42 - H.P. Lovecraft’s Radical Political Evolution
Description
Recently I learned that H.P. Lovecraft had undergone a surprising and dramatic political transformation in the final years of his brief life. I wanted to read a few of Lovecraft's letters and discuss his views on capitalism, socialism, and the influence of the profit motive on artistic expression. (In the middle part of this episode, I also indulge in a bit of culture war stuff, so consider yourself warned.) In these letters from the last several years of his life, his notorious racism seems to fade, and he explicitly rejects the reactionary political ideology he held prior to 1931. He ruthlessly critiques capitalism, speaks glowingly of Marx, and warns us that our only options are socialism or barbarism. Anyone familiar with the author knows how out of kilter this feels compared to the absurdly reactionary person who most of us know as Lovecraft.
First episode on Lovecraft
@waldenpod
Lovecraft Letters:
1937, Catherine Moore
1936 Arthur Sechrist
1934, Helen Barlow
Lovecraft Audiobooks:
Dagon
The Call of Cthulhu
At the Mountains of Madness
The Shadow Over Innsmouth
/ timestamps /
00:00 Introduction
02:53 Flawed Characters, Real and Fictional
09:30 Letter to Catherine Moore (1937)
13:00 Letter to Helen Barlow (1934)
15:32 Letter to Arthur Sechrist (1936)
17:23 Art & the Profit Motive
19:52 The Shadow
Transcript
Today we discuss Mary the color scientist, her cousin Fred, and a colorblind Norwegian neuroscientist. Specifically, we talk about why Philip Goff thinks "phenomenal curiosity" threatens the ability hypothesis and the phenomenal concept strategy, ruling out moderate forms of physicalism. ...
Published 11/10/24
We discuss Philip Goff’s conversion, the online reaction to it, and what his “heretical Christianity” involves. Is he a real Christian? What does he think about the resurrection, the ascension, the miracles of Christ, the virgin birth, the trinity, inerrantism, the atonement, and God’s...
Published 10/10/24