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    <title>Notebooks   </title>
    <link>http://bactra.org/notebooks</link>
    <description>Cosma's Notebooks</description>
    <language>en</language>

  <item>
    <title>Jacques Barzun</title>
    <link>http://bactra.org/notebooks/2003/09/20#barzun</link>
    <description>
French-American historian and educator, born 1907 into very &lt;a
href=&quot;artistic-modernism.html&quot;&gt;modernist&lt;/a&gt; circles (his father disputed with
another poet over the honor of having invented &quot;simultaneous&quot; poetry).  He
came to the States --- more specifically Columbia --- in the '20s for college
and has been there ever since.  He's an excellent writer, one of our last
living men of letters, and was for decades one of the guiding lights of liberal
education in this country, especially through the western civ. course he taught
at Columbia.  He's not a paragon, of course --- he's grown more conservative as
he's grown older, he's never quite reconciled himself to &lt;a
href=&quot;darwin.html&quot;&gt;Darwin&lt;/a&gt;, and he admires Pascal --- but even at his worst
it's instructive to see how a witty, intelligent, well-informed and
clear-thinking man went wrong, and at his best --- say, &lt;cite&gt;The House of
Intellect&lt;/cite&gt; --- he is superb.

&lt;P&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;wm-james.html&quot;&gt;William James&lt;/a&gt;.
&lt;a href=&quot;romanticists.html&quot;&gt;Romanticism&lt;/a&gt;.  &lt;a href=&quot;artistic-modernism.html&quot;&gt;Modernism&lt;/a&gt;.  &lt;a href=&quot;intellectuals.html&quot;&gt;Intellectuals&lt;/a&gt;.  US Education.  &lt;a href=&quot;mysteries.html&quot;&gt;Detective stories&lt;/a&gt; and their aesthetic.

&lt;ul&gt;Recommended:
	&lt;li&gt;&lt;cite&gt;The House of Intellect&lt;/cite&gt;
	&lt;li&gt;&lt;cite&gt;Science, the Glorious Entertainment&lt;/cite&gt;
	&lt;li&gt;&lt;cite&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;darwin.html&quot;&gt;Darwin&lt;/a&gt;, Marx, Wagner: Critique of a
Heritage&lt;/cite&gt;
	&lt;li&gt;&lt;cite&gt;God's Country and Mine&lt;/cite&gt;
	&lt;li&gt;&lt;cite&gt;The Teacher in America&lt;/cite&gt;
	&lt;li&gt;&lt;cite&gt;The Modern Researcher&lt;/cite&gt;  [My father went to college with
the first edition, which explained library catalog cards in detail.  In 1997 I
picked up the fifth, which considers what you really want in a laptop.
Considering all the supposed upheaveals of the last forty-five years, it is
shocking how little Barzun has had to change.]
	&lt;li&gt;&lt;cite&gt;The Energies of Art&lt;/cite&gt; esp.  &quot;&lt;a
href=&quot;artistic-modernism.html&quot;&gt;The Road to Abstraction&lt;/a&gt;&quot; and &quot;The Pleasures
of Detection.&quot;
	&lt;li&gt;&lt;cite&gt;Race, a Study in Superstition&lt;/cite&gt;
	&lt;/ul&gt;

&lt;ul&gt;To read:
	&lt;li&gt;&lt;cite&gt;Begin Here&lt;/cite&gt;
	&lt;li&gt;&lt;cite&gt;The bibliophile of the future&lt;/cite&gt;
	&lt;li&gt;&lt;cite&gt;Clio and the Doctors&lt;/cite&gt;
	&lt;li&gt;&lt;cite&gt;Critical Questions&lt;/cite&gt;
	&lt;li&gt;&lt;cite&gt;From Dawn to Decadence&lt;/cite&gt;
	&lt;li&gt;&lt;cite&gt;A Jacques Barzun Reader&lt;/cite&gt; (ed. Michael Murray, who is
preparing a biography)
	&lt;li&gt;&lt;cite&gt;Three talks&lt;/cite&gt;
	&lt;/ul&gt;
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