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Ron Price
06-12-2006, 01:53 AM
THE POLITICAL AFTER 1936

My poetry is political in the sense that George Orwell used the word. He used the word political in the widest possible sense. By political purpose in writing Orwell meant “the desire to push the world in a certain direction, to alter other peoples' idea of the kind of society that they should strive after.” “Once again,” Orwell went on, “no book is genuinely free from political bias.”1 Even the opinion that art should have nothing to do with politics is itself a political attitude.

Orwell was in his early thirties when his specific political-literary orientation began to take shape. “The Spanish war and other events in 1936-37 turned the scale,” he said, “and thereafter I knew where I stood. Every line of serious work that I have written since 1936 has been written, directly or indirectly, against totalitarianism and for democratic socialism, as I understand it. It seems to me nonsense, in a period like our own, to think that one can avoid writing of such subjects. Everyone writes of them in one guise or another. It is simply a question of which side one takes and what approach one follows. And the more one is conscious of one's political bias, the more chance one has of acting politically without sacrificing one's aesthetic and intellectual integrity.” -Ron Price with thanks to 1George Orwell, “Why I Write,” 1947 at The Political Writings of George Orwell Internet Site, 2006.

You said it well, George,
after ten years of practice
of your art.1 It took me 40
years on some sinuous line
to make my work into an art.2

My starting point was a very
different partisanship, you
might call it a spiritual view,
some facts to which I want
to draw attention, to expose
some false consciousness,
to get a hearing, to find some
space in the public view.

I, like you, am driven on
by some demon whom I
can not resist or understand.
But political purpose is at
the base of my literary vitality.
Were it not for this energy
my writing would be lifeless,
betrayed into purple passages,
sentences without meaning,
decorative adjectives and humbug.

1 1936/7-1946/7 2 15 to 55: 1959 to 1999

--Ron Price June 12th 2006 ;)

caesar
06-16-2006, 08:47 AM
Hi, Ron. I'm new here. I am glad to hear about your political consciousness. I think that 'Animal Farm' is the greatest treatise on politics - it's the Bible of Politics.

I look forward to hearing more from you. Kindly suggest to me some good books on political philosophy.

Ron Price
09-02-2007, 02:05 AM
If you still exist I certainly appreciate your response and your kind words. There are so many books on the subject you mention. The first one that came to mind as I started writing this sentence was: Robert Nisbet's "The Social Philosophers, 1980(circa).-Best wishes.-Ron:yawnb:

Ron Price
07-20-2015, 07:41 AM
After more than 7 years I'll add some more of my thoughts on philosophy and political science at this link to my website: http://www.ronpriceepoch.com/PHILOSOPHY.html ...My website on the subject of philosophy divides the field of philosophy into: classical, medieval and modern, three separate sub-divisions and three separate webpages. Readers who come to this introductory section on philosophy are advised to click on one of the other sub-sections at the top-right if they want to continue reading on the subject of philosophy in one of those 3 time-periods. Readers who want some of my take on other disciplines, other topics, should go to other sections of this website. Readers can click on any one of the many other sections found at the top of this access-page. Given the inevitable, and in this 21st century, necessary interdisciplinary nature of so many fields of study, I encourage readers to go to some of the other sub-sections of this website, dealing as they do with: history and political science, economics and sociology, religion and the print and electronic media, inter alia.

This introductory section on philosophy also includes the subject of "political science" toward the end of this webpage. There is much more to political science than the endless partisan discussions that fill the air-waves day after day and night after night. The daily dose of the serious and the trivial from the world of partisan politics and popular culture is often important, sometimes entertaining, but sometimes highly complex, indeed far-too complex for your average punter requiring, as many subjects often do, a knowledge-base far in excess of the basic facts of the news-item in question. Many issues are dealt-with in a two-minute, a 30 second, or a 10 second fact-grab or sound-bite; the viewer is often left at the end of "the news" with an assortment of stuff that requires the sport and the weather to neutralize the heat, the sound and the fury. For more go to: http://www.ronpriceepoch.com/PHILOSOPHY.html