The Tao of the Scholar-Writer
Graduate Courses: Class One
unedited draft of lecture notes,
cant be fully understood unless you come to the lecture.
The Tao of the Scholar-Writer:
A Lifetime of Self-education.
Where to Start.
(Including: Why we have these books.)
I am going to start by taking you very seriously.
People who have signed up for this program have often been people who are ready to
make a change in their lives. They are usually-- in this university, in this city--
not traditional beginning graduates, but older, more experienced and more serious.
Also more intellectual. Few have chosen this as a road to riches or even to employment.
Rather, they are taking stock of themselves, and they want to free their creativity,
so they can do things in life which fulfill them, things they are proud of having
done.
they are particularly attracted by the whole way of life-- the Tao of life, the path
of life-- involved in being a writer, a person who uses writing as a way to metabolize
his or her life experience.
In this course we try to free your creativity, partly by just doing it, but also
by making inquiry into creativity itself. Youíll find itís a topic bound up with
the idea of ìhistory,î-- whether thereís a pattern to what happens-- and therefore
whether creative individuals of all kinds help it all happen by solving problems.
You want a coach, and some direction, some methods. No point doing it all yourself
and inventing the wheel once again.
Here are some familiar steps toward discovering one's personal Tao, and weíll follow
them.
1. Stopping.
And I really just mean stopping. When you meditate, you start by stopping. Meditating
itself is pretty much stopping: stopping acting, stopping thinking, trying to simply
be alive.
2. Discovering one's goals. Theyre not apparent. They have to be discovered.
3. Matching them to one's means.
4. Taking the first steps to doing them.
The first step, the stopping, can be as simple as, enrolling in a class with someone
more experienced. Coming to class is a way of stopping normal life. Youve made a
start. Just stopping rote behavior is a start.
You have already been thinking about your goals, or you wouldnt be here. You decided
to
set aside 2hr 45 min once a week for this goal. Another good start.
Youre buying the tools you will need, starting with the books. My reading list helps
there.
Now, practicing planning. Thereís always time to plan: youll always save so much
time back, that the time you spend planning is free.
Whenever you feel overwhelmed in these first months, and want to quit,
Stop.
Rest.
Plan.
Learning how to learn.
You are choosing to spend the rest of your life learning and revising and growing.
A culture is actually a long debate. Western culture starts with Plato, who is immediately
followed by Aristotle taking the opposite position on everything Plato said. Right
from the first, in the West, there is no monolithic Tradition.
Writers usually gain a place in the debate not by being disciples, but by overturning
as much as possible that has gone before. The only tradition is Rebellion. Creativity,
James Joyce and many others think, is Rebellion itself.
Your best shot at creatively overturning the applecart, however, is to know as much
of the tradition as possible. True, most people get sidetracked into mere discipleship,
but others say with Joyce, Non serviam! I will not serve!
You can see that historical process, in miniature, in the forty five year history
of Rock and Roll. People donít just politely add something new, they rise up screaming
ìDisco sucksî or whatever, and claiming to be God. Then someone else rises up.
But if anyone were to claim their best shot at Rock originality was to avoid ever
hearing Chuck Berry or the Beatles or Springsteen, youíd think they were nuts. The
way to be new is to learn everything you can, and digest it, gain its strength, like
a cannibal eating his enemy to gain his power.
(That reference you just heard was the only time popular music will be mentioned
here, by the way, because you donít need my help there, you can do it better than
I can.)
To understand the debate, start at the beginning of the argument. Thatís the simplest
way in.
A Lifetime Reading List
for busy working people
This course will launch you, but let me give you some further ideas.
There are countless reading lists, but my students typically work, thirty, forty,
in one case fifty-five hours a week, and theyre pressed for time. Theyre parents,
theyre caretakers of elderly parents.
So Ive picked a reading list that gives a person, quickly, the most literacy in the
least amount of time.
Many of these selections are incredibly short. A Shakespearian play will take 20
minutes to read. Isnt it interesting to realize that you puzzled over references
to King Lear all your life, and you could have read it in twenty minutes?
