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An ancient marketplace

March 3rd 2007 00:49
Usually, I am not a culture hawk. I do not gush into tears hearing a syncopated symphony, I do not refuse to scratch my head when reading a modernist poem and I blink and stare at modern art without claiming any epiphanies. You can call me moronic that way or simply middle class. But when I read this small news item I felt a twinge of wistfulness and immense reverence that ancient monuments and great art are supposed to generate in us. An archaeological discovery was made and what was dug up was not a fort or a temple but a marketplace. A rather anonymous place that probably was not mentioned in any literature and hence has not entered our mental landscape.


This is the news item from Yahoo:

Archaeologists have discovered extensive remains of what is believed to be an ancient marketplace with shops and a religious center at the southern edge of Athens, the Culture Ministry said Friday. The finds, in the coastal neighborhood of Voula, date from the 4th or 5th century B.C.


"It is a very large complex," the ministry said. "It was a site of rich financial and religious activity, which was most probably a marketplace."

Marketplaces — or agoras — teemed with shops, open-air stalls and administrative buildings, and were the financial, political and social center of ancient Greek life.

Archaeologists believe the complex belonged to the municipality of Aexonides Halai, among the largest settlements surrounding ancient Athens.

The main building was a hollow square with a rock-cut reservoir in the center. The building had 12 rooms — probably shops — and a small temple with an open-air altar.

Finds included large quantities of pottery, coins and lead weights that would have been used in transactions by traders.


Last month, archaeologists discovered an ancient theater in the northwestern Athens suburb of Menidi.

There it is. I have blogged before about capitalism in Assyrian and Islamic worlds. I wrote about their immense efficacy and wealth but I did not write about their cultural impac, about how lively they were, how picturesque to behold and most of all, how sacred. The sacredness of a marketplace is a given in ancient world. I was blogging, rather fitfully, about Herodotus, wasn't I? The first book of Herodotus brings that sacredness to the fore. Some of the greatest epics are set in market milieu and the perfumes on the streets of Baghdad bazaars, the art works commissioned by Florentine businessmen still haunt us to this day. I will write about it later.

Most ardent proponets of market capitalism regard it s a system antithetical to cultural efflorescense. They are wrong. And of course the culture vultures are always ascribing cultural erosion to markets. This is nothing new. There were Spengler and Fromm who noted that the new era of nineteenth century capitalism eroded "the sense of wonder" of the feudal days.

A random discovery of a random marketplace has evoked such a sense of cultural recognition in me, who is removed from it by centuries and continents. After the effete cultural mores imposed on us by a century of a welfare statism, it is time to reclaim the romance and the adventure of markets and restore them their rightful cultural potency. It won't be easy. As a steady diet of poison inures people to poison itself, we as a people generally have ceased to care about cultre at all. Many liberal commentators ( the post-modern types) readily ascribe this to globalization, liberalization, in a word, to market capitalism. According to their theories, cultural vibrancy was greater in nanny states where morsels of high and low culture were carefully rationed. If anything after a systematic starvation, people have simply ceased to care about culture.

But as the world become more and more capitalized, people will also remember the important role makets played in their own cultural heritage, they will begin to understand the part played by markets in their own imagination and they will eventually reclaim back the "sense of wonder."
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An attack of lassitude

February 26th 2007 22:37
I am siiting on my table and looking out the window to a day that is as soggy as my mood. For the past week or so, I have not read much and I don't have anything to write about nor have I blogged here. What is affecting me? I do not know. I am familiar with these bouts of lassitude but this utter carelessness of both reading and writing is new to me. And nothing I could do or nothing I could have done, moves me even a litle bit. I am apathetic, I am enervated, I am dead.

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Killing Atlas

February 5th 2007 06:42
The Atlas who Shrugged:Ayn Rand

For a novel whose movie adaptation has not even gone onto the floors, Atlas Shrugged is generating a lot of buzz. Look at this International Herald Tribune's article which fairly describes the number of unsuccesful attempts to film it. The article does not induce confidence. For one, the movie is going to be 2 hours long. For heaven's sake, why film it at all?

