Category Archives: Arts

Arts Books Theatre

Notes from Women in International and Universal Exhibitions, 1876-1937

p. 17 Women’s work did not necessarily gain visibility from fair to fair, nor did greater gender equity necessarily follow from feminist interventions within fairs. Our volume does show, however, that women’s presence at fairs were potentially transformative experiences, professionally and personally, individually and collectively… fairs opened opportunities for women that neither historians of womenand gender nor specialists of fairs have yet explored systemically ..the volume suggests the potential to focus on women offer the development of international, global or transnational perspectives within the field of exposition studies. And it suggests the need to include within such persepctives the experience and actions of all categories of women .. Unlike many studies, this volume has not much focused on consumption of phantasmagoria. Rather we sought to bring to light women as actors, producing goods and measuring the degree of their advancement. … And there is undoubtedly much work that could be done on the cultural effects of women’s spectators’ faze… Women, like men, experienced the fairs sensually and evocatively.”

Which also took me to the fascinating character of Maude Adams. A $150,000 statue of her in gold – typifying “The American Girl” was to be shown at the Paris Exposition, but was rejected.

Books Politics

Notes from Mariana Mazzucato’s Mission Economy

p. xi “In the UK, the government outsourced health contracts worth £9/2bn in 2018 alone. Over 84% of care home beds are in privately owned homes, and 50,000 are in homes run by private equity companies..The total value of the public health grant in the UK – which enables local authorities to provide vital health care and preventative services – has been declining in real terms, from £4 billion in 2015-6 to £3.2 bn in 2020/1.”

p. 11 “Between 1995 and 2013, real median wgaes in the OECD countries grew at an annual average rate of 0.8% versus 1.5% growth in labour productivity.”

p. 16 “Fire (finance, investment, real estate) is burning the foundation on which economic growth rests. In the USA and the UK only about a fifth of finance goes into the productive economy… 10% of all UK bank lending helps non-financial firms; the rest supports real estate and financial assets. In 1970 real estate lending constituted about 35% of all beank lending in advanced economies; by 2007 the figure had risen to about 60%. .. fuels a debt-driven system and speculative bubbles which, when they burst, bring banks and others begging for government bailouts. … if they failed, the entire system would come crashing down with them. So the banks got the bailouts: FIRE profits are private; FIRE losses are public. … Business itself has become financialised. … within non-finance sectors, financial activities and their accompanying attitudes have come to dominate business. An ever greater share of corporate profits have been used to boost sort-term gains in stock prices rather than provide long-term investment in areas like new capital equipment, R&D and worker training”

p. 34 if a government dares do anything ambitious, it risks being accused of crowding out private investment… Lurking deeper is the familiar conviction that only the private sector creates calue and – by extension – that government investment may destroy it. … Government investment often has the opposite effect. When structured strategically it can crowd in private investment, stimulating funding that might not have happened otherwise and expanding national outpur, which benefits public and private investors alike…. Relatively small government stakes in Airbus have helped build the world’s biggest aircrat comapny, with operations and suppliers across Europe. The history of technological breakthroughs shows that public investment, particularly when made early in the innovation process, absorbs major uncertainties and long-term risks that private investors can be reluctant to take on.”

p. 38 New Public Management “NPM led to proposals to a) privatise publicly owned companies b) decentralise and/or break up big public organisations and c) introduce metrics such as performance pay. One way to reduce the risk of government ‘doing harm’ was to outsource and privatise public services. In theory, outsourcing and privatisation would ameliorate the principal-agent problem in the relationship between government and xitiens, save money and improve services. The practice turned out to be quite different… accompanied by centralisation of the state machine, for example by weakening the pwoer of local government over housing.. Between 1980 and 1996 the UK accounted for 40% of the total value of all assets privatised acorss the OECD.”

p. 39 In total, there have been over 700 projects financed through PFI in the UK since 1998, with a capital value of around £60 billion. Under the current paymnet arrangements, these will cost the public purse a cumulative total of nearly £310 billion by 2047-8 – more than five times the original capital outlay. The UK’s National Audit Office estimates the cost of a PFI project is typically 40% higher than an identical project financed by government borrowing.”

