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Scott Spires's avatar

Speaking of literary binaries: further reflection on "Major Arcana" leads me to see it as a study in binary oppositions that nevertheless interpenetrate and interact with each other: art vs. life, male vs. female, boundaries vs. freedom, progressive vs. reactionary, virtual vs. real, aesthetic vs. commercial, all of it laid out on the "trinary" of past vs. present vs. future (the boundaries of which threaten to dissolve at certain points in the book).

Well hey: we live in the binary (digital) age, don't we? All those 0s and 1s. I guess what I'm saying is I look forward to re-reading and re-reviewing it when the Belt edition comes out - it will be interesting to see what impressions of it I have then.

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Henry Begler's avatar

I have the giant two volume Kenner/Davenport letters staring at me rn next to a book on Ming China, and the last time I read Harold Bloom I felt like someone was playing a prank on me, so I guess you could say I've chosen a side. To give it its due, that school of modernism at its best gives me this almost psychedelic sense of awareness; I step outside and every leaf on every tree seems charged with beauty and meaning and I feel a sense of awe at being part of this greater consciousness. Because it is situated *in* the world and in history it makes me want to go out into the world and do things, spend time in nature, read as widely as I can, travel, talk to strangers etc.

(Of course, my imaginary interlocutor argues, maybe mapping the interior of the self a la Stevens is the real work and this stuff is all just a temporary high, a flashy manic phase. But what are you gonna do.)

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