Archive for the ‘Mayer Hillman’ Tag
Replies to Mayer Hillman
At the end of April, The Guardian published a dour interview with social scientist Mayer Hillman, wherein he pronounces “We’re doomed.”
Said interview resulted in some tangled discussion threads that, in turn, resulted in some poems (here, here, and here), and some friends’ sharing the interview on-line—again!—prompted the following intervention.
Replies to Mayer Hillman
“We’re doomed.”
Your therapist would guide you
gently to see you’re fortune telling.
The dialectician would unfold the thought
that determination does not
foreclose unforeseen developments
being the condition of its own negation.
A happy chance slip of memory recalls
“What is real now was only once imagined”.
NaPoMo (n+2): Two for Mayer Hillman
Two for Mayer Hillman
1.
So much depends
upon
fossil fuels except
music,
love, education, and
happiness.
Focus on these
things.
2.
Asked what he would do were the world to end
next day, Luther replied, “Plant an apple tree.”
NaPoMo (n): a serendipitous poem
Combing through with no small pleasure the Seculum trilogy of Peter Dale Scott, preparing a talk I’m to give at a humanities conference at the end of May, I wound up at the same time in a short Facebook thread back and forth with a teaching colleague, which inspires the improvised poem, dedicated to him, below:
So many aspects of life
For Shawn Bell, composer
We read the same Guardian article
this morning, though you chose to share it.
Mayer Hillman, 86: We’re doomed
…making a case for [re?]cycling…
is almost irrelevant. We’ve got to stop
burning fossil fuels. I commented
you’d forgotten his most important words:
Standing in the way is capitalism
Your reply in its current form
and though I am not unacquainted
with Isaiah’s singing the lion shall lie down
with the lamb and I’m the first
to remark the confusion of first
and second nature in Adorno’s
If the lion had a consciousness
his rage at the antelope he wants
to eat would be ideology
I answered The dream of postwar
social democracy that capitalism
could be tamed by the rule of law
is as realistic as thinking
a lion can be trained to be vegan
And though we continued twisting into
that thread strands of current models
of socio-economic organization
in particular capitalism and socialism
big data and AI
The Communist Hypothesis
and the Enlightenment’s faith
in its overcoming its own
fateful dialectic Hillman’s words
free of the snarl
of our disagreement
need here be repeated
So many aspects of life
depend on fossil fuels
except for music
and love and education
and happiness. These things
we must focus on.