Showing posts with label identity politics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label identity politics. Show all posts

Monday, 23 September 2024

Beyond the Palewall (13)


 That Sinking Feeling
   If you are heading to the capital of Indonesia, don't go to Jakarta which is rapidly sinking. The new capital is Nusantara which is located in the jungle on another island. There are around 30 million people in the Jakarta metropolitan area, so it is pretty heavy. Although the Dutch left in the last century, they will likely be blamed."Why Indonesia Moved Its Capital to a Jungle Hundreds of Miles Away: The New City Nusantara, Comes as Jakarta Continues to Sink at a Record Pace," Bryan Pietsch, Washington Post, Aug. 17, 2024.
  It is not the only city that is sinking and if you plan to move to Miami, pick one of the higher floors in the condo.
"Venice is Sinking. So are Rotterdam, Bangkok and New York: But no place compares to Jakarta, the fastest-sinking megacity on the planet. Over the past 25 years, the hardest-hit areas of Indonesia’s capital have subsided more than 16 feet. The city has until 2030 to figure out a solution, experts say, or it will be too late to hold back the Java Sea."
 "The World’s Fastest-Sinking Megacity Has One Last Chance to Save Itself: Parts of Jakarta are subsiding at unprecedented speed,"  By Sheryl Tian Tong Lee and Grace Sihombing, Bloomberg.com. Dec. 6, 2023.
These stories just arrived: Last week, another house just collapsed in Rodanthe in the Outer Banks, "See the Latest House in This Outer Banks Town to Fall Into the Ocean," The Washington Post, Sept. 20, 2024.
People are still buying condos on the Texas coast, but, "since 2010, Galveston has experienced a burst of sea level rise, which has added a staggering 8 inches to the ocean's height here, according to federal data analyzed by The Post," The Washington Post, Sept. 23, 2024.

The Rich Are Different From Me
   
The rich are buying some items that would not be very valuable to me. Apparently others agree since in this article it is mentioned that "there was zero rationality to the valuations" for "celebrity-adjacent objects." Freddie Mercury's mustache comb went for almost $200,000 at Sotheby's, no less, and 
“In 2015, the cardigan that Kurt [Cobain] wore during Nirvana’s appearance on “MTV Unplugged” sold for $137,000; four years later it went for more than twice than that” (even though it “had a small amount of something brown and crusty, possibly dried vomit, in a pocket.)”
See: "The Place to Buy Kurt Cobain’s Sweater and Truman Capote’s Ashes: As the art market cools, Julien’s Auctions earns millions selling celebrity ephemera—and used its connections to help Kim Kardashian borrow Marilyn Monroe’s J.F.K.-birthday dress," Rachel Monroe, The New Yorker, March 18, 2024.

Current Fiction and "The Piety Problem"
   
I don't read much current fiction, but from the reviews of some of the novels, one gathers that there is considerable pedagogy buried in the prose and that the category in which the author falls is as important as the fiction written. The following is from this interesting piece in the NYT: "An Acerbic Young Writer Takes Aim at the Identity Era: Tony Tulathimutte is a Master Comedian Whose Original and Highly Disturbing New Book Skewers Liberal Pieties," Giles Harvey, Sept. 13, 2024.
   “The years since Donald Trump announced his first presidential bid have hardly been a heyday for American fiction. “Literature is the human activity that takes the fullest and most precise account of variousness, possibility, complexity, and difficulty,” Lionel Trilling wrote in “The Liberal Imagination” (1950), but 75 years later, amid the rise of a homegrown authoritarianism, these qualities can start to look expendable, like mere literary trinkets. At least that’s the sense you get from a recent tranche of worthy social novels, books that may as well come with colorful stickers proclaiming, In these pages we believe Black lives matter, women’s rights are human rights, no human is illegal and so on. Such commitments, however well-intentioned, can sometimes come at the expense of a nuanced moral vision and tend to lead to writing that’s effective neither as politics nor art. “There is definitely a piety problem,” Tulathimutte told me, summing up the state of today's publishing business.”
[If now you are interested, Tulathimutte's new book is Rejection.]

DETECTIVE FICTION - CANCON



   
We often learn about Canadian things from American sources. I learned recently, for example, that a new TV mystery series is soon to launch on an American network. It is based on the work done by Laurali Wright who was born in Saskatchewan and lived and died (2001) in B.C. where the settings often involve the "Sunshine Coast." Canadian lovers of the mystery genre may wish to tune-in and they will likely already know about Ms. Wright and the "Alberg & Cassandra" mystery series. I did not, but found from these sources that more needs to be known about Laurali Wright and it is better to learn from them than me.

