Thursday, March 24, 2011

Hamlet

I liked this play, I really did. Almost as much as Macbeth. I still can't decide whether Hamlet seems genuinely crazy or if it is an act. Reading it, he seems more conniving. But watching it on film, he seems truly insane. That could be the particular performance, though. Someday I'd like to see it as a play as well as on film. Anyway, by the fourth act I knew where the story was going. Everyone was going to die. The poisoned cup, the backup plan, was just too much. Things were bound to go south from then on. And lo and behold, all the main characters, except Horatio, were killed by their plotting and crimes. It just goes to show that poison, like faking your own death, is always a bad idea.

Thursday, March 17, 2011

That to Study Philosophy is to Learn to Die

In this essay, Montaigne makes his case on why people should not fear or try to avoid death. Many of his examples, I admit, make sense. Near the end, when he is speaking as Nature, he says, "A thousand men, a thousand animals, a thousand other creatures, die at the same moment that you die." This reminded me of a novel I read recently for a literature class, The Road by Cormac McCarthy. Death is a strong theme in that book as well, considering it is set in a post-apocalyptic world where everything is either dead or dying. In one point, the man and the boy come across an old man, Ely, with which they share some food. The man and Ely are talking about being the last man on the earth. The man says, " How would you know if you were the last man on earth?" Ely replies, " I dont guess you would know it. You'd just be it." "Nobody would know it." "It wouldnt make any difference. When you die its the same as if everybody else did too." (p. 170) In a way, the characters of the novel have embraced Montaigne's ideas. Though only because there is little hope left in living; those that have not died or committed suicide wish they were no longer alive. Anyway, that passage of the essay made me immediately think of the one in the novel. And they make a lot of sense. As far as you're concerned, when you die, nothing else continues to exist; for you, everything has died with you.
(p.s. Please ignore the lack of apostrophes in the McCarthy quote. That's just the way he wrote it.)

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Twelfth Night, or, What You Will

This weekend I saw 'Twelfth Night,' as put on by the Casper College Theatre department. What does this have to do with class? Well, it was set in the Renaissance. Plus it was hilarious. I haven't really had many opportunities to read or watch any Shakespeare, and seeing that makes me look forward to the upcoming section on the Catholic Counter-Reformation, in which I believe we are reading 'Hamlet.' In that particular play, the one I saw, I did notice a few things that allude to Shakespeare's participation in or support of the Counter-Reformation. For example, there was one rather amusing part in which Viola, Sir Andrew, the Uncle whose name escapes me and Maria are talking, well, conniving really. They discuss one of Olivia's ministers, who is a Puritan; each time, upon saying the word "Puritan," they all spit on the floor, showing their obvious distaste for such reformed religions.

Thursday, March 3, 2011

More and Mirandola

'On the religions of the Utopians,' in Book 2 reminded me rather forcibly of 'On the Dignity of Man,' by Pico della Mirandola. More begins this last section of the Book with a description of the different religions of Utopia; some being the worship of fire, some the moon, planets, prominent men, and so on, as well as the worship of the supreme Being or Deity. 'Being' is a common way to refer to a god or God, but it made me think specifically of Mirandola's treatment of Plato's concept of the One. Raphael, in the story, says, "They differ in this, that one thinks the God whom he worships is this supreme Being, and another thinks that his idol is that God; but they all agree in one principle, that whoever is this supreme Being, He is also that great Essence to whose glory and majesty all honours are ascribed by the consent of all nations." And that explains the connection I made. Mirandola was eccentric in that he collected and studied a variety of religious texts, not only Christian but Muslim and Jewish, including the qabbalah. He equated these differing concepts of God with the One, as if all the differences between religions were merely trifles for all are worshipping the same Being. The same apparently is believed in Utopia, where the founder of the country, "seemed to doubt whether those different forms of religion might not all come from God, who might inspire men in a different manner, and be pleased with this variety."