p. 42 “Carillon’s failure led to accusations by Blackrock, the giant fund managed that was one of the company’sinvestors, that the company thought about ‘how to renumerate executives rather than what was actually going on in the business’. The institute for Government said the government had created a “corporate monster” with “low-margin, high-risk” projects – an endemic weakness of the outsourcing model of procurement, particularly for longterm projects, where contractors are tempted to underbid to increase market share and hope they can increase their margins as the prject progresses.”

p. 46 In 1970 the public sector employed 47% of arhcitects in the UK, mostly with local authorities. Today it is less than 1%. This partly reflects the sharp fall in the provision of new public housing by local authorities but it is also consistent with the outsourcing trend across government.”

p. 55 Warren Buffett once said – quite rightly – that “society is responsible for a very signfiicant percentage of what I’ve earned”.

p. 109 SDGs “the perfect starting point for considering the challenges that missions might address…. engage diverse stakeholders across the world. The idneitfy internationally agreed grand challenges that have been chosen by broad and comprehensive consultation around the world. They offer huge opporuntities to direct innovation at multiple social and technological problems to create societies that are just, inclusive and sustainable.”

p. 123 “DArPA took enormous risks in funding the invention of the internet – and it did so with a problem in mind: so that satellites could communicate. Similarly, the US Navy funded the invetion of GPS in an effort to target missiles better… recently funded two pharmaceutical companies, Merderna Inc and Inovio Pharmaceutical Inc to create RNA and DNA vaccines – technologies that many scientists and inevtors considered speculative and high-risk.”

p. 163 “When they built the cathedrals that are among Europe’s most magnificent cultural achievements, the medieval master builders took chances that would drive a modern architect out of business. Nobody knew how much it would cost to build a cathedral or how long it would take. But these were missions with a purpose – to demonstrate the glory of God through creativity – and they brought together many different sectors of society: clergy, craftsmen, nobles, rulers and ordinary people.”

p. 169 “the ancient Greeks used the term ‘idiotes’ to debote those who did not operate in the public sphere; to put it harshly, if you were only concerned with the private sector, you were an idiot.So if you were a wealthy Athenian and you didn’t want to be seen as an idiot, you funded public arts like threate festivals (as told by Xenophon, perhaps the first economist, in Hiero. Later the ancient Romans spoke of the ‘pro bono publico’, based on ethical considerations of working for the common good, not the pursuit a profit”.

p. 182 Alan Greenspan 2005 “There is nothing to prevent the government from creating as much money as it wants and paying it to somebody. The question is, how do you set up a system which ensures the real assets are created which those benefits are employed to purcahse… It’s a question of the structure of a financial system which assured that the real reosources are created.”… in other words, the key question is whether the economy has the productive capacity to make good use of the money that is created and placed in private hands.”

p. 183 economists such as Stephanie Kelton, who belong to the economic school called modern money theory (MMT), have been trying to get gvoernments to realise that the idea they have to come up with money before they spend it is reverse logical In reality, spending itself creates money.”

p. 184 “If the government spends £10 and taxes £4m, it can be said to be in deficit by £6. But that £6 is also in the hands of people and businesses… The other side of a government deficit is a private surplus. In other words, the government’s and private sector’s balance sheets must be mirror images of each other,, a government surplus ‘sucks’ pounds off balance sheets. A sustained fiscal surplus means constant sucking, which means that he private sector is losing financial assets, as maturing bonds are not reissued. Thus, fiscal surpluses weaken private-sector balance sheets.”

p. 185 “What happens to the money government is spending when it gets into private hands. Much of it is invested in government bonds… the lynchpin of the financial system and the core of many portfolios: pensioners, who complain about government profligacy are probabli living off income partly derived from government bonds. The national debt, which so exercises many politicians and citizens, is actually the historical accumulation of money spent by government, not taxed back, and now a privately held asset. Government red ink equals private sector black ink.”

p. 199 The Philosopher Hannah Arendt developed the concept of the common good and public value – into an active participatory one with her concept of viva activa. Her idea was that citizens should engage in public affairs, as this is the only way to escape totalitarianism and alienationin mass-production capitalism: here the idea of commmon good is relctec in the idea of an active citizen … also means the need for society to be open to real debate, the contestation of ideas and explicit conflicts over values… Participation is not a silent, harmonious process.”

p. 205 “Capitalist markets are an outcome of how each actor in the system is organised and governed, and how the different actors relate to one another.. No particular kind of market behaviour is inevitable. For example, the market pressure often cited as forcing a business to neglect the long term in favour of the short term, as too many companies do today, is the product of a particualr organisation of the market. Nor is there anything inevitable in government bureaucracies being too slow to react to challenges such as digital platforms and climate change. Rather, both are outcomes of agency, actions and governance structures that are chosen inside organisations, as well as the legal and institutional relationships between them, as well as the legal and institutional relationships between them”.

