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	<title>HiLobrow &#187; Erik Satie</title>
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	<description>Middlebrow is not the solution</description>
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		<title>Anarcho-Symbolists: 1864-73</title>
		<link>http://hilobrow.com/2009/08/12/the-anarcho-symbolists/</link>
		<comments>http://hilobrow.com/2009/08/12/the-anarcho-symbolists/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 12 Aug 2009 13:00:54 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Joshua Glenn</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Codebreaking]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Alfred Jarry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Alfred Stieglitz]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Anarcho-Symbolists]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[André Gide]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Arthur Symons]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Aubrey Beardsley]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[brainiac]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Edvard Munch]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Emma Goldman]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Erik Satie]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[G. K. Chesterton]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[generations]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Gertrude Stein]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Gustav Landauer]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Luigi Pirandello]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Marcel Proust]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Miguel de Unamuno]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Paul Valéry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[radium-age sf]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Richard Strauss]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[sf]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Wassily Kandinsky]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[William Butler yeats]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://hilobrow.com/?p=4098</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<a href="http://hilobrow.com/2009/08/12/the-anarcho-symbolists/"><img align="left" hspace="5" width="90" height="90" src="http://hilobrow.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/jarry-ubu-150x150.jpg" class="alignleft wp-post-image tfe" alt="jarry-ubu" title="jarry-ubu" /></a>The Anarcho-Symbolists are a lost generation, overshadowed by their immediate elders (the...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Anarcho-Symbolists are a lost generation, overshadowed by their immediate elders (the deep-diving Plutonians) and juniors (the high-flying Psychonauts). HiLobrow luminaries of this generation include Alfred Jarry, Emma Goldman, Edvard Munch, William Butler Yeats, Paul Valéry, André Gide, Richard Strauss, Arthur Symons, Wassily Kandinsky, Erik Satie, Luigi Pirandello, Gustav Landauer, Marcel Proust, Aubrey Beardsley, Alfred Stieglitz, Miguel de Unamuno, G. K. Chesterton, and Gertrude Stein. </p>
<p><center><img src="http://hilobrow.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/jarry-ubu.jpg" alt="jarry-ubu" title="jarry-ubu" width="407" height="714" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-4423" /></center></p>
<p>In what sense is this a &#8220;lost&#8221; generation? The hilobrows listed above are hailed today for their influence on subsequent political, aesthetic, and intellectual movements, or as late adherents to previous movements; and it&#8217;s common, in discussions of this or that literary or intellectual or artistic &#8220;generation,&#8221; to see an asterisk by the names of, e.g., Yeats, Stein, or Unamuno — e.g., was Stein really a member, along with Hemingway, of the capital-L Lost Generation? No!</p>
<p>In fact, the Anarcho-Symbolist Generation invented neither anarchism nor Symbolism. Pierre Joseph Proudhon, the first person ever to call himself an anarchist, died just as the earliest members of this generation were being born. And the original Symbolist litterateurs (Rimbaud, Verlaine, Mallarmé, as well as Remy de Gourmont, Paul Adam, Alfred Vallette) were older, too. However, in this 1864-73 generational cohort, these unrelated and incompatible movements were negatively-dialectically synthesized, held together in a productive tension unthinkable to members of earlier or later generations&#8230; with the exceptions of Mallarmé, who in 1894 insisted that only the poet should be called an anarchist; and Félix Fénéon, <a href="http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/ideas/brainiac/2007/08/summer_of_sante.html">about whom we should all learn more</a>.</p>