All you have to do is know your goal; plan ahead; buy the volume; put it next to
your bed. But without that planning, its Saturday Night Live for you again. Chris
Kattan acts like a monkey during Tina Feys News of the Week tonight.
Donít over look films. A few are legitimate shortcuts (but let a professor guide
you.) It is certainly wonderful to read Fieldingís Tom Jones and it should make a
wonderful breakfast book (see below) because it is very episodic. But, you could
start with the Albert Finney classic Tom Jones, which is excellent and quit faithful.
Before you start reading Jane Austen you should see ìSense and Sensibilityî, Emma
Thompson ... it will give you the Austen mood. You have to read A Christmas Carol,
buit the Alistair Sim 1949 version is a great classic itself. Thereís a surprisingly
good movie of Joyces Ulysses that was made back around 1970, a good introduction,
and it helps you picture that world. Amazon will have Laurence Olivierís Henry V,
and perhaps you can even find the BBC Derek Jacobyís Hamlet, or Olivierís Lear, these
are great experiences.
Here then, is a reading list which builds literacy, for time starved people:
The University of Chicago Press translations of Greek Tragedies... for instance,
Sophocles One which contains, Oedipus Rex, Oedipus at Colonus and Antigone.
Aeschylus One The Orestia.
Euripides the Bacchae,
Suetonius, The twelve caesars, picked the craziest ones.
The Oxford Study Edition Bible, modern translated.
The Divine Comedy-- just the Inferno. John D. Sinclairs paraphrase is excellent.
Paradise Lost,
The Beginning and all the parts with the Devil
Any of the major Shakespeare plays you havenít read
Lear, Macbeth, Midsummer Nights Dream, (see Olivierís Richard III, better than the
play),
Proust, Swanns Way
Thomas Mann, Death in Venice
Joyceís Portrait of the Artist
Beckett, Waiting for Godot
Eliot, The Wasteland
Twain huckleberry finn and tom sawyer
If you want American literature,
Hemingway, In our Time
and The Sun Also Rises
Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby
Dickens, A Tale of Two Cities
Updike, The Rabbit books, Bech, the story Bech enters heaven...
Harper Lee, To Kill A Mockingbird
Steinbeck, Of Mice and Men
James T. Farrellís Studs Lonigan all parts, the greatest American Novel....
Phillip Roth, Goodbye Columbus
Saul Bellow, Seize the Day
Capote, Breakfast at Tiffanys
Tennessee Williamss Streetcar Named Desire
Many of these are available in $1.00 editions from Dover press:
Ralph Waldo Emersonís Self Reliance
Wordsworthís Favorite Poems
Haiku.
Techniques for Lifetime Learning: identifying recurrent units of free time
Identifying recurrent units of free time lecture goes here
Dave Mozingoís back from lunch book
I noticed my waking up tv situation getting dressed
The breakfast book
should it be a language you want to learn
Recorded books for travel time
Tapes to listen to in your car:
at the library-- tons of them
history
you never know enough
Barbara W. Tuchman The guns of august
Wm Manchesters Churchill
The evening book
WHENEVER FEEL OVERWHELMED: STOP AND REST, THEN PLAN. PLANNING CREATES TIME. Youíve
got a lot of time.
Magazine subscriptions/websites/mailing lists
these work on the Jesuit principle of small doses applied at a constant rate for
a long time
you should read a weekly newsmazazine
Newsweek has a lot of pop culture, even teen culture-- halfway to People now
US News and World Report more serious
The Economist
subscribe to Lingua Franca and to The Atlantic Monthly... the Newyorker is out and
Atlantic monthlye sets the aganedsa
Special interests: Biblical Archaelogy - special interests. Constant small dose so
that you keep educating yourself
I use Yahoo to do searches on my favorite topics each day
I read a lot from the Hindu in New Dehli
and the Sydney Morning Herald
two of the worldís great newspapers
Languages
And you should be always be studying a language,
Barzun said, you can never learn enough history
Manchesters Chuirchill and Tuchmanís Guns of Augustí
you never know enough languages, you should study a little bit of a language evbery
day by the time you are my age you will know 7 of them, ,
However, you must visist the place, until you visist the place, your study will never
come together, if you diceid eyou are never going to that place, stop styduyiung...
