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When a Civilization Goes Mad
Pajamas Media ^ | August 16, 2011 | David Solway

Posted on 08/16/2011 11:32:17 AM PDT by Kaslin

It begins with self-doubt; it ends with self-destruction.

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Historian Arnold Toynbee, who developed the theory of challenge-and-response to account for the survivability of civilizations, has said that great civilizations are not murdered, they commit suicide — by not meeting their challenges. A variation of this historical insight may be phrased thus: When a civilization or an empire feels inwardly that it is dying, or as Oswald Spengler put it in The Decline of the West, that it wants to die and “wishes itself into the darkness,” it begins to go mad. Collective madness is a sure portent that an end is approaching, that an axial transformation is about to occur, that an entire worldview or cultural habitus is on the verge of disintegration. It signals that a people has surrendered to a mortal destiny, repudiated its sustaining tradition and condign principles, and indeed has gone so far as to regard the enemy at the gates as a form of salvation. “They were, those people, a kind of solution,” say Constantine Cavafy’s effete Romans in his celebrated poem, “Waiting for the Barbarians.”

“Western politics,” Raymond Ibrahim has said, discussing the befuddled American and European outreach to the Muslim Brotherhood with its clever, phased project for infiltrating Western society, “have descended into idealism and fantasy.” The same can be said about the state of the Western media. The media are like the neural pathways establishing connections between the various parts of the “world brain.” When they begin to transmit false representations and misleading messages, the response to world events is at best incongruous and at worst drastically contorted. Both public sentiment and public policy lurch about in a kind of no-man’s land, unable to make contact with things as they are. Obviously, there will always be a certain amount of “misfiring” in the circuitry, but when the entire system is warped and deformed, it becomes next to impossible to properly “read” the empirical world and react in appropriate ways. This creates a disjunction between mind and reality, which is one definition of madness.

The gradual but unrelenting insinuation of socialist and neo-Marxist doctrine into the liberal West, after it has been reliably shown to falter or collapse wherever it has been implemented, is still another index of severe mental disconnect and maladjustment to reality. Command economies are proven to be inefficient, and the welfare state, predicated on the punitive taxation of a shrinking and increasingly insolvent productive base to subsidize ever-inflating entitlement programs, has been properly described as a gigantic Ponzi scheme. Redistributionist and womb-to-tomb security states, as Margaret Thatcher famously said, will eventually run out of other people’s money. Nevertheless, this ideological will-o’-the-wisp continues to be diligently pursued.

Or consider the phenomenon of multiculturalism, as interpreted and practiced in the West, which has led the countries that have adopted it into a state of social and political bedlam. Based, as Salim Mansur argues in his new book Delectable Lie, “on the false idea — another official lie, really — that all cultures are equal,” it is progressively destroying “the West’s liberal democratic heritage…by extending recognition to groups defined through collective identity” and by elevating ethnicity over nationality. As a consequence, under the glazed and permissive view of the political class, the social fabric has critically unraveled, no-go enclaves have sprung up in many cities, the specter of homegrown terrorism haunts the public square, the structure of Western law and normative conduct has come under threat, and growing tension is the order of the day. Multiculturalism has seen the heritage culture adapting to the demands, institutions, and usages of immigrant societies rather than the other way round.

Indeed, the European Union has promulgated laws which militate against the criticism of Islam on the grounds of hate speech. Politicians, journalists, and ordinary citizens, like Geert Wilders, Lars Hedegaard, and Elisabeth Sabbaditch-Wolff, respectively, have found themselves prosecuted in court for warning their fellow citizens against the infiltration of radical Islam into the body politic. The same travesty is being repeated in Canada, whose misnamed Human Rights Commissions, which are essentially kangaroo courts that are not required to follow the rules of evidence, have tried such forthright and respectable journalists as Ezra Levant and Mark Steyn for offending Muslim sensibilities. If this is not madness, I don’t know what is.

Perhaps the most conspicuous current example of collective delirium was the election of Barack Hussein Obama to the presidency of the United States. A man with no record of significant prior achievement, who sat for twenty years in the pews of a dubious church under the ministry of an anti-American and anti-Jewish, hate-spewing pastor, who has associated with various compromised individuals such as former PLO spokesman Rashid Khalidi, antisemite and black supremacist Louis Farrakhan, unrepentant former terrorist Bill Ayers, pro-Islamist plutocrat Khalid al-Mansour, and corrupt businessman Tony Rezko, whose political sentiments lie far to the Left, whose dossier remains in large measure under seal and whose verifiable biography is to a disturbing degree a matter of conjecture — all this and much more should have alerted the electorate to his gross unsuitability for office, prompted the legacy media to investigate, and disqualified him immediately from running for the Democratic nomination.