<p>I thought I&#8217;d coined the term &#8220;Anarcho-Symbolist&#8221; (a play on anarcho-syndicalism), only to discover that I must have encountered it first in Roger Shattuck&#8217;s <em>The Banquet Years</em>, which describes the heyday (1885-1918) of this 1864-73 cohort. Shattuck employs the term to describe certain proto-Situationist tendencies originating in fin de siècle and early 20th-century Paris, where outsider anti-political and literary anarchists and nihilists declared that &#8220;the style of one&#8217;s life and one&#8217;s art took precedence over their content, the act of rebellion over the cause.&#8221; </p>
<p>Alfred Jarry — often called a &#8220;forerunner to the Surrealists,&#8221; or listed as an inspiration to juniors like Guillaume Apollinaire, André Salmon, Max Jacob, or Pablo Picasso — is the prototypical Anarcho-Symbolist. Jarry&#8217;s life and art, his pranks and ’pataphysics, his absurdism and experimentalism, are a microcosm of this generation&#8217;s impetus and style.</p>
<p><center>***</center></p>
<p><center><img src="http://hilobrow.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/06/goldman-mug-550.jpg" alt="goldman-mug-550" title="goldman-mug-550" width="550" height="362" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-2368" /></center></p>
<p>Notable anarchist members of this generation — including Gustav Landauer, <a href="http://hilobrow.com/2009/06/21/hilo-heroes-june-21-27/">Emma Goldman</a>, Alexander Berkman, Voltairine de Cleyre, Gaetano Bresci, Rudolf Rocker, Leon Czolgosz, Shūsui Kōtoku, Émile Henry, Sante Geronimo Caserio, Michele Angiolillo, Luigi Lucheni, Alexandros Schinas, and Ricardo Flores Magón, plus honorary Anarcho-Symbolist Gabriele D&#8217;Annunzio — ranged from (often violent) radicals to reformers (like Mahatma Gandhi), and from staunch individualists to anarcho-syndicalists and -communists. But they agreed that human beings are capable of rationally governing themselves in a peaceful, cooperative, productive manner, and that government, exploitative owners of the means of production, despotic teachers, and domineering parents are all part of the problem.</p>
<p>If anarchism was the ne plus ultra of Enlightenment political tendencies, the late-Romantic literary movement known as Symbolism was a quasi-occult mode of knowledge deliberately opposed to the positivism of the period. In his 1899 book The Symbolist Movement in Literature, which introduced French Symbolism (Rimbaud, Verlaine, Mallarmé) to the English-speaking world, Arthur Symons calls symbolism &#8220;a form of expression&#8230; for an unseen reality apprehended by the consciousness.&#8221; And in a 1900 essay, <a href="http://hilobrow.com/2009/06/07/hilo-heroes-june-7-13/">William Butler Yeats</a> derided the realist trend (&#8220;scientific movement&#8221;) in literature and praised instead the symbolist tendency, because it &#8220;call[s] down among us certain disembodied powers, whose footsteps over our hearts we call emotions.&#8221; The artist, in this philosophy, is a hierophant communing with the occult truths hidden by the &#8220;veil&#8221; (a favorite term of Symbolists) called reality. Notable Symbolists of the 1864-73 cohort include Symons, Yeats, Paul Valéry, Henri de Régnier, Dmitry Merezhkovsky, Vyacheslav Ivanov, John Gray, Ernest Dowson, Zinaida Gippius, André Gide, Tadeusz Miciński, and Valery Bryusov. Plus: Edvard Munch.</p>
<p><center><img src="http://hilobrow.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/06/yeats1.jpg" alt="yeats1" title="yeats1" width="410" height="493" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-2265" /></center></p>
<p><center>***</center></p>
<p>A reminder of my generational periodization scheme:</p>
<p>1824-33: [Gilded Generation] <a href="http://hilobrow.com/2010/07/13/post-romantics/">Post-Romantics</a><br /> 1834-43: [Gilded Generation] <a href="http://hilobrow.com/2010/07/06/original-decadents/">Original Decadents</a><br /> 1844-53: [Progressive Generation] <a href="http://hilobrow.com/2009/07/28/the-prometheans/">Prometheans</a><br />
1854-63: [Progressive, Missionary Generations] <a href="http://hilobrow.com/2009/08/06/the-plutonians/">Plutonians</a><br />
1864-73: [Missionary Generation] <a href="http://hilobrow.com/2009/08/12/the-anarcho-symbolists/">Anarcho-Symbolists</a><br />
1874-83: [Missionary Generation] <a href="http://hilobrow.com/2009/08/19/the-psychonauts/">Psychonauts</a><br />
1884-93: [Lost Generation] <a href="http://hilobrow.com/2009/08/26/the-modernists/">Modernists</a><br />
1894-1903: [Lost, Greatest/GI Generations] <a href="http://hilobrow.com/2009/09/03/the-hardboileds/">Hardboileds</a><br />
