Here’s one way I think about and often respond to lyric poems. They’re soliloquies, a progression of consciousness, from first word to last. Their poetry in good poems—charged language, imagery, repetition, coupling, symbolism, metaphors, metre, rhythm and the like—works in unison with that progression as form becomes meaning. Simply paraphrasing poems is a start, perhaps a necessary but insufficient condition of understanding a poem, where understanding is a continuum of depth.
Monday, September 9, 2024
Tuesday, September 3, 2024
Incoherence In Spike Lee’s Do The Right Thing?
I just rewatched Do The Right Thing, 1989, with my 2024 eyes. It’s provocative.
From Wikipedia:
“Lee has remarked that only White viewers ask him if Mookie did the right thing; Black viewers do not ask him the question. Lee believes the key point is that Mookie was angry at the wrongful death of Radio Raheem, stating that viewers who question the riot are explicitly failing to see the difference between property damage and the death of a Black man.”
I wonder if the movie goes beyond what Lee intended. It seems he wants the right thing done and, if so, it raises the question, what is that?
The movie famously ends with the two contrasting quotes:
MLK’s: a preachment against violence to get justice, and for the need for love and understanding;
and Malcolm X’s, more wiggly: bad people in America hold the power and that violence might be justifiable if the issue is self defence.
Lee seems to cite MX for the idea that for American Blacks in 1989, violence is self-defence against white racist power, and, therefore, is intelligence rather than violence.
Isn’t it thematically notable that the movie begins with a lengthy sequence of Rosie Perez dancing aggressively including boxing sequences in the dancing, all to Public Enemy’s Fight The Power?
Wikipedia says:
“”Fight the Power’ is a song by American hip hop group Public Enemy, released as a single in the summer of 1989 on Motown Records. It was conceived at the request of film director Spike Lee, who sought a musical theme for his 1989 film Do the Right Thing.”
I take all this arguably to suggest that Lee had in mind the vindication of MX’s quote.
Why else the opening sequence?
Why else the thematic incorporation of Public Enemy’s lyrics?
Why else in what Wikipedia reports Lee said, that Mookie‘s trashing of Sal’s window is an understandable reaction to Radio Raheem’s death?
The whites in the movie in the persons of Sal and his sons are shown as propertied and hardworking, with Sal and his younger son not prejudiced and his older son, John Tuturro, an out and out racist. The white cop Long is racist, one homicidally so. Ponte, the other cop, not so much.
Lee shows the Blacks in a largely negative light. Many are unemployed. Mookie, the movie’s protagonist, is an irresponsible loser, unable to hold on to a job, living off his much more responsible sister. He’s quite indifferent to his son, and seems only to come around to see his baby son’s mother Rosie Perez when he wants sex, after which he’s gone for a week at a time.
His racist son aside, Sal is a benevolent man, proud of his business and accommodating to his customers so long as they are respectful to him and of business.
His keeps harkening back to a past when he and his 25 year old business were accepted in the neighbourhood, welcome and trouble free.
So I say Buggin’ Out is wrong to demand Sal hang pictures of Blacks on his Wall of Fame rather than only pictures of Italians.
He’s wrong to try to organize a boycott of Sal’s on that basis.
And I say Sal is in his right to insist Radio Raheem turn off his boom box inside the pizzeria, to which Raheem takes unjustified exception.
In the result, Buggin’ and Raheem at night insist the Wall of Fame have Blacks. Sal again tells Raheem to turn his radio off. Raheem refuses. Buggin' insults Sal and says he’ll shut his pizzeria down.
Sal explodes.
He demolishes Raheem's boombox with a bat.
Raheem attacks Sal.
And the violence worsens till the cops come and Long kills Raheem leading to Mookie trashing Sal’s window and sparking a riot that leads to the pizzeria being burnt to the ground.
I argue that all this dramatizes hopelessness and tragic intractability, both exploding into meaningless destructive violence and loss, with a fair amount of sympathy going to Sal.
This view of the movie supports MLK’s quote and cuts against MX’s. So why, again, the opening sequence of fighting the power?
