Why The Way You Talk About Artificial Intelligence Needs To Change – Forbes

Gemma Milne - Author, Technology Writer

Gemma Milne isnt messing around. The world is in trouble and not just because of COVID-19. Hype and fraud fascinates her and Artificial Intelligence is one of those areas rife in both. Milne is on a mission to get everyone talking about it...properly.

Smoke + Mirrors is Milnes first book and focuses on the misuse of technical terminology. You might not think incorrectly using terms like AI is a big deal in the grand scheme of things but youd be wrong. Influence is everywhere and there is big money involved; ...it influences flow of funding, policy-making, voting, consumer behaviour, all sorts. Advertising agencies spend a great deal of time and money telling clients how important it is to sway people with narratives - their business makes no sense if words have no impact, right? says Milne.

While bluster around Blockchains ability to save the world didnt make it in the book, AI did as Milne believes the area has the biggest potential to be harmful if technology terminology is misused; There's such a cult of entrepreneurship around [AI] and a severe lack of reality in its general coverage. There are way too many people funding words on a slide deck, far too many people having philosophical discussions around the singularity as opposed to holding those in power right now to account, and far too many people still super influenced with the sci-fi narratives which have been in popular media over the last few decades.

Impact-wise, Milne believes it is tough to quantify and more funding is needed to wage a war on hype akin to fake news. Milne is clear in her intent; The point of the book is to arm each and every one of us with the insight, tools and understanding of how hype works, so we can better manage what information does to us and - ultimately - create better futures for us all. Smoke and Mirrors is there to help you fight a future we dont want to happen.

The result of doing nothing could be catastrophic for humanity. Milne believes that if we do nothing in 10-20 years well have a disjointed society made up of polar opposites; ...some in utopia, and many in dystopia: a society that doesn't always move towards new things based on inherent value but perceived value.

There is a lack of frankness in the space according to Milne - a driving force in her writing the book - There's still joy and excitement in realism - in fact, in my opinion, far more than in idealistic futurism. A sentiment more people should agree with after reading Smoke + Mirrors. I wanted to empower more people to feel able to critically think around complex topics and engage in the crucial debates happening in science and tech.

Milne is aScience & Technology Journalist (Forbes), a Keynote Speaker and the Co-Founder of Science: Disrupt. You can order SMOKE & MIRRORS on Amazon and follow her on Twitter@gemmamilne.

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Why The Way You Talk About Artificial Intelligence Needs To Change - Forbes

Our cities may never look the same again after the pandemic – CNN

For advocates of walkable, unpolluted and vehicle-free cities, the past few weeks have offered an unprecedented opportunity to test the ideas they have long lobbied for. With Covid-19 lockdowns vastly reducing the use of roads and public transit systems, city authorities -- from Liverpool to Lima -- are taking advantage by closing streets to cars, opening others to bicycles and widening sidewalks to help residents maintain the six-foot distancing recommended by global health authorities.And, like jellyfish returning to Venice's canals or flamingos flocking to Mumbai, pedestrians and cyclists are venturing out to places they previously hadn't dared.In Oakland, California, almost 10% of roadways have been closed to through-traffic, while Bogota, Colombia, has opened 47 miles of temporary bike lanes. New York has begun trialing seven miles of "open streets" to ease crowding in parks, with Auckland, Mexico City and Quito among the dozens of other world cities experimenting with similar measures.

There are many purported benefits of "reclaiming" the streets during a pandemic. Encouraging cycling may reduce crowding on buses and subways, where people can struggle to get distance from one another. Vehicle-free roads also offer those without access to parks the ability to exercise safely.

A woman cycles through a bike lane in central Milan. Credit: Miguel Medina/AFP/Getty Images

But few other cities have been so committal. And it will be harder to make the case for pedestrian- and cycle-friendly streets once their benefits are weighed against the knock-on effects of congestion elsewhere -- especially in countries as dependent on cars as the US.

A recently expanded bike track in Berlin's Kreuzberg district. Credit: Tobias Schwarz/AFP/Getty Images

In other words, the pandemic may only have served as a catalyst. But urban planning is a long game in which change is piecemeal and the legacies of past decisions take time to overcome. Public spaces and amenities cannot always be expanded or reconfigured at will.

So, looking to the coming years rather than the coming months, how else might the virus -- or attempts to prevent future ones -- re-shape our cities?

Reimagining public space

Austrian design studio Precht has imagined a maze-like public park that encourages social distancing.

It is too soon to know which, if any, may be realized. But each idea suggests that the practice of social distancing and unease over shared surfaces could continue long after the current crisis.

Planners talk about creating 'sticky' streets -- places where people linger and stay around. So the question now is: Will those efforts continue, or how will they need to be changed? Can we still achieve connectivity if we all keep social distancing?

Jordi Honey-Ross

"Everybody from Daniel Burnham -- who was the planner of Chicago -- to Le Corbusier came up with arbitrary measurements on their own," she said in a phone interview. "Le Corbusier writes extensively that every 'unit' in the Radiant City (or "Ville Radieuse," the celebrated architect's proposed utopia) needed a specific amount of light ... and a certain amount of cubic feet of air to circulate within it.

"So six feet could be the new unit we use when we think about cities and public parks."

Yet, the idea of keeping people apart seems to contradict the emphasis planners have traditionally placed on human interaction. Architects, whether designing parks or social housing, have often valued meeting points as sources of collaboration, inclusion and community-building.

"In fact, if you look at the literature on the health benefits of green spaces, one of the primary (advantages) is social connectivity -- people seeing their neighbors and being part of a community.

"Planners talk about creating 'sticky' streets -- places where people linger and stay around," he added, speaking on the phone from lockdown in Barcelona. "So the question now is: Will those efforts continue, or how will they need to be changed? Can we still achieve connectivity if we all keep social distancing?"

Credit: Antonio Lanzillo & Partners

Milan-based architect Antonio Lanzillo has envisaged public benches equipped with plexiglass "shield" dividers. Credit: Antonio Lanzillo & Partners

Rather than outlining solutions at this early stage, Honey-Ross' paper (which, subject to peer review, is set to publish in the journal Cities & Health) instead lays out the questions facing urban planners. Many relate to how cities manage the green spaces that he thinks "will, overall, be more valued and more appreciated" after the current crisis.

Neither line of inquiry has yielded conclusive results. But should a definitive link between pollution and the virus emerge, it would "really be a game-changer" for green urban planning, Honey-Ross said.

"Then, cities will be able to say, 'We're going to redesign our streets not only because we need social and physical distance, but because we need to increase our probability of survival," he suggested.

A matter of density

The biggest questions may center around population density. Fears that disease spreads more easily in busy urban centers could already be having an impact on people's attitudes towards living in cities.

A desire to distance ourselves from others in public may continue long afer the pandemic. Credit: Miguel Medina/AFP/Getty Images

"Space now means something more than square feet," Harris CEO John Gerzema said in a press release. "Already beset by high rents and clogged streets, the virus is now forcing urbanites to consider social distancing as a lifestyle."

So will there be a long-term push for cities to sprawl outwards in order to reduce downtown populations?

According to Carr, the backlash against city centers may be especially acute in America, where high rates of car ownership make suburban life less inconvenient. "The United States has always been a country that somewhat fears density," she said.

Credit: miss3/Hua Hua Architects

A proposed "Gastro Safe Zone," which uses brightly colored ground markings to encourage passersby to keep their distance from outdoor diners. Credit: Hary Marwel/Hua Hua Architects

"I think as designers and urban planners we have to think about how we emphasize the benefits of density," Carr added. "Because now, whenever anyone tries to build new housing anywhere, it's probably going to be the first question that people have."

Six feet could be the new unit we use when we think about cities and public parks.

Sara Jensen Carr

Whether the use of public transport is a significant factor in Covid-19's spread is a theory still being explored. And while, again, the findings remain far from conclusive, mistrust of buses and subways may nonetheless see their use decline.

Honey-Ross suggested we may instead see the growth of "micromobility" -- vehicles like scooters and e-bikes -- though this could be accompanied by reduced demand for initiatives like bike-sharing schemes.

"The sharing model is going to have additional costs related to hygiene and cleaning, which will be very challenging," he said, adding that sharing schemes "might get hurt in this pandemic."

A man rides an electric scooter across the Parco Sempione park in Milan. Credit: Miguel Medina/AFP/Getty Images

Blue-sky thinking

Epidemics can have radical and unexpected effects on architecture and design.

So although considering the impact of Covid-19 is, at this stage, largely speculative, there's plenty of scope for innovation.

A recent skyscraper design competition was won by a prefabricated emergency healthcare tower dubbed "Epidemic Babel." Credit: Gavin Shen/Weiyuan Xu/Xinhao Yuan

Regardless of such proposals' viability, there is plenty of optimism that this crisis can improve the way cities are designed and run, said Honey-Ross. But he caveated this by saying politics and opportunism may play significant roles in dictating which ideas come to fruition. ("I'm seeing a lot self-interest in the optimism -- the cyclists are talking about having bigger bike lanes, because that's in their interests," he offered as an example.)

A man rides along a temporary cycle lane put into place to relieve pressure on public transportation in Grenoble, France. Credit: Philippe Desmazes/AFP/Getty Images

But despite his self-professed skepticism, the researcher nonetheless believes that the pandemic has presented real opportunities to rethink public space.

"This is a time for humility on the part of pundits," he said. "And researchers need to be asking good questions. But I also think it's time for city leaders to be bold.

"Things that were not possible before, now are."

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Our cities may never look the same again after the pandemic - CNN

STREAMING WARS: The Expanse trades sci-fi fantasy for realism and it works – SaltWire Network

Shedding the cowboy antics of Star Wars and the utopian idealism of Star Trek, Amazon Prime Video's The Expanse highlights how royally we can screw things up, which is made only worse by being in the vacuum of space.

Rather than slick spaceships and operatic overtones, The Expanse takes a hard, cold look at what colonizing the solar system could look like in the next few centuries.

I'll admit I'm only a couple of seasons in so far, but I haven't been able to watch anything else since I started. It's so damn watchable.

The story centres around Jim Holden (Steven Strait) and his crew of misfits as they bounce from one crisis to another in the colonized solar system. Things go from bad, to worse and then much worse.

Holden is a reluctant, but capable leader. Alex Kamal (Cas Anvar), Naomi Nagata (Dominique Tipper) and Amos Burton (Wes Chatham) make up the rest of the team, each with their own can't-help-but-root-for-them attitudes.

Luckily, they have each other (for the most part) and a relatively stable moral centre.

The expanded cast includes some fantastic performances from Thomas Jane, who plays a hard-done-by detective and Jared Harris as a gang/rebel leader with an impossible accent.

But the highlight is easily Shohreh Aghdashloo as Chrisjen Avasarala, a powerful diplomat looking after Earth's interests. She doesn't suffer fools lightly, performing delicately when she needs to, but able to flip the switch to badass in an instant.

The series, based on novels of the same name by James S. A. Corey, is set during a solar system-spanning Cold War. On one side is Earth, governed by the decadent UN, and the other is Mars, a militaristic but fragile state which is bound in a tenuous peace. However, one little provocation and that could all come crashing down, along with all of human civilization.

Originally released on American channel Syfy, the series was picked up by Amazon after it was cancelled following its third season. Prime released the fourth season in 2019 and announced a fifth is already in the works.

And thank goodness Amazon scooped it up. The mystery surrounding an unusual and dangerous alien substance that can alter matter (being experimented on with the most Machiavellian way imaginable) is the main throughline for the plot.

But The Expanse is about much more than this existential threat, it's about the incredible world it's set in.

This isn't the idealized universe of Star Trek, where money and hunger have gone the way of the dodo, in The Expanse, water has become more precious than gold. It's a world full of greed, corruption and inequality. It is capitalism gone mad in the far reaches of space.

People have inhabited asteroids in the belt, which is being taken advantage of by the dominant planets in the system, Mars and Earth.

Mars, with the know-how to turn their rusty-red planet into a garden, is low on resources because of their spending on the military, just in case there's a war.

And Earth, after years of degradation and sea-level rise is changed (but all too familiar) with an elite pulling the strings for selfish ends.

One also has to admire the writers (both screen and novel) restraint when it comes to the technology. Yes, humans have been able to reach the other planets and stellar rocks in the solar system, but the ships people use are definitely built for speed, not comfort. They're blocky, with wires and scaffolding unceremoniously strapped to their sides.

New languages and phrases seem so natural. Yes, a group of people living on asteroids probably would develop their own culture and a sizeable chip on their shoulders.

Differences in gravity, resources, time, it's all taken into account and given its due. Sometimes I'll pause an episode just to remark, wow, they've thought of everything.

It also doesn't hide the audience from the cruelty and inequalities, and it doesn't pull away from the atrocities that could happen. It's a warning of what we could become.

It's science fiction without the utopia, and although somewhat depressing, it adds a layer of realism that is so compelling to watch.

Needing an escape from planet Earth? I get it. Here are some other sci-fi shows worth checking out I haven't already recommended (like The Mandalorian, Star Trek Discovery and Picard).

Battlestar Galactica (remake), available on Amazon Prime Video. A deep, though sometimes convoluted plot that touches on humanity and artificial intelligence. An excellent musical score that reverberates throughout.

Westworld, available on Crave (with HBO add-on). A theme park made for the elite with no limits, the characters within the fantasy are highly intelligent robots, what could go wrong?

Space Force, available on Netflix on May 29. Needing something a little lighter? Steve Carell is tasked with forming the Space Force (an actual real thing), a new branch of the American Armed Forces with no idea of what it's supposed to be. Hopefully, it will be a sufficient replacement for The Office for the streaming giant.

For All Mankind, available on Apple TV Plus.What if the Soviets landed on the moon first? This alternate history drama takes a look at what could have been and what it would mean for America's psyche.

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STREAMING WARS: The Expanse trades sci-fi fantasy for realism and it works - SaltWire Network

9 books to read this summer – The Week

Books are just about the only part of our culture right now that is chugging on, more or less as normal. And thank goodness for that, because summer reading is going to be excellent this year (and not just because we're potentially going to be spending most of it still in quarantine). From books about outbreaks to books that offer complete escape, here's what you'll want to have on your nightstand for those warm summer nights.

And if all else fails, there's always Midnight Sun.

1. The Brothers York, by Thomas Penn (June 16)

I have a vast, sad void in my life now that I've finished Hilary Mantel's trilogy about Thomas Cromwell, and I can't wait to fill it with this War of the Roses biography about the house of York. Already out in the U.K. where it was named one of the best books of 2019 by The Guardian and the Telegraph The Brothers York also earned an endorsement from Mantel herself, who writes that "with insight and skill, [author Thomas] Penn cuts through the thickets of history to find the heart of these heartless decades." One might recognize the biography's central trio of brothers Edward IV; George, Duke of Clarence; and Richard III from the works of Shakespeare, yet the history behind the plays is well worth your time; Lit Hub calls it a "juicy, impeccably researched work."

2. Mexican Gothic, by Silvia Moreno-Garcia (June 30)

This is maybe less of a "beach read" than it is a great book to take camping, if only because its spooky Bram Stoker-esque atmosphere is way better for reading by the light of a campfire. (For a quarantine-appropriate alternative, try reading it under the covers with a flashlight). The book begins in Mexico City in the 1950s, when the beautiful bachelorette Noem is summoned home from a party by her father due to his receiving a concerning letter from Noem's cousin, Catalina. Though it is rambling and strange, Catalina claims in the note that her new husband is trying to poison her and that their grand home in a remote mountain village is "sick with rot, stinks of decay, brims with every single evil and cruel sentiment." Off Noem goes to find out what's happening, only to be pulled deeper into the nightmare.

3. The Only Good Indians, by Stephen Graham Jones (July 1)

The Only Good Indians earned the rare triple crown of starred reviews from the trades, and its author, Stephen Graham Jones, has been described as "the Jordan Peele of horror literature." But if that weren't enough to get you hyped, the novel follows the supernatural events that unfold after four young Blackfoot men kill a pregnant elk on forbidden tribal land. Years later, a demonic force comes to take revenge for the bloodshed in this story that, in the words of Publishers Weekly's starred review, "works both as a terrifying chiller and as biting commentary on the existential crisis of indigenous peoples adapting to a culture that is bent on eradicating theirs."

4. Utopia Avenue, by David Mitchell (July 14)

Cloud Atlas author David Mitchell has made us wait five years for his next novel, but at a chunky 600 pages, Utopia Avenue sounds like it's going to be worth it. The book presents itself as the "unexpurgated story" of a British psychedelic rock band that "released only two LPs during its brief and blazing journey from the clubs of Soho and draughty ballrooms, to Top of the Pops and the cusp of chart success, to glory in Amsterdam, prison in Rome, and a fateful American fortnight in the autumn of 1968." Each chapter title is apparently taken from the name of one of the band's songs, and focuses on one of its four members. Addressing the ambitious undertaking, Mitchell has said, "Can a novel made of words (and not fitted with built-in speakers or Bluetooth) explore the word-less mysteries of music, and music's impact on people and the world? How? Utopia Avenue is my rather hefty stab at an answer."

5. The Pull of the Stars, by Emma Donoghue (July 21)

Emma Donoghue's novel about the 1918 influenza had its publication date bumped up to this summer because, well, duh. "Back in October 2018, the centenary of the Great Flu prompted me to start The Pull of the Stars, set in a Dublin maternity ward at the height of the misery in 1918," the Room author told the Irish Times. "Two days after I delivered my final draft, COVID-19 was declared a pandemic." Admittedly, the misery of disease might be the last thing you want to read about right now, but Donoghue's book which centers on health-care workers in a city hospital under quarantine is described as "deeply involving and profoundly moving." Read if you're an enthusiastic 7 p.m. applauder (and if you're looking for more coronavirus-adjacent literature, start here).

