Dear Friends, Due to unfortunate considerations of time and cost, Backwards City is no longer a print journal. However, we will maintain our presence on the web that, however meager, we hope you might enjoy.
According to secret Vatican documents recently released wartime pontiff Pope Pius XII attempted a "long distance" exorcism of Hitler which failed to have any effect.
Hey, it looks like the DVDs of the (sigh) last season of the best television comedy of all time came out today. Amazon can get you what you want. Still no word on that movie...
I asked him what he had meant, exactly, when he spoke at the recording session of abandoning “finger-pointing” songs, and he took a sip of wine, leaned forward, and said, “I looked around and saw all these people pointing fingers at the bomb. But the bomb is getting boring, because what’s wrong goes much deeper than the bomb. What’s wrong is how few people are free. Most people walking around are tied down to something that doesn’t let them really speak, so they just add their confusion to the mess. I mean, they have some kind of vested interest in the way things are now. Me, I’m cool.” He smiled.
“Peter Pan in Scarlet” is a kind of last-gasp attempt to cash in on Great Ormond Street’s copyright, which runs out in 2007. “We thought we would make the most of it while we can,” Ms. De Poortere said. “After 2007 it will have so many sequels. At least this is commissioned with our approval, and we will benefit from the income.”
...
“Now there’s the new ‘Peter Pan in Scarlet,’ the official sequel, so you find out what really happened to Peter with the official voice and sanctioning of the estate,” he said.
The New Yorker tackles Duke's lacrosse rape scandal. On a completely unrelated, lighter note, it's also got a great Louis Menand review of Bob Dylan: The Essential Interviews.
* And in the Huffington PostGeorge Effing Saunders has short, fabulistic piece about 9/11.
This thing was done to us. We have to do something. We have to strike back.
We resolved to do so. You could feel it in the air: Purpose, direction--flags appeared on car antennas, people's eyes got brighter. The cats got the spring back in their step and suddenly mice were no longer safe. Water began doing what water is supposed to do--seismologists detected the sound of thousands of first waves slapping down over thousands of restored waterfalls. The leaves changed, gloriously as I remember it, feeling to us like the miracle that leaf-change actually is. We thought: Wow, orange trees, red trees, yellow freaking trees, we are, all of us, alive again, alive still.
One night around that time, lying in bed, kids asleep, wife asleep, wind outside blowing through the trees forming, blessedly, no words at all--I realized that in our relief and excitement, no one had asked--of the wind, the swingsets, the ocean, the highway--no one had asked what, suddenly, seemed to me a few reasonable questions:
Strike back against whom? And where? And how? And to what end?
I thought about waking my wife. But it was late and we had to work next day, and I thought: the 'who' and the 'where' and the 'how' and the 'to what end?'--that is not now, that is later, that is yet to be decided, by the people who decide such things, people who are, like us, of good will, only more powerful, and know things we don't, and will proceed with discretion, in the full measure of time.
But when I woke next morning, it had already begun.
The U.S. economy of the decades to come will center on farming, not high-tech, or "information," or "services," or space travel, or tourism, or finance. All other activities will be secondary to food production, which will require much more human labor. Places that are unsuited for local farming will obviously suffer... To put it simply, Americans have been eating oil and natural gas for the past century, at an ever-accelerating pace. Without the massive "inputs" of cheap gasoline and diesel fuel for machines, irrigation, and trucking, or petroleum-based herbicides and pesticides, or fertilizers made out of natural gas, Americans will be compelled to radically reoganize the way food is produced, or starve.
I've just finished reading The Long Emergency, which should suffice to convince you that we are in for a radical revision of the way we live in the next few decades.
The world is now using 27 billion barrels of oil a year. If every last drop of the remaining 1 trillion barrels could be extracted at current cost ratios and current rates of production -- which is extremely unlikely -- the entire endowment would only last another thirty-seven years.
Kunstler makes short work of the miracles -- hydropower, solar power, hydrogen fuel cells, nuclear power -- which won't be coming to save us, and convincingly demonstrates that a world which held approximately one billion people at the start of the oil age simply won't be able to sustain the six and a half billion people we now having walking around, even if the environment weren't collapsing around our ears, which it is.
In short, things are fixing to get incredibly ugly.
The book was excerpted in Rolling Stone not too long ago; I know I've linked to it before. If you want a vision of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face, forever -- and then read this book.