Sources:
   
Start with the official web site of L.R. Wright. You will find there a trailer for the new series, "Murder in a Small Town which starts on Sept. 24.
   The Wikipedia entry is interesting and provides other sources: L.R.Wright
   
The Canadian Press did write about the series at the end of last year. See: "Fox Picks Up B.C.-shot Crime Drama: "Murder in a Small Town, For Upcoming Fall Lineup," CBC News, Dec.14, 2023.
   I read about Ms. Wright here:
“Murder in a Small Town” debuts Sept. 24 on Fox (trailer). The mystery series is based on “The Suspect,” an Edgar Award-winning novel by the late Canadian writer Laurali Wright (1939-2001). Rossif Sutherland plays police chief Karl Alberg, and Kristin Kreuk is Cassandra, the town librarian who becomes an integral part of his investigation. If the show catches on, it could run for years; Wright published nine Alberg & Cassandra mysteries." From: "The Book Club Newsletter," Ron Charles, The Washington Post, Sept. 20, 2024.
   The images of the books above are all from Felony & Mayhem, which was started by a woman and deserves a post of its own. 

Post Script:
   
If you wish to borrow rather than buy the books by Ms. Wright, I don't think you will have any luck at the London Public Libraries since I didn't find any, using various search strategies. 
  Oddly enough, the libraries up at Western do have some Wright books, but they are either in storage or in ARCC where they seem to have been acquired as part of the "William French Collection of Canadian Literature."
  I don't think I can be accused of shameless self promotion, since this is buried at the bottom of this post and I have rarely mentioned it before, but a couple of years ago I wrote a book about another Canadian mystery writer who is generally unknown in Canada. Like Ms. Wright, Hulbert Footner, wrote more than detective fiction and should be better known. For about a buck you can read the ebook and for about ten of them you can have the book printed near you and delivered in a few days. Or if you just click on this link, you can read a good summary for free.
Hulbert Footner: Author of Adventure Novels, Detective Novels and Historical Nonfiction...  Or you could borrow a copy from either the London Public Libraries or Western.
Or you could stop by and see me and I will give you one.

Friday, 11 March 2022

A Few More Factlets


Wonder Woman - Factlet (10)

   If you are thinking about working out more (or even some) when the weather gets better, then this brief set of statistics may serve as an incentive. On the other hand, if you are breathing heavily after walking from the couch to the fridge, you might get depressed when reading about this woman for whom a 100-mile run is just a jaunt. She is clearly both finely tuned and named.  The stats are from here: “Woman Ultrarunners Age Like Fine Wine: Camille Herron, 40, Has Set Another World Record,” Victor Mather, New York Times, Feb. 27, 2022. On your ready, get set, go:


She has set multiple world records in open-road races and on tracks, in distances from 50 miles to races that lasted 24 hours. In 2017, she shattered the 100-mile world record by over an hour, finishing in 12 hours 42 minutes 40 seconds…

On Feb. 19, she did it again, breaking her own world record, in 12:41:11, a pace of 7:37 per mile. She also beat all the men in the race, with the first male runner, Arlen Glick, coming in about 30 minutes behind her with a time of 13:10:25.


If you are not yet impressed, she mentions at the end of the article: “I also hold the world record for 24 hours. I ran 167 miles in a day.” (about 270km).


Southern Ontario Real Estate - Factlet (11)



    If the rundown bungalow on your street is being offered for sale under a number in the high six figures, then I suppose it is reasonable to assume that the land upon which it sits is also worth a lot. This is good news for farmers, but rather bad news for those of us who enjoy eating. The raising of rutabagas looks less glamorous when one realizes that the land can produce warehouses more quickly and the yield is far, far more profitable. As I said in my earlier rant, there will soon be nothing but tarmac from Tillsonburg to Tilbury and all of southern Ontario will soon look like Toronto the Carbuncle. Here is the factlet:



"The rush is widespread, involving tens of thousands of acres of land in regions outside the Greater Toronto Area, including the Golden Horseshoe and all the way to Windsor, he adds. “Two years ago, we were talking between $300,000 to $450,000 per acre across Southwestern Ontario. Now it’s $800,000 to $1.5-million per acre."
From: "Commercial Real Estate Sees Record-breaking Canada-wide Land Rush," Wallace Immen, Globe & Mail, March 1, 2022.

If you are concerned about the loss of good agricultural land, there is an election soon. Here is a good resource produced by Environmental Defence Canada. 

WOE CANADA - Factlet (12)

   Given the focus on Identity and Indigeneity this statistic made me wonder if there will be a Canadian identity in the future, or several thousand solitudes not just two.

There are more than 630 First Nation communities in Canada, which represent more than 50 Nations and 50 Indigenous languages.
From: First Nations. 

Post Script:
   For the fine distinction between FACTLETS and FACTOIDS, new readers should see my post about GEE-GEES.