Stronger Loving World

A Cultural Criticism WeblogE-Mail Murdervision

Wednesday, July 30, 2003

Nobody go to see Veronica Guerin. Shit is whacker than ten thousand baseball bats against a a really thick treetrunk

Sunday, July 27, 2003

I just got back from Galway. The Arts Festival was going on, so there were lots of plays and hippies lining the streets. But man, those are some pretty hippies you've got there, Galway. We took a ferry to a small island called Inish Moor, then rented bicycles and rode them along the edges of the island-the most scenic fucking bikeride that you will ever take. At the top of Dun Aengus, a cliff with a 70 foot drop, charging sigils and trying to remember memory patterns in stone. Learning to breathe. Finding, killing, gutting and eating God. Statues of Celtic Gods on the roads, with crucifixion statues down a little bit longer. And yes-there were pretty white ponies. I wanted to whip out a gameboy and start playing ms.pacman, it was that beautiful.

I'd write more extensively but I just got back a few hours ago and about 10,000 ideas for a column that I want to write next semester, if I find the time, have been running through my head. It's hypbole and reductio ad absurdum, really fun caricatures of post-whatever the fuck culture codes. I want it to be headscratchingly weird and very funny. I've been thinking of either calling it "Pirate Logic" or "Up Yer Dad". Up Yer Dad was the first thing that came to mind-it's a great sounding name for a column, I think. Anyway, it's almost 11 and I have to run out and get some drinks before the pubs close.

Fuck off.

Tuesday, July 22, 2003

For anyone who'd like to see more of where I stomp about, here is the website of a club that I am going to tonight:

www.rira.ie

RiRa is close to Trinity, right off Dame Street, and it plays what a cute Irish told me would be "good hip hop". By day it's a bar called The Globe, which is actually right around the corner. Guinness is around 3.50 and the people aren't loud and poorly dressed. I'll probably hit up RiRa a few more times, but for now the "let's find which bars are hip" phase has to have let off, and poor bald Roshan is realizing how little of Dublin he's seen. So tomorrow I'm going to actually take the bus with all the punks and the plebians and the seedy eyed foreigners and look me fer some nature. Dublin's a coastal city, there's no reason not to have seen some beaches by now. Even though I don't like beaches, it's probably a whole fucking lot better than this congested town.

It's actually surprising how many pictures I have not taken since I've arrived here. I'll try to take my camera (which I broke, by the way. The lense cracked off, though I can still take pictures. It's just...got no lense.) Hopefully I will be tossing some pictures up here soon. Er. Than late.er.

Going to Galway this weekend. Galway is another coastal city but in Western Ireland but with more pastoral areas for me to look at. I want to see a pretty pretty white pony.

Monday, July 21, 2003

Who the fuck cares where Raed is?:Roshan Blogs From The Heart Sinews of Post-Fabulism

I've got a few papers to write tonight, so right now I'm going to actually be dripping the text into the modem after having pureed it with my electrosexual blender. The one that keeps winking at me! It's e-culture so fast, so self-indulgent and so poorly editted that it goes through 15 minutes of fame in a record 1/8 nanoseconds and wakes up fast enough after the tumor shocks have set in to see its own body lying in bed and picking its nose.

If I've e-mailed you up until this point, I've probably given you a few main outlines regarding Dublin's "cultural life". You know it's old and that it's filled with dead people, and you might even know that it's severely cosmopolitan but only kind of metropolitan. I've been told by several people that Dublin is "turning into another Paris or London." It seems to be mimicking the ascent into global tourism of its European big brothers, and whatever resentment of cultural gentrification this might entail is only half hearted as the economy is improving. Typical of this is the infamous Temple Bar District, which was a popular local hotspot that the government decided could be franchised for tourists. The locals were evicted and relocated, many of them minorities, the homeless shooed away and then this part of Dublin really did become a "Disneyland of Bars". It's a similar story as Central Park, which served its 150th anniversary the other day-the Park was home to minorities and lower class occupants who were callously evicted. While I am greatful that Central Park exists and it does sometimes live up to its namesake as the "lungs of New York", I fail to see what Temple Bar "means" in the long run.

