Difference between revisions of "Clucas, Lowell"
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− | '''NAME: Lowell Clucas | + | '''NAME: Lowell Clucas''' |
− | Biography:''' | + | '''Biography:''' |
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+ | This piece speaks of Lowell's death: | ||
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+ | http://staff.bcc.edu/philosophy/cosdial.htm | ||
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Latest revision as of 14:06, 31 July 2011
NAME: Lowell Clucas
Biography:
This piece speaks of Lowell's death:
http://staff.bcc.edu/philosophy/cosdial.htm
On Lowell Clucas
From the preface of "The Byzantine Legacy in Eastern Europe", edited
by Lowell Clucas. Publ. East European Monographs, Boulder.
[…]
It remains for me to say something about the genesis of the
conference. The Byzantine Legacy in Eastern Europe from which these
papers have emerged. The conference, both as to its conception and
execution, was the product of the thoughts and activities of the late
Lowell Clucas. In stating this fact I enter into the domain of his
scholarly formation and life so tragically terminated by death at the
moment of the full bloom of his intellectual powers and their
scholarly realization. This conference, the fruit of his thoughts,
indicates the strength and comprehensiveness of intellect, and shows
clearly that the development of his thought and vision was dynamic.
Having been trained as a Byzantinist he soon realized that Byzantium
did not die in 1453 and so he began to try to reconstruct the
historical rhythms of this civilization in Eastern Europe at a time
when first the Ottomans and then the Russians appeared on the scene as
the heirs to the political testament of the Byzantine state. Thus as a
Byzantinist he was forced also to become a Balkanist or East
Europeanist. This has been the fate of a restricted number of
Byzantinists who have stopped to ask what happened after 1453. This
concern sharply differentiates Byzantinists even today, when Russia
has become such a given in our world outlook. Lowell Clucas was aware
of the profundity of the Byzantine influence and particularly of its
longevity. Having arrived at this state of mind, he decided to pursue
the matter in a conference, which would try to draw a sharper or newer
focus on the problem of Byzance après Byzance.
I first came to know Lowell when he matriculated at UCLA and where he
took the BA degree in German language and literature in 1966. During
the senior year he had enrolled in the survey course on Byzantine
history and for reasons, which were never clear to me, he made the
fateful decision to dedicate his life to the study of Byzantine
civilization. I can only surmise that the richness, extraordinary
variety, and the 'exotic' character of this civilization fascinated
him. At that time I suggested to him that he should go away for a
period of time and study classical Greek, as this would be essential
for such a dedication on his part. He quietly agreed, enrolled at San
Francisco State where for three years he turned to the study of
classical Greek, history (with a special interest in the Islamic World
thanks to the presence of the Orientalist Prof. Gerard Salinger). At
the end of the three years he had mastered the fundamentals of
classical Greek, could read the basic texts, had studied and learned
to speak modern Greek, and took the master's degree. In 1969 he
returned to UCLA where for the next few years he continued to study
classical Greek and had the seminars in Byzantine texts with Professor
Milton Anastos and myself. During this period of intense work on
Byzantium Lowell had already displayed his great philological
dexterity and his intellectual brilliance, particularly in the realm
of Ideengeschichte. By 1975 his doctoral dissertation, The Hesychast
Controversy in Byzantium in the Fourteenth Century was submitted,
accepted, and he received his doctoral degree. The dissertation was a
massive work, steeped in the complex texts of the Hesychast and
anti-Hesychast circles, some of the texts still accessible only in
manuscript form. Unlike much intellectual history this work was based
on a simultaneous analysis of the intellectual debate of the times and
of the social, economic and political factors, which were fast,
sucking Byzantium into the vortex of political disintegration and
destruction. These two features remained characteristic of all
Lowell's publications, research, and historical thought, resulting in
the book, The Trial of John Italos and the Crisis of Intellectual
Values in Byzantium in the Eleventh Century (Munich, 1981). Having
begun with the clash of mystical and humanistic strains in Byzantine
intellectual life and culture during the Palaeologan era (in his
dissertation) he went back in time to this crucial trial of Italos to
mark a mile stone in the strengthening of the mystical or perhaps one
should say the "revealed" basis of Byzantine intellectual life.