I forgot to link to it, but I had an interview/book review in the Indy last week about The City Is a Rising Tide by UNCW's Rebecca Lee (both the book and its author are great). And this week I have a hard-hitting exposé on the game of carrom, which is featured on the cover entirely because of Derek Anderson's excellent photograph.
In a week or so I should have an interview with the editor behind New Stories from the South -- in which, it can never be said enough, will appear Chris Bachelder's fantastic story from Backwards City #2.
...was talk about situations like the one described in this article from the Chronicle of Higher Education, about one man's obsessive quest to expose plagiarism in his department at Ohio State.
There was also a lot of listening to rules about how not to experiment on humans, which are entirely irrelevant to my discipline. But I've since blocked all those many hours out.
* Jonathan Lethem profiles Bob Dylan next month in Rolling Stone. The Web site has an excerpt.
* Bruce Schneier is the latest person to attempt to restore some rationality to our discussions about terrorism. [+/-]
Another thought experiment: Imagine for a moment that the British government arrested the 23 suspects without fanfare. Imagine that the TSA and its European counterparts didn't engage in pointless airline-security measures like banning liquids. And imagine that the press didn't write about it endlessly, and that the politicians didn't use the event to remind us all how scared we should be. If we'd reacted that way, then the terrorists would have truly failed.
It's time we calm down and fight terror with antiterror. This does not mean that we simply roll over and accept terrorism. There are things our government can and should do to fight terrorism, most of them involving intelligence and investigation -- and not focusing on specific plots.
But our job is to remain steadfast in the face of terror, to refuse to be terrorized. Our job is to not panic every time two Muslims stand together checking their watches. There are approximately 1 billion Muslims in the world, a large percentage of them not Arab, and about 320 million Arabs in the Middle East, the overwhelming majority of them not terrorists. Our job is to think critically and rationally, and to ignore the cacophony of other interests trying to use terrorism to advance political careers or increase a television show's viewership.
* Grant Morrison talks Batman with Newsarama. [+/-]
GM: The very rough timeline I have in my head runs as follows - 19 year old Bruce Wayne returns from his journey around the world and becomes the (1930s style) Dark Avenger Gothic Vigilante Batman for his first year of adventures. Then, aged 20, he meets Robin and his whole outlook changes - now he has responsibilities, he becomes less reckless, now he has a partner, he lightens up and learns to have fun again for the first time since his parents died. The police stop chasing him, the Joker stops killing and becomes a playful crime clown, and Gotham is bright and crazy like Vegas. Batman's having the time of his life in his early 20's, fighting colorful villains and monsters with his irrepressible young pal.
But by the time he's in his mid-20s things are starting to go wrong - the first Robin leaves to go to college and hang out with the Teen Titans. Batman enjoys a period as a swinging bachelor for a couple of years but it's not long before the hammerblows start to fall - in rapid succession, the now-homicidal Joker kills Jason Todd, the new Robin, and maims Barbara (Batgirl ) Gordon, Bane breaks Batman's back, then Gotham is devastated by earthquakes, plagues and urban warfare, the Joker kills Jim Gordon's beloved wife, Jason Todd returns corrupted, and a betrayal by his superhero friends leads Batman to the creation of Brother Eye and leads him on to Infinite Crisis where Batman winds up pointing a gun at Alexander Luthor's head before deciding to leave Gotham for a year.
Thinking about it this way, the grim Batman of the last decade or so makes a whole lot of sense - the guy went from cool, assured crimefighter to shattered ***-up, barely clinging on with his fingernails. His mission, his life and his sanity had all gone off the rails. His confidence was shot. After a few years of relentless pain, bad luck and betrayal like Batman's had, any normal man would be canceling the papers, pulling the blinds, then pulling the trigger. We had to address the effect of these tragedies and then move him beyond them.
Apologies for the slow blogging this week. I've been busy. Luckily, my classes start on Monday, after which time I'll never be busy again.
* Rethinking the collapse of Easter Island. Terry Hunt argues in American Scientist, contra Diamond, that rats (not people, though in fairness people introduced the rats) deforested the island, which furthermore may never have been all that populated to begin with.
I would never attempt to dissuade anyone from reading a book. But please, if you're reading a book that's killing you, put it down and read something else, just as you would reach for the remote if you weren't enjoying a television programme.
