04 April 2017

Literary Humility

One of the harder things about trying to be a writer is that so often it seems like I am shouting into a void. Who actually reads this thing? This site is starting to get quite a bit of traffic, but for all I know it's a bunch of Russian hackers. Or, even think of something like the recent publication of Rod Dreher's The Benedict Option. The book seems like it's making quite the stir--and for a religious nonfiction book, I think it is--but I imagine I could walk into the bar down the street from my house and no one inside would have heard of the book, the author, or the controversy swirling around it. Even a work that is in the top ten of the New York Times bestseller list is barely going to make a splash outside of the small niche of people interested in such things. Which is kind of bleak, especially for someone like me who will likely never be read much outside of a loving circle of friends and family.

But, worry not, modern writers. This problem is fairly old. I'm reading The Scarlet Letter which I haven't read since I was a junior in high school (which, let's be honest, likely means that I've never read it). The opening chapter, I guess you'd call it, is autobiographical, focusing on a period in Hawthorne's life when he worked as the chief officer at a customs house in Salem, Massachusetts. He had achieved some degree of literary merit before his employment there, mostly riding the coattails of the transcendentalists from what I can tell, but no one in his sphere of influence at the Customs House knew the first thing about his literary career or gave one fig about it if they did know.

Hawthorne took this as an encouragement to humility, which it definitely is. He writes:


It is a good lesson--though it may often be a hard one--for a man who has dreamed of literary fame, and of making for himself a rank among the world's dignitaries by such means, to step aside out of the narrow circle in which his claims are recognized, and to find how utterly devoid of significance, beyond that circle, is all that he achieve, and all he aims at.

As dour as that can seem, I think it is a good warning to writers to not overestimate our influence. This doesn't mean that writers should stop writing, or that the work is ultimately meaningless. Hawthorne has been dead for a century and a half and he's still outselling most contemporary novelists, after all. But it is proper to recognize that for the vast majority of people the act of writing is superfluous to a meaningful engagement with the world. In the invocation to Book VII of Paradise Lost, Milton prays that his work would "fit audience find, though few." This is the prayer, I think, for every writer. That we find the audience that is ready and open to what we have to say. The humility that inheres in the recognition that such a group is likely small is good for one who sets pen to paper or fingers to keys.

I am by no means a Stoic when it comes to life, but I do appreciate their insights on many things. Epictetus once wrote that "to live in the presence of great truths and eternal laws, to be led by permanent ideals, that is what keeps a man patient when the world ignores him and calm and unspoiled when the world praises him." Equanimity is a valuable goal for all people, but maybe especially important for the one who, in the words of the philosopher, lives in the presence of great truths and eternal laws. 

Such a rarefied experience of life can easily lead to pomposity, but if we remember that very few people actually give a crap about what we're doing we can be brought back to a level of humility that might actually make us useful both to the people who don't give a crap about us and the very small number that do.

2 comments:

  1. Hmmm.... well I give you great credit for bringing up this topic. I attend a technical university, where there is a small, struggling liberal arts department. They are convinced that they are under appreciated and "that few people actually give a crap." I have always had a soft spot for literature, but to tell you the truth, I cannot stomach to take a single class from that department other than they few that are required. And it is certainly not because I don't care for the subject matter. It is the attitude of the professors. The subtle way in which they talk down to the class as if we are ignorant children because we spend all day working with equations and haven't read an actual book in three years. You are absolutely right; they are very arrogant. But I think you missed the root cause.

    You advocate for humility by pointing out that "someone like me...will likely never be read much outside of a loving circle of friends and family." Ahhh!!! That's not humility. That is doubt! Doubt that is the opposite of faith! As a fellow Christian, I ask you to have faith in your words, in your writing. Believe and receive the fact that they will be heard far and wide. Clearly, you want your writing to make a difference. So exercise your faith and let it!

    It is not an author's passion or faith in his work that leads to arrogance. No, it is the fact that authors have their book groups, their fancy websites, their lunch discussions in which they discuss the finer points of high level thinking, and before long they believe themselves to be so very above the uncouth riff raff around them. Maybe they don't voice this sentiment, but it is there. And it is hinted at here in this post as well. You write that you believe it should be the prayer of every writer that his work would "fit audience find, though few." I spent the entire day studying beam displacement. I have never heard of Rod Dreher before. The last time I read a novel was in high school. I don't know who Milton is, but surely I cannot be the type of person he envisioned as a fit and ready audience.

    This is the problem, not the solution, to the arrogance the plagues literary circles. When you "pray" for a small group that cares about your grand ideas and writing, you are separating yourself off from the general populace. And even if that was not your conscious intent, it comes off as very arrogant to the rest of us.

    I apologize if I was overly critical. But this is a matter that lies very close to my heart. I love the arts, truly. But this elitist attitude that permeates the humanities has to go, if we are to get more people interested in literature, philosophy, and the like. Thank you for your honest post and for addressing a topic that few are even aware about.

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  2. Leiland, thanks for the thoughtful comment. May I ask how you stumbled across this? I am never sure how people end up reading this thing.

    As to your comment, I appreciate the challenge. I don't know that I lack faith; I pray that God would use what I write, particularly with my students and friends, to help shape the way they engage their faith. Also, I don't think it's arrogant to note, though, that most people just simply are not interested in the things that interest me. That is not the elitist in me (which is certainly present at times), but the realist. I am not puffing up my ideas as grand, just pointing out that the bubbles within which Christian writers operate are smaller than we imagine. The point of such a recognition is not to inflate myself with some under-appreciated-artist chip on my shoulder, but to realize that if I am to lovingly engage my neighbor it cannot merely be through writing. It has to be real flesh and blood interaction. If I am going to be useful to my neighbor, I need to acknowledge that they probably don't care about a lot of the stuff that animates me and move on to connecting where we can find common ground. And to realize that they have stuff to teach me.

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