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Tuesday, 5 November 2019
Berji Kristin: Tales from the Garbage Hills - Latife Tekin
A fascinating social portrait of a time and place - the period of mass migration from Anatolian villages to Istanbul and Ankara, and the creation of massive overnight slum neighbourhoods. A portrait of the village mind in confrontation with capitalism and the effects of untrammelled industrialization. Also a portrait of capital at work in the neoliberal post 60s military coup in Turkey. Dovetails nicely with another book I read recently - Why Turkey is Authoritarian: From Atatürk to Erdoğan, by Halil Karaveli. The novel puts some flesh and bones onto the political situation of the time - government unquestioning support of capital, ignored corruption, links between politics and organized crime, suppression of worker rights.
Labels:
20th c,
capitalism,
caucasus,
class,
economics,
fiction,
Istanbul,
literature,
novel,
turkey
The Cockroach - Ian McEwan
Great impromptu spoof of the whole Brexit deal and the individuals and forces behind it. Bit of a take-off on Franz Kafka. Basically, cockroaches take over the bodies and minds of leading political figures behind Brexit. Their goal is to create a world in chaos and disorder to promote living conditions more suitable to their continued reproduction and success - another way of looking at Brexit, Trump and Putin (amongst others) who strive to create legal, political and social conditions favourable to their own greed and desire for power
Labels:
capitalism,
europe,
fiction,
literature,
novel,
russia,
society
Tuesday, 1 October 2019
This Is Not Propaganda: Adventures in the War Against Reality - Peter Pomerantsev
A complex exploration of how our communication has moved away from facts and reality to the fantasy worlds of Facebook and Twitter. Looks at social and economic causes.
Some interesting examinations of how totalitarian forces have coopted the language and gestures of the Left to counter their influence.
Some scary case studies of how Facebook and Twitter have been used by would-be dictators and extremists to control people's perception of reality, to win elections and to create riots and commit murder.
Worth rereading, as ideas are quite complex and wide-ranging.
Some interesting examinations of how totalitarian forces have coopted the language and gestures of the Left to counter their influence.
Some scary case studies of how Facebook and Twitter have been used by would-be dictators and extremists to control people's perception of reality, to win elections and to create riots and commit murder.
Worth rereading, as ideas are quite complex and wide-ranging.
Labels:
21st c.,
america,
capitalism,
china,
find again,
international politics,
left,
media,
politics,
russia,
society,
U.S.
Monday, 16 September 2019
Anarchist Banker - Fernando Pessoa
Curious little story/novella. A long dialogue between two characters where the successful, wealthy banker builds an argument as to why he is a true anarchist, as opposed to the anarchist political movements of the time. Anarchy means being free, and the only person you can really free is yourself. All movements are essentially a form of tyranny, as all movements have leaders. To free yourself from money, you cannot destroy it, so you must surpass it by becoming so rich it doesn't limit your freedom. Clever.
The Uses and Abuses of History - Margaret MacMillan
In spite of the title, a fairly light read looking at the way history is used by politicians and radicals to further their ends. She outlines some interesting historical myths used in recent history to justify some horrendous actions - Serbia, post-Vichy France - as well as instances where governments have refused to listen to historical experts with specialized knowledge of countries - U.S. policy in the Middle East, especially Iraq.
She also discusses the issues around current governments acknowledging responsibility and apologizing for actions done in the past in different times with different values. There are two sides to this coin.
Worth a read, but if you are a thinking consumer of the news and history, not much new here.
She also discusses the issues around current governments acknowledging responsibility and apologizing for actions done in the past in different times with different values. There are two sides to this coin.
Worth a read, but if you are a thinking consumer of the news and history, not much new here.
Nothing is True and Everything is Possible - Peter Pomerantsev
A very interesting book about how the modern Russian mafia state works, and how Russia has changed since the fall of the Soviet Union and the rise of Putin. What makes this book interesting is who's stories the author tells. This is not an analytical book, a theoretical book, nor a look at well-known key figures. The author tells the stories of regular, everyday people that he meets in the course of his ten years of working for Russian media. (His difference as a reporter is that he actually grew up in London but kept up his Russian with his dissident parents who had moved there.)
