[-] Tatar_Nobility@lemmy.ml 18 points 4 months ago

The public representation is more important than the ideology behind the process. Women take off their veils; they are emancipated.

[-] Tatar_Nobility@lemmy.ml 16 points 6 months ago

I'm joining the war on cancer... On the side of cancer!

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submitted 7 months ago by Tatar_Nobility@lemmy.ml to c/books@lemmy.ml

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/10484701

The best way I could describe Uruguayan Journalist Eduardo Galeano's book is that it's a poetical obituary of the art of soccer. As the author writes in the first lines, “the history of soccer is a sad voyage from beauty to duty. When the sport became an industry, the beauty that blossoms from the joy of play got torn out by its very roots. In this fin de siècle world, professional soccer condemns all that is useless, and useless means not profitable.”

Galeano recounts the development of the sport from its ancient roots, its bourgeois upbringings in the modern age, through its proletarisation and to its eventual commercialisation by the global market. The history of soccer is one of those few instances whose origins are less grim than their present actuality.

The fact is that professional players offer their labor power to the factories of spectacle in exchange for a wage. The price depends on performance, and the more they get paid the more they are expected to produce. Trained to win or to win, squeezed to the last calorie, they are treated worse than racehorses.

Soccer in the chaotic 20th century turned from an innocent sport into a profitable and equally shady industry milked to its last bit by bureaucrats, merchants and corporations. Players are owned and sold and disposed of like slaves in plantations. The profession being shaped by the entertainment industry, the common man fails to regard the soccer player (or of any other mainstream sport for that matter) as a worker with labour rights, and the international bureaucracy tries its best to maintain the status quo.

The machinery of spectacle grinds up everything in its path, nothing lasts very long, and the manager is as disposable as any other product of consumer society.

But, despite the chronological narration, this is no history book, far from it. The passion and vividness in which the author describes some of most iconic plays from around the world, old amd new, capture a beaty that no camera or TV screen can ever catch.

To Galeano, soccer is an art; the players are performers; and the stadium is a theatre. He denounces the mechanical vocabulary employed by the critics and commentators: the players of the Argentine club River Plate couldn't be a "Machine" when they had so much fun they'd forget to shoot at the goal; the 1974 world cup Dutch team nicknamed "Clockwork Orange" was more of a jazz band.

The reader throughout the book ceases to be simply a spectator. No, he is now bonding with the fatigued striker, the goalkeeper criminalised by the fans, the distressed referee, the suicidal star and so on.

Galeano remains very much aware that sport cannot be detached from the politics of our age. To some fans, especially in South America,

The club is the only identity card [they] believe in. And in many cases the shirt, the anthem, and the flag embody deeply felt traditions that may find expression on the playing field but spring from the depths of a community’s history.

”Soccer and fatherland are always connected, and politicians and dictators frequently exploit those links of identity.” The championship is a national pride, countries host the world cup to bleach the regime's record of oppression, wins are offrances to the monarch or the tyrant.

Being a Uruguayan, the author shifts the spectacle of soccer from the European pitches to the South American turf, breaking the mythological narrative of European dominance and superiority in a sport that had no meaning before the Brazilian Mulattoes Friedenrich and Pelé, the Argentine Di Stéfano, the grandsons of slaves Gradín and Delgado, all dabbled with the ball.

The game of soccer was and still is the source of happiness and glimmer of hope for the youth of the world. As for the professional sport, we must mourn its beautiful past and cry on the cold body that is shamelessly called “soccer.”

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submitted 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago) by Tatar_Nobility@lemmy.ml to c/books@lemmygrad.ml

The best way I could describe Uruguayan Journalist Eduardo Galeano's book is that it's a poetical obituary of the art of soccer. As the author writes in the first lines, “the history of soccer is a sad voyage from beauty to duty. When the sport became an industry, the beauty that blossoms from the joy of play got torn out by its very roots. In this fin de siècle world, professional soccer condemns all that is useless, and useless means not profitable.”

Galeano recounts the development of the sport from its ancient roots, its bourgeois upbringings in the modern age, through its proletarisation and to its eventual commercialisation by the global market. The history of soccer is one of those few instances whose origins are less grim than their present actuality.

The fact is that professional players offer their labor power to the factories of spectacle in exchange for a wage. The price depends on performance, and the more they get paid the more they are expected to produce. Trained to win or to win, squeezed to the last calorie, they are treated worse than racehorses.