Lowell, throughout his mature life, was exercised by the life of the
mind, its freedom, and the history of its release from the
historically imposed fetters on the mind, which in the European
tradition goes back to the monotheistic revelation and its
predominance over the ancient belief in the priority of human reason.
Lowell was also a poet of very considerable merit, and though Plato
might have decried the presence of the poet in his ideal society,
nevertheless the first historian, Herodotus was greatly affected by
the tradition of epic poetry. So also in Lowell we see the union of
the historical and poetical tastes and gifts. In the beginning he
published his poems individually on single sheets, which he then
circulated to his friends and of these I am fortunate to have six in
my files. He then published in such poetic journals as The Blue Cloud
Quarterly, a magazine of Indian themes, and in Hard Pressed. Many of
these poems, as well as newer ones, were published in the volume An
Indian Triptych and other Poems, The Red Chrysanthemum Press
(Berkeley, 1984). He also published a historical drama entitled The
Death of Alexander (Oakland, 1982). I have read and reread his poems
and have been moved not only by his gift of poetic language but also
by his sensitivity to time, to the earth, mountains and streams of
California, that is to nature, and by the sensitivity which he shows
to the destruction of America's first inhabitants and our great
historical innocents, the American Indians. During the final phase of
his struggle with death Lowell spoke to me frequently and in our
conversations, which in texture, force, velocity and clarity were not
unlike the cascading mountain streams of the California mountains
which he so dearly loved, his ongoing involvement with poetry received
equal attention with this work on Byzantine intellectual history. He
was determined to face death bravely, quietly, and to maintain the
quality of his intellectual life at the same high level which he had
always attained. Thus the conversations interchanged between his two
primary concerns: intellectual history and poetry. I can think of no
more fitting sample of his poetic and historical mind than to let
Lowell's poetry speak for him.
The American River, Sacramento
(Sacramento, 1975)
You don't see any more Maidu Indians
down highway 50
beside the American River flowing west
towards Sacramento
Sacramento from sacramentum
sacrament
what should be a communion
shared in common
a deep draught of this water
sliding toward dusk
between cottonwoods.
They are gone now, driven out
because we came, because,
as Pizarro growled to Atahualpa
we suffer from a disease of the heart
"that can only be cured
by gold".
In a second poem Lowell contemplates time the eternal.
Palo Colorado Canyon
(in Hard Pressed, No 3, Sacramento 1977)
I look up at stars
over towering redwoods
and wonder what ages
layered branches count:
I listen to the far off
murmur of water
and wonder what tales
a man could tell
who held all time
in his hand
like a stone
from a lost creek.
In a third poem we see Lowell's personal feelings.
Winter Passage
(Sacramento, 1980)
Bones of trees
wash into the sea
or break into soil.
They scatter seeds
on the forest floor;
new shoots have already
sprung from the ground.
And at your laughter
beside me, as we speak
in a stillness
over the rusing torrent
the little gods of death
regard us quizzically
they fold their feathers,
they fall silent and
sit still at attention.
I stand on the bank
and look up the ravine:
groves of pine, laurel
and taller redwood
rise up green
upon green
in the cold mist.
I close by calling to memory this extraordinary human being, so
gifted, intense, and above all creative. We recall his memory fondly
and sadly: the wife her husband, the parents their son, the scholars
their colleague, the muse her poet, and the teacher his student.
Los Angeles 1987
Picture: (Insert picture if available)
Date of Birth: 7/11/1944
Date of Death (delete if non-applicable): 1/1986
Age at Death (delete if non-applicable): 42
Employment: Professor of Byzantine Studies at the University of Pennsylvania.
Social/Political Groups he attends/attended:
Bars/Clubs he attends/attended:
His friends include: (type your name here, or names of others)
Testimonials to him (add a space before a new testimonial):