Is anyone else from the boards planning to go? http://www.blakesociety.org.uk/I shall be talking about the relationship between what I believe and what I write ~ Blake's I must create a system or be enslaved by another man's and whether a 'system' restricts or empowers.
"Blake's Dark Materials" - anyone else going?
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"Blake's Dark Materials" - anyone else going?
In Pullman's newsletter he mentioned giving the annual lecture to The Blake Society this year. It's this Tuesday evening in London, and Pullman will be talking about "Blake's Dark Materials":
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dumbledad - Zalif
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Yes, yes, yes!
Oh, bollocks, I'm in the wrong city. It's in Lundun, now there's a surprise...
Oh, bollocks, I'm in the wrong city. It's in Lundun, now there's a surprise...
==========================================
That accent o' yers, are ye frae Holland like me?
Visit an almost daily photo-diary of the Hyperborean North.
View the Hyperborean North from a Rabbit's Eye View
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That accent o' yers, are ye frae Holland like me?
Visit an almost daily photo-diary of the Hyperborean North.
View the Hyperborean North from a Rabbit's Eye View
CURRENTLY READING ==> The Economist
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Melancholy Man - Yoruba Warlock
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Stargirl - Si te amo
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I'd be careful what you say, child! Alec is not in the same country that PP is speaking in!at least your not in the wrong country.
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Stargirl - Si te amo
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don't you mean from? anyway, i'm probably late already, even if i were on the plane right this second, aren't i? dumbledad, we want to SEE those notes!Actually, he's not even on the same planet.Ah but is he atleast in the same continent?
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zemarl - I ATE'NT DEAD
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Nope, I meant on.don't you mean from? anyway, i'm probably late already, even if i were on the plane right this second, aren't i? dumbledad, we want to SEE those notes!Actually, he's not even on the same planet.Ah but is he atleast in the same continent?
The Sraffie Formerly Known As hermit
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So, last night I went to see Philip Pullman speak on "Blake's Dark Materials" for the annual Blake Society ( http://www.blakesociety.org.uk/ ) lecture at St James's, Piccadilly. It was a wonderful lecture with a large (several hundred) and engaged audience. First up Tim Heath, the chair of The Blake Society, spoke to introduce the Society and its president, Philip Pullman. Tim "reminded" us that St James's was the church in which Blake was christened on Sunday 11 December 1757 at a beautiful marble baptismal font carved by Grinling Gibbons. (St James's also boasts a stunningly beautiful limewood reredos by Gibbons.)
"I am not a scholar, I am a moth"
Pullman started off with an analogy that he returned to later in the lecture: he likened himself to a moth, a moth that flutters around lights but that returns to some lights repeatedly. He also likened himself to a butterfly, and to a bee, but told us he'd return to sort out those analogies later.
We then turned to a lovely story about writers block, and Blake's rescue of Pullman. During writing "The Amber Spyglass" Pullman came across a book in a bookshop in Oxford on a subject that had intrigued him for a long time: Gnosticism. The book was A.D. Nutall's "The Alternative Trinity: Gnostic Heresy in Marlowe, Milton and Blake" ( http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/019818462X/ ). Far from confirming Pullman's understanding of Gnosticism and the themes of "The Amber Spyglass" he felt challenged: which plotlines needed more weight, which parts needed rewriting, which planned elements needed rethinking, had he studied this area enough, etc. He felt like he was in an exam without having adequately prepared and stopped writing (he didn't say how long this lasted). Blake came to the rescue when Pullman reread Blake's words in "The Marriage of Heaven and Hell":
"I must create a system or be enslaved by another man's. I will not reason and compare: my business is to create."
So Pullman realized that he could forge on, as a creator.
He then addressed two questions and promised a third for later.
Question 1: What is a system?
The first question was answered by exploring several systems in use, e.g. "I'm a Christian". Systems give one an account of how the universe began and our role in it. A system might be religious, or it might be mythological, or it might be psychoanalytical, or it might be political etc. One example Pullman sketched out was Jung replacing Freud's system with his own. Pullman mentioned a "web of crystalline light" that seems to link and explain all the problems that one was previously perplexed by before one builds or discovers a system that works for you. But he made the point that the experience was the same, though the systems themselves differed dramatically.
