Friday Links, August 21, 2020

Catching up with some of the links we didn't have room for last week, with such varied topics as the difference between a friend and an acquaintance, and some speculation that modernist abstraction may actually have fixed a problem that made Plato see art as immoral. Plus there are links to a review of a new collection of essays on Gerard Manley Hopkins' poetic legacy, and a nostalgic glimpse at long bygone days of splendid cloth book bindings.

Friendship: Close Encounters of Intense Recognition

Katy Carl, Dappled Things Editor in Chief recommends Caroline Langston's last post for the Slant Books "Close Reading" section, in which Langston explores the boundaries between “acquaintance” and “friend.”

“This seemed to be the criterion I came to: a friend was somebody with whom you’d shared an experience of intense authenticity, or recognition. The thread might be slender, but it had strength and was real. And in that realness, I also became real."

The Fire that Breaks: Gerard Manley Hopkins's Poetic Legacies: Eds. Daniel Westover and Thomas Alan Holmes

“[T]he essays in this new volume show how Hopkins's still-burning fires ignited the imaginations of early modernist writers . . .. Taken together, these essays contend for what Westover calls the 'enduring newness' of Hopkins and demonstrate how the lessons of his verse (his linguistic innovations, his metaphysical insights) continually break forth in new contexts and with new—and sometimes surprising—meanings." —A. J. Nickerson, in his review at Review 19.

Modernism and the Possibility of a True Art

At "Genealogies of Modernity":

“Perhaps there’s another way of understanding what’s at issue in the western tradition—not a narrative but an ethos; not a straightforward story of development but an idea that resurges in the history of western art and reaches a kind of fever pitch in the modernist project.

"Tom Break rethinks modern art’s relationship with the western art tradition."

TheMet150: Fine Bindings Collection

On August 9, National Booklovers’ Day, the Facebook page of the Met Museums of New York featured a selection of fine book bindings. You can find many different collections at the above link and browse among their many, gorgeous, gilded or silvered, cloth bindings.

“I know we are not supposed to judge a book by its cover, but these are splendid."—From the combox.

Below: Three of the splendid covers from the Met's collection, with descriptions.

BookCoverrMET4DT.jpg
Roseanne T. Sullivan

After a career in technical writing and course development in the computer industry while doing other writing on the side, Roseanne T. Sullivan now writes full-time about sacred music, liturgy, art, and whatever strikes her Catholic imagination. Before she started technical writing, Sullivan earned a B.A. in English and Studio Arts, and an M.A. in English with writing emphasis, and she taught courses in fiction and memoir writing. Her Masters Thesis consisted of poetry, fiction, memoir, and interviews, and two of her short stories won prizes before she completed the M.A. In recent years, she has won prizes in poetry competitions. Sullivan has published many essays, interviews, reviews, and memoir pieces in Catholic Arts Today, National Catholic Register, Religion.Unplugged, The Catholic Thing, and other publications. Sullivan also edits and writes posts on Facebook for the Benedict XVI Institute for Sacred Music and Divine Worship, Catholic Arts Today, the St. Ann Choir, El Camino Real, and other pages.

https://tinyurl.com/rtsullivanwritings
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