And then it's going to star Angelina Jolie. There is more than a sense of dismay in her usual fans that this actress, known for adopting African babies and going on UN paid altruism trips, should do something like Atlas. Well, there's something funny about all this. She reminds me of one of those actresses Ayn described in The Fountainhead, the one who stands on a dead lion and pronounces her opinion on the Roark trial.

the fear is not about a mediocre adaptation. It is about thed need of the liberal junta to run down, to vandalise, to destroy anything that does not fit their agenda. In short, their iconoclasm. They are going to kill Atlas. For the rest of us though, there is still the book.

Pic Courtesy: New York Times
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Amazons: Who were they?

January 20th 2007 03:58
Amazons. Who hasn't heard of these fearless nation of women warriors? Hippolyta, Penthesilea and other immortal names? They have forever scarred people's imaginations as brave women, fierce but graceful, dangerous and sexy at the same time. A women-hating, homosexual English poet called Shakespeare even used an Amazon heroine to portray a brutish, marm-like dyke to vent his spleen.

According to ancient Greek legends, they were supposed to be a nation composed of entirely women who were trained for war and fearless in waging it. They were so committed to bravery that they even burned their right breast off so that it will be easier for them to us e abow and arrow. Only women were allowed in their society but to prevent them from dying up, they would kidnap hapless men from neighbouring countries, get pregnant and breed girl children. They even marched right up to Athens, to claim their queen who had been fisked by the upstart Theseus.

The myths are clear and consistent and you have to remember that even Homer was accused of being a fabulist until Schliemann found Troy or remains of a city that could be Troy. If so many other Greek traditions have been found to be true, they why not this, one of the most persistent and colorful of all legends? And its not just Greeks. They appear in mythic traditions across "three continents", as Sacred-texts.com site puts it.

The ruse of women burning their right breast is remarkably used in Silappadikaram, a Tamil Epic, where this act becomes the apotheotic climax. This epic is set in Kaveripattanam, a big port connected to the rest of the world through sea. Even though the herione in the epic is a housewife and not a martial warrior, remember merchants were the surest way of transmission of tales in the ancient world. And the tales of handsome warriors being forced to impregnate a nation of women are a legion, to be found in various chivalric literatures.

People who looked for the original Amazons have generally considered Sarmatians as the most likely candidate for them. This is a little known Scythian tribe whose men were accused of being ruled over by women. This particualr accusation too has been repeated for Scythian protoypes wherever they appear in legends, whether in Indo-Iran or in Greece. So much so that an archealogist, who first stumbled on a few Sarmatian inscriptions in Asia Minor would joyfully exclaim that he had found the Amazons.

But, beautiful and fierce, this nation of warrior women remains elusive as ever.
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Philistines: Who were they?

January 17th 2007 08:44
Philistines. If you have ever read Bible, you must be familiar with the name. Yet who were these people? They are now generally thought to be of Indo- European origin and spoke an Indo_European lanaguage. For more on this, see below. You might have seen a series called Lost Tribes currently airing on television. I thought this week we'd rather dig through the colorless term called "Indo-Europeans" and find those lost tribes who still animate our thoughts even though they have vanished from history for thousands of years.

Philistines first appear on Egyptian insciptions as Prst, part of a naval confederacy that more or less simultaneously raided all the known empires back then. The Hittites, the Mitanni, the Myceneans and the Egyptians, some of the most glorious empires that ever were known. Of them only Egypt would survive the raids of these unknown raiders. Of the twelve or so tribes which comprised the confederacy, one was mentioned as PRST. After supplying the vowels it could be read pereset, pulasati and other forms.

These raiders then seized the Canaanite lands and established control in five cities: Gaza, Ashkelon, Ekron, Gath and Ashdod. Thecities would be called Pentapolis and the people gradually known as Philistines. They would remain visible in history for the next few centuries until finally subjugated by the Babylonians.

It is an immensely important time in history, if you measure the impact in terms of the effect on mental landscape. Men all over the world have not been able to shake of the impact of those times.

When Philistines were increasing their hold on Canaanite lands, the Hebrews too appear in history, locked in a struggle for the same territory with these people. It is also possible that the Hebrews themselves were dislodged from Egypt (if they were ever there) by the Sea People attacks. A major part of Old testament was authored in such a context.

