Posted by babylon crashing | Filed under Illustration and art
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26 Saturday Oct 2013
Posted by babylon crashing | Filed under Illustration and art
≈ Comments Off on holi: festival of colors
26 Saturday Oct 2013
Posted in Uncategorized
≈ Comments Off on phoolan devi
Tags
Bandit Queen, Behmai massacre, dacoi, Durga, Hindu goddess, India, Phoolan Devi, Samajwadi Party
Phoolan Devi (10 August 1963 – 25 July 2001) popularly known as the “Bandit Queen,” was an Indian dacoit (armed bandit), and later a politician. She was born into a poor rural family belonging to the Mallaah caste. Married to a much older man at an early age, she was branded as a social outcast after she left her husband to escape domestic abuse. Kidnapped by a gang of bandits hired to kill her, she subsequently married one of them, Vikram Mallah. The group then murdered Phoolan’s ex-husband, carrying out several highly publicized robberies at the time. Later, a different group of bandits, belonging to the Thakur caste, murdered Vikram and gang-raped Phoolan. After escaping from them, in 1981, her gang raided the Thakur outlaw village, killing twenty-two Thakur men in what came to be known as the Behmai massacre. As a result she gained a fearsome reputation as the “Bandit Queen” and some villagers started calling her an incarnation of the Hindu goddess Durga, goddess of flowers. In 1983, she surrendered and spent 11 years in prison. The 1994 film Bandit Queen, made against her wishes, was a highly romantic take of her life. After she left prison she ran as a candidate for the Samajwadi Party, getting elected to parliament in 1996. In 2001, she was assassinated by gunmen claiming revenge for the Behmai massacre.
24 Thursday Oct 2013
Posted in Feminism
≈ Comments Off on whatever happened to amina?
Tags
Amina Sboui, FEMEN, feminism, Islamophobia, Koran burning, news, Riot Grrl, support Muslim women, Tunisia
The top and bottom photos are of Amina Sboui, a Tunisian feminist and political activist who sparked world-wide controversy by posting topless pictures of herself on Facebook, with the words, Fuck Your Morals, written in Arabic across her chest.
Her cause was taken up by FEMEN, a feminist protest group based in Paris, known for organizing controversial, topless public protests against sex tourists, religious institutions, international marriage agencies and other sexist topics. As someone who was raised to believe that Riot Grrl activism could solve many of the sexist, homophobic problems that plague the world, I really wanted to support FEMEN in what they were trying to do: show their support of a woman who was threatened with death by any means necessary. Then the self-styled “topless jihad” started and everything went to hell.
What I found troubling about FEMEN was that by turning the international spotlight upon themselves the whole question of what happened to Amina got lost. Indeed, if a person hadn’t been following the protests from the beginning one might rightly assume this had nothing to do with Tunisia or Amina and everything to do with the right to shout down Islamists while topless and bash Muslim women for being slaves to the patriarchy. As many, many critics pointed out (from Bell Hooks to Fatima Thompson to the late Audre Lorde) when First World, white, privileged women start telling women of color from developing nations what they can and cannot do that is oppression.
Apparently, it wasn’t just Muslim feminists who found FEMEN’S actions highly problematic, though. Yesterday, Amina Sboui, the very person that prompted the protest in the first place, denounced and distanced herself from the organization, accusing FEMEN of Islamophobia and a lack of financial transparency.
“I do not want my name to be associated with an Islamophobic organization,” she told the Maghreb edition of the Huffington Post. “I did not appreciate the action taken by the girls shouting ‘Amina Akbar, Femen Akbar’ in front of the Tunisian embassy in Paris.” The chants were a parody of Allahu akbar (God is great).
Amina also criticized the burning of the black Tawhid flag and a Koran in front of a mosque in Paris.
“That offends many Muslims and many friends of mine. We must respect everyone’s religion,” she added.
Amina, who now calls herself an anarchist, also criticized the lack of financial transparency of FEMEN.
“I don’t know how the movement is financed. I asked [FEMEN leader Inna Shevchenko] several times, but I didn’t get a clear answer. I don’t want to be in a movement supported by suspect money. What if it is financed by Israel? I want to know.”
At the end of May, three FEMEN activists — two French and a German — were arrested, and eventually freed, for bearing their breasts outside the main Tunis courthouse, in an earlier demonstration of support for Amina.
24 Thursday Oct 2013
Tags
bisexuality, feminism, Marquis de Sade, poem, Poetry, Sappho, silencing, slut shaming, sonnet, zipless fuck
Are you the one,/ who hates me in life,
but masturbates wildly/ in secret from your wife?