But the emotional frenzy surrounding his candidacy ensured that sanity would not prevail in outing a man whom Robert Kimball has called “a typical hothouse product of our self-satisfied liberal elite.” Kimball continues, with much justification, that “tens or hundreds of thousands of people will suffer because of our naïveté and Barack Obama’s malevolent stupidity.” The sequel has made it amply clear to all but the partisan, the myopic, and the myriad barnacles clinging to the ship of state and dependent on the largesse of the Democratic Party that America has been gravely weakened both domestically and abroad, and that it might not recover. And yet it is entirely conceivable that Obama may be re-elected to the most powerful office in the world. We recall it was not only a besotted American electorate that hoisted him on its collective shoulders; all Europe also went berserk over the man. Even the Israelis treated him like royalty when he gave his lying Sderot speech. If this is not madness, I don’t know what is.

These are only a few examples, which could be multiplied indefinitely, of a civilization losing control of its future. The riots we are currently witnessing in the UK, ignited to a great extent by an entitlement culture that cannot meet the expectations it has created, is only a modest symptom of what is coming down the pike. The overall spectacle we are observing today — the dramatic erosion of a sense of civic responsibility, the nihilistic relativizing of moral principle, the insidious effects of political correctness, the reluctance to deal adequately with terrorism, the mounting hostility toward Jews and Israel, the return of autocratic rule in Europe with the appointment of authoritarian bureaucrats answerable to no one to the European Parliament, the cosseting of Islam, the election of incompetents, as in the U.S., as well as in Britain, Sweden, France, Spain, Australia, and many other places — the list goes on and on — are infallible harbingers of cultural and civilizational decay. Good things come to an end, just like everything else. It seems highly probable that the United States in particular and Western civilization in general have begun to circle the drain. The symptoms of an imperium in its dotage are unmistakable.

The greatest civilization the world has ever known has lost confidence in itself, infected by a plague of self-doubt and self-recrimination. Having lost its bearings, it is no longer willing or able to think clearly, to make difficult choices, to defend its patrimony and resist demographic subversion, to accept the need for sacrifice, to value the radiant catalogue of its triumphs and achievements in art, science, technology, medicine, and statecraft, and, with its declining birthrate, even to reproduce itself. This is total madness. Further, the leftist “illiberal trajectory” it has embarked upon, as Caroline Glick writes, has led to the “bid to criminalize ideological opponents and justify acts of terrorism,” a radical political shift that “will destroy the liberal democratic foundations of Western civilization.”

Is a return to psychic health at all possible? Do civilizations convalesce? Can those who follow the maxim of the Roman emperor and Stoic philosopher Marcus Aurelius in his Meditations — “the object of life is…to escape finding oneself in the ranks of the insane” — influence events for the better or at least defer the inevitable? Is the writing on the wall erasable graffiti or is it, shall we say, Biblically indelible?

Any way we look at it, the prognosis is not encouraging. As Martin Heidegger deposed in a 1966 Der Spiegel interview, the only one of the philosopher’s utterances that keeps on echoing, “Only a god can save us now.”


TOPICS: Society
KEYWORDS: civilization; culturalsuicide; declineofthewest; thecomingdarkness
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To: Joe 6-pack
Oh, for heaven's sake. Just because I don't like an artist's work I'm seethingly jealous? Come on. And I didn't say his models weren't lovely . . . in fact I went out of my way to say that Millais depicted Rossetti's wife beautifully in "Ophelia".

I hope you can see the similarities in the three paintings you posted, even though one is much earlier, of Elizabeth Siddals, and the others look like either Jane Morris or Cornforth. Rossetti didn't paint what he saw, he painted something that was inside his head.

But by any objective standard, Rossetti is not the artist that Millais or Hunt or (especially) Burne-Jones are. His sketches, especially, are awkward in modeling and perspective. He got so badly embrangled with perspective and figure size in "Found" that he never completed it.

