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Leonard Cohen and Philosophy

Page 28

by Holt, Jason


  BRENDAN SHEA, PhD, teaches philosophy at Rochester Community and Technical College. He has published articles on the history and philosophy of science, ethics, and the philosophy of popular culture. Somewhat embarrassingly, he first learned who Leonard Cohen was when watching the 1990 Christian Slater film, Pump Up the Volume.

  PETER STONE is Ussher Assistant Professor of Political Science at Trinity College Dublin. He received his PhD from the University of Rochester in 2000. He has previously taught at Stanford University and held a Faculty Fellowship at Tulane University’s Center for Ethics and Public Affairs. Much of his research concerns the contributions that random selection can make to democracy and justice. He is the author of The Luck of the Draw: The Role of Lotteries in Decision Making (Oxford University Press, 2011) and the editor of Lotteries in Public Life: A Reader (Imprint Academic, 2011). He has also published articles in such journals as the Journal of Political Philosophy, the Journal of Theoretical Politics, Political Theory, Rationality and Society, and Social Theory and Practice. Last time he checked, his friends were not gone, and his hair wasn’t grey.

  LISA WARENSKI, PhD, is a philosopher who works primarily in epistemology, metaphysics, and the general philosophy of science. She teaches at City College and The Graduate Center of the City University of New York. Lisa is a former dancer and choreographer. Lisa first heard the song “Suzanne” one night at the age of thirteen when she was drifting off to sleep. She didn’t hear it again, but never forgot it, until some years later after the performance of a duet that she choreographed. One of her dancers then played Songs of Leonard Cohen for her for the first time, and she has been gripped by “Suzanne” ever since. She knows that she’s half crazy. (But that’s why you want to be there.)

  BERNARD WILLS is Professor of Humanities at Grenfell Campus Memorial University in Corner Brook, Newfoundland. He has a doctorate in Religious Studies from McMaster University and a Master’s in Classics from Dalhousie University. He hails from Cape Breton Island, Canada though he has spent well over a decade in Newfoundland. He is of such an age as to recall enjoying Leonard Cohen on his mother’s eight-track cassette player. In spite of this he continues to root among the garbage and the flowers of contemporary culture turning up scholarly papers, essays, and poems as he goes.

  EDWARD WINTERS studied painting at The Slade School of Fine Art before reading philosophy, taking his doctorate in philosophy at University College London. He has published widely in aesthetics and art criticism. He was co-director of History and Theory in the School of Architecture at University of Westminster and was head of fine art graduate programs at West Dean College. He has also taught history and philosophy of art at University of Kent. His latest book, Aesthetics and Architecture, is published by Continuum. As a result of a residency in southern Spain, he is currently working on a philosophical travelogue in conjunction with a series of fine art prints, entitled, Málaga Suite. He regrets having played the favorite game so carelessly, but is grateful for a life in bars, where he fought against the bottle in the graceful company of beautiful losers.

