Showing posts with label Reviewery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reviewery. Show all posts
Thursday, July 12, 2012
Ker's Chesterton Biography
Taking a break from Aeneid prep to read Ian Ker, G.K. Chesterton: A Biography (Oxford, 2011), for a review due later in the summer. So far, I like it: other reviewers have accused Ker of including too much, and thus delivering a torpid, overstuffed biography no one will read. But Chesterton was great--he contained multitudes--and I can imagine Chestertonians passing through this large book quickly and with great enjoyment. We'll see whether I still feel the same in a few more days, though...
Saturday, June 30, 2012
MacIntyre, and on to Virgil
Finished the review of Mong Ih-Ren a few days back (it was horrible--plagiarism on top of poor style), and finished re-reading a good part of After Virtue, but unfortunately I need to put off Whose Justice? Which Rationality? for now--the imperative of getting through a few classroom texts is gaining force. Maybe I'll still get to WJWR before the end of the summer...
One smaller thing: I re-read MacIntyre's very sharp essay from a few years ago, "Transformations of Enlightenment: Plato, Rosen and the Postmodern" (in Logos and Eros, ed. Nalin Ranasinghe (St. Augustine's P, 2006), which appreciates and critiques the thought of the Straussian philosopher Stanley Rosen. I don't know of any other place where MacIntyre actually confronts Straussianism, other than a review he wrote a few years back of a book by Thomas Pangle (but M. didn't seem to understand what was going on in that book). His critique of Rosen is thoughtful and illuminating, and basically turns on the claim that Rosen's Platonism and modified liberalism rely upon a version of Nature he is unwilling to credit as existent.
Now, as part of a class prep, I'm reading through Robert Fagles' translation of the Aeneid for the first time (I've usually read Fitzgerald before now), and I'm going through Lee Fratantuono's commentary, Madness Unchained: A Reading of Virgil's Aeneid (Lexington, 2007), at the same time. Fagles is pleasurable, though I find myself second-guessing his florid renderings from time to time. Fratantuono seems solid and very interesting so far, displaying some of the reading habits of his erstwhile mentor, the late Seth Benardete, but without descending into the maddening fog of Benardete's obscurantist prose.

Now, as part of a class prep, I'm reading through Robert Fagles' translation of the Aeneid for the first time (I've usually read Fitzgerald before now), and I'm going through Lee Fratantuono's commentary, Madness Unchained: A Reading of Virgil's Aeneid (Lexington, 2007), at the same time. Fagles is pleasurable, though I find myself second-guessing his florid renderings from time to time. Fratantuono seems solid and very interesting so far, displaying some of the reading habits of his erstwhile mentor, the late Seth Benardete, but without descending into the maddening fog of Benardete's obscurantist prose.
Tuesday, June 19, 2012
A first post
Reading Ambrose Mong Ih-Ren, The Liberal Spirit and Anti-Liberal Discourse of John Henry Newman (Peter Lang, 2011) in order to review it. Very interesting topic, but some unfortunate ESL problems already in the prose. More to come.
On the side, looking at John Alvis, Nathaniel Hawthorne as Political Philosopher (Transaction, 2012), a book by one of my old profs. Re-reading MacIntyre's After Virtue, and hoping to get to Whose Justice? Which Rationality? before the summer is out.
On the side, looking at John Alvis, Nathaniel Hawthorne as Political Philosopher (Transaction, 2012), a book by one of my old profs. Re-reading MacIntyre's After Virtue, and hoping to get to Whose Justice? Which Rationality? before the summer is out.
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