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Posts Tagged ‘culture’

Out Where the Air is Fresh and Clear

September 6th, 2011 Leave a comment No comments

I spent the morning in Berkeley, poking around on Shattuck Avenue while my car got an oil change. I went out to breakfast in Walnut Square, then walked downtown to a bookstore and the library. I picked up the car around lunchtime, stopped off at the natural grocery for a few items, and then headed back out to the hinterlands. A lovely day, one that reminded me of what I appreciate about the city and the country. Berkeley is jam-packed with interesting things to see and do, and is truly on the cutting edge of good food and books. Love it! But I’m much happier not being constantly bombarded by the attendant sensory overload. Out here where the air is fresh and the pace of life slower, I can more fully savor material abundance. It’s the best of both worlds, and a very nice place to be.

Categories: Flotsam & Jetsam

One Woman’s Weed is Another’s Culinary Herb

September 1st, 2011 Leave a comment No comments

There’s a nice synergy going on between two items on my household “To Do” list: I need to clean up the straggly parts of the garden and I forgot to buy fresh dandelion leaves for my green elixir last time I was at the produce market. Fortunately, the “weeds” that need clearing out of the patio bricks include several dandelions that are untainted by powdery mildew. So, I will harvest them for my healthy brew, as opposed to relegating them to the compost bin. “Weed” is a relative term.

Categories: Flotsam & Jetsam

Calling a Spade a Spade

August 15th, 2011 Leave a comment No comments

Another great week for Corporate America!

The economy is flatlining. Global financial markets are in turmoil. Your stock price is down about 15 percent in three weeks. Your customers have lost all confidence in the economy. Your employees, at least the American ones, are cynical and demoralized. Your government is paralyzed.

Want to know who is to blame, Mr. Big Shot Chief Executive? Just look in the mirror because the culprit is staring you in the face.”

Categories: Flotsam & Jetsam

Powerful Older Women

August 11th, 2011 Leave a comment No comments

I don’t think it’s a stretch to say that the most brilliant entertainment performance I have ever seen was Margo Martindale’s turn as the villainess Mags Bennet in the recently concluded second season of the FX television show “Justified.” The climactic scene in the season opener, in which Mags poisons a neighbor who has crossed her and then sits there casually chatting with him as he dies, as if she were merely euthanizing a pet who needed to be put down, practically had me falling on the floor in amazement. I had forgotten that television could be this good.

The role broadens and deepens over the course of the season, showing how Mags’s warm, nurturing qualities co-exist with her murderous inclinations, and presenting her as a heroine to her small, tightly-knit Appalachian community when a smoothly polished strip-mining company executive oozes into town with her slick corporate routine. It’s refreshing to see moral complexity explored with such intelligence and depth. This is the first DVD I can think of that I’ll probably rush out and buy as soon as it’s released. Martindale is up for a best supporting actress Emmy, and I can scarcely imagine someone more deserving. I am so glad to see this level of quality work being infused into our fractious cultural mix.

Categories: Flotsam & Jetsam

Crash

August 9th, 2011 Leave a comment No comments

I did a dumb thing moving computer files around the other day, resulting in the system crashing around the same time the stock market began tumbling down. The computer still worked, but the stored content was stripped bare and all the programs were welcoming me as if I were just signing on for the first time. I spent a few panicky minutes trying to retrace my steps and patch Humpty Dumpty together again, but weird things started replicating and freezing up, and I fortunately had the presence of mind to recognize I was out of my depth. I turned off the machine and let both it and myself cool down over the weekend.

Yesterday I schlepped the thing into Apple’s Genius Bar, where the friendly geeks were most helpful and succeeded in recapturing most of the lost content. I was prepared for the worst, so it was a nice turn of events. The thing is a mess, but at least I can find the stuff I really don’t want to lose. Now it becomes fodder for the massive organizing project I have underway. Better late than never. Creative chaos is my medium, but there comes a time when disorder is no longer amusing. I got the memo on that awhile ago, I’m just still playing catchup. The silver lining in this experience is that it kick starts it all onto a new field. There is always more to explore.

Categories: Flotsam & Jetsam

Tiamat, the Chaos Dragon

August 4th, 2011 Leave a comment No comments

Tiamat, the chaos dragon, is the Great Mother. She has a dual character. As the origin of good she is the creatrix of the gods. Her beneficent form survived as the Sumerian goddess Bau, who was obviously identical with the Phœnician Baau, mother of the first man. Another name of Bau was Ma, and Nintu, “a form of the goddess Ma”, was half a woman and half a serpent, and was depicted with “a babe suckling her breast”. The Egyptian goddesses Neheb-kau and Uazit were serpents, and the goddesses Isis and Nepthys had also serpent forms. The serpent was a symbol of fertility, and as a mother was a protector. Vishnu, the Preserver of the Hindu Trinity, sleeps on the world-serpent’s body. Serpent charms are protective and fertility charms.

As the origin of evil Tiamat personified the deep and tempests. In this character she was the enemy of order and good, and strove to destroy the world.

I have seen
The ambitious ocean swell and rage and foam
To be exalted with the threatening clouds.

