Difference between revisions of "Anarchy 31/The spontaneous university"
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Al­though I found Mr. Wesker{{s}} essay in the end dis­ap­point­ing, it did con­firm for me that in {{w|England|England}} as else­where there are groups of people who are act­ively con­cerned with the prob­lem. As we have seen, the polit­ical-<wbr>eco­nomic struc­ture of west­ern so­ci­ety is such that the gears of creat­ive intel­li­gence mesh with the gears of power in such a way that, not only is the former pro­hibited from ever ini­tiat­ing<!-- 'imitiating' in original --> any­thing, it can only come into play at the be­hest of forces (vested inter­ests) that are often in prin­ciple anti­path­etic towards it. Mr. Wesker{{s}} {{q|{{popup|Centre 42|a theatre founded by Arnold Wesker}}}} is a prac­tical at­tempt to alter his rela­tion­ship. | Al­though I found Mr. Wesker{{s}} essay in the end dis­ap­point­ing, it did con­firm for me that in {{w|England|England}} as else­where there are groups of people who are act­ively con­cerned with the prob­lem. As we have seen, the polit­ical-<wbr>eco­nomic struc­ture of west­ern so­ci­ety is such that the gears of creat­ive intel­li­gence mesh with the gears of power in such a way that, not only is the former pro­hibited from ever ini­tiat­ing<!-- 'imitiating' in original --> any­thing, it can only come into play at the be­hest of forces (vested inter­ests) that are often in prin­ciple anti­path­etic towards it. Mr. Wesker{{s}} {{q|{{popup|Centre 42|a theatre founded by Arnold Wesker}}}} is a prac­tical at­tempt to alter his rela­tion­ship. | ||
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+ | {{tab}}I should like to say at once that I have no funda­mental quar­rel with Mr. Wesker. My main criti­cism of his pro­ject (and I admit my know­ledge of it is very hazy indeed) is that it is lim­ited in char­ac­ter and that this is re­flec­ted in his ana­lysis of the histor­ical back­ground. {{p|294}}He takes the 1956 pro­duc­tion of {{w|Osborne|John_Osborne}}{{s}} ''{{w|Look Back in Anger|Look_Back_in_Anger}}'', for ex­ample, to be the first land­mark in {{q|our new cul­tural up­surge}}. A seri­ous lack of histor­ical per­spect­ive, the in­sul­arity of his view … these feat­ures are, I am afraid, in­dic­at­ive of a kind of church-<wbr>bazaar philo­sophy which seems to under­lie the whole pro­ject. Like handi­crafts, art should not be ex­pec­ted to pay. Mr. Wesker calls for a tradi­tion {{q|that will not have to rely on finan­cial suc­cess in order to con­tinue}}. And so he was led to seek the patron­age of trade unions and has begun to organ­ise a series of cul­tural fest­ivals under their aus­pices. While I have noth­ing against such fest­ivals, the ur­gency of Mr. Wesker{{s}} ori­ginal diag­nosis led me to ex­pect re­com­menda­tions for ac­tion at a far more funda­mental level. Cert­ainly, such a pro­gramme will not carry us very far twoards seiz­ing what he so hap­pily refers to as {{q|the secret reins}}. I do not think I am being over­cau­tious in as­sert­ing that some­thing far less ped­estrian than an ap­peal to the public-<wbr>spirited­ness of this or that group will be the im­per­ative of the vast change we have in mind. | ||
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+ | {{tab}}Never­the­less, at one point in what re­mains an in­ter­esting essay, Mr. Wesker quotes Mr. {{w|Raymond Williams|Raymond_Williams}}. Who Mr. Williams is and from what work the quota­tion is taken I am un­fortun­ately ignor­ant. I only wonder how Mr. Wesker can quote the fol­low­ing and then go out and look for patron­age. | ||
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+ | <blockquote><font size="2">{{tab}}The ques­tion is not who will patron­ise the arts, but what forms are pos­sible in which art­ists will have con­trol of their own means of ex­pres­sion, in such ways that they will have rela­tion in a com­mun­ity rather than to market or a patron.</font></blockquote> | ||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Spontaneous university}} | {{DEFAULTSORT:Spontaneous university}} |
Revision as of 15:12, 11 April 2017
The spontaneous university
In a recent essay Arnold Wesker, concerned precisely with the gulf between art and pupular culture and with the possibility of reintegration refers to the threatened strike of 1919 and to a speech of Lloyd George. The strike could have brought down the government. The Prime Minister said:
… you will defeat us. But if you do so have you weighed the consequences? The strike will be in defiance of the government of the country and by its very success will precipitate a constitutional crisis of the first importance. For, if a force arises in the state which is stronger than the state itself, then it must be ready to take on the functions of the state. Gentlemen have you considered, and if you have, are you ready?
The strikers, as we know, were not ready. Mr. Wesker comments:
The crust has shifted a bit, a number of people have made fortunes out of the protest and somewhere a host of Lloyd Georges are grinning contentedly at the situation … All protest is allowed and smiled upon because it is know that the force—
economically and culturally—
lies in the same dark and secure quarters, and this secret knowledge is the real despair of both artist and intellectual. We are paralysed by this knowledge, we protest every so often but really the whole cultural scene—
particularly on the left—
‘is one of awe and ineffectuality’. I am certain that this was the secret knowledge that largely accounted for the decline of the cultural activities in the Thirties—
no one really knew what to do with the philistines. They were omnipotent, friendly, and seductive. The germ was carried and passed on by the most unsuspected; and this same germ will cause, is beginning to cause, the decline of our new cultural upsurge unless … unless a new system is conceived whereby we who are concerned can take away, one by one, the secret reins.
Although I found Mr. Wesker’s essay in the end disappointing, it did confirm for me that in England as elsewhere there are groups of people who are actively concerned with the problem. As we have seen, the political-
Nevertheless, at one point in what remains an interesting essay, Mr. Wesker quotes Mr. Raymond Williams. Who Mr. Williams is and from what work the quotation is taken I am unfortunately ignorant. I only wonder how Mr. Wesker can quote the following and then go out and look for patronage.
The question is not who will patronise the arts, but what forms are possible in which artists will have control of their own means of expression, in such ways that they will have relation in a community rather than to market or a patron.