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Chris Bateman's avatar

Interesting to see you expand this idea, David, which you've touched upon before.

I think it slightly problematic to rehabilitate Dahl villains - whether in your way, or in the manner of the makers of the musical (which I have not seen). Miss Trunchbull, I would remind everyone, is implied to have murdered Miss Honey's father, and without question illegally usurped her inheritance, and is certainly not a bastion of order in the book. This is a difficult character to defend, as are all Dahl's villains by virtue of the post-Grimm narrative form he pioneered.

For myself, the keenest insight into Dahl's psyche is Danny, The Champion of the World, with its quasi-ethical defence of poaching against the vacuity of wealth accumulated by greed. Dahl does not have enough history stowed away to get at the origins of this in the enclosure of the commons, which in some respects marks out the trajectory of society that remains quite explanatory even today.

What drove the humanities mad was that the love of Foucault was more easily reconciled with demolishing the existing social order than it was with providing any tools for imagining how to replace it. Somehow the tensions in the philosophy of the existentialists were circumvented by this Foucauldian tearing down of the Wizard's curtain in Oz, such that everyone just pretended existentialism represented a ready-made solution rather than a problem, indeed a set of problems, that have been grappled with not one whit since de Beauviour and Merleau-Ponty. It was ready-made only in the sense of the artwork by Duchamp.

Likewise, in the backlash against 'queering gender' (the vanguard of contemporary 'existentialism lite'), it is seldom recognised that Judith Butler is and was not pursuing 'pseudoscience' (as the rebuttal always presumes), but actually understood Foucault all too well. While I genuinely do not understand how she can think the revolution she has fostered could ever be deemed a success, by presuming there was nothing but vapour to her philosophy the reaction presumes we will all simply move a few squares back and everything will be right as rain again. This is not what can possibly happen from here. You at least, David, appreciate this, perhaps in part because you too have a firm grasp of the implications of Foucault.

How strange it is to see the inheritors of enclosure shirk any sense that they might have responsibilities by manoeuvring everyone else to shirk theirs. The Age of Distraction is fast becoming the Age of Denial.

With unlimited love,

Chris.

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Mike Hind's avatar

There's a past, to which I'd assume most of us wouldn't want to return, with kids cleaning chimneys (which I assume is unhealthy and dangerous) and very little formal education. But the nature of Progressivism means the future is relentlessly fluid. So how do we even talk about a point where things are OK and don't need to be changed much? This seems to be a genuine built-in advantage for progressive utopianism. An unpopular past versus a pick-your-own ideas future that no one can nail down.

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