BOOK REViEW: Capitalism & the Death Drive, Han

Occasionally interesting insights, lost, adrift in seas of postmodern academic claptrap.

Hmm? Pretty poor, in my opinion. I recently read and reviewed the much, much better critique of Capitalism, Post Growth, by Tim Jackson. Both books are published by Polity, who specialise in this sort of stuff.

First of all this is a collection of short essays, most (but not all) of which have been published elsewhere before. A consequence of this format is lots of repetition. Not great. These essays cover numerous topics, the chief of which is criticism of capitalism/neoliberalism. But other areas talked about include refugees, Europe, Covid and the arts. The first two thirds are short essays, the last part interviews.

Han is a South Korean living/working in Germany (so it’s all translated from German), as a philosopher and lecturer in an arts university. This embedding in such an institution is crucial, as it informs his language and points of reference, both of which are mired in the tediously opaque traditions of postmodernism. These are more or less unchanged from when I studied art/art history at Goldsmiths, with frequent use of buzz-words such as affect, and haptic, and references to Barthes, Adorno, Baudrilard, etc.

The author.

At certain points, in essays about contemporary arts culture, he discusses pornography vs eroticism, and rhapsodises about the latter, as being far better (capitalism favouring the ‘in your face’ m.o. of porn). And in these passages you get a glimpse of the crux of the postmodern problem (or rather one of many such problems), namely that obscuring is preferred to ‘unveiling’. Put another way, florid verbiage trumps understanding!

There are many valid insights, scattered throughout the text. But there are just as many vapid unfounded (or rather unsubstantiated) remarks. And the dominant register is negativity. Endless critique – neoliberalist capitalism isolates us all, and makes us internalise blame, and burn-out in hyper performance (he’s also written a book called The Burn-Out Society) – which might be true; but with no real suggestions of better ways out of such contemporary impasses, eventually it comes over as carping.

In the landmark ‘sledgehammer’ series Civilisation, stuffily patrician art historian Kenneth Clarke remarked, in his inimitable and oft very prescient manner, that the German language lacked a clear workable prose, such as English has developed, much to the ‘troubling’ of Europe. If one understands what Clarke was getting at, this book is – to my mind – a prime example, albeit from the left, as opposed to the right. And, ironically, by being so windily obscure, it plays into the hands of neoliberalist capitalism, effectively neutering itself. And, to use one of the buzz-words Han overuses, is all affect, to no effect.*

I find books on the topics this covers of interest. But I can’t say I either enjoyed or would recommend this one. It belongs, frankly speaking, to a tradition – the postmodern – that I hope will wither on the vine sooner rather than later.

*I also find it annoying when books of this ilk bandy round buzzwords with no attempt to define them. That’s the case with ‘affect’ here, amongst others. The sense of the word in postmodern-speak strikes me as closer to the meaning of the word ‘affectation’ than the normal dictionary definition of affect, as a verb, the doing of which produces the equivalent noun, or effect.

BOOK REViEW: The Silence of Animals, John Gray

Intellectual? Misanthrope? Dilettante of depression… what is Gray up to?

Another archival entry, this is a slightly longer version of a review I first posted on Amazon in 2013.

One little addition – amongst quite a few, as it happens – to this review, and something I had intended to include in my original review for Amazon, is this, what is Gray getting at with the title? The most obvious response is to assume he means that animals aren’t talking all the time, like us humans. Does he, by extension, mean they have no language, and from there, no consciousness? If I’m even just partly correct in this guesswork, then, like the book itself and so many of the ideas contained within it, this little statement is so freighted with assumptions, and potentially massively erroneous ones at that, as to make the reader potentially astonished that such thinking could be accorded the respect it routinely is.

Anyway, let’s dive in. On the penultimate page of part three, the final part of this brief and very thought-provoking book, Gray says ‘There is no redemption from being human. But no redemption is needed.’ Right… So, your point was? Well, I guess his point is that, in his view, progress towards a better humanity is a modern myth: rooted, so he argues, in an outgrowth of Christian ideas of end-times and redemption. An unattainable chimera, belief in and pursuit of which just causes us both actual and mental/psychological/spiritual anguish.

I’ve not read any other Gray yet but, judging from this book, he appears to be a professional essayist in the poetic-philosopher mode, happiest when he is simultaneously displaying his erudition and making us all feel miserable. Towards the end of the book Gray quotes American poet Robinson Jeffers, who at one point defends his own philosophy as being ‘neither misanthropic nor pessimist’. On the evidence of this slim volume Gray appears to be both.

Still, briefly changing tack for a bit: it seems silence is in the air, with this book of Gray’s coming hot on the heels of Diarmaid McCulloch’s Silence: A Christian History. Strengthening possible links between these two titles, and much to the chagrin of some, including several reviewers here, Gray casts humanism (and science) as the offspring of Christianity – ‘the Christians and their disciples, the humanist believers in progress’ – in a process whereby alleged former pagan visions of cyclic/seasonal time have been replaced by ideas of progress towards an ‘end of time’.

In many respects quite a lot of what Gray says makes sense, at least in places. For example, it seems quite natural that modern thinking would have, within its DNA so to speak, traces of the ideas and cultures that preceded it. But Gray goes well beyond this observation, evincing a visceral loathing of humanism, and it’s this that lies at the root of my charge of misanthropy. His position, which I suppose may stem from an understandable distaste for the solipsism and self-regard of the human animal, leads him to make some assertions that I find plain bizarre.

