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29 novembre

玩物哲学

 
我高中时的政治老师曾经说过这样一句话,“哲学就是当人们在吃饱了没事儿干的时候研究的东西。”虽然我不是很喜欢这个教政治的老师,但她的这句话我至今记忆犹新。从初高中开始机械地记忆着政治书中的哲学概念,也曾看过许多关于什么处世哲学,男女交往哲学之类的读物,只是脑子里对“哲学”还是没有一个成形的概念,只能说这是个见仁见智的问题。之所以在“哲学”这个词儿上浪费了这么多笔墨是因为无意中看到新浪读书频道中推荐的一本新书----“玩物哲学”,作者竟然是张信哲。这个名字实在是让我眼前一亮,做了十几年的哲迷,看到他也开始写书,心中还是喜忧各半的。文化娱乐圈中的名人出书立著现象一直以来颇受争议,无论他们是出于何种意图,多数人对之还是比较反感的。阿哲的无可挑剔的清澈声音是伴随着我多年了,但一直不知道他的文笔如何。于是我一口气看完了他的这本处女作“玩物哲学”,才发现这并非是一部个人传记,而是一本关于他多年来收藏的物件古玩家具等的记录,难怪被命名为“玩物哲学”。很早之前就在娱乐八卦杂志上得知张信哲有收藏古董物品的爱好,今天在他这本书的插图中终于欣赏到他多年来积攒的各种物件,的确包罗万象,并且十足的古色古香。书中语言文字朴实无华,娓娓道出作者从小时候在居住的村镇中收集各种小物件到后来做歌手成名后购买大件古玩家具以至到拍卖个人收藏的经历。翻看起来象一本陈年的日记,记录了主人公成长的过程,居住环境的变化等,而那些插图中的私人收藏物品更象是对时代变迁的见证。有1900-1930年间的牡丹瓶,有日式和西洋的古典灯具,有从台湾各处凑齐的旧式家具,也有外祖母那八寸金莲穿过的绣花鞋。不得不感叹一个儿时形成的爱好在作者多年苦心经营下竟也能带来如此多的乐趣。我承认在看这本书的时候,我是带有个人感情色彩的,因为喜欢阿哲的歌有十来个年头了,铁杆哲迷这个称号我是当之无愧的。他的歌从没让我失望过,当然他的这本书也没有让我失望,可以说是文如其人,缓慢流畅的叙事手法就象他给我的感觉那样一如既往的平静。这可能就是作者自己所谓的“哲学”吧,在玩物中发现,在身边发现。
14 novembre

不就是玩嘛!

 
昨日在彭彭家小聚了一下,在乘车回家的途中我哈欠连天,今天竟然睡到了中午12点。其实昨晚到家也不过1点多而已,但年事已高的我发现自己已经不适合熬夜了,一晚睡就觉得特别疲惫,更别说NIGHT LIFE了。记得昨天在席间还对彭说,这25岁就象一个分水岭,一但进入了26,那基本和30也没啥本质区别了,呵呵,这么说虽然有点悲观主义,但我自己的确觉得进入26岁以来,无论是精神上和体力上都大不如从前了,想当年我曾是多么的alive and kicking啊,如今却也只剩感叹和追忆似水流年的力气了。今日酒醒后反思了一下为什么突然间觉得自己老了,究其根源我想是因为昨天一起happy的人中,自己是年龄最大的一个,彭正好小我2个月,其他几个弟弟妹妹不但年轻而且更是面嫩,置身于年轻人中间还是有一定压力的说,呵呵。本来是打算9号那天要隆重为彭庆祝26岁生日的(KP同学在国内腐败期间屡次叮嘱我要大办),只可惜又赶上个星期四,大家不好凑齐,改到周六吧,偏又是个11月11日(不知道哪个好事者把这天定为光棍节了?!我在此强烈谴责这个始作俑者!),于是这个为彭庆生的party推了又推,挪到了周日。终于盼到了这个大家一起腐败的日子,彭于上周就准备好了一瓶Martini Rossi,家中更是有储存的红酒若干。我亲眼见证了这个小妮子由一年前的只沾滴酒堕落到如今喜欢酗酒的地步,我猜这和丹麦的天气有很大的关系。在寒冷阴郁而缺少阳光的环境中,咖啡和酒精是能够使人cheer up的最佳选择。大姐没离开的时候,每逢周末我们总会到Bar或者各自家中小酌一下,这便是在丹麦大家最常做的娱乐活动了。三五人凑一起,吃喝谈笑调侃周遭人事,不亦乐乎。恋爱可以不谈,工作可以不想,总之一切导致郁闷的烦事都可以消融在酒里,这可能就是我最喜欢的排解压力的方式吧。其实并不十分确定所谓的压力到底从何而来,只是偶尔总有患得患失的感觉,怀念过去的日子,担忧回去的出路,也顺便憧憬下自己的未来。。。。。。一切的琐碎都仿佛以意识流的形式在脑中呈现,以至于陷入一种庸人自扰的困境。这可能也是“Twenty six complex”的一种症状吧,哈哈。不知道自己真的到了30岁那天,会以怎样的心态来回顾这些片段呢?那一定会是件很有趣的事情,胜过酗酒。想想一年前的经历,五年前的故事以及十年前的历史,都会有种非常释然的感觉。之前那些令我彻夜难眠的事情似乎已经是无关痛痒,曾经那个让人心悸的面孔如今在脑海里却也了无痕迹。Things become nothing, lovers turn out to be person of unimportance or even shits.对此我无从解释,朋友说这个就是成熟的表现吧,我说也很有可能是麻木的前兆。但昨晚我却找到了一个十分可靠的答案:“不就是玩嘛!”这也是彭在吃饱喝足后一直念叨着的一句话,出处是小弟T-Shirt上的LOGO,很Cool的一句哦!是啊,一切的一切之于我们,或者我们之于别人,有什么大不了的呢?不就是玩嘛!
8 novembre