Books Environmental politics History Podcasts Politics

Podcast: Floating Coast

The history of the ecology of the Bering Coast might sound like a bit of an obscure subject, but this podcast brought it alive.

An interview with  Bathsheba Demuth, the academic author of the title of that name, is a fascinating listen.

What really struck with me is the way in which whaling was one more great extraction of resources – energy – from the periphery to the political centres of the colonial era. How much a whale is in practical terms a huge store of energy – all harvested up from the krill that teems so richly in particularly polar regions. On a smaller scale tundra lichen fed caribou, the riches from which were also transported to political centres.

Memorable phrase – “all conversion is a loss.”

The book also very well regarded in this New York Times review.

Books History Politics

Podcast: The Jakarta Method

To quote from the blurb:  “In The Jakarta Method: Washington’s Anticommunist Crusade & the Mass Murder Program that Shaped Our World (Public Affairs, 2020) journalist Vincent Bevins links the history of the overthrow of Sukarno – a leader of 1960s Third Worldism –, the rise of the Suharto – one of the most brutal and corrupt dictators – , and the slaughter of 500,000 to one million Indonesians allegedly linked to the Indonesian Community Party (the PKI) to the Latin American “dirty wars”, including Brazil, Chile, Argentina, and Central America.”

As someone who managed the Bangkok Post’s coverage of the fall of Suharto, this is all a story that I should have known, yet I confess I knew little of it. That there’s been a huge massacre certainly, but not the US role, or the way that this became a model for so many other US dirty wars to follow.

It can’t but provoke thoughts about alternative histories, how if national aspirations had not been crushed in the service of capitalism, if the world had not been divided into two camps of US and USSR, how we might be in a very different place now.

But, since I’m always looking for the hopeful side, how the ending of US hegemony, a more unstable time, frightening as it can often feel, could allow time for developments of genuine self-determination and democracy, rather than pseudo-democracies and outright dictatorships.

Arts Books History London

Notes from Chaucer: A European Life

p. 27 In 1304 a list of aliens (foreigners) who protected about paying a tax demonstrates that they were living in only eight of the 24 wards. Vintry Ward had the most immigrants, mainly from Gascony, the hub of the wine trade. Adjoining Dowgate was the home of Hermans and people from the Low Countries; those from Spain, Italy and Povence lived in the wards of Cordwainer, Cheap and Langbourn. WHile there are certainly cases where we see Londoners closing ranks against foreigners, we can also find cases in which European immigrants were treated with notable equity. One case, centering around the nonpayment of money owed for wine, which should have been paid on a quay in the Vintry, involved a Gascon merchant and a London apprentice. It went before a jurt deliberately comprised half of Gasons, before doing to the arbitration of four members of the vintners’ guild, and the decision was in favour of the Gascon merchant.

p. 91 Deschamps, a poet whose life and career paralleled Chaucer’s closely …he wrote … on the benefits of sleeping along (he discusses how annoying it is when your co-sleeper takes all the blankets”

p. 96 A great deal of high culture crossed borders with ease: painters and ministrels travelled from court to court, beautiful objects were sold and given within trade networks and beteern allies and spouses, and educated men and women across Europe read much of the same literature and valued the same leisure occupations. At the same time, this was the century of the vernacular, when local languages flourished as the languages of literature, gaining a dominance that they were never to lose. The year 1366.. was the year of the Statutes of Kilkenny, which banned the Anglo-Irish from using the Irish language, playing Irish sports, or intermarrting with Irish women. These statutes were not effective or enforced, but they reveal English political anxiety”

p. 98 Hainault was a county in which is now northern France and Belgium, incorporating the cities of Valenciennes, Mons, Cambrai and Charleroi, an independent feudal state within the Holy Roman Empire… Chaucer numbrered many Hainuyers , including of course his wife’s family, amongst his closest associates, and he certainly read the work of Hainault poets, some of whom he knew personlly. Without Hainault, English political and cultural life in the mid-14th century would have looked very different.”

