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Showing posts with label Something Thoughful. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Something Thoughful. Show all posts

Monday, February 10, 2025

Something Thoughtful

  Nicholas Reid reflects in essay form on general matters and ideas related to literature, history, popular culture and the arts, or just life in general. You are free to agree or disagree with him.

                                                 SPEED AND IMBECILITY

            My wife and I are driving on a highway north of Auckland. I am at the wheel. We are enjoying the clear sky, the scenery and the cool jazz we’ve chosen to listen. A perfect ride. I am driving on the left lane at 80 per k. To our right on the inner lane there are cars buzzing past us at about 100 per k. This is now legal, so good luck to them, though I prefer 80 per k. and a slightly more leisurely pace. Suddenly my rear-vision mirror shows a car rushing up to us and then placing itself all of about two metres behind us. He obviously wants us to speed up. I say a few choice words to myself, wonder why somebody wants to sniff my bum like this, and I continue at the speed I am already driving. After some cars on our right have left open a gap, the road hog moves over, joining the 100 per k. group, and goes on his way… but in the distance ahead, we see him dodging and weaving between lanes, trying to get ahead of any car on the highway… and obviously going over 100 per k. Is it an emergency? Is his house burning down? Is his wife giving birth? Does he have to be on time for an important appointment? I suppose this is possible, but I doubt it. About five kilometres later the traffic has to slow down because of some event ahead of us. We find the road hog all of one car ahead of us. So what price all the speed anyway?

            I’m not a saint when it comes to driving. I have been known to use out-loud un-printable words when I’m trapped in a traffic-jam. But I do wonder why some people feel compelled to go as fast as they can when they don’t have to. At best, it appears to be a mania for teenaged boys… and teenaged boys [and some immature men in their twenties] are always way ahead in the statistics of death-by-car.

            Which brings me to a phenomenon that I have dealt with before on this blog. There is a prejudice claiming that “truckies” [drivers of large heavy-weight trucks] are boorish, thoughtless and careless about other traffic on the road. Quite the opposite is true. See a skilled truck-driver on the road, and you see somebody who knows how to load and handle goods without breaking them; who knows how to slow down when the road is twisty; who knows how to let cars pass when there is a slow-down lane; and who knows how to manoeuvre when having to reverse. See if you can back-up a large truck through a narrow gate. I have often seen this and I know it takes great skill. Of course trucks sometimes crash – usually on difficult roads far from the motorways – and when they do, they make headlines in newspapers and on the evening news. But every year, far more crashes are the result of thoughtless car-driving idiots who think their only purpose in driving is to go fast as possible, often to show-off with their mates or girlfriends. It happens on both motorways and rural back-roads.

            As for the legal 100 per k. speed on motorways and rural roads, as has often been said, 100 per k. is an option, not a target. Yes, you can be charged for deliberately going too slow and holding up the traffic; but the fact is there is no law compelling you to go at top legal speed.

Monday, August 12, 2024

Something Thoughtful

Nicholas Reid reflects in essay form on general matters and ideas related to literature, history, popular culture and the arts, or just life in general. You are free to agree or disagree with him.  

                                                    KEEPING TRACK OF READERS

Beginning in 2012, I have been producing REID’S READER for over twelve years. For quite a few of those years I presented my Something New, Something Old and Something Thoughtful every Monday, excluding the summer breaks that I took. But after a number of years I found the amount I had to read, review and write on a tight schedule was becoming a burden. So I changed speed by producing my work every fortnight rather than every week, and I still follow that regimen – though it too means a lot of work.

Unlike my readers, I am able to track how many people have read my work. I can see what has been read by very many and what has been read by very few. One thing I notice is that, when it comes to my reviews of New Zealand poetry, it always gets a large readership. After all, there are very few outlets that promote and analyse poetry... and there are quite a few of poets who want to see how their work has been understood. But there is an interesting trend. Reviews that at first attract only few readers turn out later to attract many. In other words, my reviews and comments “have legs”. Looking every so often at statistics, I find what at first attracted only twenty-or-so readers has later been read by hundreds or even thousands.

