Tuesday, January 29, 2008

sectarianism

dissent magazine, issue 70, winter 2008in the latest issue of dissent (print-only), avishai margalit makes a most intelligent and articulate refutation of the kind of "new atheism" pitched by sam harris. it is not his direct intent, though, which is to explain the dynamics of sectarianism -- a tool that can help us how christian and islamic fundamentalisms alike are dangerous without drawing moral equivalents between the two or throwing the baby of faith out with the bathwater of religion altogether.

sam harris, the end of faithlet me back up by explaining my sense of the critique of belief registered by sam harris (in this book the end of faith). i'm getting this not from the book itself, which i have not finished yet, but from a c-span broadcast of a lecture he gave on his book tour. the argument goes something like this: faith exists completely outside the boundaries and conventions of rational thought, evidence and argument; as such, we treat it in special ways that it does not really deserve, e.g. we tolerate almost anything if it rests on the grounds of faith. this kind of deferential treatment to matters of faith is doing great harm to us as a species and may end up getting all of us killed in the religious wars we are increasingly seeing. and it's not just the extremists who are to blame; people of modest or moderate religious faith are just as much to blame for their toleration of extremists or thinking that extermists can somehow be talked out of their extremism. conflicting religious beliefs can only end in the elimination of opposing dogmas. we should all, for the salvation of the species, simply give up our faiths, which will one day seems as quaint as all primitive deities, a flat earth and a geocentric universe seem now.

avishai margalitmargalit's analysis begins by distinguishing two lenses through which politics can be viewed: market economics, in which infinitely interchangeable commodities only have value in relation to each other and not inherently; and politics, in which sacrifice is more important than satisfaction, and has an overarching sense of what is needed for the collective good and the individual's duty toward that collective good. he continues,
Most of us see both pictures of politics. We have a stereoscopic political perception, recognizing that some aspects of politics are better covered by the first picture, while other aspects are better covered by the second. In a time of war and crisis, the religious picture may have the upper hand in making sense of politics. In a time of business as usual, the economic picture has the upper hand. But there are people who lack stereoscopic vision--the perception of depth that comes from the use of both eyes--and they look at the political world with one eye, and one eye only.
two implict and important critiques of the harris position are already registered. first, a plurality of views is not only needed, but indispensable. one cannot simply jettison faith as a category of experience (which harris probably would not deny) or judgment (which is what i think harris wants to eliminate).

second, faith itself is not the problem; sectarianism is the problem. and it is not exclusive to those of a professed religious belief: mao for example was an atheistic sectarianist who nevertheless clung to his dogma with a religious fervor. margalit is still more precise:
Sectarianism in politics is an extreme case of viewing politics with one eye--the eye of politics as religion. [...] Sectarianism is a mode of operation and a state of mind. The operation is that of splitting the party rather than splitting the difference. The state of mind is that of keeping your principled position uncompromised, come what may.
in short: no compromise of principles, my way or the highway, with us or against us. margalit then proceeds with some additional characterizations of sectarianism.

1) strength in small numbers: sects are not interested in democracy. polls and surveys do not matter, nor does having a sizable numbers in one's ranks. sectarians are an embittered minority and a vanguard. while missionary zeal is not out of the question, it cannot happen at the expense of principles.

2) the difference is everything, no matter how small: to the uninitiated, sectarian principles may be drawn over very faint lines. (what christians can fully explain the historical split between shia and sunni muslims? few i think.) but those differences are indeed the basis for rigorously maintained and defended principles.

3) it's all black and white: otherwise known as manichianism. there are no grey areas. but this can also fuel the siege mentality: there are no trivial contests, every fight is a fight to the death.

4) purity: not just of one's own principles, but the logical contrary which is the complete defilement characterizing opposing principles. any intermingling pollutes and taints that which must be kept pure. as margalit puts it with zizekian aplomb: "Shit is the negation of the pure. The sectarian craves life without shit. Compromise is part and parcel of the shitty world."

the piece goes on to do other things -- distinguish sectarianism from sectorialism, for example, and weight the latter's relation to social democracy -- against the real backdrop of the israeli-palestinian dispute, but i find the above analysis especially useful. margalit's clarity and examples throughout are commendable. contact me if you are interested in reading the entire piece.

Sunday, January 27, 2008

altman's three women

altman's three womeneasily the most interesting american film i've seen in years. incredible that this was a hollywood production. a study in identity merging to rival bergman's personautterly enigmatic and yet captivating from start to finish. of its time and yet speaking well beyond it.

david sterrett's essay for the criterion collection is excellent, giving the historical context and placing the film in altman's oeuvre, as well as suggesting where interpretation might go in what is ultimately an irreducible film. (you may also want to watch once with altman's commentary, as he reveals his own take on the film's famously mysterious closing sequence.)

Friday, January 25, 2008

truth and lies

[...in their nihilo-political sense: a reply to mark's post found here.]

hi mark,

your lead image is particularly timely for me, as today while driving the outskirts of nashville i saw a sign in someone's frontyard that is quite common in those outskirts as i first experienced them months ago: it reads, "eyes on jesus."

now this is of course terrible advice to give someone whose eyes should more properly be on the road. however, if you keep your eyes fixing on jesus (wherever he may be) while you're behind the wheel, you may well see him very soon -- from your vantagepoint inside a totaled automobile!

which is another way to say that if you believe strongly enough your faith will probably be rewarded: He will come to those who believe. (non-believers need not apply.)

which leads me to turn a phrase, a truth if you will, made popular by the seinfeld character george costanza and manifest with a vengeance by this current administration: it's not a lie if you truly believe it. another way of saying it's true if you believe it.

but, says the enlightened liberal humanist, what about facts? yes, there's this whole tricky business about facts. "the left," if it's possible to speak in such terms, has been in the curious position of asserting an antifoundationist epistemology (via foucault, derrida and the like) while at the same time insisting that its politics are born out by the facts (on global warming, evolution, globalization, u.s. foreign policy, etc.). i realize i may very well be talking about two lefts here, one academic and one political; regardless, neither's agenda has been well served.

meanwhile, the right has pulled a very shrewd and efficacious double move: first, it has embraced (or simply mimicked) antifoundational rhetoric when it suits its aims, on global warming and evolution and the like (what are facts and theories? they don't really prove anything, nor do they completely remove all doubt...); second, it has understood the power of the spectacle (again a tool of critique originally devised by the left) and used it to construct a whole series of interconnected myths that many people find compelling. (radical islam has proceeded in this fashion as well.)

in short, while the left was pronouncing the end of grand narratives, the right happily picked up those pieces and ran with them.

you hit the nail on the head, mark, when you write that
If the Left needs to reclaim the power of truth, that’s not because they are necessarily speaking the truth, as indeed they cannot purely be, but because the concept of the truth is a lie so powerful at this time that no one can do without it and succeed.
i'm curious tho how you see the afflicted powers argument comparing or playing out with respect to your claim here; they write that
If the Left is to survive as a political entity, it seems to us that its great (theoretical) task is to think this atavism and new-fangledness together, as interrelated aspects of the world system now emerging." (13-14)
how do they think this through, do you have a sense?

call it what you want: meaning, value, truth, whatever. but whatever it is, it appears to be indispensible. which is why "the new atheism" of hitchens, cockburn and others i think is hopelessly naive. i include the "end of faith" narrative of sam harris as well: people should just stop believing, altogether. yeah, good luck with that, pal.

stephen duncombe puts the problem quite well in his book Dream: Re-imagining Progressive Politics in an Age of Fantasy"
The problem comes down to reality. Progressives believe in it, Bush’s people believe in creating it. The ideological inheritors of the May ’68 protest slogan “Take your desires for reality” are now counseling its reversal: take reality for your desires. Conservatives are the ones proclaiming "I have a dream."
he says if the left is going to make and inroads with its agenda it is going to have to learn and use the power of spectacle. which is an interesting argument in is own right. essentially it's that it doesn't matter if "the facts" are on your side, you've still got to have a myth that resonates with people. and of course that myth should not be a complete lie, but it cannot be complete truth either. it has to be, as you say, a situational or situated truth.

i mean the flat earth and a geocentric universe were situated truths: they worked fine until "better" ones came along. but don't think that people were sold on that "betterness" right away: a lot of bloodshed had to happen first.

as we are seeing now unfortunately. your question "But for what purpose?" points precisely to what nietzsche described with such great accuracy and insight in the notes on european nihilism that were collected in the will to power.
For some time now, our whole European culture has been moving as toward a catastrophe, with a tortured tension that is growing from decade to decade: restlessly, violently, headlong, like a river that wants to reach the end, that no longer reflects, that is afraid to reflect. (3)
the upshot of this, though, has to be positive, as deleuze maintains for example (whereas debord and his spectacle remain at the level of passive nihilism as i read him). nietzsche again:
For why has the advent of nihilism become necessary? Because the values we have had hitherto thus draw their final consequence; because nihilism represents the ultimate logical conclusio of our great values and ideals--because we must experience nihilism before we can find out what value these "values" really had.--We require, sometimes, new values. (4)

Thursday, January 24, 2008

Global Music Archive

from the vanderbilt news service:
Three years ago, Vanderbilt University ethnomusicologist Greg Barz realized that American popular culture was sweeping Africa and could very well threaten centuries-old musical traditions.

He traveled to Uganda and Kenya to begin archiving music and performances before they disappeared forever. Barz’s pilot program set the foundation for The Digital Collection of East African Recordings and helped launch the creation of the Global Music Archive at Vanderbilt University.