I suspect this advice may not be strictly applicable to graduate students.
The broken Tom K comic preview page has been fixed. You can find it here. It's really very good; to read the rest of "100,000 Miles," which you certainly will want to, you've got to order a copy.
Also, while I'm talking more about BCR 4, I'd like to quietly plug the photos Jaimee took for the winners' pages in the magazine, which I think are just fantastic. You can find ghostly turquoise versions of them by reloading the index page a couple times. (She also made our current parody logo, at left. Like Barry Zuckercorn and Haruki Murakami and Tom K, she's very good.)
We just sent Backwards City #4 off to the printer, which is why everything suddenly looks so nice and aquamarine around here. (Also why I hardly got any sleep last night.)
Regular blogging will resume tomorrow. Today I want to highlight a few of the writers and artists in the upcoming issue of Backwards City, called "our best issue" just the other day by no less a personage than Don Ezra Cruz. (Many of these wonderful people have wonderful Web sites and blogs, which you can find under the "Our Writers" tab on the linkbar.)
To tide you over until the print issue arrives, I've put some excerpts up at the usual place, and I hope you'll take a look:
Insomniacs will attest that I've spent the last few hours creating a new template to go along with our upcoming fourth issue (excerpts of which are now available at the also-redesigned backwardscity.net -- I'll talk a lot more about this tomorrow).
I'm not 100% satisfied with the way it looks just yet, but I'm incredibly tired, and I've got orientation in the morning, so this will have to do for now.
3. Each resident of Dot-town carries a red or blue dot on his (or her) forehead, but if he ever figures out what color it is he kills himself. Each day the residents gather; one day a stranger comes and tells them something -- anything -- non-trivial about the number of blue dots. Prove that eventually every resident kills himself.
Partly in preparation for the forthcoming, incredibly ill-conceived sixth sequel, but mostly just because I don't know that I've ever sat through all five Rocky movies in order in any condensed span of time, we rented all five from Netflix this week.
In addition to cataloguing a startling amount of discontinuity between the sequels -- alongside the famous rapid aging of Rocky's son, there's also the very perplexing matter of Rocky's bad eye -- my primary discovery from this important critical investigation was the unexpected and unmitigated awfulness of Rocky IV.
Among other things, I'd completely forgotten about Paulie's robot.
This is the kind of challenge that may frame this issue best. What are we really willing to do when such an opportunity comes between our professional aspirations and our personal values? Through the glass of history, we are able to make such issues seem overly simple and clear; however, when faced with these decisions in real life it’s hard to not feel more conflicted.
Ask yourself honestly. What will you say if McDonald’s, big oil, or a major clothing-label that employs sweat-shop labour comes knocking? It’s easy to answer quickly; but really, think about this one. Pretend that work has been a little slow over the past months and your household expenses are getting pinched as a result. Let’s up the ante a bit to make it interesting. Let’s make believe that this client is willing to hand-over full creative control, will impose no budgetary limitations on the printing of the effort, and will make available funds that ensure that you will not have to take on any other work for the year. Is it still as easy a call?
For no good resaon, I lifted my years-long ban -- inaugurated after my one attempt to rent it was stymied -- on the movie Gerry tonight. The results were...mixed. The thing is, the film sort of sucks.
The "New Chronology" is radically shorter than the conventional chronology, because all of ancient Greek/Roman/Egyptian history is "folded" onto the Middle Ages, and Antiquity and the Dark Ages are eliminated. According to Fomenko, the history of humankind goes only as far back as AD 800, we have almost no information about events between AD 800-1000, and most historical events we know took place in AD 1000-1500. These views are entirely rejected by mainstream scholarship. However, some mainstream researchers have offered revised chronologies of Classical and Biblical history which do shorten the timeline of ancient history by eliminating various "dark ages." However, none of these revisionist chronologies are as radical as Fomenko's: the events which are traditionally assumed to have happened in the centuries before AD 1 are still thought to have happened thousands of years ago, not hundreds of years ago as in Fomenko's timeline.
It's taken me an uncharacteristically long time to get through Haruki Murakami's excellent (though meandering) The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle. Part of it has to do with real-life interruptions that have persistently prevented me from reading the book start-to-finish as I would have liked -- and part of it has to do with the book itself, which is so large thematically that at times it's almost too much to take in.
