"but you're still fuckin' peasants as far as I can see..."
(x-posted from adswithoutproducts)
Just came across another candidate for my collection of incredibly strange American politico-cultural amalgamations, hybrids, and halfrights: Green Day's recent cover of John Lennon's "Working Class Hero."
Did they actually listen to the song before they decided on this Darfur x-over thing? High-Period Lennon Political Ambivalence (see also: "When you talk about destruction, doncha know that you can count me out... in...) meets Teary Liberal Piety about those Poor, Poor People Elsewhere at the crossroads of unmetabolized reflexivity.
How about this part, as the noble faces of the Darfurians bubble across the screen, and Billie Joe Armstrong sings:
Keep you doped with religion and sex and TV,
And you think you're so clever and classless and free,
But you're still fucking peasants as far as I can see,
A working class hero is something to be,
A working class hero is something to be.
Yeouch. Just to make it worse, here's a bit from wikipedia that quotes the band's press release about the song:
When asked why they chose the song, frontman Billie Joe Armstrong said, "We wanted to do 'Working Class Hero' because its themes of alienation, class, and social status really resonated with us. It's such a raw, aggressive song -- just that line: 'you're still fucking peasants as far as I can see' -- we felt we could really sink our teeth into it. I hope we've done him justice."
You could write a dissertation, not an acceptable one, but whatever, on the topic: "Who does Billie Joe think the 'you' of that toothsome line refers to?"
Secondary mystification, or simply vapid distraction, "what the fuck, yeah, the Africans, cool..."? Benettonism gone libidinal? Inadvertent self-disclosure, a profoundly unconscious honesty that leaves Lennon's navel-gazing in the dust?
By CR | August 9, 2007 | Link to “"but you're still fuckin' peasants as far as I can see..." ” | Comments (21) | TrackBack
maybe ten years ago . . .
There's a lazy tendency to slander the past when something happens in the present. In today's New York Times David Carr writes that the firing of Don Imus for his racist remarks is a "sign of the times."
Mr. Imus is an old-school radio guy caught in a very modern media paradigm. When he started 30 years ago, if he made the same kind of remark, it would have floated off into the ether — the Federal Communications Commission, if it received complaints, might have taken notice, but few others.
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By Swifty | April 13, 2007 | Link to “maybe ten years ago . . . ” | Comments (28) | TrackBack
comfort torture
Yesterday, Tuesday April 10, I saw an article by Mr. Joseph Kahn at the New York Times on China's mistreatment of one of its intellectuals. If you read the Times, you've read the same article about a hundred times before. They love writing articles about evil foreign regimes while luxuriating in the pink bubble bath background assumption that "we" aren't anything like that. And thus Kahn was more than willing, when referring to China's treatment of its reformist intellectuals, to use a word that has become, recently, "contested": torture. Earlier this year, in January, I contacted another Times reporter, Mr. Scott Shane, who was unwilling to use the 'T' word in an unqualified way concerning our treatment of detainees at Guantanomo. The contrast between these two uses of the word 'torture' is what prompted me to contact both authors.
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By Swifty | April 11, 2007 | Link to “comfort torture” | Comments (21) | TrackBack
Regarding the Scull Controversy
Rather than going away as an issue, the Scull versus the Foucauldians debate seems to be spreading. It seems odd to me that people are willing to get worked up over this issue. Afterall, standard periodizations of Foucault's work place The History of Madness outside his developed periods; viz., the archaeological, the genealogical, and the problematization. That is, within the Foucauldian corpus itself, The History of Madness is an outlier (not unlike his commentary on Kant's anthropology, his book on Roussel, or the disavowed Maladie mentale et personnalité). The question, then, appears not to be about the place of The History of Madness in Foucault's own oeuvre - a concept that should no doubt be question by anyone who takes Foucault's work seriously - but, rather, about what "Foucault," that is to say "Theory," signifies in the context of (primarily) (North) American disciplinary politics. (Although, it is worth pointing out that comparing passages from the "Nietzsche, Genealogy, History" essay with The History of Madness is, at best, strange - it is wrong-headed to criticize a non-genealogical work for not being genealogical!) Scull is engaged in a territorial pissing match with rivals. His concern, it seems to me, is to reject the work of Foucauldians by nit-picking Foucault's major dissertation. (I guess it is easier to take on a dead guy's dissertation than it is to take on work published by Nik Rose twenty years ago.) Predictably, the "Theory" warriors - themselves derivative hacks of the worst sort - are all to happy to jump into Scull's boat in an effort to push their own agenda within the narrow perspective of American English departments.
(Cross-posted from theoria.)
By Craig | April 4, 2007 | Link to “Regarding the Scull Controversy” | Comments (15) | TrackBack
Understanding Incommensurability
(You guessed it! My latest cross-posting from I Cite.) Here is a paragraph from the middle.
Incommensurability need not be accepted or known by all involved (which would of course make it parasitic on a prior commensurability). In fact, the opposite is the case--inscribed into the situation is its own description, about which there is disagreement. So, there isn't an external point of truth or agreement that then allows for incommensurability to appear.
The whole post is below the fold (as it were).