The Philistines were also instrumental in eclipsing the beautiful Mycenean civilization that was thriving on Crete. Yes, it is from the continued memory of Crete that the legends of the minotaur , the bull-headed prince locked up in a maze called labyrinth, would germinate and grow.

One version of their name, Pulasati, is remarkably similar to Pulsatya, the father of Ravana in the Indian epic Ramayana. It has been conjectured that the Ramayana might preserve the distant echoes of those times.

From Wiki, I got to know another important tidbit of information. The Phjilistines had a monopoly on iron-smithing. The use of iron in war was first accomplished in Hittite empire, so that might have surivived in the people who deposed them. Wiki says that this is apparent in the Goliath legends. That is not the only legend which is based on iron. A significant portion of relgious mythology was affected by the arrival of iron. Remember the terms like golden, silver and bronze ages. These are eras before iron was discovered and both large scale destruction and large scale clearing of forests and settling was made possible. Iron is almost unanimously represented as evil. In Hindu mythology, we are living in Kali Yuga, a time of evil and general dissolution. It generally corresponds to changes wrought in by Iron.

Bible, Ramayana and the Greek legends: three mythic traditions central to our own consciousness. They were all shaped by the actions and memory of Philistines. They also have survived in our language. No small achievement for a people who remained in history for about five centuries and then disappeared completely.


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Aryans: Who were they?

January 15th 2007 07:05
One of the great discoveries of nineteenth century was the fact that a lot of human languages from Latin to Sanskrit were so closely related that they could be counted as one family. This eventually came to be known as the Indo-European family. Further studies revealed that the people who spoke these languages also shared a remarkable similarity in religion, mythology and general culture. Were they at some point in time one people who latter differentiated into many peoples?

The people who made these connections at the time were European and white and they saw in this remarkable unity, a chance to find the original Aryan ancestors and the original home of the white race. It also gave rise to remarkable range of mysticism around the globe, not the least the attraction Aryanism had for the nazis. This inevitably lead to nativist reaction in many parts around the world; most importantly, in India where an Out of India theory developed.

For all the vicissitudes in scholarship from those early neo-grammarians to the anthropologists of today, the question refuses to go away. The current claimant to the throne is the so called Kurgan hypothesis proposed by Zimbuthas. The Indo-Europeans were supposed to have originated in the Kurgan culture, in Ukrainian steppe.


There is certainly no dispute that there is a deep affinity among a widespread cultural and linguistic artefacts and that this affinity is remarkable. What I found unusual is that the affinity continued even when the supposedly single race differentiated into many peoples. For example, Zeus and Indra, both of them patriarchal thunder storm gods, became equally concupiscent at the fag end of their careers before being supplanted by younger gods. Why such an ignoble demotion for both of them? This similarity in the fate of the gods is perhaps an indication that more than a common heritage, we may also share a common imagination.

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Capitalism in Islamic World--II

January 6th 2007 07:47
Lewis then describes how the growth in trade brought about growth in banking, an advantage that the Muslim world still enjoys:

The growth of large-scale trading and enterprise gave rise during ninth century to a development of banking.... Despite many attempts to stabilise the relative value of the metals of which they were made, and the Sarraf, or money-changer, came to be an essential feature of every Muslim market. In the ninth century, he developed into a banker on a large scale, no doubt supported by wealthy traders with money to invest. We hear of banks with a head office in Baghdad and branches in the other cities of the Empire and of an elaborate system of cheques, letters of credit etc, so developed that it was possible to draw a cheque in baghdad and cash it in Morocco. In Basra, the main centre of the flourishing eastern trade, we are told that every merchant had his bank account and that payments in the bazaar were effected only by cheque and never in cash.........