Why does Lee present the issue, at least according to Wiki, as the loss of property as against the death of a black man, when the movie shows them both as terrible occurrences in that intractable hopelessness? They ought not be pitted against each other.
Does not this tension point to incoherence?
Either, it seems to me, Lee’s film either works thematically against itself or Lee has, however explicitly, subtly dramatized the impossibility of doing the right thing.
My 1989 eyes saw the latter of those two possibilities. My 2024 eyes incline to the former of them.
Wednesday, August 21, 2024
An Example Of A Difference Between Literature And Mere Writing
Here’s an example of a difference between mere writing and literature.
I’m reading Rogue Cop by William McGivern.
His protagonist, a bent cop, Mike Carmody, has just worked out and before that has played handball.
After, he relaxes, exulting in how good his body feels. And yet he’s enjoying his first cigarette of the day.
Then right after come descriptions of things being “clean”, the weather, certain interiors.
A central conflict in the novel is between Carmody as bent and his late father as righteous and his brother Eddie, also a cop, as righteous.
In mere writing, the oddity of smoking after vigorous exercise, and the contrast between the surrounding cleanliness and Carmody as dirty consistent with the central contrast between Carmody and his brother and father are simply there.
In literature they’re intended, purposeful, in order to amplify and enrich the novel’s themes.
Thursday, August 1, 2024
Exchange On UCLA Anti Israel Encampment And Anti Semitism
L:
What if a muslim claims a deeply and sincerely held religious belief that the state of Israel has no right to exist because muslims have a religious duty to spread their faith throughout that territory. If someone were to criticize this view, would it be fair to label that person as islamophobic?
What if someone asserts a deeply held Christian Orthodox belief that Ukraine is the godly-ordained territory of Russia? And there was a pro-Ukraine encampment, and they wanted to exclude people who held those views. Should those protesters be stigmatized with the label of "anti-Christian"?
The question goes to the right of the protesters to cordon off a section of the campus in order to establish a zone for protest, education, and mutual support. Maybe there shouldn't be a zone where others who are considered to have "repugnant" views cannot enter - it's a university and a public space.
But to label the encampment anti-semitic on those grounds alone is unfair.
Me:
I don’t get the relevance of your examples to events at UCLA or to Zionism.
Any Muslim who religiously believes that Israel has no right to exist is anti Semitic. In fact, most anyone who claims Israel has no right to exist, whether claimed religiously or not, is anti Semitic. Criticism of this view in the case of a Muslim isn’t Islamophobic: it’s being factual, true to what counts as anti Semitism.
If a Russian Christian believes Ukraine is the God-given territory of Christian Russia, then pro Ukrainians who reject that are not anti Christian. If pro Ukrainians exclude such Christians from a public space, then they’d be wrong. They’re not, however, anti Christian despite the exclusion.
We must separate two issues: lawfulness of protest; and content of protest.
People can legally protest in public spaces.
Commandeering some university grounds unlawfully is, well, unlawful. And more so if the protest is civil disobedience, the precise meaning of which is law breaking with willingness to take penal consequences. The lawfulness or illegality of protest is separate from content.
Whether a lawful protest or not, if the content is that Israel has no right to exist, that Jews have no right to a homeland state born of international assent, surviving as such with increasing assent and functioning with all the hallmarks of a sovereign state for almost 80 years, then that content is anti Semitic. It’s vivid anti Semitism. Israel is prominent in Judaism’s meaning.
Here your second example falls off. Christianity is a set of beliefs and earthly realities. The application of those beliefs in one geopolitical instance, Ukraine as part of Christian motherland Russia, is as nothing in relation to the whole of Christianity. It doesn’t begin to come close to exhausting its meaning.
Judaism is likewise a set of beliefs and earthly realities. Granted, one can be a Jew and not a Zionist, but the proximity of Zionism to Judaism is such that if Zionism is eliminated from the meaning of Judaism, then Judaism is hollowed out.
Moreover, while Russia having a God given right to Ukraine is morally, geopolitically and objectively objectionable, and while the position that Israel shouldn’t exist is similarly objectionable, the latter’s converse, that it should exist, is righteous.
