Thursday, September 04, 2008

Archetypal beings

All descended lines of beings of the finite dimensions, continued the waves, and all stages of growth in each one of these beings, are merely manifestations of one archetypal and eternal being in the space outside dimensions. Each local being - son, father, grandfather, and so on - and each stage of individual being - infant, child, boy, man - is merely one of the infinite phases of that same archetypal and eternal being, caused by a variation in the angle of the consciousness-plane which cuts it.
- HP Lovecraft with E. Hoffman Price, Through The Gates of the Silver Key [source]

"The idea is not that there was likely an original human model that they were copied from. The idea was that these models of Cylon were sort of developed out of their own study of us. The Cylons on some level looked at humanity and said 'You know what? There's really only twelve of you.' If these are the twelve, and sort of if you look at them they each represent different archetypes of what humanity is."
- Ronald D. Moore, producer of the re-imagined Battlestar Galactica series [source]

Bincangkan/discuss.

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Wednesday, March 05, 2008

PowerPhluff

There's something remarkably perverse about taking study breaks from composing a PowerPoint presentation of a paper, to read a book where the author tells you how PowerPoint makes presenters stupid, holds audiences captive, sucks for technical data in general, and was responsible in part for the deaths of 7 astronauts on the Columbia shuttle.

I'm not kidding. Read Edward Tufte's Beautiful Evidence. It's a great book, spurring me to think about what I'll need to do to best present my work in the future, and its publication is responsible for the resurrection of Minard's map of Napoleon's Russia campaign that's being bandied around by the mass media. But I think it's sort of funny that he hates PowerPoint so much that he devoted an entire chapter to it, but I can see his - 'scuse me - points very well. I've had some professors who, when their laptop won't talk to the projector, can't flipping remember what that big whiteboard hiding behind the screen is for.

Minard's map:

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Sunday, November 04, 2007

Harriet Beecher Stowe Is A Bitch

The cast: Eight graduate students in various stages of education.
KRISTA, our hostess, a Spanish major who's a total Harry Potter fanatic
DAVE, her fiance, a mathematician
KATRINA, her housemate, a speech pathologist
BEN, a student of 19th-century German
LIS, a petite, chirpy pianist
CHRISTOPHER, a mediaevalist who looks the part
LEE - I think he studies Russian
me

The scene: Krista and Katrina's apartment, crouched over a guys-versus-girls game of It Was a Dark and Stormy Night. This is a relatively new board game which involves guessing either the title or the author of a book whose first lines are read from a randomly drawn card.

So far the girls are well ahead (gender stereotypes, anyone?). We've landed more often on Novels: 1900-1950 more often than we would have liked and on Children's Books and Science Fiction not enough, but Krista and I have saved two turns in a row by guessing "Hemingway" and "Fitzgerald" semi-facetiously and turning out right.

The guys roll and land on Novels: before 1900. Krista draws and reads
"In Which the Reader Is Introduced to a Man of Humanity. Late in the afternoon of a chilly day in February, two gentlemen were sitting alone over their wine, in a well-furnished dining parlor, in the town of P----, in Kentucky. There were no servants present, and the gentlemen, with chairs closely approaching, seemed to be discussing some subject with great earnestness."
resulting in a moment of bafflement before the argument breaks out.

"It sounds like Tolstoy. He does that letter-followed-by-dash naming."
"But it's in Kentucky!"
"What year?" someone asks.
"1852," Krista reads.
"Mark Twain with the 'man of humanity'? [Twain is the universal answer to any American novel before 1900, apparently] He was kinda preachy in some of his short stories."
"Yeah, but this is a novel."
"Wait...could it be Uncle Tom's Cabin, you know, by Harriet Beecher Stowe? Kentucky is a border state," Ben suggests.

The girls, who have all glanced at the card, exchange a look of brief panic which changes to glee when Christopher, head in hands, mutters, "No, no, that's too late for Uncle Tom."
There's more back-and-forth for several minutes until Christopher yelps at Lee "You saved us with Dante, what's this one?"
Lee shakes his head. (The guys got a poem earlier that sounded awfully like "The Road Less Travelled" but turned out to be "The Divine Comedy" or something.)
"Twain, then?"
"I guess so."
"Twain."
Shrugs. "Twain."

"Uncle Tom's Cabin, by Harriet Beecher Stowe," Krista announces, smug as a cat in the cream.
"YOU WERE FREAKING KIDDING ME!" Ben yells at Christopher.
"I'm gonna go hide in the kitchen." As he retreats behind the fridge, the rest of us are treated to a frustrated screech of "HARRIET BEECHER STOWE, YOU BITCH!"
"Now that would make a great first line," says Dave.