But, still more astonishing is the impact on literature:

The flourishing commercial life of the time was reflected in its thought and literature, where we find the upright merchant held up as an ideal ethical type. Traditions attributed to the Prophet inlcude such statements as " In the day of Judgement the honest truthful Msulin mechant will take rank with the martyrs of the faith", "The truthful merchant will sit under the shadow of the throne of God on Day of Judgement,"..... The Caliph Umar I is most improbably quoted as saying, " There is no place where I would be more gladly overtaken by death than in the market place, buyin and selling for my family." The essayist Jahiz in an essay entitled "In praise of mechants and in condemnation of officials" remarks that the approval of God for trading as a way of life is proved by His choice of the trading community of Quraish for his Prophet. The literature of the time includes portraits of the ideal upright merchant and much advice on the investment of money in trade.....

The self-consciousness implicit in such sayings probably indicates that this was a new way of life for the Muslims and the Arabs and hence, religious interpretation was necessary. It may also mean that there was a threat to this way of life.was a threat to this way of life then and that's why so much importance

And indeed there was. The glorious epoch also spawned a myriad revolts and the emergence of many sects like Ismailis who all would practise "communism of property and women." Most progressives would warn you about reactionaries. It occured to me that progressivism, socialism, communism, one of those isms are the true reactionary idealogies that crop up every time there was a burst of wealth and trade. Nothing like a full crop to attract a swarm of locusts.







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Capitalism in Islamic World -- I

January 5th 2007 07:17
Earlier, I had written about capitalism in ancient Assyria. There was a burst of trade and capitalism in the same part of the world in a totally different epoch. The time is eighth century, the place is Baghdad.

From Bernard Lewis's book, Arabs in History:

The trade of Islamic Empire was of vast extent. From the Persian Gulf ports of Siraf, Basra and Ubulla and, to a lesser extent, from Aden and the Red Sea ports, Muslim merchants travelled to India, Ceylon, the East Indies and China, bringing silks, spices, aromatics, woods, tin and other commodities, both for home consumption and for re-export. .....

In Scandinavia, and especially in Sweden, scores of thousands of Muslim coins have been found bearing inscriptions dating from the late seventh to the earliy eleventh centuries, showing the period of efflorescense of Islamic trade. many finds of coins along the course of the Volga confirm the evidence of literary sources as to an extensive trade between the Islamic Empire and the Baltic via the Caspian, the Black Sea and Russia. .......

With Africa, too, the Arabs carried on an extensive overland trade, the chief commodities which they imported beging gold and slaves......

Apparently, even then capitalism had to contend with the Big Government and Petty Bureaucracy. Here's Lewis:

If the industry recieved some encouragement from the State, amingly from fiscal reasons, trade was not so helped, and even in such matters as the maintenance of roads the State seems to have done very little to promote commerce. The merchants were compelled to wage a constant struggle against the ever-encroaching bureaucracy. The economic action of the State was at first limited to a general ban on specualtion in vital food stuffs--nopt very effectively enforced-- and to the work of the Muhtasib, an urban official whose task it was to superintend the markets..... At a later date the State began to intervene more directly in commerce, even attempting to trade in and monopolise certain commodities for itself.




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Fake Classics

November 29th 2006 06:08
What exactly is a classic? What is the difference between a true classic and made up ones? I can telll if a book is a bad one or good one but how do you determine whether it's a classic or not? And if you read a book that is awful but demonstrably a classic, how do you react to it? Can we disagree that it's not a classic? Here are some classics which I do not think fit the label at all. It's just a random selection.

5: TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD BY HARPER LEE: OK. The book is not bad. The story has some punch but is written in a flat style. Some of my friends have said that the movie is infinitely better but I haven't seen the movie. But as a standalone, the book is just boring.

4: CATCHER IN THE RYE BY J.D.SALINGER: Now this one is not only a not-classic but one of the worst books I ever had the misfortune to read. And I don't get it. Neither what the novel is or why it should garner so much adulation.

3: ULYSSES BY JAMES JOYCE: This novel reguarly tops the best novels of the century polls. It's not just a classic. It is supposed to be one of the finest achievements of modern literature if not the finest. The long and pondering wordfest which happens in a day and takes place in Dublin. It's not that it is badly written. It is well-written in parts but Joyce is in so love with his own style that he does not make any concessions for the reader. But, even if you put all the effort into it you are not sure what you have got at the end. There are hundreds of wonderful book out there. I don't want to scratch it out of the Classics list yet, only wish to see it removed from the No.1 position.

