October 1, 2019
MY CORNER by Boyd
Cathey
Who Wins the
Culture War, Wins Everything!
Friends,
Most
installments in the MY CORNER series, in addition to a stated concentration on the
South, address deeper cultural issues: questions about what is happening in our
educational system, how Western culture is being transformed before our very
eyes, the attacks on the visible symbols of our past, and, perhaps more insidiously,
examining assaults on our history, on our memory and on our very language, that
is, how we communicate with each other.
For
up-to-the-moment, blow-by-blow accounts of the latest attempt—indeed, conspiracy—by
the Deep State to take down and impeach President Trump, there are such voices
as Rush Limbaugh, John Solomon, and others. From time to time, I can provide
such information, or a certain slant or focus, but given the nature of what is
transpiring and the headlong rush, my attention is drawn to what I consider
more basic, more fundamental questions that underpin and shape our current conversations
and debates.
I have heard
it said that it was the great English prelate and author, Cardinal John Henry Newman,
who declared that “all political issues involve basic religious questions.” But
while studying in Spain I read something very similar written by the Spanish
traditionalist, Juan Donoso Cortes (d. 1853): “The momentous political
questions of our time, when examined closely, reveal deeply philosophical and
religious roots. Unless these foundations are understood, debate will be like
fighting the symptoms of a disease but not the cause.”
Knowing
how to fight our enemies, knowing how to react and what to say and what,
finally, to do, involves as the late Southern writer Mel Bradford used to say, first, “knowing who we are,” that is, knowing that
we are creatures made and given life by a Creator, that we are given
stewardship over this planet, that there are both Natural and Divine Positive
Laws that govern us and our existence; and that to transgress them will bring
disastrous consequences, perhaps not at once, but certainly eventually.
And that
is why the cultural and essentially religious battles—the conflict over who we
are and our place in Creation—are so critical. It is why I have a very poor
view of much of what passes for “modern kulchur,” including much of the
architecture, the so-called literature, the cinematic excrescence, the painting
and sculpture, and the music that is spewed forth by our contemporary society.
Certainly
such products reflect our current dominant culture, for art follows and is
inspired by reigning beliefs and standards in any society, while at the same
time helps to shape that society’s future vision and conception of itself. And,
no doubt, most of the artists in our society today fancy themselves just like
artists of the past, using their creative intelligence to create works of art.
Has this not been the self-appointed role of such persons throughout history?
The arts,
in their major role, reflect a society’s beliefs and aspirations—think here architecturally
of the Acropolis in Athens, the incredible monuments in Rome, the great
cathedrals of Chartres and Rheims in France, representing the aspirations and
thought of those foundations of our own civilization. Think of the great
artwork of a Giotto, a Michelangelo, a Rubens, a Gainsborough; and in music, of
Gregorian Chant, plainsong and polyphony, the great symphonic and liturgical
works of Bach, Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven and Bruckner.
Some of
you may recall the great BBC series, “Civilization,”
hosted by the late Sir Kenneth Clark and then shown in American theaters (circa
1970) and later on television. Lord Clark attempted, quite successfully, to
connect the dots and illustrate both the complexity and the unity of our
cultural inheritance and its organic development. As Bernard
of Chartres declared nearly 900 years ago, “we are as dwarfs standing on
the shoulders of giants.” Our ancestors built upon and added to what was
vouchsafed to and inherited by them, as a trust, as a precious legacy. And
traditionally, this was thought to be the essential role of the artist: to create
based on what he had received, to make it finer if possible, to enhance it, but
never to disparage it or destroy it, and always to preserve it.
But since
at least the early twentieth century artists have more significantly emphasized
the radically transformative, even revolutionary, at times highly political element. Of
course, artists throughout history have used their talent to advance new ideas
with social and political import; that’s always been the case.
But, I would suggest,
not with the same demonic fervor or determination, not with the same
ideological commitment and involvement that we have witnessed in our time. And
not with the same type of influential dominance by the Marxist
Frankfurt School and its votaries in almost every field of knowledge, a
dominance which fully comprehends the role of culture in the success of the revolutionary activity it advocates.
Whether
in such enterprises as “critical theory” in literature, deconstructivism in architecture, or
the use of music as a weapon to undermine societal mores and standards, too
often it seems that “the arts” have been weaponized and have become critical
elements in the destruction of our civilization, rather than estimable and
valuable additions to it.
Where—what—are
today’s monuments to rival the cathedral at Chartres, music to compare with
Mozart’s Requiem or Bach’s St. Matthew Passion, or paintings to be set beside
the work of a Rembrandt or El Greco? And even more recently, where are the
architects to rival a Ralph
Adams Cram (d. 1942) or a Daniel Burnham (d. 1912)?
