Following up the
Shawshank quotes in Monday’s post, Jeff
Renye notes a similar quote in the great recent German film The Lives of Others (2006): “Hope always dies last.” As Jeff
argues, the film’s multi-part ending (which I’m not going to spoil here!) might
illustrate the darkness in that quote; although it’s possible to argue that it
is ultimately more genuinely hopeful instead. In any case, another cultural
and national engagement with dark histories and the question of hope to be
sure!
Responding to
the literary and philosophical connections in Tuesday’s post, Linda Patton Hoffman notes
how fully “Transcendental (and Anti-Transcendental) ideas flow throughout
American society,” argues for how much “Melville [was] way ahead of his time,”
and makes the case that “all should read Walden—slowly and thoughtfully.”
Following up on my
Wilmington thoughts in Thursday’s post, Jonathan
Goodwin highlights Philip Gerard’s book Cape Fear Rising (1994), a
historical novel based on the Wilmington coup and massacre (which neither he
nor I have read, so if you have, please share your thoughts in the comments
below!).
Steve
Railton highlights one of the best hope-related lines in American
literature, Ishmael’s description of Queequeg as “hopelessly
holding up hope in the midst of despair” in Herman
Melville’s Moby Dick (1851).
Ezekial Healy points
instead to a more recent, pop culture engagement with hope, Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope (1977)—a
film that also features as one of its most famous lines, “Help me, Obi-Wan Kenobi. You’re my
only hope!”
Finally, I
can’t fail to mention a new blog post by my grad advisor and uber-American
Studier Miles
Orvell, based on his just-about-to-be-released book on Main
Street (and much else American Studies). Check it
out!
Week-long
special post goes up on Monday,
Ben
PS. What
do you think? Reactions to any of these thoughts, the week’s posts, or other
takes on hope in America?
9/22
Memory Day nominee: James
Lawson, the minister, draft
resister, and Civil
Rights leader whose theories and practice
of nonviolence connect traditions of faith and
spirituality, social protest and activism, and many other American voices and ideals.
9/23
Memory Day nominee: A tie between two very talented and very
American musicians, songwriters, artists, and legends, Ray Charles and Bruce
Springsteen.
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