In which we, the anxious editors of Click Opera, continue to analyze your comment numbers as if they were Nielsen ratings, and are dismayed to find that you don't seem to get as excited about art and design as we do, but love to talk about America.
July 2006
1st Meet the Jerpmans - 89 comments
3rd Empires and dance - 52 comments
4th Bamboo feed - 25 comments
5th Was it lunch, or was it "relational design"? - 11 comments
I thought this was quite an interesting piece, speculating on whether Åbäke and other young design groups might be making something like the design equivalent of Nicolas Bourriaud's "relational aesthetics" (explained here in a long quote from Jerry Saltz). The theme related back to an AIGA Voice piece I'd done the previous November, about conceptual design and whether it was developing a social conscience. The pictures were nice, but the comment ratings ranked as the month's lowest.
6th Saga of a sleeve - 29 comments
7th Kindergarten - 61 comments
8th Whispers about ginger and rice - 23 comments
9th Bonjour Trissa-tesse - 37 comments
10th Epigone pop - 55 comments
11th Making cities work - 39 comments
12th Notes on Syd - 103 comments
13th Very shelfish - 31 comments
14th Sonambiente - 15 comments
15th Get political? We already are! - 100 comments
16th Fumiko's playground - 29 comments
18th The news from Paris - 31 comments
19th Being (just a teensy bit less) digital - 23 comments
20th Notes on Potus - 86 comments
21st The quietest (and hottest) club in the world - 21 comments
24th Why do you come here? - 130 comments
25th Europe is the future - 59 comments
26th The art of pop - 35 comments
5th Cracks in Angrael - 149 comments
As another crisis separates Israel, the US and the UK from the rest of world opinion, and an ICM poll finds that 63% of Britons think the UK is too close to the US, I speculate on how much longer the "coalition of the increasingly unwilling" I've baptised "Angrael" can last.
28th So shoot me - 83 comments
29th Transformed by magazines - 53 comments
30th Fresh milk - 51 comments
31st Can 30% of us drag the rest into the post-industrial age? - 66 comments
August 2006
1st Put two and two together - 96 comments
2nd Talking to a picture of Green - 46 comments
3rd Tony Hannibal Blair - 46 comments
4th Think pink - 83 comments
5th News from Anne - 18 comments
6th Oh! Marxy - 80 comments
7th Happy hosting sought for 11 year-old - 55 comments
8th Story got legs - 62 comments
9th The iceberg listens, melts - 44 comments
10th Optimism moves east - 156 comments
11th Dancing between the unspoken and the unspeakable - 46 comments
12th The cosmopolitanism of the poor - 108 comments
13th Berlin's darkest scene - 53 comments
14th Right about Japan - 46 comments
15th Who the hell do you think I want to be? - 87 comments
16th A bathos ape - 35 comments
17th Unrealpolitik - 188 comments
We restage Darwin's 19th century battles on learning that only 14% of adult Americans think the theory of evolution is "definitely true". Alas, far from a reconstruction of a historic battle, it seems this one rages still. As creationist Christianity continues to hold large numbers of influential people in the world's most powerful (if not its most realistic) nation in its sway, it seems the jury on Darwin's theory of evolution is still, officially, out. Possibly just for lunch, or possibly until the clarion blare of the final trump promised us in the Book of Revelation.
18th Good with faces - 55 comments
19th Analog Baroque TV - 62 comments
20th Bitches without britches - 36 comments
21st Museum of Spring - 48 comments
22nd No bra - 54 comments
23rd Screaming meaning machine - 14 comments
24th Anastasia - 30 comments
26th Wissenschaftsakademie tonite! - 12 comments
I advertise a lecture I'm delivering that evening in a design institute on the Torstrasse. Once again, a visual culture topic leaves commenters cold.
