Home | Professional | Personal | International | National | Regional | Books & DVDs | Articles By Title | email Jack |
|||
Anna Karenina: A Conservative Morality Tale |
|||
|
|
By Jack Cashill T he new movie version of Tolstoy’s Anna Karenina might be a bit stagy for some tastes, but any movie that--a) stars Keira Knightley and b) advances Leo Tolstoy’s worldview--is surely worth watching. I will leave the story itself to the moviegoer, but in the novel of the same name Tolstoy describes liberalism in terms that are entirely recognizable 140 years later. In the following passages he speaks to the character of Anna’s philandering, self-important brother, Stepan Arkadyevitch, a landau liberal because it suited his life style. Indeed, writes Tolstoy wryly, liberalism had become something of a habit for him, like smoking his cigar, “for the slight fog it diffused in his brain.”
Writing more than 40 years before the Russian Revolution, Tolstoy noted the myopia of one-percenters like Stepan Arkadyevitch who believed that the real danger to Russia lay “not in that fantastic revolutionary hydra, but in the obstinacy of traditionalism clogging progress.” Curiously, the 100 or so million lives lost to that revolutionary hydra have not wised up our friends on the left. As one prominent Kansan said famously in the pages of the New York Times, today’s religious right poses a “far greater threat than the old threat of communism.” In his best court French Tolstoy just might have replied, Plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose. |
|
|
|||
Home Page || Professional || International || National/U.S. || Regional/Kansas City || Personal || Articles by Title | |||
|
|||