The Economist's take on Hell:
Into everlasting fire For hundreds of years, Hell has been the most fearful place in the human imagination. It is also the most absurd
An interesting article, if somewhat lacking in focus. It appears to be just a dumping ground for everything the author knows about hell.
I have my own thoughts on the matter, but it's difficult to respond to an article as unfocused as this without just making my own post a dumping ground for everything I think about hell. So I'll save my thoughts for another day. (link via whisky).
I use this blog for two different projects: my reviews and my materials for Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages (TESOL).
Monday, December 31, 2012
Sunday, December 30, 2012
A friend of mine (he knows who he is) introduced me to David Mitchell's Soapbox the other night.
I particularly like Sustainability and Burden of Proof.
I also liked What the Hell is Going On? , David Mitchell's rant about religion. In fact I agree with it so much so that I'm going to take the trouble to quote from a small bit of it:
These days we're expected to work it [the true religion] out for ourselves. Well, how? Millions of very intelligent people have spent their entire lives trying to work out what the Hell is going on, and whilst a few have resolved it more or less to their own satisfaction, not one has come up with a theory so compelling that everyone else has had to drop their rosary beads, prayer shawls or, I don't know, fossils, and agree that, yeah, good work Steve, that seems like it's basically it. In fact, whatever the hell you may think is going on and whatever the hell actually is going on, surely we all have to admit that the lack of a majority consensus means that most people in history who think or thought they knew what the hell was going on were, by definition, wrong. So what chance have I got?
My view entirely.
I particularly like Sustainability and Burden of Proof.
I also liked What the Hell is Going On? , David Mitchell's rant about religion. In fact I agree with it so much so that I'm going to take the trouble to quote from a small bit of it:
These days we're expected to work it [the true religion] out for ourselves. Well, how? Millions of very intelligent people have spent their entire lives trying to work out what the Hell is going on, and whilst a few have resolved it more or less to their own satisfaction, not one has come up with a theory so compelling that everyone else has had to drop their rosary beads, prayer shawls or, I don't know, fossils, and agree that, yeah, good work Steve, that seems like it's basically it. In fact, whatever the hell you may think is going on and whatever the hell actually is going on, surely we all have to admit that the lack of a majority consensus means that most people in history who think or thought they knew what the hell was going on were, by definition, wrong. So what chance have I got?
My view entirely.
Saturday, December 29, 2012
In 1982, President Reagan didn't respond to an invitation from the Queen of England because....
Nancy Reagan needed time to consult an astrologer!!
"You have to remember that Mrs. Reagan was very strict about his schedule, and she would consult her astrologer to see if this was the right time to travel," William F. Sittman, a special assistant to Reagan who was involved in planning the trip, told The Associated Press. "Sometimes she would back up departures."
[Full Article Here]
Nancy Reagan needed time to consult an astrologer!!
"You have to remember that Mrs. Reagan was very strict about his schedule, and she would consult her astrologer to see if this was the right time to travel," William F. Sittman, a special assistant to Reagan who was involved in planning the trip, told The Associated Press. "Sometimes she would back up departures."
[Full Article Here]
Friday, December 28, 2012
Monroe Mall
So I'm back in Grand Rapids again for Christmas break, which means I find myself commenting on local news stories.
The Grand Rapids Press did a story yesterday on the history of downtown: Monroe Center's failure as pedestrian mall.
It used to be these articles on the history of Grand Rapids would get my parents and grandparents reminiscing. But in a sign that I'm getting old, the history recounted in this article is something I remember from my own high school/college days.
Growing up in the suburbs, I didn't really experience downtown Grand Rapids until I got the mobility that came with turning 16 and getting a driver's license in 1994, but I was just old enough to catch the tail end of Monroe as a pedestrian mall. My high school classmates would go out to Monroe Mall for the Blues on the Mall series in the summer, and I would come along.
I remember also that wonderful pedestrian area being turned back into a street in 1997, and feeling regret about it. But unfortunately no one ever consulted me on the decision, so I just watched as they plowed the street through there.
The article linked to above talks about how the pedestrian area was an economic failure, and I'll take their word for it.
But ultimately, sooner or later, Americans are going to have to learn to start walking. This gets back to the Crisis in American Walking post I did a few months back. The environmental crisis caused by cars (global warming is becoming a bigger issue all the time) and health crisis caused by Americans' phobia of walking (the growing levels of obesity and diabetes) just are not going to go away.
So I find it a very unsatisfying answer to simply say: "Well, what are you going to do? People just weren't walking, so we had to change it back."
Ultimately I think the way of the future is to create more pedestrian zones, and so I view the end of the pedestrian center on Monroe as a sad step backwards.
But it's a complicated issue I'll acknowledge.
Part of the larger problem is that to even get downtown you needed to take a car. Grand Rapids has a lot of urban sprawl like many other North American cities, so if you're in the suburbs it's a good 30 minute drive just to get downtown. And the public transportation system isn't great.
But I'm curious what my favorite urban planning expert has to say on the subject. Peter?
Link of the Day
Professor-Noam-Chomsky & Angela-Davis
The Grand Rapids Press did a story yesterday on the history of downtown: Monroe Center's failure as pedestrian mall.
It used to be these articles on the history of Grand Rapids would get my parents and grandparents reminiscing. But in a sign that I'm getting old, the history recounted in this article is something I remember from my own high school/college days.
Growing up in the suburbs, I didn't really experience downtown Grand Rapids until I got the mobility that came with turning 16 and getting a driver's license in 1994, but I was just old enough to catch the tail end of Monroe as a pedestrian mall. My high school classmates would go out to Monroe Mall for the Blues on the Mall series in the summer, and I would come along.
I remember also that wonderful pedestrian area being turned back into a street in 1997, and feeling regret about it. But unfortunately no one ever consulted me on the decision, so I just watched as they plowed the street through there.
The article linked to above talks about how the pedestrian area was an economic failure, and I'll take their word for it.