27th I love Lacaton and Vassal! - 25 comments
28th Amigurumi: the slime of empathy - 63 comments
29th The zeroes - 44 comments
30th Piscine Josephine Baker - 19 comments
31st Me and a small annoying idiot - 18 comments
September 2006
1st Yokoland just got bigger - 36 comments
2nd Entropy cotton - 51 comments
3rd The century of the self is over - 35 comments
4th He who says Noh - 22 comments
5th Rough notes on Trade - 43 comments
6th A refreshing feeling that reminds us of whatever we believe in - 37 comments
7th L'Ocky nouveau est arrivé! - 47 comments
8th An Ocky concordance - 35 comments
9th Ample for man? - 37 comments
10th 7 Lies About North Korea - 60 comments
11th Starchitects in Venice - 25 comments
12th Last of the pornotopians - 47 comments
13th Street? We're not worthy! - 36 comments
14th The trip inside - 48 comments
15th Geisai, Janken and the Tam Tam Medusa - 17 comments
16th Let there be a record of your, ahem, gorgeous voice - 54 comments
17th Facial beauty index - 90 comments
18th Beuys and me - 32 comments
19th So farewell, then, Lionheart - 41 comments
20th Mukokuseki diasporans - 24 comments
21st It's so nice to be a beautiful girl - 121 comments
In contrast to a piece about Tokion magazine I'd pulished the day before -- a piece which vaunted a melting-pottish "third culture" in which foreigners and Japanese collaborate -- this one looks at "the kind of implicit semantic and philosophical agreements that only parties raised in the same country can really share... a glimpse into a whole way of being, thinking and feeling." In other words, this is a piece that celebrates Japan's irreducible otherness. Many of you are keen to point out that the film I've chosen to illustrate this is porn... something I've somehow failed to notice. But does that change anything?
22nd Queen Midas - 51 comments
23rd Nobody else knows how to do anything - 35 comments
24th Tape shows Bin Laden alive and well - 17 comments
This piece about an amusing Makoto Aida video in which the artist impersonates a Bin Laden gone to ground in Japan and heavily mellowed by sake tied for the month's least-commented entry along with another piece about the Japanese art scene. Philistines!
25th David Bowie turns nasty - 75 comments
26th Hell phone - 46 comments
27th Local man isn't - 43 comments
28th The real Neo-Marxism - 50 comments
29th Young Gordon - 29 comments
30th When will I see you again? - 62 comments
October 2006
2nd John Bock, bockstar - 14 comments
3rd Flagments - 23 comments
4th Art makes me happy - 35 comments
5th Fear of the Matterhorn - 31 comments
6th Money makes free - 37 comments
7th Ego to eco to ero - 12 comments
8th Oyster pearl - 34 comments
9th Land of the rising daughter - 62 comments
10th Murder the Buddha - 40 comments
11th A monstrous tweefest - 24 comments
12th Shoboplasma - 32 comments
15th London bubbles - 29 comments
16th London 2: People as animals - 8 comments
A day of -- for me -- vast excitement on the London art scene provokes a great shoulder-heaving shrug amongst the readers of Click Opera. Come on, how can Edwina Ashton's people dressed up as animals acting like people leave you this indifferent? People?
17th Holler and scream - 50 comments
18th The office of the future - 13 comments
19th Momus live in Barcelona - 28 comments
21st The "It" System - 27 comments
22nd The roof of the city - 11 comments
23rd Gutevolk are good people - 10 comments
24th Popo: the sound of moral goodness - 13 comments
25th Japanowama - 40 comments
26th 2 Thackrays - 30 comments
27th All about wristbands - 32 comments
28th The homosocial - 58 comments
29th Take my eyes and through them see you - 11 comments
30th Potsdam, 2063 - 30 comments
31st How much are you wearing? - 82 comments
Interestingly enough, street fashion is the only aspect of visual culture that doesn't meet with massive apathy in the comments department. This rewrite of a bling-oriented article in Grazia magazine was the biggest story in a quiet month. You all told me what you were wearing and how much -- or how little -- it cost.
November 2006
1st Nod Currie, hidden hero - 38 comments
2nd Ballads of massive acceptance - 23 comments
3rd Two incidences of beauty - 61 comments
4th What, pushed too far, does it reverse into? - 20 comments
5th Fawkes Noose Network - 22 comments
6th Hisae's Top 5 blog picks - 8 comments
Poor Hisae doesn't provoke much interest with her favourite blogs -- even when one of them turns out to be Marxy's wife's page!
