{"id":87,"date":"2003-09-03T18:00:02","date_gmt":"2003-09-03T22:00:02","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/blogs.law.harvard.edu\/lydondev\/2003\/09\/03\/harold-bloom-culture-gods-from-emers"},"modified":"2012-05-04T00:06:24","modified_gmt":"2012-05-04T04:06:24","slug":"harold-bloom-culture-gods-from-emerson-to-bird","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/archive.blogs.harvard.edu\/lydondev\/2003\/09\/03\/harold-bloom-culture-gods-from-emerson-to-bird\/","title":{"rendered":"Harold Bloom: Culture Gods from Emerson to Bird"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><a name='a293'><\/a><\/p>\n<p><P><FONT size=\"4\">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <FONT face=\"Times New Roman,Times,Serif\">&#8220;If God appeared in 19th Century America,&#8221; <A href=\"http:\/\/cyber.law.harvard.edu\/ml\/output.pl\/35401\/download\/Bloom.1.mp3\">Harold Bloom told me<\/A>,&nbsp;&#8220;it was as Ralph Waldo Emerson.&nbsp; In the 20th&nbsp;Century it would have been as Charlie Parker.&#8221;<\/FONT><\/FONT><\/P><br \/>\n<P><FONT face=\"Times New Roman,Times,Serif\" size=\"4\">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Who knew&nbsp;that Yale&#8217;s&nbsp;monumental literature man was a bebopper?&nbsp; No mere <IMG height=\"255\" alt=\"\" hspace=\"15\" src=\"http:\/\/cyber.law.harvard.edu\/blogs\/static\/lydon\/bloom.jpg\" width=\"182\" align=\"right\" vspace=\"5\" border=\"0\">record collector, either.&nbsp; Bloom&nbsp;remembers haunting Minton&#8217;s and other Harlem&nbsp;hatcheries of&nbsp;the new jazz in the 1940s.&nbsp; A half century ago he&nbsp;handed the collected poems of&nbsp;one idol, Hart Crane, to&nbsp;another, the pianist Bud Powell, whose &#8220;Un Poco Loco&#8221; is short-listed with, say, <STRONG><EM>Moby Dick<\/EM><\/STRONG> and <EM><STRONG>The Scarlet Letter<\/STRONG><\/EM> among&nbsp;Bloom&#8217;s all-time all-American aesthetic statements.&nbsp; And in&nbsp;<A href=\"http:\/\/cyber.law.harvard.edu\/ml\/output.pl\/35402\/download\/bloom.2.mp3\">our long conversation<\/A> Professor Bloom spelled out exactly what he thinks the connections are.<\/FONT><\/P><br \/>\n<P><FONT face=\"Times New Roman,Times,Serif\" size=\"4\">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The Sage of New Haven&nbsp;helped revive&nbsp;the late Sage of Concord in the 1960s.&nbsp; This summer, <A href=\"http:\/\/books.guardian.co.uk\/review\/story\/0,12084,962070,00.html\">Emerson&#8217;s 200th<\/A>, it is Bloom&#8217;s effusive devotion that rules the international birthday party.&nbsp; Bloom does not quite confer supremacy on Emerson, though he believes Emerson made our greatest writer, Walt Whitman, possible.&nbsp; Emerson made the rest of our literary culture (Emily Dickinson to Henry James to Robert Frost to Don DeLillo) possible, necessary and perhaps inevitable.&nbsp; &#8220;The whole phenomenon of American culture,&#8221; said Bloom, &#8220;on every level down to popular culture&#8230; is a profoundly Emersonian affair.&nbsp; He has prophesied everything&#8230;&nbsp; He is the mind of America.&nbsp; He is not only the first absolutely original mind to appear in the United States, but he usurped everything that could be peculiarly American about thought as such.&#8221;<\/FONT><\/P><br \/>\n<P><FONT face=\"Times New Roman,Times,Serif\" size=\"4\">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; It is Bloom&#8217;s way to digress, and by the end of an afternoon we had littered acres of artistic ground with scores and scores of dropped names.&nbsp; <A href=\"http:\/\/cyber.law.harvard.edu\/ml\/output.pl\/35401\/download\/Bloom.1.mp3\">Part One<\/A> of this conversation is a modern walk in the Emersonian woods, <IMG hspace=\"5\" src=\"http:\/\/www.watershedonline.ca\/literature\/IMAGES\/rweportrait.jpg\" align=\"left\" vspace=\"5\">lit by Bloom&#8217;s astonishing memory for people and lines and history, and with several touches of&nbsp;Bloom&#8217;s high style of invective.&nbsp; Richard Rorty and the late Bart Giamatti come up as good guys; Dubya, Cheney and Rummy as fools; Robert Penn Warren and Allen Ginsberg as departed friends with whom the voluble Bloom is still arguing.&nbsp; <A href=\"http:\/\/cyber.law.harvard.edu\/ml\/output.pl\/35402\/download\/bloom.2.mp3\">Part Two<\/A> is not least a catalog of people who hated Emerson (Southerners in his lifetime and ever after, including C. Vann Woodward, Allen Tate and &#8220;Red&#8221; Warren; but also T. S. Eliot and even Herman Melville, who mocked Emerson in his fiction) and those who loved him and\/or owed him (including W. E. B. DuBois, William James, Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Henry David Thoreau, Wallace Stevens,&nbsp; the Argentinian Jorge Luis Borges and the American novelist of&nbsp;<EM><STRONG>Invisible Man<\/STRONG><\/EM>,&nbsp;Ralph Waldo Ellison).