Some of these assertions include: ‘True myth is a corrective of fantasy’; ‘Religion was a poetic response to unchanging human realities…’; ‘the idea that Jesus returned from the dead is not as contrary to reason as the notion that human beings will in future be different from how they have always been.’ The first two of these statements only address very partial aspects of what either myth or religion might be. Most of the time Gray doesn’t support such statements at all, and where he does the bulk of the ‘supporting evidence’ for his ideas are quotations drawn from poetry and literature. So, for example, the legends of Icarus and Prometheus are invoked as evidence for myth as a corrective.

In the third quoted statement above (and the second also, to some degree) Gray reveals himself to be remarkably ignorant of, or resistant to, the findings of evolutionary science: humans are not a static and unchanging entity. There was a time before humans, there will be a time after humans. And whilst we are around, we evolve, both physically and culturally. Who is Gray to legislate for closed parameters to either our physiology or our behaviour, within that unknown span of time?

I might go along with him, inasmuch as the evidence of the last several thousand years of human life doesn’t, at first glance, give immediate cause for optimism, regarding the kind of ideas of moral progress which seem so anathema to Gray. But appearances can be deceptive, and science proves itself a very effective tool not just because it can replace wildly poetic myth with something much closer to reality, but because it’s such a potent ‘corrective of fantasy’.

Perhaps Gray should dwell less on the horrors of modern times (the first part of this book – well, nearly all of it, actually – but the first part particularly, is a litany of recent calamities), read less poetry and literature by suicidal authors, and instead try, for example, Pinker’s The Better Angels of Our Nature: A History of Violence and Humanity? But of course it’s exactly such books and thinkers that Gray is attacking.

Pinker’s book seeks to counter precisely the kind of resolutely pessimistic contemporary myth Gray appears to subscribe to, which says that humanity is currently more barbaric than it’s ever been. When he fulminates against humanism for replacing beautiful old myths with horrible new anthropocentric ones, I just groan: except for those stages in our religious evolution that have dealt more with our relationship with raw nature (and even then, to some degree), the anthropocentrism of myth and religion has been at least equal to, or if anything then perhaps even greater than in the past, often because it was that way without much self-consciousness.

Gray may feel that, as the pop band Blur once put it, ‘Modern Life Is Rubbish’, and that we’re more repellently violent than ever, but that isn’t what all the research into the subject necessarily suggests: per capita, Pinker argues (and this depends on whether his evidence is sound, and apparently there’s much heated debate around this) humanity is now less violent than ever before (and most demonstrably since the advent of agriculture). Pinker backs his claims up with evidence, rather than poetry: where’s Gray’s evidence to support his Jesus claim, regarding the plausibility of the dead being brought back to life as greater than any changing of humanity?

The author (source: wiki).

Along the same lines, and equally egregious, is where Gray equates humanism, via the idea of a ‘myth’ of progress as embodied within modern science, with Genesis, implying that the Genesis myth is preferable! The only part of the Genesis myth that I find resonant with any profound meaning is the darkly depressive idea that consciousness might be some kind of curse. Having finished this book, the fact that such pessimism should be attractive to Gray is not the shock it was when I first read the relevant passage. But, like his ‘true myth’ and religion as ‘poetic response’ ideas, his approach to some of these ideas is spectacularly limited, skewed in numerous ways, and leaves out much that, if re-introduced, brings significant changes of perspective.

Yes, myth can act as a corrective, and sure, religion is, in part, a poetic response to understanding human life. But myths and religions have also functioned as both literal explanations and harshly enforced rules, i.e. tools for control. Looking at both Genesis and the ‘myth’ of progress in humanism and science more broadly, which is the preferable delusion to suffer from: that we (well, rather one small tribe among us) are God’s specially created and chosen people, and can do as he wills (or rather, as we see fit, but justified in his name), in a world he made for our usage? Or that that we are products of evolution and, endowed as we are with some degree of consciousness (however flawed and limited that may be), we might strive to live in better ways?

I think the latter is both more realistic and, in every way (morally/practically) preferable. Only when presented in Gray’s highly partial and selective terms – wilfully misrepresented I would say – could the reverse be made to appear even remotely reasonable.

Whilst The Silence of Animals is fascinating and very thought-provoking, I also find it massively irritating. I imagine he would dismiss my problems with his book as being those of a believer in the myth of progress. I think he’s wrong: he continually tars humanism with the same brush as religion, equating ideas of progress with ideas of the Christian ‘triumph over death’ theme. But he’s quite mistaken. Just as it would be wrong to believe ‘that rejecting religion [means] renouncing any idea of order in the world’ (in paraphrasing Llewelyn Powys Gray slightly skews what he says: Powys clarifies his own position by referring to an ‘ordained moral order’), so to is it wrong to conflate the legacy of Christian ideas of triumph over death with all modern humanist ideas of progress.