7th Trendy freethinking - 22 comments
8th One eyebrow, four names - 22 comments
9th Japan is portable - 14 comments
10th Who's been damned, what's been planted? - 25 comments
11th A big x to your milky hair - 36 comments
12th 60something - 42 comments
13th Clickoperesque! - 9 comments
14th When you were my pervert octopus, and I was your sex sailor - 45 comments
15th Seasonally expressive - 19 comments
16th Apartment exchange / アパート交換 - 16 comments
In Middle England - 16 comments
17th Breakfast in Brum - 49 comments
18th Panspermingham - 43 comments
19th Forest gets funky - 18 comments
20th Love... or "remasturbation"? - 49 comments
21st Are Wii all becoming Marie Antoinette? - 38 comments
22nd Geodemographics put me in my place - 21 comments
23rd A new theory of everything - 32 comments
24th I murdered a pretty little bonsai tree - 74 comments
25th This week in (what's left of) magazines - 24 comments
26th You kill things to look at them - 23 comments
27th A salty egg - 29 comments
28th 21 square metres into the future - 54 comments
29th Inner bitch, meet inner bastard! - 33 comments
30th Perfect Man Play-Off - 80 comments
Marxy thinks Japanese TV is "low resolution". Using a single cluttered freezeframe from a show devised to please bored housewives, we set out to prove him wrong.
December 2006
1st Pecha kucha is dead - 26 comments
2nd Holidays from being human - 29 comments
3rd Gold and Winter - 3 comments
Indifference sweeps like a grim, wintry wind across an entry about my Tokyo friend Zoren Gold's fashion photography, despite the presence of his gorgeous girlfriend Minoru.
4th Winter bathing ship - 46 comments
5th The presentation of self in everyday life - 75 comments
6th In the art world, increased levels of chatter - 35 comments
7th Splash 22 - 32 comments
8th Some digi-splatter nerdcore for the weekend, sir? - 22 comments
9th Design commentary as propaganda - 104 comments
Aha, you want to talk about America! That's what the internet is for! Or, wait, wait, maybe you want to talk about design? How cunningly I've mixed the two topics up! I'm learning!
10th The CIA calls the tune and the tune is called freedom - 38 comments
11th Dumbiedykes versus the net-and-jet people - 20 comments
12th Curly Carl proudly presents... - 39 comments
13th Flyer Scotsman - 10 comments
14th Voyager and Valerie Dore - 20 comments
15th Randomly generated numbers... or national culture? - 77 comments
17th Postcard from Madrid - 27 comments
18th Madrid generics - 48 comments
19th Tokyo-as-highly-viral-third-culture-style-lab - 26 comments
20th Being narsty to carnts - 77 comments
21st Concerning Moomins - 30 comments
22nd The year in (anything but) music - 72 comments
23rd Berger and Eno propose a cultural boycott of Israel - 68 comments
24th Good pots have errors - 22 comments
25th Gay Christmas Mr Lawrence - 39 comments
27th Bring me your mind-children - 48 comments
28th The 'airy foibles of Rambling Syd Rumpo - 33 comments
29th So hip they're Japanese, so Japanese they're square - 45 comments
30th Six films I could actually stand in 2006 - 42 comments
31st Meta-Retro-Fest 1: Click Opera hits and misses of 2006 - 15 comments
July 2006
1st Meet the Jerpmans - 89 comments
3rd Empires and dance - 52 comments
4th Bamboo feed - 25 comments
I thought this was quite an interesting piece, speculating on whether Åbäke and other young design groups might be making something like the design equivalent of Nicolas Bourriaud's "relational aesthetics" (explained here in a long quote from Jerry Saltz). The theme related back to an AIGA Voice piece I'd done the previous November, about conceptual design and whether it was developing a social conscience. The pictures were nice, but the comment ratings ranked as the month's lowest.
6th Saga of a sleeve - 29 comments
7th Kindergarten - 61 comments
8th Whispers about ginger and rice - 23 comments
9th Bonjour Trissa-tesse - 37 comments
10th Epigone pop - 55 comments
11th Making cities work - 39 comments
12th Notes on Syd - 103 comments
13th Very shelfish - 31 comments
14th Sonambiente - 15 comments
15th Get political? We already are! - 100 comments
16th Fumiko's playground - 29 comments
18th The news from Paris - 31 comments
19th Being (just a teensy bit less) digital - 23 comments
20th Notes on Potus - 86 comments
21st The quietest (and hottest) club in the world - 21 comments
24th Why do you come here? - 130 comments
25th Europe is the future - 59 comments
26th The art of pop - 35 comments
As another crisis separates Israel, the US and the UK from the rest of world opinion, and an ICM poll finds that 63% of Britons think the UK is too close to the US, I speculate on how much longer the "coalition of the increasingly unwilling" I've baptised "Angrael" can last.