Some salient points:
The historical progression goes something like this: The fall of the Soviet Union leads to the rise of two groups; mega-entrepreneurs who quickly become very rich, and a well-organized criminal mafia with roots in the Gulag system. This leads to chaos. The rise of Putin follows, and he uses the KGB structure to rein in/destroy/subsume the independent criminal mafia. Putin uses his new KGB mafia alliance to destroy or rein in the mega-entrepreneur class. Slowly the mega-entrepreneurs transfer their wealth to London and leave the country. Huge amounts of money are extorted, profitable business are taken over, whole areas of the economy are taken over, and the resulting spoils are distributed amongst Putin's underlings. Slowly the mega-entrepreneurs transfer their wealth to London and leave the country. The government/mafia inserts itself into most of the economy.
It becomes clear in the book that Putin controls all levers of power in the country - government, military, criminal organizations, media, the courts, the economy. It would seem the only crack in the structure is when Putin is no longer, but the result will probably resemble a civil war amongst various underlings to capture the top position - which won't help the country at all; in fact, make everything worse.
Like China, it would be very interesting to study this phenomenon of countries where revolutionaries have tried to destroy the organically rooted culture and replace it with an entirely new imposed ideologically based culture. These types of radical breaks do something strange to the society. It would be interesting to look at this from a sociological point of view. I wonder if there are parallels to be made with various personal psychological issues and pathologies...
Some salient points:
The historical progression goes something like this: The fall of the Soviet Union leads to the rise of two groups; mega-entrepreneurs who quickly become very rich, and a well-organized criminal mafia with roots in the Gulag system. This leads to chaos. The rise of Putin follows, and he uses the KGB structure to rein in/destroy/subsume the independent criminal mafia. Putin uses his new KGB mafia alliance to destroy or rein in the mega-entrepreneur class. Slowly the mega-entrepreneurs transfer their wealth to London and leave the country. Huge amounts of money are extorted, profitable business are taken over, whole areas of the economy are taken over, and the resulting spoils are distributed amongst Putin's underlings. Slowly the mega-entrepreneurs transfer their wealth to London and leave the country. The government/mafia inserts itself into most of the economy.
It becomes clear in the book that Putin controls all levers of power in the country - government, military, criminal organizations, media, the courts, the economy. It would seem the only crack in the structure is when Putin is no longer, but the result will probably resemble a civil war amongst various underlings to capture the top position - which won't help the country at all; in fact, make everything worse.
Like China, it would be very interesting to study this phenomenon of countries where revolutionaries have tried to destroy the organically rooted culture and replace it with an entirely new imposed ideologically based culture. These types of radical breaks do something strange to the society. It would be interesting to look at this from a sociological point of view. I wonder if there are parallels to be made with various personal psychological issues and pathologies...
La luna e i Falò - Cesare Pavese
Otttimo romanzo. Molto bello, complicato e sottile. Racconta il ritorno di un uomo alla sua paese de gioventù e l'impossibilità di ritornare al passato. È un romanzo chi raconta l'alienazione culturale della vita moderne industriale. Come nel libro 'A Mind at Peace' da Tanpinar, racconta i costi emozionali e sociali del confronto con l'Occidente industriale, ma in questo romanzo la cultura et la vita tradizionali sono quella dei paesani europei - interessante quello perché, esattamente come la cultura turca, benché questo qui sia una società europea, è nonostante straniera alla modernità.
L'immagine dei falò ritorna nel libro, e ogni volta prende nuovi significazioni, nuove sottigliezze. Il libro è pieno di belle immagini del paese e del ciclo dei stagioni - e anche di immagine orrendi.
L'immagine dei falò ritorna nel libro, e ogni volta prende nuovi significazioni, nuove sottigliezze. Il libro è pieno di belle immagini del paese e del ciclo dei stagioni - e anche di immagine orrendi.
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