2: MADAME BOVARY BY GUASTAVE FALUBERT: If Ulyssses is supposed the greatest book of the twentieth century, this is supposed to be the greatest book of the nineteenth. I personally think the initial reaction to the book was from the vulgraity trial it had to meet and once the victimhood had been conferred on it, it was elevated from the drab to the heavenly. It is supposed to have initiated realism into art scene but reading now the story is cloying and overly sentimental. It is also written badly. Not in the same league of Stendhal and Hugo. If there is a revision of criticism that yanks down something from a lofty pedestal, Madame Bovary is the first one to desrve it.

1: WAR AND PEACE BY LEO TOLSTOY: I have come across people calling it the greatest book in world literature. Is it? The war scenes are good. But when Tolstoy goes on and on about upperclass vagaries, one longs to say, SHUT UP! An excess of self-indulgence mars what could have been a good novel.



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I have been writing about population fears in the ancient world. Here's an article that's been doing the rounds of conservative blogs all around that focuses on the rise of prostitution in Iran and the consequent death of Iran itself. Go read the entire article, it's worth your time.

Prostitution, for the author, is the symbol of a society in decline. The article tries to analyse what this means in the Islamic context but also uses a general view of population anxiety to bolster the case.

First, the import of widespread prostitution:

Wars are won by destroying the enemy's will to fight. A nation is never really beaten until it sells its women.

The French sold their women to the German occupiers in 1940, and the Germans and Japanese sold their women to the Americans after World War II. The women of the former Soviet Union are still selling themselves in huge numbers. Hundreds of thousands of female Ukrainian "tourists" entered Germany after the then-foreign minister Joschka Fischer loosened visa standards in 1999. That helps explain why Ukraine has the world's fastest rate of population decline. On a smaller scale, trafficking in Iranian women explains Iran's predicament.

Therefore:

To understand Iranian politics, cherchez les femmes: the fate of Iranian women sheds light on the eccentricity of President Mahmud Ahmadinejad. By Spengler's Universal Law of Gender Parity, the men and women of every place and every time deserve each other. A corollary to this universal law states that the battered Iranian whore is the alter ego of the swaggering Iranian jihadi.


There are many interesting allusions from history and even the relationship to literature. Why is it that a prostitute has been singled out as a symbol for decline of the people?


What is it that persuades women to employ their bodies as an instrument of commerce, rather than as a way of achieving motherhood? It is not just poverty, for poor women bear children everywhere. In the case of Iran, deracination and cultural despair impel millions of individual women to eschew motherhood. Prostitution is a form of psychic suicide; writ large, it is a manifestation of the national death-wish, the hideous recognition that the world no longer requires Ukrainians or Moldovans.

And now for the application of this theory to Iranian example:

Iranians already behave like a defeated people. That is why they are so unstable, and so dangerous. The new Persian Empire masquerading as an Islamic Republic is a wounded beast. The rural misery and urban squalor that drive Iranian women into the brothels of Dubai and Brussels contrasts sharply with neighboring Azerbaijan, whose economy will double in size by 2010 as new oilfields come online, according to the CIA World Factbook.


And now Spengler comes to an especailly relevant section for our blog, for we have been trying to track just such anixieties in world literature:


The crisis of modernization first of all is a crisis of faith, and the attenuation of religious faith is the root cause of the birth-rate bust in the modern world. Traditional society is everywhere fragile, not only in the Islamic world; by definition it is bounded by values and expectations handed down from the past, to which individuals must submit. Once the bands of tradition are broken and each individual may choose for herself what sort of family to raise, religious faith becomes the decisive motivation for bringing children into the world ...

The collapse of traditional society has brought about a collapse of birth rates across cultures. Cultures that fail to reproduce themselves by definition are failed cultures, for the simple reason that they will cease to exist before many generations have passed.