Tiamat was the dragon of the sea, and therefore the serpent or leviathan. The word “dragon” is derived from the Greek “drakon”, the serpent known as “the seeing one” or “looking one”, whose glance was the lightning. The Anglo-Saxon “fire drake” (“draca”, Latin “draco”) is identical with the “flying dragon”.
In various countries the serpent or worm is a destroyer which swallows the dead. “The worm shall eat them like wool”, exclaimed Isaiah in symbolic language. 2 It lies in the ocean which surrounds the world in Egyptian, Babylonian, Greek, Teutonic, Indian, and other mythologies. The Irish call it “morúach”, and give it a mermaid form like the Babylonian Nintu. In a Scottish Gaelic poem Tiamat figures as “The Yellow Muilearteach”, who is slain by Finn-mac-Coul, assisted by his warrior band.
There was seen coming on the top of the waves
The crooked, clamouring, shivering brave . . .
Her face was blue black of the lustre of coal,
And her bone-tufted tooth was like rusted bone.

The serpent figures in folk tales. When Alexander the Great, according to Ethiopic legend, was lowered in a glass cage to the depths of the ocean, he saw a great monster going past, and sat for two days “watching for its tail and hinder parts to appear”. An Argyllshire Highlander had a similar experience. He went to fish one morning on a rock. “He was not long there when he saw the head of an eel pass. He continued fishing for an hour and the eel was still passing. He went home, worked in the field all day, and having returned to the same rock in the evening, the eel was still passing, and about dusk he saw her tail disappearing.” Tiamat’s sea-brood is referred to in the Anglo-Saxon epic Beowulf as “pickers”. The hero “slew by night sea monsters on the waves”.
The well dragon–the French “draco”–also recalls the Babylonian water monsters. There was a “dragon well” near Jerusalem. From China to Ireland rivers are dragons, or goddesses who flee from the well dragons. The demon of the Rhone is called the “drac”. Floods are also referred to as dragons, and the Hydra, or water serpent, slain by Hercules, belongs to this category. Water was the source of evil as well as good. To the Sumerians, the ocean especially was the abode of monsters. They looked upon it as did Shakespeare’s Ferdinand, when, leaping into the sea, he cried: “Hell is empty and all the devils are here”.
There can be little doubt but that in this Babylonian story of Creation we have a glorified variation of the wide-spread Dragon myth. Unfortunately, however, no trace can be obtained of the pre-existing Sumerian oral version which the theorizing priests infused with such sublime symbolism. No doubt it enjoyed as great popularity as the immemorial legend of Perseus and Andromeda, which the sages of Greece attempted to rationalize, and parts of which the poets made use of and developed as these appealed to their imaginations.

from Myths of Babylonia and Assyria, by Donald A. MacKenzie [1915]

Categories: Flotsam & Jetsam

The Mad Hatter’s Tea Party

August 3rd, 2011 Leave a comment No comments

“The Tea Party version of the American Revolution is not just fundamentalist: it is also Disneyfied, sentimentalised, and whitewashed. It rests on a naïve, solipsistic and exceptionalist faith that for America it will all work out in the end, because America is “the greatest nation in the world”. They take solace in tautology: America is great – this they know – because Fox News tells them so.”

Sarah Churchwell: “The willful ignorance that has dragged the U.S. to the brink”


Categories: Flotsam & Jetsam

Staying Cool

July 29th, 2011 Leave a comment No comments

I set up a clothesline in a sunny corner of the garden a few weeks ago, and was somewhat surprised at how happy such a simple thing made me. Partly, I guess, a function of both the wonderful smell freshly dried clothes have and also delight at finally having a lifestyle where I have time to engage in such activities. A further antidote to the toxicity in our political system, which I find both mesmerizing and stomach-turning these days. Good to just turn away and get outside to the truly important things.

Meanwhile, here’s the dogs’ preferred way to stay cool when things get overheated.



Categories: Flotsam & Jetsam

Smoking Gun

July 21st, 2011 Leave a comment No comments

The age-old tactic of blaming underlings and/or some rogue crackpot for anything within an organization that runs afoul of the law is playing out in spades in the Murdoch empire scandal. The main story today is that allegations have emerged suggesting that Rupert Murdoch’s son and heir apparent, James Murdoch, lied about a crucial piece of evidence in his very public testimony before Parliament on Tuesday. Some of those pesky underlings forget their place sometimes, and just refuse to fall on their swords to protect their masters. What’s a poor mega-gazillionaire to do? It’s so hard to find good help these days.

Categories: Flotsam & Jetsam

Clash of the Titans

July 20th, 2011 Leave a comment No comments

If ever a corporate scumbag deserved to fall far and fast, it has to be Rupert Murdoch, the man who has singlehandedly spent the past several decades poisoning the well of global communications on an epic scale. By all accounts, the soap opera currently topping the headlines in Britain — which has already spilled over onto our fair shores with the FBI opening an investigation into possible criminal activity — is only the tip of the iceberg. This is the juiciest news story to come along in ages.

Categories: Flotsam & Jetsam
American Muse > Archive by tag 'culture'