/archive

  • Is Holocaust Education Making Anti-Semitism Worse ? | Dara Horn
    https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2023/05/holocaust-student-education-jewish-anti-semitism/673488
    L’article est une critique de la façon dont l’extermination des juifs est enseignée (dans pas mal d’endroits aux Etats-Unis, du moins). L’écrivaine pointe un paradoxe. Une des façons privilégiée de répondre aux actes, paroles, théories du complot antisémites actuels est de se mettre à enseigner le génocide (ce n’est pas obligatoire aux Etats-Unis) et à créer des musées dédiés. Mais cette façon de faire est privilégiée justement parce qu’elle permet de ne pas répondre à l’antisémitisme actuel et de se concentrer plus facilement sur un événement du passé, dont les Etats-Unis ne sont pas responsables, le tout sans risquer de trop grandes tensions en classe ou avec les politiciens anti-woke (c’est moi qui résume à la hache) qui s’exciteraient si on osait parler du sort fait à d’autres minorités. Le génocide, comme il y est enseigné, est un sujet aseptisé qui n’est qu’un support à des leçons de morales universelles (favoriser l’empathie, dénoncer le racisme, donner envie de se battre pour une cause). L’antisémitisme des nazis est complètement anhistorique, ceux-ci sont comme des extraterrestres venus avec en 33 et disparus avec en 45. Les Juifs quant à eux n’existent que morts et toute spécificité juive est gommée pour que ne reste que le symbole de victimes absolues. On peut alors facilement se féliciter de ne pas être un nazi vu qu’on n’a pas commis de massacre de masse, et sentir de l’empathie pour une population dont on ignore tout et qu’on pense même disparue, maintenue vivante dans certains musées par des hologrammes animés par une intelligence artificielle.

    Talking with Kennedy, I realized, with a jolt of unexpected horror, that there was an entirely unplanned pattern in my Holocaust tour across America. Almost every city where I spoke with Holocaust-museum educators, whether by phone or in person, had also been the site of a violent anti-Semitic attack in the years since these museums had opened: a murdered museum guard in Washington, D.C.; a synagogue hostage-taking in a Dallas-area suburb; young children shot at a Jewish summer camp in Los Angeles. I was struck by how minimally these attacks were discussed in the educational materials shared by the museums.

    The Skokie museum was built because of a Nazi march that never happened. But this more recent, actual anti-Semitic violence, which happened near or even inside these museums, rarely came up in my conversations with educators about the Holocaust’s contemporary relevance. In fact, with the exception of Kennedy and Regelbrugge, no one I spoke with mentioned these anti-Semitic attacks at all.

    The failure to address contemporary anti-Semitism in most of American Holocaust education is, in a sense, by design. In his article “The Origins of Holocaust Education in American Public Schools,” the education historian Thomas D. Fallace recounts the story of the (mostly non-Jewish) teachers in Massachusetts and New Jersey who created the country’s first Holocaust curricula, in the ’70s. The point was to teach morality in a secular society. “Everyone in education, regardless of ethnicity, could agree that Nazism was evil and that the Jews were innocent victims,” Fallace wrote, explaining the topic’s appeal. “Thus, teachers used the Holocaust to activate the moral reasoning of their students”—to teach them to be good people.

    The idea that Holocaust education can somehow serve as a stand-in for public moral education has not left us. And because of its obviously laudable goals, objecting to it feels like clubbing a baby seal. Who wouldn’t want to teach kids to be empathetic? And by this logic, shouldn’t Holocaust education, because of its moral content alone, automatically inoculate people against anti-Semitism?

    Apparently not.

    https://justpaste.it/bacxg

    • Prétendre que les #USA cad ses capitalistes et politiciens au pouvoir ne portent pas leur part de responsabilité pour l’holocauste est une belle histoire mais loin de la réalité.

      On est au courant de l’apport financier de la famille Bush pour les nazis, Henry Ford est connu pour son antisemitisme (je ne sais pas à quel point il a activement soutenu les nazis allemands), IBM fournissait à la SS les machines pour organiser l’extermination, on refusait de mettre fin à l’holocauste par un raid aérien contre Auschwitz et on s’entendait dans des entretiens infomels et secrets en Suisse avec des émissaires de Göring sur la progression des troupes américaines dans les dernières phases de la guerre.

      Ne parlons pas de la non-dénazification en Allemagne de l’Ouest et de la fondation des services secrets allemands actuels et de la Bundeswehr par des anciens nazis commandités par leurs contreparts états-uniens. L’amitié entre les nantis d’Allemagne et des États Unis est plus jeune que celle entre la turquie génocidaire et l’Allemagne militariste, mais en différence avec celle-là elle est totale y compris ses crimes de guerre et actes de génocide.

      Le grand mensonge de l’innocence américaine rend futiles la commémoration des morts et les accusations contre les nazis allemands.

      #impérialisme #nazis #shoa

  • A New History of World War II
    https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2022/05/world-war-ii-empire-colonialism/629371

    This fact wasn’t incidental; empire was central to the causes and course of the war. Yet the colonial dimensions of World War II aren’t usually stressed. The most popular books and films present it as Churchill did, as a dramatic confrontation between liberty-loving nations and merciless tyrants. In the United States, it’s remembered still as the “good war,” the vanquishing of evil by the Greatest Generation.

    That understanding works—sort of—when war stories focus on Adolf Hitler’s invasions of sovereign states in Europe. It falters, however, when they center on the Pacific. There, the Japanese targeted colonies, seizing them under the banner of “Asia for the Asiatics.” The Allies beat Japan back, but only to return Burma to the British and Indonesia to the Dutch—Asia for the Europeans.

    The Pacific clash over colonies reveals a greater truth about the Second World War. Or such is the contention of Richard Overy, one of the conflict’s most distinguished historians. After writing some 20 books about the war, focused mainly on Europe, Overy has widened his scope. His new book, Blood and Ruins: The Last Imperial War, 1931–1945, 1,000 pages long, refuses to treat the Pacific as “an appendix,” as histories often do. Rather, it sees World War II as a truly “global event.”

    In that light, one thing becomes clear. Whatever else the Second World War was about, it was, on both sides, a war for empire.

  • National Parks Should Belong to Native Americans - The Atlantic
    Story by David Treuer
    https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2021/05/return-the-national-parks-to-the-tribes/618395

    Pas encore lu ce #récit mais lu deux romans de l’auteur dont le père est un européen immigré aux usa et la mère amérindienne

    Return the National Parks to the Tribes

    The jewels of America’s landscape should belong to America’s original peoples.

