Wednesday, March 11, 2009

The House of Intellect After Fifty Years

R. R. Reno, End of an Era, First Things:

Rereading The House of Intellect has helped me understand our times more clearly. Certain images recur: abdication, desire for release, and exhausted impotence. The adult world of achieved self-discipline abdicates to an adolescent world of spontaneity and desire. Among those charged with responsibility for cultural standards, Barzun sees a strong desire for “a release from responsibility.” People “idealize youth” and “hope that youth will bring to the conduct of life an energy that manners have sapped in their elders.” The really smart and ambitious intellectuals read the signs of the times and strike poses accordingly: “Nowadays it is assumed that all attacks on culture are equal in virtue, and that attacking society, because it is society, is the one aim and test of genius.”


Read also Frank Wilson, Get to Know Today . . ., in the blog BOOKS, INQ. — THE EPILOGUE, March 12, 2009.

Both tips thanks to David Lull.