Curiously enough this links to Islamism even though all over the world, whether in India or in Europe, th rates of Muslim growth are a matter of anxiety. it is perhaps ironical that Mulsims everywhere should be flourishing but Iran be the odd man out:

That is why the Islamists - Muslims who seek a new theocracy - display a sense of extreme urgency. They are not conservative Muslims, for they reject Muslim society as it exists as corrupt and decadent. They are revolutionaries who want to create a new kind of totalitarian theocracy that orders every detail of human life.

And back to the prostitution and tying up both the concepts:

Nothing is more threadbare than the claim of Islamists to defend Muslim womanhood. Islamist radicals (like the penny-a-marriage mullahs of Iran) are the world's most prolific pimps. The same networks that move female flesh across borders also provide illegal passage for jihadis, and the proceeds of human trafficking often support Islamist terrorists. From Jakarta to Kuala Lumpur to Sarajevo to Tirana, the criminals who trade in women overlap with jihadist networks. Prostitutes serve the terror network in a number of capacities, including suicide bombing. The going rate for a Muslim woman who can pass for a European to carry a suicide bomb currently is more than US$100,000. The Persian prostitute is the camp follower of the jihadi, joined to him in a pact of national suicide.

When Soviet Russia fell, the Russian prostitute became a common symbol of the Brotherhood, to imply how capitalism has taken this once proud country to the dogs. Remember Dirty But Clean's Ludmilla's Broken English. Will the brotherhood so rise up and use the Iranian prostitute to depict Iran's descent into fascist totalitarianism?

You can read my other post here.
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Is Western Civilization dying? --II

November 12th 2006 02:04
Call it a divine co-incidence that after writing last post, I should wake up and read this. Thomas Sowell is the most widely read American columnist. t=11/09/2006&page=1" target="_blank">Here he speaks on the death of Western Civilization. Some snippets:

European nations protesting Saddam Hussein's death sentence, as they protested against forcing secrets out of captured terrorists, should tell us all we need to know about the internal degeneration of western society, where so many confuse squeamishness with morality.

Something that I'd wanted to say for a long time:

How many times, in its thousands of years of history, has Europe gone 60 years without a major war, as it has since World War II? That peace has been due to American nuclear weapons, which was all that could deter the Soviet Union's armies from marching right across Europe to the Atlantic Ocean.

This is relevant to my last post:

The achievements of western civilization are buried in histories that portray every human sin
found here as if they were peculiarities of the west.

Sowell makes a valid point:

The classic example is slavery, which existed all over the world for thousands of years and yet is incessantly depicted as if it was a peculiarity of Europeans enslaving Africans. Barbary pirates alone brought twice as many enslaved Europeans to North Africa as there were Africans brought in bondage to the United States and the American colonies from which it was formed.

How many schools and colleges are going to teach that, going against political correctness and undermining white guilt?

About the above, I have read histories and historical fiction in the past weeks and it gave me the same idea too. That slavery was predominant in every society in the ancient world. Sowell writes:

How many people have any inkling that it was precisely western civilization which eventually turned against slavery and began stamping it out when non-western societies still saw nothing wrong with it?

The surviving West?:
Western nations that show any signs of standing up for self-preservation are rare exceptions. The United States and Israel are the only western nations which have no choice but to rely on self-defense -- and both are demonized, not only by our enemies but also by many in other western nations.

He has a good word for Australia too:

Australia recently told its Muslim population that, if they want to live under Islamic law, then they should leave Australia. That makes three western nations that have not yet completely succumbed to the corrosive and suicidal trends of our times.

And now to the conlcusion:
If and when we all succumb, will the epitaph of western civilization say that we had the power to annihilate our enemies but were so paralyzed by confusion that we ended up being annihilated ourselves?

Isn't that the epitaph of evry civilization that dies?




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Is the Western Civilization dying?

November 11th 2006 07:05
Brad Pitt plays Achilles in Troy


I caught a flash of Troy yesterday when it played on a TV channel. Brad Pitt looked cute and the battle scenes were well-mounted. I couldn't see the whole movie though.