Those that hit the highest numbers are most often reviews of classic works or works that have stirred up controversy. Many people have read what I have had to say about Joseph Conrad, Charles Dickens, George Orwell, Honore de Balzac etc. I believe that much of this interest comes from students who are studying such works and are looking for a new angle to put in their essays and impress their tutors. According to my statistics, the second most perused work on my blog is my account of Geoffrey Chaucer’s The Knight’s Tale from his Canterbury Tales. It has been read by 16,656 readers at time of writing this. So much for the classic. As for controversial books, the most read on my blog is Kaspar Hauser, the so-called mystery about a boy who apparently came from nowhere in Germany in the early nineteenth century. Believing myself that the Kaspar Hauser story is largely a fabrication, I am still aware that his story has often been quarrelled over. Hence the controversy. It has been read on this blog by over a whopping 21,511 readers.

It would be pleasant if my postings were read by thousands of readers as soon as they first appear; but it is consoling to know that ultimately many will read the really important stuff.

Monday, July 1, 2024

Something Thoughtful

 Nicholas Reid reflects in essay form on general matters and ideas related to literature, history, popular culture and the arts, or just life in general. You are free to agree or disagree with him.

                                              HORRIBLE COINCIDENCE 

                                                Monica in cheerful mood

In real life there are often dreadful coincidences. About three weeks before I am writing this, I started to read my way through Jacqueline Leckie’s excellent book Old Black Cloud, which deals with the history of mental depression in New Zealand and how it has been treated. But I had to set the book aside because two weeks ago, the horrible coincidence happened. Our youngest child, Monica Marguerite, was overwhelmed with depression and took her own life by drowning. Monica was very bipolar (manic-depression is the older term) and her moods could be extreme, bouncing between deep despondency and joyful happiness. Yet whatever the mood, she would present herself as happy, as enjoying life. Monica was 26. She did spend four years at Wellington’s School of Dramatic Arts and aspired to be an actress. She was capable of presenting her warm, wide smile no matter what she was actually feeling. Gabrielle, my wife, says her smile could light up a room. It could. Of course there is so much more I could write about Monica and the families who loved her – us and her fiancés family – but it is hard for me to say more here. We loved her. We miss her. We are devastated.

 

                                                            Monica with mother

 

Monday, April 29, 2024

Something Thoughtful

 

                                            NOTHING TO DECLARE

Keen readers of this blog might have noticed that instead of a fortnightly gap between postings, this week’s posting comes after three weeks. The reason is quite simple. My wife and I were over in Australia for a fortnight, celebrating a wedding anniversary, so I had to miss one deadline. I might in future concoct postings that deal with the land of Oz, but in the meantime I have nothing to declare.

PS Only this very morning have I heard the sad news that Vincent O'Sullivan, the greatest of New Zealand's senior literary people, has just died. He was a good friend to me and I will write an appropriate obituary for him in my next posting.

Monday, March 25, 2024

Something Thoughtful

 Nicholas Reid reflects in essay form on general matters and ideas related to literature, history, popular culture and the arts, or just life in general. You are free to agree or disagree with him.  

                               ON SEEING THREE FILMS ABOUT NAZIS    

As much by chance as by choice, over the last year we have gone to see three movies about Nazis and the Holocaust. None of the three was the standard Hollywood “war film” about battles and eventual retribution for the Nazis. All three were more subtle than that, though of very different quality from one another.


First we saw the filmed transcription of the British National Theatre’s production of Good the play written by Cecil Philip Taylor and first staged back in 1981. Now revived, the play has a very bleak and very simple stage-set and a total cast of four (with one fifth actor appearing in the last moments of the play). David Tennant plays the central character of Professor Halder and we quickly accept a Scottish actor with a Scottish voice as a German. It’s the 1930s. Professor Halder is an esteemed academic at a prestigious German university. He regards himself as a liberal. His best friend is Jewish, and Hitler has only recently come to power. Halder tells his friend not to worry – Hitler is just making stupid speeches he doesn’t really believe in. He’s just playing up to the rabble. He won’t do any harm. Then Halder’s friend disappears, but Halder rationalises that it was probably for the best. Halder believes that he can live in the Nazi state by simply separating from society and living a private life. When books are publicly burned he is able to keep some and read them in private – just like a Nazi woman he knows who is able to enjoy in private forbidden non-Aryan Jazz music. He is flattered into joining the S.S. He’s actually comforted by wearing a uniform and sharing the comradeship. But don’t worry. He doesn’t intend to do anything wrong. He still regards himself as “good”… and so it goes on - the story of a man who step by step rationalises what he does and never really accepts that he is complicit in great evil. After all, he is “good”.  Thus can a self-centred liberal’s morality collapse.