Everything is within walking distance, the busses run pretty often, many churches are pretty to look at. But you can't throw a rock in this city without hitting an American or a tourist. Actually, I wonder if you're even allowed to throw rocks in this city. This weekend I'll be going to Galway, a more rural area in Western Ireland that will in all likelihood feature thicker accents and girls with even more messed up teeth. I'll probably have a few commentaries up on Dublin nightlife in the next few weeks. (But I'm keeping the funny drinking stories to myself for now.)Part of what's been propelling Dublin's economy is that its still in its own little technology bubble, though it's been a more gradual economic massage than the boom and bust we witnessed in the states. I'm trying to write one of my papers on Dublin's technology economy and to a lesser extent its technology culture.


Psst: I'm still looking for an apartment, preferably Brooklyn based when I get home this summer. I'd like to have someplace to hang my head in September so if any one is coming across anything feel free to throw an e-mail my way: Churchoftheblues@hotmail.com.

I haven't really tried to figure out if I can post pictures here, but to those of you who've bloggered: how do I do that? I guess I can figure it out later.

feet in the air,
Roshan


Friday, July 18, 2003

As is the probably the obvious thing to do when travelling to a city a lot older and prettier than the city one lives in, I've suddenly become aware of this phenomenon called "architecture". I haven't paid much attention to it in the past, though it's clearly a significant part our conceptual landcapes. ("conceptual landscapes" has GOT to be the wrong term there-I sound like I'm describing an assignment to art school students) I'm not really aware of any particular "great works" of writing about architecture. I really like Tom Wolfe's From Bauhaus To Our House, but that's more of a distinctly Wolfe-ian critique; stylistic, flamboyant, overeducated and overopinionated. Of course, that is why I like it. But that's the type of writing that reveals more about the Subject of criticism than the Object, if it can be said that that is not already true for all social criticism. It's also not widely accepted by architects, to say the least. (They think it's total shit-talking, to say a little more.) There's also Richard Humphrey's "The Shock of The New" which is significantly influential from my understanding. It's also the prototypical "text without a medium",a book that was crafted as a possible television series and thus cuts around its own textual corners, and a television series that is editted significantly from its print source. The whole project lingers awkwardly between mediums, a fact that would either make Marshall Mcluhan break into spontaneous orgasm or throw up into a gunney sack. So if any of you reading this know good books about architecture, let me know! You know where to find me.

The Berkeley Library here on Trinity's campus is really quite wonderful. I am going to go there right now.

neener neener neener,
Roshan

Tuesday, July 15, 2003

Well, here we all are.

Ireland, “our neighbors to north by northeast give or take” and I bid you fond salutations with pepper spray Guinness that smells like blood that smells like gunnies slack toothed broads with freckles on their freckles and dirty old men licking their lips as the last sight of the night is rashed knuckles braced violently against nasal cartilage and of course “miles of piss poor bars at hideous post-globalization post-inflationary prices and never, yet never never enough to kill yerself, just focken kill yerself oh god where’s my arms I can’t feel my arms just let me lie here why do the best whores always smell like grenade smoke?.” As I believe Stephen Dedalus says towards the more futurePunk chapters of Ulysses. Actually, I’m not reading Ulysses, but I was thinking recently about Robert Anton Wilson deciding that Ulysses, along with Gravity’s Rainbow represents something like third or eighth level consciousness expansion. “Writing a three dimensional novel after Ulysses is like using the horse and buggy after the jetplane was invented.” That guy’s crazy!

