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Reason Limps.


Legends of Modernity

Essays and Letters from Occupied

Poland, 1942-1943

Czeslaw Milosz

Farrar, Straus and Giroux, $25, 266 pp.

He was "among those members of humankind who have had the ambiguous privilege of knowing and standing more reality than the rest of us." This is how the Irish poet Seamus Heaney Seamus Justin Heaney (IPA: /ˈʃeɪməs ˈhiːni/) (born 13 April 1939) is an Irish poet, writer and lecturer who was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1995. He currently lives in Dublin.  described Czes-law Milosz (1911-2004), Nobel Prize-winning Lithuanian-born poet, novelist, and essayist. This "ambiguous privilege" spanned enough of the disasterous twentieth century to fill several lifetimes.

Milosz was raised as a Pole in Lithuania under Tsarist Russian rule. As a child, he witnessed the Bolshevik Revolution and World War I. When he was twenty-eight and living in Warsaw, Germany invaded. After surviving the Nazi occupation, he lived through Soviet control of Poland, eventually sought asylum in France during the intellectual swirl of the 1950s, and took a professorship at Berkeley in the 1960s, just as the cultural revolution was beginning.

Throughout all the upheavals, he wrote--and was well regarded for it. But his fame and influence reached a new level once he began teaching at Berkeley, a critical node An element, position, or command and control entity whose disruption or destruction immediately degrades the ability of a force to command, control, or effectively conduct combat operations. Also called target critical damage point.  of Anglophone intellectual life. Though he never abandoned Polish as his primary form of expression, translators always stood ready to render his work into English, and Milosz became a virtual English writer just as English established its dominance as a global language. As his writings reached a wider audience, increasingly he became known for his eloquent and steadfast witness against communism in his homeland. It is probably no accident that his Nobel Prize Nobel Prize, award given for outstanding achievement in physics, chemistry, physiology or medicine, peace, or literature. The awards were established by the will of Alfred Nobel, who left a fund to provide annual prizes in the five areas listed above.  in 1980 coincided with the rise of the Solidarity movement in Gdansk.

The publication of Legends of Modernity, then, provides a fresh look into the early development of a literary giant. Legends collects the letters and essays Milosz wrote during the Warsaw occupation, when he labored as a janitor, carting books from one bombed library to another, and became involved in an underground literary resistance to the Nazi regime.

Milosz was always a beneficial disturbance in modernism, partly because he never lost touch with the central reference points of his Catholic education. His ambivalent relationship to Catholicism has always been one of the more fascinating elements of his work. Milosz returned to the church later in life, but rejected the appellation ap·pel·la·tion  
n.
1. A name, title, or designation.

2. A protected name under which a wine may be sold, indicating that the grapes used are of a specific kind from a specific district.

3. The act of naming.
 Catholic writer "because if you are branded as a Catholic, you are supposed to testify with every work of yours to following the line of the church, which is not necessarily my case."

Still, the classic Catholic question of reconciling faith and reason, best exemplified in the thought of Thomas Aquinas, features in Milosz's writing. Aquinas differed from Augustine, who argued that human reason depends on divine intervention--an illumination of the intellect that draws our thoughts into conformity with truth. Without God, reason moves in circles; language is merely self-referential. Aquinas, responding to new translations of Aristotle, thought reason self-sufficient--subservient to, but not constituted by faith. As Milosz tells it, the nineteenth century put Thomism to the test by taking God out of the picture, and the twentieth century, in two world wars, may have proven Augustine right. The death of God turned out to entail the death of reason.

Milosz invokes Augustine only occasionally in these essays, but, through several essays and letters, he does take up the baleful process by which reconciled reason and faith were supplanted by an increasingly unreconciled, even polarized A one-way direction of a signal or the molecules within a material pointing in one direction. , reason and unreason. Amid the war ruins wrought by that process and the dull thumping of bombs, Milosz sought the origins of this polarization in "leg-ends of modernity," which portrayed one side or the other of the split.

In one such legend, that of Robinson Crusoe, he sees autonomous reason--man alone with his God, capable of "starting anew" because he is cut off from community. This model of man's relation to God is essentially Protestant. It replaces the Catholic model, which emphasizes grace in the community of believers. The individualism of Robinson Crusoe feeds into not only the idea of capitalism, but also the ideal of the noble savage
Noble Savage
Chactas

the “noble savage” of the Natchez Indians; beloved of Atala. [Fr. Lit.: Atala]

Chingachgook

idealized noble Indian. [Am. Lit.
.

But not even a solitary reason uncorrupted by city life can escape the city's advance. Reason suffers under the further embarrassment of being able to undermine its own autonomy by its powers of radical analysis. Under the scrutiny of this analysis, Milosz argues, the city becomes a monstrous collective governed by the laws of biology that operate inexorably in Balzac's Comedie Humaine to subvert the individual. Rational analysis always seeks laws, and the more laws it discovers to explain behavior, the less scope remains for the free will, which, ironically, we have always associated with reason. The individual, having reasoned himself out of his Crusoe-like autonomy of reason, defiantly reasserts that autonomy as will. Milosz sees a fundamental danger in the fact that the will expresses itself as act rather than idea. Under its regime the individual asserts himself not by deliberative de·lib·er·a·tive  
adj.
1. Assembled or organized for deliberation or debate: a deliberative legislature.

