The writer
is George Stuart Gordon (1881-1942), the British literary scholar, as quoted by
his widow, Mary Campbell Gordon, in the preface to his posthumously published Letters of George S. Gordon (Oxford
University Press, 1943). She cites no source, and I don’t find the passage
among Gordon’s letters, but it seems worth remembering and contemplating. By
Gordon’s definition, a deeply researched, well-organized field guide to the
dragonflies of North America can be judged literature, as can a 271-word presidential
address and collections of essays devoted to boxing, French cuisine and World
War II combat. There’s more to literature than the academic straightjacket of novels,
poems and plays.
I’m reminded
of a working definition of literature formulated by my late friend David Myers:
“Literature is simply good writing—where ‘good’ has, by definition, no fixed
definition.” Such unscientific elasticity will bother some, though not those “capable of being in uncertainties, Mysteries, doubts, without any irritable reaching after fact and reason.” Literature is the work we value, regardless of the
author or his intent. When we value something we wish to save it. As David writes:
“Literature
is just the writing that arouses the impulse to preserve it and pass it on. (I
call that the ‘canonical impulse.’ Canons are inseparable from literature. To
call something literature is to start a canon.)”
[Leave it to Dave Lull to find the unfindable. The passage at the top is from Gordon’s Anglo-American Literary Relations (1943). Thanks, Dave.]
[Leave it to Dave Lull to find the unfindable. The passage at the top is from Gordon’s Anglo-American Literary Relations (1943). Thanks, Dave.]
1 comment:
Indeed, literature is elastic enough to accommodate almost everything...except science fiction. (I seem to remember someone saying that recently...)
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