28th So shoot me - 83 comments
29th Transformed by magazines - 53 comments
30th Fresh milk - 51 comments
31st Can 30% of us drag the rest into the post-industrial age? - 66 comments
August 2006
1st Put two and two together - 96 comments
2nd Talking to a picture of Green - 46 comments
3rd Tony Hannibal Blair - 46 comments
4th Think pink - 83 comments
5th News from Anne - 18 comments
6th Oh! Marxy - 80 comments
7th Happy hosting sought for 11 year-old - 55 comments
8th Story got legs - 62 comments
9th The iceberg listens, melts - 44 comments
10th Optimism moves east - 156 comments
11th Dancing between the unspoken and the unspeakable - 46 comments
12th The cosmopolitanism of the poor - 108 comments
13th Berlin's darkest scene - 53 comments
14th Right about Japan - 46 comments
15th Who the hell do you think I want to be? - 87 comments
16th A bathos ape - 35 comments
We restage Darwin's 19th century battles on learning that only 14% of adult Americans think the theory of evolution is "definitely true". Alas, far from a reconstruction of a historic battle, it seems this one rages still. As creationist Christianity continues to hold large numbers of influential people in the world's most powerful (if not its most realistic) nation in its sway, it seems the jury on Darwin's theory of evolution is still, officially, out. Possibly just for lunch, or possibly until the clarion blare of the final trump promised us in the Book of Revelation.
18th Good with faces - 55 comments
19th Analog Baroque TV - 62 comments
20th Bitches without britches - 36 comments
21st Museum of Spring - 48 comments
22nd No bra - 54 comments
23rd Screaming meaning machine - 14 comments
24th Anastasia - 30 comments
I advertise a lecture I'm delivering that evening in a design institute on the Torstrasse. Once again, a visual culture topic leaves commenters cold.
27th I love Lacaton and Vassal! - 25 comments
28th Amigurumi: the slime of empathy - 63 comments
29th The zeroes - 44 comments
30th Piscine Josephine Baker - 19 comments
31st Me and a small annoying idiot - 18 comments
September 2006
1st Yokoland just got bigger - 36 comments
2nd Entropy cotton - 51 comments
3rd The century of the self is over - 35 comments
4th He who says Noh - 22 comments
5th Rough notes on Trade - 43 comments
6th A refreshing feeling that reminds us of whatever we believe in - 37 comments
7th L'Ocky nouveau est arrivé! - 47 comments
8th An Ocky concordance - 35 comments
9th Ample for man? - 37 comments
10th 7 Lies About North Korea - 60 comments
11th Starchitects in Venice - 25 comments
12th Last of the pornotopians - 47 comments
13th Street? We're not worthy! - 36 comments
14th The trip inside - 48 comments
15th Geisai, Janken and the Tam Tam Medusa - 17 comments
16th Let there be a record of your, ahem, gorgeous voice - 54 comments
17th Facial beauty index - 90 comments
18th Beuys and me - 32 comments
19th So farewell, then, Lionheart - 41 comments
20th Mukokuseki diasporans - 24 comments
In contrast to a piece about Tokion magazine I'd pulished the day before -- a piece which vaunted a melting-pottish "third culture" in which foreigners and Japanese collaborate -- this one looks at "the kind of implicit semantic and philosophical agreements that only parties raised in the same country can really share... a glimpse into a whole way of being, thinking and feeling." In other words, this is a piece that celebrates Japan's irreducible otherness. Many of you are keen to point out that the film I've chosen to illustrate this is porn... something I've somehow failed to notice. But does that change anything?
22nd Queen Midas - 51 comments
23rd Nobody else knows how to do anything - 35 comments
This piece about an amusing Makoto Aida video in which the artist impersonates a Bin Laden gone to ground in Japan and heavily mellowed by sake tied for the month's least-commented entry along with another piece about the Japanese art scene. Philistines!