These problems appear to stem from a combination of Gray’s attachment to ‘the old ways’ (read Christianity) and his apparent inability to grasp fundamentals of evolutionary science: all life, vegetable and animal, never mind just human, is precisely the temporary imposition of both order and even increasing complexity (against an otherwise universal tendency to disorder and simplification), whereas the Christian idea of triumph over death – or, in other and more biblical terms, eternal life – is, as Addy Pross states in What is Life? , an oxymoronic concept. So, in fact, the sciences Gray attacks give constant and irrefutable evidence that, actually, order is everywhere apparent (and in no way based upon human religious systems as a fundamental footing), and categorical proof that one of the most central and cherished aims of Christian religion is a nonsensical impossibility. Failing to understand or address any of this, Gray gets nowhere near tackling the more interesting link, often dealt with around the ‘natural fallacy’ idea, of the kinds of order that just are (in nature at large), and the kinds we feel there ought to be (in our societies).

Just as he notes that evolution is actually a process of drift rather than directed change (Gray doesn’t address the idea of constraints on pathways in evolution), one can conceive of our moral or ethical progress as a form of drift, but no less real for it. In terms of absolute values this can therefore remain ‘random’, but to us, as human beings embedded in the matrix of the moment – and that’s why I’m what I understand to be humanist (we are all human after all, so what else can we honestly be, other than humanist?) – it is not random. Whilst we know that we are not, in point of fact, the centre of the universe, yet we are, each of us, as Gray himself notes in relation to animals, when he says ‘every sentient creature is a world maker’, still the centre of our own cosmos of perception and experience.

Gray has introduced me to some new writers and thinkers, for which I’m grateful. His ideas have also been something for me to work around, re-examining my own understanding, and I think this sort of process is healthy and useful. But, in the end, his overall tone is, like his name, rather Eeyore like. Several times I was put in mind of Woody Allen, in Annie Hall, where his character says “I feel that life is divided into the horrible and the miserable.” Woody Allen’s brand of pessimism can at least make us smile, and perhaps even occasionally laugh out loud. Gray didn’t have that effect on me, and, more to the point, I’m not even sure he’s right either. In fact, in many fundamentals, I think he really and very clearly couldn’t be much more wrong.

So, very annoying at times, but nonetheless – precisely because it challenges many of my own views – a stimulating read.

MiSC: Thinking Aloud – Christianity, Faith of Our Fathers?

NB – This is not an academic treatise, by the way, but a ruminatory opinion piece. I’m just chewing over some thoughts!

A ‘desert religion’ turned equal parts fluffy and apocalyptic; a Jewish heresy adopted by a Serbian, who just happened to become Roman Emperor; how and why did a palimpsest of Chinese-whispers become the religion of ‘The West’?

Well, first off, all religions or creeds are ultimately palimpsests of Chinese whispers. They evolve over time with their users. Christianity is neither unique nor exceptional in this respect.

The next thought is, ‘Why, Constantine?’ I’ve read a bit about this, and to be honest it appears that historians feel his adoption of Christianity was about equal measures personal faith/conviction, and an awareness of the faith’s potential for socio-political utility.

But going back a bit, the Christian God actually evolves in plain sight. In the Old Testicle any reader with insight will quickly become aware that the many and various peoples all have their different gods. And even the God of the Israelites is, as Alexander Waugh explores in his book God, a slippery polynomial entity.

The later Roman adoption of Christianity was a ‘saltation’ event, of sorts; prior to this the world was peopled with many spirits and gods. Roman Christianity distilled this down to one god. Monotheism as opposed to polytheism was to be very useful for the ‘divinely sanctioned’ authority of a singular emperor/ruler. And lest we get too parochial, this was a trend worldwide; as humanity and societies evolved, so too did our myths of the divine.

But returning to the older modes of what we might call a more pagan plurality; even the tribal/racial name Israel is actually itself etymological evidence of this cultural and ‘spiritual’ evolution: containing within itself, as it does, the names of three older deities, Ish (poss’ a form of Isis?), Ra(h?), and El. And thus the tribe of three Gods evolved into a tribe of just one, albeit one with a dizzying array of names and natures.

I remember being either first made aware of, or reminded of this, on a BBC TV programme called The Bible’s Buried Secrets, or something like that. The lady presenting that show was, I think, Greek. (And rather buxom, if mammary serves?) And I have vague mamm… er… memories of her noting that some of the deities in this muddled gene pool were female.

Interestingly Robert Crumb picks up on this gender related theme in his notes on his illustrated Book of Genesis. I mention this because it’s illustrative of how, rather than religion being some conduit to fixed divine truths, it in fact reveals and reflects the people who create and ‘curate’ it, and their shifting needs and values.

I was prompted to write this post when thinking about mutton-headed racists in places like the UK and the US, who so proudly and belligerently claim this confused, arcane, dusty eastern Mediterranean set of fables as their own. Hence the use of a George Cross flag as a crucifix, at the head of this post. I

It just makes no sense. I mean, it can be understood, quite easily, as a very primitive form of conservatism: fidelity with the religion one is brought up in. But there’s an enormous irony in the blind loyalty to this ‘alien’ creed in contrast with the tendency amongst this same very angry demographic to regard all government as a kind of oppressive crypto-conspiracy.