Now compare that to Burne-Jones . . . I've picked one with the elongated figures and flattened perspective to avoid the retort that Rossetti was painting in a "medieval style" (he wasn't, but never mind) . . . and you can see that he has a mastery of figure drawing, composition, and perspective that Rossetti just could not attain.

All Pre-Raphaelites are not created equal.

61 posted on 08/17/2011 11:41:51 AM PDT by AnAmericanMother (Ministrix of ye Chasse, TTGC Ladies' Auxiliary (recess appointment))
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To: Joe 6-pack
I swear I didn't look at your post before you brought up the "medieval style" canard.

But anyhow, Q.E.D.

And if you're going to argue that Burne-Jones wasn't "really" a member of the P.R.B., just consider "The Lady of Shalott" instead.


62 posted on 08/17/2011 11:44:44 AM PDT by AnAmericanMother (Ministrix of ye Chasse, TTGC Ladies' Auxiliary (recess appointment))
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To: AnAmericanMother
I seem to have touched a nerve, lol. You didn't say you didn't like Rossetti, you said he couldn't draw. Care to post some of your sketches for comparison?

And the medievalism is no canard; nor was it their aim. Certainly they drew on medieval subject matter and mythology, but had their pure aim been medievalism, they would have called themselves the "Medieval Brotherhood." That was not their intent. They deliberately chose their name based on the rigid inflexibility in the European academies in the wake of Raphael. That does not equate with medievalism. Have you ever read their manifesto? I'd recommend doing so before you unveil any further irrational invective against Rossetti. If you read (and understand) the PRB Manifesto (and much of Ruskin's commentary on them) , you'll see that what Rossetti did was very much in line with what he set out to do. Whether you like it or not is entirely a matter of personal taste, and I don't begrudge you (or anybody) that. To skewer Rossetti's abilities as an artist without understanding what his aims were requires a retort. Your arguments against Rossetti bear all the weight of a person criticizing an architect who set out to build a round building for building a round building for not including any corners.

Of course, I'm guessing you had some feminist art prof along the line who decried Rossetti's 'misogyny' and have not liked him since. Too bad, but your loss for not seeing his paintings for what the are. And I enjoy how you continue to keep bringing up "Found." Every artist has pieces they became unhappy with and didn't complete. Few of these 'throwaways' merit the reknown and study that "Found" receives. So you don't like it...big deal. Neither did the artist.

And to further correct the record, in the strictest of senses, Burn-Jones was not a PRe-Raphaelite. Insist all you want, but he was not. Did he paint in their style, and was he heavily influenced by them? Certainly, as did many european and American artists in their wake. But the PRB was, and remains a clearly defined group. Rigidly so. He was not a member.

63 posted on 08/17/2011 12:10:06 PM PDT by Joe 6-pack (Que me amat, amet et canem meum)
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To: AnAmericanMother
Also, you stated...

"...Now compare that to Burne-Jones . . .and you can see that he has a mastery of figure drawing, composition, and perspective that Rossetti just could not attain."

His drawing, composition and use of perspective could be described as....well...Raphaelesque. Clearly you don't understand the intent and aims of the PRE-Raphaelite Brotherhood. There's ample evidence Rossetti could attain the techical goals of Burn-Jones; he just had no interest in doing so.

64 posted on 08/17/2011 12:37:37 PM PDT by Joe 6-pack (Que me amat, amet et canem meum)
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To: Joe 6-pack
You're not very convincing with your personal attacks. Why don't you just knock it off and discuss the merits instead of repeatedly imputing motives? It detracts from any actual arguments you have, and makes you look petty and mean.

Another annoying thing is that you continue to pose questions that I've already answered, and repeat in "attack" mode issues that I have already acknowledged (e.g. I anticipated that you would gripe that Burne-Jones wasn't "really" PRB. So I gave examples including Holman Hunt, who was indisputably a PRB member, indeed a founder, but didn't have the same problems with basic drawing that Rossetti had. Neither did Millais, another founder. I've noted several examples.) That simply makes you appear unwilling to engage on the merits.

I do apologize for mentioning "Found" twice, but since it illustrates in one place a number of persistent DGR problems (perspective, figure proportions, composition, and drawing) it's a good general example. And while everybody has stuff they should toss in the trash, you're supposed to work out those basic issues before you start applying paint to canvas, like in the preparatory sketching phase. Several of my Pre-Raphaelite books note this painting, by the way, so it has attracted some unfavorable attention from others as well.

