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Vivian Evans's avatar

I couldn't agree more with your observations regarding the rediscovery of 'Ancient Musick', i.e. the use of original baroque instruments and the ensuing different dynamics of performing. So let's hear it for Trevor Pinnock, harpsichordist extraordinaire and for the english Concert which he founded.

If you need cheering up, here's the Overture to Handel's 'Music for the Royal Fireworks' performed by the English Concert under Trevor Pinnock:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SIhvelwCuUk

Enjoy!

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Guy Rittger's avatar

You make a number of interesting points worthy of reflection and discussion. I want to focus my own response on two things:

1. History as a contested space.

2. Liberalism as the velvet glove covering the iron fist of capitalism.

The post-modern critique of les grands reçits or great narratives of history was carried out not as a cavalier assault on tradition but as a way of restoring voices and perspectives typically excluded from official accounts of the past, typically written, as we are often reminded, by the victors. Or, as in the case of the West, by imperialist powers such as Portugal, Spain, Great Britain, France, and the United States. These histories are typically written to justify and legitimate the power exercised to achieve specific outcomes - e.g., the colonization of the Western Hemisphere and India. As such, they routinely omit the perspectives of the victims, who are themselves typically depicted as savages worthy of the violence perpetrated against them. Starting, arguably, with Nietzsche and continuing through figures such as Derrida, Lyotard, and a number of outstanding Marxist critics, these grand narratives were subject to critiques which exposed their largely ideological function and opened up space for alternative, inclusive narratives or histories which gave the victims of colonial violence a voice: indigenous peoples, women, Blacks, Indians, gays, etc.

This is a crucially important undertaking and largely in keeping with your own reading of Orwell's take on the Party's control of historical narrative. The post-modern / materialist critique of traditional histories is not the cavalier practice you seem to make it out to be, but a necessary corrective to the distortion and silencing of the voices of people crushed under the heel of the colonial and post-colonial powers.

My second point is that Liberalism as a political ideology has always been the respectable face of capitalist exploitation, established precisely as an antidote to the perceived threats posed by the French Revolution and nascent socialism in England. This is why whenever Liberalism has lost its ability to keep the masses subdued, it quickly turns into fascism in the strict sense in which Mussolini first articulated - a marriage between the authoritarian state and capitalist power. The tactics of fascism are well known in the West, characterized by intense ethnic nationalism, an appeal to "tradition" (see those grand narratives above), and the creation of a common threat or enemy (Jews, Blacks, gays, transgenders, Latin Americans, Chinese, immigrants, etc.). Ultimately, though, the purpose is not noble but the defense of capitalists and their supporters.

As far at the debasement or trivialization of culture, Marx has already provided us with a solid explanation in his theory of commodification, where the only value of importance is exchange value, irrespective of use or anything else. That is why so much popular culture is garbage, though I think that's actually overstated because plenty of popular culture is quite good.

Finally, speaking as a vegan, I find your throw away line against exploiting non-human animals unconvincing. The fact that something has been done for a long time is insufficient justification for continuing to do it. And I suspect you would readily agree if the practice was something like enslaving human beings, forced genital mutilation, or any number of things I expect we would all agree should no longer be done. No doubt there are many things we justify today that the future will take issue with, such as the genocides in Gaza and the DRC, to name two.

But thank you for taking the time and energy to start this conversation. As always, much appreciated.

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