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BARNARD PANEL CONSIDERS SEPTEMBER 11TH'S LEGACY

By Matthew Schuerman

NEW YORK, N.Y., November, 28, 2001 — Literature holds promise as a force for consolation and comprehension following the September 11th terror attacks – but Americans have not yet embraced books in the way they have music and ritual, a panel of Barnard teachers and authors said Tuesday evening.

From the newspaper profiles of the World Trade Center victims to nightly reports on Afghanistan, there has been no shortage of words in the last two months. But the panelists, speaking to more than 50 people in the Julius S. Held Auditorium, said the country had so far failed to mine great books for the kind of understanding that literature can help provide.

"As a nation, we don’t seem to be sharing words that comfort us, that illuminate the issues we now face," said Helene Foley, a professor of classics. "I doubt the same would be true in other countries that still have a literary tradition."

Other panelists and audience members suggested that that was just as well, that a literary legacy would take time in coming, or even that it was preferable if each reader selected his or her own choice.

It was the fifth Community Forum at the College since Sept. 11. At least two more are planned for the spring semester, Provost Elizabeth S. Boylan said. [For information about the past community forms, including panelist remarks and video clips, as well as general resources regarding the September 11th tragedies, click here.]

The four panelists and the moderator, Catharine Thiemer Nepomnyashchy, a Slavic professor and director of the Harriman Institute, did say that literature should make people understand the mentality of terrorists and the dangers that may lurk in the way the United States is reacting. And each speaker mentioned authors with which to start.

Foley, the classicist, pointed to Aeschylus’s "Oresteia," a trilogy of plays that tells of Agamemnon’s murder and the revenge taken by his son, Orestes, who is driven mad as a result. Michael Levine, chairman of the German department, and Elizabeth Reich, a recent Barnard alumna and teacher at The Fieldston School in the Bronx, both cited the Holocaust poet Paul Celan.

Nepomnyashchy, the Slavist, mentioned both "Crime and Punishment" and "The Brothers Karamazov," noting, "No one understands terrorists better than Dostoyevsky, and while he loathed them, no one spoke better for them."

Auden Reconsidered

English professor and writer Mary Gordon, took to task all those people who had been reciting in recent weeks W.H. Auden’s poem on the advent of World War II, "September 1, 1939." Auden, Gordon said, later repudiated the poem in part because of its heavy reliance on aphorisms, which made less sense as time went by.

"The lines ‘Those to whom evil is done/Do evil in return,’ seemed to be a lodestone, but in truth, did Hitler’s victims have it in them to be victimizers?" Gordon said. "The most clear victims of evil were dead and no longer had it in them to do evil in return."

Instead, Gordon recommended Joseph Conrad’s novel "The Secret Agent," about a twisted trio of revolutionaries and a plot to blow up the Royal Observatory in England.

Simplified Images

Not everyone was convinced that literature should, or could, play the sort of role Greek tragedy had in 5th Century Athens. Barnard President Judith R. Shapiro, who attended the forum, said during the question-and-answer period that the United States may be too diverse for there to be a single piece of literature that can speak to all citizens. Instead, we watch television.

"When we watched the towers come down time and time again, it was something that we as a nation were experiencing simultaneously," Shapiro said. "This was the reason why we could watch a white Bronco doing nothing but driving down a highway—it was like an Andy Warhol movie—because everyone was experiencing it together. These simplified images are something we can share."

Nor did all listeners find fault with the lack of a literary anthem that would somehow unify the country in the way that "God Bless America" has become the preferred musical piece of the moment. Jesse Galdston, one of Reich’s students at the Fieldston school, said the solitary nature of reading had been one of its attractions over the last two months.

"I’ve kind of felt a pressure to grieve together when I don’t want to grieve with everybody else," he said. "That’s why I like literature. It’s me reading words and asking myself, ‘What does this mean to me?’ Obviously, there’s a use for togetherness but literature does not need to be thrust into this arena."

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