Saturday, October 28, 2023
Taking a Stab at Cultural Appropriation - a brief essay
Lawrence Hall, HSG
mhall46184@aol.com
Taking a Stab at Cultural Appropriation
On the morning of 28 October I happened to watch Crystal Greenberg reporting the news via MSNBC. I noticed on a shelf behind her what appeared to be a Roman gladius, a short military sword. The handle seemed in appropriate condition for its age but the blade may have been a wooden or plastic replacement to demonstrate the appearance of the original. I infer that Miss Greenberg has a fondness for studying history and was given or legally purchased this ancient Roman artifact. This speaks well of her varied interests.
However, given the political / cultural disagreements of the past few years the question must now be asked: is this an occasion of cultural appropriation? Can Miss Green document her Roman ancestry in order to possess this artifact legally or at least ethically? Is this gladius a looted artifact that should be returned to the descendants of the long-ago people who manufactured it?
Yes, I'm being snarky. Miss Green appears to be professional and ethical in her reporting, and I very much appreciate her obviously good care of an ancient artifact. Indeed, I am somewhat envious; I would like very much to have a gladius in any condition.
But as St. Thomas More says to the Duke of Norfolk in A Man For All Seasons, "I show you the times." Our country's museums were quite wrong in collecting the remains of First Nations peoples, and although perhaps originally well-intentioned in their displays of clothing, domestic appliances, horse trappings, blankets, and tools it is quite right that now all these things should be return to their proper custodians.
But everything that is
manufactured is the product of a culture or series of cultures, a time, and a
place. Many pocketknives have been excavated among other debris at the Little
Bighorn, evidence of Custer’s soldiers desperately using them to extract the
jammed soft-copper shells from their overheating rifles. The presence of these
knives in an American museum is just right, but what of a pre-historic bone
knife found in a dig in, say, Syria. Whose is it? Who decides? What about a rusty
British army pocketknife plowed up in a field in Belgium? What is the cutoff
date for determining rightful possession, and what are the borders and
boundaries?
Should Turks return
Constantinople (which they were pleased to rename Istanbul) to the Greeks?
Indignant accusations
of cultural appropriation has become a self-destructive fashion reflecting
jealousy and insecurity, and the illogic of the very concept eludes many
people. Eyeglasses, for instance, can be argued as having been invented in
China or one of the Italian states (Italy didn’t exist until the 19th
century) around 1300, and possibly by our busy Romans 2,000 years ago. It does
not thus follow that no one but Chinese or Italians should be permitted to wear
eyeglasses.
Cultures blend; the dialectic of thesis / antithesis / synthesis is what make civilization dynamic. Without the interplay of music, art, science, literature, engineering, medicine, and all the other practices of cultures enriching each other we would decline into a series of isolated museums of unimaginative peoples clinging to a closed loop of non-progress.
I am happy that Miss Greenberg owns an ancient Roman gladius (the length of whose blade might be illegal where she lives). It is because she is not a Roman that she is more empowered to share another culture around the metaphorical table at which we all may feast.
