no author hits it out of the park every time. where am i acting like that? we're discussing classics and all i'm venturing here (which isn't very outrageous) is that every classic has, on some basis, earnt its place in the canon-- that's part of the parcel of canonicity. i don't think that an artist has failed because you as a reader don't 'grasp' it, at all. say the author provides a schemata for reading his book, a sort of manual for the uninitiated. it illuminates the work and arms you with the requisite knowledge and approach to grasp the piece of art's intent: all of a sudden a doorway is opened and you can marvel at the artistic integrity and autonomy of the work. what your argument results in, at its logical conclusion, is that no books or pieces of art should be written that exclude anyone on the basis of knowledge or intelligence. what would that mean for art, as a whole? it would be disastrous.
take joyce's ulysses. is it a failure as a book because you don't understand every allusion or allegory, or because you don't have a good enough grasp of the western classical tradition to recognise every historical name and reference? or is it a modernist masterpiece that combines just about every aspect and style of the western artistic tradition in one conclusive, contemporary high-point? a failure, by your method, because you will not have read enough homer, dante, shakespeare and aquinas to appreciate the art's full implicated effects. a shame.
take joyce's ulysses. is it a failure as a book because you don't understand every allusion or allegory, or because you don't have a good enough grasp of the western classical tradition to recognise every historical name and reference? or is it a modernist masterpiece that combines just about every aspect and style of the western artistic tradition in one conclusive, contemporary high-point? a failure, by your method, because you will not have read enough homer, dante, shakespeare and aquinas to appreciate the art's full implicated effects. a shame.
libertarian benefit collector - anti-academic super-intellectual. http://mixlr.com/the-little-phrase/