I probably did misunderstand that, Julie. I'll blame graduate school (the classes the poetry professors warned us not to take). I think the correct way to look at it is that there's beauty and ugliness in every culture. As cheesy as that sounds, it's true. At least from my experiences. (Maybe I became too aware of the ugliness of American (US) culture, which prompted me to leave. But, also, Koreans, for example, can be extraordinary xenophobic. Actually, worse than that, depending on where you live. Which has a lot to do with being invaded 1000 times, probably. Doesn't make me more likely to live there...) I think there's a hesitation to be frank, honest, about "culture" and, as I've mentioned, I think, a real confusion between race and culture. Which confounds me. Some of that was most likely off-topic, but, that's me.
But, yeah, the short response is that I probably jumped too quickly on your post. Carry on. |
[Don's comment below is correct. No need to derail the discussion of David Mason's essay with my Iain McGilchrist-related digression. I've started a new thread for that on The Discerning Eye. Thanks, Don.]
|
Julie,
This interesting interview you posted deserves its own discussion and doesn't relate to the thread underway. I would ask the moderators to move this to its own thread. Thanks for bringing attention to this interview. Cheers. Don |
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 06:23 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.