Soccer in the chaotic 20th century turned from an innocent sport into a profitable and equally shady industry milked to its last bit by bureaucrats, merchants and corporations. Players are owned and sold and disposed of like slaves in plantations. The profession being shaped by the entertainment industry, the common man fails to regard the soccer player (or of any other mainstream sport for that matter) as a worker with labour rights, and the international bureaucracy tries its best to maintain the status quo.

The machinery of spectacle grinds up everything in its path, nothing lasts very long, and the manager is as disposable as any other product of consumer society.

But, despite the chronological narration, this is no history book, far from it. The passion and vividness in which the author describes some of most iconic plays from around the world, old amd new, capture a beaty that no camera or TV screen can ever catch.

To Galeano, soccer is an art; the players are performers; and the stadium is a theatre. He denounces the mechanical vocabulary employed by the critics and commentators: the players of the Argentine club River Plate couldn't be a "Machine" when they had so much fun they'd forget to shoot at the goal; the 1974 world cup Dutch team nicknamed "Clockwork Orange" was more of a jazz band.

The reader throughout the book ceases to be simply a spectator. No, he is now bonding with the fatigued striker, the goalkeeper criminalised by the fans, the distressed referee, the suicidal star and so on.

Galeano remains very much aware that sport cannot be detached from the politics of our age. To some fans, especially in South America,

The club is the only identity card [they] believe in. And in many cases the shirt, the anthem, and the flag embody deeply felt traditions that may find expression on the playing field but spring from the depths of a community’s history.

”Soccer and fatherland are always connected, and politicians and dictators frequently exploit those links of identity.” The championship is a national pride, countries host the world cup to bleach the regime's record of oppression, wins are offrances to the monarch or the tyrant.

Being a Uruguayan, the author shifts the spectacle of soccer from the European pitches to the South American turf, breaking the mythological narrative of European dominance and superiority in a sport that had no meaning before the Brazilian Mulattoes Friedenrich and Pelé, the Argentine Di Stéfano, the grandsons of slaves Gradín and Delgado, all dabbled with the ball.

The game of soccer was and still is the source of happiness and glimmer of hope for the youth of the world. As for the professional sport, we must mourn its beautiful past and cry on the cold body that is shamelessly called “soccer.”

8

The centrality of archaeology in articulating and espousing the politics of nation states as also erstwhile empires is today undeniable. The history of archaeological research and practice is replete with cases where material culture has been used to produce origin myths, shared imaginaries of communities simultaneous with consolidating an image of the ‘other’...

... it was important to weave together a narrative of the nation and its people using archaeological objects and combining “scientific truths” about these objects with elements of fiction ...

The creation of the two new nation states of India and Pakistan in the immediate aftermath of the Partition of 1947 provided an immediate impetus to these concerns of narrativization. The irony of the situation was of course the fact that both the nation states were creations of the politics of 1947, with their newly drawn geographical boundaries. Yet, there were interesting ways in which this irony was worked around. Even more interesting were the ways in which archaeology came to be employed in such constructions ...

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submitted 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago) by Tatar_Nobility@lemmy.ml to c/literature@beehaw.org

Two of Deleuze's essays read by Acid Horizon.

"The Grandeur of Yasser Arafat": https://deleuze.cla.purdue.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/the-grandeur-of-yasser-arafat.pdf

"Stones" can be found in the compilation of essays entitled 'Two Regimes of Madness': https://mitpress.mit.edu/9781584350620/two-regimes-of-madness/

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submitted 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago) by Tatar_Nobility@lemmy.ml to c/documentaries@lemmy.world
99

Become a Github sponsor or buy the dev a coffee.

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[-] Tatar_Nobility@lemmy.ml 18 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago)

I think the problem lies in the mentality of "getting" a date. It seems like something that occurs automatically and without one's intervention. At least I used to (implicitly) think so, until I figured it's as easy as making a plan for the day and asking someone out to accompany you.

[-] Tatar_Nobility@lemmy.ml 14 points 9 months ago

The Lebanese Phalanges Party, a right-wing political party.

[Pierre] Gemayel [the founder] never denied his desire to replicate the youth organizations of Nazi Germany, and the name was taken from Francisco Franco’s (1892–1975) Falange Española, a fascist political party.

