Jan Zwicky’s “Once upon a Time in the West” – Review by Ron Dart
Jan Zwicky, Once upon a Time in the West: Essays on the Politics of Thought and Imagination (McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2023).
I lived for a couple of years in the young 1970s in northern Norway and Switzerland. I spent time in Norway with the mountain Sami—this was a period when Arne Naess (Norwegian mountaineer, Spinoza scholar and founder of deep ecology with Delores LaChapelle) worked closely with the Sami to oppose the large dam projects. Naess lived in Austria from 1933-1935 and was involved, when there, with the Vienna Circle and Wittgenstein. When I was in Switzerland, I took in the Swiss mountaineering tradition and soaked myself in the writings of Renaissance scholar Jacob Burckhardt (complicated history with Nietzsche), Hesse and Heidegger. I have been fortunate to spent time at Heidegger’s Hut in southern Germany (Todtnauberg) and Nietzsche’s home in Sils Maria. I mention this the simple reason that each of these thinkers were focused and preoccupied with the dilemma of the West and its seeming deterioration and decline, its lemming-like stampede to a cliff’s edge, its hyper and unanalyzed addiction to the vita activa and its opposition to the vita contemplativa—such are the legitimate and focused concerns of Jan Zwicky’s recent probes and beauty of a book, Once upon a Time in the West, “Once”, “Time” and West” the target, the suggestive and classical fairy tale sequence not to miss.
Once upon a Time in the West is divided into 14 reflective and meditative chapters, the personal and philosophical woven together on a finely textured tapestry of thought and insight. The initial chapter, “Auden as Philosopher: How Poets Think” is the golden key that walks the attentive reader into this bounty of a book, two ways of seeing and the consequences for the West of taking one path or the other: “Auden’s Poetic Epistemology” versus “The Epistemology of Baconian Science.” Bacon was somewhat more sophisticated than his detractors make him out to be but the ‘novum organum,” when pushed too far, conceals much what Zwicky’s read of Auden-Coleridge unconceals—this is a chapter worthy of multiple slow reads.
read more…Awakening: More Hard Questions on Hierarchy and Institutions by Brad Jersak
Awakening: More Hard Questions on Hierarchy and Institutions by Brad Jersak One week ago, I published an article entitled, “Hard questions I ask myself about hierarchy and institutions.” In it, I deliberately challenged the energy behind so much post-modern and...
The Harrowing of Hades: A Visual Retelling of the Orthodox Tradition – Review by B Jersak
The Harrowing of Hades: A Visual Retelling of the Orthodox Tradition Illustration and Design: Margie & Michael Elgamal Story: Dalia & Reda Fayek (Creative Orthodox, 2017). Available on Amazon The Harrowing of Hades is a beautifully...
A Message to Those Who Kill Us: Holy Monday Homily after the Bombing of Coptic Churches – Father Boules George
d What will we say to them? THANK YOU The first thing we will say is “Thank you very, very much,” and you won’t believe us when we say it. You know why we thank you? I’ll tell you. You won’t get it, but please believe us. You gave us to die the same death as...
Paradise and Hell According to Orthodox Tradition – George Metallinos
"When Thou comest to earth with glory, O God, and all things tremble, then a river of fire will flow before Thy Judgment Seat, and the books will be opened, and the hidden things made public. Then deliver me from the unquenchable fire and grant me to stand at Thy...
Embracing the Whole Church – Fr. Kenneth Tanner
Hank Hanegraaff's embrace of Eastern Christianity has, by the looks of my Facebook feed, revealed how sad and pathetic our church divisions are during this sacred week of reentering the mysteries that save the world (in one of those rare years when East and West...
Hard questions I ask myself about hierarchy and institutions – Brad Jersak
A word about hierarchies "If the high Authority appoints you to an office, know this: every step upward on the ladder of offices is not a step into freedom but into bondage. The higher the office, the tighter the bondage. The greater the power of the office, the...
Hermann Hesse’s “Stages” – poem read by Ron Dart
Hermann Hesse’s “Glass Bead Game” – Ron Dart
Hermann Hesse's "The Glass Bead Game (part 1) analysis by Ron Dart Hermann Hesse's "The Glass Bead Game (part 2) analysis by Ron Dart
Hermann Hesse and “The Christianity Without Religion” (CWR) Religion
Hermann Hesse (1877-1962) was viewed, in the 1960s-1970s, in North America, as a spiritual and literary icon of sorts. He embodied the best of the counter culture in a probing and poignant manner. He was, as Theodore Ziolkowski rightly notes, “Saint Hesse among the...
The Apocalyptic Cross: Preaching Mark 13 – Martin Little
Mark 13 is the longest speech attributed to Jesus within this shortest of Gospels. It is therefore highly significant for both Mark’s message and Christian tradition. How might one preach this passage as good news today? Of what significance are...