But ultimately, sooner or later, Americans are going to have to learn to start walking. This gets back to the Crisis in American Walking post I did a few months back. The environmental crisis caused by cars (global warming is becoming a bigger issue all the time) and health crisis caused by Americans' phobia of walking (the growing levels of obesity and diabetes) just are not going to go away.
So I find it a very unsatisfying answer to simply say: "Well, what are you going to do? People just weren't walking, so we had to change it back."
Ultimately I think the way of the future is to create more pedestrian zones, and so I view the end of the pedestrian center on Monroe as a sad step backwards.
But it's a complicated issue I'll acknowledge.
Part of the larger problem is that to even get downtown you needed to take a car. Grand Rapids has a lot of urban sprawl like many other North American cities, so if you're in the suburbs it's a good 30 minute drive just to get downtown. And the public transportation system isn't great.
But I'm curious what my favorite urban planning expert has to say on the subject. Peter?
Link of the Day
Professor-Noam-Chomsky & Angela-Davis
Thursday, December 27, 2012
Tuesday, December 25, 2012
The Campaign
Why I saw This Movie
I had never heard of it before the
other day, but I was in the video store and I saw it. I like politically humor
and I usually like Will - Ferrell. So I decided
to check it out.
The Review
There’s not a lot of deep
political satire in this movie. Despite
one candidate running as a Republican and one candidate running as a Democrat,
there’s no attempt to make any sort of partisan political humor.
What this
movie does seek to satirize is:
1) How
political campaigns are completely controlled by big money, and
2) Because
political campaigns are completely controlled by big money, the campaigns are
not about issues anymore, but instead about which candidate has the more
likeable personality.
I think
both of those presuppositions are true as far as they go, but the question is
whether the movie does an intelligent job of satirizing this. And it does not.
The plot
makes absolutely no sense, and is an insult to the intelligence of the
viewer.
The Plot (such as it
is)
Will Ferrell’s
character is a long standing senator, who gets caught in a telephone answering
machine sex scandal. The big money that
support his campaign decide he’s finished politically. (Even though it later becomes clear that in
the world of this movie, sex scandals do not hurt a politician’s credibility at
all.) And so they put all their money
into creating a rival candidate (played by Zach Galifianakis) who is the director
of local tourism and has a personality which is completely unsuited to
politics. (Zach Galifianakis playing the
political fish out of water paves the way for a lot of laughs, but plot wise it
again makes no sense. There was no one
else in the state they could have found who would have made a more suitable
candidate?)
Then after
putting lots of money into Galifianakis campaign, only when he is about to win
the election do the evil businessmen finally reveal what they want out of him—they
want him to sell his district to China and create Chinese style
sweatshops inside his district.
(First of
all, I’m not an expert, but I believe the job of a congressman is to represent
the views of his district on national issues in Washington DC. I don’t think it is within the power of a
congressman to change the local laws within his district, or sell his district
to China. Secondly, what kind of sense does it make for
the evil capitalists to pour all this money into Zach Galifianakis campaign
without bothering to check first if he is willing to do their evil
bidding? If big money really were this
stupid, it would be a non-issue.)
So then the
big money goes back to supporting Will Ferrell’s character. Which of course begs the question: why didn’t
they just do that all along in the first place?
I know, I
know, it’s just supposed to be a dumb comedy and it’s pointless to try and
nit-pick the plot like this. The plot is
supposed to be nothing more than a set-up for the jokes. But I just couldn’t look past all this when I
was watching this movie. You can watch
this movie for the jokes, but you can not watch the movie for the plot.
Nor is it a
law of nature that all comedies have to have nonsensical plots. Superior comedies have a story line that you
can get interested in even as they are giving you laughs along the way.
All that
being said, the good news is that despite having a plot that doesn’t make a
lick of sense, this is still a fun movie to watch. There are a lot of scenes in this movie which
certainly work comedically, and the ample laughs this movie
gave me while I was watching it make me willing to forgive the stupid plot.
Will Ferrell
plays a character which is not all that dissimilar from his caricature of
George W. Bush that he used to do so well. He says ridiculous things with great
conviction. He’s become so good at
playing the crowds that he can get them to cheer for just about anything if he
says it right. (America, freedom, and Jesus, he tells his campaign manager. I don’t
know what it means, but the people sure love it when I say it.) But
somewhere along the way he got separated from reality, and now he often doesn’t
understand how ridiculous he sounds to other people, and he acts like it’s
other people’s fault for not taking his ridiculous statements as serious as he
does. And when he’s in a hole, he just keeps
digging himself in deeper and deeper.
When he
accidentally dials the wrong number, and leaves an obscene phone message on a
religious family’s answering machine, Will Ferrell attempts to defend himself
like this:
“We can’t have this. It’s a behavior
that has to stop.”
Newspaper reporter: “But congressman, you made the call.”
Will Ferrell: “I have made in my lifetime probably over
one hundred thousand phone calls of which I could say maybe 1 percent have been
inappropriate. What is that, a thousand
phone calls?”
Campaign manager: That is exactly 1000
Will Ferrell: A thousand phone calls have been rude,
inappropriate, sexually explicit. Phone
calls I wish I could take back. But that’s only 1000 out of 100,000. I’ll take
those odds any day of the week.
Sure it’s an
exaggeration of the way politicians act, but, as with Ferrell’s old George W.
Bush impersonation, it’s only one or two steps removed from reality, and that’s
why it’s so funny.
Sometimes
though real life politicians are so stupid that it’s difficult for satire to
keep up (W). In that case
all the movie can do is simply replay what has already happened in real life, with
Will Ferrell putting his mock serious face over ridiculous events. So when Will Ferrell brags to his campaign
manager about how he just tweeted his mistress a picture of genitalia, he of
course acts like there’s nothing wrong with it.
(I CC’d you he says to his
campaign manager, over his campaign manager’s protests.)