Goinmg to that place after you have studied is like a whole year of studying.
Long Works to Read Slowly Over the Years:
Own these Indispensable long works. Youve got a lifetime to enjoy them. Using the
techniques above, youll have the time to read them.
Homers Iliad
The Oxford Study Bible
Joyces Ulysses
and the most important religious works of East Asia,
Confuciuss Analects
The Tao te Ching
Cervantes Don Quixote,
Goetheís Faust Part One,
Thomas Mann, The Magic Mountain, translated H.T. Lowe-Porter,
Chaucerís Canterbury Tails, read Prologue, and the wife of Bath.
George Elliot, Middlemarch,
Tintern Abbey, Wordsworth, The immortality Ode, some early lyrics
Gerard manly Hopkins, Sonnets
To feel your way into Asia... these 3 from the great de Bary collections
de Bary, East Asian Civilizations
de bary and Bloom, Eastern Canons
Conrad Schirokauer, A brief History of Chinese and Japanese Civilizations
de Bary, Chan and Watson Sources of Chinese tradition, volume I and II
The Way of Chinese Painting, Mai-mai Sze... it goes in and out of print, but youcan
sometimes find an old paperback
Sir Joshua Reynolds Discourses on Art, the Yale edition, tellyou everything you want
to =know about classicism.
Nietzsche Genealogy of Morals
Schopenhauer Essays and Aphorisms in the Hollingdale translation
Philosophies of Art and Beauty, Sl
An Education in Art:
Visual Arts sources to start with:
Time Life books
Modern Art
Anything by Calvin Tomkins is an excellent introduction, for instance these are the
standard histories,
The Bride and the Bachelors, Off the Wall, Post- to Neo-
Duchamp- Biography, which is standard, if you really want to know art history
Art History
The Documents of 20th Century Art, series, from Robert Motherwell, general editor,
New York Viking Press
Futurism, Marcel Duchamp, Functions of Painting by Fernand Leger, the Dada painters
and poets
MH Abrams, Natural Supernaturalism
Anything by Kenneth Clark but especially Landscape into Art
The Gothic Revival. see Kenneth Clarkís Civilization BBC series.
For Art History if you are really interested, John Rewald, The History of Impressionism,
the greatest researcher, and he can write like a novelist. It can be found used,
Philosophy:
As an introduction, the story of philosophy by Will Durant
heilbroner, the worldly philosophers
the columbia history of the world
History:
The Columbia History 0f The World, edited by John A. Garraty and Peter Gay, older
editiuons before Politcal Correctness, reads like a novel. Great book. Widly available
used, very cheap. You want the 1981 edition. Before any politcal correctness as censorship.
For your writing you use the Chicago Manual of style
PUT ROUGH NOTES TO QUARRY AFTER THIS POINT:
A Note on Popular Culture:
Donít trust any rock n roll reference work , the seem to be written from press releases,
and repeart each others mistakes, the only reliable material ever found was The Beatle
s in their Generateion
It waw so obvious and they would take it off , some guy would use a no de plumb and
they thought it was a different guys, no scholarly standards there. Someday sthere
will be real scholarship on rock and roll, it was written for 12 year olds, what
a 12 year old would find exciting, at that time nobody cared,
But the one oddly acurate thing, this Rock Dreams
And as far as Time Life Series for Art books, quick introductions, from
Charles Scribners British Writers, George Stade General Editor, they are the highest
standards. Good introductions.
My own books on Italian and Asian American Literature
Gilbert Highet, The Classiscal Tradition
Leo Rosten, The Joys of Yiddish
M.R. James, The Penguin Complete Ghost Stories