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According to Harold Bloom,
by Eva Sohlma
- Sweden -
Harold Bloom, Yale literature professor and cultural critic, is
one of America’s most prominent and provocative intellectuals.
Unabashedly, he has always spoken up for what he calls “the
fight for truth and beauty” making a lot of foes in the process,
but also some friends. As one of the first critical voices
against the Bush administration and the war in Iraq, Bloom
landed in the hot seat with the satire “MacBush” in 2004. Lately,
he sparked worldwide outrage by calling Harry Potter “garbage”.
Speaking at his home in New Haven where he is recovering from a
recent health scare, a pale and weak Bloom seems to have
symbolically embodied what he calls the “poor state of the
nation”.
“I am 77 years old and I have never seen this country in such a
bad state. It is madness. What we are seeing is the fall of the
Roman Empire, only now it is the fall of America, the glory of
our Empire. This war is what Parthya was to Rome.
“The horror of what is taking place in Iraq exceeds my worst
fears five or six years ago (after Bush came to power). I am
horrified at the disastrous mistake involved. Imagine the
complete madness in trying to occupy a large Arab country in the
middle of the Arab world, a culture we know precious little
about, and who speaks a language only a handful of our
specialists can speak, with armed forces which we have limited
control of and with a large army of private soldiers… The whole
thing is a scandal…a series of lies. I don’t understand the
motivation for the war, but suspect the real reason for the war,
which one would suspect of a country which is a third oligarchy,
a third plutocracy and a third theocracy, is that it simply is a
profitable machine.”
Sitting in the middle of his living room and in the brown
leather armchair from which he has given most of his interviews
in recent years, Bloom sighs deeply and a sad grimace spreads
over his expressive face. It soon switches to anger, as he
expands on the consequences of the war and, ultimately, of Bush
at power: a growing national debt and a weakened dollar in
tandem with a spiraling war budget, as well as America’s lost
credibility on the international stage due to the Iraq war and
the situation in Afghanistan. Not to mention Guantanamo Bay, the
use of torture and humiliation at Abu Ghraib and the CIA’s
rendition program.
“We have caused a monstrous mess. We don’t even count killed
Iraqis. God knows how many Iraqi women, children and men have
been killed by our accidental shootings, which we are such
experts at, or by other Iraqis. No, ‘Benito Bush’ (Bloom’s pet
name for President George Bush) deserves, if we had a
functioning civil law in the world, to be condemned for crimes
against humanity. Bush is ultimately responsible for this war,”
Bloom says pointing angrily with his index finger in the air as
his dark eyes burn below a pair of thick dark eyebrows and a
crown of unruly white hair.
“It is bleeding our nation, and I can’t see a solution in the
near future. We are obviously so deeply involved concerning
blood, money and the situation on the ground that it will be
very hard for us to pull out.”
But Bloom has no illusions that there is any real pressure from
the Democrats to pull out of Iraq at the moment.
“The truth is that Nancy Pelosi, Harry Reid, Hoyer and the other
Democrats who lead the Congress Party in the Senate, are far too
cunning. They will talk about wanting to end the war and so on,
but the truth is that they know they can’t do anything about it
and it suits them as they can blame the Republicans for the war
in the upcoming elections. But the ugly truth is that we can’t
stop the war now. We are responsible for Iraq now. We have
crushed it so now we own it. I have never seen this country (America)
in such a bad state. But how big a percentage who actually cares,
I don’t know.”
If the war in Iraq is the most palpable example of the decline
of America under Bush’s reign, Bloom cites the U.S. media as
another casualty.
“’Media-ocrity’ is what I call it. It is awful what kind of
media we have today. Nobody dared to stand up and criticize Bush
when he unlawfully went to war on Iraq. It is depressing, and
shows what direction this country has taken since he came to
power - a power which did not rightfully belong to him. The
media is not playing its role. The Bushites are bullies and for
a long time nobody dared criticize them and just swallowed their
propaganda and lies. People have become scared. In this kind of
climate, nobody is interested in the critical voice. You ask
about the role of the intellectual in America today and I have
to say: What role? What intellectuals? There is no room for them
in the simplified and dumbed down world of today’s media. We
used to play a role, and there are still a few left, but we are
a dying breed. Nobody seems to be interested in nuance anymore.”
