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   Author  Thread: Clive's Cultural Amnesia.  (Read 136738 times)
Kevin Cryan
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Posts: 1144
Re: Clive's Cultural Amnesia.
« Reply #180: 17.08.08 at 12:33 »
Quote

In today’s edition of Sunday Times (South Africa) the cultural commentator, Bongani Madondo, clearly a great admirer of Clive’s writing, forgetting that he’s correctly identified Cultural Amnesia as “a biography of the writer’s own reading experience through an examination of the writers, thinkers, poets, politicians and comedians he has read and watched over the last 40 years” laments the fact that “ book’s heroes are almost all white, Western, mostly male, which is sad and ironic, considering that James, like Evelyn Waugh, George Orwell and his contemporary, VS Naipaul, is one of the most well- travelled authors you’ll find this side of National Geographic.”
 
Although Madondo immediately recognises the absurdity of the position he has just taken, he, for some unfathomable reason, can’t quite bring himself to say so in his column.
 
The only black names are those he believes validate his elitist view of the parallels between jazz and elevated taste.
 
There’s also almost no discernible attempt to deal with India (apart, of course, from the token essay on Nirad Chaudhuri), South America or any other Third World country.
 
Let’s just assume it’s not racism, that a man who writes with such aching clarity and feeling can’t be racist. Let’s just assume James’s primary focus is writing about his childhood heroes.
 
Or let’s just assume that the thrill is gone, baby — that both continents are not worth the effort it takes to cut down precious trees and, besides, why waste the ink? Or let’s just say: Clive James doesn’t give a f**k about Africa.”

 
Kevin Cryan
 
Forgetting Africa by Bongani Madondo
    https://peteatkin.com/forum?board=Words&action=display&num=1172831592&start=180#180   copy 
Bogus Trumper
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Posts: 284
Re: Clive's Cultural Amnesia.
« Reply #181: 17.08.08 at 22:25 »
Quote

Looking at the recent post list, I am begining to think we should rename the forum the "Clive James Forum"
 
Cheesy
    https://peteatkin.com/forum?board=Words&action=display&num=1172831592&start=181#181   copy 

And so goodbye, my lady of a night
Anne H
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Posts: 26
Re: Clive's Cultural Amnesia.
« Reply #182: 17.08.08 at 22:49 »
Quote

That's true Bogus Trumper.  Let's get back to talking a bit more about Pete (wish someone would give him some kind of award!) Clive's words are wonderful, but the music is pretty brilliant too.
    https://peteatkin.com/forum?board=Words&action=display&num=1172831592&start=182#182   copy 
Anne H
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**


I love Midnight Voices!



Posts: 26
Re: Clive's Cultural Amnesia.
« Reply #183: 21.08.08 at 19:57 »
Quote

To reply to Kevin's last message - sorry if the thread was cut off somewhat.
 
My thoughts on reading the South African cultural commentator's review was that poor Clive was damned if he did, damned if he didn't .  If he had included anything about Africa it would have probably have been dismissed as "token"!
 
"Cultural Amnesia" is definitely going on my wish-list.
 
Anne
    https://peteatkin.com/forum?board=Words&action=display&num=1172831592&start=183#183   copy 
Rob Spence
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Re: Clive's Cultural Amnesia.
« Reply #184: 29.08.08 at 10:22 »
Quote

Clive has a review in the current TLS of Joseph Horovitz's Artists in Exile, which covers some of the same ground as Cultural Amnesia, in that it is about the impact of refugees from Europe on the performing arts, particularly cinema in America. Worth a look. Go to
http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/the_tls/article4618457.ece
    https://peteatkin.com/forum?board=Words&action=display&num=1172831592&start=184#184   copy 
Jan
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Posts: 312
Re: Clive's Cultural Amnesia.
« Reply #185: 16.09.08 at 21:24 »
Quote

on 17.08.08 at 22:25, BogusTrumper wrote:
Looking at the recent post list, I am begining to think we should rename the forum the "Clive James Forum"
 
Cheesy

 
I know this is going back a bit but I'm really missing the stuff about Clive and after all a section of the forum is called:
 
Words
Clive James, his lyrics and other writings

 
Please could someone give an update on Clive's doings? I know its cheeky to ask, but could Kevin post a weekly link to his blog if there's some new material on Mr James?
Clive does seem to have been pretty busy in Australia over the last few weeks, there's been at least one good interview, a collection of his writings... and isn't there a poetry book due in the near future?
 
CJ's work has stimulated some interesting discussion on MV in the past and it would be a shame to lose that aspect of the forum.
 