Trinity

Look at me! I’ve been put up in Trinity College, a walled in community in Dublin’s Central City area. Ostensibly, Trinity is historically significant, modern, and traditional at once,(good luck with that) But even the teeming eight year old Italian tourists can see that Trinity’s immediate landscape speaks more for the luster of Dublin’s culture industry than any philosophical or literary coordinates it trumps with busts and alms, statues of tribute to long disinterested icons of Western Europe.. It’s the heart of a tourist engine, Dublin, that’s been growing exponentially since the late 90’s, fueled by silicon valley breast implants and surrounded on all sides by the Dead, who seem to embody and merchandize the mythology and financing that is Dublin. Much of what your eye lays down upon is grafted in delicate, creamy eyed clays of Victorian and Elizabethan architecture, culled into existence during a cultural and economic high mark in the 18th century. Buildings around campus are named for the authors that keep those international kids with the big pockets coming year after year. There is of course, the James Joyce Centre, an respectably sized building given that its namesake never attended school at Trinity, but rather Trinity’s rivals, the decidedly Catholic University College at Dublin. Then there’s the Jonathan Swift theatre, the Oscar Wilde dressing room, Samuel Butler Yeats cascade, Flan O’Brien latrine, Seamus Heaney broomcloset, oh it goes on.
If there’s anything confusing about Trinity’s projected cultural orientation, and there is, it’s evident in the plaza that I’m sitting in. To my left is the South Library, which houses a 16th century gospel called the Book of Kells. Trinity’s oldest and dearest text, the Book of Kells is indicated on all sides of Trinity by informational brochures and signs. It’s also a reasonable source of revenue for the school, boasting an 8 euro admission to see its turquoise ink under plate glass. A distraction: I’m so attracted to the language used to describe the ink that Irish Monks used to compose the document, and I don’t know why. The historical notations are a blur relaying the same old Protestant/Catholic angst an American might be flushed with when reading European history, but a close reading of the book’s composition is as poetic and intimate and disturbed as this gallery is going to make me feel. We read about blues that were made from crushed lapis lazuli imported from Arabia, gums and rubbers mixed into make the residue adhesive, sticky and permanent. African insects, brought in by the thousands, crushed into fine powder and mixed with turquoise, adhere, affix, agglomerate, stick, residue, endless poetic names for organic combinations and applications. It sticks to my phonemes like glycogen and smells in my language of gum and acids and reminds me of the mystical orientation of ancient writers, the genuine spiritual valence of the instrument, the poetry that is embedded in the “magic” of a physical process as well as the romanticized imaginative process we are so familiar with.
Needless to say, the Book of Kells has no real utility. It doesn’t burst into flames. It doesn’t see through time. You can’t even touch the damned thing, it’s under glass so thick it’s fireproof signal proof bullet proof and GRENADE PROOF. (I’m not kidding.) Unlike other impressive sacred documents, the Book of Kells fails to implode and transform into a beam of light upon physical contact. Unlike the Book of the Darkhold, muttering Latinate invocations to long dead dark priests does not set the surrounding area into flames or transform the caretakers into melting drooling venomous multi-porous zombies. Although interestingly, Michael Drosnin, infamous author of that new age pseudo scientific tome “The Bible Code” was said to have applied his neo-arcanic computational formula to the ancient pages of the Kells. After months of tedious examination with high powered microscopes and mathematical programs Drosnin revealed an implicit pattern running its way through the text, obviously embedded as a warning by the Druidic Sacristans who inscribed the book- that's right, the words “tourist trap” had been criss-crossed and indexed on every single page! Creeeeepy. There are higher powers at work, girls and boys, and they want you to keep your wallet clenched to the insides of your side pockets at all times and keep walking for fuck’s sake.
The sides of the schools are houses, numbered one through 40 where I am pimped up in a splendidly sized (by new york standards) 17th century room. Other buildings have housed Samuel Beckett, Bram Stoker, and others. But the Joycean theme that wrings across Trinity is probably emblematic of Dublin’s culture industry as a whole- although it’s a nationalism, an imaginary celebration that is paraded around. No narratives about death and paralysis, no formalistic multi perspective rooms, no longing for a total representation, a finite language to explain infinity. There is no Modernism here; just its heads, rolled out in concrete and transformed alchemically into dollar bills. Er, I mean pounds. Er, I mean Euro. Holy union-ization batman!
To the right is the Conference Center, built in the mid sixties and modeled conceptually after the Hanging Gardens of Babylon. The building is notable of course for its total lack of resemblance to the Hanging Gardens of Babylon. In this respect, it fits comfortably in the pantheon of landmarks that in no way resemble the Hanging Gardens of Babylon; such as the Sears Tower, the Colossus of Rhodes, The Baxter Building, my toothbrush, and the Hanging Gardens themselves, so rusted and hewn and decapitated by bombs and Iraqi children’s bitemarks that it in no way resembles the lost paradise that it now only signifies with old, chastened ham-fisted fingers. This is distinct, or exceptionally indistinct postmodern architecture, in all its obnoxious splendor. Windows protrude at angles, slanted, confronting the body of the building from the outside. A patio melts in from the outside and covers the entrance, as well as houses the gate onto Nassau Street. Nothing seems to fit, nothing admits to the body’s sense of “self”. The outside gives way to the inside. There are no moments of architectural rupture from a preceding cultural moment-it is an (imagined) worldview of buildings with no context, buildings that are their own reference, with no points for the eyes to lay down upon and explore. In its desire to be invisible and indistinct, it sticks out like a sore thumb. It gives me nothing, and content with the present, I receive nothing, blushing and smiling girlishly. Oh, for me! Needless to say, the thing is hideous and stupid.
I am sitting in the middle of this architectural trinity,surrounded by buildings that seem to signify eras troubled enough by their own internal contradictions, but now fighting for the eyesight of the shapeless gestalt of international students walking in and out through the front gates of Trinity. I am, of course, sifting through the J.Crew catalogue and attempting to decide what color underwear is going to be the most suitable for the coming Fall season in New York-will the boxer-briefs triumph over the dying arc of the naïve, rough and tumble boxer-which by its name seems to embody a lost spirit of competition? Will the length and shape of crotch room expand, giving us breath, comfort and a deceiving sense of space, or contrast a neo-conservativism of the cremaster region? It’s enough to bring me to tears, and I bend over dramatically with my face in my hands underneath a statue of Leopold Bloom.


