Showing posts with label literature. Show all posts
Showing posts with label literature. Show all posts

Wednesday, 26 February 2020

That Lovely Old Biddy From Gabriola: On The Arts

There is a great deal of talk about resources and how important they are for our economy. However I believe there is an even greater resource which can’t be shown in financial tables.

This is the essayist and poet, Naomi Beth Wakan — that lovely old biddy from Gabriola who, with her many years of writing and thinking, reveals a world that has not gone mad, because lovely old biddies are still giving us their views.

The most available worthy resources are people who are intelligent, articulate and compassionate. I know, as they do, we need gas to get to the market to buy food, but we also need water and fresh air. After we have the essentials we need elders who have experienced life.

This is where the old biddies come in.  Even though wise old women have been burnt at the stakes as witches, or shamed for expressing opinions — they are a threat to fascist systems when they value life for life’s sake.

Wakan has written many books in her lifetime and now has a second edition to her collection of essays On The Arts.  It is a full study of arts in our history and today.  The quotes are many from artists of the modern and post-modern era.  

Carl Jung is quoted as saying “It is not Goethe who created Faust, it is Faust that created Goethe."

If you don’t know who Goethe, Faust or Jung are, don’t be put off. As much as Wakan has studied art — she is not an academic elitist. Naomi writes for you and I not the bloviating experts.  Sure there is reference to great minds and teachers, but it is written for all of us who struggle with finding meaning in the marketplace and city.

This book questions the purpose of art not the financial wizardry of auctioneers and world class museums. ART IS FOR US! 

Art is for our mental health, our social systems, political crises and most importantly — our survival. We need creative insight to tackle the problems our planet is facing.

To explain — I go to the chapter on The Art of Personal Essay Writing.  

Wakan writes “I long for the sharp political and personal insights of Nora Ephron and Phillip Lopate’s elegant essays on anything that takes his fancy.” Then follows this with good advice on what makes an essay elegant or just readable.

A fine personal essay is absorbing because it “teaches so much about humankind”. The best personal essays “weave the eternal into everyday moments.”

Personal experiences, feelings, reflections that are simply sharing for no other reason than to meet you and other humans wherever you may sit.

Art includes, of course, music, opera, painting, theatre and even politics, if our system had the imagination to see how it is lacking when the emphasis is solely on the economy and jobs. Many politicians seem to be scared of acknowledging the importance of life on this planet and how we must take care of it.

Naomi doesn’t dwell on the crises we are facing. She writes with humility and reverence within the world, and allows the reader to inform herself on why and how, every day, according to UNHCR, 28,000 refugees flee the countries of their birth to escape persecution.

Hmmm. Between the lack of love for human experience and the emphasis on gadgets and winning or losing, is it possible that the arts are more than just entertainment?

Are lovely old biddies exactly what this planet needs right now?


ON THE ARTS
Essays by Naomi Beth Wakan
(Shanti Arts publishing 2020)
$25.00 cad
mail@pagesresort.com






———
——————―——

Thursday, 28 December 2017

No. 2 of a New Hierarchy of needs.

2. knowledge - in order to survive we must study what is true in nature and in our selves.

We need to know the plants that will nourish and the plants that poison. We need to know the actions that bring peace in our lives and the actions that create discomfort, fear, and pain.

Conversations to share knowledge, to teach facts, to share poetry and stories, to report on what is going on in the world are like nourishment. All creatures must have some basic knowledge. All generations need new stories.

Absolutes exist but if we never question or move beyond these absolutes we become afraid of thinking or reading or learning, in case we discover we don't know everything.

The fear that we don't know everything is what will make us willing robots for the political movements that demand we must obey and not think, and we are under threat of their control whenever we stop questioning.

Friday, 11 March 2016

Women Who Have Made the World Better - A List You Won't Find in Mainstream Media

"I am those 66 million girls who are deprived of education." Malala Yousafzai. Nobel Lecture, 2014 Peace Prize

Malala Yousafzai 2014 Peace Prize 
Optimism of Petals

Svetlana Alexievich 2015 Literature
Youyou Tu 2015 Physiology or Medicine
May-Britt Moser 2014 Physiology or Medicine
Alice Munro 2013 Literature
Ellen Johnson Sirleaf 2011 Peace
Laymah Gbowee 2011 Peace
Tawakkol Karman 2011 Peace
Elinor Ostrom 2009 Economic Sciences
Herta Muller Literature 2009
Elizabeth Blackburn 2009 Physiology or Medicine
Carol Greider 2009 Physiology or Medicine
Ada Yonath 2009 Chemistry
Françoise Barré-Sinoussi 2008 Physiology or Medicine
Doris Lessing Literature 2007
Wangari Maathai 2004 Peace
Linda Buck 2004 Physiology or Medicine
Elfriede Jelinek 2004 Literature
Shirin Ebadi 2003 Peace
Jody Williams 1997 Peace
Wislawa Szymborska 1996 Literature
Christiane Nüsslein-Volhard 1995 Physiology or Medicine
Toni Morrison 1993 Literature
Rigoberta Menchú Tum 1992 Peace
Nadine Gordimer 1991 Literature
Aung San Suu Kyi 1991 Peace
Gertrude B. Elion 1988 Physiology or Medicine
Rita Levi-Montalcini 1986 Physiology or Medicine
Barbara McClintock 1983 Physiology or Medicine
Alva Myrdal 1982 Peace
Mother Teresa 1979 Peace
Rosalyn Yalow 1977 Physiology or Medicine
Betty Williams 1976 Peace
Mairead Corrigan 1976 Peace
Nelly Sachs 1966 Literature
Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin 1964 Chemistry
Maria Goeppert Mayer 1963 Physics
Gerty Cori 1947 Physiology or Medicine
Emily Greene Balch 1946 Peace
Gabriela Mistral 1945 Literature
Pearl Buck 1938 Literature
Irène Joliot-Curie 1935 Chemistry
Jane Addams 1931 Peace
Sigrid Undset 1928 Literature
Grazia Deledda 1926 Literature
Selma Lagerlöf 1909 Literature
Bertha von Suttner 1905 Peace
Marie Curie 1903 Physics, 1911 Chemistry


See the whole list here http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/themes/other/womens-day-2016.html

It's At Times Like These

... I need to remind myself of all the beautiful things in the world. First my husband who takes care of me, day and night. He has a positiv...