Implicit discount of advice by relying it By Prof Dr Sohail Ansari and material for SBBU
“O son
of ‘Imran, never be envious of people concerning the favors I have conferred on
them by My grace, do not glower at them, and do not succumb to your (envious)
self. Indeed the envious man is indignant at the bestowal of My favor, and
contests My apportioning of gifts among My creatures. Whoso is such, he neither
belongs to Me nor do I belong to him.” Usul al-Kafi
A logical twist
1.
I happened to have the
acquaintance of a politician who warned me against trusting politicians. ‘They
always tell lies and who can know more than me as I am politician myself.’ I
thanked him for his advice but said that in the light of what he had said I believed
it.
For relying advice, he
implicitly discounted it.
Quotes
The best and most beautiful things in the world cannot be
seen or even touched - they must be felt with the heart. Helen
Keller
Great literature is simply language charged with meaning
to the utmost possible degree. Ezra Pound
Great literature must spring from an upheaval in the
author's soul. If that upheaval is not present then it must come from the works
of any other author which happens to be handy and easily adapted. Robert
Benchley
The idea behind a dish - the delight and the surprise -
makes a difference. Great literature surprises and delights, and provokes us. It
isn't just 'Here's the facts - boy meets girl, boy loses girl, boy gets girl.'
It's how you tell it. Nathan Myhrvold
What is wonderful about great literature is that it transforms
the man who reads it towards the condition of the man who wrote.
E.
M. Forster
I think you can find all the elements that you can find in great literature in mundane experiences. Harvey Pekar
I think you can find all the elements that you can find in great literature in mundane experiences. Harvey Pekar
Of course the illusion of art is
to make one believe that great literature is very close to life, but exactly
the opposite is true. Life is amorphous, literature is formal. Francoise
Sagan
Novelists get to say plenty in
their massive tomes; rock singers only get four-minute songs with two verses
and a chorus' worth of lyrics, and so there's a real pleasure in accessing the
intelligence behind the music, even if it doesn't qualify as 'great
literature.' Karan Mahajan
No one bothered reading the books
and understanding - and again, I'm not being high-falutin' about it - but I
think our books are great literature with great metaphors of real life dealing
with fears and hopes. Avi Arad
What is
Literary Writing?
by John Oldcastle
(highlighted
lines are for discussion in a class
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The term 'literary writing' calls to mind works by writers such
as Shakespeare, Milton, or Wordsworth; definitive examples of all that the
term implies. We instinctively
associate the term with characteristics such as artistic merit, creative
genius, and the expression of mankind's noblest qualities. In
this essay I will explore some of the characteristics of this kind of
writing.
Literary works are primarily distinguishable from other pieces
of writing by their creative, or artistic intent.
A piece of literature differs from a specialised treatises on
astronomy, political economy, philosophy, or even history, in part because it
appeals, not to a particular class of readers only, but to men and women; and
in part because, while the object of the treatise is simply to impart
knowledge, one ideal end of the piece of literature, whether it also imparts
knowledge or not, is to yield aesthetic satisfaction by the manner of
which it handles its theme. [1]
The writer of this passage emphasises the distinction between
writing of didactic purpose and literary writing which has that other,
aesthetic, dimension. In fundamental terms literature is 'an expression of
life through the medium of language' [2], but language used more
profoundly than when used simply to convey information.
The following two extracts, for example, both describing one
partner's response to marital problems, are different in both their form and
their intent:
Many critics date the crumbling of their marriage back to that
unfortunate episode, but David was delighted when he heard that Lynne had
produced a daughter from her marriage to an American doctor.