p. 100 Queen Philippa’s influence on English court culture was wide-ranging. The poets Jean de la Mote and Jean Froissart came to England in her wake. She gave her husband gifts such as a silver cup and ewer decloated with the Worthies, including Charlemagne, Arthur, Roland, oliver, Gawain and Lancelot, and a manuscript that shows evidence of the labour of both English and Hainault text workers… Philippa herself helped to found an Oxford college, and she also commissioned a startlingly unusal tomb sculpture from a Brabancon artists, Jean de Liege, who depickted her in individual and realistic form.”

p. 103 “Paon’s connections with the ruling house of Hainault allowed him to place two of his daughters, Katherine and Philippa, in the households of the queen of England and her daughters-in-law. Katherine de Roet worked for Blanche of Lancaster in the 1360s and was governess to her children by John of Gaunt; in the 137s she was to become John’s mistress, mother of the Beaufort line, and, eventually, duchess of Lancaster. We do not know how Philippa’s career started. She may or may not be the Philippa Pan who appears in Elizabeth de Burgh’s household accounts alongside the teenage Chaucer… but by 12 September 1366, Philippa de Roet had become Philippa Chaucer and is mentioned in the roal accounts as a lady of the queen’s chamber.”

p. 112 In Navarre, Jews were a proinent part of the cultural mix. They lived alongside Muslims and Christinas, in a border country in which groups including Gascons, Basques, Navarro-Aragnese, and Castileans, all mingled. Many Jews worked as moneylenders, but they also did a huge rang eof other jobs: they were silversmiths, embroiderers, vets, doctors, irrigation specialists, grape growers and mill owners. Charles II had a trusted Jewish physician nad his favourite juggler was a Jew… their oaths had full value, and if a Jew went to court, he or she took a Jewish witness and obvserver. Although they also suffered many injustices, such as heavy taxation and sometimes violence, their position was better than it was or had been in most other parts of medieval Europe.”

p. 129 In choosing to write in English, he may have been inspired by Hainuyer poets’ penning poems for the Hainault patroness, and have elected to complement this trend at the English court by writing an English poem for an English prince, about his dead English wife. It might have been a way of marking himself as part of a group of contemporary poets and yet claiming his own ground. .. He chose to write a poem that is in many ways a homage to writers such as Machaut and Froissart, a poem dependant on the forms developed by those poets, positions Chaucer as a participant in a sophisticated and cosmospolitan poetic milieu, not as a combative little Englander”

p. 158 Chaucer’s visit (1372) although we do not know exactly what Chaucer was doing in Glorence, Edward had his fingers in more than one Florentine pie at this particular historical moment. Chauver’s mission was almost certianly financial and involved negotiating with the wealthy merchant companies of the city – companies that were also fundamentally connected with the extraordinary artistic revolution that had taken place in the city earlier in the century. Chauver arrived in Florence at a time of Dante fever, when members of literary, civiv and mercantile circles were likely talking about their new plan to hobour their great vernacular poet… while there is no evidence that Boccaccio and Chaicer met, Chaucer may at this point have encountered some of his poetry, as well as that of Dante.

p. 189 The surviving doccuments tell us fragments of fascinating tales: the collectors’ accounts for 1380-81, for instance,… include payments made by “Affrikano Petro” (African Peter), who was transporting wool on John Double’s ship.”

p. 205 Three years agter he started work at the Customs House, his daughter became a nun at St Helen’s Bishopsgate, a stone’s throw from Chaucers Aldgate apartment, and Elizabeth remained there for four years … thinking about Chaucer’s daughter remins us of the diverse social networks, many of them facilitated by women, in which he was embedded in his London years.”