The second film we saw was One Life, the true story of the British bureaucrat Nicholas Winton who, in 1938 and 1939, managed to save many Jewish children in occupied Czechoslovakia from being sent to death camps. (Winton was of German-Jewish descent, but he had become an Anglican.) Winton arranged for trains to carry the children away from Nazi-occupied territory but, life-long, he regretted that he was not able to save the last group he had arranged. The film cuts between the old Winton reminiscing (played by Anthony Hopkins) and the young Winton carrying out his deeds of mercy (played by Johnny Flynn). This film closes with the elderly Winton being applauded in a television studio by some of the many people who were saved by him.



The third film was The Zone of Interest. The first five minutes of the film are a blank, reddish screen and a soundtrack of unsettling, ominous noise, grinding, shaking, rumbling. Then it cuts to a picnic near a river. These are ordinary people. They are enjoying themselves. They have a nice spacious house. Dad is good to his kids. He reads them bedtime stories. Mum makes nice meals. They have a large hot-house for exotic plants. Mum is very proud of her expansive garden, which is right next to a very high wall. How very nice. Oh, and by the way, Dad is Rudolf Hoss, commandant of Auschwitz. And over that high garden wall is where there are gas chambers, crematoria, forced slave labour, genocide. That is where all those rumblings and shaking come from, like the work of a huge factory, mixed occasionally with distant gunshots and screams, not to mention all the smoke that can be seen coming from tall chimneys. Where do the clothes and fur-coat Mum tries on come from? We don’t have to be told. Do the family ever get upset about where they are living? Well Mum does. She gets upset when Dad is posted elsewhere, and she fears that she will be moved from her beautiful garden and house. Filmed in Poland with a German cast The Zone of Interest is based in a novel by Martin Amis, but very much changed from Amis’s version. Among other things, Amis had given fictious names to the commandant and others, whereas the screenwriter and director Jonathan Glazer gave the characters their real names… such as Rudolf Hoss. Be it noted that the film’s camera never takes us over the wall into Auschwitz. In our minds, this makes what is behind the wall even more ominous.

How do I rate these films? The weakest of them is One Life . I do not belittle Nicholas Winton’s bravery and humaneness. He deserves to be remembered as a hero. But, like Schindler’s List, the film gives the audience a happy ending. The kids are saved. The hero is applauded. So, as in many formulaic films, we are allowed to think that there are more good people in the world to counter-balance bad people. But this simply wasn’t the truth about the Holocaust – or any other Genocide for that matter. The great majority of those targeted for extermination were actually murdered, often after torture and starvation. In focussing on the humane heroes, we are ignoring the horrible truth of history. Salute the compassionate heroes by all means, but always remember that they are the minority.

Far better, and equally more searching, are Good and The Zone of Interest. They are films for adults. Good makes it clear that a highly intelligent man can rationalise participating in what he would otherwise understand to be heinous. By deluding himself that he can stand aloof and live a private live, he is in effect allowing the worst to happen without resistance. The process that turns him into a Nazi is gradual, with him all the time assuming that he is “good”. The Zone of Influence concerns a man who knows exactly what he is doing and glories in it [Rudolf Hoss had been a committed Nazi as soon as the movement was created]. Yet he shadows the younger members of his family from it and in domestic matters he acts as if their life is perfectly normal. Again there is a cognitive dissonance here – a refusal to see that what he is doing is neither normal nor in the least moral. Creating mass murder does not go easily with ordinary domestic life. One major merit of these two films is that they do not try to persuade us of the genocidal horror by showing us gore and atrocities. Good stays in one set embracing three or four characters talking. The Zone of Interest never moves outside the house and garden, although there are nightmarish sequences where a young girl is seen searching through the grounds that prisoners have to work in. We, as adult viewers, understand that when Hoss looks at an imprisoned girl and then, in the next sequence, we see him washing his genitals, we know that he has committed rape. We understand the horror by knowing what we are not seeing

 

 Below is a photo of Rudolf Hoss's children enjoying their garden next to Auschwitz

Monday, September 26, 2022

Something Thoughtful

Nicholas Reid reflects in essay form on general matters and ideas related to literature, history, popular culture and the arts, or just life in general. You are free to agree or disagree with him.  