2. Characterized by or for use in deliberation or debate.
 reason but by spontaneous unreason. He strikes out against the vulgar collective, like Julien Sorel Sorel (sôrĕl`), city (1991 pop. 18,786), S Que., Canada, at the confluence of the St. Lawrence and Richelieu rivers. It is a grain-shipping center with an important shipbuilding industry.  in Stendahl's Rouge et Noir, or against the very feelings of empathy that bind the individual to that collective, like Lafcadio in Andre Gide's Les Caves du Vatican, who commits the perfect crime of murdering a man for no reason at all. Milosz calls Gide "that depraved de·praved  
adj.
Morally corrupt; perverted.



de·praved·ly adv.
 man" for his Nietzschean glorification glo·ri·fy  
tr.v. glo·ri·fied, glo·ri·fy·ing, glo·ri·fies
1. To give glory, honor, or high praise to; exalt.

2.
 of this "gratuitous act." This is an end point in self-assertion of will that presents itself as the only alternative to the impersonal forces of biology or economics.

This is but one line of Milosz's thought that winds through several of the essays. A full account of some others, equally exciting, can't be given in the space of a review. But I can recommend his reflections on war hysteria, illustrated by Pierre Bezukhov Count Pierre Kirilovich Bezukhov (Russian: Пьер Безухов, Пётр Кириллович  in War and Peace, who wanders through Moscow as it burns, "overcome by a feeling of obscure but powerfully experienced obligation, the necessity to participate at any cost," and conceives a mad plan to assassinate as·sas·si·nate  
tr.v. as·sas·si·nat·ed, as·sas·si·nat·ing, as·sas·si·nates
1. To murder (a prominent person) by surprise attack, as for political reasons.

2.
 Napoleon. And there is Milosz's wary homage to Marian Zdziechowski, a former teacher who insisted that a genuine belief in God must be in some sense irrational. Milosz naturally sympathizes with this "intuitionist in·tu·i·tion·ism  
n. Philosophy
1. The theory that truth or certain truths are known by intuition rather than reason.

2. The theory that external objects of perception are immediately known to be real by intuition.
" stance, even as he recognizes that its surrender to belief fatally resembles the Nazis' surrender to the imperatives of blood and race.

Yet an ironic thread of hope runs through these essays. The bleakest legend of the modern for Milosz is the primacy of impersonal forces--whether these are the biological forces worshiped by Nazis or the economic forces worshiped by Marxists--over reason. This legend makes ideas the secondary result of acts rather than their source, or what the nineteenth-century German philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer called the representations of a generalized prerational will. Even in the malevolent ma·lev·o·lent  
adj.
1. Having or exhibiting ill will; wishing harm to others; malicious.

2. Having an evil or harmful influence: malevolent stars.
 history that Milosz traces to Nazism and communism, he finds a refutation ref·u·ta·tion   also re·fut·al
n.
1. The act of refuting.

2. Something, such as an argument, that refutes someone or something.

Noun 1.
 of this theory.

Intellectuals akin to the "depraved" Gide have blood on their hands because, even though read by few, their ideas find their way to the many: "And so the coin of ideas, of thoughts, starts rolling; along the way its more subtle letters are rubbed out until, smooth and simplified, it reaches the masses in the form of a single motto, a cheap slogan." The SS men who slaughter Jews are racially "the same as those German youths who under the influence of [Goethe's] The Sorrows of Young Werther ran into fields and woods to commit suicide Verb 1. commit suicide - kill oneself; "the terminally ill patient committed suicide"
kill - cause to die; put to death, usually intentionally or knowingly; "This man killed several people when he tried to rob a bank"; "The farmer killed a pig for the holidays"
 from sorrow over the imperfection im·per·fec·tion  
n.
1. The quality or condition of being imperfect.

2. Something imperfect; a defect or flaw. See Synonyms at blemish.


imperfection
Noun

1.
 of the world." What joins them, race, is nothing compared to what separates them, an idea.

This optimism returns unobtrusively throughout the book and is a point of contention in the letters exchanged with Milosz's friend Jerzy Andrzejewski Jerzy Andrzejewski (August 19, 1909, Warsaw, Congress Poland, Russian Empire - April 19, 1983, Warsaw) was a prolific Polish author. In 1976 he was one of the founding members of the intellectual opposition group KOR (Workers' Defence Committee). , who later wrote Ashes and Diamonds. If the idea is primary, Milosz argues, then there is hope, beginning to show itself even in occupied Warsaw, in the possibility of a new idea.

Daniel M. Murtaugh is associate professor of English and director of the Writing Programs at Florida Atlantic University “FAU” redirects here. For other uses, see FAU (disambiguation).
Florida Atlantic University, also referred to as FAU or Florida Atlantic, is a public, coeducational research university with its main campus in Boca Raton, Florida, United States.
.
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Title Annotation:Legends of Modernity: Essays and Letters from Occupied Poland, 1942-43
Author:Murtaugh, Daniel M.
Publication:Commonweal
Article Type:Book review
Date:Aug 11, 2006
Words:1316
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