The other day, I was re-reading a biography of C. S. Lewis (A. N. Wilson's, to be precise), and enjoying not so much the biography of Lewis as the description of a time, and a lifestyle, that is now gone. here is much I don't regret from that time (world wars, women's lack of basic rights, no antibiotics, etc) but one thing that ruck me very
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And the value of being well read for Lewis and Tolkien excluded a whole of writers/texts as not important/not useful, so I don't in fact yearn for those days at all.
I don't really feel we need to take over their canon because we accept the value of being well read. Issues of canon will always appear, regardless of how we deal with it - but not reading strikes me as worse.
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And I was taught Shelley by someone who'd quite obviously never read Plato, or some of the Greek lyric poets that Shelley refers to.
I don't see why we can't make the reading list more inclusive without throwing out some of the essentials. Or read just for content and ideas.
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