Some of
us are old enough to remember when the “Ed Sullivan Show” on CBS featured the then-new
English sensation, the Beatles (1964), at almost the same time that NBC
cancelled the long-running, classical music standard “The Voice of
Firestone” (1963). Irrespective of the talent, or the inventiveness, or the
catchy tunefulness of the Fab Four—something most of us would readily
acknowledge—that appearance and what then followed like an avalanche
represented a seismic cultural shift, and the opening of the floodgates, as it
were. Soon, weekly national broadcasts of the Metropolitan Opera were also off
NBC, relegated first to public radio, and finally to a few private radio
stations. And I am old enough to recall all sorts of rock groups which soon
crowded out almost all other musical programming from national networks and
local stations, largely exiling both country music and classical music to niche
markets. (The country musical variety show Hee
Haw only lasted on CBS for two years, 1969-1971, before cancellation and going
into syndication. Other non-Rock programming soon followed.)
The most
egregious offense in all this was the disconnection of citizens, of the
populace, from our civilization’s very rich musical inheritance. While my
parents were not what I would call “classical music experts,” they at least
understood and appreciated its value and importance in our society and to our
culture. Just consider some of the scores (and subjects) of films of the 1930s
until the early 1960s, think about the music used in early popular television
programs like “The Lone Ranger” (1949-1957), or “Sergeant Preston of the Yukon”
(1955-1958), think of those memorable Warner Brothers cartoons, especially Elmer
Fudd’s “I Killed the Wabbit,” or
those Woody Woodpecker cartoons we also grew up with. How many of us still
associate Rossini’s William Tell
Overture with “Hi-Yo Silver!” any time we hear the final gallop of that piece being
played?
And,
sure, the use of such music has continued in film, but certainly not with the
broad influence or significance it once had. Nor with the role of connecting
average, everyday citizens with their inherited culture. In our day the
classical tradition occupies, it seems, a niche which grows smaller by the
year, with fewer listeners and devotees, and with music impresarios attempting
frantically to remedy the situation by heavy mixes of “pop” cross-over concerts,
neither truly classical nor truly rock.
It has
been a great accomplishment of cultural Marxism and its adepts in the arts to
separate in large measure our population from its heritage—a major step in the
conquest of our culture and the transformation of our civilization. And the
resulting atomistic individualism—a formless anarchy—is the exact condition
desired by the enemies of our civilization. In the words of the late T. S. Eliot
our foundations have been destroyed, made largely inaccessible or beyond our
reach, “to make ready the ground upon which the barbarian nomads of the future
will encamp their mechanized caravans.” [Notes
towards the Definition of Culture, 1948]
At the
very base of our conflict today is this imperative: to recover those bonds
which unite us to our heritage, for it is in retrieving that inheritance (and
the faith which accompanies it) that we gain strength and renewal for the
battles that lie ahead of us.
*****
With
these thoughts in mind, I pass on a link to my latest essay published by The New English Review. It’s titled, “Richard
Strauss and the Survival of Western Culture.” I hope you’ll see the connections
and even relevance in what I’ve written. Please access the link below, and
there are several Youtube excerpts included:
And he who wins the battle for supremacy in law, wins the culture. Tragically, most Christians and patriots believe they're fighting for the correct law when, in actuality, they're instead fighting to enforce the very law that sent America to the precipice of moral depravity and destruction and that's responsible for losing the culture war to the anti-Christs and non-Christians:
ReplyDelete"...3. Every problem America faces today can be traced back to the fact that the framers failed to expressly establish a government upon Yahweh’s immutable morality as codified in His commandments, statutes, and judgments. (Would infanticide and sodomy be tolerated, let alone financed by the government, if Yahweh’s perfect law and altogether righteous judgments were the law of the land? Would Islam be a looming threat to our peace and security if the First Amendment had been replaced with the First Commandment?...
"On February 27, 2009, James Dobson conceded that we have lost the culture wars. This is the consequence of Christians [including Dr. Dobson] having spent the last two centuries lopping at the rotten branches of our culture’s corrupt tree while watering and fertilizing its roots.
"We should lop away at the tree’s corrupt branches (infanticide, sodomy, the economy, etc.). However, until the root of these problems is Biblically addressed, we will never shut down the infanticide mills, we will never defeat the sodomites, and we will never fix the economy. In short, we will never win the culture wars. This issue is more than important for anyone concerned about God, our nation, and the future of our posterity, it’s the cutting- edge issue of our day...."
For more, Google our Featured Blog Article "5 Reasons the Constitution is Our Cutting-Edge Issue" at http://www.bibleversusconstitution.org/
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