I suppose that once again, the simplest most obvious explanation – Occam’s razor! – fits the best: the lower orders, the dispossessed, rightly aware that government isn’t always working in their best interest, seek solace in a creed that promises redress hereafter. But the submission to an arbitrary and unmerited authority, in either case (and indeed if it really is arbitrary and unmerited), smacks of a profound and unexamined cognitive dissonance.

The horrible ironies pile up so deep and so rapidly: the church itself is a government and oppressor. And even when church is not itself government, in many instances appeals to religion ‘validate’ authority. And then there’s also the fact that actually sometimes our governments are acting in our better interests (even if at times for questionable or complex and convoluted reasons). But for the small-minded small-c conservatives at the bottom of the pile, there seems to be a tendency to always go for the worst ‘reading’, achieving the worst of all poss’ worlds.

If one takes this path, one surrenders critical thinking to an alien creed, and then violently attacks other very similar alien creeds, such as Islam, for example. Totally unable to see the irony or hypocrisy of such a position. And yet one retains the mistrust of authority. So, having deferred to the imaginary and unreal heirarchies of religion – and often swiftly thereafter monarchy, as an earthly equivalent – one then refuses to acknowledge the legitimacy of the far more real governance of fellow human beings.

And here we come to the very atavistic lizard-brain level of religion as a tribal identifier. What’s so bizarre is that a collection of arcane gobbledygook, open – like horoscopes – to an infinitely variable range of interpretations, can come to be seen as the immutable and incontestable ’truth’.

It’s also very clear that parts of the Old Testicle are a repository for a lot of very specific tribal memory and myth. How bizarre that such a specific set of stories, so deliberately and singularly attached to one small ethnic group, can eventually become so transferable. This leads to such bizarre moments as when a European theologian calculated the age of the world using a combo’ of the Bible’s creation myths and lineages.

And how sad, pathetic, in fact, that two bastard heresies sprung from the same parents – Christianity and Islam, begat by Judaism – should become the heraldic emblems of warring factions.

Having used their religious traditions to survive as a more or less itinerant minority, how bizarre is it when the ‘unnaturally selected’ or bizarrely bred mutant offspring of the old Jewish faith get attached to other ethnic groups, and weaponised in a tribal war of cultures?

BOOK REWiEW: Post Growth, Life After Capitalism, Tim Jackson

This book isn’t perfect, by any means. Occasionally dazzled by his own prose, and prone to that impressive but somewhat cloying tradition of drowning in quotations, Tim Jackson may also be in danger of only preaching to the converted.

Like Karl Marx before him, he puts forward a damningly cogent and incisive critique of Capitalism. Where he diverges from Marx is in both his more florid and emotional tone, a more up to date view of neo-liberal capitalism, and his proposed answers to the vexatious questions that some of the more obvious failures of capitalism pose.

Several key concepts emerge, such as virtue (understood here in an older more Aristotelian form, rather than the current yet rather Victorian sense), working wisely within limits (as opposed to simply ignoring them), and the slightly more vague-sounding balance and flow.

Countering the very dominant neo-Darwinian (or should that really be Spencerian?) 19thC ‘law of the jungle’ style models of Capitalism, and exposing them for the inherently flawed myths they are, Jackson says the only sustainable way beyond capitalism is a ‘post growth’ vision that learns wisdom by acknowledging limits.

That such ideas are being openly discussed nowadays is quite reassuring. But sadly, with the recent/current eras of Trump in the US and Boris and co in the UK, TJ’s wisdom of balance within limits still looks and feels rather like a utopian pipe-dream, struggling against myths that, for whatever twisted tragic reasons, like weeds, take root and multiply so much more readily than do the more attractive flowers of wisdom.

There are occasional moments where I find myself quibbling with certain key readings of history within his narrative. But overall his arguments are, at least to me, pretty compelling and essentially sound. But then I’m not amongst the rapine disaster capitalists that need to be ‘converted’ by such reasoning.

This said, even as someone who considers themself very in tune with TJ’s thinking and desires, regarding a better future for humanity, this book has helped shine a light on how inescapably insidious so much of contemporary capitalist life is. From my own seeking of solace in over-consumption – both in literal dietary terms and the more metaphorical but equally material terms of ‘I shop therefore I am’ – to the devastation of the mental and ‘spiritual’ life Capitalism wreaks, as it devalues labour and marginalises dissenters.

This book is a wake up call to all of us, from the cowed victims, like me, hiding in the margins eking out a subsistence life, away from the glare of the capitalist mainstream, to the ‘captains of industry’ and their apologists and enablers, merrily driving humanity over a cliff of short-sighted short-termist greed.

I do think the ideas presented here need to somehow be successfully communicated to ‘the enemy’, the Trumps, Bojos and their hordes of zombie enablers. And as most of them don’t even read, let alone read this sort of book, that’s where TJ’s vision falters. One can imagine, or rather hear already, the contemptuous dismissals such ideas as are presented here will typically encounter from the currently dominant Capitalists.

As someone who has dallied with Buddhism for many years, it was interesting that, towards the end of this book, a Buddhist perspective was used as a positive foil to contrast with capitalism: both, as TJ points out, start with a vision of life beset by suffering, but the responses are very different. This section was kind of nice for me, on an almost personal level, as I’d become very disillusioned with Buddhism in the end. And this has reminded me that I wasn’t actually wasting time, as some of the philosophical aspects of Buddhism are, as it turns out, potentially useful antidotes to some of the ills of capitalism.

