Saturday, June 15, 2019

How Michael Brendan Dougherty subverted the Irish misery memoir

How Michael Brendan Dougherty subverted the Irish misery memoir

       As long troubled but still (bricks and mortar) market-leading US bookseller Barnes & Noble has announced, Barnes & Noble to Be Acquired by Elliott, Owner of Waterstones, Bringing Together the Leading Booksellers in the US and the UK, as they've been bought, "in an all-cash transaction valued at approximately $683 million" by Elliott Advisors (part ofElliott Management), who acquired British booksellerWaterstones last year. 
       James Daunt, who was installed as CEO of Waterstones, "will assume also the role of CEO of Barnes & Noble" -- though somehow the two companies are expected to: "operate independently". 



Writers pen protŷests at UK terror bill
In an unprecedented outpouring of anger, 42 of the UK's most celebrated writers will each publish a short story, essay or poem tomorrow attacking the government's determination to proceed with legislation to hold terrorist suspects without charge for 42 days. The list of writers taking part reads like a literary 'Who's Who' of modern Britain. They include Philip Pullman, Julian Barnes, Monica Ali, Ian Rankin, Alain de Botton, Ali Smith and AL Kennedy...

What has until now largely been a political row is fast becoming a cause célèbre for Britain's literary establishment, who are flexing their intellectual muscles in a manner not seen since leading figures in the arts world regularly clashed with the Thatcher government in the Eighties.
The House of Lords, apparently swayed by the essay of Alain de Botton,quash the terror bill.


Report Says Acclaimed Czech Writer Informed on a Supposed Spy 
In a revelation that could tarnish the legacy of one of the best-known Eastern European writers, a Czech research institute published a report on Monday indicating that the young Milan Kundera told the police about a supposed spy.

According to the state-backed Institute for the Study of Totalitarian Regimes, in 1950, long before he became famous for darkly comic novels like “The Unbearable Lightness of Being” and “The Joke,” Mr. Kundera, who was then 21, told the local police about a guest in a student dormitory where he lived.
Kundera denies he reported a western spy in 1950
"I'm completely shocked by something I didn't expect, something I didn't know about as recently as yesterday, something that never happened. I didn't know that person at all," Kundera told the agency, adding he has no idea why police records quote him as the informer.





Nobody gives you the motivation you need like a Black woman. That’s a fact.

Whether it’s tough love inspired or humor filled, Black women somehow know exactly what’s needed in the moment, when anybody needs a pick me up. In that spirit, we have collected 100 greatest Black women quotes on, life, success, love, and everything in between.

We will start with Dr. Maya Angelou, as she is quoted often here. 

“If you don’t like something, change it. If you can’t change it, change your attitude.” – Maya Angelou

“Freeing yourself was one thing; claiming ownership of that freed self was another.”– Toni Morrison
“I will not have my life narrowed down. I will not bow down to somebody else’s whim or to someone else’s ignorance. ” – Bell Hooks
101 Black Women Quotes about MediavDragon, Life, Love, and Success