And
Her writing hand stopped. She sat still for a moment; then she
slowly turned in her chair and rested her elbow on its curved back. Her face,
disfigured by her emotion, was not a pretty sight as she stared at my legs
and said . . [3]
The first piece, from a newspaper, gives a typical
tabloid account of a broken marriage. It plainly states the position
of the two parties involved, (but with an attitude akin to 'gossip'). The
tone of the second piece is less factual and more descriptive. Here
the writer is sets out to depict a particular scene, that of a woman distressed
by the discovery of some unsavoury information concerning her husband, and
employs such devices as the use of emotive words, such as
'disfigured', the gradual increase of dramatic tension, 'slowly turned in her
chair', and then in the last line a humorous deflation of this tension, 'her
face . . . was not a pretty sight'. The author shows a mixture of intentions
here, the structure and the use of language showing a
different approach and purpose to the first piece's straightforward account
of the everyday world. In contrast to such a plain factual account -
Literature is a vital record of what men have seen
in life; what they have experienced of it, what they have thought and felt
about those aspects of it which have the most immediate and enduring interest
for all of us. [4]
So literary writing, having creative and artistic intent, is
more carefully structured and uses words for the rhetorical effect of their
flow, their sound, and their emotive and descriptive qualities.
Literary writers can also employ tone, rhyme, rhythm, irony,
dialogue and its variations such as dialects and slang, and a
host of other devices in the construction of a particular prose work, poem,
or play.
All fiction is a kind of magic and trickery, a
confidence trick, trying to make people believe something is true that isn't.
And the novelist, in a particular, is trying to convince the reader that he is
seeing society as a whole. [5]
Literary writing is, in essence, a 'response',
a subjective personal view which the writer expresses
through his themes, ideas, thoughts, reminiscences, using his armoury of
words to try to evoke, or provoke, a response in his reader.
. . . it is not only a question of the artist looking into
himself but also the of his looking into others with
the experience he has of himself. He writes with sympathy because he feels
that the other man is like him. [6]
In Welsh
Hill Country, R. S. Thomas conveys his response to a
landscape:
Too far for you to see
The fluke and the foot-rot and the fat maggot Gnawing the skin from the small bones, The sheep are grazing at Bwlch-y-Fedwen, Arranged romantically in the usual manner On a bleak background of bald stone. [7]
Here the powerful evocation of desolation, of
the stark brutality, even indifference, of the countryside is captured by
Thomas through a pointed use of language which also conveys his grim mood.
In contrast, Keat's To
Autumn conveys a soft, sensuous depiction of
this season which captured his imagination:
Season of mists and mellow fruitfulness
Close bosom-friend of the maturing sun; Conspiring with him how to load and bless With fruit the vines that round the thatch-eaves run; [8]
Both these extracts show a creative, imaginative response to a
particular scene, and show contrasting ways in which a poet can use diction
to capture his mood and provoke a reaction in the reader. Devices such as
rhyme, rhythm, alliteration, and assonance combine to form a structure
of mood, a structure recognisably literary.
. . . apart from the precise mixture of certainty and hesitation
in the poet's mind, one of the sovereign gestures of art is to make the ideal
real, and to project a dim impersonal awareness onto a structure of definite
invention. [9]
Literature is a process of communication, it 'helps us to
understand life'. [10]
Perhaps we should also consider the motivation of the writer
as a factor which distinguishes literary from other forms of
writing. The writer's motivation is the energy that pulls together
the strands of his creativity in the shaping of the finished work.
Ernest Hemingway gives his reasons for writing:
From things that had happened and from things as they exist and
from all things that you know and all those you cannot know, you make
something through your invention that is not a representation but a whole new
thing truer than anything true and alive, and if you make it well
enough, you give it immortality. That is why you write
and for no other reason that you know of. [11]
Georges Simenon puts forward the idea of
therapeutic value, a search for self:
I think that if a man has the urge to be an artist, it is
because he needs to find himself. Every writer has to find
himself through his characters, through all his writing. [12]
Philip Larkin gives his reasons for writing poems
as a need 'to preserve things I have seen/thought/felt (if I may so indicate
a composite and complex experience) both for myself and for others'. Here,
in The Whitsun Weddings, his
motive was to capture his response to a view seen from a train:
As if out on the end of an event
Waving goodbye To something that survived it. Struck, I leant More promptly out next time, more curiously, And saw it all again in different terms: The fathers with broad belts under their suits And seamy foreheads; mothers loud and fat; An uncle shouting smut; and then the perms, [13]
The main impetus behind Edward Thomas's No One So Much as You,
is to describe his experience of love:
No one so much as you
Loves this my clay, Or would lament as you Its dying day [14]
While the motive behind Andrew Young's, On the Prospect of Death,
is self-evident.