This is where the real danger lies, he says.
“Democracy, whether in Sweden or the United States, depends on
the voter’s capacity to think. If you have read the best of what
has been thought and said, then your cognition and understanding
is on a much higher level than if you have read Harry Potter or
Stephen King. So what this decline into half-literature and
mediocre media really means is de facto a self-destruction of
democracy.”
“Political correctness is the death for the mind, for literature.
I am terribly outspoken and don’t try to hide it. I care
passionately and I say so. I want quality when it comes to
everything, and insist on it. I believe in the aesthetics, the
beauty of good literature and I believe in wisdom. People get
angry because of that and think it is an attack on them.”
Harold Bloom has long been a central, yet lone, figure in the
American cultural debate.
In the 1950s, he battled T. S. Eliot, whose New Criticism then
reigned in literature classrooms. In the 1970s, he sparred with
the Deconstructionists, a group of mostly European intellectuals
who argued language was essentially devoid of meaning. In the
1990s’ Culture Wars, Bloom, who advocated an aesthetic approach
to literature against feminist, Marxist, new historicist,
postmodernist, and other new methods of academic literary
criticism, found himself facing off against feminist and
multiculturalist critics after publishing “The Western Canon,”
which many found too biased towards white male writers. A great
admirer of William Shakespeare and a defender of the 19th
century Romantic poets, Bloom has written some 30 books, notably
the influential “The Anxiety of Influence” and “The Book of J,”
which makes the unorthodox claim that parts of the Bible were
written by a woman.
“I don’t think most people understand me, but that is life. I am
often portrayed as an anti-feminist. Of course, I am not against
women’s equal rights in society. It would be madness and
unintelligent not to support that. What I am against is applying
a political agenda to literature. It kills it.”
Contemplating his own legacy and work, Bloom describes himself
an anarchist who refuses to adhere to any school or paradigm;
“an agnostic Jew” who takes great pride in always having
encouraged his students to go their own way -- manifested by the
fact that “none of his former students’ work resembles the
other.”
“I might be remembered as what I myself disparagingly call a
‘period piece,’ a rather large period piece. One tries to
justify one’s existence, one wants to believe one can do
something good with a life of teaching, writing and reading.”
Once at the center of the American intellectual debate, Bloom
today considers himself a marginalized guerilla fighter – an old
dinosaur with the self-invented nickname “Bloom Brontosaurus”.
“(Big sigh) We lost the war. What can I say? Nobody is
interested in quality any more.”
But supporters and fans still write Bloom, like the teacher who
describes the discussion she has had with her students. Bloom,
now sitting at the computer in the salon, reads her email aloud:
“Some of them are quite upset with your harsh words regarding
the Harry Potter books, as you can imagine. As a teacher I love
the article and agree wholeheartedly with you, and so now we
wonder if you are still out there writing more controversial
articles.”
Looking up bemused, Bloom responds, “How funny!” and asks his
wife, Jeanne, to type his reply:
‘As I am getting very old, I must avoid any quarrels. With best
regards, Harold Bloom.’
Bloom sighs again, puts his hand on his forehead while slowly
shaking it, and says with a resigned smile: “But you are right,
Jeanne. What is one known for? To have attacked Harry Potter and
Stephen King!”
About the Author
Eva Sohlman is a Swedish journalist and writer with credentials
in print, radio and TV. She is presently Editor and Producer of
The World in Focus ("Världen i Fokus"), a Swedish TV program
which reports world news and in-depth studio interviews. The
show follows Eva's international career reporting for Reuters
and publications in The Economist, The New York Times and The
Washington Post.
Having lived, studied and worked in Sweden, Britain and France,
Eva is fluent in each of those languages. Her book, Arabia Felix
[Happy Arabia] in the Time of Terror – Journeys in Yemen
("Arabia Felix i Terrorns tid – Resor i Jemen" ) was published
in Swedish in January 2007. It is based on her reporting for
Reuters and the Economist. Three chapters translated into
English by her Swedish publisher, Wahlström & Widstrand can be
found here.
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