feb/22
Sunday, February 19, 2006
*************************************
The Brits and the Yanks use terms like Victorian to describe an era whose mindset can clearly be defined and distinguished from, say, the Edwardian that followed it. If I were to label the period of our collective experience and mindset from the turn of the last century to the present, I would have to call it Hamidian after Sultan Abdulhamid II and Talaat, to emphasize the fact that we continue to be at the mercy of Ottomanized mini-sultans and crypto-Stalinists.
*
The two challenges we confront today are (a) to modernize and (b) to democratize, that is to say, to liberate ourselves from the nightmares of despotism, massacrism, and Turcocentrism,
*
What we need is an emancipator like Lincoln whose "personal qualities enabled him to form friendships with men who had previously opposed him; to repair injured feelings that, left untended, might have escalated into permanent hostility; to assume responsibility for the failures of subordinates; to share credit with ease; and to learn from mistakes." I am quoting from TEAM OF RIVALS: THE POLITICAL GENIUS OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN by Doris Kearns (New York: Simon and Schuster, 916 pages, 2005).
*
When warned that one of the politicians he was about to promote had been a rival in the past, Lincoln is quoted as having said: "We have stood together in the time of trial, and I should despise myself if I allowed personal differences to affect my judgment of his fitness for the office."
*
Do you see anyone on the horizon that may come close to qualifying as an Armenian Lincoln?
*
And now let us pray: "Our Father Who art in heaven…"
#
Monday, February 20, 2006
***************************************
I am proud of my few friends and even more proud of my many enemies.
*
It is not the wise who have strong opinions but the foolish who are satisfied with their own ignorance.
*
I hope I will never be insecure enough to make the mistake of elevating an opinion to a belief system.
*
They tell me I complain too much. I see nothing wrong in that. Complaining or grumbling is a legitimate genre. According to J.B. Priestly, "I am a writer of talent but I am a grumbler of genius." And Paul Johnson: "If I had my way there'd be a Nobel Prize for grumbling."
*
I criticize no one but myself, and more precisely, my former self.
*
When at the age of 87 a woman with whom Mozart had fallen in love as a young man was asked, "Whatever made you reject him?" She replied, "How was I to know? He was such a little man!"
#
Tuesday, February 21, 2006
************************************
Some people are so consistently wrong that if they ever decide to say the opposite of what they think, they may come close to achieving infallibility.
*
"I made a mistake when I said there were no gas chambers at Auschwitz," admitted British historian David Irving. After calling him a "serial denialist," the Austrian judge sentenced him to three years in prison. As a historian Irving should have known that being a denialist is a bad career move in the West. It's different in the Middle East…
*
On the radio this morning I heard a woman define a great lover as "a man who makes love to you for eight hours and then turns into a pizza." She must have been a black widow spider in a previous life.
*
André Gide: "Truths belong to God; ideas belong to men. Some people confuse ideas with truths."
*
A writer should write as if he valued the reader's time more than his own. One reason I find most academics unreadable is that they write as if they had all the time in the world to produce empty verbiage that may mean a great deal to themselves and to their fellow academics but no one else.
#
Wednesday, February 22, 2006
*************************************
"If you think just because you and I are Armenian that makes us brothers, you are dead wrong, my friend. We are nothing of the kind. As a matter of fact, to avoid all future disappointments, let us think of each other as Turks!" Had I approached my fellow Armenians with this mindset, I would have been a happier man.
*
In his second volume of memoirs, BETWEEN YOU AND ME, Mike Wallace writes about his encounters with many celebrities from all walks of life and quotes from his interviews extensively. Sometimes what happens before and after the interviews is far more interesting than the interviews themselves. When, for instance, President Johnson warns Wallace that he has no wish to speak about Vietnam and if Vietnam is mentioned he will walk out on him, Wallace tells him: "Vietnam f***ed you, Mr. President, and so, I'm afraid, you f***ed the country. And you've got to talk about that!" I look forward to the day when an Armenian journalist will say to one of our political leaders: "Do you have an explanation as to why you and your kind have been f***ing the nation?"
*
In Hermione Lee's VIRGINIA WOOLF'S NOSE: ESSAYS ON BIOGRAPHY, there is a chapter titled "How to End It All," where Lee analyzes the tendency of all biographers to embellish and dramatize the death of their subjects. It seems biographers, even the ablest among them, are incapable of simply stating the facts. Instead they give in to the temptation of orchestrating a finale which more often than not belongs to fiction rather than history.
#
Books to read:
DICTIONNAIRE MOZART,
SUR L'AMOUR ET LA MORT by Patrick Sueskind,
L'HOMME SANS CONCESSIONS: ARTHUR KOESTLER ET SON SIECLE by Michel Laval.