Lost

 
几天前电脑又犯了点小毛病,于是有一想法,打算把BLOG给利用上,存点资料什么的,随时在线阅读,感觉比存电脑上保险。刚贴了两篇东西,自己琢磨着挺好的,节省硬盘空间啊,但接下来的便是骂声如潮。。。。。。
X说:“怎么?玩起ACADEMIC STYLE了,怎么看你也不象那种人啊!”
Y说:“看你很久没更新BLOG了,好不容易亮朵小花,靠。。。还都英文的!”
Z说:“。。。英文也就结了,勉强看懂了一两句,可都没意思啊,有点原创精神好不好?!”
哎,面对各位领导的批评我无语了,我容易吗?!最近实在太忙,连MSN上的人都顾不上招呼,就别提更新博客了。每天连去超市的时间都没有,断断续续坚持了近一个月的跑步计划也因为忙碌和天气的缘故暂停了。要说丹麦这鬼地方真是不适合清晨跑步,自打夏令时结束就进入了阴雨连绵的深秋,比江浙一带的梅雨季节好不到哪去。一早顶着小雨出去跑步,绕几个圈回来时,身上都湿漉漉的,极其不爽!但有一点好处就是虽说阴雨不断,但没有雾气,至少跑到个偏远地带不会有迷路的危险。在国内上班时候早晨也常出去跑步,四五月份气候极佳,但就是清晨雾气很重,偶尔也是细雨不断。那时候总会拉上小魏老师一起出去锻炼,热中于减肥的她欣然同意做我的PARTNER。只不过,这个小魏和我一样是路盲,方向感极差,到陌生地方通常容易GET LOST。有次端午节前夕的周六大家约好早晨出去跑步,路线是花果山那个方向。从我们学校到花果山乘车是将近半小时的路程,当然我们是不会跑到那的。我们于是分头行动,然后说好到学校正门汇合。我是一个人顺着高速公路的路线中规中矩的跑了回来,等了半个多点儿,还是没见魏老师的影子,于是又顺着原路线溜达回去迎她。走了又将近20分钟,还是连个人影都没看到,拨通她电话,竟然没人接听。我急了,心想这位姐姐不会迷路了吧?!这样等下去不成啊,都快一个钟头过去了,走也该走回来了呀,一定是迷路了!情况不妙啊,这星期六本来人就少,还是个大早晨,她要迷路了,也真是找不到个人问啊。我于是拨通一个朋友家的电话,让他第一时间开车过来和我MEET去找魏老师。电话那头儿显然还在做梦呢,被我这么一搅和,估计要气死了,没办法,找人要紧呀。大约过了10分钟,朋友开车过来了,劈头盖脸给我一顿训斥,说什么大周末的折腾什么呀,找人跑步也不能找小魏老师呀(她易迷失是众所周知的),说就算非要找她也得先给她备一指南针啊。。。。。。我又是无语,乖乖的上了车去找人。我们绕了一圈,最后终于在距学校半公里左右的公路入口处看到了那位MM慢悠悠的走着,车刚一停稳,我就急着跳下去,一顿盘问,跑哪里去了,怎么不接电话云云。谁知这个姐姐慢条斯理的解释说手机设成无声了,没看见有电话,还说知道自己走迷糊了,但相信我会找到她的,所以没急,慢慢的溜达着等我。FAINT!从那以后,我再没找她跑过步。虽说我自己也没方向感,但我出去玩或者旅游从不乱走。六月份大宝贝从英国来丹麦玩,到哥本哈根时我可都是跟着她后面,她会看太阳辨方向,这招很强,以至于我们一番周折后还是找到了事先预定的住处。
 