  Index

  Aaron (biblical), 19

  Abraham (biblical), 22–23

  Abu Ghraib, 222

  Adorno, Theodor W., 155, 162

  Aeschylus

  Agamemnon, 213

  aesthetics, best explanation in, 149

  afterlife, question of, 228

  agape, 111, 223

  Airplane! (film), 32

  Alexander, Jeffrey, 162–63

  Alexander the Great, 6

  Altman, Robert, 32

  ambiguity, 126

  ambivalence, 125

  Amos, Tori

  “Raincoat,” 69

  Strange Little Girls, 69

  Anaximander, 133

  The Answer, critique of idea of, 19, 22

  Antichrist, 41

  apocalypse, 46

  apokalypsis, 46

  Apollo, 79, 80

  Aquinas, Thomas, 234

  Arendt, Hannah, 134, 162

  Eichmann in Jerusalem, 161, 164

  Aristotle, 30, 108, 117, 195

  art, Apollonian versus

  Dionysian, 80

  asceticism, 173–74

  askesis, 217

  Auden, W. H., 25

  Aufhebung, 134

  Augustine, Saint, 40, 128

  Aurelius, Marcus, 6, 43

  auteur theory, xi

  Bach, J. S., 80

  Badham, John, 32

  Badhwar, Neera K., 108, 109

  banality of evil, 161–62

  Barbour, Douglas, 149

  Bauman, Zygmunt, 164

  Beatlemania, 207

  Beatles

  “She Loves You,” 134

  Beaudelaire, Charles, 239

  Beauvoir, Simone de, 126, 129

  The Ethics of Ambiguity, 126

  The Second Sex, 131

  Benjamin, Jessica, 107

  Berlin, Irving, 40

  “Always,” 51

  Berry, Chuck, x

  Bieber, Justin, 25

  biological essentialists, 35

  Bird on a Wire (film), 32

  Bizet, Georges

  Carmen, 83

  “black romanticism” (Scobie), 239

  Blake, William

  “The Garden of Love,” 150

  Blakley, Ronee, 62

  Bloom, Harold

  The Anxiety of Influence, 221

  body, as shaping mind, 102–3

  Bogart, Humphrey, 244

  The Book of Revelation (biblical), 237. See also John the Apostle: Apocalypse

  Boucher, David

  Dylan and Cohen, 57

  Brel, Jacques, 57

  Brod, Harry

  “Jewish Men,” 33

  Bronner, Ethan, 226

  Bruno, Giordano, 159

  Buckley, Jeff, 24, 67, 73, 132, 242, 245

  Buddha, 174

  Buddhism, and compassion, 239–40

  Burke, Alexandra, 72, 74, 251

  Butler, Judith, 37

  Gender Trouble, 36

  Cale, John, 24, 72, 132, 242, 244

  Callas, Maria, 57

  Camus, Albert, 21, 32

  on absurdity, 18–20

  The Myth of Sisyphus, 17–18, 20

  resignation in, 19–20

  Canadian history, 146–47

  Carroll, Jim, ix

  Carson, Anne, 39

  Cash, Johnny, 67

  Catherine of Alexandria, 13

  Catullus, 203

  Cave, Nick, 78

  “The Secret Life of the Love Song” (lecture), 75

  Chagall, Marc, 217

  chansonnier, 57–58

  Cheese, Richard, 73

  Lounge Against the Machine, 73

  Christgau, Robert, 62

  Christianity, and compassion, 239

  chronos, 43, 44

  Cicero, 3

  classical theory of concepts, 118

  The Cloud of Unknowing, 231, 234–35, 238, 239

  Coates, Susan W., 106–7

  Cohen, Leonard

  as acquired taste, 61

  affirmation/negation in, 236

  on afterlife, 228–29

  “Ain’t No Cure for Love,” 93, 206, 211

  “All There Is to Know about Adolf Eichmann” (poem), 162

  “Always” (cover song), 51

  ambiguity in, 127

  ambivalence in, 73, 125

  “Anthem,” 16, 22, 47–50, 96, 172, 213

  authenticity in, 120–21, 149–50

  “Avalanche,” 206

  “Ballad of the Absent Mare,” 34, 205, 209, 236

  Beautiful Losers (novel), 109, 139, 141–45, 220

  Best Reading of, 140

  Canadian context of, 143, 145–48, 150–53

  Obscenity Reading of, 139

  Poetical Reading of, 140, 143

  Political Reading of, 146–48, 150–51, 153

  Psychological Reading of, 144

  Religious Reading
of, 150

  Sexual Reading of, 149–50

  “Because Of,” 28

  “Be for Real,” 44, 46

  “Beneath My Hands,” 109

  The Best of Leonard Cohen (album), 64

  as Biblical prophet, 217

  “Bird on the Wire,” 31, 206, 211

  Book of Longing (poems), 222, 223, 228–29

  Book of Mercy (poems), 24–25, 221, 225

  “Born in Chains,” 221

  brokenness in, 24–25, 220

  and Buddhism, 172, 217–19, 231, 233, 239