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Friday, October 26, 2007

Acquisition

I made a request to the UW library to get a copy of Amir Muhammad's Lelaki Komunis Terakhir [The Last Communist] and they got it from Singapore in a WEEK. I think it was my appending "this film was banned in Malaysia" to the acquisition request that might have sped it up ^_^ I like the little pomelos on the DVD cover and poster. Will watch and let you know what I think.

They also got Syed Akbar Ali's "Malaysia and the Club of DOOM" for me fairly quickly, as well as James Rennie's "The Operators" for Steve. Operators is a non-fictional memoir about British special forces in Northern Ireland and it's great if you like Tom Clancy kind of stuff. Rosei and Johnson's "Survival Skills for Scientists", the only thing I requested that wasn't purely for leisure, actually took a bit longer to get here.

Especially after Karcy/Cat told me how it can take UM (Universiti Malaysia) effing months to get a book - because of the approval process! - I'm glad I'm doing my graduate studies in the US... But I still want to go back and FIX the system. I hate stuff that's broken. It's not like we're some kind of banana republic wallowing in mud. We HAVE the money. We HAVE the tech. It's just not being used!

A survival skill for scientists: not screwing around blogging the morning right before a midterm exam, which skill I don't seem to have...

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Saturday, March 24, 2007

The Asian Mystique

What I did for the last two nights instead of my homework =P This was for Vox.


Book review: Sheridan Prasso’s The Asian Mystique
ISBN: 1586483943 (paperback edition)

Usually when someone says of a manuscript that it sounds like it was researched in bars, it’s an insult. With this book, it’s the truth.

I first heard of the book when visiting a Singaporean classmate from college. She pointed it out to me while we were wandering around Kinokuniya, and I scribbled down the title to see if it was cheaper online. Since I’m a Malaysian English-speaking banana with a vested interest in intercultural issues and women’s rights, it piqued my interest. Although admittedly my concern with Western perceptions of Asia previously extended mostly to getting annoyed at people who would ask “Do you have computers in Malaysia?”

The premises of the book, to “uncover the origins of Western fantasies and fallacies” and “encourage a clearer understanding of an Asia unclouded by Mystique” sounded promising, but the outcome is a let-down. From the author’s own narrative, she seems to have gone through her travels with her thesis fully formed, selecting subjects who would prop it up.

As mentioned before, Prasso spends a lot of the book hanging out in bars with prostitutes. She also hangs out with feminist writers, air stewardesses, the famous retired geisha Mineko Iwasaki (who stopped befriending Arthur Golden after he twisted her story in “Memoirs of a Geisha”), and Japanese housewives. Why Japanese housewives, if the book’s about Western perceptions and interactions with East Asia? I suppose the point is to show that Japanese women aren’t all that exotic after all, but unless you like reading about a bunch of aunties taking care of their kids and chit-chatting with their friends, you can skip the better part of the sixth chapter. (However, it’s useful to learn that a good Japanese excuse for getting rid of salesmen is “I’m sorry, I must ask my husband.”)

On the non-Hello Kitty side, sex tourism certainly is one of the more disturbing aspects of globalism. However, the two chapters spent on prostitution aren’t good enough to justify the space they take up in a 13-chapter book. Again, Prasso seems to be selectively deaf here – if you’re in a red-light district, you’ll find dirty old men. She fails to make a coherent argument that their mindset is representative of the Western mindset toward Asian women, or any coherent argument at all. Her research the Philippines is pretty much just a narrative of a bar crawl.

This book would have been better for examining the lives of Asian/white couples and the effect that culture and perceptions have on their various trajectories. However, Prasso only looks at one long-term relationship in depth – Yukie and Chris, Japanese and American, and it terminated badly. Even from the biased narrative, it sounds like it was more the woman’s fault for not considering the consequences of asking a spouse to give up everything and move to a country where he literally couldn’t do anything. (Gasp! Can I write that on a feminist website?)

One dot’s not enough to make a picture. Among my relatives and acquaintances, there are a number of long-term (long-term = old enough that I call them aunty and uncle) interracial couples. I know two ladies, sisters from Penang, who both married white men and settled overseas. One couple had very different personalities, didn’t communicate, and were openly bitter. They are now divorced. The other two are pretty straight-laced but easygoing, outreaching people, and are together after more than two and a half decades. As one of the young Japanese women in the first chapter says, “Junin toiro!” Ten people, ten colours, and yet this author seems determined to paint all Asian-inclined white men with the same brush.