[In 1982] Bashir Gemayel was elected president of Lebanon, but he was assassinated before he took office. After his assassination, militias loyal to the Lebanese Forces (a collation of right-wing militias under the control of the Phalanges) entered the Sabra and Shatila refugee camps and massacred hundreds of Palestinians (and some Lebanese) civilians.

Source

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[-] Tatar_Nobility@lemmy.ml 20 points 10 months ago

It is a shame that pro-palestine sympathisers in the West paint the Palestinians as the "perfect victims," defanged, innocent, and mute creatures, and preferably westernized.

Hamas is Palestine. They even won the last elections. This may not be “ideal”, but supporting them is critical to the struggle for a free Palestine.

[-] Tatar_Nobility@lemmy.ml 12 points 10 months ago

What enabled much of the scientific and industrial innovation since the early modern age was the wealth directly extracted from colonies and by European companies who established monopolies throughout the globe.

Colonialism and Slavery are central to Europe's and, eventually, North America's industrialization. Slave owners walked so machine owners can run. Marx talks about this as well.

To picture Europe's wealth as the product of mere trade or 'competition' is simply inaccurate.

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submitted 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) by Tatar_Nobility@lemmy.ml to c/askscience@lemmy.world

I am seeking a scientific explanation behind this phenomenon which is unprecedented to me.

I was performing a piece on a music keyboard. I was filming it with my phone's camera as well as recording the sound via the keyboard's built-in tool.

After reviewing the recordings, the film and the keyboard's recording simultaneously stop emitting sound at the same exact millisecond.

This infuriated me quite a lot, but now it intrigues me. What happened there? I am willing ro provide more information if needed.

[-] Tatar_Nobility@lemmy.ml 16 points 11 months ago

Weirdly enough, I appreciate the fact you listed them in the alphabetical order.

2
submitted 11 months ago by Tatar_Nobility@lemmy.ml to c/middleages@lemmy.ml
[-] Tatar_Nobility@lemmy.ml 20 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Perhaps many will agree that there are probably better ways to further such goals. However, this doesn't mean we shouldn't support them. Let's be real, if we were to bring awareness to a certain cause, havoc and terror must be caused.

I saw some youtubers who infiltrated JSO's ranks and sabotaged their plans, while still claiming they care about the environment and that something should be done. The hypocrisy is unreal.

Do not fall for what the mainstream media says about such movements, since disruption and terror are one of the few weapons we have when fighting against the despotism of the bourgeois elite.

[-] Tatar_Nobility@lemmy.ml 13 points 1 year ago

Oh no those commies are offering me free housing and a safe environment, what a dystopia!

Some have pointed out that the apartments aren't spacious enough for families and I can understand this but we have to take into account that houses in socialist countries principally served for sleeping and bathing. Individuals were meant to spend most of their time outside, namely in their jobs, the public parks and halls, the libraries and so forth. With good public expenditure one doesn't need big houses.

[-] Tatar_Nobility@lemmy.ml 13 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I am not sure if it fits your question, but defendants and their attorneys can navigate bourgeois law in order to assist radical movements. This requires defying the individualistic framework of the (criminal) legal system. The J20 case is the ideal example of such manoeuvering, where more than two hundred people were arrested and charged of rioting. I will quote the Tilted Scales Collective:

Taking plea agreements to lower-level charges would have been legally sensible for manypeople, especially if they were not individually accused of damaging property or organizingthe demonstration. Nevertheless, most of the accused agreed to “Points of Unity” that asserted they would not cooperate with the prosecution (including testifying or making statements against other defendants), would share information and resources to help each other fight their charges, and would support each other’s individual decisions as long as they were not at anyone else’s expense. Later political messaging and organizing concentrated on defendants taking their cases to trial unless all the charges were dropped for every person who was charged.

In late November 2017, six people charged with rioting went on trial. Prosecutors alleged that these six people were taking part in DisruptJ20 protests and vandalism. A jury trial found the six defendants not guilty on all counts in December 2017. On January 18, 2018, the U.S. Justice Department dropped charges against 129 people, leaving 59 defendants to face charges related to the DisruptJ20 protest. By early July 2018, federal prosecutors had dropped all charges against all defendants in the case.

[-] Tatar_Nobility@lemmy.ml 17 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

According to the court, the ban is justified if the employer needs “to present a neutral image towards customers or to prevent social disputes” (emphasis added). Is that a fair justification in your opinion?

[-] Tatar_Nobility@lemmy.ml 19 points 1 year ago

Restoring British/French colonialism in the Middle East.

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