hawkwing_lb: (Helps if they think you're crazy)
So iTunes just cued up Mystic Lipstick (Celtic Tenors cover), a folk song written in 1989 by Jimmy McCarthy. (McCarthy wrote a number of Christy Moore's folk hits.) And it seems strangely appropriate, because I've just finished watching an episode from the fourth series of Waking the Dead that featured Irish nationalism and British politics, and I have been having thinky thoughts about Romanticism rolling around in my head since I got back from Greece.

Greece has been terribly romanticised in its turn, of course. Leaving aside its mythological status as the Cradle of European Civilisation (a construct of the European Renaissance), the 18th century saw it constructed as a Romantic destination on the Grand Tour (et in Arcadia ego), a construct which bore little relationship to reality. The 19th century and the Greek war of independence saw the construction of a (self-built, internally contradictory) national mythology, and its growth as an Interesting Place for international Classically-interested archaeologists... well, let's just say that from a certain point of view the likes of Schliemann on the mainland and Evans in Crete contributed to the erection of Whole New Interesting Mythologies.

And now the stories northern Europe tells about Greece have to do with laziness and profligacy, and you know what? No more true than ROMANCE. Fuck off, ECB in Frankfurt. Look at some context.

Ireland did not, of course, see itself lionised and mythologised during the European Renaissance - quite the opposite, since the 16th century saw it viewed as a land of barbarians ripe for colonisation and the 17th century witnessed the repurposing of martyr and atrocity stories from the Thirty Years War to give voice to the anxieties and stife arising from the Rebellion of 1642 and the English Civil War - but the 18th century saw the beginnings of an interest in Irish antiquarianism and the start of a "national" impetus towards myth-making and - as the 19th century began - lionising the Catholic Emancipation movement in messianic and nationalistic terms. Nationalism and tenants' rights are the two major themes of Ireland's politics in the 19th century, and though the lack of a Home Rule victory until the 20th century prevented the canonisation of an officially-sanctioned nationalist mythology until much later, the pantheon contains numerous unofficial and contradictory saints. Complicating matters for Ireland is that its Protestant and Anglo heritage is much less easy to disavow than the Turkish heritage of Greece. If it is to be disavowed, it must be done in subtle terms, acknowledging Exceptional Anglo-Irishmen, casting the others as West Brits, betrayers of nationalism and the Historical Imperative of Irish Nationhood.

Then you have the Romantic Irish movement at the end of the 19th century, existing alongside Gaelic revivalism and the growing European antiquarian interest not only in "Celtic" cultures, but in magic and mysticism. No overview of Irish Romanticism is complete without an understanding of how the likes of Yeats and the rest of the Celtic Twilight literati partook of an international intellectual/literary atmosphere that included members of the Theosophical Society and the Order of the Golden Dawn. (And if anyone can point me to a solid and readable academic study that discusses this, I'd be grateful - I used to have a handful of references, but that was when I was still in school.) Lady Gregory was connected with figures from this milieu, and Yeats himself was a member of the Order of the Golden Dawn. A misty mysticism pervades much of Yeats' writing. He positioned himself as a "national poet" of the new Ireland, even after independence, and as many of the other literary figures who entered the national pantheon (Pearse, for example) not only died in the Rising or in the War of Independence/Civil War years, but had a vested interest in portraying their relationship to Irish Nationhood in mystical, quasi-religious, at times messianic terms (it is easier to get people to die if you position dying as a salvific act), misty mysticism pervades Irish literature of the late 19th and early 20th century.

It is an obscurantist haze layered over a complicated reality. What makes it worse is that misty mysticism - or at least its salvific/messianic nationalist offshoots - remain common currency in certain puddles of political rhetoric, and enjoyed a much wider currency than they do now within my own lifetime. (See Northern Ireland, pre-Peace Process.)

And both the misty mysticism and the complicated historical reality inform present national politics. But because our national myths (our dialectics, even!) rely all too much on the Romantic Mirage (and its obverse, the Lazy Irish Savage: hello, ECB! Our financial woes are actually mostly your fault, since you helped provide the credit - and then mandated the socialisation of debt - that got us to this point!), it is nearly impossible to even construct an argument about history today without engaging the Mirage. (The Mirage is politically useful, in that it elides discussion of class and the historical benefits conferred thereby: many of the present prominent political figures of the Republic have several generations of political connections, and those that do not generally come from publican or professional backgrounds.)

It's impossible to ignore it, you know. It just sits there, even if you never mention it, pulling the conversation askew with all the gravity of a soul-sucking black hole.