The one welcome break from this comes in “The Communities and Fetishes of the Net” where a couple of pages are allocated to a website attempting to refute stereotypes about fetishism and racism toward Asian girl/white guy relationships (asianwhite.com, which no longer exists). Excerpt: “Some men have an attraction to Asian QUALITIES. Less healthy men have a fetish for Asian women as OBJECTS.” Prasso doesn’t seem to have anything to say about the site, presumably because she can’t come up with anything nasty to say.

One of the failures of this book is neglecting to look at interactions among students. Uni students are young and horny, and by definition at least smart and educated enough to get into a university. International students are likely to be interested in other people’s cultures, or at least willing to experience them briefly. Put all these factors together, and ka-ching! Mixed couples. I’ve lost count of the number of “yellow fever” couples I’ve seen walking around campus here. Students are important to look at for an author to consider trends, because as the cliché goes, we’re the leaders of the future.

Instead of spending time to observe everyday life around a few American campuses as she does with the Japanese housewives, Prasso mainly takes sound bites and essay excerpts from a handful of students who seem to have been selected for having spoken out on the subject before. The few students (few compared to the number of whores in later chapters) featured are mostly Asian-Americans, who, from a foreigner’s perspective, are American for all practical purposes. They’re even more banana than me.

[Disclosure: I’m inclined to believe that middle-to-upper class Asian-Americans tend to be somewhat neurotic and self-conscious, because of exogenous pressure from the model minority stereotype and endogenous pressure from well-educated, skilled immigrant parents. This is especially noticeable in the statement from one young lady that a diagnostic of “yellow fever” is “You see a guy walking down the street, hand-in-hand with another Asian girl, and he still checks you out as you walk by him.” This fails to take into account normal male behaviour: GUYS WILL LOOK AT PRETTY GIRLS, PERIOD. Insert dick joke here.]

Yes, there are a lot of jackasses here who think everyone outside the U.S. of A. is living in a third world slum with no electricity. Yes, they still think “Vietnam War” when they think of Vietnamese. Yes, there are idiots who will catcall “Sayonara!” and “Arigato!” at Chinese, Korean, Vietnamese, Filipina, Indonesian, or even Japanese – hey, even a broken clock is right twice a day - girls. Yes, there are creepy hamsup otakus who think Asian girls are kawaii like anime characters. But I think the influence of these ignoramuses on international relationships is marginal. As stated above, the movers and the shakers and the ones who are shaking their bon bons together are more likely to be those who are educated, professionals who know better.

Prasso’s annoyingly elitist tone saturates the book, from her description of a sniffling Filipina prostitute to her explicitly disdainful tone toward a Chinese school administrator, who wants to marry her long-term boyfriend and have babies. I thought the point of women’s rights (and any other “rights” movements) was to let individuals do what they want to do, not what some wanker with a diploma wants them to do. Even the interview with the famous Madame Iwasaki seems exploitative, as the author can’t seem to stop congratulating herself on how much the ex-geisha likes her. By the end of this book, I was prepared to bellow “YES!” at her admission that “As a Caucasian woman, I cannot eschew membership in a group that…has been guilty of racist “sour-grapeism.””

One unintentionally funny sentence is where she rags Singapore Airlines and Cathay Pacific for pandering to foreigners: “no flight on Singapore Airlines or Cathay is ever domestic.” Perfectly correct – I don’t know about Hong Kong, but Singapore is a nation that you can bicycle across in a matter of hours. (My athletic sister at NUS did that one night with a bunch of her crazy friends.)

At the end of scientific papers, the authors sometimes declare that they “have no competing interests”. This isn’t a paper, but I have to declare that I do have a competing interest: I’m dating a white guy. I have an interest in refuting Prasso’s typifying of Asian women who date Western men as green-card-chasing gold-diggers, and of all Western men who like Asian women as chauvinistic, domineering, closet paedophiles (I kid you not). He freely admits a preference for the physical features of east Asian girls, but we’re in a university town full of Korean, Chinese, and Taiwanese students, the vast majority of whom are better-looking than me. He wants a girl who won’t be afraid to argue with him, not the stereotypical Oriental who’ll look demure while he inserts foot in mouth. My favourite angmoh and I are together because we’re antisocial science geeks who get along like a house on fire. Or in his words, “Intelligence is sexy.”

Not so much my ebony hair, tea-coloured skin, or petite figure, but the invisible part – brains. Damn syiok.

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