Make this my home page
More buttons
Best of the Day
Page
Turn off that Wi-Fi network - it's disturbing our chakras.
Video

Hot For Words: Lollipop

Blog
Innocent Spam
Game
EA SPORTS Complex on PlayStation Home
Art
Kinetic sculpture is a cross between art and engineering.
Cool tools
Hot links
Dadaist deconstruction of new media, as a flash game.
Everything you need to know about microscopic water bears
News for nerds
For lovers of the Green Fairy
Stories and art from Australia's Yolgnu people
Australia's best science fiction author
Did the earth just move?
Don't discount journalism
Novelist and comic book legend's homepage
Searchable history of the internet
Exposing systematic torture in Iran
Museum of science fiction, utopia and extraordinary journeys
The real story of christianity
Image bookmarking
Developing tech to get the internet to its full potential
ADDICTED TO CHAOS from Mysterious Miro

One of the disenchanting things about change in the world is that invariably there is a blog or article online which specifically highlights every future event in great detail. Is it luck ? Is it genius ? Who knows... there are just as many websites about aliens landing as there are on quilting. What I really want to see is a website on quilting aliens - or is that what crop circles really are ?

We have become a race of panic driven monkeys far too willing to throw Coogee deserts at any person who draws on the logical and empirical, giving rise to the alternate and contrary position. We are in fact addicted to chaos and when there is none in our lives it seems we are just as likely to assume we are in the eye of the storm and not outside it.

It is indeed true that the pedal which stops everything is far more effective than the pedal which makes things go. That is effectively predicted by the idiom "once bitten, twice shy" - something which predates Bill Gates by a large margin.

Our human nature has become so intimately homogenised with guilt, debt and doubt that it prevents us as Australians from wanting to say we are in fact doing well when our colonial cousins are crapping their pants. Overseas the visual cues are far more potent and the disintegration of unity is driven by fragmentation of predictability. In other words, the neighbourhood is falling apart and soon it will revert to the outland it was before the houses were plonked on it.

The American dream was in fact a wet-dream on the timeline of economic history. It was a fantasy and the victims in the trauma were the unlikely, unprofitable and uninformed. Thus the status quo has been returned - the smart people have taken a whole generation of people to the river and sent them back thirsty to the place they started. It was smash and grab and nothing else. If you did the smashing you did well for yourself ... if you did the grabbing ... the rain of banknotes has turned into a hailstorm of coins. But then why does all of society need to lament the loss of money itself.

The social spirit has been warped by what can only be described as too much proof that "this" was avoidable. It was avoidable because someone predicted it a year ago. This is our "UFO Christ" - a moment of realisation that the crackpots were the leaders. Notably, there are just as many people saying that things are normal and life is still viable but that doesn't sell magazines or make good broadcasting.

We are addicts and our drug is fear. Gordon Gecko + Richard Simmons - Adrenalin is Good. We question our lives by raising the ante on self-destruction and depriving ourselves the satisfaction of knowing that we survived - a form of vicarious post-traumatic disorder. WE can't be happy because someone else screwed up.

Australians live in a well catered society, the power is still on, the water runs at the tap, fuel is available, pensions are available, healthcare is available and food is available. If anything, Australia is more capable and more able to care for its population than it has ever been. Let's agree that it was no accident - indeed a masterpiece of social construction.

There is hope, caring and volunteering don't forget. These are also deeply Australian qualities and while it is true that the music stopped and some people lost their seat - dont forget that every Thursday afternoon in Sydney's Pitt Street Mall the Hugs are still free.

Go back to previous pageLeave some feedbackPrint this pageEmail link to friendsBookmark in del.icio.usAdd to Stumble ThisAdd to your favourite bookmarksDigg this article

Tags

 

Related Stories

   
Next

So, I read today that the designer of Mattel's Barbie doll was obsessed with sex. Seriously? We need a book-length study to tell us that?

We in the land of feminist academics have been teaching the pernicious sexual politics of Barbie for years. The breasts that defy gravity, the hair, the long, long legs and of course the cruel, nipped in waist. Oh, don't forget the tiny clothes, the f*ck-me pumps, not to mention the well-equipped kitchens in every Barbie Dream House. The message of Barbie seems unambiguous to me.

Still, many students (and not a few colleagues) consistently resist seeing Barbie as a miniature sex toy, claiming instead that the doll was a good role model for little girls. (One could, after all, purchase a Barbie doll dressed as a doctor.) Or claiming, equally untenably, that toys had no impact on their ideas about gender roles or their own sexuality.

These students, mostly women, want to rescue Barbie, to protect their own childhoods from academic interrogations of pop culture and what those interrogations might reveal. That's understandable. Yet, many of these same students sit in my class pouring out of tank tops, squeezed into low-rise jeans, or tugging on mini-skirts so short they are nearly impossible to sit down in. That is, dressed like Barbie.

It's an experience I regularly have as a feminist critic of popular culture: a media event, book or news story demonstrates that I'm not wrong, my ideology is not based in "over analyzing," "hyper sensitivity," or "reading too much into things" (the three most common criticisms feminists tend to encounter). It's disappointing, frankly, to stumble so often upon evidence of society's sexism and to keep having to explain that it's there. Disappointing that Barbie was so obviously a sexed-up, misogynist, bad idea for little girls and to realize how thoroughly our culture embraced the toy anyway.

So, here we are again. Feminists were right: no one but a sex-obsessed man with a perverse idea of female anatomy would create a female toy like Barbie. And, as is too too often the case for feminists, being right isn't something to celebrate.

Dr. Bean is an Associate Professor of English at Marshall University, specializing in Gender Studies, Film and Drama. She is the author of "Post-Backlash Feminism: Women and the Media Since Reagan/Bush" (McFarland & Co. 2007). She hosts a blog on mid-life and feminism at kelliebean.com.