tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3855223901782590860.post6236049908290828577..comments2024-02-19T05:12:30.844-05:00Comments on Oh Boym: The Real Fakecbhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03342342242345926624noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3855223901782590860.post-33762271561883599412011-06-13T20:12:19.234-04:002011-06-13T20:12:19.234-04:00Not cynical, critical.
The question, I would pos...Not cynical, critical. <br /><br />The question, I would pose to my students is "better than what?" <br /><br />It's lovely to be idealistic, but our young should be continually reminded that making the world better inspired any number of "would be" designers, from the from the Greeks, Romans, Arabs, Crusaders and Conquistador—let's jump to the modern world to mention the Jacobins, Bolsheviks, Fascists, Nazis, Stalinists, and also the United States in Southeast Asia. Today, we have the jihadists and, again, the United States in the Middle East and in North Africa...to say nothing of Apple, Google, Facebook, EXXON, Walmart, etc. etc. <br /><br />Few things have introduced more terror than the impulse to make the world a better place. Your students should be inspired to design a more efficient tea pot or gardening tools.RWordplayhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13987980380490858573noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3855223901782590860.post-38697381818243680972011-06-13T02:01:49.969-04:002011-06-13T02:01:49.969-04:00I tend to agree with you. Yet it is so hard, bein...I tend to agree with you. Yet it is so hard, being a teacher in a design school, to carry on with such pessimistic, if not cynical, attitude. They still believe they can make the world better.cbhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03342342242345926624noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3855223901782590860.post-79024357032185560622011-06-12T23:03:31.529-04:002011-06-12T23:03:31.529-04:00Our Uncle Quixote sought another reality in dreams...Our Uncle Quixote sought another reality in dreams. We impatient moderns have little faith in dreams and want what we want when we want it, and we want it stamped, certified, and when possible, in limited editions. The whole of it:We are quite indifferent to whether something is authentic, or "the school of..." or a copy, or even a counterfeit. <br /><br />We are not only indifferent, but unable to distinguish between simulacra and the genuine article. The glory of consumerism has made everything possible, every place within reach, even as an increasing number of our new realities/experiences, are little more than increasingly manufactured, highly immersive digital product. This is not a bad thing, this is the only strategy to conserve the planet, as we know it, as the population swells to ten billion people. <br /><br />The result: For the lucky minority "a preferred" reality, made up of a mishmash of remnants, running, to use a quaint metaphor, on a film reel, on an endless loop. They can pick, enjoy and discard the increasingly managed place i.e., Venice, Vienna, Paris, Prague, etc. They can rummage through lifestyles a bit of Provence here, New York City there. Urban or rural or undeveloped, they live on the surface of the world, like ants on a balloon.<br /><br />The great majority will taste reality in its most horrendous forms, a world without borders, language without meaning, seeing through their minds eye the "real" world prepared for us by prophets such as Hieronymus Bosch or Rodin, or even the one prepared for us by gentle C.S. Lewis in the "Screwtape Letters."<br /><br />The Unreal America is now the Unreal Earth. My Dear Boym, "eliminate," embrace," or "interpret'? All responses are irrelevant. At best, if we're aware, if we're grateful there's a bit of pleasure. A moment's wonder. However, there is no more passion, so no more transgression. There is only consumption. Or, as Robert Sawyer wrote some time ago: "There is no meaning, only markets. Enjoy everything now, the fire sale will ignite soon.RWordplayhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13987980380490858573noreply@blogger.com