6. The Queen of Tuesday, by Darin Strauss (August 18)

Publishers solicit blurbs in order to sell books the quotes are essentially advertising material but when two-time Pulitzer Prize-winner Colson Whitehead gets behind a novel, you sit up and listen. His endorsement of the "gorgeous, Technicolor take on America" sits on the cover of Darin Strauss' forthcoming Queen of Tuesday, which weaves together memoir and fiction as it circles around its central character, actress and I Love Lucy star Lucille Ball. Strauss' grandfather was at a party with Ball (hosted by Fred Trump!) in New York in 1949, and the novel imagines an affair between the two. While fictionalizing a real person in such a way can be fraught, Strauss is the winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award (for Half a Life) and I trust that Lucy is in good hands.

7. Sisters, by Daisy Johnson (August 25)

If you're not aboard the Daisy Johnson train yet, well, where have you been? Johnson became the youngest author to ever be shortlisted for the hyper-prestigious Man Booker Prize in 2018 at the age of 27 for her debut novel, Everything Under, and she follows it up with Sisters, a story about teenagers July and September who move to a remote family home on the seaside with their single mother. While we don't have too many details about the book yet this far out, her publisher calls it "alive, original, and surprising" as well as a "seriously smart and compulsively readable novel about a young woman attempting to find her own agency within an all-consuming relationship." The Guardian hails Johnson as being "the next generation," writing that Sisters is a "short, sharp explosion of a gothic thriller whose tension ratchets up and up to an ending of extraordinary lyricism and virtuosity." Sold.

8. Migrations, by Charlotte McConaghy (August 25)

Don't judge a book by it's cover, although if you must, it might as well be the gorgeous Migrations, the U.S. debut of Charlotte McConaghy. Franny Stone arrives in Greenland with the goal of finding the world's last flock of Arctic terns as they make their final migration, and convinces the captain of the Saghani to ferry her in the pursuit. (There is, as you might expect, more to Franny than she initially lets on to the captain). Early descriptions make it sound like a novel with a topical climate change theme and a plot that examines the slippery brink of extinction. Shelf Awareness praised it as "brimming with stunning imagery and raw emotion" and "the incredible story of personal redemption, self-forgiveness, and hope for the future in the face of a world on the brink of collapse." Bonus: In the sweltering days of August, its descriptions of the frozen Arctic can cool you down.

9. This Is the Night Our House Will Catch Fire, by Nick Flynn (August 25)

Another Bullshit Night in Suck City author Nick Flynn is publishing yet another memoir with a fantastic title, this one called This Is the Night Our House Will Catch Fire. The book appears to reference the fire set by his mother in their house when he was seven years old, a story he revisits now that he is a parent himself. The book also deals with him excavating the emotions around his mother's suicide when he was 22, and cheating on his wife. Flynn is never not terrific I sometimes can't make up my mind if I prefer his prose or poetry more and This Is the Night Our House Will Catch Fire is already garnering early praise that reflects that fact. "Readers will devour this powerful memoir of letting go," Publishers Weekly promises in its starred review.

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9 books to read this summer - The Week

Making a Mess of the World: On Hao Jingfang’s Vagabonds – lareviewofbooks

MAY 10, 2020

IN VAGABONDS, the princess of an aggressively communitarian Mars chafes against her homeworlds attempts to ensure stability through equality, preferring instead to champion a system that promotes individual success and rarefied reward. That she is already recognizably lauded within her own egalitarian system for the accident of her birth scion that she is of Marss consul-cum-dictator is an intrinsic part of her reasoning for dismantling a system that benefits her, even as she exists outside of it. Simultaneously, a photographer from Earth seeks the economic stability and creative freedom offered by Marss open information archive, rebelling against his own homeworlds insularity and possessive intellectual property laws. First wary, then helpful, then friendly, but never convinced of each others views, the two circle the concept of an ideal worldview just as their own planets circle the sun, rarely in sync and often at odds. Such contradictions are central to each of Hao Jingfangs characters, neither recognizable archetypes of science fiction nor stereotypical symbolic representations of their respective systems.

But stop; lets go back.

More than just a question of character complexity, the writing in Vagabonds itself, here translated by Ken Liu, resists clear definitions. The books tone could be described as dreamlike Hao excels at narratives that exist at a remove, as if the reader is witnessing events happen at distance. This pace makes it unclear at times as to which characters are important and which events are significant and hold latent meaning Luoying, the books primary character, is as close as the book comes to a protagonist, but even her role ebbs and flows in importance, and she disappears almost entirely for the novels final section. Individuals fade in and out of the narrative; decisions that obsess characters for several chapters disappear without ever being mentioned again. The effect is profoundly disorienting and surreal, as if the world is emerging temporarily and then fading back into the mists of history.

Its through this exquisite insistence on transience that Hao masterfully demonstrates both the dreamy ungraspability of the passage of time and the inability of any individual to fully narrativize their own life, to pinpoint any specific moment as the moment of import and thus reify it. Political machinations, interplanetary travel, fashion and engineering, the biomechanics of dance, love and loss, war both cold and hot: all these fade into view and then out again with equal weight. The effect is disorienting and complex, liminality weaponized as a way to keep the reader perpetually aware of the ultimate transience of discrete moments within the greater momentum of history.

But stop, lets go back again.

The momentum of history, gently problematized by Hao, could not exist as it does in Vagabonds without equal recognition of the fact that it is a product of its particular situatedness in the real world outside of the book. Publicity for Vagabonds advertises it as for fans of Kazuo Ishiguros Never Let Me Go and Naomi Aldermans The Power two wildly different books that also grapple with bare life in a changing world. If such marketing is based on audience reception alone, then Simon & Schuster wasnt wrong: I was excited about this release, not only because of Haos singularly nuanced and compelling voice, but because Never Let Me Go and The Power are among my favorite books. But teasing out the strands of why a novel like Vagabonds resonates given its vastly different stories is a more complex undertaking, similar not in tone or structure or characterization but in the murkiness undergirding the sense of being adrift in a world that is at once both familiar and new.

Never Let Me Go is an understated bildungsroman set in a near-future England where clones are raised for their parts, and the narrative focuses on the quotidian sorrow of living with the knowledge of ones own place in such a system. Conversely, in The Power, women develop the ability to control biologically generated electricity, inducing the collapse of one world system and the rise of another. The tone and scale of these two novels couldnt be more different both from each other and from Vagabonds but they share a preoccupation with the ambiguities of being between two end points of a changing world and the ways in which individuals get lost in the in-between spaces.

This, too, is a defining feature of Vagabonds the ambiguity of existence after one of historys end points but before the next, and the characters struggles to understand their place in a world over which they have very little control. From a marketing standpoint, all the three novels juxtapose the prospect of violent, destructive change with an already-unbearable status quo. Dystopia for some and utopia for others, these worlds are already in a state of flux in which those who are being harmed stand to gain much and those on top stand to lose everything. If were to take the relationship between these three texts at face value, then we must find those connections in the recognition that theres no character complexity without textual complexity, and no textual complexity without the very complexity of the novel itself as a marketed cultural artifact.

Stop. Go back.

The difficulty of marketing such a book is due in part to the fact that Vagabonds would have been impossible to write even 15 years ago, because it represents a worldview that didnt exist before the contemporary boom in Chinese science fiction consumption in the West. This new readership, introduced to Chinese SF by Liu Cixins Three-Body Problem trilogy, has created a market for SF from China at the same time as it has struggled to identify what makes SF from China any different from American or British science fiction. Since then, at least four translated anthologies of Chinese SF have been published (three more than the preceding decades, with another slated for publication), with Western readers increasingly consuming SF originally written in Chinese and for an ostensibly Chinese audience. This newfound popularity has changed the focus of the work itself, and indeed, Chinese authors are increasingly grappling with the realities of writing for a non-Chinese audience. Hao Jingfang herself, in fact, was the first Chinese woman (and only second Chinese author) to win a Hugo (for her novelette, Folding Beijing), and Vagabonds her first full-length novel to be translated into English is uniquely aware of its readership both in and outside China.

In fact, its hard to read Vagabonds as anything other than a science fictional treatment of contemporary idealized Sino-American relations, written by someone clearly aware of both internal and external stereotypes about China and Chinese culture. Mars is easily interpretable as a stand-in for China but its a China seen through the eyes of Westerners. Martian citizens routinely discuss the stereotypes of Mars that they encountered on Earth: its ruled by an authoritarian dictator who forbids all dissent; citizens are locked into their stations in life; people are mechanical, faceless masses without the benefits of individuality or creative expression; society is stagnant and barbaric; Mars seeks to expand, consume, and control Earths resources. Once they return to their homes, even Martian characters question whether such beliefs can be true and whether or not they have been indoctrinated to view their home planet favorably. Different characters come to different conclusions, but one thing that remains consistent is the novels insistence on complexity and contradiction at the expense of clarity. Mars is not the ideal paradise they believed it to be as children, but neither is it the autocratic prison imagined by Earths citizens.

Such recognition of contemporary Chinese SFs ability to speak to an international audience, and to position Chinese literature in a global literary order, has been noted elsewhere, with SF author Xia Jia noting in the essay What Makes Chinese Science Fiction Chinese? that

[i]n reading Western science fiction, Chinese readers discover the fears and hopes of Man, the modern Prometheus, for his destiny, which is also his own creation. Perhaps Western readers can also read Chinese science fiction and experience an alternative Chinese modernity and be inspired to imagine an alternative future.

In Vagabonds, Hao Jingfang gives us two alternative modernities, neither of which are entirely China or fully the West: Mars reflects Western stereotypes of China just as Earth reflects Chinese stereotypes of Western economic and cultural systems. Its a canny estrangement, and one that can only come from an author fully aware of the milieu in which shes writing.

Who, then, is a conclusion like this for? Before the global literary establishment began to consume Chinese SF in the quantities it now does, such an astute, self-evaluative assessment would have had no home, either in domestic or international literature. Simply put, Chinese authors wrote for a Chinese audience, and (with a very small number of exceptions) international readers didnt much care about how Chinese authors reflected their own society to Chinese readers. All that has now changed. Haos awareness of her audience is a profoundly contemporary phenomenon. Shes aware of the stereotypes international readers hold of China and Chinese culture, and her work grapples with that in a discerning and inventive new way, one in which Mars looks back at the world looking in and reflects outsiders stereotypes directly back to them to examine.

Back back back, then; each level of analysis requires looping back on itself to better understand the mechanics that initially produced it. There can be no questing, uncertain characters without looking at the intentionally ambiguous text itself; no analysis of the texts misty tone is possible without considering the marketing system that published it; no such market analysis is possible without recognizing the shifting landscape of the established global literary order in the first place. Reading and understanding Vagabonds is like starting at the core of an onion and finding yourself still inside after peeling away layer after layer. To do so and to believe that doing so will provide hard answers is, as one of Haos characters puts it, to make a mess of a world that relies on nuance and complexity. Vagabonds refuses easy answers, inviting the reader to return to the beginning, to steadfastly refusing to provide a map to any kind of origin. Messy or not, its up to the reader to find their own answers.

Virginia L. Conn is a comparative literature PhD candidate at Rutgers University.

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Making a Mess of the World: On Hao Jingfang's Vagabonds - lareviewofbooks

No Tony Awards This Year, Maybe Next Year, So Who Gets Hurt the Most? David Byrne, Adrienne Warren, Mare Winningham, Jay O. Sanders – Showbiz411

Home Television No Tony Awards This Year, Maybe Next Year, So Who Gets Hurt...

My friends at Variety theyre smart people, but they just realized there probably will not be any Tony Awards this season. Thats because the coronavirus stopped the Broadway theater season in its tracks. The season, which runs from June to April, is over.

So what happens to the shows that did open? Clearly, the winner of Best Actress in a Musical would have been Adrienne Warren in the Tina Turner musical, Tina! She would have won even if all the other musicals had opened as planned. Warren is a spitfire on stage. When I say her performance is incendiary, people whove seen it know what I mean. She makes that big wheel keep on turnin.

There were two great performances by actresses in plays. First there was Mary Louise Parker in The Sound Inside, which might also have won Best Play. Adam Rapps play, directed by David Cromer, was exceptional. It would have gone on longer but Parker had already agreed to star in a revival of How I Learned to Drive, which was unnecessary. I hope The Sound Inside can return sometime.

Laura Linney was equally sensational in My Name is Lucy Barton. The one woman show was a fake off because Linney- who can do anything and seemingly never wrong also played Lucys mother so persuasively you would swear she was a separate actress. Based on Elizabeth Strouts novel, the adaptation by Rona Munro gave Linney one of her greatest moments on stage (and there have been plenty). Since we cant see this now, the only alternative is watch Ozark season 3 on Netflix, where Linney is on track to win the Emmy award.

As for male actors: Simon Russell Beale, Adam Godley, and Ben Miles got thisclose to opening in The Lehman Trilogy, which had already played in New York and London, and can be seen in a television taping. There would have been nominations from The Inheritance mainly John Benjamin Hickey, who might have also been nominated for directing possible nominees Matthew Broderick and Sarah Jessica Parker in Neil Simons Plaza Suite.

Well never know now what would have happened to the best show of the 2019-2020 season, David Byrnes American Utopia. I suppose the Tony committee would have given it a special award, since it was Byrne using his old music. Maybe he could have won Best Actor in a Musical. The show was supposed was supposed to re-open this fall. Whenever Broadway returns, I hope David Byrne does, too.

And Best Musical? So we had Tina, and maybe American Utopia, Moulin Rouge (not my favorite), the still to be opened Diana, plus Sing Street and Flying over Sunset. Of what already opened, Girl from the North Country would have been my choice, with nominations for Jay O. Sanders and Mare Winningham (who was going to have to fight off Adrienne Warren) who gave the best performances of their lives.

Should we just have the awards? Why not? Everyone Zoom in on June 7th, or least hum the songs. Maybe CBS could do some kind of Best of 2020 show with clips. But real Tony Awards? Not now.

Roger Friedman began his Showbiz411 column in April 2009 after 10 years with Fox News, where he created the Fox411 column. He wrote the Intelligencer column for NY Magazine in the mid 90s, reporting on the OJ Simpson trial, as well as for the real Parade magazine (when it was owned by Conde Nast), and has written for the New York Observer, Details, Vogue, Spin, the New York Times, NY Post, Washington Post, and NY Daily News among many publications. He is the writer and co-producer of "Only the Strong Survive," a selection of the Cannes, Sundance, and Telluride Film festivals, directed by DA Pennebaker and Chris Hegedus.

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No Tony Awards This Year, Maybe Next Year, So Who Gets Hurt the Most? David Byrne, Adrienne Warren, Mare Winningham, Jay O. Sanders - Showbiz411

Educational reform under Imran Khan is a way of embracing isolationism. – The Indian Express

Written by Khaled Ahmed | Updated: May 9, 2020 7:55:45 am Given Pakistans poor level of intellectual sophistication, the project of educational reform under Imran Khan runs the risk of becoming Boko Haram which translates literally to Western education is forbidden since 2009. (AP Photo)

Reacting to protest marches called Aurat March this year by women who want to control their lives in matters of education and marriage, Prime Minister Imran Khan announced: We will, hopefully by next year, introduce a core syllabus for all schools that will be mandatory for students apart from the additional subjects each institution chooses to teach. This is how you create a nation. This is how you end rival cultures from developing. The Aurat March that just happened a different culture was visible in it. this is a cultural issue and this comes from the schooling system.

What he hinted at was that the liberated women who wanted more rights were Western educated and were responsible for the societal divide that his government would end by adopting a uniform education system. The obvious inference from his remark is that he would like to merge Urdu and English-medium education with the madrassas or the religious schools functioning in the country: He would be less able to prune the extremist religious-ideological material in the Urdu-medium-madrassa sector while expurgating the liberal aspect of the English-medium sector.

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Pakistans educational system has consistently opposed the liberalism that the growing middle class allows its children to imbibe in the English-medium sector. There was a time when Khan used to accuse his modernised opponents of liberal fascism. But no one ideologically inclined thinks of tackling the extremism nurtured by the Urdu-medium and madrassa sectors.

Given Pakistans poor level of intellectual sophistication, the project of educational reform under Khan runs the risk of becoming Boko Haram which translates literally to Western education is forbidden since 2009. As a movement of the Muslims of northern Nigeria, Boko Harams army of Islamic soldiers has killed more than two million people, and kidnapped and raped thousands of Muslim girls.

The uniformity of mind created in the state-sector schools is a kind of preparation for the final takeover by the pure madrassa stream the utopia Pakistan aspires to. A majority of the suicide-bomber boys who did the dirty work of the Taliban came from the state-run schools. The madrassas, on the other hand, provided the warriors that waged cross-border jihad and at times, defied the patron-state itself. Today, Pakistan is simply not intellectually equipped to handle the problem it has posited to itself. The most locked mind in Pakistan is located inside the educational bureaucracy serving in the federal and provincial ministries.

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Khan might create a system that would still have two streams: Urdu-medium and the madrassas. Will this create the single system he wants? Given the general intellectual backwardness of Muslims from Nigeria to Indonesia, he might end up isolating Pakistan further through a new mind embracing the isolationism of Iran.

Why is Pakistan upset by the three streams? Pakistan is going through a withering process of isolationism, which is another word for turning inwards and showing hostility towards anything smelling of foreignness. Liberalism is under attack and liberal education is already not in favour even in the private sector stream where the financiers know it pays to create space for ideology and uniformity of the mind.

Pakistani scholar Madiha Afzal in her book Pakistan under Siege: Extremism, Society, and the State, observes: While education appears to make people less favourable toward terrorist groups, there is also a worrying increase in favourability toward these groups at the secondary school level. My analysis of Pakistan Studies textbooks helped explain why that is the case: The books set up a framework of the world in which Pakistan is viewed as the victim of conspiracies of both India and the West, and Pakistanis and Muslims are pitched in opposition to other countries and religions.