But that brief flash of a movie brought back the memory of a small incident that happened a couple of months back. I wrote something based on Greek mythology and showed it to a friend of mine. He is reasonably well-educated and fairly intelligent but he didn't know anything about Trojan War or Greek mythology. The first time he had heard about them was in the movie Troy!
It turned out I knew a whole lot more about it. I had the whole story of Trojan War as a text for a whole year in school. That alone should make me remember it. My countrymen too should know a bit about Helen of Troy and all that stuff. Of course, I went on to read a lot of literature and philosophy and got to know more about Greeks but my point is, even those who hadn't pursued my interests but came from my background would still know about it. And here was a child of Western Civilization, utterly clueless about his own cultural heritage!

And yesterday when I caught the movie, I marveled at how this Hollywod rehash of an age-old story is the only tenuous link between an age-old civilization and its modern inheritors.
There is a fear floating around in the intellectual circles that Western Civilization is dying. There was this young white man who had no idea whatsover of his own culture, his inheritance.

I also marveled at the irony of it all. In the nineteenth century, at the height of European colonialism, it was white people who would strut over four corners of the world and wake up demons from the past. Whether it was Africa , China or India, it was these people who would reawakened the sense of their cultural heritage. And now a century and a half later, it was I, who had recieved a education which was very much influenced by that colonial experiment, had known something about Western civilization whereas it's own child didn't know anything about it. Isn't it a curious reversal?
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Romance, Porn and Politics

October 28th 2006 09:44
Hey, it's US election season and the capaign season is in high gear. First, George Allen of Virginia, is accused of racism because he called somebody macacca. Allen then retaliated by saying that his opponent wrote graphic scenes in his novels which described digustingly lurid sex acts and therefore, is not to be trusted with a US senate seat. The Democratic Party in turn dug up novels of no less than Lynne Cheney, wife of Vice-President. Apparently, she wrote in lesbian scenes in her novel Sisters too. Never knew that US political class was brimming with so many literary figures.

Lynne Cheney has a standout interview with Wolf Blitzer with CNN which is so enjoyable, it is unreal. She was there for talking about her latest children's book and she was taken "around a mighty long trip around a merry-go-around." Just notice how after their high-strung argument, they decide to leave the guns outside like sheriffs in old cowboy movies, talk about the children's book, and then complement each other, he on her preparedness for answering his questions and she on his not fair but tough questions. It spins and rolls itself like a postmodern dream of an interview.

That was not all. This time a Democrat cadidate running for a state comptroller race, refered to the unsuitability of his opponent's porn writings. Apparently, she was a romance writer in her younger days and filled her novels with great passages of steamy sex. The Democrat then posted the offending passages on his website provoking a huge backlash, from romance writers! Who knew there were so many romance writers in the world and they were organized. Apparently, even the usually Democrat voting romance writers are not voting for the democrat can. Read this from Houston Chronicle:


Dismiss romance writers as the drama queens of the supermarket set, perhaps, but call them pornographers at your own peril.

Just ask Fred Head.

Head, the Democratic long shot in this year's state comptroller race, is reaping the wrath of Texas romance writers for calling Republican rival Susan Combs a "pornographic book writer."

Since the Texas Democratic Convention in June, Head has repeatedly attacked a steamy romance novel Combs published in 1990, and even features excerpts from it on his campaign Web site. Head says it was hypocritical of her to write such a book and then support abstinence education as a Republican politician.

Once word of Head's attacks hit the romance trade press, cyberspace buzzed with the news.

"Out of the blue I had e-mails from England, Canada, California, all over Texas," said Combs, Texas agriculture commissioner and author of the 1990 romance, A Perfect Match. "Women all across the United States and foreign countries are very angry at what they see as an attack on women."

Combs launched a $3.2 million political advertising blitz Tuesday. The TV spots, which end with the words "experience we need, values we trust," stress Combs' roles as a small-business owner, former state legislator, agriculture commissioner, wife and mother.

Head, with $0 in campaign money, remained defiant, repeatedly calling Combs' book pornographic.

"I think the romance novelists should endorse my opponent," he said in response to their criticism of him. "That could probably get me elected. I just don't agree with writing what I believe is pornographic and not good for the young people."

Outraged romance writers first flooded Head's campaign in-box with angry e-mail.

This week, they vowed revenge at the ballot box.

