Friday, July 20, 2018

Critical Thought in the Face of the Capitalist Hydra I (Sixth Commission of the EZLN)

Sixth Commission of the EZLN
Critical Thought in the Face of the Capitalist Hydra I (Contributions by the Sixth Commission of the EZLN)



Translated notes on a seminar over a number of days. Starts with some entertaining speeches about the Zapatistas (Zapatista Army for National Liberation, or EZLN) with a personal touch. Then gets a bit more serious and factual which is interesting enough but a little dry with a bit of repetition (although as this was a seminar that's not surprising). Gives a good insight into how the Zapatista's run their affairs indeed sometimes in too much detail. Unless you're using this as a guide for how to live within the Zapatista structure which of course was the purpose of the seminar. Interesting nonetheless.

It's sprinkled with some very odd stories being funny, bizarre and surreal. Some possibly true but some are anecdotes or parables. then there's the practical instruction of how to govern bottom up and role of committees including guidance and instruction. A lot of what we did; why we did it and warnings especially about mainstream political parties. Critical thought means different views and there's a fair bit of philosophical ramblings and political economics lecturing. An example I liked was a musing on whether scientists who experiment on mice brains are in reality "simply channelling psychopathic serial killer tendencies". I'd say yes. There's also a lot of Sherlock Holmes quotes and musings which I wasn't expecting in a Latin American rural anarchist book but maybe his stories are really popular over there. The thread about the football team the small girl the cat-dog and the wall to be destroyed is a weird one although brings you back to the fact that the Zapatista anarchism is both revolutionary and steeped in critical analysis.

Saturday, July 07, 2018

The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle (Haruki Murakami)

Haruki Murakami
The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle



Very readable but not particularly enjoyable. It's a dark subject matter which I'm not a fan of although the more surreal passages are great. However to my liking there's far too much gratuitous descriptions of extreme violence and also an underlying salaciousness. The sex scenes may or may not add a lot to the story but I'm not sure why he needs to beat the crap out of a musician or for the ongoing flirting with a local teenager. I'm a bit surprised that Patti Smith loves this book, it's due to her that I read it, apart from her interest in dark crime programmes. Such an epic probably deserves more than a few lines from myself but it's too chopped up with too many strands many of which I feel are there as short stories of violence and sex. There's also an unsavoury thread of women being defiled and maybe quite enjoying it. An enjoyable read in parts but overall very suspect.