The White Peril 白禍

22 October 2007

Expressions
I just got the latest shakedown e-mail from my college. That's fine. They're doing they're first fund drive in twenty years. That's fine, too. What isn't fine is the purple overblownness of the enterprise—is it really assumed we'll only cough up money if we're come on to like this?

What we celebrated this evening was the beginning of what will be a five-year endeavor that will require the ongoing, thoughtful participation of our entire community. I promise you this: When we achieve our goal in 2012, we will hold the keys to an eminent and consummately interdisciplinary Penn that will have a vast, transformative impact on humanity.


Oh, my. That's some fundraiser.

More Penn-related stuff: Erin O'Connor links to a wonderfully crabby review of Alice Sebold's newly-disgorged novel. Sebold is a good example of why I rarely read fiction published after, like, 1950. I'm perfectly happy to listen to current music and watch current television and movies, but every time a friend whose taste I trust recommends a recent novel or short story, I end up giving up on the thing. I finished The Lovely Bones. Ick.

Lee Siegel says of Sebold's latest:

If you welcome the unreal disjunction between killing your mother and reflecting afterward how lucky you are compared with the children of the dead, “uncared for” mothers in Rwanda and Afghanistan, then this book will make you clap your hands with joy. If you find the idea that mothers shape their children’s “whole” lives original rather than simultaneously banal and puerilely overstated, then Barnes & Noble, here you come! This novel is so morally, emotionally and intellectually incoherent that it’s bound to become a best seller.


O'Connor charitably observes that writing in the first person makes it difficult to give the reader a sense of critical distance on the protagonist, and that (though she doesn't put it this way) Sebold just isn't a good enough thinker or writer to do so. Anyway, the whole review is hilarious. As O'Connor says, Siegel writes with real anger, not the airy contempt reviewers usually employ to dump on books they dislike.

Speaking of art that doesn't make good on its shock potential, a good friend and I went to see Death of a President this weekend. (It's a year old, of course, but just made it to Japan.) She and I have known each other for a decade; she's a very liberal history professor who's always ready for a good argument. I looked forward to tangling over the issues raised in the movie.

Unfortunately, there wasn't much meat to it. The assassination itself isn't presented in ghoulish graphic detail, and while the filmmakers' sympathies are rather clearly not with the Bush administration, no one comes off any more cartoonish than actual interviewees on Frontline. But the moral problems that flow from the response to the assassination are rushed through and not developed very well. A Muslim Syrian-American is prosecuted for the crime based on circumstantial evidence, now-President Cheney flirts with attacking Syria for not cooperating in the investigation, and a Patriot III act is passed to increase powers of surveillance even further. But it's hard to sink your teeth into anything because it's all rushed through. It's certainly possible to imagine a Muslim's being railroaded--prosecutors can get overzealous and develop fixations on suspects that fit their expectations, especially when they're under intense pressure from above to produce a case. It's also possible to imagine that a lead with genuine promise could be lost among the thousands of tips that would inundate the FBI during its investigation. But the misjudgments that come after the assassination aren't as fleshed out at those that lead up to it. The result is a nice lefty horror flick, presumably, but not all that hard-hitting about miscarriages of justice.
Posted by Sean on 2007-10-22 20:01:26 | 0 Comments | 0 Trackbacks >>>>>>> Categories: aesthetics

5 October 2007

I've Got a Lover (Back in Japan)
Glad this week is over--productive but super-busy. I was mercifully spared any cross-cultural encounters of the variety below (sent to me by my buddy--those Brits!):





Speaking of people from the UK, I'd feared, given the title, that Annie Lennox's new album would consist of Songs of Mass Sanctimony. After all, her attempts at social commentary with Eurythmics could be downright laughable. She and David should have won some sort of Freedom from Self-Awareness Award for this one:



Nothing really to fear, it turned out, fortunately--not even on the one with the Choir of Concerned Mommies. Nice to have her recording again.

I also truly enjoyed the opening salvo from this week's Popbitch:

"I theme-dress depending on where I'm going... if I was going to dinner at a Chinese restaurant, I would wear a kimono - it makes it more fun." Kelly Osbourne.


Good to know the child's as much as grammarian as she is a geographer, huh? Whatever you do, though, do NOT click on the Anna Nicole Smith link toward the bottom of this week's mailing. Ugsome. I still haven't recovered.

Out of here for the weekend. Have a good one, everyone.
Posted by Sean on 2007-10-05 21:56:41 | 3 Comments | 0 Trackbacks >>>>>>> Categories: aesthetics

1 October 2007

毛深い
While everyone else is debating whether there are gays in Iran, this fag (note unapologetic hegemonic-Western assertion of identity--BUTCH, huh?) is wondering anew at how beyond sexy Hugh Jackman is, even if the hair needs a trim (just the hair on his head, obviously).

Speaking of body hair, I'm normally pretty persnickety about this sort of thing--don't get me started on visible clip-on bow ties at black tie parties--but I'm not sure I can fall in line with this post (via Ann Althouse). I can see arguing that grown men shouldn't wear shorts because it violates adult etiquette. I can see pointing out that shorts flatter well-shaped legs and don't flatter dumpy ones. Hell, attractiveness isn't even always the issue. I've been fighting with friends who tell me I should show more chest hair when we go out for years. My relatively smooth buddies can have three buttons open, and you don't even notice. I have three buttons open, and I look as if I should have a sign around my neck that says, "Ask about my low all-night rates!"

But looking decent and looking comely are two different, if related, considerations that it's not good to slush together. (Is it proposed that we go the whole way and ask people who lost the genetic lottery on bone structure and complexion to wear paper bags over their heads?) Noisome breath and body odor or noisy chewing--that sort of thing is inescapable to people around you, so it's flat-out inconsiderate to inflict it on them. I have a hard time equating that with covering up your legs lest someone deem them too hairy.
Posted by Sean on 2007-10-01 17:47:08 | 6 Comments | 0 Trackbacks >>>>>>> Categories: aesthetics, gay