  • Why the Pandemic Is So Bad in America
    https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2020/09/coronavirus-american-failure/614191

    In March, a small and severely flawed French study suggested that the antimalarial drug hydroxychloroquine could treat COVID‑19. Published in a minor journal, it likely would have been ignored a decade ago. But in 2020, it wended its way to Donald Trump via a chain of credulity that included Fox News, Elon Musk, and Dr. Oz. Trump spent months touting the drug as a miracle cure despite mounting evidence to the contrary, causing shortages for people who actually needed it to treat lupus and rheumatoid arthritis.

    […]

    Trump is a comorbidity of the COVID‑19 pandemic. He isn’t solely responsible for America’s fiasco, but he is central to it. A pandemic demands the coordinated efforts of dozens of agencies. “In the best circumstances, it’s hard to make the bureaucracy move quickly,” Ron Klain said. “It moves if the president stands on a table and says, ‘Move quickly.’ But it really doesn’t move if he’s sitting at his desk saying it’s not a big deal.”

    In the early days of Trump’s presidency, many believed that America’s institutions would check his excesses. They have, in part, but Trump has also corrupted them. The CDC is but his latest victim. On February 25, the agency’s respiratory-disease chief, Nancy Messonnier, shocked people by raising the possibility of school closures and saying that “disruption to everyday life might be severe.” Trump was reportedly enraged. In response, he seems to have benched the entire agency. The CDC led the way in every recent domestic disease outbreak and has been the inspiration and template for public-health agencies around the world. But during the three months when some 2 million Americans contracted COVID‑19 and the death toll topped 100,000, the agency didn’t hold a single press conference. Its detailed guidelines on reopening the country were shelved for a month while the White House released its own uselessly vague plan.

  • Et si le confinement avait eu raison de Marie Kondo ? | Slate.fr
    https://www.slate.fr/story/192039/confinement-marie-kondo-appartient-monde-avant-bordel-necessaire-occupation-pe

    Pour survivre au confinement, j’avais besoin de savoir que les objets étaient là, quelque part. C’est ce que raconte Amanda Mull dans un article de The Atlantic. Au début du confinement, elle a été contacté par un lecteur qui peu de temps auparavant avait appliqué la méthode Marie Kondo, et en avait été ravi. Mais depuis qu’il était confiné chez lui, il regrettait amèrement. Il avait même racheté des jeux qu’il avait jetés parce qu’il n’avait pas le temps de jouer avec sa famille.

    Marie Kondo ferait-elle partie du monde d’avant ?

    Lien vers
    https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2020/07/the-triumph-of-the-slob/612232

    Dans le fond, on garde souvent des choses en cas de catastrophe. Et le fait que de nos jours, les maisons de riches sont extrêmement dépouillées va dans ce sens. (La maison des Kardashian, ou la maison dans le film Parasite.) C’est la preuve que les riches n’ont pas à s’inquiéter. Ils sont à l’abri du besoin. Ils n’ont donc pas besoin d’accumuler des objets.
    Sauf que voilà, avec la pandémie et le confinement, c’est comme si le monde nous avait donné raison, à nous les angoissé·es. Autant dire que je ne suis pas près de jeter cette baguette en bois cassée qui me sauvera peut-être la vie dans dix ans.

    Enfin, dernier point qui donne tort à Marie Kondo. Pendant le confinement, j’étais contente de n’avoir pas fait de grand rangement parce qu’alors il restait à faire. Ça me donnait une perspective. J’avais un projet. Un futur. La possibilité de reprendre du pouvoir en faisant le tri. Alors que si le tri avait déjà été fait je me serais retrouvée en position fœtale sur le canapé en train de pleurer silencieusement.

    #confinement #maison #Marie_Kondo #Titiou_Lecoq
    pour @fil

  • Power Causes Brain Damage - The Atlantic
    https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2017/07/power-causes-brain-damage/528711

    Je reposte à part, cet article de 2017 était perdu en commentaire à la fin d’un fil.

    The historian Henry Adams was being metaphorical, not medical, when he described power as “a sort of tumor that ends by killing the victim’s sympathies.” But that’s not far from where Dacher Keltner, a psychology professor at UC Berkeley, ended up after years of lab and field experiments. Subjects under the influence of power, he found in studies spanning two decades, acted as if they had suffered a traumatic brain injury—becoming more impulsive, less risk-aware, and, crucially, less adept at seeing things from other people’s point of view.

    That loss in capacity has been demonstrated in various creative ways. A 2006 study asked participants to draw the letter E on their forehead for others to view—a task that requires seeing yourself from an observer’s vantage point. Those feeling powerful were three times more likely to draw the E the right way to themselves—and backwards to everyone else (which calls to mind George W. Bush, who memorably held up the American flag backwards at the 2008 Olympics). Other experiments have shown that powerful people do worse at identifying what someone in a picture is feeling, or guessing how a colleague might interpret a remark.

    The fact that people tend to mimic the expressions and body language of their superiors can aggravate this problem: Subordinates provide few reliable cues to the powerful. But more important, Keltner says, is the fact that the powerful stop mimicking others. Laughing when others laugh or tensing when others tense does more than ingratiate. It helps trigger the same feelings those others are experiencing and provides a window into where they are coming from. Powerful people “stop simulating the experience of others,” Keltner says, which leads to what he calls an “empathy deficit.”

    As Susan Fiske, a Princeton psychology professor, has persuasively argued, power lessens the need for a nuanced read of people, since it gives us command of resources we once had to cajole from others. But of course, in a modern organization, the maintenance of that command relies on some level of organizational support. And the sheer number of examples of executive hubris that bristle from the headlines suggests that many leaders cross the line into counterproductive folly.

    Less able to make out people’s individuating traits, they rely more heavily on stereotype. And the less they’re able to see, other research suggests, the more they rely on a personal “vision” for navigation.

    PepsiCo CEO and Chairman Indra Nooyi sometimes tells the story of the day she got the news of her appointment to the company’s board, in 2001. She arrived home percolating in her own sense of importance and vitality, when her mother asked whether, before she delivered her “great news,” she would go out and get some milk. Fuming, Nooyi went out and got it. “Leave that damn crown in the garage” was her mother’s advice when she returned.

