Aesthetic. What is so hard to understand about this? Does everything have to be counted quantitatively? We are talking about quality here, not quantity. It's not about counting anything, but taking a work for what it is by it's intrinsic artistic merit. And how do you see religious influence as something less vague than artistic merit?



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) over the very altar where the Pope himself was to hold mass... nor dared to have placed portraits of high-ranking clergy who had offended him in his portrayal of Hell in the Last Judgment. Why Shakespeare... with his problematic sexual history and his knack for challenging clear-cut morals and religious faith? Surely Milton would have been far more ideal? And Dante?! My god! Almost a heretic. The woman of his sexual fantasies placed on the right hand throne next to the Virgin Mary?! All his enemies condemned to horrific tortures in hell. Too often I get the feeling that such critics have little, if any, real love or passion for literature or art. Their real obsession is political, but they have the misguided notion that somehow they might change the social construct by erasing the past... or perhaps they just recognize that no one outside of the arts would actually take them seriously.