I say this, because I am contemplating opening Kevin Hearne's Tricked, which based on previous track record, will be an entertaining pseudo-Celtic mixed mythological romp set somewhere in the continental United States. While at the same time I am still reading Ian McDonald's King of Morning, Queen of Day - which at least in its first part, juxtaposes the weird and Romantic with the utterly mundane and is the better book for it. The more painful: but McDonald understands that the layers of the rotten onion (the Matryoska dolls of Irish mythology, each one stranger than the next) have a kind of recursive complexity impossible to reduce to linear clarity. The only possible shape is the spiral. Not the line, not the circle, but a twisted helix bending around an indefinable centre.

My analogy runs away from me. Still.

*rambles along, ramblingly*
hawkwing_lb: (Default)
So, climbing.

Not a terrible night, all told: I had some strength back, and some courage. Three routes sent, all of which I had done before, and three more routes improved upon. Although I'm very annoyed with the lack of posted grades: it's hard to tell if I'm improving, or what.

I also spent a little time on the bouldering section. They have one problem that's all jugs, a ladder, and I did some ten-second straight arm hangs and (attempted, at least) bent arm hangs. They're kind of hard.

Apparently there are bouldering problems out at Portrane. I might have to see if I can talk the parent into driving me there this weekend or next to check them out.


College work proceeds apace. A very slow resentful pace: I should dearly like to carve time out for writing without feeling a mountain of guilt descend on my shoulders for using limited brain power for what is, technically, a hobby.

Said hobby had two hours and ~1000 words worth of note-taking expended on it today, in a response to "Merlin" and various piddling bits of medievalistic fantasy. (I should have been doing Greek, really.) Ah, well. There is yet time.

There damn well better be.



I don't even read the papers, and passing the headlines on the newstand in the morning makes my stomach clench. The parent has made noises about me possibly approaching the banks to see if there are any useful affordable student types of loan left.

Read more... )

So. Still not monarch of the universe. Better get cracking, then.
hawkwing_lb: (Default)
So, climbing.

Not a terrible night, all told: I had some strength back, and some courage. Three routes sent, all of which I had done before, and three more routes improved upon. Although I'm very annoyed with the lack of posted grades: it's hard to tell if I'm improving, or what.

I also spent a little time on the bouldering section. They have one problem that's all jugs, a ladder, and I did some ten-second straight arm hangs and (attempted, at least) bent arm hangs. They're kind of hard.

Apparently there are bouldering problems out at Portrane. I might have to see if I can talk the parent into driving me there this weekend or next to check them out.


College work proceeds apace. A very slow resentful pace: I should dearly like to carve time out for writing without feeling a mountain of guilt descend on my shoulders for using limited brain power for what is, technically, a hobby.

Said hobby had two hours and ~1000 words worth of note-taking expended on it today, in a response to "Merlin" and various piddling bits of medievalistic fantasy. (I should have been doing Greek, really.) Ah, well. There is yet time.

There damn well better be.



I don't even read the papers, and passing the headlines on the newstand in the morning makes my stomach clench. The parent has made noises about me possibly approaching the banks to see if there are any useful affordable student types of loan left.

Read more... )

So. Still not monarch of the universe. Better get cracking, then.
hawkwing_lb: (war just begun Sapphire and Steel)
I had to share this, because I wonder if anyone else will have the same mental picture I had.

Batwoman: )

I knew about batmen, of course, but this?

My mental response was to wonder...

Read more... )

I really need to finish a novel one of these days so that I can write another one. :-)
hawkwing_lb: (war just begun Sapphire and Steel)
I had to share this, because I wonder if anyone else will have the same mental picture I had.

Batwoman: )

I knew about batmen, of course, but this?

My mental response was to wonder...

Read more... )

I really need to finish a novel one of these days so that I can write another one. :-)
hawkwing_lb: (war just begun Sapphire and Steel)
So. Today I have been head-mugged by a story that insists on representing itself as a short (I am mistrustful. I suspect it lies). This evening shall be given over to convincing it to front up and tell me what it wants: I suspect all will be clear in a few thousand words or so.

I have also made some very minor progress on Dreamdark. It continues to simmer - while the characters sulk - in the back of my head, taking up valuable space that should really be being used for my French assignment.

2000 words of literary/philosophical criticism to be done by Monday.

::stabs:: ::hates:: ::procrastinates::

Other projects are starting to pop up again, too, and other characters have been jumping up and down and waving and threatening from their perches in my backbrain.