Wednesday, July 31, 2024
Rejection Of The Argument In Alexander Meiklejohn’s Education Between Two Worlds
Alexander Meiklejohn’s argument in Education Between Two Worlds, 1942, is captured by his distinction between an agreement and a bargain. 1,
The former goes to an organic conception of society, unified by fellowship, the latter to an inorganic conception, divided and comprised by eternally competing interest groups. 2,
Mutuality of interests inform agreements. Competing interests comprise bargains, each trying for maximum advantage at the expense of the other. 3,
For Meiklejohn a football team can exemplify organic unity. What’s best for the team subsumes all individual interests. All interests are moulded into serving a singular purpose, the best team. 4,
Plaguing Meiklejohn’s argument is what his example glaringly misses, namely, one team playing another team. That, competition, is a football team’s reason to be. Football games are in his terms analogous to bargains. Each team tries to win, to beat, nay hammer, its opponent. 5,
Fair competition is fundamental to any liberal regime, whether democratic, republican or even social democratic. It coexists with the need for social cohesion in other national spheres, the most fundamental being national acceptance and adherence to law. 6,
And so Meiklejohn’s argument collapses in his organic inorganic binary, it must be one or the other. There are theories of society without competing interests, but that is inconceivable as a practical reality. 7/7
Saturday, May 18, 2024
TWO AMATEUR’S MUSICAL NOTES: ONE ON REGINA CARTER AND ONE ON NINA SIMONE
To a friend:
On Regina Carter’s Motor City Moments, it’s just my opinion, but I’m underwhelmed even with the great guest players. “Don’t Mess With Mr. t’, a Marvin Gaye tune if I remember rightly, hooked me and I bought the record. That tune has R&B bounce. So it made me think that maybe, contrary to my expectations, jazz violin can be satisfying enough for me. But the rest of the tracks, while certainly not to be panned, left me with an overall feeling of “they’re ok”. And they put me back to what I expect from the jazz violin—nothing really compelling, which is strange because I really enjoy some country and bluegrass fiddlin’ and I can feel the awesome beauty of such great classical violin as I occasionally hear.
On another point, as I listened to Nina Simone singing a few ballads on her Nina Simone Sings the Blues, I started to wonder if her phrasing on them lacks nuance as opposed to maybe, what to say?, mechanical shifts in her dynamics. I think she’s a tremendous singer especially when belting is called for, and her strong singing then is packed with great emotion. But on the ballads I heard today I began to think twice about her on them. Maybe it was the mood I was in or I was being overly critical or I was overthinking it. And maybe the next time I hear her on slow things, I’ll thinks she’s just fine. Which I usually do.
Sunday, May 5, 2024
A Few Musical Notes
To a friend:
A few random but slightly overlapping thoughts from some random listening to the blues station on Sirius Radio, Channel 75, while driving.
1, The soundtrack to one of my go to movies, Devil In A Blue Dress, is really nice. It’s either jazzy blues or bluesy jazz. But either way it’s swanky, sexy, sometimes rollicking, music of the good times night.
2, In this order I heard today, Lightnin’ Hopkins, Sunnyland Slim and Freddie King. The first two voices were compelling. In fact, before, I’d heard Sonny Boy Williamson (the original, Rice Miller) and his singing, all raggedy, is compelling too. But not Freddie King’s regardless how blazing is his guitar playing. So what makes a popular (not pop) voice compelling? I remember jazz critics talking about “swing” in a voice and saying while others may not have it, maybe surprisingly, Doris Day does. She does, to my ears. I remember a beloved English prof of mine, Warren Tallman, commenting on how lifeless is Joan Baez’s singing. Musically soaring granted, but dead in a way. I really can’t detect “swing” but I do have a sense of what?: buoyancy?: suppleness?; liveliness?; play? Not sure what word to use. Maybe, and this is the best I can come up with right now, it’s indefinable, a je ne sais pas quoi, an X factor. Freddie King, while listenable, doesn’t have it. Lightnin’ Hopkins is brimming over with it.
What can I tell you?