One thing that distinguishes Blake's system for Pullman is its detail and completeness. Pullman said that reading of many writer's systems was like looking at a landscape painting through a small window. One gets the impression that if one moves to the side one will see the edge of the picture, the frame, and the blank wall beyond. Reading of Blake's system is like looking through a small window at a landscape itself. One feels that no matter how one peers around the scene it extends on in every direction.
Pullman pulled out the system "science" for special consideration. He did feel that science (or the scientific method) could offer one a system: it is narrative. He used words like "austere", "noble", and "demanding" but in the end felt that science makes us become so insignificant in our own story that you'd need to be very brave to adopt it.
Pullman also talked about the dangers of adopting systems unquestioningly, and asked whether a system had to console, but my notes and memory are thin on those points. I did try to tape the lecture using the voice-note facility of my mobile phone but it hasn't worked well enough to discern out what's being said.
Then we went onto ...
Question 2: Should we create a system or be enslaved by one?
Pullman said this often boiled down to the choice between what you do well and what you feel is the right thing to do. One of the examples he gave was Sullivan, who felt that the work with Gilbert got in the way of his writing proper operas, but who performs his one proper opera now? Pullman used Ruskin's quote "slaves work – unredeemed" to further illustrate this point. Pullman also pointed out that having a system may help one's writing without the system itself being of interest. His example was Yates, apparently another big Blake fan, who wrote amazing poetry based within his system which itself was bunkum: "we wouldn't give tupence for it if sold separately".
That lead Pullman to reveal his third question ...
Question 3: Can a writer have no system?
The answer seemed to be "no". We bring with us so much context and experience of the world which forms an implicit system whether we accept it or not. Pullman did say that this approach, rejecting all systems, was the one he felt most intuitively drawn to, but that it was not possible.
I also have the word "palimpsest" in my notes for this section but I cannot remember why!
Pullman noted that much of this implicit system is based on prejudices and preconceptions. He talked about how "as the sun moves around, the shadows change", meaning that we have prejudices written into our work that can only be seen by later generations. His example was the blatant anti-semitism of works in the first half of the twentieth century, which most authors were unaware of, but which on reading now casts a long shadow.
We returned to this in the Q&A session where one questioner asked for Pullman's views on Shakespeare. Pullman replied that he knew more about Milton but that he was looking forward to learning more. But he did say that "Shakespeare's the closest we come to a writer with no system".
Lastly (ish) Pullman took us back to Gnosticism and whether it gave a system which Blake adhered to and which Pullman could too. Pullman gave a nice introduction to one key Gnostic heresy (whose name I forget): the real God is infinitely distant and our souls belong with him. A false god made the world we live in now. Here Pullman referenced another book, William James' "The Varieties of Religious Experience" ( http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/0140390340 ). He talked about James notion of "once born" people who have never had to forsake a system and find another; and "twice born" people who appreciate the world as more of a "double storied mystery". In passing Pullman noted that born-again Christians were really "once born" in James taxonomy, and "shrill and enthusiastic". Pullman explained that Gnosticism is the natural refuge of the "twice born" and so it occurs frequently in modern culture: he gave "The X-Files", "The Matrix", and "The Truman Show" as examples. Pullman noted that Blake's genius was protean, and that he was not a Gnostic. He, like Pullman, could never be happy with a system which mistrusted and hated the physical world.
To wrap up Pullman distilled the continent within Blake's work that he had wandered around into seven axioms, seven axioms which he called "The Republic of Heaven". At this point Pullman was really in his flow and my note taking was falling way behind. (My dad use to teach shorthand at secondary school, why oh why didn't I get him to teach me?) Anyway here's what I did catch of the seven axioms of the Republic of Heaven:
1) The physical world is amorous by nature. Matter loves matter.
2) Things arise from the love of matter for matter that are not themselves matter (e.g. thoughts)
3) Consciousness is a normal property in the physical world – it is not as rare as we think (Pullman had a playful example of what birds think as they fly, but I failed to jot it down.)
4) Bodily experience is all, the soul and the body are not separate. (My notes for this one are particularly weak.)
5) Use what works. Pullman followed this up with what I now find is a Blake quote "all deities reside in the human breast". It's made me wonder how many other asides were in fact quotes.
6) Human's relationships to each other and to the universe are key. (Again that's a terrible paraphrase of what Pullman said, sorry.)
7) What we do is worth doing.