This article appeared in the print edition of May 9, 2020, under the title Turning inwards, Locking minds. The writer is consulting editor, Newsweek Pakistan

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Educational reform under Imran Khan is a way of embracing isolationism. - The Indian Express

The Myth of ‘Sanskrit Villages’ and the Realm of Soft Power – The Wire

This series has two parts, this is the second. The first part discussed Sanskrit from having analysed at depth its relative rankings within the Indian census results. It focused on the last two censuses in 2011 and 2001. The second part is a discussion of how Sanskrit is operationalised for strategic soft power applications related to the under-appreciated realm of faith-based development.

Sanskrit, apparently, is the language of Future India. At least, that is the opinion of Soumitra Mouhan, who also asserts, in relation to the Revival of Sanskrit:

Sanskrits credentials to be a language of future India are definitely better and greater than we have realised so far. Its revival will not only renew and revive the pride in our own cultural heritage, but will also bring about spiritualism and the concept of a meaningful society and polity, thereby bringing order and peace all across the country, a desideratum for any developed society.

The following image shows how it is also framed within a global context on an NCERT-related website where one can download NCERTs Sanskrit text books. A curious thing is that, while countless rumours of NASAs supposed use of Sanskrit, as a Vedic Science, can be found on the internet, it is virtually impossible to find any mention of the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) making any use of Sanskrit. Even though it is supposedly the most computerable language, it only seems to be used to name rockets, missiles, and satellites.

Source: https://www.ncertbooks.guru/ncert-sanskrit-books/

Faith-based development, competitive diplomacy and transformative travel merge in the various leisure tourism markets of the more than $4-trillion global wellness industry. The production of legitimacy and authority in diplomatic and economic arenas involves interweaving narratives through which nations work to control their own images by implementing strategic communication strategies.

This relates to the ways countries compete using their cultural capital. This often occurs through the performance of showing good will. The International Day of Yoga is a good example of actualising yoga for strategic soft power purposes. Take, for instance, how in 2019, the slogan #Yoga4ClimateAction was implemented to increase Indias standing in the world. However, closer inspection of faith-based competitive diplomacy in relation to Sanskrit is sparse.

While for some, Sanskrit might be considered a dead language or a symbol of millennia of oppression, for others it is a treasure trove of untapped knowledge that might just save humanity. Sanskrit, and the knowledge contained in dusty untranslated manuscripts might also help define and chart ones path toward a utopia-inspired moral horizon, which speaks more about temporalities of becoming, rather than being. It helps link an archaic modernity and potential return to an imagined, previous, Vedic Golden Age that is, a priori, eco-sustainable.

Take, for example, Indias vice president, M. Venkaiah Naidu, who claims that Sanskrit can offer solutions to the worlds contemporary issues. Naidu went on to say,

The heritage of knowledge that our ancient scholars left for us is in Samskrit. I believe Samskrit has the solution for every problem in the world. That probably is the reason why Samskrit is being studied across world now and researches are being done on the ancient texts in Samskrit.

Himachal Pradeshs chief minister, Jairam Thakur, believes that Sanskrit is a language for the entire world and not just India. While the national president of Samskrita Bharati, Bhaktvatsal Sharma, argues that Sanskrit is not just a language, but also a lifestyle. And that efforts should be made to make this 21st century, a Sanskrit century.

Similar sentiments are shared by Indias Human Resource Development (HRD) Minister, Ramesh Pokhriyal, who claims It is essential to learn Sanskrit if you want to understand India and its culture and tradition. By 2050, Sanskrit will be the most prominent language in the world.

One way to think about the news articles, blogs, and opinion pieces that regularly inform us of Sanskrit-speaking villages is how they seem to operate in a similar way to phalaruti paratexts. The phalaruti parts of any text outline the potential rewards for a pursuing a particular spiritual task, like reciting a text, and, also, the dangers and pitfalls for not doing it, or doing it poorly. These lists that contain promises of heavenly rewards enable the discourse around the topic being discussed to function as true. Think about the function, or purpose, of all the articles on Sanskrit-speaking villages. They promote the idea that these villages are true.

In a similar way to phalaruti paratexts, the claims of Sanskrit-speaking villages is partly, or, entirely, driven by an earthly agenda.As well, people will ultimately believe whatever they choose to, regardless of available, contrary, evidence. In a sense, stories of villages where everyone speaks Sanskrit do not need to be empirically true for people to believe in them. More importantly, the Sanskrit-speaking phalaruti paratext articles serve as a source of inspiration.

Perhaps, these rumours also act as a buffer to ward off existential anxiety. At least, for some, it is potentially comforting to know that a real and true India still exists. That M.K. Gandhis idea of the village and Mohan Bhagwats idea of core Indian values are still intact. This is found in one phalaruti type article about one Sanskrit-speaking village. In the article, Jhiri, which we travelled to in the first part of the essay, is described as Indias own Jurassic Park. It is supposedly a village that is a lost world that has been recreated carefully and painstakingly, but lives a precarious existence, cut off from the compelling realities of the world outside.

The village holds an ambiguously utopian relation to future India. The Sanskrit village intensifies this affective quality.

Consider the example of this faith-based development narrative that has evolved over the past decade in the state of Uttarakhand. In 2010, Sanskrit became the states second official language. Even though this project was implemented a decade ago, and has endured changing governments and allegations of corruption, by 2013 Rs 21 crorehad already been spent on promoting Sanskrit education in Uttarakhand. Regrettably, there is very little to show for it.

It is unclear how much capital was invested between 20132020. Recently, an updated policy has increased this top-down imposition of language shift, toward Sanskrit. The new policy aims to create a Sanskrit village in every block (administrative division) of Uttarakhand.

The state of Uttarakhand consists of two divisions, 13 districts, 79 sub-districts and 97 blocks. One wonders how much more investment might be needed to transform 97 villages scattered across the Himalayas into Sanskrit villages? Are we to assume that over the last decade, based on the 2010-2013 expenditure of Rs 21 crore, that Rs 63 crore has already been spent? On what, exactly? There is hardly a Sanskrit village in even one block in Uttarakhand.

The curious thing is that, while 70% of the states total population live in rural areas, 100pc of the total 246 L1-Sanskrit tokens returned at the 2011 census are from Urban areas.

No L1-Sanskrit token comes from any villager who identifies as an L1-Sanskrit speaker in Uttarakhand.

This top-down project aims to reverse engineer India and the world through Sanskrit and Yoga. The aim is to reform society toward an imagined Sanskritland. The aspiration is total. Take, for example, the following song that attendees at Samskrita Bharati language camps learn, which inspires people to work towards helping Sanskrit be spoken in every home (ghe ghe), in every village (grme grme), in every city (nagare nagare), and in every country (dee dee). Samskrita Bharatis vision for future India (and world) inevitably leads to a global language shift where Sanskrit is spoken everywhere (saskta sarvatra), and is installed as the next lingua franca (viva bh). The perceived net-positive outcome (abhyudaya) has India positioned as the global superpower and moral dispenser (viva guru).

This might seem inherently banal and optimistically utopian, yet it is part of a yoga-oriented, faith-based, competitive diplomacy, soft power initiative. Evidence of this includes propositions, such as Yoga and Sanskrit can solve climate change. In this way, Sanskrit and Yoga are used to brand the nation.

This narrative is evolving from its green, eco-friendly roots into a digitising of Sanskrit, ostensibly through a saffron-lite filter. Or rather, green and saffron are forcibly collapsed to present a sustainable programme as a Hindutva programme. A common, albeit erroneous and misplaced, sentiment is that Sanskrit is the best language for computing and artificial intelligence. This is as equally troubled as the Sanskrit village narrative. The pair seem to work in tandem. The following quote, from Soumitra Mohan highlights the sentiment.

The language deserves to be treated much better than it has been so far, more so when it has been called the best computerable language. Sanskrits credentials to be a language of future India are definitely better and greater than we have realised so far. Its revival will not only renew and revive the pride in our own cultural heritage, but will also bring about spiritualism and the concept of a meaningful society and polity, thereby bringing order and peace all across the country, a desideratum for any developed society.

The following quote is found on the homepage of one of Indias best-known Sanskrit universities in Benares, namely, Samprnanda Saskta Vivavidylaya:

Sanskrit is the most ancient and perfect among the languages of the World. Its storehouse of knowledge is an unsurpassed and the most invaluable treasure of the world. This language is a symbol of peculiar Indian tradition and thought, which has exhibited full freedom in the search of truth, has shown complete tolerance towards spiritual and other kind of experiences of mankind, and has shown catholicity towards universal truth. This language contains not only a rich fund of knowledge for people of India but it is also an unparalleled way to acquire knowledge and is thus significant for the whole World.

We see this Sanskrit-inspired eco-tech sentiment manifest in the words of Samskrita Bharatis founder, C.K. Shastry, who believes, that:

Todays technology is IT; tomorrows will be biotechnology, the day after, nanotechnology. What comes afterwards is knowledge technology. India has the potential to turn into a superpower by 2025, for it is home to scriptures and Sanskrit literature which is a great treasure of knowledge. But the problem is we have not yet decoded it.

One seemingly intractable issue is the overwhelming volume of manuscripts. The amount of trained philologists, manuscript conservators, and available funds and resources is no match for the decoding of even a fraction, let alone, all the manuscripts that exist. The rough estimation is that only about 500,000 manuscripts have been catalogued out of a staggering, yet conservative, minimum total of 7 million manuscripts. And, of these already catalogued, only a handful have been digitised, translated, and published.

The National Survey of Manuscripts has the unenviable task of locating, cataloging, preserving and translating these texts. However, to put it into perspective, in just one survey round across four states, the following numbers of manuscripts were recovered: Delhi (85,000), Manipur (10,000), Karnataka (150,000)and Assam (42,000).

Yet, even with awareness campaigns to promote the documentation and conservation of manuscripts, career prospects are slim. This is compounded by what seems to be a general impression that a serious study of Sanskrit and subsequent investment of capital to work on this literal mountain of manuscripts is quickly politicised, or, worse, made into a parody of itself in which policy decisions are put forward that will ultimately undermine efforts to popularise Sanskrit. Four examples are perhaps worth highlighting.

The first example involves the aspiration to reverse engineer next generation transport options, as the title of this article suggests, Decoding Sanskrit scriptures to make Vedic vimans a reality. For an exquisite discussion of archaic modernities, Banu Subramaniams latest book (2019) titled, Holy Science: The Biopolitics of Hindu Nationalism is an excellent overview. One nation branding issue relates to the general interest and knowledge of Sanskrit and its manuscripts. This is particularly prevalent outside of India, across the global consumer-scape of Yogaland, where Indias gift to the world re-orientalizes the biographies of Sanskrit and Yoga through a neo-Orientalist filter to create a neo-Romantic mood amongst New Age consumers of spirituality and yoga-inflected lifestyles. Regrettably, the rumours and factoids about Sanskrits ability to sanitise modernity of its blemishes adds tremendous credibility, regardless of the unintended consequences.

The second example occurred at the Bhandakar Oriental Research Institute (BORI), Pune. It highlights the internal tensions within India. Founded in 1917, it was during January 2004 that this repository was ransacked and vandalised. The media used broad saffron-coloured strokes to paint those involved in this and related incidents as homogenous extra-judicial agents of Hindutva. Instead, this particular act is better framed as an exercise related more to internal caste-based politics of Maharashtra that was carried out by the Maharashtra Seva Sangh, which is part of the new religious/political movement, Shivdharma. Adheesh Sathaye, Associate Professor of Sanskrit at the University of British Columbia, explains, how this largely lower-caste movement consciously regards itself as distinct from mainstream Hinduism and is particularly hostile towards Brahmanic hegemony. Shivdharma is, in short, a marriage of a passionate folk devotion to Shivaji with anti-Brahman politics.

The third example comes back to the faith-based development issues first raised in this article. In 2017, the Assamese government declared it would make Sanskrit compulsory in all public schools, up to the eighth grade (class VIII). Yet, this politically expedient decision does not address the genuine issues around language planning and promotion of Sanskrit, not to mention, who will fill all these new teaching positions? More importantly, it discriminates against the economically underdeveloped populations. As Mayu Bora writes, the Asom Sahitya Sabhas position is that students would benefit more from studying geography and history, or minority languages, like Bodo, which is the language of largest indigenous tribal group of Assam.

The fourth example relates to Samskrita Bharatis push, through the New Education Policy, to replace English in the three-language education policy with Sanskrit, and make English optional. Much importance is made of promoting Sanskrit as a language of the masses. However, having attended several Samskrita Bharati camps, I am familiar with the opinion that Sanskrit was apparently the only language spoken by everyone across the sub-continent. This ahistorical and factually incorrect claim shows either complete ignorance of Indias rich and dynamic linguistic ecology, evidenced in the Nirukta, Asthadhyayi, Mahabhashya, and other linguistic commentaries roughly 2500 years ago, or a willful ignorance fueled by an ideological agenda. It also demonstrates a willingness to persist with a narrative that does little else than exercise the sort of linguistic hegemony and fundamentalist attitude that pushes people away from learning Sanskrit. Or invites those inclined to this theo-political position to embrace it. However, it does not seem to really exude one idea of an open-minded deshabhakta (patriot), who supports linguistic diversity, as it is enshrined in Article 345 of Indias constitution.

Yet, it seems, political expediency justifies restricting linguistic diversity, as long as it occurs through a development narrative. As Union minister Pratap Sarangi, explains Sanskrit is the language for science, mathematics, and environment [] It is the most scientific language [and] if it is used more often by India, we will become a world leader.

After all, Sanskrit is a gift of India for [the] entire humanity, at least, that is what Indias HRD Minister, Ramesh Pokhriyal, asserted just after the Central Sanskrit Universities Bill, 2020 was passed by Indias upper house of parliament. This was done to upgrade three Deemed Sanskrit universities to Central University status.

Amarav is a wing of Samskrita Bharati that promotes Sanskrit through songs. One example is the song Viva-bh Sasktam (The universal-language is Sanskrit). Information about the song on Amaravs website claims, that There are many villages in India where the entire population speaks solely and fluently in Sasktam! Such truth claims, as we have seen, are curious things.

Yet, these lofty ambitions to help save the world, ostensibly, from itself, have humble origins among the mythical villages of rural India, which we are told, speak, or could speak, the language of the rural masses, Sanskrit. The inhabitants of these rural areas are meant to be grateful that Sanskrits perceived civilising power will finally reach them, even if this ideological benevolence is soaked in a neo-colonial Sanskritisation impetus made explicit in ways, such as Saskta sarve ktesarvad; Sanskrit for everyoneforever. Strength, it seems, is not found in linguistic diversity.

The idea of the Sanskrit village continues to gain momentum. One of the first things that Uttarakhands former chief minister, Ramesh Pokhriyal, did when assuming the Unions HRD portfolio is announce a plan to upgrade his pet, Sanskrit village development, project from the state-level to the union (national) level.

Finally, 2021 marks the first completely digitised census the nation will experience. Hopefully, this allows for data to be enumerated, rationalised and published much more efficiently, and that it will result in next round of Sanskrit data to be released sooner than the seven-year lag that occurred at the last census. Hopefully, too, there will be fewer glitches in 2021, compared to 1941, which was completely botched due to it being the first census at which self-reporting of data was introduced.

Patrick McCartney, PhD, is a Research Affiliate at the Anthropological Institute at Nanzan University, Nagoya, Japan. He is trained in archaeology, anthropology, sociology, and historical linguistics. His research agenda focuses on charting the biographies of Yoga, Sanskrit, and Buddhism through a frame that includes the politics of imagination, the sociology of spirituality, the anthropology of religion, and the economics of desire. His social media handle is Patrick McCartney.

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The Myth of 'Sanskrit Villages' and the Realm of Soft Power - The Wire

Author Traces The History Of Chicago And Other American Cities In Pursuit Of Utopia – WBEZ

Utopia has endured as a concept ever since philosopher Thomas More imagined the word and such a world more than 500 years ago. For centuries, novelists and scholars have adopted utopia as a muse to imagine living in a better place.

In his new book City on a Hill: Urban Idealism in America from the Puritans to the Present, Alex Krieger gives a domestic history by tracing different movements and promises in the U.S. for paradise. Since this countrys founding theres been Thomas Jeffersons blueprint for an egalitarian republic (albeit only for white men); the idealism of the small town; romanticizing the suburbs as an escape from the disease-ridden, overcrowded city; Walt Disneys carless EPCOT new town vision; and the epicenter of accessible pleasure for all, Las Vegas, Krieger notes in his book. Failures abound, too: Manifest Destiny, Native American removal, ugly urban renewal and a host of terrible housing policies cementing segregation.

The search for utopia hardly ever produces utopia. Im not naive to believe that but that does not prevent the search for utopia or ideal aspirations, said Krieger, a professor at the Harvard Graduate School of Design. The Chicago native gave a rescheduled spring utopia lecture on Monday, but virtually, sponsored by the Chicago Architecture Center.

Krieger crisscrosses the country in the book, and of course often lands in the middle in Chicago. Its where industrialist George Pullmans paternalism attempted to marry company and labor; where the Worlds Columbian Exposition put the city on a pedestal for tens of millions of people to see; and where long before Henry Ford the precision of assembly lines in the stockyards anointed Chicago as Hog Butcher of the World. Our greenspace, park design and lakefront are unmatched. Renowned Chicago planner Daniel Burnham made no small plans.

Krieger also describes Chicago as the original Amazon, connecting railyards and the Great Lakes to deliver goods.

Chicago certainly was the logistical utopia of the planet towards the end of the 19th century, Krieger said, referring to the catalogue shopping of Sears, Roebuck & Company and Montgomery Ward. You could acquire anything dresses, homes, guns.

In the book, Krieger writes that there are not many accounts of Chicago as utopia.

In fact, there was much to dislike and even fear about this unruly cauldron of urbanization in the decades before and after the arrival of the twentieth century, Krieger writes. Reformers condemned the exploitation of workers during industrialization, as activism sought to change those conditions.

During his talk Monday, Krieger said the lessons learned a century ago from the activism of Jane Addams ring true today especially as society is in a COVID-19 paralysis. One of the things I want us to return to is Jane Addams sensibility of sharing our wealth and our options, he said.