  “The Butcher,” 206

  “Came So Far for Beauty,” 34, 114–15

  “Un Canadien Errant” (cover song), 235

  “The Captain,” 35

  changing lyrics of, 69

  “Chelsea Hotel,” 2, 4, 32, 68, 116, 209, 222

  “Closing Time,” 40, 50, 89, 93, 171, 206

  Cohen Live (album), 69

  collapse of irony in, 98–99

  “Come Healing,” 222, 223

  and compassion, 239

  “A Concert for Reconciliation, Tolerance, and Peace,” 226

  “crack in the wall” lyric, 49–50

  cracks of light in, 16, 48

  “Crazy to Love You,” 223

  cynicism in, 99

  “Dance Me to the End of Love,” 81, 129

  darkness/light in, 15–16, 25, 175

  dark space in, 186

  Dear Heather (album), 56, 182, 184

  death in, 134–35

  “Death of a Ladies’ Man,” 116

  “Democracy,” 5, 21, 22, 40, 49–50, 93, 95, 220

  distance/immediacy in, 96, 98, 113, 116

  divine disconsolation in, 220

  “Don’t Go Home with Your Hard-on,” 35

  dreamers/men of action in, 115

  “Dress Rehearsal Rag,” 206

  embezzlement from, 227

  embodied metaphors in, 205–7

  emotion in, 204

  epistemic humility in, 218–20

  “Everybody Knows,” 5, 34, 94, 96, 121, 213, 220

  existentialism in, 25

  “Famous Blue Raincoat,” 8–10, 29, 67–69, 115, 116, 119, 211

  The Favourite Game (novel), 76, 79, 84, 109, 144, 185

  femininity in, 27

  “Field Commander Cohen,” 31, 205

  in film soundtrack, 31

  “Fingerprints,” 210

  “First We Take Manhattan,” 45

  Flowers for Hitler (poems), 155–56, 162–63

  as gnostic, 165

  normality in, 158–59, 165

  radio and phone in, 163–64

  symbolism in, 156–57, 163–64

  The Future (album), 16, 18, 21, 40, 46, 47, 49, 50, 55, 171

  “The Future,” 20, 21, 33, 41, 42, 94, 168, 172, 221

  future as apocalyptic in, 40–41

  on gender relations, 28

  “Going Home,” 29, 67, 121, 228

  “golden voice” lyric, interpretations of, 65–68, 71

  “The Great Event,” 45

  “The Guests,” 36, 205, 236

  “The Gypsy’s Wife,” 203

  “Hallelujah,” 6, 22, 24, 69, 72–73, 96, 115, 122, 123, 125, 127, 129, 130, 209, 220, 222, 223, 245–51

  and “Amazing Grace,” 251

  ambiguity of, 248–51

  biblical references in, 249

  covers of, 72–74, 242

  as heretical, 250

  as meme, 244–45, 251–52

  as religious, 249–51

  as secular, 248–49

  healing in, 220

  “Heart with No Companion,” 34, 206

  “Hey, That’s No Way to Say Goodbye,” 6–7, 31, 171, 207, 222

  high and popular art in, x–xi

  and Hinduism, 217

  “Humbled in Love,” 206, 209

  I Am a Hotel (film), 203

  “I Can’t Forget,” 121

  iconography of, 232

  “If It Be Your Will,” 6

  immanence/transcendence in, 233

  imperfection and intimacy in, 96, 99

  I’m Your Man (album), 35

  “I’m Your Man,” 206

  infatuation in, 209

  “In My Secret Life,” 122, 205, 208

  “Iodine,” 206, 210

  irony in, 33–34, 42, 93–95, 98–100, 113

  and Islam, 224–26

  and Israel, 225–26

  “Is This What You Wanted,” 33

  “I Tried to Leave You,” 209

  jealousy in, 210

  Jesus in, 220, 232

  “Jewish Men,” 34

  “Joan of Arc,” 12

  and Judaism, 172

  and Judeo-Christianity, 217–21, 231–33

  Juno award, 55

  “The Land of Plenty,” 205, 213

  “Last Year’s Man,” 37, 206

  “The Law,” 221

  “Leaving Green Sleeves,” 211

  Let Us Compare Mythologies (poems), 167

  “Light as the Breeze,” 46, 114, 206, 222

  “Love Calls You by Your Name,” 206

  love in, 97–98, 209–10

  “Love Itself,” 171, 219, 228

  “Lover Lover Lover” 34, 225

  masculinities in, 27–29, 31, 32, 35–37

  “Master Song” 34, 115–16

  “Memories,” 35, 203, 206

  in Miami Vice, 31

  mind-body complexity in, 214

  monastic life, 171–72

  nakedness in, 46–47

  “Night Comes On,” 114, 171

  and nothingness, 239–40

  Old Ideas (album), 39, 56, 67

  Old Testament in, 34

  “On That Day,” 213

  “The Order of the Unified Heart” (symbolic order), 223

  “Our Lady of Solitude,” 114

  “Our Lady of the Torah”