                  AS THE COUNTERCULTURE REALLY WAS… AND IS

Recently, I had the pleasure of reading and reviewing on this blog Nick Bollinger’s Jumping Sundays, his entertaining, comprehensive and detailed account of the “counterculture” in New Zealand in the 1960s and early 1970s. As I pointed out in my review, as well as sharing the same familiar name (I’m Nick to many friends), Nick Bollinger and I are “baby-boomers” as we were both born in the same decade, the 1950s. But I am six years older than he. This means that I was already leaving high-school and going to university when the “counterculture” was in full swing, while he was still going through the junior classes of high-school. So (dare I say it?), even allowing for differences in temperament and upbringing, my memories of those times are inevitably different from his.

But before I get into the autobiographical part of this posting, I have to make some general points about the old “counterculture”.

First is the obvious fact that every generation tends to think it is creating the world anew. In my last years at high-school, in the late 1960s, the music that was being created (Beatles, Stones etc.), the relaxation of censorship and the type of films that were being made (The Graduate, Zeffirelli’s version of Romeo and Juliet, Bonnie and Clyde) persuaded us schoolboys that we were in a new age, unique and different from, and more open than, our parents. But looking back, and comparing 1960s music and films with earlier music and films, what I now see is continuity with just some modifications. If each young generation thinks it has unique and new insights, then each young generation is often sorely deluded.

Second issue is the meaning of this term “counterculture”. In Jumping Sundays, Nick Bollinger’s foreword states: “By the late sixties, counterculture was in common use and remained so for much of the following decade, after which … it began to slip into the past tense.” (p.21) But I believe this freezes the meaning of the word as it is now used, and implies that the “counterculture” applies only to the decade that Bollinger examines. When it is now used by sociologists and other commentators (who frequently present the term in hyphenated form as “counter-culture”), a counterculture is a sub-culture that runs against current norms or the mainstream culture of a given society. Thus, for example, in New Zealand now, where pop and rock music dominate the airwaves and podcasts, and where religious observation has declined drastically, it is truly countercultural to listen to classical music and go to operas and it is truly countercultural to regularly attend church. Radical, man! The term is not reserved for the counterculture of the 1960s and 1970s. Of course there are also destructive movements which could legitimately be called countercultural, such as anti-vaxxers, idiots who call themselves “sovereign citizens” (i.e. people who think they are above the law), gangs etc. but the point still stands.

Third issue is that many of the ideas embraced by the 1960s / ‘70s counterculture have now been largely reversed by a younger generation. For example, in the 1960s, at Berkeley University in the USA, there was the radical “free speech” movement, and gradually throughout the Western world, university students began to take it for granted that platform speakers could now say whatever they liked in a university environment. Now we live in a world of “cancel culture”, which is a reality despite some pundits denying that there is such a thing. The smallest statement a speaker or writer may utter can cause that speaker to be “de-platformed” from a campus, or for petitions to be spread condemning that speaker and asking for some sort of sanction or punishment in the name of (self-)righteousness. The notion that there might be legitimate statements at odds with current norms is incomprehensible to some organised campus groups. This is an age in which “trigger warnings” have to be given if fragile university student ears are likely to be told harsh truths. In the USA, comedians are first vetted lest that say anything offensive to a campus audience. “I am offended” becomes the catch-cry of de-platformers, and anyone who promotes free speech is labelled a “free speech absolutist”. Of course free speech has never been absolute, and rightly so. Laws against slander and libel, laws against inciting violence, and sanctions against genuinely extremist groups have been with us for many centuries. But when many of the present era label people as “free speech absolutists”, they are most often condemning speakers and writers who simply express views they dislike.

I could say other things about the 1960s/70s counterculture, including my great scepticism of those who purported to be seeking “spirituality”, which as often as not meant hedonism and zonking out on drugs. But with regard to New Zealand, what I would emphasise is how much in the 1960s/70s, younger people were more likely to take their cultural cues from the USA rather than from Britain, which had been the model for their parents. Sure there were influential British bands and musicians (Beatles, Stones, Kinks et al, with me being a heretic and preferring Alan Price). But the quality of protests in the USA, the type of anti-war rhetoric in the USA, the psychedelic drug buzzy-ness in the USA, the Eastern mysticism embraced in the USA, the dropping-out-into-communes in the USA  - all became the pattern for protests, anti-war rhetoric, drugginess, mystic aspirations and communes in New Zealand. If I were to sum up New Zealand’s counterculture in the 1960s/70s, I would say it was the decade when New Zealand acknowledged  that its cultural pattern was woven in (love it or hate it) the USA rather than in Britain. (See on this blog a related posting on this reality called Imported Protests.)