—-Esperanza Hidalgo
Never slut shame: whatever I might say
or do, how I love, why I love, beyond
asking you, “come to bed or stay away,”
lies my damned love. Damaged love, vagabond
love, lost love: but still love. If you can’t see
that then I’m not the damned one. “Cocks, cunts, juice
flowing freely,” as if it’s all just free.
That is both the freedom and the abuse
that these doggerel zipless fucks try to claim.
If the flesh is weak then the flesh is weak.
This is not your sweat-fuck poem. Don’t quote
boring de Sade to me, you still slut shame.
To me that’s neither wild, rare or unique.
“So, please, fuck off;” for you that’s all I wrote.
][][
notes
It’s curious how certain figures in history have had their names attached to things that rarely reflected who they were in life. For example, Sappho (as much as we know about her from scraps and fragments handed down over the centuries) was bisexual, at least by today’s understanding of the term. She was married to a merchant named Cercylas, had a daughter she called Celis. Despite all the wonderful love poems to women that she wrote legend has it that she killed herself by jumping off the Leucadian cliffs for her love of Phaon, a village fisherman. While in the 19th and 20th century her name has been attached to lesbianism, when Sappho wrote, “coming off heaven/ throwing off/ his purple cloak,” it was a love poem addressed to one of her male lovers. Of course the marginalization and silencing of bisexual artists in both the larger heterosexual and gay and lesbian communities is nothing new, and will continue as long as people only see the world in black and white dualism: you’re either gay or straight, there is nothing in-between, although Sappho wrote again and again, “your love can be any [gender] that the gods have chosen for you.” I would argue that all there is in this world is what’s in-between. Dualism is a myth that needs dismantling.
Donatien Alphonse François, better known as the Marquis de Sade, is another curious case. Even though he gave the world the word “sadism,” I’d rather poke my eyes out with a rusty fork than try to read what his admirers call “erotica” once again. This has nothing to do with subject matter. Yes, yes, I know he was, in theory at least, an advocate for extreme freedom, unrestrained by morality, religion or law (what hipster isn’t?) When I was in Peace Corps I brought two anthologies of his collected works with me, since he was an author I had heard a lot about but had read nothing that he had written. Sadly, when I was done, I had to conclude that de Sade is boring. He spent 32 years in prison, which was when he wrote most of his work. His writing style was to come up with an outline and every day simply rewrite and expand each paragraph until it collapsed under its own dry weight. There is no flow or poetry in his work. It has all the erotic sensibilities of a college term paper. I had made the mistake of watching Pier Paolo Pasolini’s Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom (1975), which updated Sade’s novel by placing it in the fascist Salò Republic during WWII. As Italian snuff films go it was horrific. When I sat down to read the novel I wasn’t sure if I even wanted to … until I started and realized it really wasn’t a novel, more like long lists of what de Sade wanted to write about if he ever got around to do so. The legend goes that he actually did write 120 Days, but when the Bastille was liberated during the French Revolution the manuscript was lost. He never got around to producing a second draft. Justine and Juliette are vaguely interesting, if you can get beyond his utter loathing of women. The only work I enjoyed was the comedy Philosophy in the Bedroom, partly because it was short but mainly because it didn’t take itself seriously. It revolves around Eugénie, a 15 year-old girl who, at the beginning of the story, is a naive virgin of all things sexual but by the end has become a depraved libertine (of course she does). “Lewd women,” de Sade writes, “be heedless of all that contradicts pleasure’s divine laws … be as quick to destroy, to spurn all those ridiculous precepts inculcated in you by imbecile parents.” I suppose if French philosophy is your aphrodisiac then de Sade’s work will be highly titillating. It certainly got Michel Foucault excited, but since I despise Michel Foucault that really isn’t a plus in my book.
23 Wednesday Oct 2013
Posted in Armenia
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……….. early 20th century underwood typewriter with armenian keys
DOES ANYONE KNOW: where I could buy an Armenian typewriter? I’ve looked on eBay to no luck. It might seem silly since there are free fonts for the computer online, but I want the machine, with buttons and those crazy insect-leg keys and the satisfying “t-chunk” sound each time I hit a key. Maybe someone’s grandparents have one up in a closet somewhere just dying to be loved again. I’ll send you copies of hand-typed poems, in Armenian. How cool would that be? Cheers!
23 Wednesday Oct 2013
Tags
75% water, free food, free verse, Guantanamo, Issa, Jimmy Carter, poem, Poetry, starvation, we are the 1%
“We know that a peaceful world
cannot long exist, one-third rich
and two-thirds hungry.”
— Jimmy Carter (America)
This stupid world —-
skinny mosquitoes, skinny fleas,
skinny children.
