Archive for the ‘politics’ Category

Hollywood powerhouse plays diplomat

Sunday, April 15th, 2007

Maybe La-la-land isn’t such a souless place.

Steven Spielberg jumped into action after Mia Farrow wrote an open letter to the Wall Street Journal comparing Spielberg’s’s involvement as artistic director of the Beijing games to that of Nazi propaganda filmmaker Leni Riefenstahl. Four days later Spielberg wrote a letter to the president of China and shortly thereafter a top Chinese diplomat was dispatched to Darfur to pressure the Sudanese government to accept UN peace keepers. Previously China had abstained from involving themselves in internal affairs in order to keep open access to Sudanese oil.

Hollywood accomplishes in a week what diplomats have been working on for years.

For the full story click here.

At least our politicians don’t get parking tickets

Thursday, December 14th, 2006

Canada came in at 15th place in the 2006 Gallup Worldwide Corruption Index, its image damaged by the Liberal Party sponsorship scandal.

There is a bright light though… our politicians (or their drivers) obey traffic signs.

Raymond Fisman, The Meyer Feldberg Associate Professor of Business at Columbia University, does work on corruption, financial markets and development. He recently created his own corruption index based on the number of parking tickets each country’s diplomats were racking up in the neighborhoods surrounding the UN building in NYC.

The worst offender was Kuwait, with an average of 250 tickets per year, per diplomat. Kuwait had more than double the next nearest offender, Egypt. There were 20 countries with no tickets, of which, Canada was a member. Fisman highlights Canada’s ticket-free status, as a ‘pround Canadian’, in an interview with Clive Thompson in a NYTimes Magazine “The Year in Ideas” online multimedia clip.

The diplomat parking problem has been effectively solved by the Bloomberg Administration when it negotiated a deal in which the licenses of diplomats with more than two violations were taken away.

Kellner’s Metaphors of Cyberspace

Friday, October 20th, 2006

Douglas Kellner, the Philosophy Chair of Education at UCLA, lectured at McGill this Thursday on the ‘Metaphors of Cyberspace’.

Kellner named four major influences in creating the internet: 1) Military 2) Big Business (IBM, Xerox, Apple) 3) University research 4) Hacker culture.

These groups have necessarily shaped the way we talk about the internet. For example, computing language is filled with militaristic terms such as “erase”, “abort”, “delete”, and “spam”. He observed that metaphors for new objects are pulled from familiar objects, such as the idea of Home, which result in relatable terms like “homepage”, “MySpace”, and “YouTube”, names that put the focus on the personal and immediate surroundings. The Work environment creates language like “desktop”, “mailboxes”, “trash”, “files” etc.

Given my research interests in BlackBerry, I was particularly intrigued by the Nature metaphor, which he argued was used to soften and blur the boundaries between nature and technology, thereby naturalizing it. Companies like Apple and Microsoft (MS fits in here because of the ’soft’, which is natural and sensuous) use the nature metaphor, as do products like BlackBerry and Mac, and terms like ‘virus’, ‘bugs’, ‘mouse’, ’surfing’, and fishing’.

Travel was another metaphor Kellner touched on, claiming the term ‘information superhighway’ was particularly problematic for Bill Gates because a highway implied a FREEway, and so, Microsoft made a move toward a different language that didn’t create an expectation of a free lunch.

And this is why metaphors matters…

Language enables what one can conceptualize. The metaphors you use limit and enable certain discourses. Kellner cited Stuart Hall who said “a metaphor is a serious thing, it informs one’s practice”, and Derrida who said “a metaphor is never innocent.” The tremendous influence metaphors can wield in public and private discussion is why it’s necessary to get out ahead of the trend and define your own terms.. There are plenty of people/companies/ideologues that have a vested interest in defining a dialogue in a certain manner and once a certain way of talking about an object has been established it’s very difficult to break the mould and view it from outside that frame of reference. The Democrats face this problem, in that they’ve been reduced (in many instances) to being a reactionary party, rather than a party that defines the issues they want to pursue.

One of the most interesting comments was a brief aside toward the end of the lecture when Kellner noted that modernity was characterized by the big businesses and infrastructure of the industrial age which have masculine overtones, and that postmodernity (if that’s what we’re still in) is characterized by smaller and more personal infrastructure of the information age which is more feminized (big frames vs. sleek laptops). Postmodernity as feminine.

After Kellner’s lecture I checked back in on a blog I keep track of and in Sept the writer had referenced a lecturer at the Industrial Designers Society of America who said the future of computing needs will be facilitated by more intuitive and human interfaces.  The same lecturer was also encouraging designers to become more “sensually sensitive” and to reconcile the design of digital interfaces with basic human cognition and intuition. Intuition, sensual, sensitive, reconciliation… is it possible the future of cyberspace is female gendered?

 

I’ve been censored!!!

Monday, September 11th, 2006

I sent the address of this blog out to some of my friends and family, including a journalist working in Guangzhou, China.  This is his response:

What on Earth did you put on your blog?  Declarations of love for the Dalai
Lama?  Your views on Taiwan independence?  The communists have blocked it!!!

Wow.  First-hand experience with the Chinese censors. The journalist says they often block anything with a blog address or name, so given my current fascination with blogs I guess I won’t be making it into his bookmarks any time soon.

I’m beginning to feel like a real Concordia student, contending with issues of censorship and all…  speaking of which….check out the below links to learn more about Concordia’s most recent incident in the world of risk assessment committees, race relations, and alleged censorship.  The timeliness of the story may have influenced the pickup it received from the Guardian. “North of 9/11” will be read tomorrow at the uni co-op bookstore.

http://thelink.concordia.ca/view.php?aid=38622 

http://books.guardian.co.uk/news/articles/0,,1867994,00.html 

Back to the Chinese censors….the Dali Lama was in Vancouver, B.C. this past Saturday.  Two friends from Victoria went over to see him and were duly inspired.  Apparently there were sound issues that made him a little difficult to hear, and during one of the lulls, 20,000 people in GM Place broke into a spontaneous round of “O’ Canada.” 

Who says Canadians aren’t patriotic?

Patriotism. 9/11. Censorship. Co-op bookstore.  Race relations.  My blog’s never going to make it big in China.  Sigh. 

 

 

 

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