As is often the case with books like this, at the end it reaches an almost rhapsodic climax of peroration. I always get a little queasy at this point. It’s as if the authors of such ‘visionary’ writings have to whip themselves and, they hope, their readers, into a kind of rapt ecstasy. To finish on an orgasmic high! To stick with the sex metaphor, the more frequently one encounters such intense !happy endings’ the more quickly ecstasy potentially slips into ennui, leaving a lingering sense of uncertainty. Was that really as good as it tried to be?

Anyway, for all my caveats and criticisms, in short, this really is a superb and very timely work. Drawing together numerous fascinating insights, ranging across everyone from good ol’ Aristotle, philosopher of the Classical Greek era, on virtue, to the more contemporary work of biologist Lyn Margulis, on the essential role of collaboration at the heart of evolutionary progress.

And – always a good sign, in my books (boom-boom, pun fully intentional!) – this book has really stimulated a desire to read further on numerous related topics: be that The Limits of Growth, by The Club of Rome ‘think tank’, to the powerful poetic writings of Emily Dickinson.

This book challenges both the individual and society to substitute old and poisonously unsustainable myths with better healthier narratives, and thereby enable positive change. And both we as a species, and the planet on which we depend, need humanity to awaken to the urgency of such change. Great stuff, highly recommended.

FOOD: Proletarian Fare – Fish & Chips, Home-Made

Ok, so I didn’t make battered cod, or mushy peas, I just steamed them both. But I did make nice fries, finally using the deep-fat-fryer I got off Freecycle a year or more back.

Soaking the chips in water for two hours, and then double-frying them, really wasn’t too onerous. Indeed, the whole process, bar the lengthy soaking, was remarkably quick. The chips took a little over ten minutes. The peas and fish about five!

I’ll certainly be cooking home made fish n chips more often, now I’ve made a start with the fryer. It’s simplicity itself. And the frying in oil of the chips is, I think (hope?), offset by the healthily steamed veg and fish.
I think it’s primarily the batter on commercial fish n chips that makes me feel bloated when we occasionally ‘treat ourselves’ to a chippy take out. This home made supper didn’t leave me feeling uncomfortable.

BOOK REViEW: 12 Rules For Life, Jordan Peterson, pt. I

Hmm!?

I saw Jordan Peterson talking, and very well I thought, in several online videos. So I thought I’d try this book. The subtitle also appealed, as I feel that my life would benefit from more clarity, order and structure.

Before I’d even started reading it, however, a post on Facebook about the fact I was thinking about reading it drew a shocking level of opprobrium. I was, frankly, rather surprised at how much hatred for JP there is amongst my peers, many of whom clearly see him as a reactionary right-winger. I hadn’t got that impression myself, from the online stuff I’d seen.

However, having now read about three-quarters or so of this book, I think I’m beginning to get glimpses of what all the fuss is about. But for me it’s not any alleged traces of ‘alt-right’ type thinking, but his love affair with the Bible and Christianity that I find most bizarre. And his is not a Bible-belt fundamentalist reading of Christianity, but a myth as poetic or philosophical insight type reading. I’ll be returning to this strand throughout.

Most of what he’s saying about things like the depth of conditioning on humanity of long-term evolutionary traits, I still find strike me as very sound. But the way in which he continually goes back to Christian texts and myths for parable style ‘wisdom’ baffles and disappoints me. Is it in part the context? Is modern Canada as Bible-bound as the US?

I think he takes on certain flaky contemporary sacred cows of the left quite admirably, at least online, coolly, calmly – and very reasonably – showing that some of the assumptions in such trains of thought are, frankly, well off the rails. Whilst he does attend to this theme here, that’s not what this book is really about.

The fact that because he’s attacked an institutionalised part of the academic left he has, I’m told, become a darling of some on the right IS an issue for me. But I’ve not heard him espousing the lunatic views of many of the alt-right morons who, it is alleged, seem to want to claim him. Indeed, I’ve not even encountered very much of this ‘darling of the alt-right’ phenomenon either – a little, yes – which so clearly upsets most left-ish folk I know.

Anyway, Peterson’s continual harping on Christian lore/mythology and a few other things – he seems to take an almost sadistic pleasure in running down the assumed subject/reader* – have seriously dented the enthusiasm for JP I initially felt after seeing him talk online.

At the point in time at which I’m writing this, this book seems to me, as far as I can tell, to be neither the great font of wisdom it’s admirers make it out to be, nor a particularly pernicious right wing or conservative attack on left-ish or progressive culture.

There is some wisdom in it, chiefly around confronting reality honestly and taking personal responsibility. But that’s hardly new or unique. It is, as I’ve said a few times now, the highly selective reading/interpretation of Christian themes that most puts me off.

At this point I’ve run out of steam, with the book unfinished. And I don’t feel compelled to continue right now. So, all in all, I can’t honestly recommend 12 Rules. Not right now, at any rate.

*A classic bullying ‘deconstruct to reconstruct’ (my phrase!) approach, as used everywhere from families to corporations to cults. Often inferred via the currently trendy term ‘gaslighting’.

Having said all of the above, in fairness to the book and it’s author, I feel I ought to address his ‘12 Rules’ directly. I found the above image listing his rules when searching for the cover image.