昨天MSN上又遇到小魏老师,她说:“自从你走后我也就不跑步了,当然也不SHOPPING了。”
“好事儿啊,你不会走丢了,现在要走丢可没人大清早的派车找你去了,有事儿就打110吧!不SHOPPING更好啊,省钱做嫁妆吧!”
“SHIT,等你回来再去。哦,对了,在丹麦给我淘条链子回来,别弄太贵的啊,要DESIGN的,回头儿请你鸭血粉丝。”
“晕。。。。。。”
不过还真是有点怀念鸭血粉丝的味道了,在奥胡斯这个渔村可没地儿吃去呀。。。。。。
2 novembre

Cultural Identity and Diaspora

"Cultural Identity and Diaspora"
Hall, Stuart.
 
In Williams, Patrick & Laura Chrisman eds. Colonial Discourse & Postcolonial Theory: A Reader.   Harvester Whaeatsheaf, 1993.  ---  The following quotes are made according to this version.
and Identity: Community, Culture, Difference. Ed. Jonathan Rutherford. London: Lawrence & Wishart, 1990. 
Major Argument: There are two kinds of identity, identity as being (which offers a sense of unity and commonality) and identity as becoming (or a process of identification, which shows the discontinuity in our identity formation.)  Hall uses the Caribbean identities, including his own, to explain how the first one is necessary, but the second one is truer to their/our postcolonial conditions.   To explain the process of identity formation, Hall uses Derrida's theory differance as support, and Hall sees the temporary positioning of identity as "strategic" and arbitrary.  He then uses the three presences--African, European, and American--in the Caribbean to illustrate the idea of "traces" in our identity.  Finally, he defines the Caribbean identity as disapora identity. 
 
1. identity as oneness
p. 393  "This oneness, underlying all the other, more superficial differences, is the truth, the essence, of "Caribbeanness', of black experience.  . .  .
We should not, for a moment, underestimate or neglect the importance of the act of imaginative rediscovery which this conception of a rediscovered, essential identity entails."

[Hall acknowledges the importance of this sense of  identity, but he also emphasizes its fictive nature.]

2.   identity as  discontinuous points of identification

p. 394  "We cannot speak for very long, with any exactness, about 'one experience, one identity,' without acknowledging its other side--the ruptures and discontinuities which constitute, precisely, the Caribbean's 'uniqueness.'"
 
  • Cultural identities...Far from being eternally fixed in some essentialised past, they are subject to the continuous 'play' of history, culture and power.
  • Identities are the names we give the the different ways 1) we are positioned by, and 2) position ourselves within the narratives of the past.
A. [the first kind of otherness: self-othering]  394-95  [otherness as an inner compulsion]
'the colonial experience'--Not only, in Said's 'Orientalist' sense, were we constructed as different and other within the categories of knowledge of the West by those regimes. They had the power to make us see and experience ourselves as 'Other." . . . It is one thing to position a subject or set of peoples as the Other fo a dominant discourse. It is quite another thing to subject them to that 'knowledge,' not only as a matter of imposed will and domination, byt the power of inner compulsion and subjective con-formation to the norm. ...

This inner expropriation of cultural idenitty cripples and deforms. If its silences are not resisted, they produce, in Fanon's vivid phrase, 'individuals without an anchor, without horizon, colourless, stateless, rootless--a race of angels'

p. 395--

Cultural identities are the points of identification, the unstable points of identification or suture, which are made, within the discourses of history and culture. Not an essence but a positioning.

B. [the second kind of otherness: creolization; racial mixture; differences within the different islands]
...We might think of black Caribbean identities as 'framed' by two axes or vectors, simultaneously operative: the vector of similarity and continuity; and the vector of difference and rupture. ...thought of in terms of the dialogic relationship between these two axes. The one gives us some grounding in, some continuity with, the past. The second reminds us that what we share is precisely the experience of a profound discontinuity: the people dragged into slavery, transportation, colonisation migration, came predominantly from Africa--and when that supply ended, it was temporarily refreshed by indentured labour from the Asian subcontinent.

p. 395
The third kind of otherness -- otherness to different metropolitan centers.

To return to the Caribbean after any long absence is to experience again the shock of the 'doubleness' of similarity and difference.

3.  Derrida's differance is used to explain cultural difference.

p. 397  ". . . if signfication depends upon the endless repositioning of its differential terms, meaning, in any specific instance, depends on the contingent and arbitrary stop -- the necessary and temporary 'break' in the infinite semiosis of language.  This does not detract from the original insight.  It only threatens to do so if we mistake this 'cut' of identity--this positioning, which makes meaning possible-- as a natrual and permanent, rather than an arbitrary and contingent 'ending'--whereas I understand every such position as 'strategic' and arbitrary, in the sense that there is no permanent equivalence between the particular sentence we close, and its true meaning, as such.