Krieger said its hard to predict what land use policies or even utopian visions emerge from the pandemic. Will sidewalks be wider, as urbanists have long advocated for? Will there be more green space in cities as social distancing stays with us like nighttime summer mosquitos?

We did not stop building skyscrapers in Manhattan after 9/11 even though that was predicted immediately afterwards, Krieger said. Yet, I think this [pandemic] will have a slightly longer impact for two reasons.

He said density will be a concern and people will be wary of urban environments. And it has become much more difficult to find a place to live in cities because of inequality and housing costs.

But Krieger said theres something else more important to take on with these issues of inequity, the built environment and the air we breathe.

If we consume a little bit less or move a little bit less, maybe well gain a little bit more time to tackle on the most important challenge, which is not the pandemic, Krieger said.

The real catastrophe is climate change, and recognizing the great correlation between it and the current pandemic, he said.

Natalie Moore is a reporter on WBEZs Race, Class and Communities desk. You can follow her on Twitter at @natalieymoore.

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Author Traces The History Of Chicago And Other American Cities In Pursuit Of Utopia - WBEZ

Timing of the martian dynamo: New constraints for a core field 4.5 and 3.7 Ga ago – Science Advances

Abstract

The absence of crustal magnetic fields above the martian basins Hellas, Argyre, and Isidis is often interpreted as proof of an early, before 4.1 billion years (Ga) ago, or late, after 3.9 Ga ago, dynamo. We revisit these interpretations using new MAVEN magnetic field data. Weak fields are present over the 4.5-Ga old Borealis basin, with the transition to strong fields correlated with the basin edge. Magnetic fields, confined to a near-surface layer, are also detected above the 3.7-Ga old Lucus Planum. We conclude that a dynamo was present both before and after the formation of the basins Hellas, Utopia, Argyre, and Isidis. A long-lived, Earth-like dynamo is consistent with the absence of magnetization within large basins if the impacts excavated large portions of strongly magnetic crust and exposed deeper material with lower concentrations of magnetic minerals.

Global magnetic fields are intimately tied to a planets interior, surface, and atmospheric evolution. For terrestrial planets, magnetization acquired by rocks in an ancient field can be preserved over billions of years and thus provide a window into a planets earliest history. Mars has no current global magnetic field; however, magnetic field measurements made by the Mars Global Surveyor (MGS) spacecraft (1) in orbit around the planet unequivocally demonstrated the presence of rocks magnetized in a past dynamo field. The first billion years of Mars history [from ~4.5 to 3.6 billion years (Ga) ago] included massive volcanism forming most of the volume of the Tharsis province by ~3.9 Ga ago (2), the formation of major impact basins such as Hellas, Argyre, Isidis, and Utopia, and atmospheric and climatic conditions very different from those today as evidenced via surface morphological signatures such as valley networks (3) and erosional features (4).

Establishing the timing and duration of the martian magnetic field, relative to these major events in martian history, is critical to, e.g., understanding whether large impacts played a role in initiating (5) or inhibiting (6) a dynamo, or whether the change in surface climatic conditions after ~3.7 Ga ago (3) was linked to the cessation of a core dynamo. Most hypotheses regarding timing of the martian dynamo are based on the presence of magnetic fields over the heavily cratered southern hemisphere and their absence over the interiors of the large basins: Hellas, Argyre, and Isidis (1, 79). An early dynamo [e.g., (1, 7, 8)] that had ceased by the time of basin excavation around 3.9 Ga ago (Fig. 1) remains the most accepted scenario. In this interpretation, the unmagnetized basin interiors and magnetized exteriors result from demagnetization within the basin during its formation in the absence of a global field. Furthermore, in this scenario, although a dynamo is inferred to have been present at the timing of formation of ~4.2- to 4.3-Ga old basins (7), the earliest history of the dynamo field was unknown. A late dynamo that started (9) after basin formation has also been proposed (Fig. 1) based on magnetic signals observed over younger volcanoes and lava flows (1013), active or emplaced after 3.9 Ga ago. Although such spatial correlations are suggestive, a critical limitation is that it has not been possible to identify whether buried units of unknown age (likely predating 3.9 Ga ago) or datable surficial units give rise to the magnetic field signatures (10).

An early dynamo [a] predating Hellas, Isidis, and Argyre (1). The basin age range is shown according to the isochron (cyan) and N(50) (blue) age (47). Early dynamo termination by 4.13 Ga [b] is based on magnetic field signatures of a larger basin population (7, 8). The age of magnetization of meteorite ALH84001 [3.9 to 4.1 Ga; (48)] overlaps the early dynamo time frame [c]. A late dynamo [d] postdating the major basins (913). New constraints from MAVEN data (stars) over the BB, around the Utopia basin, and LP that indicate a dynamo at ~4.5 and ~3.7 Ga. The timing of Utopia is uncertain (dotted line). The map displays Mars Observer Laser Altimeter topography (49) with BB, Utopia, and LP marked (stars).

Here, we present new constraints on the timing and strength of the martian dynamo from Mars Atmosphere and Volatile EvolutioN (MAVEN) magnetic field data (14) acquired globally at altitudes as low as ~130 km at night [(15); table S1]. These data reveal a high-fidelity, highspatial resolution (15, 16) picture of the martian crustal magnetic field (table S1 caption and fig. S1) that allows detection of signals too weak or wavelengths too short to have been observed by MGS. We use nighttime MAVEN data collected below 200 km altitude to demonstrate that a dynamo likely operated at the time of formation of the northern hemisphere lowlands and the dichotomy boundary, providing new information on the earliest existence of a global magnetic field. Furthermore, we provide the first identification of a datable surface unit as the source of martian magnetization that postdated major basin formation. We suggest scenarios for the martian dynamo that can reconcile these observations with the strong magnetizations in the southern hemisphere and the absence of magnetic fields over the major basins.

The earliest known feature on Mars is the dichotomy boundary, at which strong magnetic signatures present in the southern hemisphere end abruptly (Fig. 2) (1). MGS results showed hints of weak signals over the northern hemisphere, but these were near the noise level of MGS-based models (17, 18). MAVEN data clearly reveal short-wavelength, low-intensity magnetic fields over the northern hemisphere (Fig. 2 and fig. S1). These can also be seen in a new MAVEN-based model (16) but have not been previously discussed. Some, located around longitudes 180 to 200, have no correlation with surface geological features and do not have a distinct gravity signal (fig. S2). Others are concentrated around the rim of the Utopia basin but are absent within the basin interior.

(A) Magnetic field strength, |B|, from all nighttime MAVEN tracks at altitudes less than 200 km. (B) MOLA topography (49). Polar stereographic projection from 20S to the North pole, showing the basins Borealis (solid black ellipse), Utopia (U), and Isidis (I) (dashed-dotted circles), and the equator (white-black dashed line). Uncertainties in the magnetic field from measurement error are less than 1 nT (14).

The spatial distribution and the strength of the magnetic fields over the northern hemisphere, as well as the transition in field strength across the dichotomy boundary, support the interpretation that a large impact (19, 20) formed the Borealis basin (BB) and the dichotomy boundary 4.5 Ga ago (Fig. 2) (21). We propose that magnetization in the BB was acquired at the time of basin formation in the presence of a global dynamo field. The localized nature of the magnetic fields within the BB can be explained as follows. Volcanic activity at Tharsis and Elysium continued into the Amazonian (22), and intrusion-related reheating above the Curie temperature in the absence of a global magnetic field can explain the absence of magnetic signals over most of northern Tharsis (23, 24) and around Elysium. The lack of a gravity signature associated with the magnetic signals in the BB (fig. S2) further supports the idea that the magnetization therein is not the result of extensive later intrusions or a buried basin, but that it was acquired while the BB was cooling. The presence of magnetic fields around the rim of the ~3.8-Ga old (25) to ~4.1-Ga old (26) Utopia basin and their absence within its interior are consistent with, but do not require, formation of Utopia in the absence of a global field, i.e., the early dynamo scenario (27). We return to this later in the context of the absence of magnetic field signals over the major basins Hellas, Utopia, Isidis, and Argyre.

A second key observation is that the northern hemisphere signals are mostly weak and only robustly detected below 200 km altitude, in contrast to the strong fields over the southern highlands. The excavation of most of the crust during the BB impact could have removed magnetic minerals capable of carrying a strong magnetization, revealing lower concentrations of less strongly magnetic lithologies (19). Earths mantle has a much lower concentration of magnetic minerals than the crust (28, 29) and comprises more ultramafic mineralogies. The magnetic properties of martian meteorites with ultramafic cumulate mineralogies, whose compositions are consistent with martian mantle models, have been shown to be one to two orders of magnitude weaker than those of nakhlites or basaltic shergottites (30). The increase in field strength across the dichotomy boundary then reflects the transition in crustal and magnetic properties associated with the edge of the BB. If the martian dynamo were active at the time of the impact, then impact- and decompression-generated melts would nucleate and grow some magnetic minerals capable of recording this field as the magma differentiated, cooled, and solidified. The thermoremanent magnetization (TRM) susceptibility of these cooled melts would likely be different from the magnetic properties of the crustal ejecta carried southward. The final magnetization would depend strongly on both the bulk chemistry of the melt (likely different from and depleted in volatiles, relative to the pre-BB martian crust) and the intensity and stability of the martian dynamo. For example, the existence of a single hemisphere dynamo that would only produce strong magnetic fields in the south as suggested in (31) would also allow weak and patchy magnetizations to form in the northern hemisphere. Furthermore, as proposed in (31), a hemispheric field could actually result from the thermal conditions in the mantle produced during the formation of the dichotomy; i.e., the BB could give rise to both hemispheric heterogeneities in the magnetic structure of the crust and hemispheric structure in the ambient field. The extent to which the strong magnetization of the southern hemisphere crust reflects magnetization that predated, but was unaffected by, the BB formation or magnetization acquired or modified during/after the BB-forming impact by the ejecta and deposition of material is unknown. In summary, the sharp spatial correlation of the transition from weaker to stronger anomalies associated with the dichotomy boundary suggests that either a thinner magnetic source layer or a different magnetic mineralogy plays a role in explaining the northern hemisphere observations, possibly aided by a weak ambient field, at least in the northern hemisphere, at the time of the BB formation (31).

We focus next on magnetic field observations at Lucus Planum (LP), interpreted as pyroclastic flows in the Medusa Fossae Formation sourced by Apollinaris Patera (AP) (32). Stratigraphically, LP is divided into an upper unit, the Amazonian and Hesperian transition unit, (AHtu), and a lower unit, the Hesperian transition unit (Htu) (22). The Htu unit globally has a 1- model age range of 3.71 to 3.96 Ga old (22) and, in the LP region, a model age of 3.690.07+0.05 Ga old (hereafter 3.7 Ga old), obtained from crater counts on Htu exposures in nearby occurrences of the Medusae Fossae Formation (33). Htu is up to ~1.5 km thick (Fig. 3E) and is overlain in places by a thin (less than 200 m thick) younger unit AHtu (Fig. 3; see the Supplementary Materials), which is 3.49 Ga old with a 1- range of 1.39 to 3.64 Ga old (22). In what follows, LP refers to just the lower Htu unit.

(A to C) Magnetic field over AP and LP below 200 km altitude. (A) |B| from MAVEN nighttime tracks. (B) |B| and (C) Br along four tracks close to the fresh LP crater. AP and LP are indicated by arrows and dashed black lines, respectively. The magnetic field is shown by the colors along the tracks. The white wiggles show |B| and Br as a function of distance along the track, and the scale bar in (B) denotes the amplitude. (D) Geological map (22) with track for topographic profile shown in (E). (F) A Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter Context Camera (CTX, 6 m/pixel resolution) image of the fresh crater highlighted by the red box in (D) and (E). Unit abbreviations are as follows: eNh, Early Noachian highland; HNt, Hesperian and Noachian transition; eHt, Early Hesperian transition; mNh, Middle Noachian highland; Nve, Noachian volcanic effusive; Hve, Hesperian volcanic effusive.

MGS data above AP (fig. S3) have been interpreted as evidence for a late dynamo (11, 12), although the low-altitude data were argued to be contaminated by external fields (34). Critically, it was not possible to identify whether the datable, young surface unit or an underlying unit of different age carries the magnetization (7, 34).

Long-wavelength MAVEN data also show signals spatially associated with LP and AP (Fig. 3A); nevertheless, the same source depth problem persists. However, several low-altitude MAVEN tracks lie close to a fresh-looking, ~35-km-diameter crater that penetrates the Htu flows. The AHtu unit is not present in the vicinity of the fresh crater. A 75% decrease in |B| (Fig. 3B) and a change in sign of the radial field component, Br (Fig. 3C), are observed, suggesting a change in magnetization across the crater. This is supported by a recent global model that shows a local minimum in the surface field spatially associated with the crater (fig. S4) (16). The elevation of the crater floor is approximately coincident with the base of the Htu unit (Fig. 3, D and E), indicating that the 1- to 1.5-km-deep crater locally penetrates most or all of this unit. The inferred crater depth is also consistent with depth-diameter, d/D, predictions (35). For the deepest complex craters in volcanic terrain, d = 1.89 km for D = 35 km, and for all craters, d = 1.04 km (35).

We tested whether the observed reduced field amplitudes over the crater could reflect demagnetization associated with the crater and its immediate surroundings. We set up a forward model in which a cylindrical hole (representing the crater and disrupted material in the surroundings) was placed in a homogeneously magnetized layer estimated from a local inversion (see Materials and Methods; fig. S5), representing the Htu unit (see Materials and Methods). The model predicts up to a 60% decrease in field strength, explaining most of the observed signal (fig. S6). This test, combined with the spatial association of magnetic field signal with the LP flow (fig. S3), indicates that a substantial fraction of the magnetization is carried within the LP unit and can be associated with a datable unit for the first time. If the pyroclastic flow acquired a thermal remanence during its emplacement, these results suggest that a martian dynamo was operating 3.7 Ga ago, after formation of the large basins.

The terrains surrounding LP show non-zero magnetization, suggesting that some magnetization may be carried by units below the surficial LP pyroclastic flow. We estimated this for the Late Amazonian volcanic (lAv) unit to the northwest and the HNt unit to the northeast of LP (Fig. 4A) to isolate the magnetization associated with LP (Fig. 4 caption). For a 1- to 2-km-thick LP layer, the magnetization bounds are 8 to 32 A/m. Natural remanent magnetization (NRM) intensities of terrestrial pyroclastic flows and martian synthetic basalts (36) as well as estimated NRMs of martian meteorites (30) are all comparable to magnetizations inferred for LP (Fig. 4C). The magnetization, M, is related to the field strength in which the flow cooled (Bancient) and the thermoremanent magnetic susceptibility, TRM, by Bancient = M0/TRM, where 0 is the magnetic permeability of free space. For TRM susceptibilities of 0.1 to 1, compatible with the higher NRMs in terrestrial pyroclastic flows, an Earth-like ancient field strength is plausible (Fig. 4B).

(A and B) The distributions of vertically integrated magnetization spatially associated with the Htu and AHtu units of LP (blue) as well as the HNt (brown) and lAv (yellow) units. The dashed lines represent the median for each distribution (15.7, 31.7, and 47.7 A for lAV, HNt, and LP, respectively). (B) Resulting estimations of the ancient field strength for LP layer thicknesses of 1 and 2 km versus thermoremanent susceptibility, TRM, after subtraction of the median values of the vertically integrated magnetizations underlying the lAv and HNt from that for LP (dashed and solid lines, respectively). In SI units, TRM is dimensionless. (C) Compilation of NRM intensity ranges (bottom axis) of terrestrial pyroclastic deposits (see the Supplementary Materials), martian synthetic basalts with mean and median of 1.3 and 7.7 A/m (36), and estimated NRMs derived from 27 martian meteorites (range in red) with a mean and median of 1.7 and 4.4 A/m [table 2 from (30)]. The vertical lines correspond to the lines in (B).

Our results demonstrate that the martian dynamo was active 4.5 and 3.7 Ga ago. The existence of a dynamo field before and after the large basins Hellas, Utopia, Isidis, and Argyre requires an explanation for the general absence of magnetic fields over those basins. The impact demagnetization hypothesis is based on the argument that magnetization is absent within, but present around, the basin. Although this is true, unexplained observations worth noting are as follows: (i) Large tracts of Noachian crust surrounding the basins Hellas and Argyre are also unmagnetized or very weakly magnetized (fig. S7). Shock demagnetization can affect the basin exterior (27) but fails to explain the heterogeneity of magnetization around the basin or the extensive Noachian aged areas in the southern hemisphere with similarly weak or no magnetization. (ii) Short-wavelength signatures may be present in the interior of the basins (fig. S7) (16, 17), although lower-altitude tracks or surface measurements are necessary to confirm this.

Can the absence of magnetic field signatures over the basins be explained if a dynamo was operating during basin formation? At least two possibilities exist: (i) The giant impacts excavated large fractions of the crust, possibly removing material capable of carrying strong magnetizations. For crater diameters, D, up to ~500 km, the excavation depth, d, is ~0.1D, i.e., up to 50 km (37). Transient crater diameter estimates for Argyre, Isidis, and Hellas range from 750 to 1400 km (38). Although the d/D ratio for such large basins is uncertain, the depths would exceed 50 km, effectively penetrating and removing magnetized crust. The observations of very weak fields over the BB, cf. the surrounding southern highlands, suggest that this is plausible. Weak, small-scale signals may exist within the Argyre, Isidis, Hellas, and Utopia basins but require more lower-altitude observations for definitive identification. Material excavation, with only weak or small-scale subsequent magnetization, would produce a magnetic field signature at MGS and MAVEN altitudes barely distinguishable from basin-localized demagnetization. (ii) We also cannot exclude a fortuitous scenario in which a dynamo field at the time of basin formation was substantially weakened or intermittent, as a result of a reversing dynamo field (39). (iii) Alternatively, the dynamo was inactive during the time of basin formation, for example, because of inherently changing dynamo processes (i.e., from a thermally to a compositionally driven dynamo).

