
The Hope Axis by Anna Gát Alastair Benn - Human Power of Editing, and a Hope for Literacy - With Englesberg Ideas's Alastair Benn
This week on The Hope Axis, I’m very happy to welcome Alastair Benn, deputy editor of Engelsberg Ideas. In this conversation, we talk about Scottish identity and language, the challenges of writing clearly in a “post-literate” age, and the editorial philosophy behind Engelsberg Ideas.
We also discuss the idea of Bildung and Benn’s view of the editor as a mentor who helps writers turn strong ideas into clear, readable essays. Hope you enjoy.
For the full transcript of our conversation, click here: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1IZLw1IkUsu5Q5A-AbAf_mAJZKCUAkQjd/view?usp=drive_link
Important Links:
X (Twitter) –https://x.com/alastair_benn
Engelsberg Ideas - https://engelsbergideas.com/author/alastair-benn/
LinkedIn – https://uk.linkedin.com/in/alastair-benn-0327b578
Bokforlaget Stolpe– https://bokforlagetstolpe.com/en/authors/alastair-benn/
Show Notes:
(0:00:00) Introduction
(0:00:58) Misunderstanding the Scots
(0:05:32) Linguistic Identity and Code-Switching
(0:10:24) Scotland Compared to Scandinavia
(0:13:02) Whisky, the Burning Bush, and Scottish Identity
(0:22:26) Engelsberg Ideas
(0:25:07) Plain Language, Complex Ideas
(0:31:12) Why the Written Word Still Matters
(0:37:25) Writing Essays like Montaigne
(0:42:39) Gatekeepers of the World of the Ideas
(0:48:35) Are We Becoming Post-Literate?
(0:56:47) What Is Bildung
(1:01:08) The Bildungsroman from Goethe to Thomas Mann
(1:10:31) Innerlichkeit and the Cult of Inwardness
(1:18:14) Hans Castorp and the Arid Cult of Productivity
(1:24:38) The Biases of the Hyper-Literate Elite
(1:27:10) Schopenhauer, Hegel, and the Problem of Jargon
(1:30:03) The Editor as a Mentor
(1:36:35) AI and Editing: What It Can and Cannot Do
(1:43:19) Closing Remarks
Books, Essays & References Mentioned:
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Thomas Mann — The Magic Mountain
Great Expectations — Charles Dickens
Arthur Schopenhauer
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
Robert Louis Stevenson
Miguel de Cervantes — Don Quixote
Virgil — Aeneid
John Milton — Paradise Lost