4. The three traces in Caribbean Identity
Caribbean identity--diaspora
 

  • Presence/absence Africaine or the site of the repressed: the unspoken unspeakable presence

[Hall's own experience of re-discovering 'Africa' and his being 'black' in 1970's.]
 

  • Presence Europeenne [about exclusion, imposition and expropriation of colonial discourse]
p. 400 

What Frantz Fanon reminds us, in Black Skin, White Mask, is how this power has become a constitutive element in our own identities. ... 

This 'look,' from--so to speak-- the place of the Other, fixes us, not only in its violence, hostility and aggression, but in the ambivalence of its desire. This brings us face to face, not simply with the dominating European presence as the site or 'scene' of integration where those other presences which it had actively disaggregated were recomposed--...but as the site of a profound splitting and doubling--what Homi Bhabha has called 'the ambivalent identifications of the racist world...the 'otherness' of the self inscribed in the perverse palimpsest of colonial identity.

 
  • Presence Americaine

The Third, 'New World" presence is not so much power, as ground, place, territory. It is a  juncture-point where the many cultural tributaries meet, the 'empty' land  (the European colonisers emptied it) where strangers from  everry otherr  part of the globe collided. 

p. 401 The 'new world' presence--America...--is therefore itself the beginning of diaspora, of diversity, of hybridity and difference, what makes Afro-Caribbean people already people of a diaspora. I use this term here metaphorically, not literally: diaspora does not refer us to those scattered tribes whose identity can only be secured in relation to some sacred homeland to which they must al all cost return, even if it means pushing other people into the sea. This is the old, the imperializing, the hegemonising, form of 'ethnicity'. ... 
 


5. p. 401-402  The diaspora experience as I intend it here is defined, not by essence or purity, but by the recognition of a necessary heterogeniety and diversity; by a conception of 'identity' which lives with and through, not despite, difference; by hybridity. Diaspora identities are those which are constantly producing and reproducing themselves anew, through transformation and difference.
'Across a whole range of cultural forms there is a 'syncretic' dynamic which critically appropriates elements from the master-codes of the dominant culture and 'creolises' them, disarticulating given signs and re-articulating their symbolic meaning. The subversive force of this hybridizing tendency is most apparent at the level of language itself where creoles, patois and black English decentre, destablise and carnivalise the linguistic domination of 'English'--the nation-language of master-discourse--through strategic inflections, re-accentuations and other performative moves in semantic, syntactic and lexical codes.
Jonathan Rutherford  "A Place Called Home: Identity and the Culture Politics of Difference" 9-27  from Identity: Community, Culture, Difference. Ed. Jonathan Rutherford. London: Lawrence & Wishart, 1990.
p. 19
Gramsci described this articulation as 'the starting point of critical elaboration': it is the consciousness of what one really is, and in 'knowing thyself' as a product of the historical process to date which has deposited an infinity of traces, without leaving an inventory'. Identity marks the conjuncture of our past with the social, cultural and economic relations we live within. 'Each invididual is the synthesis not only of existing relations but of the history of these relations. He is a precis of the past.' ...
This politics of articulation eschews all forms of fixity and essentialism; social, political and class formations do not exist a priori, they are a product of articulation. Stuart Hall has termed this the politics of 'no necessary or essential corespondence of anything with anything' and it marks a significant break with a Marxism that has assumed an underlying totality to social relations.
politics of difference
The cultural politics of difference means living with incommensurability through new ethical and democratic frameworks, within a culture that both recognises difference and is commited to resolving its antagomisms.
¡@
politics of articulation--S. Hall
p. 107   It seems to me that it is possible to think aobut the nature of new political identities, which isn't founded on the notion of some absolute integral self and which clearly can't arise from some fully closed narrative of the self. A politics which accepts the 'no necessary or essential correspondence of anything with anything, and there has ....
 

Summary of “Imagined Community”

Summary of “Imagined Community”

想像的共同體---民族主義的起源和散佈   劉榮樺

1.全書的重點在於透過在印刷技術發達之後,歐洲的民族主義是如何興起,及在世界各地的發展情形。他認為民族主義是一想像的政治共同體,因此他認為的政治是人們所想像出來的一種彼此之間的關係,權力則掌握在控制人們想像的機構的統治者上。

2.他給予民族的定義為:一個想像的政治共同體,而這個想像本身具有內在的有限與統治。知所以為想像是因為即使在最小的民族也不是每一個人都認識彼此;之所以是有限的,是因為即使在最大的民族仍然也是存在著與其他民族的界限;之所以具有統治,是因為民族觀念是在啟蒙時代與法國大革命的年代所誕生的,而這二者破壞了君權神授、有階級的政治範圍。而之所以是一個共同體,是因為即使在其中有許多的不平等、剝削存在,民族仍然是被感知為一個深層、平面的同伴關係。