Evidence for a dynamo both ~4.5 and ~3.7 Ga ago has major implications for Mars evolution. Assuming a thermo-chemically driven magnetic dynamo, Mars must have sustained sufficiently vigorous core convection at its very earliest times and at the time of LP flow emplacement. Furthermore, the observations at LP suggest that a substantial fraction of the magnetization is carried in a thin, shallow magnetized unit. The resulting magnetizations are consistent with magnetization of pyroclastic flows in a 3.7-Ga old surface field with a strength similar to that of Earths present field. Excavation during large impacts may have played a key role in establishing a heterogeneous distribution of magnetic carriers in the martian crust, particularly removing magnetic minerals from the interior of major basins. This scenario allows a dynamo to plausibly persist from 4.5 to 3.7 Ga ago, thereby opening the possibility for a range of new magnetization processes to affect the martian surface, including depositional and crystallization remanence. For example, morphological evidence for water in the form of valley networks at the surface of Mars is dated between the Noachian and the Early Hesperian (3), before and overlapping with the timing of formation of LP and hence the dynamo. Water circulating in the martian crust in the presence of a field could have resulted in hydrothermal alteration facilitating magnetization or remagnetization of magnetic minerals (40).

Furthermore, the results link to current and planned missions e.g., the interior structure is a primary goal of the InSight mission currently operating on the martian surface (41). The dynamo timing results presented here provide a major step forward in understanding Mars thermal evolution, especially when combined with existing constraints on heat flow, mantle temperature, interior composition, and physical models of structure of the martian core. Also, if a global magnetic field protects the atmosphere from solar wind energetic particles, a prolonged dynamo would delay the effects of some of the atmospheric removal processes and hence have implications for martian atmospheric loss rates (42). This is important for addressing one of the main MAVEN goals of atmospheric escape rates through time (42). The collection of martian samples and their return to the Earth will finally be underway with sample collection by the Mars 2020 rover to be launched next year. An extended dynamo, consistent with the new results here, is of key importance for the Jezero landing site selected for Mars 2020, because units that could be sampled might have formed at a time of an active dynamo field (43). Future laboratory investigation of return samples will be the next major step in Mars exploration and, if magnetized, for planetary paleomagnetism.

Local crustal field modeling is based on the equivalent source dipole method (44). The magnetized layer is represented by evenly distributed (every 90 km) dipoles placed at mid-depth of a 40-km-thick layer. Dipoles within 75 of the observation point contribute to every orbital measurement (45), and the inversion optimizes the misfit between satellite data and the model prediction, by solving for the direction and strength of each dipole, without overfitting noise. Our solution method is conjugate gradient least squares that minimizes the root mean square difference between the data and an iteratively fitted model. The preferred solution is picked using the corner of the L-curve (46). We perform the inversion 100 times with randomly selected 50% subsets of the full dataset above the model area and 10% of the data in the buffer region and present the mean of all inversions (fig. S5A) and corresponding standard deviation (fig. S5B).

We use all nighttime MAVEN data down-sampled to 1 Hz (available on the Planetary Data System) below 400 km altitude, as well as nighttime (~2 a.m.) MGS Mapping Orbit data (~400 km altitude) binned in 10-km altitude and 0.1 longitude and latitude bins. Binning of the MGS data is necessary because of the large dataset collected throughout the mapping phase of the mission (1999 to 2006). Nighttime low-altitude (<350 km) data for MGS data are not available for the modeled area.

We set up a forward model in which a cylindrical hole (the crater) is placed in a homogeneously magnetized layer representing the Htu unit. Thus, we isolate the signal that is caused by the crater cavity itself while ignoring any additional signal due to heterogeneities of magnetization that we would expect in a pyroclastic flow. We use the estimated dipole moments from our inversion (fig. S6A) in the vicinity of the crater to estimate the magnetization of the Htu unit, assuming a 1.5-km-thick layer [Mr, M, M] = [24, 36, 7.8] A/m. This represents the near-surface layer, mapped as Htu (Fig. 3D), which is ~3.7 Ga and ~1.5 km thick. We considered a dense and broad mesh, with dipoles placed every 4 km laterally to 700 km outside our modeled region as a buffer. We allowed the crater to penetrate part of or the entire magnetized unit (i.e., we allowed a thinner magnetized layer below the crater interior) and find that the observed drop can best be modeled if the full unit is penetrated. We note that the magnitude of the LP magnetization is not critical to our calculations because we examine the percentage change in the magnetic field associated with the unmagnetized crater (the hole). The observed magnetic field east of the fresh-looking crater (fig. S5) is best explained if an adjacent crater is also demagnetized. This second crater is more degraded and is ~35 km in diameter, suggesting that it penetrates a depth similar to that of the fresh crater. The crater age is unknown; superposition relationships indicate that it is older than the fresh crater but postdates the emplacement of the LP flow. The forward model predicts up to a 60% decrease in field strength, assuming that the demagnetization is associated with a hole 1.5 times the diameter of each crater, i.e., the width of the craters and ejecta blankets (fig. S5B), explaining most of the observed 75% decrease in the data.

This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial license, which permits use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, so long as the resultant use is not for commercial advantage and provided the original work is properly cited.

A. Morschhauser, A model of the crustal magnetic field of Mars, thesis, Wilhelms-Universitaet Mnster (2016).

H. J. Melosh, Impact Cratering. A Geologic Process (Cambridge Univ. Press, 1989), vol. 126.

R. C. Aster, B. Borchers, C. H. Thurber, Parameter Estimation and Inverse Problems (Elsevier Academic Press, ed. 2, 2011).

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Timing of the martian dynamo: New constraints for a core field 4.5 and 3.7 Ga ago - Science Advances

Island Utopia – Inkstick

Even in ordinary times, Taiwan the sweet potato-shaped isle my family has called home for generations possesses something of a mythic and unreal quality. It is famously coveted by the Peoples Republic of China, which has taken to advancing its claims by forcing a series of disguises on the nation of 24 million. Thus the many different names that Taiwan is burdened with (Chinese Taipei at the Olympics; Taiwan, Province of China on website menus; even Southeast Chinas Taiwan in Chinese state media) and the protean nature of its geopolitical status, which shifts with the level of knowledge and especially the national allegiances of the beholder. Google the phrase Is Taiwan and the first suggested response is a country. The unspoken word preceding country is of course: real.

In the time of COVID-19, Taiwan appears more than ever like a mirage. It has arguably handled the coronavirus outbreak better than any other country, but it is excluded from effective participation in the World Health Organization (and other United Nations specialized agencies) due to Chinese pressure. In recent weeks, stung by accusations that it mismanaged the crisis out of deference to the PRC, the WHO has tried instead to shift the spotlight away from Taiwans domestic accomplishments and the medical aid it is now providing to the United States, Europe, and Southeast Asia. In an interview with the Hong Kong broadcaster RTHK that aired March 27, the Canadian epidemiologist and WHO advisor Dr. Bruce Aylward sidestepped a question about Taiwans potential membership by pleading difficulty hearing. Then he hung up the call. When the reporter dialed him again, he had only this to say: Well, weve already talked about China. The effect was akin to shadowboxing: the WHO desperately trying to avoid a plucky contender whose existence it frequently denies. (For a time in February, the WHO even resorted to describing Taiwan as Taipei and environs.) Soon after his interview inadvertently drew greater attention to Taiwan, Aylwards own profile was scrubbed from the website introducing the WHOs leadership team.

These days, however, it is not merely a sleight of hand by United Nations technocrats that makes Taiwan seem less than real. With a third of the global population subject to some form of shelter-in-place order as of April 13, and nearly 90% of students around the world out of class, who would believe in an island nation where life continues more or less as normal? Where schools and restaurants are open and there has been virtually no community spread of the novel coronavirus despite its closeness to the original epicenter of the pandemic? Where the populace just resoundingly re-elected its first female president (Tsai Ing-wen) and the current vice president (Chen Chien-jen) is a celebrated epidemiologist? You would have to see it to believe it, only now you cannot, for the borders are shut as of March 21st to nearly all foreigners in a bid to prevent new cases of the virus.

The empty airports are an especially difficult sacrifice for a place that relies heavily on tourism to counter its politically-enforced isolation. In 2019, Taiwan received more than 11 million visitors, an all-time high. For the ruling Democratic Progressive Party, the hope was that these sojourners would see the country for what it actually is a place with its own government, currency, passport, customs, and most importantly, a unique sense of identity and history. They hoped visitors would, charmed, tell this story to their friends and governments back home.

APPEAL OF THE UNFAMILIAR

The appeal and believability of that story depended on Taiwans likeness with the rest of the nations that make up our world. The goal was mutual recognition, the currency for participation on the global stage. But for most of us in the West, there is little to recognize in the stories coming out of Taiwan right now, stories of rigorous contact tracing and factories producing masks by the millions every day. Instead, as we queasily eye the logarithmic curves in our own countries and seethe against incompetent and uncaring leaders, the news about Taiwan takes on the timbre of a fairy tale. The appeal has been flipped: the story draws us in precisely because Taiwan stands apart, and that difference only serves to make it shimmer slightly, to seem less like a model that might actually be followed than a comforting fable set somewhere far, far away, where human life is still flourishing. It reminds me that this week I will teach my students Thomas Mores 1516 book Utopia from my couch instead of my seminar room. In this early modern classic, the traveler Ralph Hythloday (his made-up last name translates roughly to nonsense purveyor) regales his hosts despairing of the social and economic abuses in their own societies with tales of a mysterious, hitherto unknown island whose citizenry can boast of many things, including a well-ordered government and robust good health.

The COVID-19 disaster offers Taiwan the rare opportunity to demonstrate that mutual care and coordination need not be limited by formal diplomatic ties or the lack thereof.

In mid-March, I had to make a choice about a spring break trip to Taiwan that would by necessity have turned into a much longer stay, so quickly was the window closing for even nominally-safe travel. I am a professor at a small liberal arts college in the rural Midwest. With the abrupt end of in-person classes came the possibility of spending an extended period of time in a place I am hopelessly in love with but live nowhere near. At the last moment, however, I could not bring myself to drive to the airport and get on the plane. I had been teaching full classes of students all week. I had woken up with unusual aches in my body, after thirteen uninterrupted hours in bed, three days in a row. I could not say with certainty that I was not a carrier of the virus I could not say for sure that I would not fall ill on the suddenly full flight. Either scenario would have made me a vector of disease in a place whose lack of official diplomatic support renders it vulnerable and thus, by necessity, self-sufficient. In the quietness of the prairie spring I have had plenty of occasion to regret my choice, now that I know I am not sick and that my American passport and expired Taiwanese one will no longer gain me admittance. But this is just the starkest reminder to date of what it means to be the second generation of a diaspora, drawn to a homeland constructed in my mind out of longing and nostalgia a place that often bears little resemblance to its reference point and is therefore always out of reach, no matter the moment.

OPPORTUNITY FOR INCLUSION

Among those who care deeply about Taiwans uncertain fate in a world system that all but shuns it, there has been hope that its stellar performance in pandemic control and the evident danger of excluding so many people from global health coordination will win it more diplomatic space. Seventeen years ago, the outbreak of the first SARS virus provided an opportunity for Taiwan to gain limited access to the WHO. Initially, the WHO denied requests from Taiwanese officials and scientists for virus samples, antibody tests, and the latest research on treatment and vaccines. SARS was ultimately implicated in the deaths of 73 people in Taiwan. Not until the first fatalities occurred there did the WHO send specialists (and only after the PRC lifted its initial objections). Then, as now, there was an outcry against leaving Taiwan out.

Nonetheless, all this was followed in 2005 by the signing of a secret memorandum between Beijing and the WHO Secretariat that explicitly limited the latters interactions with Taiwan to times of acute emergency, and which requires the pre-approval of the Chinese Ministry of Health. Thus, Beijing has already shown it can respond to calls for Taiwans participation in the WHO by employing this same organization to acquire new methods of control over Taiwanese citizens. This time around, the result of the positive press covering Taiwans heroic efforts to save its citizens and donate personal protection equipment to hard-hit countries might well be the drafting of new WHO memoranda by the PRC to actualize its claims over Taiwan in other words, the heaping of unreality onto illusion, of misrepresentation on to the lack thereof.

Yet a different outcome is possible however remote it may be. In a post-World War II order that rations dignity, access, and protection to an artificially low number of nation states, it is no wonder that the highest political aspiration of many Taiwanese is for their homeland to be accepted as a normal country. But Taiwans predicament also points the way to a more flexible and inclusive way of thinking about the global, one that makes room for the emergence of new polities and for a variety of multilateral relationships. The COVID-19 disaster offers Taiwan the rare opportunity to demonstrate that mutual care and coordination need not be limited by formal diplomatic ties or the lack thereof. To showcase these humanitarian efforts, nearly 27,000 Taiwanese and their allies crowdfunded an advertisement that appeared in the April 14th print edition of the New York Times. It begins: In a time of isolation, we choose solidarity. A place so often dismissed as unreal and lesser knows what it means to adapt in the face of difficult circumstances. As we think about how to reorganize our broken world after the pandemic, here is a clarion call to let the anomalies and the exceptions, the outcasts and the nowheres lead the way forward.

Catherine Chou is an assistant professor of early modern European history at Grinnell College. She tweets at @catielila and is in the very beginning stages of a book on decolonizing Taiwan in the era of the PRCs rise.

Link:

Island Utopia - Inkstick

Picture this: Utopia – British Journal of Photography

My Future is Not a Dream 03. Whose Utopia Series. 2006. Inkjet print. 120x150cm Cao Fei, courtesy of Cao Fei, Vitamin Creative Space and Sprth Magers.

Justine Kurland, Alfredo Jaar, Rhiannon Adam, Cao Fei and others, reflect on the idea of Utopia amid the current crisis the first in a series of articles inviting artists to respond to a theme with image and text

In 1516, Sir Thomas More conceived of the word utopia from the Greek expression for no place or nowhere ou-topos. The almost identical word eu-topos translates as good place. There exists the essence of the term a perfect world that can never really be. Mores book of the same name, which outlined his conception of utopia, sparked decades of interpretations of the phenomena in literature, art, theatre, and film from carnivalesque communities to more puritanical worlds.

Utopia, by its very nature, can never exist. But, amid a worldwide pandemic that has altered, and in many ways suspended the chaotic world we knew, what does the word evoke for you?

Perhaps it is a place where we are free to touch again, be outside among others, travel to somewhere we love. Or can a kind of utopia be found amid this crisis, which is almost dystopian in the illness and death it has wrought? For above desolate city streets, stars have returned, oceans have quietened, and the pollution of our planet has momentarily slowed.

We asked different artists this question Justine Kurland, Alfredo Jaar, Rhiannon Adam, Jabulani Dhlamini, Cao Fei, Tabita Rezaire, Tereza Zelenkova, and Mikhael Subotzky, responded; their replies can be found below.

Fine art photographer Justine Kurland is well-known for her dreamy images of women care-free runaway adolescents, schoolgirls, mothers, and soon-to-be mothers, clothed and naked captured in utopian American landscapes often cast in a gorgeous golden glow. Before the birth of her son, Casper, Kurland spent most of her time travelling across America in search of subjects to photograph, an approach she continues to this day.

I intended my photographs as a counter-response, an opening through which to imagine a way out. I wantedand neededto create a version of motherhood that was bearable

My fifteen-year-old chose to quarantine with his father, rather than stay with me. I console myself with a set of justifications: his father has a nicer apartment; his father doesnt hassle him about screen time, bedtime, or homework; his father is a better cook. But the rejection is real and inevitable, considering the primacy of our bond. Alone in my apartment this month, I am devastated by my premature and accidental barrenness, a childless mother in an unnatural inversion of the Bertha (Underwood) Morgan song Motherless Child.

My series of photographs picturing mothers and children, Of Woman Born, takes its title from Adrienne Richs seminal book, in which she writes about the impossibility of motherhood and how its explicit subjugation to patriarchy precipitates a descent into domestic hell. I intended my photographs as a counter-response, an opening through which to imagine a way out. I wantedand neededto create a version of motherhood that was bearable.

The mothers in my photographs live in a world without men, in maternal bliss, embracing the pleasures of an animal existence. But when I look at Oneonta Gorge, Log Jammed Crevice, I see Casper instead, balanced on my hip as I manoeuvre my camera on its tripod. He had made up a little chant, something like, We photograph mama babies, we photograph mama babies, we photograph . and sang to me as I made pictures. The original utopian impulse of the work now bends toward the memory of that sound.

Artist, architect, and filmmaker Alfredo Jaar creates work in response to hardship and injustice, confronting many of the most appalling atrocities of recent history, including the Rwandan genocide and 1993 Sudan famine. His work addresses issues from unfamiliar perspectives and encourages viewers to question their comprehension of the subjects at hand.

I cannot help but think of Dantes Inferno as our present condition, suffering deserved punishments for the sins that have defined our lives

This photograph was taken in Naples in December of last year. It seems a very long time ago. It shows a 19th-century statue of Dante Alighieri that was sculpted by Tito Angelini. It sits in the middle of Piazza Dante, a beautiful public square to which I return often to pay my homage to the great poet.

Dantes magnum opus, The Divine Comedy, is a book I return often to, and now it sits, once again, on my night table. I cannot help but think of Dantes Inferno as our present condition, suffering deserved punishments for the sins that have defined our lives.

While Dantes fictional journey guides us through the nine circles of Hell in Inferno, we find ourselves not in a world of fiction, as some would make us believe, but facing science in its most disruptive capacity. Dantes Inferno is the perfect dystopia, one mere pause on our journey before we reach Purgatorio and finally Paradiso, our most desired utopia.

Rhiannon Adams work sits at the intersection of art photography and social documentary. In 2015, Adam travelled to the remote island community of Pitcairn in the South Pacific and created the first in-depth photographic series there Big Fence / Pitcairn Island. Her images employ ambient light, filtered through the hazy abstraction of degrading instant-film materials and colour negative film.

