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October 3, 2007
Improving the site for your edification
Check out the new, official book/daddy motto. It always classes up a joint when you can quote a namesake Church Father cursing out people ... in Latin.
Posted by jweeks at October 3, 2007 2:14 PM
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Kenneth Burke wrote that he enjoyed studying Latin because the Fathers were so good at anathema...
Posted by: Scott McLemee at October 5, 2007 5:52 PM
Practice makes perfect. And they had plenty of practice.
I've always considered St. Jerome the patron saint of literary critics. Anyone who disagreed with him on matters of interpretation was generally condemned as a heretic. I read a brief bio of the Church Doctor recently; it ranked him as second only to St. Augustine as an influence on early Church thinking, most of it through the vigorous weeding out of nonconformists. From there, it's a small associative leap to the observation, made by Murray Kempton, that "the catechismic style of Stalin's speeches reminds us of what can happen when a former theological student is let loose upon those he considers the enemies of light and truth."
And who says critics have no power or influence?
Posted by: book/daddy at October 5, 2007 8:18 PM
Yeah, I once coined the aphorism "It's a short step from the seminary to the Central Committee."
This was in the context of a dispute in Austin involving a former theology student turned Communist hack. My friends knew it also referred to Stalin....
Posted by: Scott McLemee at October 6, 2007 4:04 PM
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A professional critic for more than two decades, Jerome Weeks is the arts producer-reporter for KERA, the NPR/PBS station for Dallas-Fort Worth. Before that, he was the theater critic and then the book columnist for The Dallas Morning News ...
(Hence the slash in book/daddy.)
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