Book finished: Frances Yates and the Hermetic Tradition
08/07/2014
I first confess I was drawn to borrow this book by the mention of "the Hermetic Tradition" in the title, not by any knowledge of either the author or of Yates herself.
Having now read it, and upon searching for a picture of the cover, I encountered in the Wikipedia entry for Yates: -
"Influence on popular culture
John Crowley drew extensively on Yates for the occult motifs in Little, Big (1981) and the Ægypt Sequence (1987-2007) in which she briefly appears as a character.[citation needed]".
And here we have the source of my interest in "the Hermetic Tradition", because in my library I have both Little, Big and Ægypt (1987)!
What's more, now I will have to seek out the rest of the "Sequence". I have always rated Little, Big amongst the top ten or twenty books I have read, and it is one of the few I have read more than once.
Having now read it, and upon searching for a picture of the cover, I encountered in the Wikipedia entry for Yates: -
"Influence on popular culture
John Crowley drew extensively on Yates for the occult motifs in Little, Big (1981) and the Ægypt Sequence (1987-2007) in which she briefly appears as a character.[citation needed]".
And here we have the source of my interest in "the Hermetic Tradition", because in my library I have both Little, Big and Ægypt (1987)!
What's more, now I will have to seek out the rest of the "Sequence". I have always rated Little, Big amongst the top ten or twenty books I have read, and it is one of the few I have read more than once.
I will not make an analysis of the quality of the biography itself, it seems fine to me.
The tale of this woman's life made me feel sorry for her because of the restrictions on her life due to social attitudes. However, I was also jealous of her apparent intellectual freedom, her life of simply following ideas up, to the point where there was enough to write a book
She was also influential not just for what she studied, but for her methods and approach, looking to understand how those in history saw things themselves, not just looking at things as seen from the present. I was also impressed by her intellectual determination, for example, teaching herself Italian in order to study Italian sources for her studies.
I have found blogging this book more stimulating than reading it, because I can look up what it makes me think of as I write, not something possible while reading on the train.
The tale of this woman's life made me feel sorry for her because of the restrictions on her life due to social attitudes. However, I was also jealous of her apparent intellectual freedom, her life of simply following ideas up, to the point where there was enough to write a book
She was also influential not just for what she studied, but for her methods and approach, looking to understand how those in history saw things themselves, not just looking at things as seen from the present. I was also impressed by her intellectual determination, for example, teaching herself Italian in order to study Italian sources for her studies.
I have found blogging this book more stimulating than reading it, because I can look up what it makes me think of as I write, not something possible while reading on the train.
It appears Yates had a big influence in convincing other historians to consider how much Hermetic/Kabbalist and Gnostic writings influenced medieval thought. For example, in a Google search for "Frances Yates" at site:http://www.gnosis.org, Yates gets 10 hits.
(Errr... 4 hits as at 25/09/20, either I was wrong, or she has lost popularity.)
(Errr... 7 hits as at 19/12/23, either I was wrong, or she has not lost so much popularity.)
She also brought to attention the historical use of memory techniques before printing mechanised information preservation.
I have read in the past about Hermeticism here, if the reader wishes to explore further.
(Errr... 4 hits as at 25/09/20, either I was wrong, or she has lost popularity.)
(Errr... 7 hits as at 19/12/23, either I was wrong, or she has not lost so much popularity.)
She also brought to attention the historical use of memory techniques before printing mechanised information preservation.
I have read in the past about Hermeticism here, if the reader wishes to explore further.
The brutal truth of war
I quote the book here simply because the passage struck me as such a telling illustration of the effects of WWI. In describing the social scene at the time of the subject's youth, the author quotes another writer:
"In an insightful study, Virginia Nicholson discusses the post-war generation's "enforced spinsterhood and all it entailed." Nicholson reports that, toward the end of the war (when Frances was 17), one headmistress addressed her female pupils thus:
I have come to tell you a terrible fact. Only one out of ten of you girls can ever
hope to marry. This is not a guess of mine. It is a statistical fact. Nearly all the
men who might have married you have been killed. You will have to make your
way in the world as best you can."
My own Paternal Grandmother was good friends with two ladies of her age who were both single and had never married after both their fiancés were killed in WWI.
"In an insightful study, Virginia Nicholson discusses the post-war generation's "enforced spinsterhood and all it entailed." Nicholson reports that, toward the end of the war (when Frances was 17), one headmistress addressed her female pupils thus:
I have come to tell you a terrible fact. Only one out of ten of you girls can ever
hope to marry. This is not a guess of mine. It is a statistical fact. Nearly all the
men who might have married you have been killed. You will have to make your
way in the world as best you can."
My own Paternal Grandmother was good friends with two ladies of her age who were both single and had never married after both their fiancés were killed in WWI.
Culture as a tool of historians
"It is of course a very bad play," Yates commented, "But it may, perhaps, be urged that it is in the inferior literary product that one can best study the ideas current among ordinary men at a given epoch, not in the works of the genius who transcends his epoch."
I was greatly struck by this comment, as it resonated with my thoughts over the years regarding popular music. "Corny" songs have this illustrative property as well.
I was greatly struck by this comment, as it resonated with my thoughts over the years regarding popular music. "Corny" songs have this illustrative property as well.
Consider "Agadoo" (1984) which definitely qualifies as "inferior": - "In a survey for dotmusic in 2000, respondents voted "Agadoo" as the fourth most annoying song of all time. In a poll for Q magazine in 2003, a panel of music writers voted "Agadoo" as the worst song of all time......."
The lyrics definitely show "current ideas": That in the Anglosphere, words from different cultures are all interchangeable as "foreign". That Arabic coffee, South American pineapples, Caribbean calypso, Caribbean rum, Indonesian sarong, are all representative of North Pacific Hawaii. That pineapples, which grow on the ground, may possibly be pushed out of trees? That Hula involves jumping up and down. That Hula is not a dance, but a song. That Hula expertise is not enough to give up selling pineapples for a living. That the huge pineapple-growing industry is still in competition with ukulele-playing casual vendors. That there is a Hawaiian moon which is somehow not the same as the moon seen elsewhere. That Hawaiian dance experts are in for a bit of casual sex on the beach. In general the song's success shows UK popular culture's geographical and cultural ignorance in 1984. |
Agadoo
Repeated lyrics removed for clarity (and sanity) Agadoo doo doo push pineapple shake the tree Agadoo doo doo push pineapple grind coffee To the left to the right jump up and down and to the knees Come and dance every night sing with a hula melody I met a hula mistress somewhere in Waikiki Where she was selling pineapple playing ukulele And when I went to the girl come on and teach me to sway She laughed and whispered to me yes come tonight to the bay The lovely beach and the sky The moon of Hawaii The rum calypso sarong We'll all be singing this song Then down on the shore They gather romance She showed me much more Not only to dance Michel Eugene Delancray/Mya-Micheline-Helyett Simille/Francois Pierre Camille Bernheim Warner/Chappell Music, Inc. |