Mailnews_old

austraLasia 941
 

Not-so-'funny things have happened on the way to the Forum', or, how do Salesians understand ‘culture’ from an English language mindset?

 

ROME: 5th November '04 -- The company words keep is all important!  The gap between culture and faith is the word ‘and’, linguistically speaking.  That is, while we are expressing concern that there is a divide between the two in our modern world, our very discourse is able to keep them together by a small, positive conjunctive unit, subtly yoking them together.

    But the yokes are many: in Italy there is the Ministry for Cultural Goods, in London the Department of Culture, Media and Sport.  The company words keep...  recall that Boy George formed a band called Culture Club in 1981?  Beni-culturali is one message, culture-media-sport-club another, as is the contrast between a ministry and a department.

    Tankfuls of ink and terrabytes of inquiry have been given to culture, but have we noticed the semantic creep, in English?  Along with the fact that the EU officially refused to acknowledge the Christian roots of culture in Rome last week, other not-so-funny things have happened on the way to the Forum.  And they can affect the way you and I, as Salesians, read texts of our own kind, say, by Fr Viganò, who employed the term culture across nearly 90% of his writing.

    George Orwell in Nineteen Eighty-Four blamed a fictional Oceania (pity about that choice) for reducing the language, thus restricting people’s memory and ability to think: you make Thoughtcrime impossible if you reduce the number and power of words!  But reducing words is not the only way to restrict thought.

    Matthew Arnold, a British contemporary of Don Bosco,1822-1888, did more than any English writer to keep culture firmly yoked to religion even while in gentlemanly fashion setting uphigh culture in opposition to Christianity.  But the pattern, since Arnold, has been to expand the word in  linguistically and possibly mischievous ways, where the expansion restricts our ability to think.  Let me explain.

    Pluralisation:  Just add an ‘s’ and a grand concept becomes so diffused it begins to lose meaning altogether;  as many cultures as there are groups of two or more!  Mind you, the pluralisation of culture goes back to Herder (in German) in the late 18th Century, but it wasn’t picked up in English to any great degree until the development of anthropology from ethnology in the 20th Century.

    Adjectival expansioncultural only entered English in the 1870’s or thereabouts.  But tie it to genocide, for example, and you expand meaning in ways that lessen what genocide is, an unspeakable horror.  Cultural genocide has been levelled against the Taliban, Saddam Hussein, even the IRA, but what about the real genocide?

    Colloquial expansion: a subtle one this; a culture vulture is a person interested in the refined arts, but in the mouth of the utterer it has a belittling intent: a pretentious, excessive interest in the refined arts!  Then there’s pop culture, street culture…

     Meanwhile the term cultura keeps a very different type of company in our Salesian literature, rather more optimistic, intrinsically valuable, more geared to the grand salvific plan for the human person, rather more singular, I would say in general.  And that has something to do with the Italian mindset, and with Continental roots which are Christian even if denied.  It's just that the English reader carries rather more 'baggage' on the way to the Forum, and we do well to be alert to that as we read.

JBF

 


  1. 0950_Australian Province celebrates diaconate ordinations

    CategoryAUL Views223
    Read More
  2. 0949_Past Pupils: the newest national federation takes its first steps

    CategoryGIA Views453
    Read More
  3. 0948_Feature Film by Salesian screened at IFFI

    CategoryIndia Views568
    Read More
  4. 0947_Migrant Ministry: Salesians in Japan fully involved

    CategoryGIA Views349
    Read More
  5. 0946_Firecrackers, lamps light up India as Hindus celebrate Diwali

    CategoryIndia Views394
    Read More
  6. 0945_Korea learns from Fr Cimatti as part of its Jubilee effort

    CategoryKOR Views352
    Read More
  7. 0944_Youth Ministry: a step forward in Japan

    CategoryGIA Views480
    Read More
  8. 0943_BOSCOM-India: supports 'forum of information exchange and opinion generation on youth, for youth and by youth'

    CategoryIndia Views409
    Read More
  9. 0942_An English, Salesian-adapted style guide for your use

    CategoryRMG Views556
    Read More
  10. 0941_Not-so-'funny things have happened on the way to the Forum', or, how do Salesians understand ‘culture’ from an English language mindset?

    CategoryWorld Views219
    Read More
  11. 0940_The afterglow: some comments by young people on the RM's visit

    CategoryRMG Views234
    Read More
  12. 0939_RM's final hours in Japan: 'The best Church history written by missionaries!'

    CategoryGIA Views456
    Read More
  13. 0938_New Thai Salesian Bishop comments on recent deaths in Southern Province

    CategoryTHA Views523
    Read More
  14. 0937_The Rector Major amongst the Caritas Sisters of Miyazaki - and at Miyazaki

    CategoryGIA Views456
    Read More
  15. 0936_The First Rector Major to visit Miyazaki!

    CategoryGIA Views327
    Read More
  16. 0935_Passing of Sr Anne Ivaldi FMA, first Delegation Superior of the Australian = FMAs

    CategoryAUL Views545
    Read More
  17. 0934_RM spends time with young adults: 'You will not die, you will live'

    CategoryGIA Views269
    Read More
  18. 0933_Salesian Polytechnic Ikuei: RM addresses school staff on education in a fast-changing world

    CategoryGIA Views310
    Read More
  19. 0932_Salesian Family Day for RM in Japan

    CategoryGIA Views471
    Read More
  20. 0931_Youth Meet: a moot point. Would it do for 'Confronto'?

    CategoryWorld Views261
    Read More
Board Pagination Prev 1 ... 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 ... 177 Next
/ 177