Little Tart loves it all…most of the time

Archive for the ‘History’ Category

And they have a right to be!

The Obama “bitter” controversy is out of hand!  I lived in Pittsburgh, PA for 3 years.  I grew up in the industrial Midwest – also known as the Rustbelt – of which Pennsylvania is part.  25-30 years ago the jobs that regular people worked; The jobs that in the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s put kids through college, bought summer cabins and speed boats, the jobs that allowed you to work hard, get your hands dirty and retire when you were 60 LEFT for foreign soil.  Washington D.C. and the political establishment betrayed the working middle class.  The white collar children who benefited from their parents’ blue collar jobs betrayed the working middle class.   If you have ever been to Pittsburgh, PA you would see that betrayal is happening today.  That betrayal continued all through the “prosperous” Clinton years. Years when the majority of the country saw economic growth, but Western Pennsylvanians saw 60 year old men who had worked hard their whole life competing for minimum wage convenience store jobs because there were no more options.

        Are rural, suburban and former industrialized urban Pennsylvanians bitter?  Absolutely.  Do they take comfort in conservative values, religion, gun ownership and xenophobia?  Absolutely.

        When I lived in Pittsburgh I lived on Carson Street on the Southside and I lived on Mount Washington.  Geographically they are at most 2 miles and up a steep mountainside from each other.  It was an unpleasant 20 minute walk or a 3 minute cable car ride.  Many of the residents had not made that trip in years.  Men my age (26 at the time) recalled going “downtown” as a child.  Downtown was 2.5 miles from where they lived.  Pittsburghers no longer go “downtown” because of the “crime”.  By crime, they actually mean Black People.  Pittsburghers, and by this I mean multi-generational families of eastern European descent who live within blocks of the homes they grew up in and socialize only with people they have known their whole lives, are the most narrow minded insolated people I have ever interacted with.  They are bitter.  Bitter because they are told by liberals and conservatives, democrats and republicans, academics and intellectuals, that as white people they are part of the ruling class in this country.  That they should be grateful for the prosperity and the opportunities this country has to offer them.  When their ancestors came to fill the steel mills and coal mines with cheap labor they were grateful. When they could afford to send their kids to college they were grateful.  What on earth do they have to be grateful for today?  If every time you left home and some pissed on your head and told you it was raining, you’d start staying at home too.   

        Did Obama word his statement wrongly?  I don’t know.  I read the speech – it seems pretty straight forward to me.  I didn’t take it a derogatory; I took it as pretty factual.  My guess is that Hillary Clinton and John McCain have never been deeper into Western Pennsylvania than the University of Pittsburgh Campus or the home of their biggest donor.  Because if they had, they would know that Pennsylvanians are bitter, and they have EVERY FUCKING RIGHT TO BE!

For those who have not read the comments, here they are:

Here’s how it is: in a lot of these communities in big industrial states like Ohio and Pennsylvania, people have been beaten down so long, and they feel so betrayed by government, and when they hear a pitch that is premised on not being cynical about government, then a part of them just doesn’t buy it. And when it’s delivered by — it’s true that when it’s delivered by a 46-year-old black man named Barack Obama (laugher), then that adds another layer of skepticism (laughter). […]

But the truth is, is that, our challenge is to get people persuaded that we can make progress when there’s not evidence of that in their daily lives. You go into some of these small towns in Pennsylvania, and like a lot of small towns in the Midwest, the jobs have been gone now for 25 years and nothing’s replaced them. And they fell through the Clinton administration, and the Bush administration, and each successive administration has said that somehow these communities are gonna regenerate and they have not. So it’s not surprising then that they get bitter, they cling to guns or religion or antipathy to people who aren’t like them or anti-immigrant sentiment or anti-trade sentiment as a way to explain their frustrations.

Hunters by BanksyCame across an article on the last Stone Age people on Anthropology.net and thought I would share it:

  a Hadza tribesman named Gonga…

“You are welcome here. But please tell your people how things are for the Hadzabe. Please do not add things and please do not take things away. Please just tell the world that we are dying.”..

The plight of indigenous people should be more prevalent in our cultural dialogue, especially with, but not restricted to, the Hadzabe, whom are the oldest culture in the world and speak what might be the first root language  aged 10,000 years.  They are being driven from their ancestoral lands by the Abu Dhabi royal family of the United Arab Emirates, who leased the land from Tanzanian government to serve as big game hunting ground.

If the planet loses the Hadzabe, if they are forced from their ancestral in fact our ancestral lands, then all of mankind has lost something precious.  No matter how many times we watch “The Gods Must Be Crazy” we will never get it back. 

p.s. wanted to add this link to a letter you can send the Tanzianian government on behalf of the Hadzabe

This Viking Hoard was discovered in Britain last January and have just gone on display at The British Museum.