A regular collection of links to writings and broadcasts in other media
ABC’s Saturday Extra with Geraldine Doogue  (from 0730 to 0900 or on their website  in case you miss it).
New Zealand’s priorities
In championing a budget focused on “wellbeing” New Zealand has signalled a shift in thinking about priorities. Arthur Grimes is a former chief economist for NZ’s Reserve Bank and is now Professor of Wellbeing and Public Policy at Victoria University. He joins Saturday Extra  to discuss the pros and cons of his country’s initiative.
Trump and China
The US’s attack on China over trade is the wrong war, fought in the wrong way, on the wrong terrain. The Financial Times’  Martin Wolf pulls no punches in his latest column about the trade war.
Coal, or its absence 
Everyone talks about phasing out coal – but how will people employed in the coal industry make the transition to other jobs? And what would our economy look like without coal? Chris Briggs from the Institute of Sustainable Futures at the University of Technology Sydney, and Professor Frank Jotzo, director, Centre for Climate Economics and Policy, ANU, offer some clarity.
The Vietnam War as we remember it
Journalist and historian Mark Dapin delves into the truth behind six popular myths that have dogged Australia’s memory of the Vietnam War.
Kinder transport
The history of kinder transport, with guest Dr Anna Hájková, Associate Professor of History at the University of Warwick. She covers history of the Holocaust, Jewish history, feminist, gender and queer history.
Other commentary
The Government’s assault on democracy
The Abbott-Turnbull-Morrison Government may be disunited on many policy fronts, but it is of one mind when it comes to keeping its maladministration and assaults on democracy from public scrutiny.
ABC Chair Ita Buttrose has issued a formal statement, in which she asserts what should be in a democracy’s constitution and basic norms of governance: “legitimate journalistic endeavours that expose flawed decision-making or matters that policy makers and public servants would simply prefer were secret, should not automatically and conveniently be classed as issues of national security.”
The raids have made world news: Australia may well be the world’s most secretive democracy is the headline of Damien Cave’s article in the New York Times. His article covers not only the Stasi-style raids on the ABC and on Sunday Telegraph’s  Annika Smethurst, but also the government’s cover-up of its illegal spying on Timor (the “Witness K” case), defamation laws, and state government measures to suppress news of court proceedings.
While Dutton and Morrison try to wash their hands of responsibility, Shadow Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus, speaking on the ABC Breakfast showstates the basic principle  that the government is responsible for actions under laws it enacts: the police should not be scapegoats for the government’s failings.
Centre Alliance Senators Rex Patrick and Stirling Griff will push for a constitutional amendment to include protection for press freedom. (We might remember that in 1988 the Hawke Government put to a referendum a constitutional amendment to enshrine certain basic freedoms but it was defeated after a hysterical and deceitful scare campaign by the Liberal Opposition.)
Their case is supported by the Alliance for Journalists’ Freedom, whose website includes astatement by Peter Greste: “Politicians act on behalf of those who employ them; that is, us Australian voters and tax-payers. As their employers, we have both a right and a responsibility to know what is being done in our names”. The AJF site also includes a short statement on the raid on Annika Smethurst.
Nordic democracy
If your source of European news has been confined to the reports from the ABC’s London journalists, you may have missed news of the Danish election, where Prime Minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen’s centre-right coalition has lost power to Mette Frederiksen’s Social Democrats. It was a decisive victory that saw a large fall in support for parties on the far right. The Social Democrats campaigned on the need for greater action to address climate change and against Rasmussen’s cuts to government services. In contrast to other Danish parties on the left, the Social Democrats support strong controls on immigration.
What may surprise some Australians is the failure of Rasmussen’s policies of cutting taxes and spending to have gained electoral support, even though, at 46 per cent of GDP, Denmark’s taxes are the world’s second-highest. Australia’s tax to GDP ratio, at 28 per cent, is almost the lowest for a “developed” country, but you would not believe it if you listen to the government’s propaganda.
Still making sense of the European elections
Centrist political parties are still reeling over their poor performance in the European elections. Writing in Social EuropeSheri Berman of New York’s Barnard College discusses how established parties might respond to the success of “niche parties”. She warns about the risk of “accommodative strategies” (as when centre-right parties take on the policies of far-right parties). Such strategies are likely to backfire because they legitimise and strengthen the niche party.
And of the Australian election
This Government is already awful, writes Mark Buckley on his Ask Bucko blog. Morrison’s win “was the time to stamp his authority on government, and signal his intention of lifting standards”.  But he hasn’t – it’s the same old mob (with a few absences).