-30-
Tuesday, October 24, 2023
Alexander the Coppersmith - poem
Lawrence
Hall, HSG
Dispatches for the Colonial Office
Alexander the
Coppersmith
2 Timothy 4:14
We don’t know much about the coppersmith
(Indeed, we don’t know much about each other)
The works of an artist’s hands may serve the Lord
Or else they serve Ephesian vanities
If a man is going to mold metals into idols
Diana of Ephesus might be pleasing aesthetically
But better to dismiss Diana and other trumperies
And joy in the gold of the Servant’s words
For power and jewels and golden toilet bowls
Are baubles that blind our eyes and darken our souls
(But still, I hope Alexander made things right)
Monday, October 23, 2023
The Stone, the Shell, and the Lance - poem
Lawrence
Hall, HSG
Dispatches for
the Colonial Office
The Stone, the Shell,
and the Lance
-Wordsworth, Prelude, Book V, line 70 and following
Mathematics were always quarried stones to me
A chaos of integers, carries, and sums
Cascading down a dusty, crumbling slope
And piled up as a useless heap of rubble
But words, layered words, curving and dancing words
Are shimmering shells in stilly tidal pools
There waiting for my eyes, my thoughts, my speech
To play them, work them, hold them as chalices of truth
And the lance? The knight, he wields his wicked lance
Only to herd poor prisoners into algebra
Sunday, October 22, 2023
Creation Sings Hatikvah - poem
Lawrence
Hall, HSG
Creation
Sings Hatikvah
The Torah unrolls in a soft, whispered
wind
The wanderer finds shade under its protection
The scholar refreshes himself with its words
The nations sit and attend to its truths
Creation sings Hatikvah, sings
our Hope
The voice of God is in the whispered wind
His Words from before the first ever dawn
Flowing through the Beginning and even now
A blessing upon Jerusalem, upon the world
Creation sings Hatikvah, sings
our Hope
Our voices too are in the whispered wind
The Torah unrolls for us in a whispered wind
Creation sings Hatikvah, sings
our Hope
But Mom, All the Cool Kids are into Genocide! - doggerel
Lawrence
Hall, HSG
Dispatches for the Colonial Office
But Mom, All the Cool
Kids are into Genocide!
“Students! Be the Fuhrer’s Propagandists!”
Nazi
poster ca. 1933, per Library of Congress: [Studenten
seid Propagandisten des Führers Hoch-u. Fachschulen bekennen sich am 29. März
zur Deutschen Freiheitsbewegung / (loc.gov)]
All the cool kids are into genocide
Slogans and posters and bullhorns and cries
Abandoning their studies to march outside
And scream the same 2,000-year-old lies
The InterGossip commands, and they obey
Blocking the streets and clenching each fist
Waving misspelt signs and yelling all day
Never pausing to ask if there’s something they’ve missed
Am I a hollow echo for some sycophant’s squall?
Will I fail to think for myself at all?
Friday, October 20, 2023
Dostoyevsky and Applesauce 2 / $5 - poem
Lawrence
Hall, HSG
Dispatches for the Colonial Office
Dostoyevsky and
Applesauce 2 / $5
Literature in the Supermarket
The nice young man who bags my purchases -
He spoke to me of Notes from Underground
And who the unreliable narrator is
And how he anticipates the revolution
The pharmacist who jabbed me against the ‘flu –
He spoke to me of Robert E. Howard
And how Conan’s psychological issues
Anticipate the author’s death by suicide
A surprising conversation in a small-town grocery
But even more in a modern university
Thursday, October 19, 2023
The Aeolian Harb and the Aeolian Tree-Stump - poem
Lawrence
Hall, HSG
Dispatches for the Colonial Office
The Aeolian Harp and
the Aeolian Tree-Stump
Every tree is an Aeolian harp
Singing the Daily Office of the wind
Not often the night’s Matins and Lauds so much
But with the breezy dawn the service of Prime
And I know an Aeolian tree-stump too
Of deeper voices through its mysterious hollows
Wind whispering into the damp, dark earth
Then booming out into the air again
Every tree is an Aeolian harp
But a tree-stump can be musical too
Wednesday, October 18, 2023
18 October 2023 - When Missiles Fall Upon Our Vanities
Lawrence Hall, HSG
18 October 2023 - When Missiles Fall Upon Our Vanities
When missiles fall upon our vanities
And children die among our smoking ruins
Will we dare plead our weak excuses to God:
“This isn’t what we meant…”
Tuesday, October 17, 2023
If Children Ask for Bread Will We Give Them a Statement? - a sentence which is not a poem at all
Lawrence
Hall, HSG
Dispatches for the Colonial Office
If Children Ask
for Bread Will We Give Them a Statement?