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By Jodi | February 27, 2007 | Link to “Understanding Incommensurability” | Comments (17) | TrackBack
Strong Beliefs, Weakly Held
(Yet another shameless cross-posting from I Cite)
In a critique of Scott Eric Kaufman's draft paper on the history of theory in literary studies (which I haven't read; I recommend, though, the terrific discussion over at Rough Theory) Eileen Joy rightly draws attention to Stephen White's discussion of weak ontology. Indeed, to my mind, Scott's emphasis (as channeled by N. Pepperell) on "an aggressive commitment to strong beliefs, weakly held" is more akin to William Connolly's ethos of pluralization and commitment to the cultivation of an ethos of generosity (White discusses Connolly's work in detail in Sustaining Affirmation; White's notion of weak ontology in fact draws heavily from Connolly and attempts to mediate between Connolly's Deleuze-indebted 'immanent naturalism' and the work of other political theorists--in particular, Charles Taylor, Judith Butler, and George Kateb).
Is this interesting primarily as a matter of academic pedantry or turf warfare (along the lines of "gee, political theorists have already been talking about this for quite a while")? Perhaps. But there could be more at stake. Differently put, that Connolly has worked out these notions in several books that have been the subject of sustained discussion among political theorists for the last decade might shed light on potential ramifications of an "aggressive commitment to strong beliefs weakly held" (it is also likely that the disciplinary difference here is significant--Scott says that literary theorists are more interested in imagined worlds; political theorists, for all our engagement with ideals, remain imbricated in this one, for better or worse). Here are a few possibilities:
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By Jodi | February 20, 2007 | Link to “Strong Beliefs, Weakly Held” | Comments (50) | TrackBack
barely polite insults
Richard Wolin, writing a review of Paras's _Foucault 2.0_ for the Chronicle of Higher Education writes:
"One wonders how long it will take Foucault's North American acolytes to reorient themselves in light of Paras's impressive findings."
'acolyte' is meant to be dismissive, in an academic and barely polite sort of way, correct? And seeing this made me think: What other terms can be used to say that the followers or users of so-and-so's thought are idiots, without using the word 'idiot' or something similar?
The only other one I can think of right now is 'adept.' Here are the definitions:
acolyte
Function: noun
Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo-French & Medieval Latin; Anglo-French, acolit, from Medieval Latin acoluthus, from Middle Greek akolouthos, from Greek, adjective, following, from a-, ha- together (akin to Greek homos same) + keleuthos path
Date: 14th century
1 : one who assists a member of the clergy in a liturgical service by performing minor duties
2 : one who attends or assists: FOLLOWER
adept
Function: noun
Etymology: New Latin adeptus alchemist who has attained the knowledge of how to change base metals into gold, from Latin, past participle of adipisci to attain, from ad- + apisci to reach -- more at APT
Date: 1709
: a highly skilled or well-trained individual: expert <an adept at chess>
Can anyone think of other terms for 'follower' that not-so-subtly communicate a writer's distaste? Of the two above, which do you think is the more dismissive, acolyte or adept?
By Swifty | August 30, 2006 | Link to “barely polite insults” | Comments (16) | TrackBack
Your episteme is my abstraction, and we'll keep it
Nobody is invested here, it is said. Nobody wants to risk taking a firm stand for Spivak. As Terry Eagleton once announced, in post-colonial studies this dilemma is itself practically a cliché. One must renounce just in order to belong (meanwhile "individualization belies a collective lifestyle," Ulrich Beck has muttered). Very well though, let me play the role, or play at the role, at least (we are all role players here, to some degree, as everyone surely knows; bloggers are not serious). There is a sort of enviable gravity to the sacrificial victim, after all. Still, I've very little genuine desire to play at being, as Eagleton also gibes, "that ultimate source of embarrassment, [the] devoted acolyte."
Continue reading “Your episteme is my abstraction, and we'll keep it”
By Matt | April 19, 2006 | Link to “Your episteme is my abstraction, and we'll keep it” | Comments (18) | TrackBack
difference without apologies
It's a well-worn argument to suggest that the Left (whatever exactly that is) should spend more time learning from the Right (ditto), taking a few leaves out of the books of Reagan, Wall Street, Madison Avenue, the Southern Baptist Convention, Bush, the Republican Party, Harper, what or whomever have you...
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By Charles Denis Bourbaki | January 27, 2006 | Link to “difference without apologies” | Comments (36) | TrackBack
Separated at birth?
To continue with a theme....More ill-thought out and badly timed lookalikes
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By Charles Denis Bourbaki | January 5, 2006 | Link to “Separated at birth?” | Comments (9) | TrackBack
A Contest
Mr J. Alva Scruggs, current proprietor of UFO Breakfast Recipients, has over the course of his long career on the internets assembled numerous specimens of crackpot argumentation and distilled them to their intoxicatingly risible essences. His latest discovery:
It's not that you're inherently incapable of realizing you're wrong. I am, after all, a humanist. It's that you're unaware that you're being willfully inherently incapable of realizing you're not right, a condition I've explored at some length for your edification.
I invite our contributors and readers to find fully fleshed out examples of this schema. To allow time for this search (and to let me get some sleep) comments for this post will be closed after 11:30AM EST/ 4:30PM GMT. The person who provides the best example will win...something. I'm tired. Happy hunting, everyone.
Comments are now closed. Since nobody bothered to respond, nobody gets the prize, which was this handsome knife:
(You have no idea how good it felt doing that Kripke's lousy book. I may buy another copy just to destroy it again.)
By et alia | December 19, 2005 | Link to “A Contest” | Comments (0) | TrackBack