Albanese speaking
Schwartz Media’s 7 am podcast on Friday includes a report (in slightly unconventional style) of Karen Middleton’s interview with Anthony Albanese, following his return from his post-election trip thorough Queensland. Middleton is the chief political correspondent for theSaturday Paper and author of Albanese: Telling it Straight.
The Australian economy
On the same day that housing speculators were celebrating the Reserve Bank’s decision to cut interest rates, the Productivity Commission produced its annual Productivity Bulletin. The figures do not put six years of Coalition economic management in a good light. Labour productivity (economic output per hour worked) has been on a downslide for at least five years. As economist Paul Krugman said, “productivity … isn’t everything, but in the long run it’s nearly everything”.
Then there were the ABS National Accounts, showing that our economic growth has fallen to levels last experienced during the Global Financial Crisis.
Technically it can be claimed that Australia has gone almost 30 years without a recession. That’s because a “recession” is generally defined as two consecutive quarters of negative GDP growth. But we have been saved from a “recession” by population growth. In terms of per-capita GDP, and in terms of people’s lived experiences, we are in recession, just as we were in 2008.
Even on a per-capita basis, GDP is not necessarily a sound indicator of well-being, particularly if the income from GDP is not well-distributed among Australians or if some of it accrues overseas. Writing in the Canberra Times, in a criticism of the government’s “jobs and growth” mantra, John Hewson reminds us that GDP  “ignores the social and environmental consequences of the pursuit of economic growth, as well as not necessarily being a measure of our nation’s happiness and well-being”.
The government has run the economy into the ground is the headline of Greg Jericho’s article in The Guardian. In a series of informative graphs he takes readers through the components of Australia’s economic collapse, including the fall in household disposable income (probably the most meaningful indicator in terms of people’s well-being) and the profit-wages share of GDP.
Anyone hoping for a coal-led economic recovery would do well to look at another piece of economic news this week, the speech Australia’s Resource Industry – A Look into the Crystal Ball, by Alexandra Heath, head of economic analysis at the Reserve Bank. Even if the world hasn’t yet met peak demand for thermal coal, it will do so within the next year or so. In all of our big thermal coal customers – Japan, China and South Korea – there are plans to shift to cleaner energy resources. (Demand for metallurgical coal is inked to steel production, and is more assured  for now.)
In light of these forecasts the enthusiasm of the Commonwealth and Queensland Governments for the Adani development makes no sense, but writing in The Conversation John Quiggin puts forward some possible explanations, one of which involves a rather large slice of our taxes being spent to keep the project alive until the next election.
A factory of fear – the dark art of political deception
Writing in the Canberra Times  James Murphy describes the work of political strategist Sir Lynton Crosby, who once helped guide campaigns for John Howard and is now helping Boris Johnson in his bid to wreck Europe’s postwar liberal order. Murphy describes how Crosby has learned from US Republican strategist Lee Atwater: “belligerent rhetoric, personal smear campaigns, push polling, and dog whistling on race”.
Hannah Arendt for our times
Writing in Commonweal, John Thompson re-visits the work of Hannah Arendt, with reviews of all her most important works and pointers to their relevance to the politics of our present days. “Her work has experienced a sudden rise in popularity and prominence – thanks mostly to the parallel rise of the most demagogic American president in at least a hundred years.” Arendt was most critical of those who withdraw from participation in political life, a point relevant to our times: Essential research reveals that a large proportion of Australians were disengaged with the issues in last month’s election. She also pointed out that democratic resurgence can result from what may seem at the time to be quite small or tokenistic citizen actions.
Normandy’s beaches 75 years on
The New Yorker  corrects a historical misunderstanding  about the 1944 Normandy landings.
Saturday’s Good Reading and Listening is compiled by Ian McAuley
Watch out tomorrow, Sunday, for Peter Sainsbury’s Sunday environment round up
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The Nine Best Literary Magazines In The English-Speaking World Right Now (According To Stack)



“We are being deliberately vague about the term ‘literary’ here: there are traditional fiction and lit-crit magazines listed, but we’ve also included a sci-fi publication and a psychogeography title. The only thing that really unites the magazines on this list is that every one is an exceptionally good read.” – Stack


The Only Good TV Shows Now Understand Restraint, Not Endless Streaming Expansion


Just take a look atShrillorFleabag versus, oh, Game of Thrones, or Chernobyl. “Over time, length came to be correlated with quality, and with TV auteurs who declined to have their genius constrained by such arbitrary forces as ‘formats’ or ‘editors.'” Now the backlash has begun. – The Atlantic