The
personal attacks between the two candidates also at times seems like just an
exaggerated version of real life elections, but it reaches ridiculous
proportions, culminating with Will Ferrell’s plan to have sex with his
opponents wife, film the act, and then make it into a campaign add and put it
on TV. (I thought the conversation of
Will Ferrell’s campaign manager trying to talk him out of this plan was
particularly funny.)
There are
some brief, but funny, cameos by real life news anchors reporting on the
bizarre twists of the campaign. (It’s a
small moment, but I liked Joe Scarborough’s surprised reaction to the news
that Will Ferrell had gotten a bump in the polls from having sex with his
opponent’s wife on TV.)
To sum up:
this movie may not be very intelligent political comedy, but if you’re in a
silly mood it’s worth watching for the laughs, even if it doesn’t make any
sense.
SNAKE HANDLERS
The scene where will Ferrell gets bitten
by the snake in the church, and then unleashes a string of profanities, is one
of my favorites in the movie.
Shortly
after watching this movie I just happened to come across passages referencing
Snake Handling in two separate books I’ve been reading.
Coming from
the Midwest, I never really thought about
Snake Handling churches before, but this movie got the images stuck inn my
head. So when I came across these
sections in my reading, I thought, “Oh, of course, the Will Ferrell movie. That’s where this whole thing came from!”
In The Unauthorized Version: Truth and Fiction
in the Bible by Robin Lane Fox (A) (book review coming soon), Fox writes:
Verses 9-20 [From Chapter 16] which now round off the Gospel [of Mark]
are plainly a pastiche by some later hand…Here,
too, there is a gain in their loss. For these are the verses which make Jesus
tell the Apostles that believers “shall take up serpents and if they drink any
deadly thing, it shall not hurt them.”
Christians, therefore, could handle what no prudent Jew would touch: not
only did their texts of scriptures “defile the hands” but snakes, even, would
not bite them. In 1909 these verses so impressed an American Baptist, George
Hensley, that he began to handle snakes and pass them to his neighbours at
Christian meetings. Eventually he died
of snakebite, but not until the age of seventy-five; his practice persists
among the snake-handling Churches of God in Carolina and parts of the American South
(p. 144-145).
On a related note, I’ve also
recently been reading The Age of Reason
by Thomas Paine
(A) (book review coming soon) who had this to say:
Mark concludes his book by making Jesus say
to his disciples, chap. xvi. ver. 15 “Go ye into all the world and preach to
every creature; he that believeth and is baptized shall be saved, but he that
believeth not shall be damned” (fine Popish stuff, this) “and these signs shall
follow them that believe; in my name they shall drive out devils; they shall speak with
new tongues; they shall take up serpents; and if they drink any deadly thing it
shall not hurt them; they shall lay hands on the sick and they shall recover.”
Now, the bishop, in order to now see if
he has all this saving and wonder-working faith, should try those things upon
himself. He should take a good dose of arsenic, and if he please, I will send
him a rattle snake from America!
As for myself, as I believe in God and not at all in Jesus Christ, nor in the
books called the scriptures, the experiment does not concern me (From Part
III, Section 2. FULL TEXT HERE)
Paine,
writing in the early 19th Century, could not of course now that in the 20th
century some American Christians would actually take him up on his challenge.
(Wikipedia also
has a really interesting article on snake handlers (W)).
Link of the Day
Struggles of the PastThe Campaign: Movie Review (Scripted)
Wednesday, December 19, 2012
Bart Ehrman is back in the news after publishing an article in Newsweek on the Birth of Christ. (Actually it looks like this article appeared last week, so I'm slightly late to the party on this one, but an interesting article nonetheless.)
Most of Bart Ehrman's blog is unfortunately pay for content only, but his post Responses to my Newsweek Article is available in its entirety.
Most of Bart Ehrman's blog is unfortunately pay for content only, but his post Responses to my Newsweek Article is available in its entirety.
Tuesday, December 18, 2012
Flashman and the Angel of the Lord by George MacDonald Fraser
(Book Review )
Another
Flashman book. (See also: Flashman, Royal Flash, Flash for Freedom, Flashman at the Charge, Flashman and the Great Game, Flashman's Lady , Flashman and the Redskins, Flashman and the Dragon, Flashman on the March, and the original source material Tom Brown's Schooldays by Thomas Hughes.)
In this
volume, Flashman joins John Brown and the raid on Harper’s Ferry.
In my
opinion, John Brown is one of the more fascinating characters in history (back in 2007, I listed him as one of the top ten Hollywood biopics I would like to see) John Brown may have
been slightly crazy, but he was also a figurehead for one of the great idealist
movements in history. Because much of
human history is just greed and selfishness, stories of true of idealism are
always refreshing to hear (and need to be told more).
The problem
is getting Flashman into the narrative.
Since Flashman
is first and foremost a self-preservationist, and since he despises all forms
of altruism, joining John Brown’s suicidal raid into Harper’s Ferry is the last
place you’d expect to find him. It’s a
problem acknowledged very early on in the book.
You will wonder, if you’re familiar
with my inglorious record, how I came to take part with John Brown at all. Old Flashy, the bully and poltroon, cad and
turncoat, lecher and toady—bearing Freedom’s banner aloft in the noblest cause
of all, the liberation of the enslaved and the downtrodden?
….as any of you who
have read my other memoirs will have guessed, I’d not have been within three
thousand miles of Harper’s Ferry, or blasted Brown, but for the ghastliest
series of mischances: three hellish coincidences—three mark you!—that even
Dickens wouldn’t have used for fear of being hooted at in the
street. But they happened, with that damned Nemesis logic that has haunted me
all my life, and landed me in more horrors than I can count
[Pages 20-21]
..and then after contemplating for a couple more pages how
strange his life has been, Flashman finally gets around to beginning the
strange story.
It began (it usually does) with a wanton
nymph in Calcutta
at the back-end of ’58. (Page 23).
And thus
the wheels of the story are set in motion.
