Monthly Archives: December 2008

Blogging/IT

Apologies for absence

If you visited in the past day or so, you may not have found me here – that was because my host blocked the site for exceeding CPU usage limits. But I do have to give Bluehost full marks for explaining to me that what I had to do was repair my PHP databases – which I’ve now done, and after another call I’ve been reactivated. (No, I don’t really understand that second sentence, but I can follow simple instructions…)

Books Environmental politics Women's history

Two novels of climate change

I’ve read two great novels of the Age of Mutually Assured Destruction. There was Neville Shute’s On the Beach, which I consumed in a single sitting as a terrified 12-year-old with the old “torch under the blankets when I was supposed to be asleep”, finishing at about 4am, when the Australian suburbs were deathly, terrifyingly quietly. John Wyndham’s The Day of the Triffids I read about the same time, but what I remember was being shown the film at school. In retrospect it was a laughably amateurish piece of you-can-see-the-strings Fifties sci-fi, but being film-naive I found it terrifying.

Neither of these tales is, perhaps, great literature, but they deserve, I would argue, the label of great for their ability to capture the fears of an age in a manner that spoke to the common man, woman and child.

So what will be the “great” books of the Age of Climate Change? Its too early to tell for sure, of course, but I’ve been reading two of the serious candidates: Cormac McCarthy’s The Road, and Sarah Hall’s The Carhullan Army.

And oddly, they can be seen in parallel with the earlier world destruction novels. The Road is the story of a man and a boy alone in this hostile, dangerous environment raw in every tooth and claw, as Wyndham follows a couple through a similar collapsed world. The Carhullan Army meanwhile is a “community” novel; as Shute followed an Australia left alone and isolated as the last continent waiting for the wave of radiation to reach it, so Hall follows a feminist commune that’s trying to stand up alone against a desperate Britain reduced to something like 1984 without oil and with climate turbulence.

That is not to say that in style these two novels have much in common. “Spare” is the adjective that attaches itself irresistibly to The Road, (winner of the 2007 Pullitzer) and it is a text with serious literary pretentions, beautifully structured in illustrative flashback, its characters speaking in elaborately simple monosyllables, as one well might at the end of the world.

The Carhullen Army is a more traditionally structured novel, with traces of thriller in its largely linear structure. It is also an explicitly feminist novel, which means you can pretty well rule out any major popular success, but it might perhaps one day be a manifesto, an inspiration, for a holdout of a route on the way to McCarthy’s absolute hell.

In another way these novels too run in structural parallel – McCarthy posits one sudden, overwhelming disaster, never explained, in the old tradition of the nuclear novel. Hall more closely follows the path down to near-destruction that a scientist today might well posit.

Their purposes are also different: McCarthy is painting a picture, making a psychological exploration – there is a kind of hope here, but it is very much placed in the interior of the human race. Hall by contrast is intensely political – her hope lies in the creation of a new, separatist feminist structure, in which every participant has been wiped clean by past suffering and is starting again in what is still a highly realistic society for an age that has lost hope in utopia.

Yet despite their differences, these are two novels that we need as a world to read — as we will need many more: for while scientists can tell us and tell us the dangers, we live in the West in a world that believes in continuity, safety, certainty, its people incapable of imagining themselves as desperate refugees. That this is a real danger is something novelists are uniquely equipped to bring home to us, as these two novels, in their own powerful ways, certainly do.

Feminism

I couldn’t put it better

“A young girl was raped not long ago while doing her paper round. In the news report, the police officer in charge stated: ‘This young woman’s life has been ruined.’ A rape counsellor was quoted and used exactly the same words…
My thought is this: if the act of rape is an expression of a need for power, wouldn’t that man — or any potential rapist — reading the report, receive confirmation that he has succeeded in what he has set out to do?… those most concerned for the victim seem, in a dreadful paradox, to be colluding in fulfilling his fantasies. And to what extent are we inadvertantly disempowering the child (and the rest of the female population) when we tell her that what has befallen her is irreparable? Every act of physical violence will have traumatic effects but what do we mean when we tell a young woman that her sense of self-worth can be destroyed by an act of enforced penetration? Are we really meaning to say that a woman’s central identity resides in her genitals?”
From Don’t by Jenny Diski, Granta, 1998, p. 137

Blogging/IT

Good news and practical links

I should be leafletting, but am hoping the rain will stop, so instead, a short miscellany.

Good news:

Okay, it isn’t exactly earthshattering, but it is always nice to see barriers falling: the first women riders have been admitted to the Spanish riding school in Vienna.

But this, perhaps, is a big deal: union members in a small manufacturing plant in America, seeing the writing on the wall, staged a sit-in when told the entire plant staff was to lose their jobs – and secured the statutory payoff.

And worth pointing to, the Living Streets Campaign, which aims to make our thoroughfares more walkable and inviting.

On the tips on tricks side:

Live Christmas trees have to be by far the best option, but not everyone has the outside place to leave them growing year-round. I’m reliably informed that in London if you email waywardplants AT gmail DOT com they’ll arrange to pick it up and plant it on vacant land. Part, I think of the guerrilla gardening movement, which has a website, although it is a bit on the discursive side…

And some practical advice on managing your washing machine with those reusable washballs.

Finally, a mad week, so only now catching up with the Britblog roundup. Chameleon swore this time it would be short, but I’d recommend making a cuppa before you click…

Environmental politics

Hee, hee, hee

Isn’t it lovely, she says, in disgruntled-of-Tumbridge-Wells voice, to see the youth of today taking on the sensible advice of the government.

So when Edward Milliband says people power is vital to climate deal within hours the youth are out taking direct action to close Stansted airport

Politics Women's history

Miscellaneous reading

First some fun – the archaeologists are checking out the Greenham Women’s Camp… “helped to rediscover a forgotten outpost of the protest. This was the previously unrecorded Emerald Gate camp, where a few women directly monitored Gama – the Ground-launched missiles Alert and Maintenance Area – the other side of the base’s famous fence. The carefully hidden nook, with fragments of “bender” shelters and a fire pit, are compared in the survey to a long tradition of spying points in communities studied by archaeologists.”

And scientists, after poo-pooing it for years – have rediscovered something about dogs any owner could have told them – they feel jealousy. “Psychologists previously believed most animals lack the “sense of self” needed to experience so-called secondary emotions such as jealousy, embarrassment, empathy or guilt. These emotions are more complex than feelings associated with instant reaction – such as anger, lust or joy.” One more claim for primate exceptionalism falls…

Then the “why am I not surprised” category – pigs in Ireland at the centre of the current food scare were fed waste bread still in its plastic bags. Which can’t have been healthy for them… (although if the dioxins actually come from the plastic – well hope you’ve been easting home-baked bread!) A “return to organics” anyone?

And a sad tale of the individual pain (and probably cross-generation health damage) caused by the huge leap in unemployment in the US. Of course in America, with your job comes your health care – and maternity care. So one mother had her labour induced early in time to still be covered – but it all went medically wrong, and the insurance company says it won’t pay anyway. A great example of how the American medical system warps care.

But good news from Manchester, where the local community is fiercely resisting the intrusion of that system and its corporations into the NHS. (As indeed, I’m pleased to say, the community in Camden.)