Review: 1984 : Ο μεγάλος αδελφός

1984 : Ο μεγάλος αδελφός
1984 : Ο μεγάλος αδελφός by George Orwell

My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Under the spreading chestnut tree
I sold you and you sold me
There lie they, and here lie we
Under the spreading chestnut tree

I always loved how, in the book, pop prolefeed songs are manufactured by computers; no human creativity is needed. I involuntarily recall this tidbit whenever I listen to the newest radio hit these days.

I originally read Nineteen Eighty-Four (the original title, though understandably usually shortened to 1984) in Greek a few years back. 10 days or so ago I felt a need to return to it in English and did so in audio book format, read by Simon Prebble.

They say that Brave New World describes our world much better than 1984 does, that the blissful ignorance is much more prominent in our society than 1984’s “boot stamping the human face”. I’ve always held at heart that our own dystopia in the making is the neat blend of the two: the blissfully ignorant sex, drugs and genetically determined human strata, go hand in hand with a government that is in love with power and has merely chosen this more subdued but no less effective way to prolong its ever-lasting dominion.

In this world, wars never end; the enemy is unbeatable and ever-present. Bombs go off randomly every now and again just to allow your mind to come in terms with this fact. Telescreens follow the population everywhere. Nowadays people even take little telescreens with them and have feelings of withdrawal if they are ever separated from them. Those who control the present control the past, and those who do so, do it very, very well. So well, in fact, that public opinion can be swayed one way or another in a matter of weeks or even days — so little do people actually remember, so easily do they forget. Relativism is used as the end-all be-all argument to support that might is right following sickening twists of logic: that there is no nature “out there”, thus truth is dictated by the government and the government only. A similar argument hides behind the saying “who wants to ban fascist groups is against freedom of speech and a fascist themselves!” The encouragement of doublethink, of which the above is but an example, ultimately has people holding two contradicting beliefs at the same time: “I’m not a racist, but everybody knows that our race is more advanced” or “war is peace, freedom is slavery, ignorance is strength”. In a similar vain, the government body that is responsible for hitting people and quenching peaceful protests is named “Ministry of Citizen Protection” and the one which makes sure that everyone starves is called “Ministry of Development”, releasing false figures to mask the facts and manipulate the masses. They are allowed to do so; there are no real laws, since the judiciary body is also controlled by the government. What about the proles where the hope for revolution lies? They’re either too busy surviving to actually think for themselves or they’re blindly consuming the “prolefeed” the party is providing them with, including of course their own propaganda.

…oh, sorry about that. I got carried away there and started describing our own living, breathing 2012.

This is definitely one of the masterpieces of the 20th century and is one of absolute favourites. It stands as a beaming symbol of the totalitarian societies of the past and of political oppression, violence, propaganda, hunger for power etc. Orwell’s vision was so ironically vivid, realistic and reverberated with so many that his name has even come through this book to stand for a whole arrangement of things that smack of real-world totalitarianism. Even if he did write it for a different world than what exists more than half a century later, it’s evident that when it comes to human societies, old loves die hard; whether it is totalitarian socialism/communism or hardcore neo-liberal capitalism, it makes little difference. The essence, displays Orwell masterfully, remains the same. Reading 1984, especially for a second time, I got the same feeling Winston, the protagonist, gets from reading a certain book in the book itself: that he had always known about these things and that he was grateful that he had found someone who could articulate them for him.

Parts of 1984 are extreme, I’ll admit. Part Three is a punch in the gut every time. I just wanted to lie in a fetal position in the corner of my room after first reading it. It is that hopeless, that horrible. I can’t believe that states like Oceania et al. could be set up and maintain themselves on force, pain and hatred alone; call it conscience, call it a belief that people are basically good, I just can’t see such a place existing. It’s too evil to exist! That said, I can’t think of a way that such a regime, if already having been set up properly, could fall, either. Not to mention that in many ways, our own world and reality is full of unnecessary evil. Who’s to say if it’s within the bounds of possibility for the next logical step in this progression of evil and imbalance to be taken?