Because of
all the convoluted plot needed to force Flashman into (unwillingly) joining
John Brown, 200 pages pass before Flashman and John Brown even meet.
But the
good news is that these 200 pages are not wasted. They’re packed with the usual sort of
fascinating historical details you’ve come to expect from these Flashman
books. And a full 40 pages of footnotes
and appendixes further expanding on the historical events and personages that
intrude into Flashman’s story.
(A
co-worker of mine who is also a Flashman fan commented that the detailed
footnotes are the best part of a Flashman book, and I’m inclined to agree.)
Which
brings me to:
The History
I thought I
had known the history of John Brown and Harper’s Ferry, but reading this book I
was continually surprised to realize just how much I hadn’t known.
George
MacDonald Fraser has thoroughly researched the event to bring to life the
little details surrounding Harpers Ferry that
don’t usually make it into the history books.
Take for instance this description of one of the exchanges between John
Brown’s men and the hostile town’s people.
And then J.B. [John Brown] sent out another white flag. There was a great howl of fury when it
appeared in the armoury gateway, but a militia officer bawled to them to hold
their fire, for it was borne by one of the hostages, who came marching towards
the hotel with young Bill Thompson by his side.
The crowd surged out and surrounded them, drowning the hostage’s plea to
be heard, the flag was torn from him, and Bill Thompson was dragged into the
Wager House, battered and kicked with yells of “Lynch the bastard! No, no
hangin’s too good for him—burn the son-of-a-bitch!” The drunken din from
beneath was now so deafening that there wasn’t a word to be made out, but since
they didn’t haul Thompson out for execution I guessed he was still alive—for
the time being.
You’d have thought J.B. would have
learned from that incident, but not he—not long after, another white rag was seen
waving in the armoury, the order to cease fire was shouted again, and this time
it was Aaron Stevens and Watson Brown who came out, side by side. You bloody fools, thinks I, you’re done for,
but on they came towards the hotel, Watson stiff as a ramrod, with his head
carried high, and big Aaron ploughing along with one hand raised like an Indian
in greeting. For a moment it was so
still I could hear their boots squelching through the puddles—and then a rifle
cracked, and Watson stumbled forward and fell on his hands and knees. A great
cheer went up, a volley of shots followed, and Stevens seemed to hesitate, and
then he came for the Wager House like a bull at a gate, hurling the flag away,
and was cut down within twenty paces of the hotel—I absolutely saw his body jerk
as the slugs hit him, and then the hostage who had been with Bill Thompson came
running out, arms spread wide, turning to put himself between the two shot men
and the mob. Another hostage who must
have been following Stevens and Watson from the armoury ran forward to join
him, and together they dragged Stevens to the Wager House, one of them yelling:
“You cowardly scum! Stop it, damn you—cain’t ye see the flag?” For a moment the
firing stopped, and then it was seen that Watson was crawling on all fours back
toward the armoury, and the mob set up a great yell and let fly again. He scrambled up and ran, clutching his
stomach, with the bullets churning the dirt around his feet, and went down
again, but he still kept crawling and managed to roll to cover behind one of
the gate posts. That sent them wild, and
they poured in fire harder than ever.
The following is a list of all the really interesting
historical things I learned from reading this book:
* I really
had no idea about the various men who joined John Brown on his crusade, or what
their various back stories and motivations were. In many other histories of Harper's
Ferry, all the other men besides John Brown are regulated to the
background, but George MacDonald Fraser does a very nice job of rescuing the
other 21 men from historical obscurity and telling their stories. It’s historical fiction, of course, not hard
history but through Fraser’s fiction we get very colorful pictures of John Kagi
(W) (the young Swiss idealist who was one of John Brown’s best
strategists) and Shields “Emperor” Green (W) (a freed slave, and one
of Fredrick Douglass’s former companions, who ends up deciding to leave Douglas
and join John Brown).
* I also
learned about the bizarre role that George Washington’s great-grandnephew, the
sword of Lafayette and the pistol of Fredrick the
Great all played in the Harper’s Ferry incident.
* I had
previously thought John Brown’s raid on Harper’s Ferry failed because the black
slaves didn’t rise up as he expected them to.
Although this is partly true, George MacDonald Fraser also makes very
clear that the real reason the raid failed is because John Brown himself got
caught up in indecision. The original
plan had been to simply raid the armoury at Harper’s Ferry and then retreat to
the hills, but John Brown froze up and failed to do evacuate when the time
came. (Fraser portrays John Brown as a
great charismatic leader who is great at exciting the passion of abolitionist
crowds in the North, but not a great military leader.)
* Speaking of
which, I had previously thought that John Brown’s reputation was mostly made at
Harper’s Ferry, but Fraser portrays him as already being a hero and celebrity
in the North even before the disastrous raid.
* This book
also gives an interesting portrayal of the Secret Six (W), the group
of Northern Abolitionists who funded much of John Brown’s activities. Interestingly enough, the author of the
infamous Battle Hymn of the Republic,
Julia Ward Howe, was the wife of one of the Secret Six.
* After John
Brown was wounded and captured at Harper’s Ferry, there was a bizarre scene in
which he got into a long discussion with the public and members of the press
from his wounded cot. (George MacDonald
Fraser includes all this in his story, and also references it in his endnotes.)
* The long
prologue to the book (the 200 pages before Flashman even meets John Brown)
affords George MacDonald Fraser the luxury of going on several historical
digressions. For those of us who love
history, these various digressions (backed up by long endnotes in the back) are
a real treat. No doubt people who don’t
care for history would find it annoying, but then people who don’t care for
history probably wouldn’t bother reading the Flashman books.
A throwaway
comment by Flashman at the beginning of the book leads to a page and a half
endnote in the back telling the story of Jack Johnson, the first black to win
the heavy weight title, Arthur Conan Doyle and Jack London.