1904-13: [Greatest/GI Generation] <a href="http://hilobrow.com/2009/09/09/the-partisans/">Partisans</a><br />
1914-23: [Greatest/GI Generation] <a href="http://hilobrow.com/2009/09/16/the-new-gods/">New Gods</a><br />
1924-33: [Silent Generation] <a href="http://hilobrow.com/2009/09/23/the-postmodernists/">Postmodernists</a><br />
1934-43: [Silent Generation] <a href="http://hilobrow.com/2009/09/30/the-anti-anti-utopians/">Anti-Anti-Utopians</a><br />
1944-53: <a href="http://hilobrow.com/2010/02/05/boomers/">Boomers</a><br />
1954-63: [Boomers, Late Boomers, Post-Boomers, Generation Jones] <a href="http://hilobrow.com/2010/02/27/generations-12-ogxers/">OGXers</a><br />
1964-73: [Generation X, Thirteenth Generation] <a href="http://hilobrow.com/2010/03/15/generations-13-reconstructionists/">Reconstructionists</a><br />
1974-83: [Generations X, Y] <a href="http://hilobrow.com/2010/04/17/generations-14-revivalists/">Revivalists</a><br />
1984-93: [Millennial Generation] <a href="http://hilobrow.com/2010/05/24/throwbacks/">Throwbacks</a><br />
1994-2003: [Millennial Generation] <a href="http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/ideas/brainiac/2008/05/unnamed_generat.html"><a href="http://hilobrow.com/2010/05/28/generations-16-tba/">TBA</a></a></p>
<p><a href="http://hilobrow.com/2010/03/02/cuspers/">LEARN MORE</a> about this periodization scheme | <a href="http://hilobrow.com/tag/generations/">READ ALL</a> generational articles on HiLobrow.</p>
<p><center>***</center></p>
<p><center><img src="http://hilobrow.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/07/1893_Edvard_Munch_The_Scream-WR400.jpg" alt="1893_Edvard_Munch_The_Scream-WR400" title="1893_Edvard_Munch_The_Scream-WR400" width="400" height="600" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-4175" /></center></p>
<p>Meet the Anarcho-Symbolists.</p>
<p><strong>Honorary Anarcho-Symbolists:</strong> Gabriele D&#8217;Annunzio, Edvard Munch, Luis P. Senarens (all born 1863).</p>
<p>1864: Alfred Stieglitz (Photo-Secessionist), Richard Strauss (Composer, <em>Also sprach Zarathustra</em>), Miguel de Unamuno (Philosopher), Henri de Régnier (one of the foremost French symbolists in the early 20th century), George Washington Carver (Inventor), Camille Claudel (French sculptor, mistress of Rodin), Thomas Dixon (Author, <em>The Clansman</em>), Maurice Leblanc (Novelist, creator of Arsène Lupin), Walther Nernst (Chemist, Third Law of Thermodynamics), Frank Wedekind (German expressionist playwright <em>avant la lettre</em>). <strong>Honorary Plutonians: </strong>John Jacob Astor (Philanthropist, died aboard the Titanic), Jim Beam (Bourbon baron), Nellie Bly (Journalist, <em>Ten Days in a Mad-House</em>), Max Weber (Sociologist, <em>The Protestant Ethic</em>), Wilhelm Wien (Physicist, Blackbody radiation), Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec (Post-Impressionist painter).</p>
<p>1865: Arthur Symons (English symbolist poet), William Butler Yeats (Anglo-Irish symbolist), Irving Babbitt (Philosopher), King George V (King of England, 1910-1936), Frederic W. Goudy (designer of Garamond and Goudy fonts), Warren G. Harding (29th US President, 1921-23), Rudyard Kipling (Author, <em>The Jungle Book</em>), Jean Sibelius (Composer, <em>The Swan of Tuonela</em>), Dmitry Merezhkovsky (one of the earliest and most eminent ideologues of Russian Symbolism), M. P. Shiel (SF author, decadent), Robert W. Chambers (American author, best-known for fantasy).</p>
<p><center><img src="http://hilobrow.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/kandinsky-square.jpg" alt="kandinsky-square" title="kandinsky-square" width="550" height="407" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-4427" /></center></p>
<p>1866: Wassily Kandinsky (Abstractionist and theorist), Erik Satie (Composer), H. G. Wells (Author, <em>The War of the Worlds</em>), Vyacheslav Ivanov (Russian symbolist), Sun Yat-sen (President of China, 1911-12), Beatrix Potter (Author-Artist), Lincoln Steffens (early muckraking journalist), Butch Cassidy (train and bank robber), Ramsay MacDonald (first Labour Prime Minister of UK), Matthew Henson (Explorer, possibly first to reach North Pole), Voltairine de Cleyre (Anarchist without an adjective, author of <em>The Gods and the People</em>, <em>The Worm Turns</em>, <em>Anarchism</em>, <em>Direct Action</em>), Benedetto Croce (Italian anti-Catholic and anti-Communist philosopher, multi-volume <em>Philosophy of the Spirit</em>), Anne Sullivan (Educator, <em>The Miracle Worker</em>), George Barr McCutcheon (Novelist, <em>Brewster&#8217;s Millions</em>), Ernest W. Brown (Astronomer, Tables of the Motion of the Moon), Sophonisba Breckinridge (Suffragette and abolitionist), Aby Warburg (Scholar), John Gray (English symbolist translator), Archibald Marshall (English novelist, publisher).</p>