The Digital Collection of East African Recordings, the first database in a series of databases in the Global Music Archive, is the largest streaming audio archive of East African music. It consists of more than 2,000 musical performances, most of which were recorded in the field by East African musician Centurio Balikoowa. In addition to its size, the archive is unique in that the artists provide written consent, allowing Vanderbilt the freedom to license and share the music with the world via the Internet.
read the full story here. the global music archives is here. the files stream in real audio and are searchable by artist/group, region, district, language, ethnic group and musical instrument.

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

campaign 2008

Fred thompsonin the spirit of true schadenfreude, nothing gives me greater satisfaction than this. once touted by some as the true conservative that would fulfill all the GOP's hopes and dreams, thompson has fallen flat on his face. could it be that true conservativism has been flatly rejected by the electorate and has no future in this country?

Fred thompsonon the other side, the clinton-obama squabbles should be seen as productive, toughening up the candidates for what they will inevitably face from the GOP smear squad in the general election. already several weeks ago though, patricia williams made in the nation the first published expression of my long-held sentiment:
It is my audacious little hope that the two of them, in whatever order, will become running mates by November.
read her full piece, one of the smartest i've read on the campaign so far, here.

Saturday, January 19, 2008

the other oil shock

Rising prices for cooking oil are forcing residents of Asia’s largest slum, in Mumbai, India, to ration every drop. Bakeries in the United States are fretting over higher shortening costs. And here in Malaysia, brand-new factories built to convert vegetable oil into diesel sit idle, their owners unable to afford the raw material.

This is the other oil shock. From India to Indiana, shortages and soaring prices for palm oil, soybean oil and many other types of vegetable oils are the latest, most striking example of a developing global problem: costly food.
so writes keith bradsher in this morning's nytimes, in what appears to be the first in a series "the food chain: the high cost of eating." stay tuned...

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

bad economic news

citigroup logos
Citigroup, the nation’s largest bank, reported a staggering fourth-quarter loss of $9.83 billion on Tuesday and issued a sobering forecast that the housing market and the broader economy still had not bottomed out.
i'm sorry, did the nytimes say 9.83 billion dollars? in a single quarter? this does not bode well, friends, not at all. this morning's story continues:
More bad news is coming, with Merrill Lynch expected to report sizable losses this week and major financial institutions like Bank of America retreating from their investment banking business.[...] "It looks like the financial sector as a whole will see a big decline in profits, and the only time this happened in the last 100 years — financial firms’ going from making good profits to negative profits — was the Depression in the 1930s," said Richard Sylla, a professor of financial history at New York University.
lest this all seem to abstract, let's not forget the folks who are immediately losing or have recently lost their jobs with citi: "the bank said it would also lay off another 4,000 workers, on top of announced reductions of 17,000 employees."

Monday, January 14, 2008

recent reads

"God is in the details. But there are no details anymore." -- Donald Fagen of Steely Dan on current music production techniques geared towards an MP3-consuming audience. Quote in Robert Levine's "The Death of High Fidelity," in this month's Rolling Stone.

"As we cast our eye over the sheer effulgence of American food, there appears to be no limit to the type and number of food products for those who are motivated by taste, environmental concern, animal welfare, political correctness, or simple virtue." Mark Winne shows the class contours of fight for food in this country: alternet.org runs an excerpt from his new book Closing the Food Gap: Resetting the Table in the Land of Plenty. Fortunately he offers answers beyond his indictments.

Saturday, January 12, 2008

Joglars at Google Books

cover of joglars 1.2, winter 1964i've stumbled upon a strange discovery. google books seems to have made available the 1974 arno reprint of JOGLARS, the little magazine edited by clark coolidge and michael palmer (1963-1966) -- though it has misidentified it as "American foreign policy currents documents 1963" published by ayer in 1971. (this information itself is incorrect: arno did a reprint of something called "american foreign policy, vol. 1" in 1971.)

the link is here.

naturally some of the pages are not viewable and i've not gone through the whole thing closely. but there's still a lot of great stuff that is viewable.

i wonder if there is any way to correct the misinformation on this item or how else it might be put to better use. please circulate this to whomever you feel might be interested, and i welcome any suggestions you or others might have.

Sunday, January 06, 2008

henri chopin (1922-2008)

bio and links at erratum
sound at ubu
commentary by pierre joris
recordings at forced exposure
films at WFMU
wikipedia entry

Thursday, January 03, 2008

upcoming airtime

WRVU logoi'm scheduled to be on the air a fair bit during the upcoming week, before the students all return for the new semester and the station gets its spring schedule set. please note the times given are central standard time:

  • thurs jan 3, 3-4pm
  • fri jan 4, 3-5pm
  • sun jan 6, 4-6pm
  • tues jan 8, 4-6pm
  • thurs jan 10, 4-6pm
go to http://wrvu.org/ and click on "listen to WRVU"
or go directly to http://wrvu.org/sounds/wrvu.ram

it streams in realaudio format.

i'll be playing indie rock mostly -- unless something else strikes my fancy. (sunday will probably be some free jazz.)