If it should come to this
You cannot wake me with a kiss Think I but sleep too late Or once again keep a cold angry state [15]
Personal motivation is an essential characteristic of literary
writing. It is the engine behind creativity, and the last two extracts
provide examples of some of the great themes which occur again and again, not
only in literary writing, but in all the arts; love, death, war, and peace.
Such themes, it seems, provide perennial inspiration for artists.
So perhaps an inventory of literary writers' motives should
include the overflowing of their passions, their desire for
self-expression, an abiding fascination with humanity in all its variety, the
need to come to grips with relationships as they really are in the world as
it really is, the striving after an ideal world which can exist only in the
imagination, and, perhaps at the heart of it all, the need to form, shape,
things of beauty.
The artist needs to resolve conflicts within himself, to
reach an understanding, to search for some credible meaning of to life, to
death, to everything. He is always reaching, fumbling toward some
sort of truth; an artistic creative truth, a truth that resides in the
individual artist and needs to be grasped, made real, made understandable.
Perhaps in some cases the artist's motivation could be seen as a
need to create other worlds, in the way that Milton and Tolkien
created other worlds, in order that they can project real conflicts onto another
plane.
The many different genres of the novel constitute a particular
challenge to the concept of 'literary writing'. Detective novels, and
science fiction novels, for example, are creative, imaginative, depictions of
life. We might question their seriousness as literature, or whether they can
achieve the high ideals of art, but then we might equally well question the
meaning of 'seriousness', and 'the high ideals of art'. Popular
novels may not deal with life's great conflicts, or search for truth and
beauty, and they may deal with the seamier side of life, or
escape into the fantastic, but can they still be considered 'literature'? Do
they still make an important contribution to our understanding of the world, as
'real' literature does?
Obviously 'literary' works such as Tolstoy's War and Peace and
Proust's Remembrance
of Things Past take as a nucleus an event, an aspect
of life and construct a world around that core. They are works about real
people, engaged in the real business of living. They convey knowledge,
understanding, experience and are hence considered important. Yet they have
in common with the detective and science fiction novel that they are books,
consisting of words that have been used to express something, words that may
or may not be read, and may or may not succeed in conveying an understanding
of the world they depict.
In my view it comes down to subjective value judgements. I believe
literature is a 'broad church' which ought to be able to deal
with any subject, and that ultimately it is individual readers, or readers en
masse, who decide on the value of any particular work and on whether or not
it deserves a place in the annals of literary history.
Writers aim to show us 'the world', but
no single writer can do this, and 'literature' should encompass numerous
different kinds of writer because each is trying to show us something which
cannot be shown as a whole. Each, whether a Tolstoy or a Raymond Chandler,
can only give us his own small fragment of understanding.
Ultimately it is those works which endure that should be considered
'literature', those which have succeeded in holding firm a
fragment of life, to be seen, to be read, to be understood.
Perhaps we should let a writer have the last word on summing up
the writers' art:
The aim of every artist is to arrest motion, which
is life, by artificial means and hold it fixed, so that a hundred years
later, when a stranger looks at it, it moves again since it is
life. Since man is mortal, the only immortality possible for him is
to leave something behind him that is immortal since it will always move.
This is the artist's way of scribbling 'Kilroy was here' on the wall of the
final and irrevocable oblivion through which he must someday pass. [16]
In conclusion, literary writing does embody certain
distinguishing characteristics. It is a self-conscious, imaginative mode of
writing which uses words not just to convey information, but as an art form.
Ultimately it is a response to life.
Personally, passages of outstanding literary writing such as the
following, convince me that words are the highest form of expression
available to mankind:
CLAUDIO: Ay, but to die, and go we know not where;
To lie in cold obstruction, and to rot; This sensible warm motion to become A kneaded clod; and the delighted spirit To bathe in fiery floods or to reside In thrilling region of thick-ribbed ice; To be imprison'd in the viewless winds, And blown with restless violence round about The pendent world; [17] |
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