September 23, 2006


  • “A corpse will be
    transported by express!”

    Under the Volcano,
    by Malcolm Lowry (1947)


    Dietrich


    Minogue

    “It has a ghastly familiarity,

    like a half-forgotten dream.”

     – Poppy (Gene Tierney) in

    The Shanghai Gesture.”


    Temptation


    Locomotive

    The Star
    of Venus


    Locomotion


    Joan Didion, The White Album:

    “We tell ourselves stories in order to live….

    We interpret what we see, select the most workable of multiple
    choices. We live entirely, especially if we are writers, by the
    imposition of a narrative line upon disparate images, by the ‘ideas
    with which we have learned to freeze the shifting phantasmagoria which
    is our actual experience.

    Or at least we do for a while. I am talking here about a time when
    I began to doubt the premises of all the stories I had ever
    told myself, a common condition but one I found troubling.”

    From Patrick Vert,
    The Narrative of Acceleration:

    “There are plenty of anecdotes to highlight
    the personal, phenomenological experience of railway passage…

    … a unique study on phantasmagoria and the history of imagination.
    The word originates [in] light-projection, the so-called ghost-shows of the early 19th century….

    … thought becomes a phantasmagorical process, a spectral,
    representative location for the personal imagination that had been
    marginalized by scientific rationalism….

    This phantasmagoria became more mediated over
    time…. Perception became increasingly visually oriented…. As this
    occurred, a narrative formed to encapsulate the phenomenology of it
    all….”

    For such a narrative, see
    the Log24.net entries of


    From a Christian fairy tale:


    Aslan’s last words come at the end of The Last Battle: ‘There was
    a real railway accident [...] Your father and mother and all of you
    are–as you used to call it in the Shadow-Lands–dead. The term is
    over: the holidays have begun. The dream is ended: this is the
    morning.’….

    Aslan is given the last word in these quiet but
    emphatic lines. He is the ultimate arbiter of reality: “‘There was a
    real railway accident.’” Plato, in addition to the Christian tradition,
    lies behind the closing chapters of The Last Battle. The references
    here to the Shadowlands and to the dream refer back to an earlier
    explanation by Digory, now the Lord Digory:

    “[...] that was not the real Narnia. That had a beginning and an
    end. It was only a shadow or a copy of the real Narnia, which has
    always been here and always will be here: just as our world, England
    and all, is only a shadow or copy of something in Aslan’s real world.
    [....] Of course it is different; as different as a real thing is from
    a shadow or as waking life is from a dream. [...] It’s all in Plato,
    all in Plato: bless me, what do they teach them at these schools!”

    Joy Alexander, Aslan’s Speech

    “I was reading Durant’s section
    on Plato, struggling to understand his theory of the ideal Forms that lay in
    inviolable perfection out beyond the phantasmagoria. (That was the first, and
    I think the last, time that I encountered that word.)”

    Whether any of the above will be of use in comforting the families of
    those killed in yesterday morning’s train wreck in Germany
    is not
    clear.  Pope Benedict XVI, like C. S. Lewis, seems to think Greek
    philosophy may be of some use to those dealing with train wrecks:

    “Modifying the first
    verse of the Book of Genesis, the first verse of the whole Bible, John began
    the prologue of his Gospel with the words: ‘In the beginning was the logos.‘ This is the very word used by the emperor: God acts, syn logo, with logos.
    Logos means both reason and word– a reason which is creative and
    capable of self-communication, precisely as reason. John thus spoke the final
    word on the biblical concept of God, and in this word all the often toilsome
    and tortuous threads of biblical faith find their culmination and synthesis.
    In the beginning was the logos, and the logos is God, says the
    Evangelist.”


    Remarks of the Pope at the University of Regensburg on Sept. 12, 2006

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