#
Sunday, February 19, 2006
*************************************
The Brits and the Yanks use terms like Victorian to describe an era whose mindset can clearly be defined and distinguished from, say, the Edwardian that followed it. If I were to label the period of our collective experience and mindset from the turn of the last century to the present, I would have to call it Hamidian after Sultan Abdulhamid II and Talaat, to emphasize the fact that we continue to be at the mercy of Ottomanized mini-sultans and crypto-Stalinists.
*
The two challenges we confront today are (a) to modernize and (b) to democratize, that is to say, to liberate ourselves from the nightmares of despotism, massacrism, and Turcocentrism,
*
What we need is an emancipator like Lincoln whose "personal qualities enabled him to form friendships with men who had previously opposed him; to repair injured feelings that, left untended, might have escalated into permanent hostility; to assume responsibility for the failures of subordinates; to share credit with ease; and to learn from mistakes." I am quoting from TEAM OF RIVALS: THE POLITICAL GENIUS OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN by Doris Kearns (New York: Simon and Schuster, 916 pages, 2005).
*
When warned that one of the politicians he was about to promote had been a rival in the past, Lincoln is quoted as having said: "We have stood together in the time of trial, and I should despise myself if I allowed personal differences to affect my judgment of his fitness for the office."
*
Do you see anyone on the horizon that may come close to qualifying as an Armenian Lincoln?
*
And now let us pray: "Our Father Who art in heaven…"
#
Monday, February 20, 2006
***************************************
I am proud of my few friends and even more proud of my many enemies.
*
It is not the wise who have strong opinions but the foolish who are satisfied with their own ignorance.
*
I hope I will never be insecure enough to make the mistake of elevating an opinion to a belief system.
*
They tell me I complain too much. I see nothing wrong in that. Complaining or grumbling is a legitimate genre. According to J.B. Priestly, "I am a writer of talent but I am a grumbler of genius." And Paul Johnson: "If I had my way there'd be a Nobel Prize for grumbling."
*
I criticize no one but myself, and more precisely, my former self.
*
When at the age of 87 a woman with whom Mozart had fallen in love as a young man was asked, "Whatever made you reject him?" She replied, "How was I to know? He was such a little man!"
#
Tuesday, February 21, 2006
************************************
Some people are so consistently wrong that if they ever decide to say the opposite of what they think, they may come close to achieving infallibility.
*
"I made a mistake when I said there were no gas chambers at Auschwitz," admitted British historian David Irving. After calling him a "serial denialist," the Austrian judge sentenced him to three years in prison. As a historian Irving should have known that being a denialist is a bad career move in the West. It's different in the Middle East…
*
On the radio this morning I heard a woman define a great lover as "a man who makes love to you for eight hours and then turns into a pizza." She must have been a black widow spider in a previous life.
*
André Gide: "Truths belong to God; ideas belong to men. Some people confuse ideas with truths."
*
A writer should write as if he valued the reader's time more than his own. One reason I find most academics unreadable is that they write as if they had all the time in the world to produce empty verbiage that may mean a great deal to themselves and to their fellow academics but no one else.
#
Wednesday, February 22, 2006
*************************************
"If you think just because you and I are Armenian that makes us brothers, you are dead wrong, my friend. We are nothing of the kind. As a matter of fact, to avoid all future disappointments, let us think of each other as Turks!" Had I approached my fellow Armenians with this mindset, I would have been a happier man.
*
In his second volume of memoirs, BETWEEN YOU AND ME, Mike Wallace writes about his encounters with many celebrities from all walks of life and quotes from his interviews extensively. Sometimes what happens before and after the interviews is far more interesting than the interviews themselves. When, for instance, President Johnson warns Wallace that he has no wish to speak about Vietnam and if Vietnam is mentioned he will walk out on him, Wallace tells him: "Vietnam f***ed you, Mr. President, and so, I'm afraid, you f***ed the country. And you've got to talk about that!" I look forward to the day when an Armenian journalist will say to one of our political leaders: "Do you have an explanation as to why you and your kind have been f***ing the nation?"
*
In Hermione Lee's VIRGINIA WOOLF'S NOSE: ESSAYS ON BIOGRAPHY, there is a chapter titled "How to End It All," where Lee analyzes the tendency of all biographers to embellish and dramatize the death of their subjects. It seems biographers, even the ablest among them, are incapable of simply stating the facts. Instead they give in to the temptation of orchestrating a finale which more often than not belongs to fiction rather than history.
#
Books to read:
DICTIONNAIRE MOZART,
SUR L'AMOUR ET LA MORT by Patrick Sueskind,
L'HOMME SANS CONCESSIONS: ARTHUR KOESTLER ET SON SIECLE by Michel Laval.
#
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