Pullman touched back on the insect analogy saying that he read like a butterfly but wrote like a bee, a phrase that's picked up again in the acknowledgements section of the 10th anniversary re-release of the "His Dark Materials" trilogy, signed copies of which were available after the talk. (I bought a set, they have some fun extras in like new chapter heading pictures and collected letters from Mary Malone etc. They also had signed copies of the new edition of Paradise Lost which Pullman provides a forward and chapter notes within, but I just got that for my 40th so I couldn't justify another copy.)
There were some interesting questions, particularly about Pullman's notion that "as the sun moves around the shadows change", and about the suitability of the word "system". But as Pullman pointed out, the reason he used the word "system" rather than "religion" or "way of thinking" was because that is the word that Blake used.
Pullman hung around afterwards for discussion, but there was quite a throng and so I didn't get to say "hi".
I did try to take some pictures, but the low light levels meant the images captured by my mobile phones are awful. In any case I've uploaded them to flickr ( http://www.flickr.com/photos/dumbledad/sets/1218608/ ) I've also uploaded a scan of my original notes.
--------------------------------------------------
I've just read a write up of the seven axioms by someone else who was there. I'd trust Rachel's more than mine:
1. this physical world is amorous by nature. Each atom delights in falling
in love.
2. things that are not material (e.g. thoughts) arise from matter in love
with matter - (man has no body distinct from his soul)
3. consciousness is a normal property of the physical world (not just human
beings) e.g. the bird
4. bodily experience sustains mental experience - Blake's 'eternal delight'
5. we should use whatever works for us - whether that be ghosts, demi-gods,
or whatever. Banish anti-superstition.
6. the true object of all our study is human nature.
7. the work that we do is infinitely worth doing.
"I am not a scholar, I am a moth"
Pullman started off with an analogy that he returned to later in the lecture: he likened himself to a moth, a moth that flutters around lights but that returns to some lights repeatedly. He also likened himself to a butterfly, and to a bee, but told us he'd return to sort out those analogies later.
We then turned to a lovely story about writers block, and Blake's rescue of Pullman. During writing "The Amber Spyglass" Pullman came across a book in a bookshop in Oxford on a subject that had intrigued him for a long time: Gnosticism. The book was A.D. Nutall's "The Alternative Trinity: Gnostic Heresy in Marlowe, Milton and Blake" ( http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/019818462X/ ). Far from confirming Pullman's understanding of Gnosticism and the themes of "The Amber Spyglass" he felt challenged: which plotlines needed more weight, which parts needed rewriting, which planned elements needed rethinking, had he studied this area enough, etc. He felt like he was in an exam without having adequately prepared and stopped writing (he didn't say how long this lasted). Blake came to the rescue when Pullman reread Blake's words in "The Marriage of Heaven and Hell":
"I must create a system or be enslaved by another man's. I will not reason and compare: my business is to create."
So Pullman realized that he could forge on, as a creator.
He then addressed two questions and promised a third for later.
Question 1: What is a system?
The first question was answered by exploring several systems in use, e.g. "I'm a Christian". Systems give one an account of how the universe began and our role in it. A system might be religious, or it might be mythological, or it might be psychoanalytical, or it might be political etc. One example Pullman sketched out was Jung replacing Freud's system with his own. Pullman mentioned a "web of crystalline light" that seems to link and explain all the problems that one was previously perplexed by before one builds or discovers a system that works for you. But he made the point that the experience was the same, though the systems themselves differed dramatically.
One thing that distinguishes Blake's system for Pullman is its detail and completeness. Pullman said that reading of many writer's systems was like looking at a landscape painting through a small window. One gets the impression that if one moves to the side one will see the edge of the picture, the frame, and the blank wall beyond. Reading of Blake's system is like looking through a small window at a landscape itself. One feels that no matter how one peers around the scene it extends on in every direction.
Pullman pulled out the system "science" for special consideration. He did feel that science (or the scientific method) could offer one a system: it is narrative. He used words like "austere", "noble", and "demanding" but in the end felt that science makes us become so insignificant in our own story that you'd need to be very brave to adopt it.
Pullman also talked about the dangers of adopting systems unquestioningly, and asked whether a system had to console, but my notes and memory are thin on those points. I did try to tape the lecture using the voice-note facility of my mobile phone but it hasn't worked well enough to discern out what's being said.
Then we went onto ...
Question 2: Should we create a system or be enslaved by one?