  (poem), 221

  “Paper Thin Hotel,” 206, 210, 214

  paradoxes of, x–xi

  “The Partisan,” 34

  persona of, 40, 42, 67, 68

  as philosophical, 3

  as poet, ix

  as pop star–poet, ix–xi

  Prince of Asturia Award for Literature, 82

  as prophet, 217, 229

  prophetic persona of, 40, 42

  rabbinical heritage of, 172, 218

  Recent Songs (album), ix, 56, 231–33, 235, 236, 238, 240

  review criticism of, 59–60

  romantic love in, 117, 120, 122, 222–23

  sacred and profane in, 222

  and self-deception, 113, 116–17

  self-interest in, and misogyny, 129

  sexy irony in, 93–96

  “Sing Another Song, Boys,” 61

  as singer, 55–56

  “A Singer Must Die,” 4, 168, 211

  as singer-songwriter, 57–58

  “Sisters of Mercy,” 210

  “The Smokey Life,” 206

  as Socratic, 5

  solitude in, 135

  “So Long, Marianne,” 170, 209

  Songs of Leonard Cohen (album), 56, 75

  Songs of Love and Hate (album), 68

  Spanish influence on, 82

  spiritualization of love in, 113–14, 121–22, 130–31

  cost of, 115–16

  stereotype of, 15

  on stereotypes, 33–34

  as Stoical, 6–7

  “Stories of the Street,” 61

  “Story of Isaac,” 22, 34, 206, 221, 225

  Stranger Music: Selected Poems and Songs, 172

  “The Stranger Song,” 37, 115

  and surrealism, 157

  “Suzanne,” 67, 93, 101, 110–11, 129, 130–31, 191–92, 199–201, 203, 209, 220, 221, 232, 241

  body-perfect in, 110–11

  covers of, 127–28

  as teleological, 197

  “Tacoma Trailer,” 51

  “Take This Longing,” 106

  “Take T
his Waltz,” 171

  “Teachers,” 205, 206, 210

  Ten New Songs (album), 56

  “There Is a War,” 29, 81, 209

  “A Thousand Kisses Deep,” 10–11

  time in, 40, 43–46, 49, 51

  apocalyptic, 41–42

  and beginnings, 47–48

  and waiting, 43–45

  “Tonight Will Be Fine,” 207

  “Tower of Song,” 55, 65–66, 71, 74, 98–99, 121, 170, 211

  “The Traitor,” 114, 116, 206

  transcendental approach of, 117–19, 122

  Various Positions (album), 24, 56, 238, 242, 249

  “Villanelle for Our Time,” 206, 210

  as vocal stylist, 57

  voice quality of, 62–63

  “Waiting for the Miracle,” 18, 19, 40, 43–45, 47

  and war, 225

  “Who by Fire,” 108, 132–34, 135, 220

  “Why Don’t You Try,” 209

  “The Window,” 205, 219, 231, 237

  “Winter Lady,” 31

  “Wishing Window,” 206

  and women, 170 projections on, 129–30

  “women, song, religion” in, 39, 46

  “You Do Not Have to Love Me,” 116

  “You Have Loved Enough,” 206

  “You Know Who I Am,” 235

  Collins, Judy, 67

  In My Life, 127

  consciousness, 198–99

  and embodiment, 198

  and teleology, 200

  “conversational maxims,” 71

  Crumb, Robert, 233

  cultural evolution, 243

  the Dæmonic, 83

  Dante Alighieri, 233

  “dark space” (Minkowski), 184

  Darwin, Charles, 204

  The Origin of Species, 242–43

  Davidson, Donald, 119

  Dawkins, Richard, 245, 252

  The Selfish Gene, 243

  “dead letter,” 237–38

  death, Epicurean view of, 11–12

  death wish, 185

  DeCurtis, Anthony, 62

  “deep song,” 82, 84

  Deigh, John

  “Primitive Emotions,” 207

  Del Rey, Lana, 67

  democracy/individual conflict, 4–5

  Democritus, 11

  De Mornay, Rebecca, 44, 170, 223

  Dennett, Daniel, 245–48, 251, 252

  Breaking the Spell, 245

  Derrida, Jacques, 49, 125, 134

  Descartes, René, 125, 193

  de Sousa, Ronald, 212, 214

  The Rationality of Emotion, 210

  Dharma, 218

  The Diary of Anne Frank

  (play), 160

  Dickens, Charles, 227

  Dickinson, Emily, 168

  Diefenbaker, John, 146

  DiFranco, Ani, x

  Dionysian magic, 80

  Dionysius the Areopagite, 236

  Mystical Theology, 234

  Dionysus, 80, 127

 

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