Posts from — October 2009
Is timelessness forever?
Can art ever be truly timeless? It’s an almost universally accepted idea we have of great art that if it is truly great, it will “stand the test of time”. What does that mean, exactly? Simply that it still appears just as fresh, insightful and powerful as it did when it was first created. The point we can infer from that is that these great works of art are not slaves to fashion, but strike somewhere near the heart of human nature, which is unchanging over thousands of years—a fact which we know primarily from the classics. When we read an old play that is a relic more than it is a classic, that is usually because the artist was so seduced by some particular artistic fashion that was sweeping his part of the world at the time, that he forsook a true depiction of human nature in its favour. That seduction must be strong, because proportionally speaking, the amount of classics the world has produced is close to nil. [Read more →]
October 27, 2009 1 Comment
Does Griffin’s Question Time appearance signal the end of the world?
After the furore over Nick Griffin’s Question Time appearance has died down somewhat, perhaps we might be able to see more clearly its potential consequences for the British political landscape. Dianne Abbott, Labour MP for Hackney North and Stoke Newington, argues in The Independent that it was not the triumph for free speech that “white metropolitan liberals” tend to think it was. On the contrary, she says that it “legitimised” Griffin, and brought his extreme views a level of acceptance they would not otherwise have achieved. She makes the point that although Griffin has the right to express his views however he sees fit within the law, it is by no means his right to appear on the BBC with other “legitimate” politicians. That is true enough; however the reason for his appearance was not only the fact that he represents a small minority of voters, but also that he would inevitably expose his views for how ignorant and unacceptable they really are. [Read more →]
October 24, 2009 1 Comment
Sci-fi as literature
On Newsnight Review last night, the panel discussed science fiction. That got me thinking about what science fiction is, or at least what it should be. Kevin Smith, the creator of Dogma, said that essentially sci-fi just transfers real life stories into another framework, characterised by being very different to our reality. That’s probably true, but it’s not the full story. Not all stories are easily transferrable, or transferrable at all, to this imaginary other world. Imagine, for instance, Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice in a space station. Words can’t begin to express how this would utterly ruin the story. Firstly, its charm would be utterly removed—but that’s probably immaterial. Most importantly, nothing at all is gained from the shift. We learn no more about pride, prejudice or love from having the story exactly the same but in a different location. The writer must think, when choosing his location, why he wants it to be set there, and how, dramatically, it serves his story. [Read more →]
October 10, 2009 1 Comment


