Addenda
A monthly e-mail newsletter from MARS HILL AUDIO
August 15, 2004 v Number 6
"When the Christian faith is not only felt, but thought, it has practical results which may be inconvenient." -- T. S. Eliot, "The Idea of a Christian Society"
New on our desks: Art and the Loss of Transcendence
"In refusing to acknowledge the reality of any experience that is not scientifically provable, the scientific world view has condemned much that is vital to culture and creative growth. To see things in this alienating way may be the particular compulsion of the modern Western mentality, but it does not necessarily reflect the way things really are. Although we may value technological power more than sacred wisdom, scientific rationalism has so far failed to prove itself as a successful integrating mythology for industrial society; it offers no inner archetypal mediators of divine power, no cosmic connectedness, no sense of belonging to a larger pattern. Science, in the twentieth century, has had little to say about spiritual values, nor, it would seem, has art." [Read more]
Introductory Essay to Volume 68
Occasionally the introductions to interviews on the Journal are long and detailed, intended to build a framework for the interview to come. Such was the case with the first interview on MHAJ Volume 68 with the sociologist Murray Milner, in which Ken Myers explained in general terms how he often chooses subjects to consider and guests to interview. A number of our listeners have asked whether this for a printed version of these comments, which amounts to an essay on the significance of the complex relationship between what we believe (substance) and the way we live (form). These comments are now available in either PDF or HTML format. For other print articles from MARS HILL AUDIO, see our printable documents page (www.marshillaudio.org/pdf).
More on
"Michael
Moore is the mind and the grin behind TV Nation, a weekly show in which
he applies the satirical techniques he developed in his award-winning
documentary, Roger and Me, to all manner of stories, from pets on
PROZAC, to Avon ladies in the Amazon, to consumer culture in
"Some of it is illuminating, and some of it funny, but there's an uneasy
edge to the laughter, or ought to be. Where Letterman makes fun of people to
get a laugh, Michael Moore tries to get laughs in order to make fun of people,
especially rich and conservative people. He has confessed that he has a
deliberate, populist left-wing agenda. Like Rush Limbaugh, he is an entertainer
with a purpose, and he uses the visual medium as well as Limbaugh uses
his. 'I want people to be angry; I want them to get up and do something.'
Exactly what he would like them to do remains
unclear. That's always the liability of sheer satire: it tends toward nihilism
if there's no constructive vision guiding it."
The
preceding is part of a commentary on Michael Moore by Ken Myers from Volume
11 (Sept/Oct 1994) of the MARS HILL Tapes. In the intervening
years (and especially in the past few months) popularity (or perhaps notoriety)
of the filmmaker from
Coming Up on the Journal
The issue of the Journal we have recently finished producing is Volume 69 (July/August 2004). We'd also like you to know about some of the guests our subscribers can expect to hear on the Journal later this year:
R.
Larry Todd, praised by the New York Times as "the dean of
Mendelssohn scholars in the
W.
Wesley MacDonald's Russell Kirk and Age of Ideology (
Richard
Weikart teaches modern European history at
Carl Elliott's Better Than Well: American Medicine Meets the American Dream looks at various trends in medical practice (psychopharmacology, Botox, Ritalin, Viagra, etc.) in light of the American obsession with self-improvement techniques.
Dana Gioia, now the chairman of the National Endowment for the Arts, will return to our microphones to talk about the recent NEA survey on reading habits among Americans. (Conclusion: they don't read as much fiction or poetry as they did 20 years ago, and the decline is accelerating.)
MHAJ Discussion Groups
Many
of you have inquired about local MARS HILL AUDIO Journal
discussion groups, and in a few cities they have actually begun to flourish.
The ones we know about are
Reader and Listener Mail
View new postings to our Listener Mail page. We encourage you to send your submission to addenda@marshillaudio.org. If you would prefer to send a letter, please see our mailing address at the end of this newsletter. If we decide to print your letter we will include your name unless you request to remain anonymous.
Various Details, Disclaimers, Etc.
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Copyright 2004 MARS HILL AUDIO, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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MARS HILL AUDIO
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