Friday, January 21, 2011

Response to: Are the Duggars Good Christian Role Models?

Fantastic blog post by Georgina here: http://jcandpc.blogspot.com/2011/01/are-duggars-good-christian-role-models.html

And my response!

I find this a very thought provoking post, and I want to agree with you and disagree with you at the same time.

I am a bit of a fan of the Duggars, and I will preface this by saying I do not go to church, I would only loosely consider myself Christian, and I do not want 19 children and firmly believe in birth control and a woman's right to choose (children and everything else).

I think some of their comments about birth control and their own experience with it can be troubling if that is all you know about the family, but I also think there is a lot of good that they show in how they live their lives.

As unruly as it seems to have 19 children, they actually really seem to make it work. It could all be for show with the cameras, but the children seem happy, well fed, and all interact with their parents and siblings in a really loving way. Both Jim-Bob and Michelle seem to work hard to build bonds with all their children and develop close relationships as a family unit.

What I really enjoy about the Duggars is their attitude - I find them to be very authentic people. They live by their beliefs, but I don't think they try to push it on anyone (I have seen a behind the scenes video where the crew talks about how much they enjoy working with them, and one specifically speaks about not identifying with their faith but that the family is so welcoming and inviting to everyone, that it doesn't seem to matter.) I get the feeling that they really do believe that this was the right path for them, but it doesn't need to be the right path for everyone.

I enjoy that it is a reality television show that is not about getting drunk, or contrived drama, and that it is a family that lets you see a little of their personal life without airing all their dirty laundry for everyone.

I do not agree with everything they do, but I think something about their spirit is a refreshing change from a lot of the other reality TV families and programs out there.

Great post!

"I want an art more complicated than that"

The class discussion on the Dustin Kidd article "Harry Potter and the Function of Pop Culture" reminded me of a poem I had read for class a few years ago entitled "Jerk" by poet Jeff Derksen which was originally published in his book Transnational Muscle Cars, so I wanted to share it.

--

Jerk (from Transnational Muscle Cars) by Jeff Derksen

The sun glints off the chrome
bodies of the gondolas
of late capitalism
as they labour up the mountain.
The mountain is named
after a commodity. Art has made this
a nonalienated view. Is that what
we asked it to do? If "each day seems
like a natural fact" and if "and what we think
changes how we act" should art not
reveal ideology
rather than naturalize it?

These old idealisms, they burn me up
These old idealisms, what do they cover up?

You had a lovely critique
and you looked great, sexy
really, the way your world-market
pants might shock the bourgeoisie
into consciousness. But these days
I'm yearning not for a little outside
to call my own, although I like good
design too and do feel that the "workers"
(morphed "multitude") also live
outside of quotation marks
in this "the highest stage"--
but now I'm wanting transformation
rather than "structural adjustment"
to go with the primitive accumulation
and worn contradictions. Not more
of these natural facts ("globalization is").

But back to this "ocular centric" art
as social goggles, the artist as
ophthalmologist. I want to see
the real relations
but you've got Nikes on and I like you
so I have to try and understand. And if
that shirt's from The Gap, then one arm was sewn
in Malaysia, the other in Sri Lanka. Why then
is it hard to "see" ideology when you're
wearing it? Is it "out there"? Or deeper inside
than even desire could get? That clarity
would lead to historical consciousness
is muddied to the point
where you wouldn't even recognize
your buddies once you got there. "Hey you
Louis!" (There is history
to spontaneity, anger, irony.)
"People have opinions / where
do they come from?" My idealistic belief
is that historical consciousness may come.
My sad cognitive mapping
is that over determined contradictions
don't lead to new social relations.
I want an art
more complicated than that.

--

Can art be more complicated than it is right now? We live in an age where discussing if art is really "Art" has become part of the accepted social dialogue. You can walk into any museum anywhere, and find people gathered around a very non-traditional post-modern work, and they will be discussing why and if it should even be considered art in the first place.


Pop culture "art"  I believe does become our "ophthalmologist" and our historian (and I do stipulate that I believe that most pop culture falls into the category of art - no matter what we think of its overall value to society). Art may not look like it did 200 years ago, or even 50 years ago, but it becomes our windows to the world and the reflection of our society. The subway art of Keith Haring in the 1990s promoted activism through art and gave a voice to a group of people whose needs were not being addressed due to the social stigma of their disease. This is not so different from what Michelangelo accomplished in painting the Sistine Chapel, providing a pictorial reference of the Old Testament for people to draw from and reflect on.

I think art used to be something much more comfortable for people  to define before everything moved into digital and buyable - art was found in museums or parlours, it was played in theatres and concert halls, it was written by great men and women and had an aura of sophistication.  Art now seems kind of gritty in comparison. It does not always reflect a skilled hand (although many artists, even those who produce the most crude looking art, often are very skilled in their craft), and it not always subject matter we are comfortable confronting - does this make it any less valuable?

Kidd, when considering the Harry Potter novels notes that if there is any kind of social change that will be brought about by the Harry Potter novels, maybe "...this change will effect the removal of the boundary between legitimate and illegitimate culture, such that novels like Harry Potter will be appreciated within the institutions of legitimate culture without losing their popular status." I think this would be a fantastic thing - why should we restrict what we will consider art, and why should big "A" Art only be for the elite?

Thursday, January 13, 2011

My First SMC 305 Blog Post!

Hello Everyone!

As it says in the side-bar, my name is Leah and I'm really looking forward to blogging for class!

I will start with the official "class" blogging next week, but in honor of the Homer the Heretic episode of the Simpsons, I thought I'd post another Homer and God clip! (please excuse the Hulu advertisement - it was the best copy of the clip I could find.)

Enjoy!

Cheers,
Leah