<p>1867: Luigi Pirandello (Playwright), A.E. (George William Russell, Irish nationalist, writer, poet, painter), Maximilian (Emperor of Mexico, 1864-67), Frank Lloyd Wright (America&#8217;s most famous architect), Gustave Le Rouge (French SF author), Cy Young (Baseball pitcher), Marie Curie (early nuclear chemist), Arturo Toscanini (virtuoso conductor), Molly Brown (Activist, unsinkable), Ernest Dowson (English Decadent poet), Edith Hamilton (Educator, <em>The Greek Way</em>), Carl Laemmle (Film/TV Producer), J. P. Morgan, Jr. (banking magnate), Arthur Rackham (British Golden Age children&#8217;s book illustrator), Sakichi Toyoda (founder of Toyota Industries Corporation), Laura Ingalls Wilder (Author, <em>Little House on the Prairie</em>), Wilbur Wright (co-inventor of the airplane), Ernest Dowson (English symbolist and decadent).</p>
<p><center><img src="http://hilobrow.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/dubois-550.jpg" alt="dubois-550" title="dubois-550" width="550" height="791" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-4428" /></center></p>
<p>1868: W. E. B. Du Bois (American philosopher, sociologist, prophetic Marxist, architect of civil rights and Black Pride), Dietrich Eckart (Nazi intellectual), Harvey Firestone (rubber tire baron), Gaston Leroux (French mystery, SF author), Alfred Fowler (Astronomer, celestial spectroscopy), Stefan George (Poet), Maxim Gorky (Playwright), George Ellery Hale (Astronomer), Felix Hoffmann (Chemist, aspirin and heroin), Scott Joplin (the King of Ragtime), Robert A. Millikan (Physicist, determined the charge of an electron), Tsar Nicholas II (last of the Russian Tsars), Eleanor H. Porter (Novelist, <em>Pollyanna</em>), Theodore W. Richards (Chemist, proved existence of isotopes), Edmond Rostand (Playwright, <em>Cyrano de Bergerac</em>), The Sundance Kid (Criminal), John Townsend (Mathematician, electron&#8217;s charge), John Stewart Barney (minor SF author).</p>
<p>1869: Mahatma Gandhi (Activist, proselytizer of nonviolence, spiritual leader, anarchist), Emma Goldman (Anarchist and feminist libertarian), Zinaida Gippius (Russian symbolist), Neville Chamberlain (architect of appeasement), Herbert Croly (Author, <em>The Promise of American Life</em>), André Gide (Author, symbolist, <em>Le Voyage d&#8217;Urien</em>), Bill Haywood (Labor leader, Industrial Workers of the World), Typhoid Mary (notorious typhoid carrier), Stephen Leacock (Canadian political economist, humorist), Edgar Lee Masters (Poet), Henri Matisse (free, expressive French painter), Ernest Fox Nichols (Physicist, infrared radiation), Edwin Arlington Robinson (Poet), Booth Tarkington (Novelist, <em>The Magnificent Ambersons</em>), Gaetano Bresci (Italian-American anarchist, assassin of Italian King Umberto I).</p>
<p><center><img src="http://hilobrow.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/landauer-550.jpg" alt="landauer-550" title="landauer-550" width="550" height="660" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-4429" /></center></p>
<p>1870: Gustav Landauer (German Anarchist), Alexander Berkman (Russian-American anarchist, <em>A.B.C. of Anarchism</em>, attempted to assassinate Frick), Arthur Fisher Bentley (American journalist, activist, scholar, pioneer in the study of group behavior), Alfred Adler (founder of Individual Psychology), Pierre Louÿs (French poet), Bernard M. Baruch (coined the term &#8220;Cold War&#8221;), Hilaire Belloc (Author, <em>The Bad Child&#8217;s Book of Beasts</em>), A. P. Giannini (founder of Bank of America), Lenin (revolutionary leader of Soviet Union), Adolf Loos (Architect, <em>Ornament and Crime</em>), Maria Montessori (founder of Montessori Education Method), H. H. Munro (Saki) (Novelist), Frank Norris (Novelist, <em>The Octopus</em>), Maxfield Parrish (American book and magazine illustrator), Jean Perrin (Physicist, verified atomic nature of matter).</p>
<p>1871: Paul Valéry (last of the French Symbolists), Rosa Luxemburg (co-founder, Communist Party of Germany), Samuel Hopkins Adams (Journalist, &#8220;The Great American Fraud&#8221;), Shūsui Kōtoku (Japanese anarchist), Giacomo Balla (Italian futurist painter), Stephen Crane (Novelist, <em>The Red Badge of Courage</em>), Theodore Dreiser (Novelist), Marcel Proust (<em>In Search of Lost Time</em>), Rasputin (Russian mystic), Georges Rouault (Expressionist painter of clowns, Christs), Michele Angiolillo (Italian anarchist, assassinated Spanish Prime minister Cánovas), Ernest Rutherford (Father of Nuclear Physics), Frank Schlesinger (Astronomer, stellar parallaxes), John Millington Synge (Playwright, <em>The Playboy of the Western World</em>), Orville Wright (co-inventor of the airplane).</p>