3.族主義的興起和宗教共同體、王朝範圍有關。原本因為具有掌控唯一不可任意變動文字---拉丁文的教會,受到地理大發現的影響(relativism)與拉丁文本身文字的神聖性的衰弱(fragmented, pluralized and territorized),使得其神聖性減低。

4.小說和報紙在十八世紀的歐洲出現後,提供想像共同體(也就是民族)一種再現的技術,使得原本認為世界在時間軸上都是同時的,轉變為認為他們是處在具有同質的無時間差異的世界裡。由報紙所造成的想像的連結是來自兩個間接的來源,第一個是在報紙上的日期的一致性,另一個則是因為他到處都可以看到與他的報紙同樣內容的報紙也被他人閱讀著,再次將想像的世界根植於每天的日常生活中。

5.想像的民族的可能性的出現是因為三個古代的事物散失他們對於人們心靈的控制:(1)特定的書寫文字與真理之間的關係不在密切(2)不再相信社會是自然組織而成,並且被某些人所控制(3)不在相信宇宙觀與歷史是不可分。

6.印刷語言對於國家意識的興起有三個不同方式的影響:第一個是他們創造下層民眾與上層使用拉丁文者可以溝通的地方。第二個是創造一種新的固定的語言;第三個是印刷資本主義創造一種異於以往各地行政人員的權力的語言。

7.各地資本主義革命的推力來自外在三個因素:(1)最重要的是拉丁文本身的改變(2)第二個是宗教改革,這要歸功於印刷資本技術(3)特定地區的行政的中心化。

8.官方的民族主義:這是各地的統治階層受到民族想像共同體的的世界性推動的威脅下所產生出的。

9.特定教育體制的和行政的朝聖的互相連接提供一個新的想像共同體的領土基礎,在裡面的每一個人都可以把自己視為‘民族的’。

10.民族的想法幾乎都是巢居在印刷語言裡,而民族人是無法自政治覺醒分離開的。

11.最後一波的發生在亞洲與非洲的民族主義是對於因為工業資本主義所造成的新型態的全球帝國主義所做出的回應。

批評:作者透過對於歐洲因為印刷技術的發展與地理大發現,人們開始產生彼此是相對性的,並非如同在中古時期人們認為世界是有統一的性格,雖然有大部分的平民不識字,但是藉由識字階層與人們之間的互動關係,如利用唯一的拉丁文作為教會使用的文字等諸多有關的行為,人們建立起彼此是在同樣的時空中的,在宗教改革時,各地陸續出現印行當地語文的聖經,拉丁文原先所具有的獨特性被減弱,人們藉有印刷出來的文字(如報紙、小說)開始有了想像共同體。印刷文字並非全人等於各地的方言,相對的它是以一種近似方言的印刷文字出現,這樣就可以溝通上下階層。也正因為是透過印刷文字的溝通,許多原本距離很遠的事件,如法國大革命可以被記載下來,成為可學習的經驗。而官方的民族主義則是更進一步藉由教育與行政體制的朝聖之旅,將經驗給予集中化及標準化,在所謂的民族國家的規範下,透過如博物館的建立、戶口的調查和地圖的繪製,語言上的共同體也並不一定為形成的必要條件。很多原先存在於同一地域內的不同人群的衝突,可以任意被選擇記憶或遺忘,以幫助民族的想像共同體的出現。AndersonBloch一樣都認為語言有相當的控制力,但是Anderson強調的是印刷語言對於幫助想像共同體的產生,人們對於彼此的關係可以被統治者藉由對於塑造想像的媒介的控制而被宰制,這是否也意味所謂的政治本身沒有獨特性,政治只是被想像出來的關係?

1.Nation-ness is the most universally legitimate value in thepolitical life of our time.

2.Theorists of nationalism have often been perplexed, not to sayirritated, by these three paradoxes:

(a) The objective modernity of nations to the historian’s eyes vs.their subjective antiquity in the eyes of nationalists.

(b) The formal university of nationality as a socio-culturalconcept - in the modern world everyone can, should, will ‘ have ‘ anationality, as he or she ‘ has ‘ a gender- vs. the irremediable particularity ofits concrete manifestations, such that, by definition, ‘ Greek ‘ nationality issui generis.

(c) The ‘ political ‘ power of nationalisms vs. theirphilosophical poverty and even incoherence.

3.The definition of the nation: it is an imagined political community-and imagined as both inherently limited and sovereign. It is imagined becausethe members of even the smallest nation will never know most of theirfellow-members, meet them, or even hear of them, yet in the minds of each livesthe image of their communication.