    For Winston Churchill, the person who filled that role was his wife, Clementine, who had the courage to write, “My Darling Winston. I must confess that I have noticed a deterioration in your manner; & you are not as kind as you used to be.” Written on the day Hitler entered Paris, torn up, then sent anyway, the letter was not a complaint but an alert: Someone had confided to her, she wrote, that Churchill had been acting “so contemptuous” toward subordinates in meetings that “no ideas, good or bad, will be forthcoming”—with the attendant danger that “you won’t get the best results.”

    #hubris #pouvoir #psychologie #hiérarchie

  • The 2020 Election Will Be a War of Disinformation - The Atlantic
    https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2020/03/the-2020-disinformation-war/605530

    How new technologies and techniques pioneered by dictators will shape the 2020 election One day last fall, I sat down to create a new Facebook account. I picked a forgettable name, snapped a profile pic with my face obscured, and clicked “Like” on the official pages of Donald Trump and his reelection campaign. Facebook’s algorithm prodded me to follow Ann Coulter, Fox Business, and a variety of fan pages with names like “In Trump We Trust.” I complied. I also gave my cellphone number to the (...)

    #manipulation #élections #électeurs #haine #microtargeting #profiling #BigData

    • C’est le texte le plus dérangeant et puissant que j’aie lu de la semaine, notamment parce que ça nous dit où en est le capitalisme vis-à-vis de l’exploitation de la nature : c’est toujours open bar, la course à l’innovation technique mais en version pseudo-verte.

      Many people imagine the seabed to be a vast expanse of sand, but it’s a jagged and dynamic landscape with as much variation as any place onshore. Mountains surge from underwater plains, canyons slice miles deep, hot springs billow through fissures in rock, and streams of heavy brine ooze down hillsides, pooling into undersea lakes.

      At full capacity, these companies expect to dredge thousands of square miles a year. Their collection vehicles will creep across the bottom in systematic rows, scraping through the top five inches of the ocean floor. Ships above will draw thousands of pounds of sediment through a hose to the surface, remove the metallic objects, known as polymetallic nodules, and then flush the rest back into the water. Some of that slurry will contain toxins such as mercury and lead, which could poison the surrounding ocean for hundreds of miles. The rest will drift in the current until it settles in nearby ecosystems. An early study by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences predicted that each mining ship will release about 2 million cubic feet of discharge every day, enough to fill a freight train that is 16 miles long. The authors called this “a conservative estimate,” since other projections had been three times as high. By any measure, they concluded, “a very large area will be blanketed by sediment to such an extent that many animals will not be able to cope with the impact and whole communities will be severely affected by the loss of individuals and species.”

      Scientists divide the ocean into five layers of depth. Closest to the surface is the “sunlight zone,” where plants thrive; then comes the “twilight zone,” where darkness falls; next is the “midnight zone,” where some creatures generate their own light; and then there’s a frozen flatland known simply as “the abyss.” Oceanographers have visited these layers in submersible vehicles for half a century, but the final layer is difficult to reach. It is known as the “hadal zone,” in reference to Hades, the ancient Greek god of the underworld, and it includes any water that is at least 6,000 meters below the surface—or, in a more Vernian formulation, that is 20,000 feet under the sea. Because the hadal zone is so deep, it is usually associated with ocean trenches, but several deepwater plains have sections that cross into hadal depth.

      The ISA has issued more mining licenses for nodules than for any other seabed deposit. Most of these licenses authorize contractors to exploit a single deepwater plain. Known as the Clarion-Clipperton Zone, or CCZ, it extends across 1.7 million square miles between Hawaii and Mexico—wider than the continental United States. When the Mining Code is approved, more than a dozen companies will accelerate their explorations in the CCZ to industrial-scale extraction. Their ships and robots will use vacuum hoses to suck nodules and sediment from the seafloor, extracting the metal and dumping the rest into the water. How many ecosystems will be covered by that sediment is impossible to predict. Ocean currents fluctuate regularly in speed and direction, so identical plumes of slurry will travel different distances, in different directions, on different days. The impact of a sediment plume also depends on how it is released. Slurry that is dumped near the surface will drift farther than slurry pumped back to the bottom. The circulating draft of the Mining Code does not specify a depth of discharge. The ISA has adopted an estimate that sediment dumped near the surface will travel no more than 62 miles from the point of release, but many experts believe the slurry could travel farther. A recent survey of academic research compiled by Greenpeace concluded that mining waste “could travel hundreds or even thousands of kilometers.”

      https://storage.googleapis.com/planet4-international-stateless/2019/06/f223a588-in-deep-water-greenpeace-deep-sea-mining-2019.pdf

      Building a vehicle to function at 36,000 feet, under 2 million pounds of pressure per square foot, is a task of interstellar-type engineering. It’s a good deal more rigorous than, say, bolting together a rover to skitter across Mars. Picture the schematic of an iPhone case that can be smashed with a sledgehammer more or less constantly, from every angle at once, without a trace of damage, and you’re in the ballpark—or just consider the fact that more people have walked on the moon than have reached the bottom of the Mariana Trench, the deepest place on Earth.

      While scientists struggle to reach the deep ocean, human impact has already gotten there. Most of us are familiar with the menu of damages to coastal water: overfishing, oil spills, and pollution, to name a few. What can be lost in the discussion of these issues is how they reverberate far beneath.

      Maybe the greatest alarm in recent years has followed the discovery of plastic floating in the ocean. Scientists estimate that 17 billion pounds of polymer are flushed into the ocean each year, and substantially more of it collects on the bottom than on the surface. Just as a bottle that falls from a picnic table will roll downhill to a gulch, trash on the seafloor gradually makes its way toward deepwater plains and hadal trenches. After his expedition to the trenches, Victor Vescovo returned with the news that garbage had beaten him there. He found a plastic bag at the bottom of one trench, a beverage can in another, and when he reached the deepest point in the Mariana, he watched an object with a large S on the side float past his window. Trash of all sorts is collecting in the hadal—Spam tins, Budweiser cans, rubber gloves, even a mannequin head.

      Scientists are just beginning to understand the impact of trash on aquatic life.

      https://marinedebris.noaa.gov/info/patch.html

      Microbes that flourish on plastic have ballooned in number, replacing other species as their population explodes in a polymer ocean.

      If it seems trivial to worry about the population statistics of bacteria in the ocean, you may be interested to know that ocean microbes are essential to human and planetary health. About a third of the carbon dioxide generated on land is absorbed by underwater organisms, including one species that was just discovered in the CCZ in 2018. The researchers who found that bacterium have no idea how it removes carbon from the environment, but their findings show that it may account for up to 10 percent of the volume that is sequestered by oceans every year.