Pullman said this often boiled down to the choice between what you do well and what you feel is the right thing to do. One of the examples he gave was Sullivan, who felt that the work with Gilbert got in the way of his writing proper operas, but who performs his one proper opera now? Pullman used Ruskin's quote "slaves work – unredeemed" to further illustrate this point. Pullman also pointed out that having a system may help one's writing without the system itself being of interest. His example was Yates, apparently another big Blake fan, who wrote amazing poetry based within his system which itself was bunkum: "we wouldn't give tupence for it if sold separately".
That lead Pullman to reveal his third question ...
Question 3: Can a writer have no system?
The answer seemed to be "no". We bring with us so much context and experience of the world which forms an implicit system whether we accept it or not. Pullman did say that this approach, rejecting all systems, was the one he felt most intuitively drawn to, but that it was not possible.
I also have the word "palimpsest" in my notes for this section but I cannot remember why!
Pullman noted that much of this implicit system is based on prejudices and preconceptions. He talked about how "as the sun moves around, the shadows change", meaning that we have prejudices written into our work that can only be seen by later generations. His example was the blatant anti-semitism of works in the first half of the twentieth century, which most authors were unaware of, but which on reading now casts a long shadow.
We returned to this in the Q&A session where one questioner asked for Pullman's views on Shakespeare. Pullman replied that he knew more about Milton but that he was looking forward to learning more. But he did say that "Shakespeare's the closest we come to a writer with no system".
Lastly (ish) Pullman took us back to Gnosticism and whether it gave a system which Blake adhered to and which Pullman could too. Pullman gave a nice introduction to one key Gnostic heresy (whose name I forget): the real God is infinitely distant and our souls belong with him. A false god made the world we live in now. Here Pullman referenced another book, William James' "The Varieties of Religious Experience" ( http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/0140390340 ). He talked about James notion of "once born" people who have never had to forsake a system and find another; and "twice born" people who appreciate the world as more of a "double storied mystery". In passing Pullman noted that born-again Christians were really "once born" in James taxonomy, and "shrill and enthusiastic". Pullman explained that Gnosticism is the natural refuge of the "twice born" and so it occurs frequently in modern culture: he gave "The X-Files", "The Matrix", and "The Truman Show" as examples. Pullman noted that Blake's genius was protean, and that he was not a Gnostic. He, like Pullman, could never be happy with a system which mistrusted and hated the physical world.
To wrap up Pullman distilled the continent within Blake's work that he had wandered around into seven axioms, seven axioms which he called "The Republic of Heaven". At this point Pullman was really in his flow and my note taking was falling way behind. (My dad use to teach shorthand at secondary school, why oh why didn't I get him to teach me?) Anyway here's what I did catch of the seven axioms of the Republic of Heaven:
1) The physical world is amorous by nature. Matter loves matter.
2) Things arise from the love of matter for matter that are not themselves matter (e.g. thoughts)
3) Consciousness is a normal property in the physical world – it is not as rare as we think (Pullman had a playful example of what birds think as they fly, but I failed to jot it down.)
4) Bodily experience is all, the soul and the body are not separate. (My notes for this one are particularly weak.)
5) Use what works. Pullman followed this up with what I now find is a Blake quote "all deities reside in the human breast". It's made me wonder how many other asides were in fact quotes.
6) Human's relationships to each other and to the universe are key. (Again that's a terrible paraphrase of what Pullman said, sorry.)
7) What we do is worth doing.
Pullman touched back on the insect analogy saying that he read like a butterfly but wrote like a bee, a phrase that's picked up again in the acknowledgements section of the 10th anniversary re-release of the "His Dark Materials" trilogy, signed copies of which were available after the talk. (I bought a set, they have some fun extras in like new chapter heading pictures and collected letters from Mary Malone etc. They also had signed copies of the new edition of Paradise Lost which Pullman provides a forward and chapter notes within, but I just got that for my 40th so I couldn't justify another copy.)
There were some interesting questions, particularly about Pullman's notion that "as the sun moves around the shadows change", and about the suitability of the word "system". But as Pullman pointed out, the reason he used the word "system" rather than "religion" or "way of thinking" was because that is the word that Blake used.
Pullman hung around afterwards for discussion, but there was quite a throng and so I didn't get to say "hi".
