Categories
Literature Poetry

Weldon Kees and Zbigniew Herbert: A Conversation with Dana Gioia

A little less than a month ago, I posted Dana Gioia’s film about Weldon Kees. The morning I drove to sunny South Pasadena to shoot my cameo, Dana and I conducted a brief conversation about Kees, which he has now posted to his channel: I spoke about Kees, whom I’ve been reading since the age of […]

Weldon Kees and Zbigniew Herbert: A Conversation with Dana Gioia
Categories
Classics Film Literature

The Old Stoic – Emily Bronte

The Old StoicRiches I hold in light esteem,And Love I laugh to scorn;And lust of fame was but a dream,That vanished with the morn:And if I pray, the only prayerThat moves my lips for meIs, “Leave the heart that now I bear,And give me liberty!”Yes, as my swift days near their goal:’Tis all that I […]

The Old Stoic – Emily Bronte
Categories
Classics German Matters Psychoanalysis

Birth of Arthur Schopenhauer (1788–1860) – The Thinker Who Darkened and Deepened Literary English

The birth of Arthur Schopenhauer introduced a philosophical vocabulary that deepened literary English. His ideas on will, illusion, and suffering infused prose with intellectual gravity and introspective precision, enabling writers to articulate pessimism, psychological complexity, and metaphysical doubt with clarity, restraint, and conceptual authority.

Birth of Arthur Schopenhauer (1788–1860) – The Thinker Who Darkened and Deepened Literary English
Categories
Classics Literature

Book Review : Cranford by Elizabeth Gaskell

Elizabeth Gaskell’s “Cranford” depicts life in a unique, female-dominated town, highlighting class snobbery through episodic narratives. Influenced by her hometown of Knutsford, Gaskell received encouragement from Dickens to expand her story.

Book Review : Cranford by Elizabeth Gaskell
Categories
Psychoanalysis Uncategorized

Wrapping Up

https://open.substack.com/pub/theinterpretation/p/another-blizzard?utm_source=share&utm_medium=android&r=9131h

Categories
Classics Literature Poetry

Birth of W. H. Auden (1907–1973) – The Poet Who Tuned Modern English to Thought

Born in 1907, W. H. Auden reshaped modern English poetry by blending intellectual rigor with lyrical music. His verse moves fluidly between philosophy, politics, and everyday speech, proving that poems can reason as they sing. Through flexible form and precise diction, he expanded English into a medium for thinking aloud.

Birth of W. H. Auden (1907–1973) – The Poet Who Tuned Modern English to Thought
Categories
Classics Literature Psychoanalysis

Birth of Carson McCullers (1917–1967) – The Writer Who Turned Silence into Language

Born in 1917, Carson McCullers transformed American prose through psychological stillness, restraint, and interior focus. Her fiction showed that silence, subtext, and muted longing could carry immense narrative weight, expanding English’s emotional vocabulary and shaping modern introspective storytelling that values understatement over spectacle and inner life over overt dramatic action.

Birth of Carson McCullers (1917–1967) – The Writer Who Turned Silence into Language
Categories
Art and Photographic History French

Quiet days in Clichy

Categories
French Literature

Death of Molière (1622–1673) – The Dramatist Who Taught Comedy to Think

On February 17, 1673, Molière died after collapsing during a performance, sealing a life where theater and reality intertwined. His sharper legacy lies in language: he transformed satire into disciplined intelligence, shaping comic dialogue, social critique, and the evolution of modern dramatic prose across Europe, including English literature.

Death of Molière (1622–1673) – The Dramatist Who Taught Comedy to Think
Categories
Classics Literature Psychoanalysis

Joyce and Nietzsche, Take 2

I inaugurated my blog with a post about the relationship of two passages written by James Joyce, one from A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, the other from Ulysses, both revolving around the word ‘yes’ (which was used in drastically different ways in the two passages). I connected these passages to Nietzsche’s philosophy, […]

Joyce and Nietzsche, Take 2