      “There are more than a million microbes per milliliter of seawater,” he said, “so the chance of finding new antibiotics in the marine environment is high.” McCarthy agreed. “The next great drug may be hidden somewhere deep in the water,” he said. “We need to get to the deep-sea organisms, because they’re making compounds that we’ve never seen before. We may find drugs that could be used to treat gout, or rheumatoid arthritis, or all kinds of other conditions.”

      Marine biologists have never conducted a comprehensive survey of microbes in the hadal trenches. The conventional tools of water sampling cannot function at extreme depth, and engineers are just beginning to develop tools that can. Microbial studies of the deepwater plains are slightly further along—and scientists have recently discovered that the CCZ is unusually flush with life.

      Venter has been accused of trying to privatize the human genome, and many of his critics believe his effort to create new organisms is akin to playing God. He clearly doesn’t have an aversion to profit-driven science, and he’s not afraid to mess with nature—yet when I asked him about the prospect of mining in deep water, he flared with alarm. “We should be very careful about mining in the ocean,” he said. “These companies should be doing rigorous microbial surveys before they do anything else. We only know a fraction of the microbes down there, and it’s a terrible idea to screw with them before we know what they are and what they do.”

      As a group, they have sought to position DeepGreen as a company whose primary interest in mining the ocean is saving the planet. They have produced a series of lavish brochures to explain the need for a new source of battery metals, and Gerard Barron, the CEO, speaks with animated fervor about the virtues of nodule extraction.

      His case for seabed mining is straightforward. Barron believes that the world will not survive if we continue burning fossil fuels, and the transition to other forms of power will require a massive increase in battery production. He points to electric cars: the batteries for a single vehicle require 187 pounds of copper, 123 pounds of nickel, and 15 pounds each of manganese and cobalt. On a planet with 1 billion cars, the conversion to electric vehicles would require several times more metal than all existing land-based supplies—and harvesting that metal from existing sources already takes a human toll.

      L’enfer sur Terre, que cette histoire de seabed mining puisse être considérée comme écolo, de même qu’un milliard de bagnoles « vertes » !

      Mining companies may promise to extract seabed metal with minimal damage to the surrounding environment, but to believe this requires faith. It collides with the force of human history, the law of unintended consequences, and the inevitability of mistakes. I wanted to understand from Michael Lodge how a UN agency had made the choice to accept that risk.

      “Why is it necessary to mine the ocean?” I asked him.

      He paused for a moment, furrowing his brow. “I don’t know why you use the word necessary,” he said. “Why is it ‘necessary’ to mine anywhere? You mine where you find metal.”

      #extractivisme #extractivisme_marin #mer #océan #eau #mine #capitalisme_vert #tourisme_de_l'extrême par nos amis les #milliardaires #biologie_de_synthèse aussi #microbes #antibiotiques et un gros #beurk

  • The Mississippi Delta’s History of Black Land Theft - The Atlantic
    https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2019/09/this-land-was-our-land/594742

    Major audits and investigations of the USDA have found that illegal pressures levied through its loan programs created massive transfers of wealth from black to white farmers, especially in the period just after the 1950s. In 1965, the United States Commission on Civil Rights uncovered blatant and dramatic racial differences in the level of federal investment in farmers. The commission found that in a sample of counties across the South, the FmHA provided much larger loans for small and medium-size white-owned farms, relative to net worth, than it did for similarly sized black-owned farms—evidence that racial discrimination “has served to accelerate the displacement and impoverishment of the Negro farmer.”

    #agriculture #terres #Delta_du_Mississippi #racisme #discrimination #vol_de_terres #Louisiane

  • Why Don’t Police Catch Serial Rapists? - The Atlantic
    https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2019/08/an-epidemic-of-disbelief/592807

    As Spada wandered through the warehouse, he made another discovery, one that would help uncover a decades-long scandal, not just in Detroit but across the country. He noticed rows of steel shelving lined with white cardboard boxes, 10 inches tall and a foot wide, stacked six feet high. What are those? he asked a Detroit police officer who was accompanying him. Rape kits, the officer said.

    “I’m assuming they’ve been tested?” Spada said.

    “Oh, they’ve all been tested.”

    Spada pulled out a box and peered inside. The containers were still sealed, indicating that the evidence had never been sent to a lab. He opened four more boxes: the same.

    “I tried to do a quick calculation,” he later told me. “I came up with approximately 10,000.”

    Spada’s estimate was conservative. Eventually 11,341 untested rape kits were found, some dating back more than 30 years—each one a hermetically sealed testament to the most terrifying minutes of a woman’s life, each one holding evidence that had been swabbed or plucked from the most private parts of her body. And in all likelihood, some microscopic part of her assailant—his DNA, his identity—sat in that kit as well.

    #culture_du_viol #patriarcat #police #impunité #justice_nulle_part

  • Who Was Shakespeare? Could the Author Have Been a Woman? - The Atlantic
    https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2019/06/who-is-shakespeare-emilia-bassano/588076

    On a spring night in 2018, I stood on a Manhattan sidewalk with friends, reading Shakespeare aloud. We were in line to see an adaptation of Macbeth and had decided to pass the time refreshing our memories of the play’s best lines. I pulled up Lady Macbeth’s soliloquy on my iPhone. “Come, you spirits / That tend on mortal thoughts, unsex me here,” I read, thrilled once again by the incantatory power of the verse. I remembered where I was when I first heard those lines: in my 10th-grade English class, startled out of my adolescent stupor by this woman rebelling magnificently and malevolently against her submissive status. “Make thick my blood, / Stop up th’ access and passage to remorse.” Six months into the #MeToo movement, her fury and frustration felt newly resonant.