Apropos of that, where I really notice things getting out of drawing is in the preparatory sketches. If you compare Rossetti's sketches with Millais', for example, it's immediately obvious who has the better command. Outline versus volume, again and again:

Perhaps Rossetti was simply bored with the preparatory work and didn't want to bother with it. That would explain some of the end product.

65 posted on 08/17/2011 6:09:04 PM PDT by AnAmericanMother (Ministrix of ye Chasse, TTGC Ladies' Auxiliary (recess appointment))
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To: AnAmericanMother
LOL...My personal attacks?!?! You're still missing my point (and now you've mentioned 'Found' three times, BTW). And as for me being petty and mean? You're the one that came out sayin Rossetti couldn't draw. I'm still waiting for your sketches so I can see how it's really done. (By the way, some of my stuff is viewable on my FR homepage). You then go on to say, "And while everybody has stuff they should toss in the trash, you're supposed to work out those basic issues before you start applying paint to canvas..."

Are those your rules? I've thrown a lot of stuff away after I've started painting...or more expensively, started laying gold leaf. Sometimes, no matter how much you prep a piece, once you start fleshing it out, you don't like what you see. You rework it trying to salvage it. Sometimes it comes out better than you anticipated, but more often, you pitch it, or you keep it around for your personal reflection and study.

But back to my point...if you read the stated aims of the PRB, their declared purpose was to escape the 'painterly' and academic constraints that had evolved in Europe since the late Renaissance. Your criticisms of Rossetti are precisely that he didn't comply with the academic conventions of his time. If you've taken what I've said personally, it's because your criticisms seem to reflect a fundamental misunderstanding of what Rossetti had set out to do. As I stated before, if you think his work sucks, that's fine. If you think his stated objectives were wrong, that's your right to do so. However, if you want to criticize Rossetti for his failure to adhere to convention, or to work in the manner of other established artists, you're missing the point altogether.

66 posted on 08/17/2011 6:24:47 PM PDT by Joe 6-pack (Que me amat, amet et canem meum)
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To: AnAmericanMother

Thanks for your posts above.

You make your points well.


67 posted on 08/17/2011 6:57:16 PM PDT by Fightin Whitey
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To: Joe 6-pack
"My Senior Thesis for my Art History BA was on Cole's Voyage of Life."

I just had a flash-back of writing about Frederic Edwin Church and the Hudson River School...

68 posted on 08/17/2011 7:16:04 PM PDT by Flag_This (Real presidents don't bow.)
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To: Flag_This
My favorite Church painting...suits your screen name :-)


69 posted on 08/17/2011 7:22:16 PM PDT by Joe 6-pack (Que me amat, amet et canem meum)
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To: Joe 6-pack
I was always partial to "Cotopaxi"


70 posted on 08/17/2011 7:42:02 PM PDT by Flag_This (Real presidents don't bow.)
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To: Flag_This
I think his best atmospheric study was Twilight in the Wilderness...


71 posted on 08/17/2011 7:48:43 PM PDT by Joe 6-pack (Que me amat, amet et canem meum)
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To: Joe 6-pack
I'm sorry, but I have no interest in continuing this conversation, as you seem completely unable to keep 'personalities' out of it.

You have leveled some extremely discourteous insults that you (I hope) would have been ashamed to make in person. I see no reason to tolerate that.

A pity, because I think you have some good ideas and points to make and I would have liked to discuss them in a civilized manner.

72 posted on 08/17/2011 8:08:54 PM PDT by AnAmericanMother (Ministrix of ye Chasse, TTGC Ladies' Auxiliary (recess appointment))
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To: AnAmericanMother
That is a shame, since you started this whole dialogue with the assertion, "But Rossetti couldn't draw...and most of his women look downright weird."

Pretty big indictment of a reknowned artist who isn't around to speak on his own behalf. I saw no reason to tolerate that either.

73 posted on 08/17/2011 8:20:54 PM PDT by Joe 6-pack (Que me amat, amet et canem meum)
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To: Rich21IE

Still plenty of Christians everywhere. To condemn everyone in cities is just idiotic.


74 posted on 08/19/2011 3:11:05 AM PDT by Eternal_Bear
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