&nbsp; <A href=\"http:\/\/cyber.law.harvard.edu\/ml\/output.pl\/35403\/download\/bloom.3.mp3\">Part Three<\/A> is contemporary and personal.&nbsp; It was my Emersonian confession, &#8220;he speaks to me,&#8221; that prompted Harold Bloom.&nbsp; Lost and depressed in his own dark wood in his mid-thirties, Bloom said, he had read forward and back in Emerson&#8217;s Journals &#8220;morning noon and night and all night long,&#8221; and &#8220;I felt that every phrase he had ever written he was speaking directly to me&#8230;&nbsp; I still feel that way,&#8221; he said.&nbsp; &#8220;There are many many sentences in which I feel that Emerson is more than speaking to me.&nbsp; He&nbsp;has gotten inside my inner ear&nbsp;and has become indeed the the best and oldest part of myself.&nbsp; Indeed, it is the God within, as it were, that speaks.&#8221;<\/FONT><\/P><br \/>\n<P><FONT face=\"Times New Roman,Times,Serif\" size=\"4\">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Who speaks with Emerson&#8217;s range and affirmation in our lifetimes?&nbsp;&nbsp;I tried on Professor Bloom my notion that Duke Ellington&nbsp;cut his own original Emersonian figure&nbsp;for the 20th&nbsp;Century.&nbsp; <IMG hspace=\"5\" src=\"http:\/\/www.soulwalking.co.uk\/%A5Artist%20GIF%20Images\/Duke-Ellington-5.jpg\" align=\"right\" vspace=\"5\">An enabler who was&nbsp;both major composer and itinerant performance artist,&nbsp;in long forms and short, for&nbsp;dance halls and cathedrals, Ellington was a blues man of surpassing public style and inner ecstasies.&nbsp; It intrigues me that both Emerson and Ellington were towering&nbsp;individualists set&nbsp;each in his own&nbsp;band of eccentric voices&#8211;Ellington in his orchestra, Emerson&nbsp;in the Concord circle.&nbsp; Harold Bloom was wide open to&nbsp;transferring the modern Emerson search into the music world, but his taste is for the blazing solo voices from Louis Armstrong to Sonny Rollins,&nbsp;with Charlie Parker presiding&nbsp;over the&nbsp;Pantheon.&nbsp; Listen in.&nbsp;&nbsp;<A href=\"http:\/\/cyber.law.harvard.edu\/ml\/output.pl\/35401\/download\/Bloom.1.mp3\">One<\/A>.&nbsp; <A href=\"http:\/\/cyber.law.harvard.edu\/ml\/output.pl\/35402\/download\/bloom.2.mp3\">Two<\/A> and <A href=\"http:\/\/cyber.law.harvard.edu\/ml\/output.pl\/35403\/download\/bloom.3.mp3\">Three<\/A>.<\/FONT><\/P><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &#8220;If God appeared in 19th Century America,&#8221; Harold Bloom told me,&nbsp;&#8220;it was as Ralph Waldo Emerson.&nbsp; In the 20th&nbsp;Century it would have been as Charlie Parker.&#8221; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Who knew&nbsp;that Yale&#8217;s&nbsp;monumental literature man was a bebopper?&nbsp; No mere record collector, either.&nbsp; Bloom&nbsp;remembers haunting Minton&#8217;s and other Harlem&nbsp;hatcheries of&nbsp;the new jazz in the 1940s.&nbsp; A half century [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1340,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-87","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry"],"jetpack_featured_media_url":"","_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/archive.blogs.harvard.edu\/lydondev\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/87","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/archive.blogs.harvard.edu\/lydondev\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/archive.blogs.harvard.edu\/lydondev\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/archive.blogs.harvard.edu\/lydondev\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1340"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/archive.blogs.harvard.edu\/lydondev\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=87"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/archive.blogs.harvard.edu\/lydondev\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/87\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":232,"href":"https:\/\/archive.blogs.harvard.edu\/lydondev\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/87\/revisions\/232"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/archive.blogs.harvard.edu\/lydondev\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=87"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/archive.blogs.harvard.edu\/lydondev\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=87"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/archive.blogs.harvard.edu\/lydondev\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=87"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}