Jan
    https://peteatkin.com/forum?board=Words&action=display&num=1172831592&start=185#185   copy 
Bogus Trumper
MV Fellow
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You alone will be my last adventure



Posts: 284
Re: Clive's Cultural Amnesia.
« Reply #186: 17.09.08 at 17:45 »
Quote

on 16.09.08 at 21:24, Jan wrote:

 
I know this is going back a bit but I'm really missing the stuff about Clive and after all a section of the forum is called:
 
Words
Clive James, his lyrics and other writings

 
Please could someone give an update on Clive's doings? I know its cheeky to ask, but could Kevin post a weekly link to his blog if there's some new material on Mr James?
Clive does seem to have been pretty busy in Australia over the last few weeks, there's been at least one good interview, a collection of his writings... and isn't there a poetry book due in the near future?
 
CJ's work has stimulated some interesting discussion on MV in the past and it would be a shame to lose that aspect of the forum.
 
Jan
 I  have absolutely no objection to CJ threads and posts!  Smiley  It was just that we seemed to have stopped having any PA threads and posts for a while!
    https://peteatkin.com/forum?board=Words&action=display&num=1172831592&start=186#186   copy 

And so goodbye, my lady of a night
John N L Morrison
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Posts: 35
Re: Clive's Cultural Amnesia.
« Reply #187: 22.09.08 at 21:46 »
Quote

on 17.08.08 at 12:33, Kevin Cryan wrote:
In today’s edition of Sunday Times (South Africa) the cultural commentator, Bongani Madondo, clearly a great admirer of Clive’s writing, forgetting that he’s correctly identified Cultural Amnesia as “a biography of the writer’s own reading experience through an examination of the writers, thinkers, poets, politicians and comedians he has read and watched over the last 40 years” laments the fact that “ book’s heroes are almost all white, Western, mostly male, which is sad and ironic, considering that James, like Evelyn Waugh, George Orwell and his contemporary, VS Naipaul, is one of the most well- travelled authors you’ll find this side of National Geographic.”
 
Although Madondo immediately recognises the absurdity of the position he has just taken, he, for some unfathomable reason, can’t quite bring himself to say so in his column.
 
The only black names are those he believes validate his elitist view of the parallels between jazz and elevated taste.
 
There’s also almost no discernible attempt to deal with India (apart, of course, from the token essay on Nirad Chaudhuri), South America or any other Third World country.
 
Let’s just assume it’s not racism, that a man who writes with such aching clarity and feeling can’t be racist. Let’s just assume James’s primary focus is writing about his childhood heroes.
 
Or let’s just assume that the thrill is gone, baby — that both continents are not worth the effort it takes to cut down precious trees and, besides, why waste the ink? Or let’s just say: Clive James doesn’t give a f**k about Africa.”

 
Kevin Cryan
 
Forgetting Africa by Bongani Madondo

 
Was given "Cultural Amnesia" for Xmas. Ploughed happily through it for several months, struggling hard to keep head above water. Was amazed at his cultural range - how many creators/critics are so at ease with so many modern european writers? And in the original languages?
 
And some are now griping that he doesn't encompass all the world's cultures?
 
C'mon, guys - let's get serious. He does what he does better than most/any of his generation - don't expect him to be a modern incarnation of 16th century savants who could encompass all of human civilisation.  
 
And as for that Pete Atkin.....  Well, love him to bits, but his best stuff was in the '70s. His restatements of the canon are spotty - some an improvement, but others made me dive back to the originals. Still, I'll forgive him much for his efforts over the years  (not sure about the Shrinks though, even if they do have my money). Will give them another go in the car on the way to a conference in The Hague on Thursday.
 
So, horses for courses and let's not be too judgemental.....
 
John
    https://peteatkin.com/forum?board=Words&action=display&num=1172831592&start=187#187   copy 

John N L Morrison
Kevin Cryan
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I love Midnight Voices!



Posts: 1144
Re: Clive's Cultural Amnesia.
« Reply #188: 14.12.10 at 13:31 »
Quote

Heda Margolius Kovály (née Bloch 15 September 1919 – 5 December 2010)
 
The Czechoslovakian writer Heda Margolius Kovály, who died of the 5th of December and whose obituary, written by her son, Ivan Margolius, appears in today's edition of The Guardian, was much admired for her account of life under the Nazis and Communist regimes, Prague Farewell.
 
Possibly better known, and up until recently more readily avaliable to, English readers under the Under A Cruel Star: A Life in Prague 1941-1968, this book has had its admirers ever since it was first published, with some influential critics suggesting that it's a classic which ranks alongside works of Primo Levi as as an account of the war and its aftermath.  
 
Clive James devotes a section of  Cultural Amnesia (2007), to Kovály and draws his  readers' attention to her "psychological penetration and terse style". Of the book itself he says:
 
 
Quote:
Given 30 seconds to recommend a single book that might start a serious student on the hard road to understanding the political tragedies of the 20th century, I would choose this one."

 

 
RIP

 
Kevin Cryan
    https://peteatkin.com/forum?board=Words&action=display&num=1172831592&start=188#188   copy 
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