Viking Gold at The British Museum

I have never been that interested in treasures. It has always smacked of a capitalist obsession, not an academic one, but in this case I think the treasure is very interesting because, as pointed out by The 24 Hour Museum,it “reveals a remarkable diversity of cultural contacts in the medieval world, with objects coming from as far apart as Afghanistan in the East and Ireland in the West, as well as Russia, Scandinavia and continental Europe.”

I love evidence of the interconnectedness of the world and culture. Our 1950’s view of history has everyone in their own little box, compartmentalized and classified — but history, real history, is so much blurrier and messy. Globalization is hardly a new concept. Just ask Sven.

As promised a few days ago, here is my essay on the artists Marcel Duchamp and Banksy.

The Picnic

The Fountain

But is it Art?

Earlier this year I took the class “Mythology, Folklore & Symbols” where we discussed the role of “The Trickster” in society and mythology. The Trickster, while perceived as an irritant by those around him, is ultimately responsible for upsetting the status quo. The Trickster becomes the archetypal character for creating change in the world. Without the Trickster pushing the limits of acceptable behaviors, thoughts, or actions, there would be no forward motion in society and culture would stagnate. The artist is a perfect example of the power a Trickster holds for effecting change in society. The two works of art I chose were created by trickster artists. One is already an acknowledged Master Trickster and his “trick” changed the fabric of society. The second is at the beginning of his reign as head trickster and I believe his greatness “trick” is still before him. Read the rest of this entry »

War Bonds

    It is always a little hard to know how to take racist statements and images made by beloved cultural figures. Take for instance these WWII political cartoons by socialist illustrator Dr. Seuss or the oft mentioned racism of Walt Disney . Should we hold these men and women responsible for their bigotries or should we accept them as a result of their time and place? I have always been a cultural relativist, but sometimes it feels like there is no real excuse for educated individuals in the 1940s to believe what they believed! What do you think? Were these Seussian images needed for the war effort or should we put aside our “Horton Hears a Who” in protest?

I’m writing a critical essay for school comparing two pieces of artwork. I have chosen Banksy’s “The Picnic” a large canvas piece purchased 6 months ago by Angelina Jolie. I have to say his work is interesting and certainly worth checking out. . You might not like it, might question if it is art, you might even ask if it was worth the $400,000 Angie paid for it ($400,000 for 3 pieces actually), but it will make you question art, which is the ultimate goal isn’t it?

The second piece I selected is Marcel Duchamp’s “The Fountain”.

I will post the essay later today.

Apparently the tests have all come back, and maternity for the world’s (un)common housecat has been established. Five tarty female kittehs, no doubt looking for “pets” and the eternal servitude of mankind, made a move towards our ancestors’ fire pits somewhere between 10,000 and 130,000 years ago. Mind you that is a huge window of opportunity, and if “domestification” occurred closer to the 10,000 year mark, dogs (believed domesticated 15,000 years ago) will beat out catage as our oldest fur friends.

We owe a lot to those pointy eared pioneers; those furry cataurnats who braved a fear of fire, predators, loud noises, and constantly being moved so fat-butted skin-faces can sit on the sofa. Without these feline Columbuses the world would have been robbed of this, and this and this, of course these, and most importantly THIS!

Thank you, brave little she-cats, for stumbling from the darkness of the fertile crescent and curling up on our ancestoral laps. You can has cheezburger, 4 sur.

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An interesting discovery out of Egypt this week. Queen Hatshepsut’s mummy, the only female pharaoh, has been genetically identified. Apparently a toss up between two female mummies dating from the same period, iron-fisted Grand Pooh-Bah of Egyptology Zahi Hawass, had been quoted hoping the slender mummy with a “regal face” was the queen, “…Until the discovery, Hawass and others had believed that the smaller mummy—with long, wavy, white hair and its fingers individually bandaged—was more likely Hatshepsut…” but found instead that the larger heavy-set female was in fact Hatshepsut.

Hawass’ stance raises some questions about how much of history is fact, and how much is the wishes and desires of the historian to paint a beautiful picture of their (and our) past. Almost all of Ancient Egyptian history is filtered through wishful thinking not just by contemporary scholars, but by the ancients themselves. I went to the De Young museum’s Hatshepsut exhibit last year and witnessed over and over how idealized the Egyptians wished themselves. Hatshepsut turns out to be a fat diabetic who died of bone cancer. I didn’t see a hint of her there, and these artifacts were carved by artists who knew the woman. Can history really afford to be doubly clouded by allowing leading archaeologists and historians to hope something beautiful is reality simply because the alternative is something which isn’t aesthetically pleasing? I personally find Hatshepsut fascinating. Learning what she truly looked like, rather than a beautiful princess, only ads to her mythology, and our knowledge of history.

Hatshepsut identified