—- Issa (Japan)
][][
Heft it by the pound.
Squeeze it and juice
seeps between your fingers.
They don’t say that we’re
made up of juice,
though, but water, but
it is the same thing.
Life in water,
summer water,
warm to the touch.
In Vegas the nights
were so warm it felt
as if you’d been born
three weeks ago.
What sea or river or
pool could rival that?
The joy in heat
is that you can get
out of it. Not
the frog in the pan.
Like food, when
we’re satiated
we stop.
Which makes us
part of the 1%.
Some of us get to eat.
Is pot roast the color
of emergency? No.
The blue-gun metal
shell of artillery.
The silver-white
of the bayonet.
The orange landmine.
The red coal glow
of the end of a cigarette,
peppering human skin.
A body, anybody, hefted
between two staggering
detainees is still 75% water.
But it isn’t water
that runs down
the leg, staining
your hands where you
held her, staining
the ground
with something
that will dry in the heat,
dry and dissolve.
23 Wednesday Oct 2013
You found her at the Double Down Saloon.
She seemed sweet, playful, but that brew, ass juice,
could make a saint out of anyone. Soon
you and your boyfriend are calling a truce
to take her home. Open relationships
work, at times. Tonight she wants to submit.
You bind her hands in silk while he unzips
her skirt, his cock deep in her throat. Her clit
pulses. Her inner walls sweat. There’s no vote
in lust, sex is not a democracy;
yet you still believe in that illusion
called free-will. He pulls out of her throat
as you strap your strap-on on; as you three
all share a moan of anticipation—-
23 Wednesday Oct 2013
Tags
anal sex, bisexuality, blow job, erotic, fellatio, homophobia, MMF, poem, Poetry, sonnet, the problem with straight men, threesome
What was awkward wasn’t the need, wasn’t
just the will, it was the way that the straight
guy made it clear that he had consented
to this only to fuck your wife. The eight
shots of vodka that the three of you split
should have loosened things up, but no. You both
take a place beside her. He will submit
to her deep throating him down. But he loathes
the thought that he might be forced to kiss you.
Perhaps she’s watched too much porn. Perhaps she’s
blind to the clues. But with your cock in her
mouth and his in her ass she grins at you
both with joy. This is what she wants: boy grease,
cum, sperm, pig roast with two men, two lovers.
22 Tuesday Oct 2013
Tags
Bravado in bed is bad —- Bravado
in verse is worse. “I’ll make you scream, I’ll make
you cream.” Then what? You’ll steal my spleen? I know,
Poe, lust is cruel when we wake with an ache
we just can’t soothe. But no one cares about
affairs. Trysts with poltergeists at least shows
labored thought outside the box, but I doubt
it would occur to you, since your great woes
are all about not getting laid. “Get laid.”
It’s what chicken eggs do. Put down the pen.
Do you want love? This is what you shall do—-
“Love the earth and sun
and the animals, despise
riches, give alms to everyone
that asks, stand up for the stupid
and crazy, devote your income
and labor to others, hate tyrants,
argue not concerning God,
have patience and indulgence
toward the people, take off
your hat to nothing known
or unknown or to any man
or number of men, go freely
with powerful uneducated
persons and with the young
and with the mothers of families,
read these leaves in the open air
every season of every year
of your life, re-examine all
that you have been told
at school or church or in
any book, dismiss whatever
insults your own soul,
and your very flesh shall be
a great poem and have
the richest fluency not
only in its words but
in the silent lines of its lips
and face and between
the lashes of your eyes
and in every motion
and joint of your body.”
—-do that once more. You’ll never get betrayed
by love again. You will be love again.
You’ll walk this earth burning, mad, fiery.
][][
notes:
The long quote in the middle is from Walt Whitman’s introduction to his massive poem, “Leaves of Grass.” It’s one of the best moral codes I’ve ever read.
21 Monday Oct 2013
Tags
dark side of 1960, erotica, feminism, honesty, poem, Poetry, porn, Pro-Choice, rape culture, sexual politics, sexually transmitted disease, slut shaming, smut, sonnet, Summer of Love
It’s not the cock rock, the hinted blow jobs,
the bell bottoms, it’s the dishonesty.
What gets left out: Pox, Crabs, Corn on the Cob,
Bugs in a Rug, Hippie Herpes, Jenny
Warts. What gets left in: the glorious fun
sex can be. I’m all for holy fucking;
but if you have no words for abortion
or rape or STDs, then you’re selling
something. All revolutions are just lies
told by the winning side, since we’re still slut
shaming, still denying women their rights
to their bodies. Somewhere between your thighs
lies the mystery. We need new words. Smut
can be sublime but honesty excites.