I didn't find this book to be an easy read, necessarily, but it was worth the effort in the end.
The thing people need to understand about Haruki Murakami is that he's a genius.
'Actually, Dumbass, All I Have to Do Is Keep the Reader's Attention for Twenty Pages, by Whatever Means Necessary'
There's a nice and long interview with George Saunders up at Guernica. It's a good read. Click the [+/-] for a lengthy excerpt.
Guernica: Is 'science fiction' a label you embrace or shy away from?
George Saunders: I'm happy with it. I didn't really read a lot of it when I was young. But I had a big moment with --well, I watched a lot of Star Trek. I didn't really like it at the time but I think I absorbed it. And there was one moment in Star Wars, when the first one came out in 1560 or whenever it was, I remember being in the theater and there's that one scene where the ships fly over your head and you can see that they're all kind of junked up on the bottom. They're all scraped up and there's like rust and everything.
And something about that--I can't really explain it but that moment--was when in a certain way the genre science fiction just fell away from me, because I thought, "Oh yeah, no matter how advanced we get--whether we have robotic cars or whatever--we're still gonna fuck everything up with our human-ness." Like if we have holograms, we're gonna use them for porn. If you have a guy with a chip in his head, he's gonna be used for marketing. So that was a moment for me when I thought it's all science fiction. I mean, think about the concept of the i-pod. You know ten years ago that was unthinkable. So now we have these i-pods, and even old farts like me have i-pods. Yet, maybe I've got REO Speedwagon on there. So--
Guernica: [laughs, long time]
George Saunders: I don't see a real distinction between science fiction and fiction; it's all the same-- Guernica: In a lot of the interviews with you that I looked at, the interviewers or maybe reviewers were trying to get a handle on whether your stories about the near future were hopeful or 'dark'--this was the word many used. I have my take, but obviously now I'm more interested in your take. Is the future bright or is it the dents on the bottom of the Millenium Falcon--or worse?
George Saunders: Honestly, what I'm coming to think is yes. When I was younger--and this is just egotism--I thought that I of course, being me, had been born at the precise moment in human history when things would deflect one way or the other. Either we would all be saved or all be damned. Guernica: You mean that's not true? George Saunders: [laughs] So, no, then at 47 you say, "I'm gonna be dead, and it's gonna keep going. It's gonna be just as fucked up and beautiful as it is now." And depending on where you are and who you are, it's either absolute nirvana or it's the worst hell imaginable. And you could even be in the same house. And so I think one of the sort of sad but mostly liberating things you realize is that it has always been thus. And it's not gonna change in our lifetimes. And the exhilarating part for me is to think, Gee, if that's true, then the world as I'm experiencing it right this minute in my kitchen in Syracuse, New York, is exactly the same basic apparatus as Shakespeare experienced or Jesus experienced or Buddha experienced or whoever, that there's a kind of liveliness, a kind of vitality in every moment, that I think is very exciting and also scary.
It's not the case that we're gonna cure all our problems. But it's also not the case that all our pleasure will ever vanish. I think at the very last minute of the world, after we've global-warmed ourselves, and it's 400 degress and only the elite can live in these little refrigerators with plasma TVs, the people who are burning to death outside are gonna kind of be reaching for the hand of the person next to them or having a memory of childhood or finding some way of knowing pleasure in that. So I think in a way it's sort of a hopeful vision. The most hopeful thing in the stories, I hope, is wit. I make it up. If I make up a world in which we're ruled by big talking turds, it doesn't mean that we are. So you shouldn't feel depressed...
Bernadine Evaristo argues in the Independent that British poetry is stagnating due to a lack of diversity:
The published poetry scene actually needs an injection of alternative histories, cultures and stories. Haven't we had enough of the same old same old: my childhood memories; my mildly dysfunctional parents; my repressed grandparents; Greek myths; my last lover; my new lover; my love of nature; more Greek myths; my holidays in foreign lands.
Moniza Alvi, one of Britain's most established poets, told me: "Poetry that reflects a changing Britain is still badly represented in the mainstream. We are deprived of black and Asian voices who would bring fresh air to British poetry. I do believe this is beginning to change. The space now given to poetry in translation in the Poetry Society's journal Poetry Review is a welcome indication of this."
This argument seems a bit light to me -- I'm not sure ethnicity features into how boring a person's poetry is.