Mister Scratch wrote:I do think that quite a few of your posts are "insincere" and "bad" in one way or another
And I sincerely think that you're borderline insane, so I guess I can't really complain.
Mister Scratch wrote:I've been under the impression that England felt that, for a Mormon literary artist to develop fully, it would involve delving into territory that the official Church wouldn't much like.
I'm not really familiar with what Gene thought about that subject.
If your summary is correct, though, I disagree.
Mister Scratch wrote:Again I refer to Evensen, who was pressured out of BYU after a student "ratted" him out to the GAs, complaining of "a darkness" in his work.
I know little to nothing of that story, and wonder if it's altogether true. In some analogous cases of which I'm personally aware, the commonly accepted stories are largely false.
Mister Scratch wrote:I agree that Evensen's work is quite dark; but ought this be grounds for booting him out of BYU, or alienating him from the Church?
I don't know who "alienated" him from the Church, or even whether anybody actually
did.
As for "booting him out of BYU," again, I just don't know the story well enough to judge, and don't trust popular legends about these things quite enough to draw conclusions.
I will say that, when he become controversial, I immediately marched out to buy a copy of his novel. I was prepared to defend him, since I do think that Mormon culture tends to be too artistically conservative. But both my wife and I -- neither of us particularly squeamish, both of us serious about serious art -- found his writing genuinely revolting. I couldn't really muster much enthusiasm for coming to his defense. And I wondered whether the University might not be right to feel uncomfortable being associated with his work.
Face it: If somebody writes something problematic at Harvard or Berkeley, nobody holds Harvard or Berkeley (let alone, in the latter case, the state of California), responsible for the work. But the work of professors at BYU is often taken, rightly or (as I think) wrongly, to reflect directly on the Church. (Case in point: I received a telephone call just this morning from a rather powerful individual with ties to the leaders of various Near Eastern countries, concerned that, if a certain speaker were allowed on campus, those leaders might be offended and hold it against the University as a whole and against the Church. I offered as robust a defense of variety in viewpoints at an academic institution as I was able, and said that, anyway, I could -- and would -- do nothing to block the speaker from coming.)
Mister Scratch wrote:Is there a place within the Church to explore the darker aspects of life?
Certainly. And dramatists like Tom Rogers (on Huebner and the Mountain Meadows Massacre) and Tim Slover (on Liberty Jail) and historians like Ron Walker, Richard Turley, and Glen Leonard (on the Mountain Meadows Massacre), among others, have done it.
Mister Scratch wrote:If the portions of The Brothers Karamazov dealing with the cruelty of God were featured within the context of a novel explicitly about the LDS Church, would the Brethren tolerate it?
Some would be more receptive than others. They're not a monolith.
Mister Scratch wrote:Things like misogyny and depravity are part of life, though.
I agree, and I think they should be treated.
I don't dislike LaBute's work because he treats misogyny. I dislike it because he seems to me to be a misogynist.
I know that Brian Evensen said he was trying to examine depravity, which would be legitimate. But his work, to me, seemed actually depraved. I was surprised by it, and disliked it intensely.
Mister Scratch wrote:And, as I noted above, Evensen felt that he could not examine these parts of the human condition within the confines of the Church. I've only read parts of Altmann's Tongue---and wasn't it a short story collection rather than a novel?
Yes, it was. It's been ages since I've looked at it.
Mister Scratch wrote:so I cannot comment on that, though I have read The Parted Veil [I believe that's the name of it] and I thought it wasn't half bad. Have you read it? It is about a young man who winds up getting "infected" by the evil inherent in an aspect of Mormon history.
I haven't read it.
Mister Scratch wrote:Perhaps the sense---embodied in your above comment---that artists ought to be forbidden from exploring certain things is what prevents the arts from flourishing within LDS culture?
I've said absolutely not a word about "forbidding" artists from exploring anything -- although I do think that there are limits to what a Mormon artist can legitimately do as a serious disciple. (A genuinely Mormon pornography is almost as inconceivable to me as a seriously Mormon snuff film.)