Monthly Archives: May 2006

Environmental politics

People just not getting it…

The people of  it’s-the-suburbs-really-but-let’s-pretend-it-is-the-countryside Thaxted, Essex, put out on average the most carbon dioxide per household of any area in the UK.

The average household in leafy, tidy Uttlesford spews 8,092kg of carbon dioxide each year, more than double the comparatively clean, green dwellings of Camden in London, which on average produce just 3,255kg of CO2.

…Each year the average home here produces CO2 emissions equivalent to taking a Boeing 747 to Australia and back.

… “There’s all these huge pads out in the sticks where they leave their lights on all night and their big tellies on. That’s where it’s happening,” said Joe Hobbs, an architect.

The story goes on to say that those who have tried to do the right thing in terms of installing solar and wind power have run into problems with conservation and planning rules. The area obviously just doesn’t get it; all those lovely twisted old wood-framed buildings with thatched roofs won’t survive long underwater.

Then, you do have to feel sorry for this guy:

AN AIRLINE has apologised to a teacher after a short flight home to Manchester from France took more than 30 hours on a zigzagging journey on two aircraft, two coaches and a taxi, passing through five airports in three countries.

But then again, he was travelling from Angers, in the Loire Valley. It probably would have taken two hours on the train to Paris (if that) and three hours on Eurostar – and he would have been home probably quicker than the plane, even had things gone according to plan. And with far lower carbon emmissions. As a teacher, he should know better.

Finally, Australia has been hit by “drought” again. I put the word in quote marks, because when I studied agricultural science many years ago, I was told the definition of drought is exceptional weather conditions. Yet large parts of Australia are, according to farmers and officials, in “drought” for much of the time.

In fact, they are in denial about the actual normal (and quite possibly likely to get drier with global warming) climate of Australia. They’re trying to grow crops and run animals – at least the wrong sort of animals – in places where more often than not they’ll be in trouble.

Unfortunately I haven’t got a copy of it, but I once wrote an article interviewing an academic who maintained the only sensible form of “farming” across a majority of Australia was running kangaroos – leave the native pastures to maintain their own natural balance, let the roos have the run of the place (they have soft feet, not the hard hooves of the non-native ungulates, which chop up the soil and cause erosion), and harvest them once a year.

Blogging/IT History

What is the internet for?

writing-deskThere are many answers to that question, but one of the best ones is: for people to selflessly share their time and enthusiasms
to the benefits of others. At least that’s the conclusion to be drawn from Liam’s Pictures from Old Books, a site boasting 1040 images on the general theme of books and reading, nearly all in the public domain.

Go on, you know you were thinking about jazzing up your blog or website. (I’ve just done the front page of Blogcritics Books, and it is going to save me a fortune, since my previous plan for its images was buying old postcards on eBay.)

Books Women's history

A chronicler for Zenobia

Zenobia, who from her desert stronghold in Palmyra challenged and held out against the might of the Roman empire, is one of the great queens of history. Yet the fact that she was on the side of “East” rather than “West”, that she was female, that her “country” no longer exists means she’s not received the attention she deserved.

It was Antonia Fraser in The Warrior Queens who first brought her to attention of English-speaking readers, but surprisingly little has been written on her since then. A search of Amazon reveals no more than half a dozen significant factual and fictional treatments. So, having visited Palmyra and soaked up its glorious atmosphere, I was delighted to sit down with Judith Weingarten’s The Rebel Queen, billed as Volume One of “The Chronicle of Zenobia”.

The author is a veteran archaeologist, with many professional publications to her credit, and the depth of her knowledge is clear from the early pages of the book, as we meet its central character, Simon, a Jewish boy who will grow up to serve the young king Odenathus, who married the young Zenobia in the multicultural city. Odenathus was bred to rule in the caravan city that is part of the Roman empire, but not subject to it, bred to be a warrior in an unstable border region facing the threat of the Persians.