Apparently
Jack London was so appalled by the idea of a black man beating a white man at
boxing that he started the “Whip the Nigger” campaign to “remove the golden
smile from Johnson’s face”. It’s a
rather unflattering detail about Jack London which makes me think I was too
nice to him in my review of The IronHeel. (I had heard before that Jack London was a
white supremacist, but had always imagined he was a white supremacist in the
way most people back then were racists of some stripe or another. I had no idea Jack London had been such a
vehement bigot.)
* I also
learned about William Seward, another character in this book, who was in 1858
widely believed to be the next President of the United States, but who would lose
the 1860 Republican nomination to the relatively unknown Abraham Lincoln. (Again, the endnotes give a brief but
interesting political biography of Seward.)
* And
finally, the fascinating story of Allan Pinkerton.
Everyone is
familiar with the Pinkerton Detective Agency that was so infamous for breaking
labor unions around the turn of the century.
It turns
out, however, that the founder of the agency, Allan Pinkerton (1819-94) was
actually a member of the Chartist movement, a radical workers rights group in England in the
1830s and 40s. He had to emigrate to America
to avoid arrest after participating in violent Chartist protests. George MacDonald Fraser notes the irony that
the detective agency he set up was later used to suppress radical workers.
Allan
Pinkerton was also a friend and supporter of John Brown
* This book
also describes in detail the meeting between John Brown and Fredrick
Douglass. The meeting between the two
men is a historical fact, although oddly enough George MacDonald Fraser breaks
with his usual method and doesn’t include any endnotes for the meeting.
He does,
however, include some endnotes on the life of Fredrick Douglass. Another interesting fact I learned is that although
Fredrick Douglass had not been involved in Harper’s Ferry, the political
fallout from the event was such that he still had to flee the United States afterwards.
*****************************************************
When
discussing the problems of slavery on page 103, Flashman offers the following
theory:
…but what astonishes
me today is that all the wiseacres who discuss its origins and inevitability,
never give a thought to where it really began, back in 1776, with their idiotic
Declaration of Independence. If they’d had the wit to stay in the Empire then,
instead of getting drunk on humbug about “freedom” and letting a pack of
firebrands (who had a fine eye to their own advantage) drag ‘em into a
pointless rebellion, there would never have been an American Civil War, and that’s
as sure as any “if” can be. How so? Well, Britain abolished the slave trade in
1807, and slavery in 1833, and the South would have been bound to go along with
that, grumbling, to be sure, but helpless against the will of Britain and her
northern American colonies. It would all
have happened quietly, no doubt with compensation, and there’d have been
nothing for North and South to fight about. Q.E.D.
Possibly. But allow me to pick a few holes in this
theory.
For one
thing, although Britain
abolished the slavery about 30 years ahead of America, both countries abolished
the slave trade at around the same
time. And in fact, Britain was motivated
to abolish the slave trade because America was also abolishing it, at least
according to The Decline and Fall of the
British Empire by Piers Brendon (A),
For various reasons they [British
parliamentarians] believed it
[abolishing the slave trade] would no
longer be economically damaging, particularly as America was also outlawing the
slave trade and other countries were expected to follow suit.
(page 31)
So if America had never left the British
Empire, the slave trade might not have been abolished. Or at the very least, it might have continued
for much longer. And then perhaps Britain might
not have abolished slavery in 1833.
Besides
which, Britain
was able to painlessly abolish slavery in 1833 because the American South
(whose economy depended on slavery) had cut itself loose. If America
had still been part of the British Empire, would
slavery still have been outlawed in 1833?
I’m not
sure myself, but it’s certainly not as simple as Flashman (and George MacDonald
Fraser) are making it out.
***************************************************************************
The
abolitionists and underground railroad workers are not always favorably
portrayed in this book, and often come off looking like crackpots in this
book.
For
example, on page 198 Flashman observes Franklin Sanborn (W) (a member
of the secret six):
He was one of your tiptop babblers, I could
see, smiling, fidgeting, and suddenly remembering to offer us refreshment, with
more prattle about the fatigue of travelling, and the crowded of railway cars.
If this is a sample of our abolitionist conspirators, I can see American
slavery flourishing for a century or two yet, thinks I
The poor
Northern abolitionists—historians and historical fiction writers seem to have never really forgiven them for
being on the right side of history, and so they always get portrayed as preachy
and insufferable and often cowardly.
But if
Fraser is a bit harsh on the abolitionists, he also balances things out by
showing the extreme violence and hatred on the other side. The citizens of Virginia are so outraged by the
abolitionists that the mob shoots down John Brown’s men who come out under a
flag of truce. One of the men who comes
out under a flag of truce, Bill Thompson, is lynched by the mob, and then his
dead body is used by them as target practice.
In one of
the appendixes at the end of the book, Fraser debates the question of John
Brown’s sanity, but then concludes with these words:
The question of his sanity cannot be
answered now. He was held fit to plead at his trial; rightly, so far as we can
tell, but not many layman would, on the evidence, call him normal or balanced. “Reasoning
insanity” is the judgment of one eminent historian, and it will do as well as
any other. We cannot know him, but it does not matter. He is part of history and historic legend,
and if what he tried to do was not heroic, then the word has no meaning.
(From Appendix I, page 354).
Sensationalism?
On page 24, Flashman says:
It’s always been the same. Suppose some
learned scholar were to discover a Fifth Gospel which proved beyond a doubt
that Our Lord survived the Cross and became a bandit or a slave-trader, or a
politician, even—d’you think it would disturb the Christian faith one little
bit? Of course not; ‘twouldn’t even be denied, likely, just ignored. Hang it, I’ve
seen evidence, in black and white in our secret files, that Benjamin Franklin
was a British spy right through the American Revolution, selling out patriots
for all he was worth—but would any Yankee believe that, if ‘twas published?
Never, because it’s not what they want
to believe.
Fraser
attempts to back this up in his footnotes:
For evidence that Benjamin Franklin (“Agent
No. 72”) and his assistant, Edward Bancroft, were working for British
Intelligence during their time at the American Embassy in Paris, and passed
information to London which resulted in heavy American shipping losses, see
Richard Deacon A History of British Secret Service, 1980.