4. The nation is imagined as limited because even the largest ofthem, encompassing perhaps a billion living human beings, has finite, ifelastic, boundaries, beyond which lie other nations.

5. It is imagined as sovereign because the concept was born in anage in which Enlightenment and Revolution were destroying the legitimacy of thedivinely-ordained, hierarchical dynastical realm.

6. It is imagined as community, because, regardless of the actualinequality and exploitation that may prevail in each, the nation is alwaysconceived as a deep, horizontal comradeship.

7.What make the shrunken imaginings of recently generate suchcolossal sacrifices? He believed that the beginnings of an answer lie in thecultural roots of nationalism. --- the cenotaphs and tombs of Unknown Soldiers.

8. Although in Western Europe the eighteenth century marks notonly the dawn of the age of nationalism but the dusk of religious modes ofthought, he did not consider nationalism “produced” or “supersedes” religion.What he proposed is that nationalism has to be understood by aligning it, notwith self-consciously held political ideologies, but with the large systemsthat proceeded it, out of which- as well as against which- it cam into being.For these purposes, the two relevant cultural systems are the religiouscommunity and the dynastic realm.

9. Classical communities (Islam, Christendom, Buddhist,Confucianism) linked by sacred languages had a character distinct from theimagined communities of modern nations. One crucial difference was the oldercommunities’ confidence in the unique sacredness of their languages, and thustheir ideas about admission and membership. But the illiterate occupied a largepopulation. A fuller explanation requires a glance at the relationship betweenthe literati and their societies.

10. These communities’ unique sacredness: (1) The effect of theexplorations of the non-European world, which mainly but by no meansexclusively in Europe ‘ abruptly widened the cultural and geographic horizonand hence also men’s conception of possible forms of human life’. (2) A gradualdemotion of the sacred language itself.

11. Dynastic Realm: In modern conception, state sovereignty isfully, flatly, and evenly operative over each square centimeters of a legallydemarcated territory. In the older imagining, where centres defined states,borders were porous and indistinct, and sovereignties faded imperceptibly intoone another.

12. Why make the mediaeval conception of simultaneity-along-timeto “homogeneous, empty time” ? Why this transformation should be so importantfor the birth of the imagined community of the nation can best be seen if weconsider the basic structure of two forms of imagining which first flowered inEurope in the eighteenth century: the novel and the newspaper. For these formsprovided the technical means for ‘re-presenting’ the kind of imagined communitythat is the nation.

13. The imagining linkage which made by newspaper derives from twoobliquely related sources:

(1) The first is simply calendrical coincidence. The date at thetop of the newspaper, the single most important emblem on it, provide theessential connection- the steady onward clocking of homogeneous, empty time.

(2) The second source ofimagining linkage lies in the relationship between the newspaper, as a form ofbook, and the market. The book (newspaper is an extreme form of the book)At thesame time, the newspaper reader, observing exact replicas of his own paperbeing consumed by his subway, barbership, or residential neighbours, iscontinually reassured that the imagined world is visibly rooted in everydaylife.

14.The very possibility of imagining the nation only arosehistorically when, and where, three fundamental cultural conceptions, all ofgreat antiquity, lost their axiomatic grip on men’s minds.

(1) The idea that a particular script-language offered theprivileged access to the ontological truth, precisely because it was aninseparable part of that truth.

(2) The belief that society was naturally organized around andunder high centers - monarchs who were persons apart from other human beingsand who ruled by some form of cosmological (divine) dispensation.

(3) A conception of temporality in which cosmology and historywere indistinguishable, the origin of the world and of men essentiallyidentical.

15.Nothing perhaps more precipitated this search, nor made it morefruitful, than print-capitalism, which made it possible for rapidly growingnumbers of people to think about themselves, and to relate themselves toothers, in profoundly new ways.

16. If the development of print-as-commodity is the key to thegeneration of wholly new ideas of simultaneity, still, we are simply at thepoint where communities of the type ‘horizontal-secular. transverse-time’become possible. The primacy of capitalism made the nation become so popular.

17.The revolutionary vernacularizing thrust of capitalism wasgiven further impetus by three extraneous factors, two of which contributeddirectly to the rise of national consciousness:

(1) The first and the ultimately the least important, was a changein the character of Latin itself.

(2) Second was the impact of the Reformation, which, at the sametime, owed much of its success to print-capitalism.

(3) Third was the slow, geographically uneven, spread ofparticular vernaculars as instruments of administrative centralization bycertain well-positioned would-be absolutist monarchs.

18. The print-languages laid the bases for nationalconsciousnesses in three distinct ways:

(1) First and foremost, they created unified fieldsof exchange andcommunication below Latin and above the spoken vernaculars.

(2) Print-capitalism gave a new fixity to language, which in thelong run helped to build that image of antiquity so central to the subjectiveidea of the nation.

(3) Third, print-capitalism created languages-of-power of a kinddifferent from the older administrative vernaculars. Certain dialectsinevitably were ‘closer’ to each print-language and dominated their final form.

19. The convergence of capitalism and print technology on thefatal diversity of human language created the possibility of a new form ofimagined community, which in its basic morphology set the stage for the modernnation.

20. The newer nationalisms (between 1820-1920) which have twostriking features mark them off from their ancestors.

(1) In almost of them ‘national print-languages’ were of centralideological and political importance.

(2) All were able to work from visible models provided by theirdistant, and after the convulsions of the French Revolution, not so distant,predecessors. The ‘nation’ thus became something capable of being consciouslyaspired to from early on, rather than a slowly sharpening frame of vision.

21.’Official nationalism’: it is important to stress that themodel could be selfconsciously followed by states with no serious great powerpretensions, so long as they were states in which the ruling classes or leadingelements in them felt threatened by the world-wide spread of the nationally-imaginedcommunity.

22. In a world in which the national state is the overwhelmingnorm, all of the this means that nations can now be imagined without linguisticcommunity- not in the naive spirit of nosotrous los Americanos, but out of ageneral awareness of what modern history has demonstrated to be possible.

23. The very idea of ‘ nation ‘ is now nestled firmly in virtuallyall print-languages; and nation-ness is virtually inseparable from politicalconsciousness.

24. The ‘last wave’ of nationalisms, most of them in the colonialterritories of Asia and Africa, was in its origins a response to the new-styleglobal imperialism made possible by the achievements of industrial capitalism.

25. Capitalism had also, not least by its dissemination of print, helpedto create popular, vernacular-based nationalisms in Europe, which to differentdegrees undermined the age-old dynastic principle, and egged intoself-naturalization every dynasty positioned to do.

26. These school-system, centralized and standardized, createdquite new pilgrimages which typically had their Romes in the variescolonial capitals, for the nations hidden at the core of the empires wouldpermit no more inward ascension.

27. The interlock between particular educational andadministrative pilgrimages provided the territorial base for new ‘ imaginedcommunities’ in which natives could come to see themselves as ‘nationals’.

28. As with increasing speed capitalism transformed the means ofphysical and intellectual communication, the intelligentsias found ways tobypass print in propagating the imagined community, not merely to illiteratemasses, but even to literate masses reading different languages.

29. The cultural products of nationalism--- poetry, prose fiction,music, plastic arts- show this love (self-sacrificing love) very clearly inthousands of different forms and styles.

30. Through that language, encountered at mother’s knee and partedwith only at the grave, pasts are restored, fellowships are imagined, andfurther dreamed.

31. Thanks to print-capitalism, the French experience was notmerely ineradicable from human memory, it was also learnable-from.

32. If it is permissible to use modern Cambodia to illustrate anextreme modular transfer of ‘revolution,’ it is perhaps equitable to useVietnam to illustrate that of nationalism, by a brief excursus on the nation’sname.

33. Museum:

(1) The timing of that archaeological push coincided with thefirst political struggle over the state’s educational policies.

(2) The formal ideological programme of the reconstructions alwaysplaced the builders of the monuments and the colonial natives in a certainhierarchy.

(3) In the discussion of the “historical map”, how colonialregimes began attaching themselves to antiquity as much as conquest.

34. This style of imagining did not come out of thin air. It wasthe product of the technologies of navigation, astronomy, horology, surveying,photography and print, to say nothing of the deep driving power of capitalism.

35. Map and census thus shaped the grammar which would in duecourse make possible ‘Burma’ and ‘Burmese,’

36.(1) The trope took into account the sensed parallelism out ofwhich the American nationalisms had been born and which the success of theAmerican nationalist revolutions had great reinforced in Europe.

(2) The trope provides a crucialmetaphorical link between the newEuropean nationalisms and languages.

http://gwrx.itaiwan.net/image.html

The Declaration of the Human Rights (1789)

 
The 1789 Declaration of the rights of man and the citizen was inspired by the American Declaration of Independence of 1776. The French Declaration marked the end of the Ancien Régime and the dawn of a new era. The Constitution of the Fifth Republic explicitly refers to this Declaration, which is now one of our founding texts.

History

The Declaration of the rights of man and the citizen, along with the decrees of August 4 and 11, 1789 abolishing feudal rights, was one of the fundamental texts adopted by the Constituent Assembly formed in the wake of the meeting of the Estates General.

Although adopted in principle before July 14, 1789, several drafts of the Declaration were discussed before deputies voted for the final text, after lengthy debate, on August 26.

