Friday, January 3, 2020
Is Non Eschatological Poetry Possible - 1819 Words
ââ¬Å"Is non-eschatological poetry possible?â⬠Answering his own question, Ceslaw Milosz offers a resounding no. No ââ¬â that is ââ¬â if one is not to be indifferent to time and to questions of last things, like damnation, judgment, the Kingdom of God, or the ends of history. If poetry is ââ¬Å"the passionate pursuit of the Real,â⬠not only would non-eschatological poetry mean poetic indifference to our experiences of temporality and last things, it would mean a collapse into isolation and solipsism, a poetics severed from the reality of the world that makes human life common. Such stark demands for poetry are indicative of Miloszââ¬â¢s investment poetry as a witness to the world, which also involves a witness to God. Indeed, internal to Miloszââ¬â¢sâ⬠¦show more contentâ⬠¦Put as directly as possible: while his eschatology undergoes significant revision from his Zagarist poetry to his poetry during Polandââ¬â¢s Occupation, Milosz nevertheless co nfirms his conviction about the need for eschatology as an ingredient in poetryââ¬â¢s witness, maintaining an eschatological concern for the fate of the world in his early authorship. During this time, eschatology, for Milosz, while having to do with the ââ¬Å"last things,â⬠most fundamentally names a way of seeing the worldââ¬â¢s connectedness to God. In the first part of this paper, I attend to his eschatology known as ââ¬Å"catastrophism.â⬠This catastrophist position is elaborated by the poems ââ¬Å"Hymn and ââ¬Å"To Father Ch.,â⬠where Milosz writes of the natural order as a divine and destructive force, but a force to which human beings might be reconciled. In the second part, I trace an eschatology from his poetic cycle ââ¬Å"The Worldâ⬠which is characterized as ââ¬Å"restorationist.â⬠What emerges is (1) an ongoing eschatological preoccupation that has underwent (2) a shift away from his catastrophic conception and towards a Christian es chatological framework. Last, I conclude by further characterizing the eschatological witness of the poet, suggesting that Miloszââ¬â¢s term ââ¬Å"ecstatic pessimismâ⬠is also an apt description of his eschatological imagination. I. A ââ¬Å"Hymnâ⬠to Catastrophe Czeslaw Miloszââ¬â¢s interwar poetry of the 1930s, often affiliated with the Zagarist movement in Polish poetry, is characterized by
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.