"I told him I was a Texan, a Christian, a voter, a grandmother and I have written 46 novels," said Houston romance writer Patricia Kay. "I said, 'You are not going to get my vote.'

"The truth is," added Kay, 69, "I probably would have voted for him because I'm a registered Democrat."

Head could pay a big price for offending aficionados of romance fiction, the writers said, noting Romance Writers of America is headquartered in the Houston suburb of Spring and boasts more than 9,000 members. With $1.2 billion annually in sales, romance fiction makes up more than half of all popular mass-market fiction sold and 39 percent of all fiction, the association boasts.

"This has been a huge issue in the romance community. It's been a huge topic of conversation," said romance novelist Shana Galen of Houston.

"Are Romance Novels Porn?" she asked recently on blog www.jauntyquills.com. "Is a written depiction of two adults falling in love and expressing that love physically pornographic? I have always felt that my books promoted conservative, family values like love, fidelity and marriage."

A Perfect Match tells the tale of Emily Brown, a "cryptanalyst" for the National Security Agency. She meets her match in Ross Harding, a superspy.

"Their mouths had fused hotly, desperately, a feverish urgency in his touch," reads one passage in the book.

Galen wonders why Head posted excerpts from Combs' novel on his Web site if he views the writing as pornography young people shouldn't see.

"I just thought it was about the lowest blow he could make. It seems like a desperate attempt to knock Susan Combs down," said Julia London, an Austin author of 17 romance novels.

"I don't equate sex with bodice-ripping," she added. "A lot of women like to read about sex. It's part of the romance fantasy. Everyone likes to be in that feeling of falling in love. The initial thrill is always fun to read about."

Combs said she wrote her book during her 31-year marriage, and her husband jokes that the hero is modeled after him. "I think Fred Head is a very strange man, and I'm very concerned that anybody would believe anything he says," Combs said.

"We love romance, and women like happy and positive endings," she added. "I guess Mr. Head doesn't."

Both the links are courtesy Wizbang.

This gets better and better. Remember, the disgusting sexual act that I talked about in the first paragraph in the novel?It involves a father lifting a four year old child and performing fellatio on him. Ugh. Apparently, this is not something Webb has dreamed up. It's a strange custom in Cambodia!

This item from Cnsnews.com :

In an interview on Washington Post Radio Friday morning, Jim Webb, the Democratic candidate for U.S. Senate in Virginia, said excerpts of his novels are "a little bit inappropriate" to be read on news radio.

"I don't know why you're reading that on WTOP," Webb told host Mark Plotkin. "I think it's a little bit inappropriate."

Plotkin was reading an excerpt from Webb's novel "Something to Die For," in which Webb describes a female stripper performing sexual acts with a banana.

"I don't think that's appropriate for you to read on WTOP," Webb said again as Plotkin finished the excerpt. (Washington Post Radio is WTOP's sister station.)

The campaign of Republican Sen. George Allen on Thursday released excerpts from some of the war novels Webb wrote between 1978 and 2002. The books include some graphic sexual passages, as well as frequent uses of a racial slur for blacks and descriptions of Vietnamese women as "monkey-faced."

Among the excerpts is a scene from the 2002 novel "Lost Soldiers," in which a man embraces his four-year-old son and places the boy's penis in his mouth.

Webb said the release of the excerpts was "a Karl Rove campaign tactic" and a "classic example of the way this campaign has worked. It's smear after smear."

He defended his fiction as "illuminative."

"It's not a sexual act," Webb told Plotkin regarding the "Lost Soldiers" excerpt. "I actually saw this happen in a slum in Bangkok when I was there as a journalist."

"The duty of a writer is to illuminate the surroundings," he added.

Coincidentally, a Cambodian woman in Las Vegas is facing sexual assault charges for performing a similar act on her young son, according to an Oct. 14 report in the Las Vegas Review-Journal.

The article quotes an office manager for the Cambodian Association of America, who described the act as a sign of respect or love.

"It's an exception," Thira Srey told the Review-Journal of the practice. According to the report, the act is usually performed by a mother or caretaker on a child who is one year old or younger. In Webb's novel, the child is four years old.

Can it get any more sublime?
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