Let's see... there's the (former) assassin and (current) pilot; the hunted former war hero/war criminal (which he is depends on who you ask); the privateer; the courtesan-assassin-spy; the necromancer; yet another assassin; another war hero/criminal; a thief-spy; a disgraced nobleman who has a sword with a mind of its own; a revolutionary or two; a smuggler or three; a dead politician's daughter; a pilot or five (yes, more pilots); a politician or six; and maybe a couple of Prophesised Saviour/Destroyers thrown in for good measure.

Now, if only I could write them all without having to do the, y'know, actual work of writing, I'd be very happy indeed. *g*

Goals for the first third of 2006: )

Anyone else have goals? *g*
hawkwing_lb: (war just begun Sapphire and Steel)
So. Today I have been head-mugged by a story that insists on representing itself as a short (I am mistrustful. I suspect it lies). This evening shall be given over to convincing it to front up and tell me what it wants: I suspect all will be clear in a few thousand words or so.

I have also made some very minor progress on Dreamdark. It continues to simmer - while the characters sulk - in the back of my head, taking up valuable space that should really be being used for my French assignment.

2000 words of literary/philosophical criticism to be done by Monday.

::stabs:: ::hates:: ::procrastinates::

Other projects are starting to pop up again, too, and other characters have been jumping up and down and waving and threatening from their perches in my backbrain.

Let's see... there's the (former) assassin and (current) pilot; the hunted former war hero/war criminal (which he is depends on who you ask); the privateer; the courtesan-assassin-spy; the necromancer; yet another assassin; another war hero/criminal; a thief-spy; a disgraced nobleman who has a sword with a mind of its own; a revolutionary or two; a smuggler or three; a dead politician's daughter; a pilot or five (yes, more pilots); a politician or six; and maybe a couple of Prophesised Saviour/Destroyers thrown in for good measure.

Now, if only I could write them all without having to do the, y'know, actual work of writing, I'd be very happy indeed. *g*

Goals for the first third of 2006: )

Anyone else have goals? *g*
hawkwing_lb: (pale world)
...That my college semester ends on the ninth of December. Ye gods and little fishes, only a little over three weeks left.

I'm having culture shock here. First a laissez-faire attitude to learning, now (um, how many weeks?) about six weeks for Christmas break. Sh*t, this changes things.

I have completed my commentary on Huis Clos, complete with obligatory footnotes and bibliography. (That noise you hear, if you listen very carefully, is me collapsing in relief). Next up, Archaeology assignment.

But not tonight. Tonight I plan to be asleep before 2230 hours, since I have been awake since before 0530 hours, on, oh, maybe three hours' worth of sleep. This is a not good situation. This is a situation that might engender babbling and nonsensical gibberish.

I had an idea on the train home this evening that's forcing me to completely reevaluate a previous idea. One that's had three incarnations and reached a stage of finished-ness in none of them.

Why do I always get these goddamn starbursts of incandescent thought when I'm too tired to do anything about them but (metaphorically) wave at them and giggle, Ooh, shiny? That makes three - three - in the space of two days.

And I'm just lolling about here, babbling drunkenly with tiredness. Although at least when you're drunk on caffeine, chocolate and tiredness you're not going to get a hangover in the morning, not that I've much experience of hangovers to compare my sleep-deprivation after-effects to.

And see? Told you. Babbling.

Good night.
hawkwing_lb: (pale world)
...That my college semester ends on the ninth of December. Ye gods and little fishes, only a little over three weeks left.

I'm having culture shock here. First a laissez-faire attitude to learning, now (um, how many weeks?) about six weeks for Christmas break. Sh*t, this changes things.

I have completed my commentary on Huis Clos, complete with obligatory footnotes and bibliography. (That noise you hear, if you listen very carefully, is me collapsing in relief). Next up, Archaeology assignment.

But not tonight. Tonight I plan to be asleep before 2230 hours, since I have been awake since before 0530 hours, on, oh, maybe three hours' worth of sleep. This is a not good situation. This is a situation that might engender babbling and nonsensical gibberish.

I had an idea on the train home this evening that's forcing me to completely reevaluate a previous idea. One that's had three incarnations and reached a stage of finished-ness in none of them.

Why do I always get these goddamn starbursts of incandescent thought when I'm too tired to do anything about them but (metaphorically) wave at them and giggle, Ooh, shiny? That makes three - three - in the space of two days.

And I'm just lolling about here, babbling drunkenly with tiredness. Although at least when you're drunk on caffeine, chocolate and tiredness you're not going to get a hangover in the morning, not that I've much experience of hangovers to compare my sleep-deprivation after-effects to.

And see? Told you. Babbling.

Good night.

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