Aestheticism, Evil, Homosexuality, and Hannibal_If Oscar Wilde Ate People by Geoff Klock
Author:Geoff Klock [Klock, Geoff]
Language: eng
Format: epub
ISBN: 9781498548489
Goodreads: 35756428
Publisher: Lexington Books
Published: 2017-10-11T00:00:00+00:00
Conclusion
In the introduction to this book I quoted Walter Pater, who said that all art aspires to the condition of musicâto a state of abstraction free of content. This abstraction is often seen in religious terms, as getting close to the invisible, purely spiritual substance of God, and is thus used in churches, as part of service. But as Christian philosopher Søren Kierkegaard points out, Presbyterians âregard the organ as the devilâs bagpipes which lull serious reflection to sleep, just as dance benumbs good intentions.â1 Kierkegaard, a Dane like Mads Mikkelsen, sees music as being the embodiment of sensuality in a complex way: âThis is where the significance of music is revealed in its full validity, and in a stricter sense it also reveals itself as a Christian art, or rather, as the art which Christianity posits by shutting it out, as the medium for what Christianity shuts out and thereby posits. In other words, music is the demonic. In the erotic sensual genius, music is its absolute object.â2 Kierkegaard says later âmusic always expresses the immediate in its immediacy . . . in language there is reflection and therefore language cannot express the immediate,â3 the immediate of sensual satisfaction that so entrances the hedonist, the pleasure seeker, the libertine. We think of the kind of music that Hannibal listens to as higher and more refined, but it is a higher and more refined form of pleasureâjust as his meals are; Hannibal always pairs good music with scenes of Hannibal cooking. As music is the emblem of what is important in art, it may show that all art is quite dangerous, demonic even.
Montaigne, in his 1580 essay âOn Cannibalsâ describes inhabitants of the new world eating each other not for nourishment, but âto symbolize ultimate revengeâ;4 the most famous skeptic in the world, he compares the practice of these so-called âbarbariansâ to the torture his own countrymen engage in and finds Europe wanting: at least the newly discovered tribes kill their victims first, rather than make them suffer. This kind of skepticism is not what Hannibal is engaging in. Whatever else Hannibal is he is a defender of value. I have already shown how Hannibal fully incarnates the classic humanities trope of âgather ye rosebuds while ye may.â He also defends the existence of God, and not just to initiate Will into Gnosticism: Hannibal asks the Mural Killer âWhen your great eye looked to the heavens, what did it see?â
Grey: Nothing.
Hannibal: Not anymore.
Grey: There is no God.
Hannibal: Certainly not with that attitude. God gave you purpose, not only to create art, but to become it. (2.2)
Consider this exchange with Willâs neurologist, on the topic of Iberico ham. Hannibal says âis the pig, once fattened and slaughtered and air-cured really superior to any other pig? Or is it simply a matter of reputation preceding productâ and the doctor replies flippantly âitâs irrelevant. If the meat eater believes itâs superior then belief determines valueâ (1.10). We have an idea that atheists and
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