I did try to take some pictures, but the low light levels meant the images captured by my mobile phones are awful. In any case I've uploaded them to flickr ( http://www.flickr.com/photos/dumbledad/sets/1218608/ ) I've also uploaded a scan of my original notes.
--------------------------------------------------
I've just read a write up of the seven axioms by someone else who was there. I'd trust Rachel's more than mine:
1. this physical world is amorous by nature. Each atom delights in falling
in love.
2. things that are not material (e.g. thoughts) arise from matter in love
with matter - (man has no body distinct from his soul)
3. consciousness is a normal property of the physical world (not just human
beings) e.g. the bird
4. bodily experience sustains mental experience - Blake's 'eternal delight'
5. we should use whatever works for us - whether that be ghosts, demi-gods,
or whatever. Banish anti-superstition.
6. the true object of all our study is human nature.
7. the work that we do is infinitely worth doing.
-
dumbledad - Zalif
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Thanks for the report, 'dad, looked interesting. Always been fascinated by Blake.
Shut your moaning you, you've got that festival thing every year - and we paid for your sodding parliament Where's ours, eh?Yes, yes, yes!
Oh, bollocks, I'm in the wrong city. It's in Lundun, now there's a surprise...
"A man does not show his greatness by being at one extremity, but rather by touching both at once." - Blaise Pascal
"Better a cruel truth than a comfortable delusion" - Edward Abbey
"Better a cruel truth than a comfortable delusion" - Edward Abbey
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Townie - Village Idiot
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A bunch of middle-class Oxbridge students singing in baths_with_wheels, or wearing bras over their clothes?you've got that festival thing
<Unsheathes broadsword>and we paid for your sodding parliament
<Sticks Chris' head on spike outside 'Otterburn Veterans Association' offices>
==========================================
That accent o' yers, are ye frae Holland like me?
Visit an almost daily photo-diary of the Hyperborean North.
View the Hyperborean North from a Rabbit's Eye View
CURRENTLY READING ==> The Economist
That accent o' yers, are ye frae Holland like me?
Visit an almost daily photo-diary of the Hyperborean North.
View the Hyperborean North from a Rabbit's Eye View
CURRENTLY READING ==> The Economist
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Melancholy Man - Yoruba Warlock
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I've now found a full and acturate transcription of Pullman's Blake axioms. Apparantly the lecture is to be published in two places:
1) The Blake Society and
2) in a book of Pullman's lectures and essays and other non-fiction, which David Fickling Books will publish.
Here are the seven axioms in full.
1) The Blake Society and
2) in a book of Pullman's lectures and essays and other non-fiction, which David Fickling Books will publish.
Here are the seven axioms in full.
Axiom number one: The physical world, this matter of which we are made, is amorous by nature. Matter rejoices in matter, and each atom of it falls in love with other atoms and delights to join up with them to form complex and even more delightful structures. "and shew you all alive This world, where every particle of dust breathes forth its joy."
Axiom number two: things arise from matter-in-love-with-matter that are not themselves matter. Thoughts emerge from the unimaginable, the non-disentangle-able complexity of the brain, thoughts that are not material, though they have analogues in material processes, and you can't say where one ends and the other begins, because they are one thing and not two, and each is an aspect of the other. "Man has no Body distinct from his Soul; for that call'd Body is a portion of Soul discern'd by the five senses."
Axiom number three: the consciousness that emerges from matter demonstrates that consciousness is a normal property of the physical world and much more widely diffused than human beings think. "How do you know but ev'ry Bird that cuts the airy way, Is an immense World of delight, clos'd by your senses five?"
Axiom number four: bodily experience underlies, sustains, feeds, inspires, and cherishes mental experience. "Energy is the only life, and is from the Body; and Reason is the bound or outward circumference of Energy. Energy is Eternal Delight."
Axiom number five: we should use what works. And if invoking ghosts, demons, spirits, gods, demigods, nymphs or hobgoblins helps us to write, then we should banish the superstition of not being superstitious and invoke them without embarrassment or hesitation. "All deities reside in the human breast."
Axiom number six: the true object of our study and our work is human nature and its relationship to the universe. "God Appears & God is Light To those poor Souls who dwell in Night, But does a Human Form Display To those who Dwell in Realms of day."
Axiom number seven: the work we do is infinitely worth doing. "Eternity is in love with the productions of time."
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dumbledad - Zalif
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