Sunday, June 2, 2019

Responsibility of the Artist in Faith in a Tree :: Faith in a Tree Essays

Responsibility of the Artist in Faith in a Tree   The philosophical system found in Faith in a Tree deals heavily with responsibility. One of the responsibilities which was explored was the responsibility of the creative person. Paleys portrayal of artists in this story is certainly less than flattering. In one of the most thematically important paragraphs, Faith decides, (to summarize a paragraph) if its truth and honor you want to refine...let God be in charge of beauty....and let bit be in charge of Good. (p.89) The comment was given directly after a dialogue in which artists were labeled as speculators speculators in the sense that they did non invest in life, they merely observed. One gets the sense from the tone of the pages that artists are not being put in a favorable light. Paley is trying to regularise something important about the responsibility of an artist here. Her condemnation of artists as cited above does not extend to all artists. There is a qualifier at the reference of the paragraph which is very important, if its truth and honor you want to refine. In essence, if the artist is trying to discern something true or noble then they should hang-up painting, writing, or sculpting for its own sake and start doing something Good. Faith reveals her own disdain for musicians who are absorbed in art for arts sake when she comments satirically, when night covers the earth and darkness a great people, I will think of you two men with smart ears. (p.89) Paley is obviously aware thin ice of hypocrisy she is skating on. An artist herself, her own story should be actively supporting the Good, or her critique of the painter and the musicians would be meaningless. Before going further, it is necessary to define just what Faiths psyche of Good is. Faith doesnt directly define Good, but she does define grim which is just as important, because a fight or artistic work against something bad, is in essence, something Good. In Faiths words, Evi l is bad, Wicked is bad. Robbing, Murder and Putting Heroin in your Blood is Bad (p.85) Any act which is wicked, evil, or destructive is part of the Bad. Faiths definition of Bad is very general, but leaves a good jumping off point into the principal(prenominal) theme of the novel, the Vietnam War. Surprisingly, the war, which I consider to be the main theme of the novel, takes up very little of the action in the story.

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