Some of them, such as the first four seem eminently sensible, and just ‘common sense’ forms of self-respect. Rules VI-VIII also seem very wise, in a simple homely way. The two about kids I’m slightly less clear on. The first, V, I’ve read and broadly agree with, the second, XI, I haven’t read yet, so can’t really comment on. Although I deal with kids all the time in my teaching work, we don’t have kids of our own. So chapter five felt odd, as it’s so clearly addressed to parents. Of course there is transferable knowledge here, but… well, let’s move on.

Rules IX and X are, in my view, both wise and advisable as principles for discussion. And JP seems particularly good at precision of speech, rule X, himself. I must confess he doesn’t come across so strongly re Rule IX, in the public debating I’ve seen him in.

Rules XI and XII are both in the chunk of the book I’ve not as yet read. So I can only address them in the broadest and vaguest of terms: Rule XI I’ll leave for now, and only address (although I can guess at the gist of it) once I’ve read the relevant chapter.

Rule XII I feel a little safer considering, despite not yet having read the chapter that fleshes it out. Once again it seems like a simple bit of inoffensive homely wisdom, with – I’m guessing/assuming – roots in the simple value of enjoying the moment. And as folk with a pet cat, the joys of interacting with a funny little furry critter are abundant and plain to see for me already.

So, given very little in the 12 Rules list seems controversial or politically charged, why all the left wing hostility for JP? I believe that stems from how he rose to prominence as an internet sensation, in the context of Canadian legislation (or possibly just proposed legislation?) around ‘politically correct’ behaviour in public discussion of gender identity and terminology.

It’s my view that there’s something of a leftist knee-jerk reaction against JP that throws several babies out with the bath water. Which is a pity. Having said that, it might also be true that JP may actually belong to an intellectual tradition all too easily adopted or co-opted, even if mistakenly so, by certain sections of the political right.

It’s my view that a lot of so called ‘new-atheist’ and modern evolutionary writers/thinkers are occasionally enduring similar rather harsh and largely unfounded allegations of being in cahoots with forms of Spencer-ian versions of ‘social Darwinism’. Leftist attacks on JP seem to partake of the same essential dynamic. But this is all a bit off-topic, tbh, re 12 Rules (so far), and is stuff I address elsewhere here on my blog.

In conclusion then, there seems to be, for some potential readers of this, too much associated political baggage. That’s not entirely the case for me, even now I’ve become aware of it all. If taken purely for what it is, the elucidation of 12 principles for living, the book comes out better. If, however, you do believe that JP is a standard bearer for a form of neo-con or alt-right way of thinking/living, then that is a serious enough issue to give pause for thought.

Personally I feel that JP has some wisdom and insight from which I can benefit, but is also too in thrall to what one might call the Western Christian tradition. What forms of conservatism I do glean from him, at least via this book, are not of the repellently racist and frankly fascist kind that grew like rampant weeds so much under Trump, but rather of a, for the most part, quite reasonable variety.

But here we could very well get into tricky territory, as regards such topics as family cohesion vs individual rights and freedoms. But once again, this is to wander further afield than the main scope of this book (although he does touch on such stuff).

So, to sum up, despite the fawning praise of the acolytes, and the ‘damn his eyes’ of the detractors, JP is clearly an interesting if divisive figure, whose views clearly touch certain contemporary nerves. But, rather oddly perhaps, 12 Rules isn’t really as controversial as all that.

There’s some wisdom here, and also views or assumptions one might challenge or plain disagree with. But the book is neither a new Bible (12 Rules/12 Commandments!?) nor a new Mein Kampf.

MUSiC/DRUMS: Joe Morello, Take Five (enhanced)

The video linked to on this post shows The Dave Brubeck Quartet playing their famous hit Take Five. An instrumental jazz number that is essentially a vehicle for a drum solo. And it charted! I can’t really see such a thing happening nowadays. 

The Quartet’s drummer, the near-blind – hence the Mr Magoo specs – Joe Morello, who started out playing violin, is one of the greatest drummers ever to have wielded sticks. Jazz isn’t everyone’s cup of tea (but as anyone who knows me will know, I personally love a lot of it), but both this number and the drum solo are essential listening/learning for aspiring drummers, which is why I’m posting this here on my blog. 

Originally shot in black and white, this clip has been both colourised and enhanced, by a chap whose YouTube channel is, very aptly, called Drum Lucidly (and also has another similarly enhanced video, of a Buddy Rich performance), for greater clarity, really helping bring it to life for a more modern audience. The drum solo starts around 4:40-ish. I hope you enjoy watching this master drummer at work as much as I do?

MEDiA: 100 Penguin Sci-Fi Postcards

A friend on Facebook posted about this set, and I immediately ordered it for our home. It’s not quite a good as I’d hoped. And ultimately it’s the older earlier-era covers I like the most. The middle period stuff is ok, if rather Yellow-Submarine/psychedelic, but the more modern stuff is less appealing to me. Hence the star rating.

Nevertheless, this is still an interesting collection, even if only for the sub-set of ‘chosen’ or preferred images. And it is of course constrained by the remit of Penguin only book covers. There are other series of Sci-Fi book and magazine covers with even greater ‘vintage futurism’ type appeal.