Okay, that’s it, apart from my own teenage-and-young-adult memories, so here comes the autobiography.

A book like Jumping Sundays, very detailed though it is, might lead some to believe that every young person on the 1960s/70s was attached to the counterculture, dying to live in a flat or on a commune, smoking weed and rebelling against their parents. And of course this simply was not the case.  Most young people might like new-style rock music and attend rock concerts; but after leaving school, the majority were still busy trying to get a job and earn an income or even (an aspiration virtually inconceivable now) trying to begin the long process of paying off a mortgage on a house. University tuition was free (so long as one had passed the University Entrance exam or Bursary or Scholarship), but even so, the majority of young people were not university students.

I was, beginning in 1970, a university student, but I never went flatting. For most of my student years I lived, rent-free, at my parents’ home. Being the youngest of a large family, I shared the house with only my parents as all my siblings had already left home; and then, when my father died prematurely, I was with only my mother for two years. Most students found it easy to get jobs during university breaks and vacations; and at one time or another, I worked at nearly every factory on the Mount Wellington Highway in Auckland – Fisher and Paykel, Alex Harvey’s, Sunshine Foods etc. Amazing to think now how ready personnel staff were to sign students on for such casual labour, especially as students often found there was little real work for students to do in factories. Sure, I remember bottling fruit, controlling a gantry and working on an assembly line. But I also remember hours of hiding out with others in backrooms, or walking up and down with a clip-board pretending I was checking stock, because there was really nothing to do. It was almost as if casual labour then was a sort of accepted charity for students. Still, the pay enabled me to buy a (second-hand) motor scooter and buzz around freely in the evening chasing girlfriends or catching up with movies and live-performances at university.

You see, I was essentially a conformist, though I did grow my hair to shoulder-length, hippie-style. I remember once going into a barber shop in central Auckland looking for a haircut, but the grumpy barber took one look at me and said “Nah. I don’t do that hippie-stuff! and told me to get out. Obviously he was a short-back-and-sides man.

But, being a student, I couldn’t exactly avoid the counterculture. There were rants and orations nearly every day in the quad at the Students’ Union, just across the road from Albert Park, and of course I heard many speakers expounding on the war in Vietnam, apartheid and women’s rights. I can remember students acting out the shooting of protesting students at Kent State University in the USA. Feminist speeches were rarer but impassioned. There was also anger if speakers seemed frivolous or conservative. Near capping days, there was the disgusting tradition of some students “drinking a pub dry”, often announced with the charming chant “Eat more, root more, sink more piss”. There were loud boos and the threat of violence once when a half-drunk engineering student butted into an earnest oration and exhorted students to invade a popular pub and drink themselves silly.

Things were very earnest then. But Tim Shadbolt wasn’t. I heard many of his improvised speeches – usually vague, generalised, more entertaining than serious, peppered with silly jokes and catch-phrases and much fun when he decided to trap his audience. I paraphrase from memory one of his traps. “The government’s pouring twenty million dollars every month into the war. Twenty million dollars!!!” At this, the student throng gasped with horrified disbelief. Whereupon Shadbolt would say “See. I just made that up. It’s all bullshit. People will believe any bullshit. Newspapers, television. It’s all bullshit.” He flashed his toothy grin at me once when I passed him on the street, which seemed a big deal at the time.

I joined in a number of marches against apartheid, but I steered clear of demos against the war in Vietnam. The fact was, I was compromised. One of my elder brothers, whom I admired very much, was a career soldier and was then a young officer in charge of an artillery battery in Vietnam. (See posting on this blog Goodbye Soldier)

What I noticed, too, is that some voices, regarded as very "countercultural", were actually endorsed and approved of by some thinking older people. It wasn't necessarily a battle between the generations. When Germaine Greer made her controversial visit to Auckland, she was interviewed on television. I remember my parents at first watching with a degree of scepticism. But as she got to talking, they found themselves more and more agreeing with her. When she discussed the way society was being atomised, families were isolated from their neighbours, and old people were shoved into retirement homes, I remember my father saying "She's right you know" which was my parents' judgement on nearly all her comments.