This nightmarish inevitability hidden within, the terror of the idea that if someone really wanted to create IngSoc and Oceania, they could, is what plays with my mind and I believe with every reader’s mind. We might, like Winston, think that such a world is just a work of dystopian fantasy; if we look around us carefully, we just might realise that the absoluteness of the pain, the torture and the future being described as “a boot stamping on a human face forever” might not be such absurd ideas after all.

The owner of the boot is creating his shoelaces made of hatred and fear as we speak. What if we could create our own artificial shortage of shoelaces?

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Two foreign documentaries on immigration in Greece

How much further? from matthias wiessler on Vimeo.

Just click on the link above to watch it, don’t be deterred by the large “Sorry”.

Dublin’s Trap: another side of the Greek crisis from Bryan Carter on Vimeo.

You should definitely watch these two films if you want to see the human side of the immigration problem and get another perspective than the dominant racist, xenophobic, simplistic and short-sighted ideology and rhetoric.

Immigrants are streaming into Greece looking for a better future, abandoning their own countries because it is impossible for them to live in them anymore — a decision many Greeks, young as well as old, are too considering at this moment. It is not Greece they are after specifically, it’s the European dream. Much to their dismay, Greece not only proves not to be much of a hospitable place at all (hello, Χρυση Αυγή), it actually forbids immigrants to leave for other EU countries and in may cases go back to where they came from; this is in accordance with the Dublin II regulation which states that individual member countries are responsible for examining applications for asyllum by immigrants. This of course puts Greece in a dire situation compared to, say, Germany or Denmark, since of course it’s situated at the very borders of the EU and has to take care of countless more people.

Wouldn’t it be great if in a spirit of solidarity every member state had to take care of its fair share of the immigrants that land in the union’s borders? Now there are 4, maybe 5 countries that take in the most people. This sum divided by 27 would make things much more manageable. But is manageabality the desrired outcome? Is solidarity a desired stance? Apparently not.

Bottom line: it’s not the immigrants’ problem — we live in a globalised environment and no-one can control or pretend to limit the movements of entire populations: it’s the official European migration policies that smell of foul injustice and Greece’s willingness to follow them. Of course it would: these policies are perfect for creating collective scapegoats; scapegoats it has conveniently found in the faces of the hundreds of thousands of immigrants.

At this point in time, with Greeks deep in economical, political and ontological crisis, politicians knee-deep in shit but still doing their best to bring the country to an even lower point for their own questionable boals, and Europe having targeted the PIGS as responsible for a systemic problem, BOTH the Greek status quo and the European elites benefit from creating a targeted, marginalised, unsustainable immigrant influx. If you have lots of immigrants, impoverished and humiliated on a daily basis, you have the perfect mix for crime and insecurity to rise which in turn breed hatred within the resident population; just the right conditions for people to avoid seeing the real problems and point fingers away from the real culprits. It’s a win-win situation for all but the citizens and the immigrants themselves of course.

As long as Greeks point their little fingers to the immigrants, conveniently blame them for everything and anything, claiming back the moral and racial superiority which were the only contributors to the self-respect which was robbed from them, and avoid looking at the reality which has been put in place by the government and the EU, the problem will only get worse. As long as Greece itself happily remains a scapegoat for all of the EU’s planned and structured abnormalities and injustices, there won’t be a solution. In fact, you should keep in mind that some “solutions” to problems are designed precisely in order to not end but prolong or even intensify the problem they’re supposed to rectify.

Unless, of course, we get the SURPRISE! Mihaloliakos so chillingly promises us in the second video were he ever to come to power (skip to 48:50). This was before Golden Dawn became a parliamentary party, mind you. Before a lot of the disgusting developments of recent months.

 

Everybody’s Free (To Wear Sunscreen)

Do one thing everyday that scares you
Sing
Don’t be reckless with other people’s hearts,
don’t put up with people who are reckless with yours.
Floss
Don’t waste your time on jealousy;
sometimes you’re ahead, sometimes you’re behind…
the race is long, and in the end, it’s only with yourself.
Remember the compliments you receive, forget the insults;
if you succeed in doing this, tell me how.


But trust me on the sunscreen.

