Harold Bloom, one of our foremost contemporary literary critics, was born on this date (July 11) in 1930. Always an intelligent and insightful commentator who creates compelling arguments that also often can be combative, causing controversy, his analyses of literature and its authors—whether in his influential texts, like The Anxiety of Influence: A Theory of Poetry (1973), or popular books, like The Western Canon: The Books and School of the Ages (1994)—have initiated valuable ongoing discussions or debates within and outside of academic circles. I know I have frequently found his views interesting and intriguing, even (perhaps, especially) on those occasions when I might disagree with an essay’s premise, its tone, or the critical conclusion drawn.
Since its introduction nearly four decades ago, Bloom’s theory regarding the impact of previous writers on those who follow—the influence of past masters and the accompanying anxiety felt by later authors trying to compete with those predecessors who already have explored all types of human events or emotions—has infiltrated most contemporary conversations about creativity, originality, individuality, imagination, inspiration, imitation, and similarity, especially when judging or comparing works by various figures from different literary periods.
As Bloom explains in The Anxiety of Influence:
Bloom contends that every poem’s composition is the product of “a poet’s melancholy at his lack of priority.” He considers each poem to “arise out of the illusion of freedom, out of a sense of priority being possible.” Therefore, he regards the poem as a result of the mind’s creative process, an invention of the poet's imagination as formed by an accumulation of readings as well as personal experiences. The accomplished poem “is a made thing, and as such is an achieved anxiety.”
Since its introduction nearly four decades ago, Bloom’s theory regarding the impact of previous writers on those who follow—the influence of past masters and the accompanying anxiety felt by later authors trying to compete with those predecessors who already have explored all types of human events or emotions—has infiltrated most contemporary conversations about creativity, originality, individuality, imagination, inspiration, imitation, and similarity, especially when judging or comparing works by various figures from different literary periods.
As Bloom explains in The Anxiety of Influence:
Every poem is a misinterpretation of a parent poem. A poem is not an overcoming of anxiety. Poets’ misinterpretations or poems are more drastic than critics’ misinterpretations or criticism, but this is only a difference in degree and not at all in kind. There are no interpretations but only misinterpretations, and so all criticism is prose poetry.
Critics are more or less valuable than other critics only (precisely) as poets are more or less valuable than other poets. For just as a poet must be found by the opening in a precursor poet, so must the critic. The difference is that a critic has more parents. His precursors are poets and critics. But—in truth—so are a poet’s precursors, often and more often as history lengthens.
Poetry is the anxiety of influence, is misprision, is a disciplined perverseness. Poetry is misunderstanding, misinterpretation, misalliance.
Bloom contends that every poem’s composition is the product of “a poet’s melancholy at his lack of priority.” He considers each poem to “arise out of the illusion of freedom, out of a sense of priority being possible.” Therefore, he regards the poem as a result of the mind’s creative process, an invention of the poet's imagination as formed by an accumulation of readings as well as personal experiences. The accomplished poem “is a made thing, and as such is an achieved anxiety.”
1 comment:
Harold Bloom is freaking genius.
(& it's author).
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