One thing about the “counterculture” was how performative its more fervent adherents were. Everybody seemed to be playing a role which I couldn’t take seriously. I remember, in my naivete, going to a poetry reading, innocent enough to believe that I was going to hear real poetry. Silly me. The headliners were Alan Brunton and some of his mates. Brunton seemed to be either pissed or stoned. At any rate he stumbled onto the stage, appeared to be disoriented and fumbled and mumbled before delivering a few lines. There followed a long, embarrassing silence, until Brunton asked his audience “What do you think of it so far?” or words to that effect. “Inertia! ” I shouted with all my 20-year-old wit. Whereupon he shouted back “You, sir, have vertigo!” You see back then, in the counterculture, totally meaningless statements could be taken to be either surreal or profound. Then of course there were the inevitable encounters with the very performative James K. Baxter. (See The Baxter Problem on this blog.)

Defining moment for me, however, was a year or so after I’d graduated. I bumped into a fellow former-student who’d been in the same Eng. Lit. tutorial group as I. He was a guy who would always turn up wearing a tasselled soft-leather jacket and a leather cowboy hat, with shaggy beard and wild hair. “Reid,” he said, “we never could figure out what you were trying to say. One day you’d turn up in jeans and sleeves and the next day it’d be collar and tie.” I thought about this for a moment and then it dawned on me. As a student, I’d wear whatever happened to be available and clean. I wasn’t trying the “say” anything. Clothes were just clothes. But the expectation of that counterculture time was that everything was an act, a public declaration of self, a performance. In that respect among many others, I never was a part of the counterculture and never took it seriously. It took a long time for some people to discover how destructive and bogus so much of it was. And of course the tasselled cowboy himself went on to become a sober, be-suited member of the professions.

 

Monday, March 28, 2022

Something Thoughtful

 Nicholas Reid reflects in essay form on general matters and ideas related to literature, history, popular culture and the arts, or just life in general. You are free to agree or disagree with him.

                            BUT SURELY THESE THINGS DON’T HAPPEN NOW?!


 

 

            We didn’t think it could happen, did we? Wasn’t it all settled? The Berlin Wall came down. Francis Fukuyama said it was The End of History. Communism had definitively failed. Fascism in all its forms had long since been discredited. The only future was for all countries to become liberal democracies. Sure, there was China. But it was slowly going capitalist even if it still called itself Communist. And yes there were a few crazy rogue states like North Korea, but it was understood that under the impact of this global liberalisation, even such states would eventually bow to the inevitable. Besides, weren’t international platforms like Facebook and Youtube making it easier for the whole world to see the freedom and benefits of liberal democracies? Who could possibly turn against them?

It was easy to see the world this way, especially if you lived in Europe. Hadn’t the Cold War ended not with a bang but a whimper? The Soviet Union had collapsed from within. Gorbachev tried to reform Communism, but soon found that any real reform would make Communism disintegrate. Which it did. Some Soviet puppet dictators had to be overthrown by force, as in Rumania. But Russian Soviet armies retreated without a fight from all the Eastern European countries they had once intimidated – the Baltic states, Poland, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, what was then East Germany - even Ukraine and Belarus. The Cold War didn’t turn hot. The majority of Eastern European countries embraced liberal democracy.

In Russia itself, as it became the Russian Federation,  there seemed to be interesting experiments in true multi-party democracy.

Well okay, there was the rise of oligarchs – old apparatchiks who knew how to become billionaires by snapping up, at knock-down prices, national assets and enterprises.

Well okay, some of the new political parties in Russia seemed to be a sham, with bribed deputies complacently endorsing whatever the government said. And – oh dear! – genuine opposition parties were stifled and protests were always shut down… But the Russian Federation was new to democracy, wasn’t it? We couldn’t expect democracy to flourish at once. It took a long time, so let’s not criticise. Besides, weren’t Russians now free to drink Coca Cola and eat McDonalds? Surely they would fall in love with the West.

