Tuesday, April 1. 2008
The Foolishness Of Poetry
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p.s. on this to say it may have actually been critics of Weber, or Weber in later works, who expanded the notion of the Protestant ethic to include non-Protestant groups such as Japan.
Robert,
The city where I currently reside, Calgary, Alberta, is considering hiring a poet laureate/ civic poet. Calgary is like the Houston, TX of Canada, so you can imagine some of the debate and rhetoric surrounding this proposal. I think many people are so set against the idea precisely because of the conscience and consciousness that a poet would bring into the civic politics. The fool might put the status quo in danger.
The city where I currently reside, Calgary, Alberta, is considering hiring a poet laureate/ civic poet. Calgary is like the Houston, TX of Canada, so you can imagine some of the debate and rhetoric surrounding this proposal. I think many people are so set against the idea precisely because of the conscience and consciousness that a poet would bring into the civic politics. The fool might put the status quo in danger.
Well, you can imagine what I think about that. Three cheers for professional foolery!
"He dares to be a fool, and that is the first step in the direction of wisdom."
Happy Poetry Month, fellow fool!
Happy Poetry Month, fellow fool!
Thanks, Greg. I found out that quote is by James Huneker. The huneker is named in his honor as the unit of measurement for the size of a human being’s soul.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Huneker
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Huneker

I live in a country founded by Puritans, immigrants, and pioneers. These groups hold in common practicality as a crucial value: the best work is useful work. In fact, this value took on mythic proportions over time, culminating in what is sometimes called the “Protestant work ethic.” But it is more than this. It is a mythos of practicality shared by many groups. Max Weber points out in The Protestant Ethic and The Spirit of Capitalism that even in Japan, a nation that is not predominantly Protestant, the idea of working hard toward a practical, material end has become an intrinsic cultural value.