Ive visited many places that people dream of, but there is a fine line between a dream and a nightmare so I try to keep my eyes open

Utopia conjures many things for me it takes me back to writing papers on More at Cambridge when the dead of night would meet the first chink of light in the morning. The pressure cooker. The cycle of it all. The treadmill. I read that book and remembered my fathers idealism and all the chaos that led to. Reading about an impossible dream, a fog, a haze. I knew then, what I know now, that a belief in utopia is a dangerous thing, and Im a realist.

It also takes me to Pitcairn a place shrouded by mystery, perpetuated by distance. Smoke and mirrors. The pot of gold at the end of a rainbow always out of reach, a bubble due to burst, Icarus flying too close to the sun. The inevitable downfall of expectation. The lie we tell ourselves. utopia, more often than not, rings of dissatisfaction. A relentless quest. An unattainable goal. By definition, utopia cannot be. Its a lesson to be careful what you wish for. Ive visited many places that people dream of, but there is a fine line between a dream and a nightmare so I try to keep my eyes open.

Right now, as I am sitting in a flat in London, with the sun streaming through the glass roof, and the relative silence of Hackney penetrating my consciousness, I lust after an adventure, a quest, a search. The stranger danger, the adrenalin rush of a project. Each beginning like a first date, wondering whether youll still want to go home with it at the end of a night. My utopia right now is that liminal space between control and chaos, thats what I wish for. Thats what I crave. The unpredictable nature of a new start. For now, all seems familiar, suffocatingly so.

This image is of a clich a sunset and a horizon. But clich is clich for a reason. This was a moment that was beautiful, and still, or rather, where I felt still. My restlessness momentarily quelled. Sometimes I take a picture just for me, and this was one of those. I wanted to remember that feeling, of being where I was meant to be. I sat, on grimy Bombay Beach on the banks of the landlocked Salton Sea in the midst of Californias desert, a place where many dreams had come to die and watched the sun recede.

And I thought about the possibility, beginnings, endings, little heartbreaks, the thrill of rejection and journey for acceptance. I was starting a new project, and everything was new and fresh and a little dangerous. For now, thats all on hold, with travel on lockdown, but my utopia would be to be back there, amidst the detritus left by humanity, navigating the dregs, finding my place. Searching for that mysterious something that is just out of reach like this swing set at sea that grain of bizarre, the ellipsis between logic and feeling.

Thats when I feel new, reborn. And thats what Im missing, as right now Im just holding my breath.

Jabulani Dhlaminis work reflects his upbringing during apartheid and his views and experiences of contemporary South Africa. His practice draws on the pain and trauma of that past to understand and interrogate the present.

The image was taken in 2019, in Ladysmith, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. It is based on the concept of home as the perfect space in my mind. There was a funeral but, regardless of that, the moment gave me an ideal peace of mind.

Cao Fei employs photography, video, installation, and other digital media, to interrogate the changing face of contemporary China, perpetually reshaped by economic growth, rapid globalisation, and urban development. A number of major themes run through her oeuvre, notably the tension between the virtual and the real; utopia and dystopia.

Should utopia be regarded as the beacon, as in Charles Baudelaires Les Phares, igniting to shine through the darkness, or is it just a classic, unreachable and delusional mirage in our cold reality?

I took this photograph in 2006, during the filming of my multi-part project Whose Utopia in a lighting factory in the Pearl River Delta region an industrial hub in southern China that serves as a site of nationwide migration by people seeking expanded work opportunities in the countrys blossoming economy.

The photograph is an illustration of a melancholy vision of individualism within the constraints of industrialisation, which permeates the lives of an entire populace in contemporary Chinese society. In 2006, China was eager to integrate its economy into the global system, as the power of the global market was equally eager to penetrate China by means of multi-national corporations. As a result, the local economy was forced onto a global stage while young labourers from many inland provinces were entering this new international labour division.

I was deeply curious about the life of these emigrant factory workers in the Pearl River Delta region: how they achieve a totally new experience, new standard and new meaning in the overwhelming trend of globalisation, hence allowing us to see how they light up their utopia in a new reality. These workers utopia not only represented an ideal that energises their own lives, but also further exemplified how globalisation is reshaping the Pearl Delta River region, and even China as a whole. In this sense, utopia became a contemporary myth that drives us, as well as a mirror that reflects the very reality we live in.

It is important to remember that this photograph was taken 14 years ago. If Whose Utopia serves as a melancholy statement echoing Samir Amins argument that globalisation is essentially a reactionary utopia, then when the concept of utopia is reexamined in the midst of the Covid-19 pandemic, one would discover that we are now faced with a hollow utopia: globalisation, once a widely romanticised idea, is on the edge of its own demise our modern utopia seems to end up as a broken mirror.

In four decades, China has learned how to grasp the benefits of globalisation and has become a world economic champion. As the worlds second-largest economy, China is no longer a peripheral player in global affairs, but an economic powerhouse in direct competition with Europe and the US. However, Chinas long-term economic prosperity has also produced some of its unavoidable byproducts: the shrinking of demographic dividend and the increase of manufacturing cost both regarded as the preludes of the so-called Flying Geese Paradigm. The perpetual Sino-US trade war has also triggered a painful reshuffle of the global production chains, creating a rather vicious cycle along with the prevailing nationalistic sentiment and the increasingly unstable geopolitical dynamics. The recent shift it back initiative by the US and Japan is the latest anti-globalisation effort, following the current global economic re-pivot, which moves production chains from China to elsewhere, or back home.

As the neoliberal engine is losing its momentum, the possible demise of globalisation is forcing us to predict the unpredictable: What sort of crisis will occur upon our modern civilisation? An economic recession? Or wars? Or something that could cause a major setback to our civilisation? The pandemic will eventually disappear, but the global economy simply cannot be on hold forever, as well as the trajectory of every society.

Does the concept of utopia still make sense in our time? Is utopia even deserved to be properly discussed today? Should utopia be regarded as the beacon, as in Charles Baudelaires Les Phares, igniting to shine through the darkness, or is it just a classic, unreachable and delusional mirage in our cold reality?

Tabita Rezaire blends spirituality and healing, with an exploration of the online world. Rezaires practice centres on unearthing remedies to dilute the injustices, and oppressions, which pervade the digital realm, and the real world, beyond it.

Beyond the frenetic drive for growth motivated by profit and the insatiable thirst of capitalism, are other worlds. Worlds we dream, worlds we draw, worlds we sing. Worlds where visions are real, where flowers speak, and water heals. Worlds in which we value the land, protect each other, honour the science of our ancestors, and align with the rhythm of cosmic geometries.

Darkness pervades Tereza Zelenkovas distinctive black-and-white images surreal stills, which are both alluring and disconcerting. Themes of mysticism, death, and the sacred, run through her work, which is enigmatic, giving viewers the space to unravel each photograph with their imagination.

A particularly interesting phenomenon is the lack of silence and solitude within the home environment; these have somehow been transferred and imposed onto public space

It has been a month-and-a-half since the government here in the Czech Republic announced a state of emergency and dramatically reconfigured our everyday freedoms and habits. Initially, I spent days glued to news updates, with all future plans connected to any regular, preconceived sense of existence put on hold. At first, our lives were lived from hour to hour, later from day to day, until we eventually settled on living one week to the next.

Any longer-term foreseeable future remains hazy, shape-shifting from one public contradictory announcement to the next. For the first time in my life, the near future has become completely unpredictable and the only thing I can rely on is the present moment. Even the daily counts of how many people were, are, or are going to be infected, are just numbers, which will keep changing until we can fully grasp what has happened long after the current events have taken place.

We are told that life will never be the same again and that things cannot return to as they were before: the new normal, they call it. Judging from the imminent economic backlash in conjunction with largely conservative populist governments around the world, it seems like the world wont be a better place for a while. From our current perspective, paradoxically, even the past status quo presents itself as a utopian version of anything that might come in the future.

If Im to think of the past as a form of utopia, this photograph springs to mind. I took it during one summer spent with a group of my friends in rural France. It was a period that we gave to ourselves to research, make new work, and to enjoy some time together away from our busy lives in the city. The idea of luxuries, such as undisturbed time to think and work, spending the majority of our time in outdoor, open spaces, or being in close proximity with friends, seems quite remote these days.

The combination of being a mother of a four-year-old chatterbox, who has been separated from other children her age, and a work-from-home scenario, is not ideal. I am grateful that we have all the comforts of living in a spacious apartment, without a shortage of food and other supplies, but having work obligations while looking after a family can be difficult and the tensions are sometimes high.

A particularly interesting phenomenon is the lack of silence and solitude within the home environment; these have somehow been transferred and imposed onto public space. The parks and streets were eerily deserted in the first weeks of lockdown, while homes became loud, un-restful and busy.

Everything is slowly starting to re-open here in Prague but the future is still uncertain. Similarly, any notion of truth becomes an increasingly rare commodity among the countless available attempts at grasping the situation. As the whole world is experiencing something unprecedented in recent history, there are no words of wisdom that could shine a light on the end of the tunnel. I feel that the only way I can appropriately conclude is using the sentence that we all say way too often these days: This is so crazy!

Mikhael Subotzys work derives from his attempts to situate himself within the historical, social and political narrative of his home, South Africa, and the places beyond that, which he visits. One of his earliest series Umjiegwana, The Outside, and Beaufort Westinterrogates the relationship between everyday life in post-apartheid South Africa, and the social structures, and complex histories, lingering beneath it.

Perhaps utopia will only be relevant as a concept once we are gone, and the greens of our golf courses have faded into the coming dryness of winter

I took this photograph in the winter of 2008, shortly after a wave of xenophobic violence that swept through South Africa caused the deaths of 62 immigrants and the displacement of over 200, 000 vulnerable people.

The photograph functions through a very straightforward dichotomy the hugely ironic juxtaposition of the UNHCR tents with the advertising board declaring Pleasure Personified in relation to the golf resort that was intended for this empty land.

The issue of xenophobic violence has hardly disappeared since then, but I now see much more in the juxtaposition than the material conditions of the refugees. Our consciousness of the land itself has changed with recent political developments and personally, I now notice the colour of the grass in the juxtaposition far more than the more obvious text.

I realise that the grass is never really greener on any side in a world that has only become more divided, populist and cruel to immigrants in the 12 years since I took that photo in the tragic winter of 2008.

I dont know if this golf course was ever built, but this morning I woke up to pictures of lions and hyenas on the greens of the Skukuza Golf Course in the Kruger National Park, taking advantage of the absence of humans. Perhaps utopia will only be relevant as a concept once we are gone, and the greens of our golf courses have faded into the coming dryness of winter.

Read more here:

Picture this: Utopia - British Journal of Photography

Weekend Hot Topic, part 2: Movies that should be video games – Metro.co.uk

This is not what Harrison Ford looks like nowadays (pic: Lucasfilm)

GameCentral readers name the films and TV shows they think should be turned into video games, from Blade Runner to Death Note.

The question for this weeks Hot Topic was suggested by reader Grackle, who, inspired by the recent Predator: Hunting Grounds, asked what movie or other licensed property do you think would work well as a video game?

A lot of the suggestions have already been games at some point, especially in the 80s and 90s, but there was still a great desire to see definitive versions of films like The Terminator and RoboCop, as well as newer franchises like Fast & Furious.

Indiana Jones and the fountain of youthWe are long overdue a return for Indiana Jones as far as Im surprised. I have zero interest in a new film but I would love to see a new game, especially if they can somehow get Harrison Ford to do the voiceover. Given how good the graphics would be in the next gen they could get him to look exactly like his old self and basically create a whole new film that didnt have to be set in the 60s or whatever. Plus it would be a game!

Admittedly Id love if it was a graphic adventure, or even a remake of Fate Of Atlantis, but Ill settle for anything as long as isnt just straight action or an Uncharted clone.

I know thats going to be the temptation but an Indy game should be about talking to people with dialogue choices and solving puzzles, not just non-stop action. If you ask me Uncharted games always drag on because theres nothing else to them but Indy could have much better pacing if it was scripted like a film, with slow moments and fast. I think itd be great.Wallace

Wider worldGutted that the Predator game was no good, but no surprise there I suppose. To be honest I think these things only work if theres a big expansive world already to adapt, like Star Wars or Marvel. When youre trying to adapt just a two-hour movie that has maybe four or five action scenes it just doesnt work.

Given that I would say that Blade Runner has some of the most potential. Its only two movies but the world is huge and you could easily make something that had no action or lots. I doubt theres ever going to be a third film so this could be a really good way to continue the franchise.

I even think theres a reasonable chance it could happen if Cyberpunk 2077 is a huge hit, as whoever owns the film rights is going to get the notion that they can get a piece of that pie. And if that doesnt work out they should do a new Dune game. Film buffs will get the connection.Baker

Slow and tediousOne movie series that I always wanted to have a top-end video game has actually now got one in the pipeline: Fast & Furious. Though unfortunately what Ive seen so far of the game doesnt fill me with enthusiasm.

I always thought that a Fast & Furious game could be modelled to be essentially a Need For Speed with a much more memorable character set and storyline. It could also obviously have good multiplayer aspects, being a racing game. Ill admit I dont know an enormous amount about the planned Crossroads game but even the visuals looked very questionable.

Other movie-game should-have-beens Ive previously read about range from Escape From New York, Hunger Games (which I think would really work well), The Purge and a review line which I saw from the Solo: A Star Wars Story movie that said it would have worked really well as a kind of Star Wars Uncharted, if it was made as a video game instead of a movie, which I thought was interesting.NL

E-mail your comments to: gamecentral@ukmetro.co.uk

This is the wayYou know what would be nice? Some decent Star Wars games. EA has had the Star Wars so long now the whole sequel trilogy has been and gone and they didnt make a single game based on it. I mean, no loss there but talk about being late to the party.

I suspect the same thing is going to happen with The Mandalorian, even though lots of people have been saying they should make a bounty hunter game for ages.

I guess theyll just continue with Fallen Order but I wouldnt say that was any better than okay. The characters were super boring and I really dont have much interest in seeing them again. Id much rather play as a scoundrel than a Jedi and so far EA is not making that dream come true.Syril

Bomb #20One movie that springs to mind is John Carpenter and Dan OBannons Dark Star from 1974. The main game could play a bit like Elite, with the player travelling between and destroying unstable planets. Random mini-games could include stargazing, having to feed the alien, playing the bottle organ, the knife game, and navigating electromagnetic storms.

Every so often there would be a bomb malfunction, triggering a (potentially) final mini-game of having to teach the bomb phenomenology this could play like the Paradroid mini-game involving circuit diagrams and logic gates. If unsuccessful, the bomb would detonate inside the ship and the game would end, but during the credits the player could control an atmosphere-surfing Lieutenant Doolittle en-route to his doom.

A Dark Star game would probably be pretty shallow and short-lived, so best suited to a smartphone/tablet. It would have been awesome if released by Llamasoft/Jeff Minter back in the day.

Stay safe, Covid-19 and whatnot.Graham Wade

Original conceptI guess there are obvious reasons, what with all the Japanese schoolchildren and all that but Im amazed there hasnt been an official Battle Royale game yet. Theres probably some mods or something but it seems a bit unfair that Fortnite and co. have taken so much inspiration, and the name, from the film but it doesnt get anything out of it.

It would be one of the few chances to get a story mode out of one of these games too, but I doubt itll happen.Korbie

Catch up on every previous Games Inbox here

Noteworthy ideaId suggest an indie game for my comic (anime) to game idea, due to there being no real reason to go full on triple-A game for this. How about Death Note but with a twist. Obviously the story is known but we could have an alternate universe version where you can either be the antagonist or protagonist without being Light Yagami, the main bad guy, or L the super detective who investigates the crimes.

The Death Note story revolves around a notebook owned by a God of Death called Ryuk, that he somehow manages to loose. The book gives the ability for a name to be written in and that person dies from a heart attack no matter where they are in the world. Light (Kira) uses this to create a new utopia of a world by getting rid of all criminals and people he has classified as bad. Then he goes mad and goes beyond what he initially planned.

L, the young detective has to get to the bottom of this and work out who Kira is. In the game there could be a new cast of characters in a Cluedo type affair, where you will have to find the culprit before they find and eliminate you. Or be the Death Note murderer and try to create that utopia by evading the hunt for you by the super detective.

The gameplay would be based on questioning suspects, reading reports, watching TV spots, etc. and piecing clues together to dwindle down the suspects to one, before the antagonist finds out about you and tries to stop you.

Alternatively, getting rid of key people from the antagonist side of things to ultimately clear suspicion on you, whilst you try to achieve your goal, is what playing from the other angle can be like. If you are clumsy and not careful with your ill doings, then instead of you eliminating the protagonist, the super detective will catch and imprison you.

Something like this can be fun without having to have a complex world to design. A more simplistic setup can be used instead. Using a manga/anime look in a comic strip or some other clever development tool to create the world to play in is all thats needed.

Its a popular franchise so a fanbase is already there to try it. For all I know, a game like this already exists. I think itll be fun anyway.Alucard

GC: There are several Death Note video games, but weve never played any of them.

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The small printNew Inbox updates appear every weekday morning, with special Hot Topic Inboxes at the weekend. Readers letters are used on merit and may be edited for length.

You can also submit your own 500 to 600-word Readers Feature at any time, which if used will be shown in the next available weekend slot.

You can also leave your comments below and dont forget to follow us on Twitter.

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Weekend Hot Topic, part 2: Movies that should be video games - Metro.co.uk

Arquettes plan to start production of new film in Trumann – Arkansas Online

David Arquette and his wife, Hope native Christina McLarty Arquette, are planning to start production on their new film in Arkansas in June, according to a report by online news site Deadline Hollywood.

While many Hollywood productions are shuttered due to covid-19 precautions, the couple, along with partners HCT.media, have converted a former factory in Trumann to film Ghosts of the Ozarks, Deadline reports.

Its such a vast amount of space, we can build it so everyone can social distance, Christina McLarty Arquette told the website.

The Arquettes say the crew and cast, which includes Tim Blake Nelson (Watchmen, O Brother, Where Art Thou?), will be tested and their temperatures taken regularly, Deadline reports. They will also be placed in quarantine before filming starts.