But what about this guy Putin? He was a bit of a problem. He’d had a leading opposition leader killed. He sent agents to England to kill two Russians who knew too much. He failed, but the warning was clear. He forced through a bill which effectively made him president for life. He was a nationalist of an extreme form.

But surely he wouldn’t go to war? That was unthinkable. Besides, in both Belarus and Ukraine, he had leaders who obeyed his autocratic whims. But in 2004-2005 Ukrainians were able to overturn a rigged election and have a genuine election which installed a democratic regime not as compliant as Putin wanted. And in 2014 Putin tore the Crimea from Ukraine and put more effort into arming ethnic Russians who lived in two south-east provinces of Ukraine.

But this didn’t concern us, did it? Ukraine was still there, even if a fifth of its territory had been taken from it. We shouldn’t make rash judgements, and we certainly don’t want to challenge Putin. That might start a war. Anyway, Ukraine was far away. Not really our concern.

Then the invasion began and our complacent vision collapsed.

Would any European leader dare to do such a thing, autocratic or not? Such actions belonged to an earlier era – an era our great-grandparents might remember – when Mussolini grabbed Abyssinia (Ethiopia) with no excuses. But the Second World War was long ago. The world order was settled. Imperialism was something that was decried. Surely these things don’t happen now?

Here’s the bitter lesson. They do and they can.

Step by step we see an old playbook being followed.

Item 1936: Hitler says “I’m only re-militarising the Rhineland and it’s part of Germany anyway.” “Um… okay”, say Britain and France a little uneasily. Item 2022: Putin says “You think I’m surrounding Ukraine with my armed forces? I’m only holding military exercises in my own territory.” “Um…okay “, say NATO countries a little uneasily.

Item 1938: Hitler says “I’m only interested in the Sudetenland where most people are ethnic Germans. I have no further territorial interests in Czechoslovakia.” “Um…okay,” say Britain and France, signing the paper in Munich. And in short order Hitler invades the rest of Czechoslovakia. Now Britain and France see Hitler for what he really is. Item 2022: Putin says “I’m only interested in Ukraine’s Donbas region where most of the population are ethnic Russians.” This sounds sort of plausible to some NATO members. And in short order Putin attempts to invade the rest of Ukraine with overwhelming force. Now NATO sees Putin for what he really is.

Item 1939: Hitler and Stalin stitch up a deal. Hitler’s propaganda machine fakes an incident on the border to “prove” that Poland is being aggressive and threatening war. Films are made by Goebbels showing this Polish “aggression”. So Hitler invades Poland from the West and Stalin invades Poland from the East. Item 2022: While his forces are bombing civilian targets and forcing millions of Ukrainians to flee, Putin’s propaganda machine is telling the Russian people that Ukraine is being “liberated” from fascists and besides, the whole war is the fault of Ukraine because they have secret laboratories making chemical weapons.

Are these comparisons forced and unreal? I don’t think so.

As Hitler threatened all Europe with sheer military might, so Putin declares to the world that he has put his nuclear weapons on alert. The threat is obvious. “Challenge me and I am willing to start a massive world war.”

Where does this madness come from? Is the autocrat fuelled by humiliation? The old KGB man is unreconciled to the loss of Soviet power and the “defeat” of the Soviet Union in the Cold War in exactly the same way that the former corporal Hitler was humiliated by Germany’s defeat in the First World War. Hitler wanted to rebuild the Reich (Empire) and grab back all the lands that were now independent of Germany. Putin wants to rebuild the Soviet Empire even if it’s given a different name.

Any simple lesson to be drawn from all this?

Only that there will always be demagogues eager for power. Only that such leaders can impose misery on the world. Only that liberalisation of the world is not inevitable. Only that human nature doesn’t change.

I’m sorry to have to tell you this.

 


 

Monday, September 12, 2016

Something Thoughtful


Nicholas Reid reflects in essay form on general matters and ideas related to literature, history, popular culture and the arts, or just life in general. You are free to agree or disagree with him.  

PERVASIVE SENSE OF PLACE

Recently I reviewed on this blog Extraordinary Anywhere, a collection of essays about the sense of specific place in New Zealand. In one way or another, all the contributors were saying that where we are born and grow up exerts a powerful influence upon who we are.

I confirm this in a very personal way.