25th David Bowie turns nasty - 75 comments
26th Hell phone - 46 comments
27th Local man isn't - 43 comments
28th The real Neo-Marxism - 50 comments
29th Young Gordon - 29 comments
30th When will I see you again? - 62 comments
October 2006
2nd John Bock, bockstar - 14 comments
3rd Flagments - 23 comments
4th Art makes me happy - 35 comments
5th Fear of the Matterhorn - 31 comments
6th Money makes free - 37 comments
7th Ego to eco to ero - 12 comments
8th Oyster pearl - 34 comments
9th Land of the rising daughter - 62 comments
10th Murder the Buddha - 40 comments
11th A monstrous tweefest - 24 comments
12th Shoboplasma - 32 comments
15th London bubbles - 29 comments
A day of -- for me -- vast excitement on the London art scene provokes a great shoulder-heaving shrug amongst the readers of Click Opera. Come on, how can Edwina Ashton's people dressed up as animals acting like people leave you this indifferent? People?
17th Holler and scream - 50 comments
18th The office of the future - 13 comments
19th Momus live in Barcelona - 28 comments
21st The "It" System - 27 comments
22nd The roof of the city - 11 comments
23rd Gutevolk are good people - 10 comments
24th Popo: the sound of moral goodness - 13 comments
25th Japanowama - 40 comments
26th 2 Thackrays - 30 comments
27th All about wristbands - 32 comments
28th The homosocial - 58 comments
29th Take my eyes and through them see you - 11 comments
30th Potsdam, 2063 - 30 comments
Interestingly enough, street fashion is the only aspect of visual culture that doesn't meet with massive apathy in the comments department. This rewrite of a bling-oriented article in Grazia magazine was the biggest story in a quiet month. You all told me what you were wearing and how much -- or how little -- it cost.
November 2006
1st Nod Currie, hidden hero - 38 comments
2nd Ballads of massive acceptance - 23 comments
3rd Two incidences of beauty - 61 comments
4th What, pushed too far, does it reverse into? - 20 comments
5th Fawkes Noose Network - 22 comments
Poor Hisae doesn't provoke much interest with her favourite blogs -- even when one of them turns out to be Marxy's wife's page!
7th Trendy freethinking - 22 comments
8th One eyebrow, four names - 22 comments
9th Japan is portable - 14 comments
10th Who's been damned, what's been planted? - 25 comments
11th A big x to your milky hair - 36 comments
12th 60something - 42 comments
13th Clickoperesque! - 9 comments
14th When you were my pervert octopus, and I was your sex sailor - 45 comments
15th Seasonally expressive - 19 comments
16th Apartment exchange / アパート交換 - 16 comments
In Middle England - 16 comments
17th Breakfast in Brum - 49 comments
18th Panspermingham - 43 comments
19th Forest gets funky - 18 comments
20th Love... or "remasturbation"? - 49 comments
21st Are Wii all becoming Marie Antoinette? - 38 comments
22nd Geodemographics put me in my place - 21 comments
23rd A new theory of everything - 32 comments
24th I murdered a pretty little bonsai tree - 74 comments
25th This week in (what's left of) magazines - 24 comments
26th You kill things to look at them - 23 comments
27th A salty egg - 29 comments
28th 21 square metres into the future - 54 comments
29th Inner bitch, meet inner bastard! - 33 comments
Marxy thinks Japanese TV is "low resolution". Using a single cluttered freezeframe from a show devised to please bored housewives, we set out to prove him wrong.
December 2006
1st Pecha kucha is dead - 26 comments
2nd Holidays from being human - 29 comments
Indifference sweeps like a grim, wintry wind across an entry about my Tokyo friend Zoren Gold's fashion photography, despite the presence of his gorgeous girlfriend Minoru.
4th Winter bathing ship - 46 comments
5th The presentation of self in everyday life - 75 comments
6th In the art world, increased levels of chatter - 35 comments
7th Splash 22 - 32 comments
8th Some digi-splatter nerdcore for the weekend, sir? - 22 comments
Aha, you want to talk about America! That's what the internet is for! Or, wait, wait, maybe you want to talk about design? How cunningly I've mixed the two topics up! I'm learning!