We have everything in line," David Arquette said. "We have the ability to be able to still produce things with a reasonable expectation of social distancing, take everybodys temperature, and we have flexibility with quarantining people before they get there.

The film was written by Tara Perry and Bald Knob native Jordan Wayne Long of HCT.media. It will be directed by Long and Matt Glass and tells the story of a young doctor who travels to a remote Ozarks utopia in 1866.

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Arquettes plan to start production of new film in Trumann - Arkansas Online

Beyond the Shelf – Jacksonville Journal-Courier

Angela Bauer, abauer@myjournalcourier.com

While Jacksonville Public Library remains closed because of the COVID-19 pandemic, heres a closer look at some of its offerings beyond the book shelf:

All of the following items are available as e-resources by visiting jaxpl.org and clicking on Online Resources & Databases or within the apps described. If you need any assistance using any of the librarys resources, please e-mail Sarah at ssnyder@jaxpl.org.

ADULT FICTION

The City We Became by N.K. Jemisin (available as an e-book on the Libby and Overdrive apps): What makes a city feel the way it does? Is it the art and the music? The people and how they view themselves? What about the infinite, miniscule details of the place, whether they are recognized or ignored completely? Three-time Hugo Award winner N.K. Jemisin shows us her version of the answers, and they add up to something bigger than the sum of its parts. In this book, a magical novel of breadth and precision, Jemisin builds a version of New York City that is more than the borders of its boroughs. This New York is alive, literally. Cities are living organisms complete with enemies that must be fought off. Adventure awaits.

ADULT NON-FICTION

Hidden Valley Road by Robert Kolker (available as an e-book on the Axis 360 app): Twelve children. Six diagnoses of schizophrenia. Two parents navigating a meager mental health care system in mid-century America. At the center of this book are the Galvins, who are unlike any family youll ever read about. Hidden Valley Road blends two stories in alternating chapters. The first is about the overwhelmed Galvin parents, Don and Mimi, and how raising a boisterous Catholic family of eight sons from the 1950s to the 70s may have allowed mental illness to hide in plain sight. A boys will be boys attitude excused much aberrant behavior. The second story in the book details the thankless psychiatric research that has gone into defining schizophrenia and establishing treatments. Hidden Valley Road is a must-read for anyone who seeks to understand how far weve come in treating mental illness and how far we still have to go.

FILM TO WATCH

The Florida Project (available on the Kanopy app): Set on a stretch of highway in a budget motel managed by Bobby (Willem Dafoe), just outside the imagined utopia of Disney World, the film follows 6-year-old Moonee and her rebellious mother over the course of a summer. Dafoe was nominated for an Oscar, a Golden Globe and a BAFTA for his performance.

MUSIC ALBUM

3.15.20 by Childish Gambino (available on the Freegal app): Back with his first full-length project since 2016s Awaken My Love, Donald Glover aka Childish Gambino has released a sprawling record with a much more varied palette than his last effort. On 3.15.20, Glover is much more willing to take sonic risks, offering ballads supported by minimal acoustic guitar work right next to massive booming drum patterns. The album benefits from these twists and turns and it makes a much better canvas for Glover to present his lyrics. Glover has absolutely found his way by using every ounce of his influences and points of departure to create a record worthy of praise and exploration.

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Beyond the Shelf - Jacksonville Journal-Courier

The Best Movies and TV Shows Coming to Netflix, Amazon and More in May – The New York Times

For more recommendations on what to stream, sign up for our twice-weekly Watching newsletter here.

The summer movie season may be delayed this year or even canceled but the streaming services still seem to be treating May as the time to start trotting out blockbusters. The accomplished television creators Ryan Murphy, Greg Daniels, Loren Bouchard and Hannah Gadsby all have new projects arriving next month. And popular series like Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt and Homecoming are returning. The end of the month will also bring the debut of HBO Max, a new service that will combine HBOs existing content with original programming and a healthy assortment of titles from the WarnerMedia catalog.

Here are our picks for the best new movies and TV series premiering in May, as well as a roundup of some other notable titles thatll be available to stream. (Note: Streaming services occasionally change schedules without giving notice.)

Hollywood

Starts streaming: May 1

The writer-producer Ryan Murphy took some flak a few years back for his backstage melodrama Feud, which depicted the real-life rivalry between Bette Davis and Joan Crawford in ways both entertaining and factually shaky. For Murphys latest Hollywood-focused mini-series (created with Ian Brennan), he defies the accuracy police further by inventing an entire alternate history of the American movie business after World War II. Darren Criss, Patti LuPone, Jim Parsons and Dylan McDermott all veterans of past Murphy projects join Samara Weaving, Queen Latifah and Mira Sorvino for a story populated by real big-screen stars of decades past (including Rock Hudson, Hattie McDaniel and Anna May Wong) as well as fictional characters, all interacting in a version of late 1940s Hollywood where women, people of color and openly gay people achieve positions of power. The scenario may not be true per se, but with Hollywood, Murphy aims to offer an appealing counterfactual.

The Eddy

Starts streaming: May 8

The La La Land and Whiplash filmmaker Damien Chazelle returns to the world of jazz and to the daily chaos that always seems to surround musicians for The Eddy, a mini-series for which he serves as a producer and a director. Andr Holland plays Elliot Udo, a persnickety ex-pianist who runs a struggling Parisian nightclub and demands a lot of its house band, led by the equally strong-willed Maja (played by Joanna Kulig, from the excellent Polish drama Cold War). Powered by a diverse ensemble cast, the intricate and episodic story written by Jack Thorne deals with themes of passion, loyalty, family and regret. Chazelles fans will also appreciate the shows style, which is kinetic and immersive, using a you are there approach to capture the pressures of the music business and the thrills of collaboration.

Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt vs. The Reverend

Starts streaming: May 12

The delightful Netflix sitcom Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt aired a superb series finale last year, which brought the heroine back to where her story began: the crumbling New York apartment building where she met her first real friends, after spending her young adult years held captive by a religious zealot. You can consider the new special, Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt vs. The Reverend, to be an epilogue, allowing the shows creators, Tina Fey and Robert Carlock, to pit Kimmy (Ellie Kemper) against her nemesis, Reverend Richard Wayne Gary Wayne (Jon Hamm), for one more cathartic standoff. It also offers another chance for Fey and Carlock to explore their series-long fascination with life-changing choices and roads not taken. An interactive experience, this special lets the viewer decide what Kimmy and her friends do, in a story where her wedding day is complicated by the reverends return.

Hannah Gadsby: Douglas

Starts streaming: May 26

Given all the controversy and acclaim generated by Hannah Gadsbys 2018 stand-up special Nanette, the Australian comedian faced a tough challenge in delivering a follow-up especially since Nanette was in part about her realization that telling jokes is an inadequate way to process trauma. According to the warm reviews that greeted Gadsbys new show Douglas when she took the new material on tour last year, the sequel to Nanette remains a personal, thoughtful and righteously impassioned piece of comic performance art, with pithy punch lines about patriarchal privilege, the price of success and our enduring obsession with putting labels on people and art.

Also arriving:

May 1

All Day and a Night

The Half of It

May 5

Jerry Seinfeld: 23 Hours to Kill

May 8

Dead to Me Season 2

May 11

Have a Good Trip: Adventures in Psychedelics

Trial by Media

May 13

The Wrong Missy

May 15

She-Ra and the Princesses of Power Season 5

White Lines

May 19

Patton Oswalt: I Love Everything

May 22

The Lovebirds

May 30

Space Force

Spaceship Earth

Starts streaming: May 8

Our current pandemic crisis has led many of us to think more about the future of the human race, and to wonder whether careful planning and advanced technology could help us survive whatever ecological or epidemiological catastrophes await us in the decades ahead. Matt Wolfs absorbing documentary Spaceship Earth wont be much of a comfort, alas. The filmmaker behind the fine docs Wild Combination, Teenage and Recorder brings his keen critical eye and his interest in our shared cultural past to the story of Biosphere 2, the experimental terrarium project that was supposed to prove how humans could thrive within a closed system. With Spaceship Earth, Wolf considers how admirable idealism is often thwarted by cruel reality.

Also arriving:

May 8

Into the Dark: Delivered

Solar Opposites

May 15

The Great

May 22

The Painter and the Thief

May 29

Upload

Starts streaming: May 1

For everyone still missing The Good Place, here comes another heartfelt and philosophical afterlife comedy, this time not from Michael Schur, but from Greg Daniels, who was Schurs writing and producing partner on The Office and Parks and Recreation. Upload is a shade or two darker than The Good Place, but it displays an equally sharp and satirical wit. Robbie Amell plays a successful coder who dies young, in a near future where the wealthy store their consciousness in a boutique cloud server, which allows them to experience eternity in a customizable simulation of a resort hotel with opportunities galore to spend more of their money. As the hero flirts with the friendly customer service representative assigned to his account, he investigates the mysteries surrounding his death, and belatedly laments the ways his societys techno-utopia relies on the have-nots to support the haves.

Homecoming Season 2

Starts streaming: May 22

The first season of Homecoming adapted a popular fiction podcast into one of 2018s best TV series: a low-key political thriller about a therapist investigating her own half-forgotten connection to a shadowy military operation. The second season brings back a few characters including Walter Cruz (played by Stephan James), an ex-soldier still trying to recover his own hazy memories but introduces a new protagonist, played by Janelle Mone, and a new story. Mone plays an amnesiac who wakes up in a boat in the middle of a lake, then gradually discovers her connection to the Geist Group, the organization at the heart of Homecoming Season 1. These new episodes lack the first batchs director, Sam Esmail, but it remains a visually stylish and character-driven drama, using conspiratorial paranoia as the backdrop to a study of loneliness and belonging.

The Vast of Night

Starts streaming: May 29

In this smart and energetic science-fiction drama, two industrious late 1950s New Mexico teens one a radio DJ, one a telephone operator spend a wild night using all the resources at their disposal to determine if an unusual audio frequency has an alien origin. The movies director, Andrew Patterson, works similar magic with his meager budget, making a film that opens splashily with a impressively well-choreographed take that moves through an entire small town and then settles into a series of lower-key scenes that work more like a stage play or a radio drama. Sierra McCormick and Jake Horowitz are captivating in the lead roles, whether theyre chasing E.T.s through the wilderness or sitting still in front of a microphone. The Vast of Night is a charmer; and its also the rare arty genre picture that film buffs can watch with their children.

Also arriving:

May 8

Jimmy O. Yang: Good Deal

May 15

The Last Narc

Seberg

On the Record

Starts streaming: May 27

Originally slated to run on Apple TV Plus, this eye-opening documentary spotlighting the testimony of several women whove accused the hip-hop pioneer Russell Simmons of sexual assault was dropped after one of its original producers, Oprah Winfrey, pulled her support. An emotional world premiere at Sundance helped turn On the Record into a must-see; and the film ultimately became HBO Maxs first high-profile acquisition. Despite the tough subject matter, this is a remarkable, far-reaching piece of journalism from the co-directors Kirby Dick and Amy Ziering, who use the case against Simmons as an opening onto a larger conversation about how some celebrities can be so entrenched in popular culture that they become almost untouchably powerful.

Also arriving:

May 1

Betty

May 5

Natalie Wood: What Remains Behind

May 10

I Know This Much Is True

May 27

Craftopia (HBO Max)

Legendary (HBO Max)

Love Life (HBO Max)

The Not Too Late Show with Elmo (HBO Max)

Central Park

Starts streaming: May 29

Fans of the animated sitcom Bobs Burgers know that some of the shows funniest and most wondrous moments come when the characters burst into song. Now the creator Loren Bouchard has made what amounts to a cartoon version of a Broadway musical, featuring the voices of Kristen Bell, Tituss Burgess, Josh Gad, Daveed Diggs and Leslie Odom Jr. Set in New York City, Central Park has Stanley Tucci playing the ruthless hotel magnate Bitsy Brandenham, who has designs on filling the park with high-rises. Odom plays Owen, a park manager with a crusading reporter wife (Kathryn Hahn) and two adventurous kids (voiced by Bell and Burgess). Like Bobs Burgers, this is a colorful, warmhearted comedy that balances an earthy sense of humor with some lively musical numbers.

Original post:

The Best Movies and TV Shows Coming to Netflix, Amazon and More in May - The New York Times

Albert Serra on the Utopia of Libert and Pushing the Mental Borders of His Audience – The Film Stage

The New York Film Festivals Dennis Lim delivered director Albert Serra to me in the lobby of the Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center during the 57th edition of the festival last fall. Serra was traveling solo for the American debut of Libert, which picked up a Special Jury Prize at Cannes Film Festival when it premiered in the Un Certain Regard section.

We didnt know where to record our conversation so we intruded on the festival staffs lounge. Serra set up two U-shaped leather chairs facing each other. He grabbed us drinks from the bar and moved in close. Talking to the director is a lot like watching his movies; you listen and watch closely for long, unbroken amounts of time. You dont analyze Serras filmthey analyze you. Some directors refuse to speak about their own workespecially with the pressbut Serra will gladly dissect his own, even if he objects to your questions, as you will see in our conversation.

Libert follows Madame de Dumeval, the Duke de Tesis, and the Duke de Wandlibertines expelled from the puritanical court of Louis XVI in 1774who intend to spread libertinage from Paris to Berlin. To further their cause they need the help of Duc de Walchen (Helmut Berger), a German seducer and freethinker, who is lonely in a country where hypocrisy and false virtue reign.

In our conversation, Serra discusses his artists sexual language, Liberts utopia of liberty, not knowing whats real and whats fake in his movies, upsetting uptight liberals, and what it means to create contemporary trash.

The Film Stage: The groups sexual language involves bondage and capture. Can you discuss the inspiration behind these elements?

Albert Serra: The film was inspired by Marquis de Sade. Theres complexity to this idea of freedom and desire how these two concepts can be matched if they can. If you think about sex, its always a relationship with somebody else or a lot of people or several people, whatever. I was talking yesterday about this friction and it is inevitable friction. Sometimes it can be very harmonious, but perfect harmony doesnt exist. Friction in itself creates more possibilities. Maybethere are people that can be super happy to live without desire, but with time, things tend to change, and the proper nature of desire is to get tired of the same practice with the same people in the same body. If you have a harmonious moment, in general, it will not last. This is our psychological experience as human beings. The permanent non-satisfaction of desire. Give a man everything he desires and everything will immediately not be everything. It means that you always need something else.

To create utopia you have to force things, it never happens naturally. There is some first moment where there is some resistance. Maybe forcing something, you will get yours and you realize the value of what youre doing and maybe your desire and your body adapts to this idea of inevitable friction in a pleasant way. Sometimes pain and pleasure get confused because its the first moment of you dont not knowing exactly what you are feeling. You dont know exactly if youre being forced to feel something or if you really like it. In this moment of confusion that is something nice.

Its part of the utopia of liberty, because not everybody can feel the same things at the same time. So there is always somebody that is feeling less or feeling differently.

Is that why you created an intimate environment and let improvisation happen?

I will not say improvisation. That sounds like we didnt know what we are doing and, in fact, we know what we are doing and the name of what we are doing is performance. Its really accepting the fatality as the characters of the film accept the fatality of their desire, the arbitrary weight of their desire. We accept the fatality even if its a film with a budget with some constraints. We accept the fatality of living unique moments. Its not improvisation. It starts from the very beginning with accepting that what you do at that moment wont happen again, we wont be able to shoot in the same intensity so every new moment will be different. Its totally acceptable as we dont know what we are doing. As we dont know what we are looking for, even.

Its not about improvisation. We have a very close and conceptual setup. The people, the place, the aesthetics. Its quite strong to think before the frame of where we will play this game. But then, everything gets forgotten and everything can happen. The non-communication aspect of my way of working, its fatalityits really a vision of fatality, but genuine fatality. Its not how we are pretending to accept these as if it were real, but the fact we are controlling through the process of production. No, we really accept this, thats all. These actors for me are not just actors representing somebody, but they are real artists themselves, working with their own fatality in front of the camera that is very subtle but its very precise. Thats all. This is a very different approach not common in cinema.

The actress who was hung by her hands from the tree and the actor who was whipped and screaming, was that really happening?

You never know until which point. I think this is the magic of the thing; because there is representation, its boring, since there is the real. Its like a documentary, people here are enjoying what they are doing. So here we are at a strange point. But even if I dont know myself, as I never asked anyone to do anything, people were enjoying it and somehow suffering. For me because of intimacy, again, this concept, its very personal to say, How is somebody enjoying it?

Obviously there are a lot of fake things, but there are also some real things. This idea corresponds with our idea of the night, the logic of the night. Sometimes we wake up the day up after and we say, Fuck, I dont remember what I did or what was real or if I said something wrong. It was very confusing and it was nice because the film reflects this confusion and the confusion of the night. But I am not capable of saying how much of this is real. It looks real, no?

Talking about the logic of the night, which has to do with the removal of the hierarchies, so on what basis are the characters choosing to sleep with each other?

Its arbitrary, because of this idea of giving, not receiving. This idea when you are in a place where its totally arbitrary, it means that you have not focused on what you are expecting, what you are feeling, what are your desires or what are your rights. You think about what other people feel, so you make a strange combination, and you simply act as a base. Add in the confusion of the points of view. This idea that you are a hunter but you are also the prey.

When its about giving, I think the arbitrary aspect is stronger. Okay, give to simply give. This gives the egalitarian aspect of the film. At the beginning, it looks like there is some hierarchy because there is some like some aristocrat. Gradually, slowly, this is totally destroyed and you see that there is no hierarchy at all.

What youre wanting to give the audience in Libert isnt necessarily a pornographic type of pleasure or eroticism. Your average film festival audience is kind of uptight liberals

Im trying to provoke them. Also with the title, Libert, it means if you dont do this, you are not free. All of these people that have sex in the movie are free. So its pushing the mental borders on people, I have to admit that its a provocation. Why dont you do this, why are you so boring? The confrontational aspect of this is important. I want them to be a little bit confronted. Its always true with this subject of sex. When people talk about sex in film they are not talking about the film itself, but about themselves. The very personal way the film is dealing with its subject. It touches something, and I was happy with this because it opens, in a weird way, I think in a very healthy way. The film allows you to project your own things because of its confused points of views.