The whores are gorgeous

As I believe was the downfall of the Garden of Eden, when Eve bartered Adam for a lay with that glistening cum soaked apple (apricot) all those many (5,000 if you’re a pre-enlightenment theologian or a Biblical literalist, but who’s counting.) and so let that old medieval legend of the apple of Sodom what turns into smoke and dust at the touch of flesh, decadent in every English scent of the word, come into play-so’s Dublin’s take on the original sin as cupid-eyed doughy faced girls with freckles fresh out the mother’s teet stand on the streets and lay their pants down under their blankets gangly eyed nervous looking back and forth as the drunk Europeans walk by Dame Street clubbed out in white shirts and leather shaking their change and she’s got wonderful red hair and stained black jeans. I read an article in the Irish Examiner about the lack of Garda (five oh) on the streets of Dublin. It’s their absence as well as their..let’s say, unprofessionalism, that turns these decidedly open and maneuverable streets into jungles at night. There are no prominent cultural markers on the girl; she’s not sloppily dressed or mishandled, she’s not “damaged goods”. Not to the eye, at least. She’s just small, with a genuinely charming mink face and fallow eye sockets, and she’s cold and she’s penniless.


Roshan Abraham, in conversation, once famously called Dublin a “Disneyland of Bars”, and the name has stuck to this day.

Saturday, July 05, 2003

More detailed commentary soon, but a few points.

1. I'm fine, really.

2. Does anyone know how much I would have to drink to actually drink myself to death? I was just wondering.

3. That's it. E-mail me:Churchoftheblues@hotmail.com. I'll write back despite being incredibly famous and busy.

Thursday, July 03, 2003

So clearly this weblog is rather unappetizing for the eyes, unless you are an accountant or colorblind sloth. You're all welcome to e-mail me and tell me how to make it more pretty looking, or at least less like a tax form.

For those of you keeping track of my whereabouts(and who isn't in these days of 24-hour Roshan surveillance and Roshan Reality TV and the Roshan Network and what not ) my flight leaves JFK at 6:30 PM and after reading comic books and listening to glitch hop for 6 hours and 30 minutes I will arrive in Dublin. I haven't travelled overseas in quite a few years and am rather afraid of things exploding and what not. But hopefully nothing will explode until after I arrive there and am properly armed. Lately I've been fond of derringers and small butterfly knives with Japanese flowers embroidered on the sides but I am beginning to warm up to larger weapons, though nothing above a .22 caliber or 5" blade I assure you. Although those enormous machine guns that they put on robot's arms in Japanese cartoons are incredible! I would be thrilled to be blasted out of the sky by gigantic animated arms and demand no less when my time comes.

Currently I am drinking terrible coffee, trying to finish packing and being nervous as all ungodly fuck. I should have bought more comic books and magazines. Or Derek Jarman's Jubilee to watch on the flight.

agent no.9 invoking Ganesha for safe passage and protection,

Roshan

p.s. everyone visualize me being safe today. It'll be fun!