(Endnote #4, p. 365)
It’s a
shocking charge, but my own research (10 minutes on Google) seems to indicate
that this isn’t really a credible mainstream theory on Benjamin Franklin.
In the
context of the book, this is a throwaway comment by Flashman which has no
impact on the rest of the story. All the
same, this may be an indication that George MacDonald Fraser has a weakness for
using sensationalist sources, and that perhaps I should take start taking him
with more of a grain of salt?
There is
another conspiracy theory advanced in this book that is much more central to
the story—the idea that the United States Government had known in advance about
the raid on Harper’s Ferry, but chose not to do anything.
How credible
is this? I’m not really qualified to
say.
Connections with
Other Flashman Books
Previously I had said (in my
review of Flashman on the March) that
it doesn’t really matter what order you read these books in.
I now wish
to take that back. It does matter. This book makes repeated references back to
Flashman’s previous to adventures in America: Flash for Freedom and Flashman
and the Redskins. Both books should
really be read before this one.
Connections with
other Books I’ve Been Reading
Richard
Burton never appears as a character in any of the Flashman books. (Which is a shame. It would have been really cool to have a
story about Flashman going along on one of Richard Burton’s expeditions.) But in many of the Flashman books Flashman
will namedrop Richard Burton as a friend of his.
* In the
beginning of the book, there’s about a 40 page digression where Flashman is in South Africa, and talks about what South Africa
was like in 1858.
This is
close to 20 years before the events described in Thomas Pakenham’s The Scramble for Africa, but
the politics seem to be largely the same.
The same problems, balancing the interests of the Boers, the British,
and native Africans, are already present.
Link of the Day
Noam Chomsky on Palestine and Israel
Link of the Day
Noam Chomsky on Palestine and Israel
Flashman and the Angel of the Lord by George MacDonald Fraser: Book Review (Scripted)
Part 2: Flashman and the Angel of the Lord by George MacDonald Fraser: Book Review (Scripted)
Saturday, December 15, 2012
Thoughts on Gun Violence
It is worth
remembering that children in the rest of the world also watch all the same
violent movies that American kids watch, and the rest of the world also plays
all the same violent video games.
In Japan, for example, sometimes the media is more violent than would be tolerated in America.
The movie Battle Royale was one of the
biggest domestic hits ever in Japan. It couldn’t even get released on video in the
United States. Because of the graphic scenes of junior high
school students killing each other, no US distributor was willing to touch
it.
It is also
worth remembering that in every country mental illness exists.
Japan can be a
high stress society that causes people to snap easily. Sometimes students who can’t take the
pressure of school will bring a knife to school and try to stab the teacher or
other students.
When I was
living in Japan, there were a couple of different incidents where mentally ill
people brought knives to crowded sections of Tokyo and stabbed as many people
as they could before they were overpowered by police.
The
difference between 5 people stabbed, and 20 children gunned down in a matter of
seconds, is the difference between a society that allows semi-automatic assault
weapons, and one that doesn’t.
I’m told by
my British friends that in the 1990s, a mentally ill man brought a gun to a
school in Scotland
and shot several children. As a result
pistols were banned in Britain,
and hunting guns are tightly regulated.
(If you own a hunting weapon, the police will periodically come to your
house to make sure the weapon is stored in a secure place.) There has not been a repeat incident.
In the United States,
we’ve had many many more school shootings since Columbine.
Anyone who
has lived abroad can tell you the rest of the world thinks we are insane on the
gun issue. I can’t even count the number
of times a British, Australian, or Japanese person has said to me, “Really,
what is it with America
and guns? Don’t you guys get it by now?”
In Japan,
it is impossible to get a hold of a gun without some sort of connection with
organized crime. Yes, the Yakuza does
still own handguns, but no mentally ill teenager is going to get a hold of a
semi automatic assault weapon.
In America
the genie is already out of the bottle to a certain degree, but it is not
impossible to reverse course. In Cambodia, the
streets were flooded with AK-47s in the 1990s as a result of the civil
war. The government decided it needed to
get these guns off the street in order to have a peaceful society, and within a
matter of years they had largely succeeded in getting back most of these guns.
Of course I
say this all knowing full well nothing is going to change. I guess I’ll just post again after the next
gun massacre in a couple of months. See
you then.
(PS—I do
not for one minute believe that immediately after a gun massacre it is
inappropriate to talk about gun control.
That’s like saying after a nuclear power plant meltdown it is
inappropriate to talk about nuclear safety.
The reason some of us are for gun control in the first place is
precisely because of this type of scenario.)
Link of the Day
Friday, December 14, 2012
Wednesday, December 12, 2012
Interesting article on Salon.com about the current state of Michigan. As someone who hasn't really kept up on local news all that much since I left, I don't really have any thoughts on this, but I'm guessing some of you might.
Tuesday, December 11, 2012
The Whisperer in Darkness
Why I Watched This
Movie
Since
discussing The Cabin in the Woods with my co-workers, the name H. P.
Lovecraft has come up a few times now in the office.
I generally
consider myself a fan of cheesy old pulpy horror/ sci-fi stories, but, I’m embarrassed
to admit, I’d never heard of H.P. Lovecraft until a few weeks ago.
Since I’ve
become aware of Lovecraft, I’ve been keeping my eye open for his books, but
English books are always in short supply in Cambodia.
Cheap
pirated DVDs, however, are not. And so
the other day when I was in the DVD store, I came across this film adaptation
of one of H. P. Lovecraft’s stories, and decided to check it out.
The Review
The first thing to note is that
this film is not produced by a major Hollywood
studio, but is instead the passion project of the H.P. Lovecraft Historical Society (W). Correspondingly, the film has no recognizable
actors, and a small budget.
That being
said, it’s not quite as bad as you would expect. It’s not in the same league as a major Hollywood release, of course, but it is about on par with
other independent films, or a couple hours of network television.
The key is
to go in with low expectations. Imagine
you're just watching an episode of the old Outer
Limits for example. Just like the
old Outer Limits, the acting and the
production values might not be great, but there’s an old fashioned spooky story
that you can get drawn into if you let yourself go with it.
The
producers of this movie decided to film it in the style of the old 1930s horror
movies because the original story was from 1931 (the DVD jacket cites Dracula, Frankenstein, and King Kong in particular as influences).
It’s a clever idea trying to mimic old horror
movies, and the old school filming style also does a lot to cover up the low
production values of the film.
There were
a couple things that kept me from fully immersing myself in the story however.
1).The
acting isn’t great, and a couple of the actors are probably miscast for their
character, and this did keep pulling me out of the story. And
2). Some of
the homages to 1930s movies are a bit too clever for their own good, and this
constantly reminded me I was watching a film production, and it also prevented
me from getting fully involved in the story.
The story
itself is one of H.P. Lovecraft’s short stories that has been stretched out to
a whole movie, and it feels like a short story that has been stretched
out.
But then
again, just tell yourself this is an episode of The Outer Limits that goes a little bit long, and it should be
alright.
Notes (and spoilers):
* A number of things I didn’t fully understand about the
story. Either I missed something, or
they never really explained how he managed to close the portal. (What exactly was it that he threw into the
portal? And why did that cause it to
close?)
How exactly
did these creatures manage to convert humans to their cause? What did they do exactly? And if they have this mysterious power, why
wasn’t the old man ever fully converted? I mean they clearly had him exactly where
they wanted him as a brain in a jar?
The
ultimate purpose of these creatures was never fully explained, and in fact the
film was being deliberately coy with this point. I’m not sure if this was explained any better
in H.P. Lovecraft’s original story or not.
Link of the Day
Q & A with Noam ChomskyThe Whisperer in Darkness: Movie Review (Scripted)
Tuesday, December 04, 2012
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 1
I’m a
couple years behind the times, but I am working my way through the Harry Potter
movies.
For past Harry Potter Reviews see
Book Reviews:
* Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire,
* Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix ,
* Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, and
* Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows
(The first 3 books in the series I read (or listened to rather) before I had started up my book review project.
Previous Movie Reviews:
* Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince here
* A review of "Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix" here,
* Some thoughts on the Goblet of Fire here,
* A brief mention of "The Prisoner of Azkaban" here,
and everything else was before I started regularly reviewing movies on this blog.
As for this
movie, I suppose the first thing that needs discussing is:
The Controversial Decision to Split it into
Two Parts
Much ink
has already been spilled over the decision to split the last Harry Potter movie
into two halves. More probably does not
need to be said on the subject, but since this is my blog, I’m going to go
ahead add my two cents anyway.
From a
story telling perspective, it would have made much more sense to split the
fifth or sixth book into two parts instead.
These were the stories that really suffered in their abridgement to the
big screen.
The seventh
book wasn’t actually as long as the 5th or 6th book. And, although the beginning of the book
started out with a bang, and although it ended with a bang, the middle really
lagged. Harry, Ron and Hermione just go
camping and spend several pages arguing with each other.
(Stephen King wrote of the 7th book, that In Deathly Hallows, for instance, there's an awful lot of wandering around and camping in that tent; it starts to feel like Ms. Rowling running out the clock on the school year to fit the format of the previous six books.)
In
Deathly Hallows, for instance, there’s an awful lot of wandering around
and camping in that tent; it starts to feel like Ms. Rowling running
out the clock on the school year to fit the format of the previous six
books.
Read more: http://crushable.com/entertainment/stephen-king-on-harry-potter-and-the-deathly-hallows/#ixzz2CYMafxU7
Read more: http://crushable.com/entertainment/stephen-king-on-harry-potter-and-the-deathly-hallows/#ixzz2CYMafxU7
In
Deathly Hallows, for instance, there’s an awful lot of wandering around
and camping in that tent; it starts to feel like Ms. Rowling running
out the clock on the school year to fit the format of the previous six
books.
Read more: http://crushable.com/entertainment/stephen-king-on-harry-potter-and-the-deathly-hallows/#ixzz2CYMafxU7).
Read more: http://crushable.com/entertainment/stephen-king-on-harry-potter-and-the-deathly-hallows/#ixzz2CYMafxU7).
So,
ironically the 7th book is the one that least deserves the double
movie treatment.
All that
being said, I understand that from a marketing perspective you can’t really
split the 5th installment into two parts, but you can get away with
milking the climax.
But let’s
change the question. Putting aside the
fact that arguably “The Order of the Phoenix”
or “The Half-Blood Prince,” should have been two parters instead, and judging
this movie solely on its own merits, do I think it benefits from being in two
parts?
Yeah a
bit. All the previous 6 movies have felt
so rushed, so it’s nice that at least one book in the series gets a more
relaxed pace in its transition onto the big screen.
I know a
lot of people were upset at what they saw as a blatant attempt to keep milking
the Harry Potter cash cow, but from the perspective of a viewer I don’t mind.
The Review
I thought
the movie worked alright as an adaptation of the book.
The problem
with all of these Harry Potter movies is that they never really come into their
own as movies in their own right, and feel just like abridged versions of the
book. And that’s true of this one as
well. But by this point in the series, I’ve
come to accept that.
And so I
wasn’t surprised when characters were introduced briefly on the screen, had a
couple lines of dialogue, and the promptly disappeared again. We all know who they are from the books, and
so it’s okay if the movie doesn’t have time to develop half of the characters
it introduces. I also wasn’t surprised
when the movie never really reached a satisfying climax before ending.
The Harry
Potter Universe has a lot of colorful supporting characters, but in this book
they are unfortunately neglected as the trio of Harry Potter, Ron and Hermione
go off on their own. And that’s
reflected in this movie as well. There’s
one brief scene when the baddies board the train heading to Hogwarts, but for
this movie that’s all we see of most of Harry’s classmates.
Hopefully
they’ll get some screen time in the next movie.
The action
scenes in this movie are decent, but nothing special.
Although many
different directors have taken their turn at Harry Potter, in all the movies,
action scenes have never been the director’s strong point. Nobody has yet figured out anything more
exciting to do in these scenes than have the characters point wands and yell
spells.
I’ll be
interested to see what they do with the big climatic battle at the end of the
book (which will no doubt be in the second movie) but my expectations are going
to be low going into it.
The very
beginning action scene was also disappointing. It was set at night, which (at least on my tv)
made it dark and confusing to follow.
(If I’m not mistaken, the same scene happened in daylight in the
book. Am I remembering that right?)
Plus most
of the action occurred off screen and was only referenced later by the
characters. Unless I missed something,
Mad-Eye Moody got killed off-screen (which was a bit of
an ignoble send off to one of the more colorful characters) and George also lost his ear off-screen.
Also during
certain scenes I wasn’t exactly sure why sometimes the characters used their
magic powers to teleport themselves, and sometimes they ran. During that chase scene in the woods, I
thought it would have made much more sense for the characters to teleport
instead as they had in previous scenes.
(Again, with the caveat of unless I
missed something. Was there some
reason why they couldn’t teleport in that scene?)
Oh well,
onto the last movie in the series next.
Stay tuned, I’ll get around to it eventually.
Other Thoughts
Given how everything
in Hollywood
gets re-made eventually, it’s not inconceivable that in 50 years time someone
will try and remake the Harry Potter
series.
When that
happens, I recommend Harry Potter get
the Game of Thrones, and turned into
a TV show instead. Each book could be
converted into one season. This way
things won’t have to be so rushed or have so much cut out.
Link of the Day
Noam Chomsky - Phone Interview - November 16th, 2012
Link of the Day
Noam Chomsky - Phone Interview - November 16th, 2012
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 1: Movie Review (Scripted)
Saturday, December 01, 2012
Links
Cracked.com recently posted
5 Things Nobody Tells You About Living in Japan
Speaking as someone who lived in Japan for 8 years, I thought I might be qualified to comment on some of his points.
#5. Everything Is Frightfully Low-Tech
-Ah, yes and no on this one. With the examples he cites, yes definitely. As he says, the older generation in Japan is a bit technophobic, and they are the ones in charge of the city hall and the businesses.
And do not even get me started on those stupid ATM machines which closed down at the same time as the bank. They were the bane of every foreigner who lived in Japan. How we hated that inconvenience.
But in other ways Japan can be very high tech. For example when I first arrived in 2001, the cell-phones that every common Japanese teenager had were light years ahead of anything being sold in the US at the time. (Although I think with Apple and the iphone that gap has now closed.)
#4. The Houses Have No Heat
-Oh, so true. So very very true.
And for the hazards of kerosene heaters the author mentions--just see this post here.
Not to mention the bad smells from kerosene.
#3. The Hospitals Close On Weekends and Evenings
-I think the emergency rooms are still open on the weekends. Although prepare to spend the whole day waiting.
#2. You Will Always Be an Outsider
-True.
#1. The Country Really Isn't That Weird
-True. Average day to day life can get quite boring after a while actually.
Other Links:
In the category of: completely random things I found while surfing on the Internet
George Orwell: In Defence of P. G. Wodehouse
I had no idea about this Wodehouse/Nazi controversy before I came across Orwell's article, but Orwell's writing really pulls you into it. It's just a really interesting article to read even if you don't know anything.
From the Phnom Penh Post: More Toilets Needed (This actually is a bit of a serious problem in Phnom Penh--a city with serious hygiene problems.)
Whisky Prajer's twitter alerts me to a post of his I missed back in 2005, but should give a good laugh to us Dutch--The Mennonite / NeoCalvinist Drinking Game - An Idea Whose Time Has Come!
and via Phil-- On Charles Schulz's quiet integration of Peanuts and the racism of Dennis the Menace
Cracked.com recently posted
5 Things Nobody Tells You About Living in Japan
Speaking as someone who lived in Japan for 8 years, I thought I might be qualified to comment on some of his points.
#5. Everything Is Frightfully Low-Tech
-Ah, yes and no on this one. With the examples he cites, yes definitely. As he says, the older generation in Japan is a bit technophobic, and they are the ones in charge of the city hall and the businesses.
And do not even get me started on those stupid ATM machines which closed down at the same time as the bank. They were the bane of every foreigner who lived in Japan. How we hated that inconvenience.
But in other ways Japan can be very high tech. For example when I first arrived in 2001, the cell-phones that every common Japanese teenager had were light years ahead of anything being sold in the US at the time. (Although I think with Apple and the iphone that gap has now closed.)
#4. The Houses Have No Heat
-Oh, so true. So very very true.
And for the hazards of kerosene heaters the author mentions--just see this post here.
Not to mention the bad smells from kerosene.
#3. The Hospitals Close On Weekends and Evenings
-I think the emergency rooms are still open on the weekends. Although prepare to spend the whole day waiting.
#2. You Will Always Be an Outsider
-True.
#1. The Country Really Isn't That Weird
-True. Average day to day life can get quite boring after a while actually.
Other Links:
In the category of: completely random things I found while surfing on the Internet
George Orwell: In Defence of P. G. Wodehouse
I had no idea about this Wodehouse/Nazi controversy before I came across Orwell's article, but Orwell's writing really pulls you into it. It's just a really interesting article to read even if you don't know anything.
From the Phnom Penh Post: More Toilets Needed (This actually is a bit of a serious problem in Phnom Penh--a city with serious hygiene problems.)
Whisky Prajer's twitter alerts me to a post of his I missed back in 2005, but should give a good laugh to us Dutch--The Mennonite / NeoCalvinist Drinking Game - An Idea Whose Time Has Come!
and via Phil-- On Charles Schulz's quiet integration of Peanuts and the racism of Dennis the Menace