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    Pulled back into plays I’d studied in college and graduate school, I found myself mesmerized by Lady Macbeth and her sisters in the Shakespeare canon. Beatrice, in Much Ado About Nothing, raging at the limitations of her sex (“O God, that I were a man! I would eat his heart in the marketplace”). Rosalind, in As You Like It, affecting the swagger of masculine confidence to escape those limitations (“We’ll have a swashing and a martial outside, / As many other mannish cowards have / That do outface it with their semblances”). Isabella, in Measure for Measure, fearing no one will believe her word against Angelo’s, rapist though he is (“To whom should I complain? Did I tell this, / Who would believe me?”). Kate, in The Taming of the Shrew, refusing to be silenced by her husband (“My tongue will tell the anger of my heart, / Or else my heart concealing it will break”). Emilia, in one of her last speeches in Othello before Iago kills her, arguing for women’s equality (“Let husbands know / Their wives have sense like them”).
    I was reminded of all the remarkable female friendships, too: Beatrice and Hero’s allegiance; Emilia’s devotion to her mistress, Desdemona; Paulina’s brave loyalty to Hermione in The Winter’s Tale; and plenty more. (“Let’s consult together against this greasy knight,” resolve the merry wives of Windsor, revenging themselves on Falstaff.) These intimate female alliances are fresh inventions—they don’t exist in the literary sources from which many of the plays are drawn. And when the plays lean on historical sources (Plutarch, for instance), they feminize them, portraying legendary male figures through the eyes of mothers, wives, and lovers. “Why was Shakespeare able to see the woman’s position, write entirely as if he were a woman, in a way that none of the other playwrights of the age were able to?” In her book about the plays’ female characters, Tina Packer, the founding artistic director of Shakespeare & Company, asked the question very much on my mind.

    Doubts about whether William Shakespeare (who was born in Stratford-upon-Avon in 1564 and died in 1616) really wrote the works attributed to him are almost as old as the writing itself. Alternative contenders—Francis Bacon; Christopher Marlowe; and Edward de Vere, the 17th earl of Oxford, prominent among them—continue to have champions, whose fervor can sometimes border on fanaticism. In response, orthodox Shakespeare scholars have settled into dogmatism of their own. Even to dabble in authorship questions is considered a sign of bad faith, a blinkered failure to countenance genius in a glover’s son. The time had come, I felt, to tug at the blinkers of both camps and reconsider the authorship debate: Had anyone ever proposed that the creator of those extraordinary women might be a woman? Each of the male possibilities requires an elaborate theory to explain his use of another’s name. None of the candidates has succeeded in dethroning the man from Stratford. Yet a simple reason would explain a playwright’s need for a pseudonym in Elizabethan England: being female.
    Who was this woman writing “immortal work” in the same year that Shakespeare’s name first appeared in print?

    Long before Tina Packer marveled at the bard’s uncanny insight, others were no less awed by the empathy that pervades the work. “One would think that he had been Metamorphosed from a Man to a Woman,” wrote Margaret Cavendish, the 17th-century philosopher and playwright. The critic John Ruskin said, “Shakespeare has no heroes—he has only heroines.” A striking number of those heroines refuse to obey rules. At least 10 defy their fathers, bucking betrothals they don’t like to find their own paths to love. Eight disguise themselves as men, outwitting patriarchal controls—more gender-swapping than can be found in the work of any previous English playwright. Six lead armies.

    The prevailing view, however, has been that no women in Renaissance England wrote for the theater, because that was against the rules. Religious verse and translation were deemed suitable female literary pursuits; “closet dramas,” meant only for private reading, were acceptable. The stage was off-limits. Yet scholars have lately established that women were involved in the business of acting companies as patrons, shareholders, suppliers of costumes, and gatherers of entrance fees. What’s more, 80 percent of the plays printed in the 1580s were written anonymously, and that number didn’t fall below 50 percent until the early 1600s. At least one eminent Shakespeare scholar, Phyllis Rackin, of the University of Pennsylvania, challenges the blanket assumption that the commercial drama pouring forth in the period bore no trace of a female hand. So did Virginia Woolf, even as she sighed over the obstacles that would have confronted a female Shakespeare: “Undoubtedly, I thought, looking at the shelf where there are no plays by women, her work would have gone unsigned.”

    A tantalizing nudge lies buried in the writings of Gabriel Harvey, a well-known Elizabethan literary critic. In 1593, he referred cryptically to an “excellent Gentlewoman” who had written three sonnets and a comedy. “I dare not Particularise her Description,” he wrote, even as he heaped praise on her.

    All her conceits are illuminate with the light of Reason; all her speeches beautified with the grace of Affability … In her mind there appeareth a certain heavenly Logic; in her tongue & pen a divine Rhetoric … I dare undertake with warrant, whatsoever she writeth must needs remain an immortal work, and will leave, in the activest world, an eternal memory of the silliest vermin that she should vouchsafe to grace with her beautiful and allective style, as ingenious as elegant.

    Who was this woman writing “immortal work” in the same year that Shakespeare’s name first appeared in print, on the poem “Venus and Adonis,” a scandalous parody of masculine seduction tales (in which the woman forces herself on the man)? Harvey’s tribute is extraordinary, yet orthodox Shakespeareans and anti-Stratfordians alike have almost entirely ignored it.

    Until recently, that is, when a few bold outliers began to advance the case that Shakespeare might well have been a woman. One candidate is Mary Sidney, the countess of Pembroke (and beloved sister of the celebrated poet Philip Sidney)—one of the most educated women of her time, a translator and poet, and the doyenne of the Wilton Circle, a literary salon dedicated to galvanizing an English cultural renaissance. Clues beckon, not least that Sidney and her husband were the patrons of one of the first theater companies to perform Shakespeare’s plays. Was Shakespeare’s name useful camouflage, allowing her to publish what she otherwise couldn’t?
    Shakespeare’s life is remarkably well documented—yet no records from his lifetime identify him unequivocally as a writer.

    But the candidate who intrigued me more was a woman as exotic and peripheral as Sidney was pedigreed and prominent. Not long after my Macbeth outing, I learned that Shakespeare’s Globe, in London, had set out to explore this figure’s input to the canon. The theater’s summer 2018 season concluded with a new play, Emilia, about a contemporary of Shakespeare’s named Emilia Bassano. Born in London in 1569 to a family of Venetian immigrants—musicians and instrument-makers who were likely Jewish—she was one of the first women in England to publish a volume of poetry (suitably religious yet startlingly feminist, arguing for women’s “Libertie” and against male oppression). Her existence was unearthed in 1973 by the Oxford historian A. L. Rowse, who speculated that she was Shakespeare’s mistress, the “dark lady” described in the sonnets. In Emilia, the playwright Morgan Lloyd Malcolm goes a step further: Her Shakespeare is a plagiarist who uses Bassano’s words for Emilia’s famous defense of women in Othello.

    Could Bassano have contributed even more widely and directly? The idea felt like a feminist fantasy about the past—but then, stories about women’s lost and obscured achievements so often have a dreamlike quality, unveiling a history different from the one we’ve learned. Was I getting carried away, reinventing Shakespeare in the image of our age? Or was I seeing past gendered assumptions to the woman who—like Shakespeare’s heroines—had fashioned herself a clever disguise? Perhaps the time was finally ripe for us to see her.