In one of your interviews, you said with Libert youre creating contemporary trash. What does that mean?

Its not just a decorative historical film. Its more about the totally rotten way we relate to each other nowadays, physically. Harmony is lost. The possibility of harmony in the relation with bodies, I think its lost in general and I think its because of social media. It creates a lot of pain in people because they have such a strong control of their own image they are scared of everything. They are scared of everything you are not able to relate to give in a general or arbitrary way. It will not be nice anymore. Probably.

Its a very pessimistic approach. Its totally insane to think like this because I like to be optimistic but I dont see the way out of this problem of extreme difficulties of creating harmonies with bodies in the future. But maybe its my opinion, maybe Im wrong. I dont know, Im not a prophet or a visionary, but from what I feel, people are so in control of their own image. Being in control of your own image is worse than being in control of your own body or yourself, in general.

Libert is now playing in Film at Lincoln Centers Virtual Cinema.

Excerpt from:

Albert Serra on the Utopia of Libert and Pushing the Mental Borders of His Audience - The Film Stage

During a pandemic, some companies struggle to provide the community they promise – TechCrunch

Rae Witte is a New York-based freelance journalist covering music, style, sneakers, art and dating, and how they intersect with tech. You can find her writing on i-D, The Wall Street Journal, Esquire and Forbes, among others.

Achieving a sense of community has been the pursuit of businesses trying to attract the experience-over-items millennials and Gen Z who want their consumerism to have a positive impact on the world. Thats what brands want activism, human connection and how to be local, Olu Alege, owner of the New York-based boutique strategic branding agency No Noise, said.

Community is defined as a group of individuals with a common characteristic or interest within a larger society. The key to building a positive community is allowing members to speak and be heard and, subsequently, be provided for as they contribute. The same rules apply to building a business on the concept of community, and this foundation doesnt suddenly change during a pandemic. Sure, the needs fluctuate (as do the funds), but voicing the need hearing them and attempting to accommodate them should not.

The world is collectively shifting during the COVID-19 pandemic. The demand for community is arguably greater, as shelter-in-place directives have resulted in extreme isolation for some. And while these extraordinary circumstances have seen some purveyors of community step up, others have unfortunately fallen short and instead haphazardly execute community as a talking point rather than a reality that benefits communities.

Co-working places and social clubs like SoHo House, WeWork, The Wing and New Yorks Ethels Club hawk community to small businesses and entrepreneurs by bringing loosely like-minded people or those with similar lifestyles into the same space.

Brick-and-mortar retailers like Nikes Live locations have leveraged localized data to bring specific communities back out to shop in-store. Shopifys Los Angeles locations initiative is to foster community by offering educational programming and other resources within their permanent physical space. Both brands saw the value in organizing communities and adopted the concept to further their core business.

Even before COVID-19 upended everyday life, cracks in the business of community began to hurt beloved brands, as pulling the curtain back revealed unethical treatment of team members and work environments unaligned with their outward-facing brand or company mission.

Fitness brand and inclusive community Outdoor Voicess smoke and mirrors utopia came crumbling down when 14 employees anonymously sharedwith BuzzFeed Newsstories of verbal abuse and a real life Mean Girls office environment.

The Wings downfall came when 26 employees shared with The New York Times stories of racism, virtue-signaling inclusivity and white-washed feminism. Seemingly, their motto empowering women through community was intended for a smaller set of women than their PR and marketing let hopeful members believe, despite each employee also being a card-carrying Winglet.

And WeWork has been bleeding employees, investors and direction in the wake of Adam Neumanns exaggerated investment in himself, such as when he personally trademarked the word We and subsequently net $5.9 million when WeWork was renamed We Co.

Since early March 2020, when we saw the shutdown of major sport events, the cancellation of conferences like CES and the postponing of festivals like Coachella, weve also seen these offenders continually fail their community with a lack of communication and foresight resulting in acts of desperation over safety in the face of coronavirus.

Despite Neumanns exit from WeWork in fall of 2019, company culture doesnt change overnight, and their shaky idea of community persisted as the U.S. declared a state of emergency. WeWork opted to stay open despite shelter-in-place orders in cities with their largest locations, offering renters slashed rates and even incentivizing employees to come in with a $100 daily bonus, according to an internal memo received by The New York Times.

A number of The Wings staff learned of the layoffs via this story on Vice that went up at 11:19 am EST on the day employees were supposed to be informed by 6:00 pm EST. SoHo House members shared that the club took until March 27 to allow members who requested it to pause memberships (which wouldnt start until June 1), offering promises of complimentary food and drink until then.

The glaring disconnect in these self-appointed authorities of community is the lack of care for the people that contribute to the communitys foundation and convenience-based investment in its members.

I have a problem with these companies that tend to talk about it when its convenient, when its okay for everyone to do it, Alege shared. Some will argue that its for the better of the business, but that argument says more about the claimant than circumstance, as there are communities and businesses that are stepping up in this time of need.

Whether or not information is provided is where I feel like you can see the differences in a companys mission, Alege points out. He goes on to say companies that communicated to their teams and had everyone on board in preparation for an impending recession, or actively started to take precautions as the virus spread through other areas first, inherently care more for their teams and community, even if and when layoffs happen.

Brooklyns Ethels Club is the first private social and wellness club created intentionally for people of color with priority of their identity and experiences. On March 13, the club announced the precautionary shutdown of their HQ in anticipation for COVID-19.

Upon making the decision, Ethels Club founder and owner Naj Austin said she took a lap around the club and asked some members their thoughts and what theyd like to see from Ethels Club should they shut down the space for a month or so.

They were like, Oh, itd be really cool if we could still have the community, somehow. Can you do it online? In my head, Im thinking we have no capacity for this, but I guess were going to have to figure it out, Austin added.In exactly the same way that Ethels Club was started by talking to our customers about what they wanted to see out of it we used the same formula. It very much felt like we were starting the company all over again.

Giving herself and her team a deadline of five days, they decided to pause the 225 members dues and open up a digital membership nationally for $17 a month. Theyve added more than 300 digital-only members to the existing members.

The new digital membership still focuses on social and purposeful wellness. In the morning we have programming thats meant to intentionally address how you start your day, so super uplifting, assuming that you open your phone and read the news first thing. How can we combat that? How can we make your day successful? Austin said.

Strategically timed sessions include topics like Radical Self Care For Radical Times, full body at-home workouts and writing workshops, with the final session of each evening being loosely focused on celebrating the day. When were in the new normal, I think people will still need this. I think people need the structure in this new world as people work from home more and just for whatevers going to be on the other side. Austin says this is to give members something to depend on, in this time where that is lacking.

They also launched their digital clubhouse, an Ethels Club members-only directory and portal for members to communicate.

A community-based business model adopted by existing brands should be offering tools to foster the community. Communities formed on Instagram, Twitter and Slack have simply transformed without disappearing.

IG Live has brought a plethora of wellness professionals live streaming offering workouts to meditation and resulted in legendary music producers Swizz Beatz and Timbaland bringing other recording artists together. This has resulted in the likes of T-Pain versus Lil Jon and Teddy Riley and Babyface going head to head and playing through their hits, as other musicians, producers and fans converse in the comments.

Animal Crossing has seemingly established itself among these platforms as well, offering a place for existing communities to congregate despite being unable to be physically in the same room.

New York-based DJ, Jubilee shared what the game has offered in this time, where she wont be internationally touring for gigs like she normally does. Yesterday I did a photo shoot with my DJ friend Teki Latex that lives in Paris. He had a bunch of us over at 10 pm his time. He even styled some of us and he got a photographer. It was so ridiculous, but it was also really fun and cute.

With such uncertainty around when she will see her worldwide community, it seems Animal Crossing has allowed space for Jubilee and other creatives to still socialize, collaborate and have some variety in their creative output.

Despite mounting privacy issues, Zoom has offered the quickest fix for those still working, while no-invite-necessary Houseparty offers video conferencing plus games for users to play together.

Community-less platforms (and their users) like Netflix have benefited in this time of desperate need for community via the Netflix Party Chrome plug-in, which allows people to watch Netflix programming together from different locations.

Meanwhile, Venmo has been watching whats transpired on their platform and started to send money to people who have been using Venmo for good. A quick search of #venmoitforward will show Venmo sending $20 to people who are pouring into their community, whether its sending money to healthcare workers for lunch or extra cash to musicians and DJs live streaming their performances.

As we persevere through this pandemic under an administration built on divisiveness, community is becoming increasingly important, as a slow response from federal leadership has left a lot of additional responsibilities on local governments and essential workers. Whether youre keeping it among your established community or participating or building new ones, doing your part can be as simple as staying home, and now more than ever, with access to the internet, you can find some sense of community.

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During a pandemic, some companies struggle to provide the community they promise - TechCrunch

Bodies on the Market – lareviewofbooks

MAY 1, 2020

CASUAL SEX, hookups and breakups, ghosting, loneliness, no-fault divorces, single households, and sologamy (e.g., single women who essentially marry themselves) are all forms of moral decay, according to Eva Illouz. They are symptoms of what she calls in her absorbing, yet deeply equivocal, new book, The End of Love unloving or negative relations.

Illouz is an eminent Israeli sociologist who has filled half a shelf with volumes about how popular culture, social media, psychotherapy, and, not least, consumer capitalism influence modern forms of love, and modern subjectivity in general. In her first book, Consuming the Romantic Utopia (1997), one of my all-time favorite works of contemporary sociology because of its ambitious breadth, analytic insight, depth of scholarship, and expository clarity, Illouz argued that love is not only shaped by ones class background but also serves as a cornerstone of modern Western economies. In that book, Illouzs outlook was basically positive: love was an emotion that couples could revel in and, at least for the middle class, was supported by an economy of gift exchange and leisure activities. By contrast, her new book shifts focus and tone, with her views becoming much darker and riddled with moral ambiguity, if not outright contradiction.

Illouz cleaves to a well-worn declension narrative in The End of Love: Desire, during the 19th century and most of the 20th century, was channeled into norms, scripts, and symbols authorized by religion and elite society. These were, to be sure, patriarchal, but they nevertheless pointed young people in the direction of courtship practices and choices that led to marriage and family, not to mention national solidarity. Today, however, consumer capitalism, with its pervasive fetishization of the market, has led people to think of themselves as goods, commodities that inevitably become less profitable over time and must be replaced by new ones. Worse, sexual desire has come to be defined in terms of what Illouz calls a scopic regime of action: the fashion-cosmetics complex, the mass media, and, not least, pornography have turned desire into a visual performance. Exploited for profit, the display of eroticized bodies, particularly womens bodies, has become a commonplace, in advertising and the workplace, and sexual desire has become an essential unit of the economy.

According to Illouz, the consumer economy has penetrated the innermost crannies of subjectivity; as a result, the private sphere has been distorted by an ideology of radical personal freedom. The result is what she calls negative [social] relations, which have replaced mature, companionate forms of love. Illouz draws examples of such unloving from literature and the mass media, but the bulk of her data comes from interviews she conducted with almost 100 subjects. These individuals were young and old, male and female, but predominantly heterosexual and staunchly middle class, from Europe, Israel, and the United States, and reading their stories stirs up the guilty pleasure of browsing magazines in a dentists office waiting room.

While consumer capitalism is largely to blame for the current situation, the real villain of The End of Love is sexual freedom, with its valuation of mutual hedonic rights, which separate emotion from marriage and intimacy. Sexual freedom killed the social rituals of courtship calculations of eligibility, proper etiquette, and expectations of emotional transparency and replaced them with the notion of consent given by a true self who knows her or his real desires and interests. In the broader capitalist context, consent is embedded in a metaphor of contractual relations, with lovers voluntarily entering into casual sex with the goal of accumulating pleasure while maintaining autonomy by insisting on no ongoing commitments. But such a contract metaphor, Illouz asserts, often fails to produce mutual consensus since lovers may have different goals and differing understandings of consent. In other words, while sexuality may be contractualized, emotions remain uncertain.

Although casual sex, facilitated by Tinder and other dating apps, is supposed to be based in egalitarian principles, the emotional detachment it promotes can be damaging, especially for women. Illouz stresses this point: men want sex with interchangeable partners while women seek personal recognition, the rejection of which devalues them and challenges their self-esteem. Moreover, the widespread practice of sexting tends to fragment the body, reducing it to specific body parts, and thus enhances the compartmentalization of identity. The bodys value becomes a market commodity in a way that, once again, devalues women in particular, because their bodies have a shorter shelf life than mens. Men look at womens bodies while ignoring the person, while women look at men more holistically. The masculine self uses the feminine other, just as modernity uses nature, as a standing reserve (a term Illouz borrows from Martin Heidegger).

In the past, legend has it, people began to have sex only after they had fallen in love. In earlier forms of dating, as Illouz argued in Consuming the Romantic Utopia, the tenor, accent, word choice, and topic of conversation attracted people who were unconsciously seeking to match their class backgrounds. Today, by contrast, the social evaluation of speech has been replaced, in internet communication, by instant binary appraisals of others, as either sexually attractive or not. At the same time, dating apps promote a fantasy of sexual abundance: the notion that someone new is always out there, ready and willing. The internet has facilitated the quick exit because it has made dating into shopping; breakups convert people into outdated goods; and the rapid turnover of partners entails a capacity and desire to do short-term investments.

Divorces, being more protracted, differ from breakups, requiring reasons and the mediation of social institutions. Divorces tend to be acrimonious, while breakups need not be. But divorce and breakups are affected by the same deterioration of norms that the valuation of emotional autonomy inspires. Today, when discussing their divorces, people tend to say they feel unloved, have lost or been subject to the loss of desire, or have grown apart. Women especially complain that men do not love them enough. Less likely to remarry, they nonetheless are more likely than men to instigate divorce proceedings, even though they want emotional commitment more than men do.

The landscape of contemporary love being what it is, Illouz condemns sexual freedom as glib. The pervasive atmosphere of uncommitment, instability, and betrayal contributes to the sexual exploitation of women. And, for people who are excluded from sexual access, it creates humiliation. Love requires norms and conventions, Illouz concludes. But then, in an odd move, she turns against her own call for a revival of a more formal kind of love. She denies opposing casual sexuality, denies that her book is championing a right-wing return to family values, to community, or to a reduction of freedom. And thus her book, which is nothing if not an absorbing and perceptive sociological account of love, or at least of one important contemporary dimension of it, ends in contradiction, leaving one to wonder why Illouz disowns what she so plainly advocates. In any event, this peculiar conclusion does not entirely invalidate the larger argument of The End of Love or seriously detract from the books many virtues.

David Lipset is professor of anthropology at the University of Minnesota.

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Bodies on the Market - lareviewofbooks

When coronavirus is over, I will remember freedoms stolen like a thief in the night – Chicago Sun-Times

When this storm has finally passed, I will shake another brothers hand, slap hard fives, skin to skin, embrace like the best of friends. The way we used to.

Before the arrival of coronavirus cold winds.

When this storm finally has been vanquished and it is safe to come out again, to break the barrier of personal space, to converse in intimate human circles over coffee or tea and chill, I will.

And I will stroll slowly across golden sands for miles of beach. No city code to breach. I will speak to everyone I pass. Lie blissfully upon emerald blades of park grass.

Watch daylight pass as the orange-red sun sinks from a purplish evening sky and childrens voices blend with the crickets song while fireflies twinkle before their widened eyes.

And though I no longer have a head of hair, I just might plop down in a barbers chair. Break my vow to allow someone beside myself to trim my beard. To rub my face with lilac tonic after lining me with a straight edge from ear to ear.

When this storm is over, I will remember when freedoms taken for granted were stolen like a thief in the night. And at the end of the tunnel we could see no sure sign of light.

When hospitals and morgues were swollen with the sick and the dead. When the hourly news and our conversations were filled with caution and dread.

Too many visions of gloved and masked humanity fill my head. Inescapable the daily count of the infected and the dead.

Desolate streets and shuttered stores, people locked behind unwelcoming doors. Anxiety pours like gushing rain. Undeniable strain. Economic drain. Some of us muse that there may be lessons to gain from this storm. Perhaps joy after pain.

And when this storm has finally passed, there will be no fear of pumping gas. No migraines over grocery shopping or using cash. No drive-up only restaurant orders and curbside pick-ups. No consternation over human touch.

When this storm has finally passed, I will attempt to clear my head of new phobias. Forever banish from my thoughts ever achieving any possible semblances of utopia scarred for life by the word pandemic, and having prayed to God for mercy while living in it.

I will purge my nostrils of the pungent scents of Lysol and bleach. I might even treat my feet: Pedicures and TLC. Outdoor downtown cafes on summer eves.

The crack of the bat on an afternoon at Wrigley. Live bigly. Country music and beer drifting on a late-night breeze. Rib fests, tank tops and sundresses. Our souls at ease.

I long for us to again be free ...

I long simply to sit beneath the umbrella on the veranda of my local coffee house. Choppin it up with the fellas, and chillin out.

Long to escape this frozen, quarantined world in which we find ourselves nowadays reflecting on the way we once lived, loved and played. Remembering the way we were not that long ago. And longing to return, even as coronas cold winds still blow.

But I cant help but wonder if we can ever return. Or is this the new normal? My heart still yearns.

I miss the Saturday movie theater matinee. And by the time this storm passes, I will have missed the sights and sounds of children at playfrolicking at crystal sprinkling water fountains and swimming pools. The pound of the basketball and squeaking shoes.

I miss the way we moved: Engaging as instruments in the human symphony of life. Breath-to-breath, hand-to-hand, eye-to-eye.

When the storm passes, I hope well try.

Email: Author@johnwfountain.com

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When coronavirus is over, I will remember freedoms stolen like a thief in the night - Chicago Sun-Times