Monday 24 June 2013

Malta Conference: Part One

Last fall, aside from my usual activities and preoccupations related to my teaching two classes of political philosophy – one in ancient philosophy and the other in modern philosophy - I began writing the third volume of the Altamaha Trilogy, In the Widening Gyre. As December came around, I decided that I was moving too fast into the third novel and needed some time for reflection, and for this reason, pulled back from writing. Alas, when I become emerged down into a certain depth, there is no coming up until I’m finished and I realized that I wasn’t ready for that just yet. In January and February I spent time writing a lecture for an upcoming conference in late February and early March and doing some research on Sicily which I, along with my wife, Kay, had planned to visit for a week in conjunction with the conference.

The conference was sponsored by the International Association for the Liberal Arts and it was held in Valetta, the capitol city of the island state of Malta. My lecture was on what I have called elsewhere and in many instances, the ‘technological metaphor’, and is related to and therefore a part of my ‘Theory of Spiritual Crisis’ that I have been developing for years, and which informs all that I teach and write, including my fiction. Times of spiritual crisis result in an eclipse of both meaning and purpose, issuing in a non-time of lost consciousness, by which is meant not ‘un-consciousness’, but literally a consciousness that has lost its way – and thus, a disoriented consciousness.

The Malta conference was an altogether new experience, as academic conferences go, and thus, a whole experience that was, well, a bit ‘quirky’, if I may use a rather archaic adjective that I like. The first thing of note was that because the conference was held in off-season it  took place in a five star hotel at three star rates,  quite different from staying in university dorm rooms or in ho-hum hotel rooms.  My wife and I had a luxurious room with an ample balcony overlooking the beautiful harbor of Valetta with the most deep inky blue water that I ever recall seeing.