    The ranks of Shakespeare skeptics comprise a kind of literary underworld—a cross-disciplinary array of academics, actors (Derek Jacobi and Mark Rylance are perhaps the best known), writers, teachers, lawyers, a few Supreme Court justices (Sandra Day O’Connor, Antonin Scalia, John Paul Stevens). Look further back and you’ll find such illustrious names as Ralph Waldo Emerson, Walt Whitman, Mark Twain, Henry James, Sigmund Freud, Helen Keller, and Charlie Chaplin. Their ideas about the authorship of the plays and poems differ, but they concur that Shakespeare is not the man who wrote them.

    Their doubt is rooted in an empirical conundrum. Shakespeare’s life is remarkably well documented, by the standards of the period—yet no records from his lifetime identify him unequivocally as a writer. The more than 70 documents that exist show him as an actor, a shareholder in a theater company, a moneylender, and a property investor. They show that he dodged taxes, was fined for hoarding grain during a shortage, pursued petty lawsuits, and was subject to a restraining order. The profile is remarkably coherent, adding up to a mercenary impresario of the Renaissance entertainment industry. What’s missing is any sign that he wrote.

    From January 1863: Nathaniel Hawthorne considers authorship while visiting Stratford-upon-Avon

    No such void exists for other major writers of the period, as a meticulous scholar named Diana Price has demonstrated. Many left fewer documents than Shakespeare did, but among them are manuscripts, letters, and payment records proving that writing was their profession. For example, court records show payment to Ben Jonson for “those services of his wit & pen.” Desperate to come up with comparable material to round out Shakespeare, scholars in the 18th and 19th centuries forged evidence—later debunked—of a writerly life.

    To be sure, Shakespeare’s name can be found linked, during his lifetime, to written works. With Love’s Labour’s Lost, in 1598, it started appearing on the title pages of one-play editions called “quartos.” (Several of the plays attributed to Shakespeare were first published anonymously.) Commentators at the time saluted him by name, praising “Shakespeare’s fine filed phrase” and “honey-tongued Shakespeare.” But such evidence proves attribution, not actual authorship—as even some orthodox Shakespeare scholars grant. “I would love to find a contemporary document that said William Shakespeare was the dramatist of Stratford-upon-Avon written during his lifetime,” Stanley Wells, a professor emeritus at the University of Birmingham’s Shakespeare Institute, has said. “That would shut the buggers up!”
    FROM THE ARCHIVES
    October 1991 Atlantic cover

    In 1991, The Atlantic commissioned two pieces from admittedly partisan authors, Irving Matus and Tom Bethell, to examine and debate the argument:
    In Defense of Shakespeare
    The Case for Oxford

    By contrast, more than a few of Shakespeare’s contemporaries are on record suggesting that his name got affixed to work that wasn’t his. In 1591, the dramatist Robert Greene wrote of the practice of “underhand brokery”—of poets who “get some other Batillus to set his name to their verses.” (Batillus was a mediocre Roman poet who claimed some of Virgil’s verses as his own.) The following year, he warned fellow playwrights about an “upstart Crow, beautified with our feathers,” who thinks he is the “onely Shake-scene in a countrey.” Most scholars agree that the “Crow” is Shakespeare, then an actor in his late 20s, and conclude that the new-hatched playwright was starting to irk established figures. Anti-Stratfordians see something else: In Aesop’s fables, the crow was a proud strutter who stole the feathers of others; Horace’s crow, in his epistles, was a plagiarist. Shakespeare was being attacked, they say, not as a budding dramatist, but as a paymaster taking credit for others’ work. “Seeke you better Maisters,” Greene advised, urging his colleagues to cease writing for the Crow.

    Ben Jonson, among others, got in his digs, too. Scholars agree that the character of Sogliardo in Every Man Out of His Humour—a country bumpkin “without brain, wit, anything, indeed, ramping to gentility”—is a parody of Shakespeare, a social climber whose pursuit of a coat of arms was common lore among his circle of actors. In a satirical poem called “On Poet-Ape,” Jonson was likely taking aim at Shakespeare the theater-world wheeler-dealer. This poet-ape, Jonson wrote, “from brokage is become so bold a thief,”

    At first he made low shifts, would pick and glean,
    Buy the reversion of old plays; now grown
    To a little wealth, and credit in the scene,
    He takes up all, makes each man’s wit his own

    What to make of the fact that Jonson changed his tune in the prefatory material that he contributed to the First Folio of plays when it appeared seven years after Shakespeare’s death? Jonson’s praise there did more than attribute the work to Shakespeare. It declared his art unmatched: “He was not of an age, but for all time!” The anti-Stratfordian response is to note the shameless hype at the heart of the Folio project. “Whatever you do, Buy,” the compilers urged in their dedication, intent on a hard sell for a dramatist who, doubters emphasize, was curiously unsung at his death. The Folio’s introductory effusions, they argue, contain double meanings. Jonson tells readers, for example, to find Shakespeare not in his portrait “but his Booke,” seeming to undercut the relation between the man and the work. And near the start of his over-the-top tribute, Jonson riffs on the unreliability of extravagant praise, “which doth ne’er advance / The truth.”

    From September 1904: Ralph Waldo Emerson celebrates Shakespeare

    The authorship puzzles don’t end there. How did the man born in Stratford acquire the wide-ranging knowledge on display in the plays—of the Elizabethan court, as well as of multiple languages, the law, astronomy, music, the military, and foreign lands, especially northern Italian cities? The author’s linguistic brilliance shines in words and sayings imported from foreign vocabularies, but Shakespeare wasn’t educated past the age of 13. Perhaps he traveled, joined the army, worked as a tutor, or all three, scholars have proposed. Yet no proof exists of any of those experiences, despite, as the Oxford historian Hugh Trevor-Roper pointed out in an essay, “the greatest battery of organized research that has ever been directed upon a single person.”
    Emilia Bassano’s life encompassed the breadth of the Shakespeare canon: its low-class references and knowledge of the court; its Italian sources and Jewish allusions; its music and feminism.