Reminds me of 30×30…

Julien Smith

Turns out the guy who wrote The Flinch is keeping a blog. His favourite topics include –you guessed it– personal development, self-help and tips for helping others make their life into what they could only ever dream it to be. Beware; just like he demonstrates in The Flinch, this guy pulls back no punches. He’s ready to kick your ass into action and force you into some serious introspection. No wonder he’s buddy-buddy with The Minimalists. Put a couple of hours aside and check out his selection of best articles, which includes such inspiring articles as “The Complete Guide to Not Giving a Fuck“, “How to Recognize an Idiot” and “Life Doesn’t Start Tomorrow“. I can guarrantee you won’t regret it.

Not to mention he has a crazy cool website. Oops, just mentioned it.

 

Polyamory

Only You. And You. And You. (link to article)

So, apparently, having more than a single partner is a real thing. I’m all up for being with many people at once if everyone involved is cool with it (which is, understandably, a rare occurrence); however, having everyone meeting up and living under the same roof is to my eyes another matter entirely! It would multiply the difficulty level by a factor of ten! Whatever, if they can work it out, I guess there’s still hope in the world that people can look at love and relationships a little bit differently.

Instruments of Robot Repair FTW!

No idea what the concept is (apart from “let’s sample aaaall of our musical instruments in a single montage — how neat!”), but I still like it! It’s addictive, actually.

While we’re at it… (no, I haven’t completed Portal 2’s co-op yet*hi-fives Mordread*… still addicted to this track from the OST though!)

Review: In Watermelon Sugar

In Watermelon Sugar
In Watermelon Sugar by Richard Brautigan

My rating: 2 of 5 stars

In Watermelon Sugar is one of those books which you kind of get the charm of but simply can’t like. It’s tiny, with a chapter for every one or two pages, and is very easy to read, yet it took me some six months to finish. I see here on Goodreads I’m in the minority but I can easily see why someone could be taken with its simple prose, dreamy lack of narrative and the accordingly floaty characters who always live for the moment, nurtured in a unique, post-modernist culture.

I could find very little pleasure in this book. It’s not just that it’s so much stuck in the era it was written in; I got sick of trouts and that watermelon sugar stuff of which apparently everything is made in that peculiar world. The easy-going style I found pretentious and forced. What I found the most annoying though were the characters: they were wafer-thin, completely naive and perfectly interchangeable. Again, perhaps, that’s what’s made this book so famous and loved by so many. Obviously, I beg to differ.

I must admit it, though: the idea of having a sun the colour of which changes every day, and when it’s black the world has an extended night with no stars and everything is completely silent, tickles my Extraverted Intuition.

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Another Blue Moon

Remember the last blue moon? Woo boy, wasn’t that a special period?

Well, this time the blue moon just happened to be in August. Everyone started going bananas over how that one was going to be this August’s large moon, nevermind all the talk over whether it would actually be blue or not.

Just to make things clear at this point: August full moons aren’t larger than the rest of the year’s full moons, contrary to the widely believed fact (no less by yours truly until fairly recently) — the proximity cycle doesn’t coincide with the luminosity/phase cycle. In fact, it was only this May that the full moon happened to be the same day as that month’s perigee. Anyway, I digress.

Museums and archaeological sites were open for the night, couples everywhere were enjoying their romantic night out, people were outside cherishing their last days of summer wondering what was so special about this moon in particular.

In another realm, a digital one, the Scythian discovered the five sylvan sprites, fought with the Bright Moon Trigon, jammed along with Jim Guthrie, all the while feeling a hand guiding her actions. A hand belonging to a person who hadn’t had a gaming experience so moving and intense in quite some time.

If you ask me years from now what I was doing on this day of the blue moon, I’ll probably remember the Scythian’s adventures in the world of Superbrothers: Sword & Sworcery EP under the bright moon of ambiguous actuality.

I find that this experience speaks tons about how much and how quickly our digital and our physical lives have already blended… and beyond a shadow of doubt will continue to do so to spectacular, terrible, unimaginable levels.

Spoilers ahead:

Jamming with Jim Guthrie, the game’s composer:

Battling the unimaginable geometry of the Bright Moon Trigon: