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7/30/2008

Allegory for thesis writing

Filed under: four am ghosts — ana @ 3:30 pm


guadix

“A few hours mountain climbing turns a rogue and a saint into two roughly equal creatures. Weariness is the shortest path to equality and fraternity [sic] - and liberty is finally added by sleep.”

- attributed to Nietzsche but, like everything else at this point in thesis writing, I can’t find the citation.

7/16/2008

The ‘Gut Feminism’ of Elizabeth A. Wilson (or, oh, divine lipophilia!)

Filed under: depression — ana @ 4:21 pm

I found this a therapeutic read for my own full-body walk through the drowsing and dyspeptic valley of paroxetine:

“… there is particular significance in the oral administration of antidepressants: there is an intimate connection between the gut and depression, making intervention via the gut an especially felicitous means of treatment for depressed mood (Wilson, 2004a). (…). In most cases, the gut itself is not the target of therapeutic action; the drug is being released into the body some distance from its intended site of action (Katzung, 2001). The pathways from the gut to that target site are often circuitous, and it is these pathways that have arrested my critical interest … the physiological itinerary of an antidepressant takes in every organ of the body. (more…)

7/10/2008

Naomi Klein, taken to task

Filed under: solidarity, fetishism, la gringa, bolivia — ana @ 2:30 pm

“Bolivia calza hoy como piecita pequeña, sirve de dato para confirmar el sabotaje malvado del sistema capitalista contra un indígena presidente. Bolivia sirve para decir frases celebres sobre los pueblos indígenas, o poner en una línea paralela de peligrosísima y delicadísima similitud Palestina, los Balcanes, Afganistán o cualquier otro punto del planeta.

Quiero decir que somos actoras y acotres socialise corresponsables y no simples victimas de un proceso neocolonial.”

- Extracto de Carta abierta a Naomi Klein, por Maria Galindo de Mujeres Creando, mayo 2008.

“Bolivia fits today like a little piece of pie, it serves to confirm the evil sabotage of the capitalist system against an indigenous president. Bolivia serves for the saying of celebratory words about indigenous peoples, or to place [oneself] on a parallel line of high danger and great delicacy similar to Palestine, the Balkans, Afghanistan or any other [such] point of the planet.

I want to say that we are corresponsible social actors [male and female] and not simple victims of a neocolonial process.”

- Extract from Open letter to Naomi Klein, by Maria Galindo of Mujeres Creando, May 2008.

(weak english translation brought to you by ana au).

6/30/2008

Sex, city, pleasures, text, etc.

Filed under: g-string feminism, white life — ana @ 3:20 pm

Oh Lauren Berlant, you dreamy dream woman. On Sex & the City The Movie:

“It’s a good thing that they have each other … as they are incapable of talking about sex with their lovers. If any of these women had ever even walked by feminism on the sidewalk they would have learned that one of the points of sexual liberation was to put your mouth where your mouth is. Sex talk was to be part of sex, part of sex pedagogy, part of allowing fantasy and desire to produce creativity and improvisation in the now of the event. Sexual liberation culture gave skills and permission for not just resorting to reenacting the default expectation out of fear that sex talk would make sex disappear.(…). These women are so frightened of what’s uncontrollable and uncomfortable about sex that, rather than to talk well about it to lovers, they prefer to laugh and complain to each other about it.” (more…)

6/29/2008

Suffer the little children ….

A national framework for child protection is necessary, we can do better and must do better for the protection of our little children.” - Kevin Rudd.

Having worked with the child protection system I am much less excited about this comment than I should be were I to take the above comment at face value. A national framework has been advocated for years as a very basic policy intervention, and always seems to end up being hijacked for other violently paternalistic ends (if it’s not how such Interventions start off in the first place).

“Little children” really are the ultimate signifier into which to empty out all sorts of misdirected rubbish.

6/27/2008

Filed under: mal d'archive, reading, discipline, justice — ana @ 6:41 pm

“Censorship and censorial debate are denials of our right and our capacity to explore and change our alienated and/or colonised selves and the discourse which continues to mystify our conditions.”

- Marica Langton, Well I Heard it on the Radio, and I Saw it on the Television …., 1989: 57.

6/24/2008

Gaze 2.0

1519: map of Brazil issued by Portuguese explorers.
Members of an unknown Amazon Basin tribe and their dwellings are seen during a flight over the Brazilian state of Acre. Photo: AP/Gleison Miranda, Funai
30 May 2008: “Members of an unknown Amazon Basin tribe and their dwellings are seen during a flight over the Brazilian state of Acre along the border with Peru.” (Sydney Morning Herald).*

* (29 May 2008: “Funai fotografa índios isolados na fronteira do Brasil com o Peru” (National Indigenous Peoples Foundation, the government agency for “protection and education of indigenous peoples”).)


6/22/2008

Northland Clearance

Is this for real? I’m sure I’ve got a drunkenly written film script sitting around somewhere that involves Mal Brough being presented, via Keith Windschuttle, with a medal from a society of the same name.

I couldn’t have scripted for this, though, so it must be true.  See you all outside COAG next month.

6/21/2008

Names and dates and times

I received the email below today which is funny for all sorts of reasons, not least that I had intended to go here today to protest the Mexican Government’s recent attacks on Zapatista territory; this also being the day that these protests were held.

Fri, 20 Jun 2008 16:49:52 -0600
From: Australian_Embassy_Mexico_City@dfat.gov.au
To: Undisclosed Recipients
Reply-to: embaustmex@yahoo.com.mx
Subject: AUSTRALIAN FEDERAL ELECTION - 24 NOVEMBER 2007 [SEC=UNCLASSIFIED] (more…)

6/9/2008

Continuous, contiguous markings

Filed under: national security, border policing, white life — ana @ 3:28 pm

Images on the front cover of Managing the Border: Immigration Compliance, DIMIA 2004-5:

1. Part of Harvey’s Isles, Queensland, 1802
2. Cape Jervis looking from Kangaroo Island, South Australia, 1802
3. Entrance of Port Phillip Bay, Victoria, 1802
4. North side of Cape Bowen, Queensland, 1802
5. Cape Schanck, Victoria, 1802

“William Westall was born in Hertford, England on 20 October 1781. In 1801 he was chosen by Sir Joseph Banks as the artist aboard Matthew Flinders’ Investigator expedition to explore the coastline of New Holland. His works chart the progress of Flinders’ circumnavigation of Australia from King George’s Sound in Western Australia, across the Great Australian Bight and on to Port Jackson and the Gulf of Carpentaria. He is best remembered as the first professional artist to depict the Australian landscape as well as Aboriginal Art. His works, 160 of which are held by the National Library of Australia, are considered of a very high standard. William Westall died in 1850, aged 68, while working on a painting of his shipwreck experience on the Porpoise.”

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