    In fact, a document that does exist—Shakespeare’s will—would seem to undercut such hypotheses. A wealthy man when he retired to Stratford, he was meticulous about bequeathing his properties and possessions (his silver, his second-best bed). Yet he left behind not a single book, though the plays draw on hundreds of texts, including some—in Italian and French—that hadn’t yet been translated into English. Nor did he leave any musical instruments, though the plays use at least 300 musical terms and refer to 26 instruments. He remembered three actor-owners in his company, but no one in the literary profession. Strangest of all, he made no mention of manuscripts or writing. Perhaps as startling as the gaps in his will, Shakespeare appears to have neglected his daughters’ education—an incongruity, given the erudition of so many of the playwright’s female characters. One signed with her mark, the other with a signature a scholar has called “painfully formed.”

    “Weak and unconvincing” was Trevor-Roper’s verdict on the case for Shakespeare. My delving left me in agreement, not that the briefs for the male alternatives struck me as compelling either. Steeped in the plays, I felt their author would surely join me in bridling at the Stratfordians’ unquestioning worship at the shrine—their arrogant dismissal of skeptics as mere deluded “buggers,” or worse. (“Is there any more fanatic zealot than the priest-like defender of a challenged creed?” asked Richmond Crinkley, a former director of programs at the Folger Shakespeare Library who was nonetheless sympathetic to the anti-Stratfordian view.) To appreciate how belief blossoms into fact—how readily myths about someone get disseminated as truth—one can’t do better than to read Shakespeare. Just think of how obsessed the work is with mistaken identities, concealed women, forged and anonymous documents—with the error of trusting in outward appearances. What if searchers for the real Shakespeare simply haven’t set their sights on the right pool of candidates?

    Read: An interview with the author of ‘The Shakespeare Wars’

    I met Emilia Bassano’s most ardent champion at Alice’s Tea Cup, which seemed unexpectedly apt: A teahouse on Manhattan’s Upper West Side, it has quotes from Alice in Wonderland scrawled across the walls. (“off with their heads!”) John Hudson, an Englishman in his 60s who pursued a degree at the Shakespeare Institute in a mid-career swerve, had been on the Bassano case for years, he told me. In 2014, he published Shakespeare’s Dark Lady: Amelia Bassano Lanier, the Woman Behind Shakespeare’s Plays? His zeal can sometimes get the better of him, yet he emphasizes that his methods and findings are laid out “for anyone … to refute if they wish.” Like Alice’s rabbit hole, Bassano’s case opened up new and richly disorienting perspectives—on the plays, on the ways we think about genius and gender, and on a fascinating life.

    Hudson first learned of Bassano from A. L. Rowse, who discovered mention of her in the notebooks of an Elizabethan physician and astrologer named Simon Forman. In her teens, she became the mistress of Henry Carey, Lord Hunsdon, the master of court entertainment and patron of Shakespeare’s acting company. And that is only the start. Whether or not Bassano was Shakespeare’s lover (scholars now dismiss Rowse’s claim), the discernible contours of her biography supply what the available material about Shakespeare’s life doesn’t: circumstantial evidence of opportunities to acquire an impressive expanse of knowledge.

    Bassano lived, Hudson points out, “an existence on the boundaries of many different social worlds,” encompassing the breadth of the Shakespeare canon: its coarse, low-class references and its intimate knowledge of the court; its Italian sources and its Jewish allusions; its music and its feminism. And her imprint, as Hudson reads the plays, extends over a long period. He notes the many uses of her name, citing several early on—for instance, an Emilia in The Comedy of Errors. (Emilia, the most common female name in the plays alongside Katherine, wasn’t used in the 16th century by any other English playwright.) Titus Andronicus features a character named Bassianus, which was the original Roman name of Bassano del Grappa, her family’s hometown before their move to Venice. Later, in The Merchant of Venice, the romantic hero is a Venetian named Bassanio, an indication that the author perhaps knew of the Bassanos’ connection to Venice. (Bassanio is a spelling of their name in some records.)

    Further on, in Othello, another Emilia appears—Iago’s wife. Her famous speech against abusive husbands, Hudson notes, doesn’t show up until 1623, in the First Folio, included among lines that hadn’t appeared in an earlier version (lines that Stratfordians assume—without any proof—were written before Shakespeare’s death). Bassano was still alive, and by then had known her share of hardship at the hands of men. More to the point, she had already spoken out, in her 1611 book of poetry, against men who “do like vipers deface the wombs wherein they were bred.”

    Prodded by Hudson, you can discern traces of Bassano’s own life trajectory in particular works across the canon. In All’s Well That Ends Well, a lowborn girl lives with a dowager countess and a general named Bertram. When Bassano’s father, Baptista, died in 1576, Emilia, then 7, was taken in by Susan Bertie, the dowager countess of Kent. The countess’s brother, Peregrine Bertie, was—like the fictional Bertram—a celebrated general. In the play, the countess tells how a father “famous … in his profession” left “his sole child … bequeathed to my overlooking. I have those hopes of her good that her education promises.” Bassano received a remarkable humanist education with the countess. In her book of poetry, she praised her guardian as “the Mistris of my youth, / The noble guide of my ungovern’d dayes.”
    Bassano’s life sheds possible light on the plays’ preoccupation with women caught in forced or loveless marriages.

    As for the celebrated general, Hudson seizes on the possibility that Bassano’s ears, and perhaps eyes, were opened by Peregrine Bertie as well. In 1582, Bertie was named ambassador to Denmark by the queen and sent to the court at Elsinore—the setting of Hamlet. Records show that the trip included state dinners with Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, whose names appear in the play. Because emissaries from the same two families later visited the English court, the trip isn’t decisive, but another encounter is telling: Bertie met with the Danish astronomer Tycho Brahe, whose astronomical theories influenced the play. Was Bassano (then just entering her teens) on the trip? Bertie was accompanied by a “whole traine,” but only the names of important gentlemen are recorded. In any case, Hudson argues, she would have heard tales on his return.

    Later, as the mistress of Henry Carey (43 years her senior), Bassano gained access to more than the theater world. Carey, the queen’s cousin, held various legal and military positions. Bassano was “favoured much of her Majesty and of many noblemen,” the physician Forman noted, indicating the kind of extensive aristocratic associations that only vague guesswork can accord to Shakespeare. His company didn’t perform at court until Christmas of 1594, after several of the plays informed by courtly life had already been written. Shakespeare’s history plays, concerned as they are with the interactions of the governing class, presume an insider perspective on aristocratic life. Yet mere court performances wouldn’t have enabled such familiarity, and no trace exists of Shakespeare’s presence in any upper-class household.