It consists of a preamble and 17 articles containing various provisions pertaining to the individual and the Nation. It spells out such "natural and indefeasible" rights as liberty, property, security, and the right to resist oppression. The Declaration also recognizes equality, notably before the law and justice. Finally, it asserts the principle of the separation of powers.

Louis XVI did not ratify it until October 5, and then under pressure of the Assembly and the people, who had marched out to Versailles. The Declaration served as the preamble to the first constitution of the French Revolution, adopted in 1791. Although the Revolution itself subsequently reneged on certain of its principles and framed two further Declarations of the rights of man (in 1793 and 1795), only the August 26, 1789 text has remained in posterity. It is now one of the founding documents of our institutions, and notably the constitutions of 1852, 1946 and 1958.

During the 19th century, the 1789 Declaration inspired similar documents in several European and Latin American countries; The French Revolutionary tradition also helped inspire the European Convention on Human Rights signed in Rome on November 4, 1950.

The text

The representatives of the French People, formed into a National Assembly, considering ignorance, forgetfulness or contempt of the rights of man to be the only causes of public misfortunes and the corruption of Governments, have resolved to set forth, in a solemn Declaration, the natural, unalienable and sacred rights of man, to the end that this Declaration, constantly present to all members of the body politic, may remind them unceasingly of their rights and their duties; to the end that the acts of the legislative power and those of the executive power, since they may be continually compared with the aim of every political institution, may thereby be the more respected; to the end that the demands of the citizens, founded henceforth on simple and incontestable principles, may always be directed toward the maintenance of the Constitution and the happiness of all.

In consequence whereof, the National Assembly recognizes and declares, in the presence and under the auspices of the Supreme Being, the following Rights of Man and of the Citizen.

Article first.

- Men are born and remain free and equal in rights. Social distinctions may be based only on considerations of the common good.

Article 2.

- The aim of every political association is the preservation of the natural and imprescriptible rights of man. These rights are Liberty, Property, Safety and Resistance to Oppression.

Article 3.

- The source of all sovereignty lies essentially in the Nation. No corporate body, no individual may exercise any authority that does not expressly emanate from it.

Article 4.

- Liberty consists in being able to do anything that does not harm others: thus, the exercise of the natural rights of every man has no bounds other than those that ensure to the other members of society the enjoyment of these same rights. These bounds may be determined only by Law.

Article 5.

- The Law has the right to forbid only those actions that are injurious to society. Nothing that is not forbidden by Law may be hindered, and no one may be compelled to do what the Law does not ordain.

Article 6.

- The Law is the expression of the general will. All citizens have the right to take part, personally or through their representatives, in its making. It must be the same for all, whether it protects or punishes. All citizens, being equal in its eyes, shall be equally eligible to all high offices, public positions and employments, according to their ability, and without other distinction than that of their virtues and talents.

Article 7.

- No man may be accused, arrested or detained except in the cases determined by the Law, and following the procedure that it has prescribed. Those who solicit, expedite, carry out, or cause to be carried out arbitrary orders must be punished; but any citizen summoned or apprehended by virtue of the Law, must give instant obedience; resistance makes him guilty.

Article 8.

- The Law must prescribe only the punishments that are strictly and evidently necessary; and no one may be punished except by virtue of a Law drawn up and promulgated before the offense is committed, and legally applied.

Article 9.

- As every man is presumed innocent until he has been declared guilty, if it should be considered necessary to arrest him, any undue harshness that is not required to secure his person must be severely curbed by Law.

Article 10.

- No one may be disturbed on account of his opinions, even religious ones, as long as the manifestation of such opinions does not interfere with the established Law and Order.

Article 11.

- The free communication of ideas and of opinions is one of the most precious rights of man. Any citizen may therefore speak, write and publish freely, except what is tantamount to the abuse of this liberty in the cases determined by Law.

Article 12.

- To guarantee the Rights of Man and of the Citizen a public force is necessary; this force is therefore established for the benefit of all, and not for the particular use of those to whom it is entrusted.

Article 13.

- For the maintenance of the public force, and for administrative expenses, a general tax is indispensable; it must be equally distributed among all citizens, in proportion to their ability to pay.

Article 14.

- All citizens have the right to ascertain, by themselves, or through their representatives, the need for a public tax, to consent to it freely, to watch over its use, and to determine its proportion, basis, collection and duration.

Article 15.

- Society has the right to ask a public official for an accounting of his administration.

Article 16.

- Any society in which no provision is made for guaranteeing rights or for the separation of powers, has no Constitution.

Article 17.

- Since the right to Property is inviolable and sacred, no one may be deprived thereof, unless public necessity, legally ascertained, obviously requires it, and just and prior indemnity has been paid.

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