Carl Jung on Climate Change
Jung had what he regarded to be a number of prophetic and semi-prophetic dreams during the course of his life. In one of these, Europe experiences a flood of biblical proportions, and, in another, returns to the Ice Age. Perhaps these dream scenarios are not mutually exclusive in the implications for the real world. The consequences of climate change may be more multi-dimensional than we can imagine.
The psychiatrist and metaphysician Carl Jung identified a "shadow" side of the human psyche. "The Edge of Town" explores the "transference" of this shadow into our environments, whether in the form of pollution, destruction of the countryside and rural communities, or the darker side of urban life and human existence. "The Edge of Town" is, therefore, a physical, psychological and, perhaps, metaphysical "place".
Wednesday, February 07, 2007
CHAVS : The Country House & Vacuous Set
The subject of "chavs" has come up elsewhere in my blogs, and I now want to look at this from a different perspective. I understand that the expression "chav" is widely regarded to be derived from "Council House and Violent". This may be so, but "chav" has come to describe more than this particular group (or class) of people. Indeed the Chav has definitely gone up market (whilst Burberry may have gone down) in my opinion, and, I would suggest, the real Chavs are now as much the "Country House and Vacuous Set" as the "Council House and Violent" type. Indeed, Kate Moss is, I believe, generally regarded to be the Queen of the Chavs. A woman, until recently at least, of few words, she is the incarnation of a certain aesthetic quality closely linked to the zeitgeist of recent years, beautiful, but ultimately rather empty, materialism.
The subject of "chavs" has come up elsewhere in my blogs, and I now want to look at this from a different perspective. I understand that the expression "chav" is widely regarded to be derived from "Council House and Violent". This may be so, but "chav" has come to describe more than this particular group (or class) of people. Indeed the Chav has definitely gone up market (whilst Burberry may have gone down) in my opinion, and, I would suggest, the real Chavs are now as much the "Country House and Vacuous Set" as the "Council House and Violent" type. Indeed, Kate Moss is, I believe, generally regarded to be the Queen of the Chavs. A woman, until recently at least, of few words, she is the incarnation of a certain aesthetic quality closely linked to the zeitgeist of recent years, beautiful, but ultimately rather empty, materialism.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)