“The Roman Catholic–Orthodox Joint International
Commission for Theological Dialogue produced a statement this past June on
the vexed issue of papal primacy and the timely topic of synodality.”
Well of course they did.
A Deer and I Surprised Each Other - doggerel
Lawrence
Hall, HSG
Dispatches for the Colonial Office
A Deer and I Surprised
Each Other
Silence
We paused
We looked
She leaped
I said
Goodbye
But she
Was gone
And I
Was left
There all
Alone
Monday, October 16, 2023
People are Dying by the Thousands - Let's All Go Buy Slogan Tees - poem
Lawrence
Hall, HSG
Dispatches for the Colonial Office
People are Dying by
the Thousands – Let’s All Go Buy Slogan Tees
XL, L, M, S, and
Petite
Guaranteed
Ethically-Sourced Materials
Domestic
carnage now filled all the year
With
Feast-days; the old Man from the chimney nook,
The
Maiden from the bosom of her Love,
The
Mother from the Cradle of her Babe,
The
Warrior from the Field – all perish’d, all
Wordsworth, The Prelude, 1805-1806, Book X,
356-360
We busy ourselves in our accustomed ways:
Dishes to wash, the still-green lawn to be mowed
The vacuum cleaner to annoy the household pup
A book, a chair, a reverie, a glass of tea
But then
The evening news is a call to our conscience
With offerings in two senses only
Tastefully muted sounds and filtered visuals
Across a couch with a motorized recline mode
Dead bodies fuzzed out on the evening news
And peace-loving intellectuals chanting
“Gas the Jews!”
Will There be Coffee after the Crucifixion? - poem
Lawrence
Hall, HSG
Dispatches for the Colonial Office
Will There be Coffee
after the Crucifixion?
Everything’s
going to be discovered
And
understood in the course of time,
Only
we have to go on thinking
-Yevtushenko, “Zima Junction”
Not all are crucified, but all are wounded
We bring our gifts to the Altar; they fall apart
In secretly clinging to them for ourselves
Our claims to be defined by an era
But rotting corpses in a tangled wood
The celebrant elevates the Host
We lift unfocused eyes in grave pretense
Inattentive at the Wedding of worlds
The Mass is the central Act in Creation -
Not all are crucified, but all are wounded
Sunday, October 15, 2023
A Tale of Herschkowitz - a brief narrative
Lawrence Hall, HSG
A Tale of Herschkowitz
602nd
Tank Destroyer Battalion
My father, who was a master sergeant in the Second World
War, told this story of one of his armored car’s crew, Herschkowitz. Towards
the end of the war, probably in the area of Zwickau, Herschkowitz was flirting
with some pretty German girls. This was probably one of the sanest moments in
Europe in 1945.
Later my father said, “Herschkowitz, I didn’t know you
spoke German.”
Herschkowitz replied, “I don’t, sergeant, but I know
Yiddish and we all understood each other pretty well.”
Thus endeth the lesson.
-30-
Saturday, October 14, 2023
(Untitled / flashback to Viet-Nam / not for publication)
93. 14 October 2023, Saturday in Ordinary Time
Lawrence
Hall, HSG
Dispatches for the Colonial Office
Flashback (not for
publication)
Domestic
carnage now filled all the year
With
Feast-days; the old Man from the chimney nook,
The
Maiden from the bosom of her Love,
The
Mother from the Cradle of her Babe,
The
Warrior from the Field – all perish’d, all
Wordsworth, The Prelude, 1805-1806, Book X,
356-360
We busy ourselves in our accustomed ways:
Dishes to wash, the still-green lawn to be mowed
The vacuum cleaner to annoy the household pup
A book, a chair, a reverie, a glass of tea
But then
The evening news is the call of our conscience
The evening news is a long-ago call-back
With offerings in two senses only
Tastefully muted sounds and filtered visuals
Not
The concussions, the stench, the stickiness
of blood, the dust on our lips, the screams we deny, the tears we swallow the
impossible pulse that makes breathing gasping hyperventilating fragments
stinging the skin concussions concussions concussions make them stop make it
all stop running running running over there drag him to the ditch hurry hurry
hurry you can treat him there he’s dead his eyes are open to the gravel go back
again hurry hurry hurry breathe breathe breathe
Why is this happening again why is this happening again
Stop
That child is dead
Stop it
What’s that? A dead soldier. He is so small
Stop it
So many bodies, shrunken into their clothes
A still-clawed arm sticking out from a bundle
Dead bodies fuzzed out on the evening news
Non-combatant commandos channeling their views
And darling little undergrads shrieking, “Death to the Jews”
Friday, October 13, 2023
My Concealed-Carry Jewish Space Laser (Shhhhhhhhhhh...!) - doggerel
Lawrence
Hall, HSG
Dispatches for the Colonial Office
My Concealed-Carry
Jewish Space Laser
In my state you can carry a switch-blade knife
And shoot an AR with 30-round magazines
Or a .50-calibre Barrett for vaporizing a life
Tote brass-knuckles in your camouflaged jeans
In my state
Few methods of murder are regulated
But if you read Anne Frank you could be investigated
Three Cigarette Lighters - poem
Lawrence
Hall, HSG
Dispatches for the Colonial Office
Three Cigarette
Lighters
And in what landscape of disaster
Has
your unhappy spirit lost its road?
-Thomas Merton, “For my Brother”
I was strolling along for my digestion and health
Inspecting the refreshing October winds
Counting the summer-tired leaves floating to earth
And noting the brightness of autumn’s yellow flowers
Off in the weeds a cigarette lighter presented itself
It didn’t work. A second cigarette lighter did
A useful souvenir of my evening walk
And then a third – three cheap lighters, all in a row
A cocaine trail of disposable dreams
Disposable lighters, disposable lives
Wednesday, October 11, 2023
"Choose You This Day Whom You Will Serve"
Lawrence
Hall, HSG
Dispatches for the Colonial Office
“Choose You This Day
Whom You Will Serve”
“…for whom war was a fresh terror and the corpses of real people…”
-Matti
Friedman, Who by Fire: Leonard Cohen in the Sinai
A little child ripped from her dead mother’s arms
Is not a
petition for border adjustments
A grandfather murdered while waiting for the bus
Is not a
parliamentary point of order
Teenagers stripped, raped, beaten, tortured, and shot
Are not cool chants
in a university quad
A rotting fragment of a beheaded baby
Is not someone’s
tee-shirt slogan
An elderly woman still marked from Buchenwald
Is a child of
God, not a bargaining chip
No deflections
No whatabouts
No evasions
No excuses
No
Choose you this day whom you will serve.
Sunday, October 8, 2023
7 October 2023 - Anger and Futility
7 October 2023
Must Anne Frank be murdered again and again? I cannot write
anything meaningful today; I can only sputter in anger and futility.
“A voice was heard in Ramah, lamentation, weeping, and great
mourning, Rachel weeping for her children, refusing to be comforted, because
they are no more.”
St. Matthew 2:18
Saturday, October 7, 2023
Southern Belle Antiques 'N' Stuff - a little East Texas Gothic for Ya
Lawrence
Hall, HSG
Dispatches for the Colonial Office
Southern Belle Antiques
‘N’ Stuff
(Slow sibilant bathroom-slipper-shuffle)
“Oh, don’t close the door, honey, oh no
If the door is closed no one will know I’m open
English Romantics? Here’s an Edgar Allan Poe
I read lots of books myself; do you like westerns?”
(Dark narrow paths tunnel through dark moldy heaps)
“I paid fifty dollars for that bolt cutter
It’s almost new; I bought it for my daddy
My brother locked him out of his own house
You can have it for twenty; I live upstairs”
(The shambling slippers follow me to the door)
“It’s a shame that girls don’t play with dolls anymore
Come back anytime; I’m mostly open”