<p><center><img src="http://hilobrow.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/aubrey_beardsley4.jpg" alt="aubrey_beardsley4" title="aubrey_beardsley4" width="550" height="855" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-4430" /></center></p>
<p>1872: Aubrey Beardsley (leading English illustrator, decadent), Max Beerbohm (English critic, parodist, caricaturist, decadent), Émile Henry (French anarchist, detonated a bomb at the Café Terminus in the Parisian Gare Saint-Lazare), Charles Greeley Abbot (Astronomer, solar energy), Roald Amundsen (Explorer, first to reach South Pole), Ma Barker (Criminal), L. L. Bean (Founder of L. L. Bean, Inc.), Léon Blum (thrice Prime Minister of France), Calvin Coolidge (30th US President, 1923-29), Willem de Sitter (Astronomer, expanding space), William Duddell (Physicist, electronic music), Paul Laurence Dunbar (Poet), Zane Grey (Novelist, <em>Riders of the Purple Sage</em>), Learned Hand (influential American justice), Marcel Mauss (Sociologist, <em>The Gift</em>), Piet Mondrian (Dutch abstract painter), John Cowper Powys (Novelist), Bertrand Russell (Philosopher, Mathematician, Atheist, Social Critic), William Monroe Trotter (Activist), Howard R. Garis (Novelist, <em>Uncle Wiggily</em> and <em>Tom Swift</em> series).</p>
<p>1873: Alfred Jarry (Playwright, inventor of the hilobrow science &#8216;Pataphysics), Tadeusz Miciński (influential Polish symbolist, gnostic, a forerunner of Expressionism and Surrealism), Valery Bryusov (Russian symbolist), Rudolf Rocker (anarchist without adjectives), Enrico Caruso (operatic tenor nonpareil), Max Adler (Austro-Marxist philosopher), Sante Geronimo Caserio (Italian anarchist, assassin of Marie François Sadi Carnot, President of the French Third Republic), Willa Cather (Novelist), Colette (Novelist), Leon Czolgosz (Anarchist, President McKinley&#8217;s assassin), Walter de la Mare (Poet), Ford Madox Ford (Novelist, <em>The Good Soldier</em>), Arthur O. Lovejoy (Historian, <em>The Great Chain of Being</em>), Ricardo Flores Magón (Anarchist, agitator behind Mexican revolution), G. E. Moore (Philosopher, <em>Principia Ethica</em>), William Morris (Founder, William Morris Agency), Luigi Lucheni (Italian anarchist, killed Elisabeth of Bavaria, Empress consort of Austria and Queen consort of Hungary), Condé Nast (Founder of Condé Nast Publications), Emily Post (Columnist), Alexandros Schinas (Greek anarchist, exact birthdate unknown, assassinated King George I of Greec), Sergei Rachmaninov (Composer), Eliel Saarinen (Finnish-American art nouveau architect), Alfred E. Smith (twice Governor of New York), Charles Walgreen (founder of Walgreen Co.), Robert Wiene (Film Director, <em>The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari</em>), Adolph Zukor (founder of Paramount Pictures). <strong>Honorary Psychonauts:</strong> J.D. Beresford (British SF author), Hans Berger (Physicist, Electroencephalogram), William W. Coblentz (Astronomer, infrared spectroscopy), W. C. Handy (Father of the Blues), William E. Riker (Holy City cult leader).</p>
<p><strong>Honorary Anarcho-Symbolists:</strong> G. K. Chesterton, Amy Lowell, Gertrude Stein (all born 1874).</p>
<p><center>***</center></p>
<p><center><img src="http://hilobrow.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/stein-picasso-550.jpg" alt="stein-picasso-550" title="stein-picasso-550" width="550" height="675" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-4431" /></center></p>
<p><strong>HONORARY ANARCHO-SYMBOLISTS:</strong> Gabriele D&#8217;Annunzio, Edvard Munch, Luis P. Senarens (1863); G. K. Chesterton, Amy Lowell, Gertrude Stein (1874).</p>
<p><strong>ANARCHO-SYMBOLISTS WHO ARE HONORARY PLUTONIANS:</strong> John Jacob Astor (Philanthropist, died aboard the Titanic), Jim Beam (Bourbon baron), Nellie Bly (Journalist, <em>Ten Days in a Mad-House</em>), Max Weber (Sociologist, <em>The Protestant Ethic</em>), Wilhelm Wien (Physicist, Blackbody radiation), Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec (Post-Impressionist painter).</p>
<p><strong>ANARCHO-SYMBOLISTS WHO ARE HONORARY PSYCHONAUTS:</strong> J. D. Beresford, William W. Coblentz (Astronomer, infrared spectroscopy), W. C. Handy (Father of the Blues), William E. Riker (Holy City cult leader), Karl Schwarzschild (Astronomer, black holes). </p>
<p>Radium-Age science fiction authors from this generation include: Gustave Le Rouge (<em>La Conspiration des Milliardaires</em>, <em>Le Prisonnier de la Planète Mars</em>, <em>La Guerre des Vampires</em>), Maurice Leblanc (<em>The Three Eyes</em>, <em>The Tremendous Event</em>), M.P. Shiel (<em>The Purple Cloud</em>, &#8220;The Future Day&#8221;), W.E.B. DuBois (&#8220;The Comet&#8221;), Gaston Leroux (<em>The Machine to Kill</em>), Rudyard Kipling (<em>With the Night Mail</em>, <em>A Diversity of Creatures</em>, &#8220;As Easy as A.B.C.&#8221;), H.G. Wells (Radium-Age SF includes: <em>The Food of the God</em>s, <em>In the Days of the Comet</em>, <em>The War in the Air</em>, <em>The World Set Free</em>, <em>Men Like Gods</em>), Archibald Marshall (<em>Upsidonia</em>), H.H. Munro (Saki) (<em>The Chronicles of Clovis</em>, <em>When William Came</em>), Howard R. Garis (wrote <em>Tom Swift</em> series as Victor Appleton), Samuel Hopkins Adams (<em>The Flying Death</em>), Alfred Jarry (&#8220;How to Construct a Time Machine&#8221;), Hilaire Belloc (<em>Mr. Petre</em>, <em>But Soft — We Are Observed!</em>), Ford Madox Ford (<em>The Inheritors</em>, with Joseph Conrad), Booth Tarkington (&#8220;The Veiled Feminists of Atlantis&#8221;), John Stewart Barney (<em>L.P.M.: The End of the Great War</em>), Stephen Leacock (&#8220;The Iron Man and the Tin Woman,&#8221; <em>The Hohenzollerns in America</em>), A.E. (George William Russell, <em>The Avatars</em>), and Robert W. Chambers (<em>Police!!!</em>). Note: J. D. Beresford (1874, <em>Goslings</em>, <em>The Hampdenshire Wonder</em>) is an honorary Psychonaut; so is Luis P. Senarens (1863, &#8220;Frank Reade, Jr., and His Steam Wonder,&#8221; et al). However, G.K. Chesterton (1874, <em>The Napoleon of Notting Hill</em>) is an honorary Anarcho-Symbolist.</p>
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		<title>Erik Satie</title>
		<link>http://hilobrow.com/2009/05/17/hilo-hero-erik-satie/</link>
		<comments>http://hilobrow.com/2009/05/17/hilo-hero-erik-satie/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 17 May 2009 19:16:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jason Grote</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[HiLo Heroes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Erik Satie]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[hilo-birthday]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://hilobrow.com/2009/05/17/hilo-hero-erik-satie/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<a href="http://hilobrow.com/2009/05/17/hilo-hero-erik-satie/"><img align="left" hspace="5" width="90" height="90" src="http://hilobrow.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/satie-3-500-150x150.jpg" class="alignleft wp-post-image tfe" alt="FRANCE - ERIK SATIE" title="FRANCE - ERIK SATIE" /></a>Parisian composer ERIK SATIE (1866-1925) was the great-grandaddy of ambient music, the...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-1644" title="FRANCE - ERIK SATIE" src="http://hilobrow.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/satie-3-500.jpg" alt="FRANCE - ERIK SATIE" width="500" height="699" /><br />
Parisian composer ERIK SATIE (1866-1925) was the great-grandaddy of ambient music, the distant progenitor of Musak and smooth jazz. In 1902, Satie and friends introduced what they called &#8220;Furniture Music&#8221; in a Paris Gallery — that is, atmospheric music, intended to be ignored — and failed miserably when the crowd stopped looking at the art to watch the musicians. Like many a musical avant-gardist, the Velvet Gentleman&#8217;s influence outlived him. For example: Ravel and Debussy, Cage and Ono, Subotnik and Lesh, Eno and Aphex Twin, Kenny G and The Microsoft Windows ’95 Startup Sound. I dare any child of the 1970s to listen to Satie&#8217;s &#8220;Gymnopedie&#8221; compositions without being abruptly transported back to the torturous boredom of childhood, waiting for parents in a mattress store or watching a soft-focus TV-movie romance.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">***</p>
<p>Each day, HiLobrow.com pays tribute to one of our favorite high-,        low-, no-, or hilobrow heroes on that person&#8217;s birthday. <a href="http://hilobrow.com/category/hilo-heroes/">Click here for more        HiLo Hero shout-outs</a>. To get HiLo Heroes updates via  Facebook,  <a href="http://www.facebook.com/pages/HiLo-Heroes#!/pages/HiLo-Heroes/326335543872">click        here</a>.</p>
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		<title>Hilo Heroes, May 17-23</title>
		<link>http://hilobrow.com/2009/05/17/hilo-heroes-may-17-23/</link>
		<comments>http://hilobrow.com/2009/05/17/hilo-heroes-may-17-23/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 17 May 2009 07:04:33 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>HILOBROW</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Read-outs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Devo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Erik Satie]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fats Waller]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hergé]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jimmy Stewart]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Joey Ramone]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[John Stuart Mill]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mark Mothersbaugh]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Morrissey]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://hilobrow.com/?p=1472</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<a href="http://hilobrow.com/2009/05/17/hilo-heroes-may-17-23/"><img align="left" hspace="5" width="90" height="90" src="http://hilobrow.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/satie-3-500-150x150.jpg" class="alignleft wp-post-image tfe" alt="FRANCE - ERIK SATIE" title="FRANCE - ERIK SATIE" /></a>Happy Birthday, this week, to the following high-, low-, no-, and hilobrow...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Happy Birthday, this week, to the following high-, low-, no-, and hilobrow heroes.</p>
<p><a href="http://hilobrow.com/tag/hilo-birthday/">More Hilo birthdays</a>.</p>
<p><strong>MAY 17</strong></p>
<p><img src="http://hilobrow.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/satie-3-500.jpg" alt="FRANCE - ERIK SATIE" title="FRANCE - ERIK SATIE" width="500" height="699" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-1644" /><br />
Parisian composer ERIK SATIE (1866-1925) was the great-grandaddy of ambient music, the distant progenitor of Musak and smooth jazz. In 1902, Satie and friends introduced what they called &#8220;Furniture Music&#8221; in a Paris Gallery — that is, atmospheric music, intended to be ignored — and failed miserably when the crowd stopped looking at the art to watch the musicians. Like many a musical avant-gardist, the Velvet Gentleman&#8217;s influence outlived him. For example: Ravel and Debussy, Cage and Ono, Subotnik and Lesh, Eno and Aphex Twin, Kenny G and The Microsoft Windows ’95 Startup Sound. I dare any child of the 1970s to listen to Satie&#8217;s &#8220;Gymnopedie&#8221; compositions without being abruptly transported back to the torturous boredom of childhood, waiting for parents in a mattress store or watching a soft-focus TV-movie romance.  <em>— Jason Grote</em></p>
<p><strong>MAY 18</strong></p>
<p><img src="http://hilobrow.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/mothersbaugh-devo-3.jpg" alt="mothersbaugh-devo-3" title="mothersbaugh-devo-3" width="560" height="800" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-1724" /></p>
<p>Although other rock frontmen had been strange before MARK MOTHERSBAUGH (born 1950), none had been so aggressively strange or so brazenly uncool. Devo was the soundtrack of a life spent stumbling on uneven pavement, knocking over full glasses at the dinner table. Mothersbaugh is a nonfictional Lionel Essrog, giving Tourettic yelps and pricks to unsettle the comfortable. The classic Devo single is &#8220;Mongoloid&#8221; — even as you sing along you feel like the mark in a long con. For years since Devo&#8217;s peak Mothersbaugh has been inserting counter-hegemonic viruses into the heads of children of all ages through his work scoring <em>Rugrats</em>, <em>Pee-Wee&#8217;s Playhouse</em>, and Wes Anderson&#8217;s films, for instance. But practice nodding that head in 7/8 time, because a new Devo album is scheduled for fall 2009. <em>— Tor Aarestad</em></p>
<p><strong>MAY 19</strong></p>
<p><img src="http://hilobrow.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/ramones-1.jpg" alt="ramones-1" title="ramones-1" width="500" height="500" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-1652" /></p>
<p>Look at the way people describe JOEY RAMONE&#8217;s (1951-2001) voice: &#8220;bleat,&#8221; &#8220;snarl,&#8221; &#8220;hiccup.&#8221; Would they say the same about Ronnie Spector? His voice was honest, plangent&#8230; it was bliss. He left us too soon, yes, but was it a shock? Not really. He was a fragile Ramone — a romantic, brokenhearted Ramone. We secretly favored the sweet love songs, and we were gratified to learn that he did, too. We cry for our teenage selves when we listen to &#8220;I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend.&#8221; We&#8217;re listening to it right now. <em>— Mimi Lipson</em></p>
<p><strong>MAY 20</strong></p>
<p><img src="http://hilobrow.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/stewart-vertigo-550.jpg" alt="stewart-vertigo-550" title="stewart-vertigo-550" width="550" height="213" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-3119" /></p>
<p>JIMMY STEWART (1908-97) endlessly reprised Everyman&#8230; yet his most iconic films are perfect set pieces of horror. Capra&#8217;s <em>It&#8217;s a Wonderful Life</em>, supposedly a Christmas classic, is a vicious exposé of the underpinnings of capitalism. In it, Business As Usual presents a value proposition of such incoherence, in both economic and human terms, that the only rational course left to Everyman is suicide. And in Hitchcock&#8217;s <em>Vertigo</em>, Stewart plays a retired detective — a nice, normal guy who&#8217;s spent his adult life coming up with convincing explanations and tidy solutions. But he has one little problem&#8230; which widens into a fault line revealing an abyss of phobia and obsession. Soon, Everyman has blundered his way to the frontier of rationality, and his world has become an endless feedback loop that mocks his, and our, attempts at escape.</p>
<p><em>Plus, a pre-20th century figure for whom we have a certain amount of admiration:</em></p>
<p>The result of what must be the gold standard of overparenting, JOHN STUART MILL (1806-73) was a prodigy who read Greek at 3, Latin at 8, pretty much everything else by his teens, befriended (and edited!) his father&#8217;s famous friends including Jeremy Bentham, and achieved his first nervous breakdown at 20. But Mill was not just his father&#8217;s lab experiment. He exposed the holes in his father&#8217;s philosophy, made his <em>own</em> friends, and wrote extensively on every -ology, -osophy, -onomy and -ism. The most famous of these, Utilitarianism, he reformatted into a how-to manual for happiness. He emphasized practicality and action even as he examined underlying assumptions with a subtle lens, rendering him Eminently readable, even for a Victorian. <em>— Peggy Nelson</em></p>
<p><strong>MAY 21</strong></p>
<p><img src="http://hilobrow.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/waller-fats4.jpg" alt="waller-fats4" title="waller-fats4" width="475" height="600" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-1648" /><br />
FATS WALLER (1904-43) lives in some impossible space between Paganini, St. Augustine, and James Brown. Tracks like &#8220;Handful of Keys&#8221; show Fats challenging Art Tatum in sublime stride-piano ostentation. But Waller was also fearlessly upfront in his depictions of tougher aspects of Harlem culture. Listen to &#8220;The Joint is Jumping&#8221; for <a href="http://blackhistoryeverymonth.blogspot.com/2008/02/fats-waller-joint-is-jumping.html">references</a> to rent-party violence, sexual licentiousness, and mass arrests. But who really believes that Fats &#8220;Ain&#8217;t Misbehavin&#8221;? It&#8217;s precisely his self-reflexiveness, cherubic bravado, and sense of a perpetually postponed repentance that puts him decades in advance of contemporary performers who try to commodify the urban black experience for the voyeuristic gratification of mainstream audiences. <em>— Greg Rowland</em></p>
<p><strong>MAY 22 </strong><br />
<img src="http://hilobrow.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/morrissey4.jpg" alt="morrissey4" title="morrissey4" width="500" height="603" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-1657" /></p>
<p>HiLobrow.com was recently drugged, blindfolded and pushed through a series of strangely booming rooms en route to an exclusive listening party for the new MORRISSEY (born 1959) album. And still we managed to take notes! Titled <em>The Great Divorce</em> and produced by Rolf Harris, Moz&#8217;s latest will feature the following eight tracks: &#8220;They Hanged My Saintly Billy&#8221; (groaning torch song), &#8220;You&#8217;ll Still Be Ugly In The Morning&#8221; (glam chug), &#8220;Goodbye To All That&#8221; (plasma-pop), &#8220;I Laughed For The First Time The Day You Drowned&#8221; (scuffling mozzabilly), &#8220;Arthurian Torso&#8221; (music hall), &#8220;I Can’t Hug You Anymore (I&#8217;ve Cut Off My Arms)&#8221; (unisex opera), &#8220;My Mate Stanley&#8221; (crime spree), and the epic, feedback-laden closer &#8220;Last of the Eager Hangers On.&#8221; You heard it here first, pop pickers! <em>— James Parker</em></p>
<p><strong>MAY 23</strong></p>
<p><img src="http://hilobrow.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/herge-600.jpg" alt="herge-600" title="herge-600" width="600" height="440" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-1842" /></p>
<p><em>— Hergé cartoon by Joe Alterio</em></p>
<p><strong>More HiLo Heroes born May 17-23&#8230;</strong></p>
<p>May 17: Dennis Hopper, Maureen O&#8217;Sullivan, Frederic Prokosch<br />
May 18: Bertrand Russell, Walter Gropius, Reggie Jackson, Don Martin, George Strait, Tina Fey<br />
May 19: Malcolm X, André the Giant, Grace Jones, Peter Mayhew (Chewbacca), Pete Townshend<br />
May 20: Cher, Jimmy Stewart, Hal Clement, Jane Wiedlin<br />
May 21: Mr. T, Notorious B.I.G., Marcel Breuer, Robert Creeley, Henri Rousseau<br />
May 22: Arthur Conan Doyle, Gérard de Nerval, Laurence Olivier, Vance Packard<br />
May 23: James Blish, Scatman Crothers, Margaret Fuller, Robert Moog</p>
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