p. 261 There is a thingly quality to medieval money lacking from our banknotes today. Indeed, thinkers have commented on premodern culture’s different valuation of things in general. Most notably, Bruno Latour argues that the scientific revolution of the 17th century involved an intense focus on dividing subject from object, people from things and nature, as man asserted his (and it was usually his) separation from the matter hthat he tested and upon which he worked. More recently, there has been a reaction against this separation, an acknowledgement that there is a continuum between human and things, and between culture and nature. Labour argues that there are asoects of the premodern mentality that are more in tune with the enmeshing of people and things than the Enlightenment mentality tends to be. He writes about premodern people’s “obsesssive interest in thinking about the production of hybrids of Nature and Society, of things and signs, their certainty that transcendences abound, their capacity for conceiving of past and future in many ways other than progress and decadence, the manipulation of types of nonhumans.”

p. 275 Increasingly, London put on spectacles, pageants, mummings and elaborate gift-giving ceremonyies, often for courtly guests. While there had in the past been formal entries into London, these had not been accompanied by the kind of performative spectacle that now became the norm. Indeed, the last quarter of the 14th century marked the behinning of a steady increase in urban spectacle, as city oligarchies gained in power and status, and cities expressed and formed their identities through cultural display. In 1382, a summer castle was erected in Cheap (probably reused from 1377) and three virgins leaned out of it to scatter leaves; there were also ministrels, elaborated painted ornaments and accessories such as “silverskins”. .. provided work for many skilled craftsmen.”

p. 301 Parliament of Fowls … in this legalistic poem, densely packed with the technical language of law and politics. the word “eleccioun” stands out: this may be the first occasion when this word is used for the formal nomination of a political representative – its primary meaning for us today

p. 305 In the last quarter of the 14th century we see a dramtica increase in the production of ‘newsletters’, ephemeral pamplets circulated for general consumption . For the first time, newsletters were produced about parliaments’ some texts were probably produced by clerks of parliament, some pamphlets may have had their origins in the households of great nobles, who found it worth their while to circulate propoganda…. The public fascination with news – and particularly with Parliament – was a novel development.”

p. 349 IN the middle of the 1380s there were two major sex scandals at court. Elizabeth of Lancaster, Philippa’s younger sister, had been formally betrothed to John Hastings, heir to the earl of Pembroke and several years her junior. In 1385, she was about 21 and he was 13. She embarked on an affair swith Sir John Holland son of Joan of Kent and therefore older half-brother to Richard II) and became pregnant before the summer of 1386. They were hastily married… At the same time Robert de Vere, now at the height of his influence as Ruichard’ intimate friend, was involved in an affair with one of the queen’s ladies, Agnes Lancrona. De Vere was already married to PHilippa de Courcy… De Vere offered a serious insult not only to his wife but also to her uncles when he repudiated her and began lobbying for a divorce; meanwhile, he married Agnes, possibly by force.”

p. 428 “The idea of a centralized nation, with inomportant and backward margins, where power circled only around London and Westminster, would not have made sense to Chaucer. Not only were the regional courts of magnates vital and diverse economic and cultural centres, but the king himselve travelled widely.

p. 461 “This aspect of social positioning is quite different from the emphasis on gentilesse, which becomes so important in the Canterbury Tales. Across several tales, Chaucer makes the point that social orgins, age and gender nare surface attributes, and are irrelevant to true gentilesse.. one of the most significant aspects of Chaucers intellectual development in the Canterbury Tales years.

p. 487 “A poem written around 1400, London Lickpenny, vividly descibes the experience of a countryside dweller arriving in the crowds of Wstminster. The poem is structured around the refrain “For lacke of money, I may not spede”. Immediately at the doors of Westminster Hall are crowds of immigrant Flemings, trying to sell him “felt harts” and “spectacles”; at the gate are the victuallers with food and drink on offer.”

Books History Podcasts Women's history

Podcast: How the case of a six-year-old slave made legal history, and human tragedy

On the New Books Network, The Case of the Slave-Child, Med.

The Boston Female Anti-Slavery Society won her right to freedom in Massachusetts, in a case carefully chosen because previous teen cases had chosen to remain in slavery. And Med was too young to chose.

But Med was placed into an institution, and died two years later. And so it was not the triumphant campaigning story it might have been, so was almost lost to history.

Little is known of Med, her family history or her own thoughts or understanding, but it is still a highly informative tale, and a child’s life that deserves at least to be remembered, even if she probably had scant care in life.