told me, even more emphatically than he’d intimated in his writings, that he was really duty-bound to obtain permission from the ANC leadership first before embarking on such a radical initiative. But he also knew that the ANC would never consent. And so he had to place his own future at risk, knowing that if the endeavor failed, or ever became known too early, any future role he might have hoped to play would be forfeited….What in some people, or in some situations, would amount to megalomania, may in others turn out to be a visionary decision.

From Brink’s account of Mandela, I can see how he learned from both Creon and Antigone, both the positives and the negatives. Through the Truth and Reconciliation process, he rejected Creon-like draconian punishments. At the same time, he was more practical—although no less principled—than Antigone. He also didn’t have her self-righteousness, which we see when she confronts Creon:

This talking is a great weariness: your words
Are distasteful to me, and I am sure that mine
Seem so to you. And yet they should not seem so:
I should have praise and honor for what I have done.
All these men here would praise me
Were their lips not frozen shut with fear of you.
[Bitterly.]
Ah the good fortune of kings,
Licensed to say and do whatever they please!

For comparative purposes, check out this passage from Mandela’s speech before his own court, which found him guilty and sent him to prison for 27 years. Note that it lacks Antigone’s bitterness:

During my lifetime I have dedicated myself to this struggle of the African people. I have fought against white domination, and I have fought against black domination. I have cherished the ideal of a democratic and free society in which all persons live together in harmony and with equal opportunities. It is an ideal which I hope to live for and to achieve. But, if needs be, it is an ideal for which I am prepared to die.”

Writing in 2000 after Mandela’s presidency had come to an end, Brink observes that, while he made mistakes, he accomplished far more than could reasonably have been expected given the impossibility of the task:

One need only take a small step back to compare South Africa today with the country of less than a decade ago to realize how much has been achieved. If programs for housing, health care, job creation or the reconstruction of education still lag behind the forecasts of five years ago, at least the groundwork has been done, the infrastructure provided, on which the real edifice can now take shape.

Part of Mandela’s success lay in how he was able to face up to where he’d gone wrong. Brink tells the story, recounted by one of Mandela’s three private secretaries, how every night he would ask them, “Now tell me what I have done wrong today, because I don’t want to make the same mistakes tomorrow.” In other words, he follows the advice that the seer Teiresias offers Creon:

Think: all men make mistakes,
But a good man yields when he knows his course is wrong,
And repairs the evil. The only crime is pride.

Classicist Edith Hall, in Aristotle’s Way: How Ancient Wisdom Can Change Your Life, believes that the ancient Greek tragedies offered training in deliberate decision-making and for that reason were seen as vital to Athenian society, given how it was dependent on its popular council. By getting caught up in his pride, Creon would have served as a negative object lesson for Greek citizens. I can very well imagine Mandela absorbing important leadership lessons as he performed the role. 

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