As I’ve noted before on this blog [see the post Babblingof Green Fields], I spent the first 22 years of my life in the east Auckland suburb of Panmure, right next to the Tamaki Estuary. Over forty years ago, I married and moved to the other side of the city – in fact, to the North Shore, where (apart from some trips and sojourns elsewhere) I have lived ever since. I feel no particular nostalgia for where I grew up, and I do not feel a desire to visit there any more than the calls of friendship require.

But I find this curious phenomenon. On those occasions when I remember my night-time dreams, I find that they take place in the house and neighbourhood where I grew up. Even if I can decode my dreams as referring to events going on in my life now, the imagery is the imagery of my childhood and teenage years. I am no psychologist, but I always interpret this to mean that what is imprinted on our brains in childhood is what stays most powerfully with us and is most often resorted to by the unconscious. It is in childhood that we acquire the symbols of our personal emotional codes – a particular dark night in childhood will always recur as a symbol of fear; the strange sound of trains shunting on the other side of the Panmure Basin will always stand for faraway places or perhaps loneliness; the sound of a neighbouring printing press at work means comfort and security; a ceiling that began to leak in the rain means uncertainty and insecurity; and so on.

Writing poetry in particular, I find childhood still exerts a powerful pull. In my first collection The Little Enemy (2011), I included the following poem in honour of early teenage explorations of the nearby estuary’s attractive mud. I was flattered when a year later the craft-artist Ingrid Anderson chose to turn my images into two matching screen prints, incorporating a plan of the estuary with a crab motif.

The poem goes as follows:



TAMAKI ESTUARY

Walking bare-footed on the estuary

to a sour green river

over mud, sucking heels and toes,

in fear of lost fish-hooks;

crunching fallen insect exo-skeletons

and dead crustacean shells

where live crabs have crawled and blundered, just like me,

sideways and tentative,

under the bare foot’s ball.



Mud. Porous mud. Mud unstable and coaxing.


Mud maternal. Mudbank

mud in slippery life. Mud as dangerous

and giving as the womb.



My soft two-legged track will fill with water,

spread and blur, each large print

the spore of an amphibious yeti.

The soaked land stinks,

the river is a plain,

soup-green, puke-green, snot-green.

I’m upright on an unstable element

heading for water, life,

the relatively clean,



over mud. Squelching mud. Mud under-esteemed.

Mud malleable. Mud

digested in the river’s throat and cast up.

Mud fertile vomit

of the two-way tide.



            The Tamaki Estuary was a couple of hundred yards east of my childhood home. If you looked due west from our front window, you were looking across the Panmure Basin at a very distant view of One Tree Hill. The most spectacular time to look in that direction was sunset (or just after). I am certain that many more large flocks of birds flew over metropolitan Auckland when I was a child than is the case now. City spread means that nesting grounds are further and further from the central city and its suburbs than they were fifty years ago. I have a distinct memory from childhood of large flocks of birds flying towards the setting sun. I hope this is not a trick of memory. Anyway, this fed into the following poem, which I decided not to include in either of my two published collections so far. Maybe it’s too raw a piece of protest. I know that an indigenous tree has now been planted on One Tree Hill and this is taken to be culturally acceptable and we are increasingly encouraged to speak of the hill as Maungakiekie. But I still see the deliberate destruction of the exotic tree that was there as a piece of vandalism. To me, the piece of vandalism says that my associations, as a Pakeha, with this landscape mean nothing.

Here’s the hitherto unpublished poem:




ONE TREE HILL



All childhood, seen through a picture window,

beyond the Panmure Basin and railway,

beyond suburbs, she was an umbrella

to a spike, arm to an upright, shelterer

of birds too distant to see, disruptor

of neat verticals, a swaying wind trap.



For us, sunset was her special time, when

she melted into the unviewable,

a twig in the blinding gold,  or was crowned

by rays from heaven through dramatic clouds.

That was when the birds flew past us to her,

the named One Tree, their day’s end destination.



She grew from the hill and was shaped by wind,

graceful beside the stark stone phallus, part

of the scene like clouds, sheep, birds or sunset,

permanent as God. And now she’s gone, cut

for show, executed as an alien,

the hill reshaped to baldness and a pencil.



This is not your country, says the chainsaw.

You have no right to see, think, dream, be here.



*   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *

            It is always encouraging to be noticed. This was Siobhan Harvey’s response to my second collection of poems, in the Herald “Weekender” magazine on Saturday 27 August: