Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Metropolis Capital



















Frozen Assets. Fresco by Diego Rivera, 1931

Human Resources: Bodies and Money stored away beneath a teeming city.

There's an old Greek proverb attributed to the comic Epicharmus, who lived in the 6th century BC. "Where there is money (Gr. argurion - or Heb. kesef, Fr. argent ) all things run and are driven." Think New York City, capital of capital, art and fashion.

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Meleagris gallopavo













Wild Turkey hens on Lime Kiln Road, Suffern, NY

The Wild Turkey

"As early as the middle of February, they begin to experience the impulse of propagation… If the call of the female comes from the ground, all the males immediately fly towards the spot, and the moment they reach it, whether the hen be in sight or not, spread out and erect their tail, draw the head back on the shoulders, depress their wings with a quivering motion, and strut pompously about, emitting at the same time a succession of puffs from the lungs, and stopping now and then to listen and look. But whether they spy the female or not, they continue to puff and strut, moving with as much celerity as their ideas of ceremony seem to admit. While thus occupied, the males often encounter each other, in which case desperate battles take place, ending in bloodshed, and often in the loss of many lives, the weaker falling under the repeated blows inflicted upon their head by the stronger.

I have often been much diverted, while watching two males in fierce conflict, by seeing them move alternately backwards and forwards, as either had obtained a better hold, their wings drooping, their tails partly raised, their body-feathers ruffled, and their heads covered with blood. If, as they thus struggle, and gasp for breath, one of them should lose his hold, his chance is over, for the other, still holding fast, hits him violently with spurs and wings, and in a few minutes brings him to the ground. The moment he is dead, the conqueror treads him under foot, but, what is strange, not with hatred, but with all the motions which he employs in caressing the female."

- John James Audubon, Ornithological Biography, Vol. I, Philadelphia, 1832


Monday, January 2, 2012

The greatest Sages find the chutzpah right under our noses
















The Akedah, from R. Crumb's 'Genesis'

There are so many transgressions available out there in the world for which we may indict "Western" culture. But here's one we don't think about much or at least I never heard it uttered by any scholar of Biblical literature.

In a note from Nietzche and Philosophy, Gilles Deleuze quotes this passage from Beyond Good and Evil:
"the taste for the Old Testament is a touchstone in regard to 'great' and 'small'... To have glued this New Testament, a species of rococo taste in every respect, on to the Old Testament to form a single book, as 'Bible,' as the 'Book of Books': that is perhaps the greatest piece of temerity and 'sin against the spirit' that literary Europe has on its conscience."