10th The CIA calls the tune and the tune is called freedom - 38 comments
11th Dumbiedykes versus the net-and-jet people - 20 comments
12th Curly Carl proudly presents... - 39 comments
13th Flyer Scotsman - 10 comments
14th Voyager and Valerie Dore - 20 comments
15th Randomly generated numbers... or national culture? - 77 comments
17th Postcard from Madrid - 27 comments
18th Madrid generics - 48 comments
19th Tokyo-as-highly-viral-third-culture-style-lab - 26 comments
20th Being narsty to carnts - 77 comments
21st Concerning Moomins - 30 comments
22nd The year in (anything but) music - 72 comments
23rd Berger and Eno propose a cultural boycott of Israel - 68 comments
24th Good pots have errors - 22 comments
25th Gay Christmas Mr Lawrence - 39 comments
27th Bring me your mind-children - 48 comments
28th The 'airy foibles of Rambling Syd Rumpo - 33 comments
29th So hip they're Japanese, so Japanese they're square - 45 comments
30th Six films I could actually stand in 2006 - 42 comments
31st Meta-Retro-Fest 1: Click Opera hits and misses of 2006 - 15 comments
(no subject)
Date: 2007-01-01 03:54 pm (UTC)I find it interesting how little actual debate this blog creates, compared to other blogs with similar thematic orientation. Is that a function of the unlimited thread depth livejournal allows? A function of the audience? (Is Livejournal more about community than about discussion?) Or of the fact that whatever ideas there are is spread a little too thin to actually trigger debate (for which there would be only one day anyway)?
But anyway, happy new year, Momster!
der.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-01-01 04:15 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-01-01 04:45 pm (UTC)In this half, I was really into the article on the bath in Germany, that Sako artist who became a hamster in France.
I don't think I could mask my dislike of "pechakucha."
It makes me sad that the USA is more popular a topic than art. I know that the USA are controversial and fun to discuss, but I'd like to see Angrael and all that motivate people to become more concerned with beauty than with ugliness.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-01-01 05:35 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-01-01 05:50 pm (UTC)1. not to be on the side of your own culture, and
2. not to be on the side of the most powerful culture.
So that works fine; this is simply a liberal blog for Americans, a blog which plays to their sense of self-doubt.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-01-01 05:55 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-01-01 06:01 pm (UTC)I'm not sure what "other blogs with a similar thematic orientation" are, and what you mean by "actual debate". But yes, I do tend to bury posts every 24 hours with the next one, and LJ's comments structure inhibits debate a bit -- after 50, everything collapses and is a pain to read. I think I'm interested in flow and freshness rather than "actual debate". I'm interested in the Scheherezade-like challenge of finding something new each day to write about, and be inspired by. It's a search for value rather than a talk radio-like attempt at provocation for its own sake.
And if you're talking about Marxy's blog, I think one of its limitations is that it's structured like an antithesis. The thesis is Marxy's own early infatuation with Japan, or the Japan boosting that goes on here or elsewhere. But, like all negation, it depends heavily on an absent "yes", and comes off looking frail and mean at times. Negation in itself cannot be the basis of a worldview.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-01-01 06:04 pm (UTC)You will know me as mini_snape. Since LJ has made it impossible for me to post, I´ve set up this journal to replace mini_snape. I´ve added you on it, please add me back if you should feel so inclined. My other journal will from now on be on hiatus. There is more info on the how and why in the last post.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-01-01 06:13 pm (UTC)Perhaps the 'America' issue could be relegated if the sort of polarised dichotomous debate that charactarised an excessive quotient of last year's postings could be tempered with a modicum of reasoned balance. There is plenty wrong with American society and culture but I lived there long enough to realise that there are some aspects of American culture worth celebrating. This issue and the pro/anti singularity of discourse it produces are becoming a bore, it would benefit Click Opera if it were sidelined for more confab on art and culture in general.
Thomas Scott.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-01-01 06:20 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-01-01 06:20 pm (UTC)Thomas S.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-01-01 06:21 pm (UTC)Wissenschaftsakademie tonite!
Date: 2007-01-01 06:46 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-01-01 07:25 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-01-01 07:27 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-01-01 07:56 pm (UTC)I do think there's a fundemental difference of perception here between people who say "there is much good as well as bad about x" and people who say "if x is dominant, it must be opposed as a kind of moral obligation".
I am clearly the latter type of person. I feel it's a duty to become an official opposition to anything dominant. We must weaken the strong until they're so weak it's time to strengthen them again. We may, at that point, actually praise some of the very same things we currently blame. This is not inconsistency, but strategy.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-01-01 08:26 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-01-01 08:31 pm (UTC)My concern Nick, is that blanket opposition to a culture will induce reactionary entrenchment.
Thomas.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-01-01 08:40 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-01-01 08:43 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-01-01 08:48 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-01-01 08:55 pm (UTC)Thomas.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-01-01 09:17 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-01-01 09:22 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-01-01 09:38 pm (UTC)