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The Mitre Literary
Review is printed at the University of St Andrews in the United
Kingdom.
ROBERT
O'BRIEN
Editor
MATTHEW BELL
Associate Editor
ANDREW CUSACK
Publisher
CONTACT:
literaryreview@yahoo.com
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L E A D E R
Leisure,
the Basis of Culture
In Defence of Time-Wasting
To
read a literary journal
requires leisure; and to be reading this new literary journal suggests
an excess of it. Moralists and even some parents will stress that we
must make good ‘use’ of our university years. But this word has mildly
pernicious connotations of usefulness, and by extension utility, and a
humanities degree should be, to all intents and purposes, useless.
Those who study English literature for employment reasons are
corrupting the system of education. (This is not to say one should not
seek employment after one’s degree.) Time-wasting it may be, but the
intellectual life is, in its fullness, a sort of consecrated
time-wasting. It is good for the soul.
In repudiating the language and ethos of the modern Total Work State,
the intellectual, with his celebration of time-wasting, may seem to
speak with unbecoming levity. The intellectual prides himself in being
utterly non-utilitarian, and therefore he appears to the ‘real world’
as sort of heretic. He has opted out of the system. Because he does not
produce anything marketable, and because his hours are spent in
leisure, he cannot even receive a wage. (See Pieper’s Leisure, the
Basis of Culture for all this in a much richer form.) For one
receives
a wage as a bribe – spend your time doing this undesirable job, says
the employer, and I shall compensate you £x. But the intellectual
is not working, and so cannot be paid except in the form of a donation,
grant, or fellowship.
Disappearance of the Literary Magazine
The whole movement of the post-war years has been to drive out leisure
from society and even from the sanctuary of the intellectual, the
academic school. Nowadays, an academic is a member of ‘staff’ in a
‘department’, his or her life is driven by government targets for
research not teaching, and the bureaucracy is like that of any other
profession. Those in the ‘real world’ say, well that’s life. Indeed it
is. But to apply the ethos of the factory or office to the academic
school impoverishes it, and the form-filling activities which are
common to many jobs is less tolerable in academia because ‘wages’ are
so low. For wages must be paid to academics, now that they are workers.
Connected to this deprivation of leisure is the disappearance of the
literary magazine. The corollary of research-based departments is a low
amount of class hours and so at least while academics have no time for
such things as journals, the students do (though in practice there are
few such ventures). The classical literary magazine, popular outside
the academic circles, which flourished for two-and-a-half centuries
until the second war, is now not only dead, but forgotten. Again, this
is explained by the all-subsuming Total Work State which sucks the
leisure out of our lives. What was noble in working-class culture –
Ruskinian evening lectures, a respect for education, that sort of thing
– has been assuredly undermined by commerce driven popular culture.
Home from the factory or office to slump at home and then out for
another day ad infinitum. That is exactly what the government wants –
unskilled labour with no aspirations. And then there is the other thing
much desired – the continuing decline of religious belief, for religion
is the thing most likely to bring lofty ideas about human dignity to
the proles. It’s fairly obvious that Matthew Arnold’s naïve faith
in the ability of culture (without religion) to circulate ‘the best
that has been thought and known in the world’ has been proven nonsense.
Addison and Steele
If we are to have a literary journal then, let it be one based on
leisure. It is unlikely that much will be learned from the Times
Literary Supplement and the London
Review of Books, though both are
superb in their way. But much will be learned from the eighteenth
century prose-stylists, like Addison and Steele who produced the Tatler
and the Spectator. Their
great literary essays combined the ‘novelty of
literary experiment with the security of journalistic convenience’. In
that tradition are all the popular journalists up to Chesterton. The Spectator was the
conversation, quite literally, of the coffeehouses of
London; it was the product of leisure. And so Addison’s creature, the Spectator,
famously proclaimed that ‘I have brought philosophy out of
closets and libraries, schools and colleges, to dwell in clubs and
assemblies, at tea tables and in coffeehouses.’
It makes sense that the writers who produced the great essays are not
on our university syllabi. According to one honest left-wing critic,
‘[t]he work of both Addison and Steele has features that render it
useless to critics housed in English departments.’ The occasional essay
is an inherently ‘conservative’ form, embodying the high-leisure of the
bourgeoisie; its subjects are often directly related to leisure, such
as Chesterton’s gem, ‘On Lying in Bed’. As such, what use has this form
for the modern academic department?
Anyway, before your editor gets too heated and emotional, let us
conclude by saying that the Mitre
Literary Review, the little brother
of the Mitre, is a minor show of
defiance. The journal has no ‘learning
outcomes’ and we hope you catch no ‘transferable skills’. We aspire, at
least, to read and write for no end other than to make edifying use of
our leisure time. We hope you consider our Review, as one critic called
the original Spectator, ‘a
wholesome and pleasant regimen’.
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T H E M I T R E
L I T E R A R Y R E V I E W
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