Of course one can also use these as, um… postcards!? And bookmarks. I love a nice postcard bookmark! But the main reason for the purchase is to create a multiple image display piece for somewhere in our home. When that’s done, I’ll doubtless share it here.

This set is certainly nicely presented, and cheaper like this than in the also available book form. I’m guessing the latter might also have textual components? Not checked as yet.

MUSiC: Joni Mitchell, the Reprise Albums, (1968-1971)

I’ve usually missed out on any Joni news in recent years. For example, when they did the boxed set of her first 10 or so albums… I missed it! But then I have all those albums on vinyl already, and on CD, as well.

Still, hearing that Seagull was significantly improved, and all four had been remastered, I thought, yep, let’s get this set. In some ways I love it. I’m such a Joni junkie that if money were not an object I’d simply buy pretty much everything. But funds are, alas, an issue.

Compared with the threadbare Tom Waits remastered re-isssues, which i thus far haven’t even bothered with, these are at least nicely packaged, with the gatefold card covers, lyrics, and even separate inner-sleeves, like ye olde vinyl. But sound wise I haven’t as yet noticed any great improvement. I’ll have to do some proper A/B comparisons.

Joni has said she thought Seagull sounded awful, as if it had been recorded under a jello-bowl, or something like that. Produced by her one time lover, David Crosby, it certainly sounded different from all the later recordings, but not awful. Not to my ears, at any rate. Indeed, it’s differences even give it some charm. And, regarding the ‘improved’ new version, I’ve read some reviewers saying they actually think the new mix is worse, over-compressed and muddy, etc!

All things considered, I do feel that as great as all this Joni stuff is, that’s going on right now – and far and away the best stuff is the previously unreleased material that’s gradually coming out – it could have been even better. Brandi Carlisle’s little written homage is ok-ish. But many fans, like myself, would’ve loved proper essays on each album, as you sometimes get with the rare jazz, funk and souls reissues.

It’s a bit like those Steely Dan remasters that came out some time ago now, whilst Becker was still with us, and that had those rather silly notes, written by Becker and Fagen, as added ‘bonus’ material. Ok, that was at least something new. But hardly something of any great value. Indeed, in some ways it served to tarnish their legacy, seeming a bit sophomoric in tone. It seems odd and rather sad to me that some of the stars of contemporary(-ish) popular music appear to hold such a sway over their legacy that they actually inhibit it’s appreciation.

Anyway, it kind of goes without saying – around here at any rate – that the content of these four discs is some of the twentieth century’s greatest singer songwriter artistry ever committed to wax. I love all four of these albums, and some of those that came soon after this, just about equally. I’m not one of those that holds Blue to be her Holy Grail. Indeed, Blue is the one album of the four presented here that I sometimes can’t listen to all the way though. It’s just sooo intense!

Song to A Seagull has a very special place in my own life, for reasons I dursn’t enter into online, to be honest. Just as Kris Kristofferson said ‘Christ, Joni, keep some for yourself!’ I shall do likewise in this instance. Suffice to say that I went through a very intense time with this album as my chief accompaniment. It is true that this is her most naïve and dated sounding album, in some respects. But that suited the naïve young me to a tee! And to counter-balance that, there is poetry in the lyrics and magic in the music that I believe is the equal of anything in her long and prolific career. My pick for this disc, Sisotowbell Lane. Sublime!

Clouds is another solid gold slice of musical brilliance, with no bad songs at all. Just like Seagull, in that respect. The production aesthetic is more natural and ‘transparent’, and consequently a tad less dated than her debut. But her music and delivery are very similar. Whereas there are no famous hits on her first record, here we have Chelsea Morning and Both Sides Now. But for me the standout track is the hauntingly deep Songs To Ageing Children. Rather like Tom Waits, Joni had a kind of old head on young shoulders.

Ladies of The Canyon also has a few ‘name’ tracks, from the jaunty Big Yellow Taxi – the Chelsea morning of this record – to Woodstock, the ode to the festival she spurned and yet kind of wanted to both be at, and not be at. But once again the real gem is The Circle Game, which, like Songs To Ageing Children cuts much deeper. Again, all killer, no filler. And on this disc Joni starts adding some more diverse sounds. A sign of things to come.

And then, of course, there’s Blue. Inescapable in her canon, and undoubtedly a rare instance of a lionised record that really does live up to (and, in all honesty, transcend/surpass) all the hype. Ironically there’s only the slightly more jovial – tho’ still melancholy – Carey, to follow numbers like Chelsea morning and Big Yellow Taxi. Everything else, like the album’s name and hue, is deeply, darkly blue. And as a result this is the easiest Joni album for me to O.D. on. Standout tracks? Well, it’s hard, they’re all so good. But if pressed I might say Little Green and This Flight Tonight. In the parlance of yore, man, this is one heavy trip!

So, all the music contained herein is top-drawer 24-carat undiluted brilliance, of a rare and unique kind.

But… the thing is, does this latest release really add anything? And, as much as I love having it, and rate it highly for the sublimity of what it contains, the basic answer is… no, not really. The biggest potential benefit is the ‘fixing’ of the mix/production on Seagull. And although I can hear an audible difference in the music, it’s not so big as to be remarkable, either in a good or a bad way. At least not so far. I have only had this a few days, and listened through it all just the once so far.

Some folk would dock something for the fact that this doesn’t really add to or augment the Joni legacy, as such. I can’t do that. The musical genius that is contained herein is off the scale. To knock stars off they’d have to have sabotaged it all in some way. And they haven’t. It may not add anything. But nor does it take away. What you get is four utterly wonderful albums, presented in a rather lovely manner. So, it’s the full five stars.

BOOK REViEW: Picasso, 1932

This was the sole new book purchase, of my recent trip to Topping Books, Ely. I bought two very cheap books that same day, from Oxfam. One on Caravaggio, the other, A Tolkien Bestiary. The Caravaggio one is for cutting up and framing prints. The Bestiary was a book I had as a child. Something for old times sake!

Picasso 1932, was an entirely new thing to me. I hadn’t even been aware of the recent-ish Tate exhibition, of which it is a catalogue/accompanying monograph. I’m a massive Picasso nut. I just love his prodigious output; the rampant fecundity and diversity of it all. The single year theme is great. It really accentuates Picasso’s incredible creative energies. The quantity, variety and quality of his work is, I find, always astonishing. It’s kind of like he’s a conduit for continent-shifting levels of energy, a continually erupting vent of Krakatoan proportions.

Picasso often talked about making art like a child. And here he talks about painting ‘arses’ (got to love his earthiness!) like a blind man; painting it as it feels to the touch. How delicious! The Mirror, pictured below, achieves just this, I reckon. And rather cheekily, I might add. It’s even as if the lady’s ‘pillow of clouds’ type backside is actually a dream object, in a cartoon-style thought bubble. Which of course it is.

Picasso, TheMirror, 1932.
Reclining Nude, 1932.

The above pictured Reclining Nude has a soft spot (or two, or three…) in my heart, as it’s a painting I bought as a picture postcard on a visit to the Musee Picasso, in Paris, many, many moons ago. And I love how speaking of moons, he uses crescents of white repeatedly. And the use of apple-esque red and green, also, is delicious.

Reclining Nude, 1932.

Briefly returning to the theme of arseholes, as well as this cataloguing the Tate Modern exhibition (2018), it also covers and celebrates Picasso’s first career retrospective, of 1932, around the time he was turning 50. I’m 49 now, so this is very resonant for me.

Rather ironically, one of Picasso’s exhibitors, Paul Rosenberg, is quoted in here as saying ‘I refuse to have any arseholes in my gallery’. I love art and artists. But many – and it’s often been said of Picasso – are, frankly, the very epitome of assholes. And gallery owners and art critics? Even worse!

How ironic that Rosenberg would object to hanging arseholes on his walls, but could be very tolerant of the same populating the environment of his gallery!

One of the many, many, many things I love so deeply about Picasso is how varied and prolific his work was. Have I said this before? I’ll say it again; one of the many things I love about Picasso is how much work he did and how diverse that work was.

In this year/book alone, he ranges from monochromatic drawings and paintings to orgies of colour, soft round pillows and hard sharp angles, and then there’s the sculpture. Sometimes the links between periods, styles or themes are clear, whilst at others he jumps around like a grasshopper on PCP.

And very often he works through ideas in series of closely related works. Riffing away (appropriately enough he often riffs on guitars/flutes, etc*), looking for perfection, or that elusive magical alchemical quality great art can have. As he puts it: ‘ I can rarely keep myself from redoing a thing… after all, why work otherwise, if not to better express the same thing? You must always seek perfection.’

Crucifixion, 1932.
Crucifixion, 1932.
Crucifixion, 1932.

Ironically, for one of the greatest artists of all time, he is incredibly unlike most appallingly hip artsy types, whose preciousness often manifests in a combination of spiky arrogant feeling obscurantism, and an almost monomaniac visual aesthetic.

The series of crucifixions above illuminates several of these ideas; his playfulness, the stark stylistic contrast between this stuff and his colourful cream-puff nudes, and how he sought perfect through re-iteration.

That said, Picasso’s own spoken words – at least as communicated in books such as this – range from the refreshingly earthy and unpretentious (I like his statement about not making art ‘serving the interests of the political, religious or military art of any country.’) to the painfully self-consciously intellectual or opaque: ‘I will never fit in with the followers of the prophets of Nietzsche’s superman.’

As well as the series of related artworks, some on themes such as seated ladies, female nudes, bathers, crucifixions, Bacchanalian scenes, etc, there are whole sketchbooks, reproduced here, as well as photo-articles such as Andre Breton’s Brassaï illustrated piece on Picasso’s sculptural work at Boisgeloup.

One of a number of Brassaï‘s terrific photograhps of Picasso’s sculpture studio, at Boisgeloup.
Picasso’s bourgeois side barely hid the bohemian life he was really carrying on.

And, rather nicely, the importance of places, as well as people, is really addressed nicely in this book, via maps, black and white photos, and text.

This review is primarily my initial response to the visual content of this terrific book. Most of my interest in art books lies in simply looking at the artworks, and other images. Art history texts are infamous for all too often being tortuously verbose and pretentious. What little I’ve read here, thus far, seems alright.

But the real treasures here are not the words, obviously, but the artworks. And for these alone, this book is, for me, essential. Love it!