Weingarten writes as one intimately familiar with the cities of the eastern empire that she’s describing:

The little town of Nazala … had an ornate caravanserai with a fine facing of polished stone, and its entrance blocks were carved with whorls of plant tendreal… A busy market with shops and stalls ran around all four sides … Covered booths sold rolls of gaily-dyed cloths and embroidered belts, or tiny glass bottles filled with magic waves of coloured liquids that never mixed .. We stayed that night … stuffing ourselves on pickled fish flavoured with sesame oil and harlic, skewered goat’s meat and a special smoked dumpling that was only made in Nazala.”

read more »

Arts History

I’m sitting on my urge to scoff

The Guardian reports:

The British Museum has become the first national museum in the world to throw open its doors to a television gameshow. Codex, due next winter on Channel 4, is filmed in the galleries and Great Court, with a code-breaking finale in the Round Room, the former British Library reading room where Karl Marx and George Bernard Shaw pored over their papers.Already TV companies and museums around the world are watching with interest. The executive producer of the series, Roy Ackerman, said yesterday: “Our dream is to move on to conquer the Louvre, the Cairo museum, the Smithsonian.”

Well … whatever gets in new visitors – particularly of the non-traditional sort. And it does sound like there is some sort of intellectual content.

Can you hear me convincing myself?

Environmental politics Miscellaneous

Shopping at the “low” and “high” ends

I was in my local Londis (corner store chain) last week (it has a half-way decent range of organics, extremely rare in a corner store), when I noticed some peanut cookies, definitely not organic but in the cheap and hopelessly morish class.

But they were 99p each; I used to get three for a pound of exactly the same thing from the Leather Lane street market. So I left them on the shelf.

But I was reminded of this by a report in the Independent today.

Local street markets generate twice as many jobs as big supermarkets and sell goods at half the price of the supposedly cut-price retail giants, research shows.

Planning decisions that favour the building of huge outlets over established smaller markets could result in fewer jobs and less choice for local communities, a report by the think-tank the New Economics Foundation (NEF) warned.

Leather Lane thrives because it gets lots of office workers, but the markets in this part of Camden (Chalton and Plender Streets) are struggling, and further north the council has been trying to move them out altogether to use the sites for, you guessed it, luxury flats. What is needed is some lateral thinking to mix the traditional cheapie traders with more of the organic, “farmers’ market” type, I’d suggest. Oh, and make sure you genuinely block off the traffic – not done in either Chalton or Plender streets.

Moving to the other end of the market, found intriguing a story in the Telegraph about bespoke tailored bras.

‘Women who come to me think there is something wrong with them. “I have to talk to you,” they say. “I’m not normal,” and they are 36B. 36B is normal – it is the bra that isn’t normal! ‘Bras are the most difficult item of clothing to make,’ she continues. ‘More than shoes, more than hats. But the manufacturers don’t respect the bra. They make something only to cover the nipple. Our business is to support the bust. It’s not just to cover it.’ According to Poupie, the worst offenders are ‘seamless bras in elastic or stretchy fabrics – the women who wear these bras today are my customers of tomorrow! Stretchy straps are bad, too.’

Food for thought there…

Women's history

Violette Szabo: Hero

Photo-0128 Deserving its own post from the visit to the Brookwood Cemetery was the story of one outstanding women: Violette Szabo, a Second World War British agent and recipient of the George Cross. (Which was received by her four-year-old daughter from the King after the war.) Violette was captured and tortured by the Germans (but didn’t betray her comrades), and finally killed in a concentration camp as Allied troops approached. Consequently there is no grave here, but her name is recorded on the memorial for those without graves, pictured left, under the entry below, for the “Women’s Transport Service”.

szabo
Her story was told in the 1958 movie Carve Her Name With Pride, there’s a museum devoted to her in Herefordshire and a walking trail.She had been a hairdresser’s assistant in Woolworths, so the Special Operations Executive had problems taking her seriously when she volunteered for duty in France (being half-French herself) after her husband was killed at El Alamein. Class AND gender issues there.