J. Duban |
I’ve
never been asked by a reputable journal to review such a bad book as Jeffrey
Duban’s The Lesbian Lyre. Duban is an
embittered person who left an apparently unsuccessful academic career for the
law. He has published a volume ostensibly about Sappho so hefty that I plan to put it on the tea-towel when
I am next squeezing water out of aubergines to make moussaka.
My
first reaction to the proposal was to turn it down. The most painful aspect of the
book is its (almost) unbelievably reactionary position on literature in general
and ancient Greek poetry in particular. Duban is convinced that The Classics
belong to a favoured few Very Intelligent People Like Himself and that nobody
else has any right to study, translate or pollute them by any form of contact
whatsoever. He particularly singles out for vilification ‘modern’ Greeks, ‘triumphalist
feminists’, adult learners and ‘amateur’ classicists without expensive private
educations. Yum.
My
second response was to write a temperate review simply pointing out the (several)
scholarly errors and (many) blind prejudices. But I felt as though I was using
a nuclear warhead to destroy a hamster.
So
in the end I decided to do something which I don’t usually approve of—use the
space in the Times Literary Supplement to
explore an issue which is of interest to me, and none at all, I suspect, to the
writer of the book I was supposed to be reviewing.
The
single merit of Duban’s work, it seem to me, is that he really, really, likes
poetry and isn’t ashamed to say that some literature is really, really good. And
it has always bothered me that the scholars most politically opposed to Dubanic
elitism, those on the Left, not only in Classics but in all fields where
artworks are discussed, are terrified of talking about beauty, sublimity, and
artistic value.
'Freddie, I think Aeschylus is great and will tell you why after the revolution' |
Karl
Marx and Friedrich Engels inconsiderately did not develop an aesthetic theory
because they had more urgent things to do, like liberate the global working
class. Subsequent Left critics have struggled to create an adequate theory of
artistic excellence. Talking about literature in terms of its dialectical
relationship with class and other socio-politico-economic categories (of which
I’ve done a lot myself) is essential, but it’s not the whole story.
The
only reason why it matters what literature says about
society is that it can have an extraordinarily powerful psychological,
emotional and therefore social effect. Pleasure, exaltation and excitement are
political. We need to work on a Left-wing way of talking about the things which
cause some art to make your hair stand on end, so we can really put the Dubans
of this world in their place and not let the Devil get all the best literary-critical
tunes.
The review is published behind a pay wall but you can download the pdf from the news column of my personal website here. Duban is known for his trenchant public statements: I don’t
know whether I want him to write to the TLS
to complain about it or not.
Thank you very much for this! José. C. Baracat Jr. (Brazil)
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