    And then, in late 1592, Bassano (now 23) was expelled from court. She was pregnant. Carey gave her money and jewels and, for appearance’s sake, married her off to Alphonso Lanier, a court musician. A few months later, she had a son. Despite the glittering dowry, Lanier must not have been pleased. “Her husband hath dealt hardly with her,” Forman wrote, “and spent and consumed her goods.”

    Bassano was later employed in a noble household, probably as a music tutor, and roughly a decade after that opened a school. Whether she accompanied her male relatives—whose consort of recorder players at the English court lasted 90 years—on their trips back to northern Italy isn’t known. But the family link to the home country offers support for the fine-grained familiarity with the region that (along with in-depth musical knowledge) any plausible candidate for authorship would seem to need—just what scholars have had to strain to establish for Shakespeare. (Perhaps, theories go, he chatted with travelers or consulted books.) In Othello, for example, Iago gives a speech that precisely describes a fresco in Bassano del Grappa—also the location of a shop owned by Giovanni Otello, a likely source of the title character’s name.

    Her Bassano lineage—scholars suggest the family were conversos, converted or hidden Jews presenting as Christians—also helps account for the Jewish references that scholars of the plays have noted. The plea in The Merchant of Venice for the equality and humanity of Jews, a radical departure from typical anti-Semitic portrayals of the period, is well known. “Hath not a Jew hands, organs, dimensions, senses, affections, passions?” Shylock asks. “If you prick us, do we not bleed?” A Midsummer Night’s Dream draws from a passage in the Talmud about marriage vows; spoken Hebrew is mixed into the nonsense language of All’s Well That Ends Well.
    Stephen Doyle

    What’s more, the Bassano family’s background suggests a source close to home for the particular interest in dark figures in the sonnets, Othello, and elsewhere. A 1584 document about the arrest of two Bassano men records them as “black”—among Elizabethans, the term could apply to anyone darker than the fair-skinned English, including those with a Mediterranean complexion. (The fellows uttered lines that could come straight from a comic interlude in the plays: “We have as good friends in the court as thou hast and better too … Send us to ward? Thou wert as good kiss our arse.”) In Love’s Labour’s Lost, the noblemen derisively compare Rosaline, the princess’s attendant, to “chimney-sweepers” and “colliers” (coal miners). The king joins in, telling Berowne, who is infatuated with her, “Thy love is black as ebony,” to which the young lord responds, “O wood divine!”

    Bassano’s life sheds possible light, too, on another outsider theme: the plays’ preoccupation with women caught in forced or loveless marriages. Hudson sees her misery reflected in the sonnets, thought to have been written from the early 1590s to the early 1600s. “When, in disgrace with fortune and men’s eyes, / I all alone beweep my outcast state, /And trouble deaf heaven with my bootless cries, /And look upon myself and curse my fate,” reads sonnet 29. (When Maya Angelou first encountered the poem as a child, she thought Shakespeare must have been a black girl who had been sexually abused: “How else could he know what I know?”) For Shakespeare, those years brought a rise in status: In 1596, he was granted a coat of arms, and by 1597, he was rich enough to buy the second-largest house in Stratford.

    Read: What Maya Angelou meant when she said ‘Shakespeare must be a black girl’

    In what is considered an early or muddled version of The Taming of the Shrew, a man named Alphonso (as was Bassano’s husband) tries to marry off his three daughters, Emilia, Kate, and Philema. Emilia drops out in the later version, and the father is now called Baptista (the name of Bassano’s father). As a portrait of a husband dealing “hardly” with a wife, the play is horrifying. Yet Kate’s speech of submission, with its allusions to the Letters of Paul, is slippery: Even as she exaggeratedly parrots the Christian doctrine of womanly subjection, she is anything but dutifully silent.

    Shakespeare’s women repeatedly subvert such teachings, perhaps most radically in The Winter’s Tale, another drama of male cruelty. There the noblewoman Paulina, scorned by King Leontes as “a most intelligencing bawd” with a “boundless tongue,” bears fierce witness against him (no man dares to) when he wrongly accuses Queen Hermione of adultery and imprisons her. As in so many of the comedies, a more enlightened society emerges in the end because the women’s values triumph.

    I was stunned to realize that the year The Winter’s Tale was likely completed, 1611, was the same year Bassano published her book of poetry, Salve Deus Rex Judæorum. Her writing style bears no obvious resemblance to Shakespeare’s in his plays, though Hudson strains to suggest similarities. The overlap lies in the feminist content. Bassano’s poetry registers as more than conventional religious verse designed to win patronage (she dedicates it to nine women, Mary Sidney included, fashioning a female literary community). Scholars have observed that it reads as a “transgressive” defense of Eve and womankind. Like a cross-dressing Shakespearean heroine, Bassano refuses to play by the rules, heretically reinterpreting scripture. “If Eve did err, it was for knowledge sake,” she writes. Arguing that the crucifixion, a crime committed by men, was a greater crime than Eve’s, she challenges the basis of men’s “tyranny” over women.

    “I always feel something Italian, something Jewish about Shakespeare,” Jorge Luis Borges told The Paris Review in 1966. “Perhaps Englishmen admire him because of that, because it’s so unlike them.” Borges didn’t mention feeling “something female” about the bard, yet that response has never ceased to be part of Shakespeare’s allure—embodiment though he is of the patriarchal authority of the Western canon. What would the revelation of a woman’s hand at work mean, aside from the loss of a prime tourist attraction in Stratford-upon-Avon? Would the effect be a blow to the cultural patriarchy, or the erosion of the canon’s status? Would (male) myths of inexplicable genius take a hit? Would women at last claim their rightful authority as historical and intellectual forces?

    I was curious to take the temperature of the combative authorship debate as women edge their way into it. Over more tea, I tested Hudson’s room for flexibility. Could the plays’ many connections to Bassano be explained by simply assuming the playwright knew her well? “Shakespeare would have had to run to her every few minutes for a musical reference or an Italian pun,” he said. I caught up with Mark Rylance, the actor and former artistic director of the Globe, in the midst of rehearsals for Othello (whose plot, he noted, comes from an Italian text that didn’t exist in English). A latitudinarian doubter—embracing the inquiry, not any single candidate—Rylance has lately observed that the once heretical notion of collaboration between Shakespeare and other writers “is now accepted, pursued and published by leading orthodox scholars.” He told me that “Emilia should be studied by anyone interested in the creation of the plays.” David Scott Kastan, a well-known Shakespeare scholar at Yale, urged further exploration too, though he wasn’t ready to anoint her bard. “What’s clear is that it’s important to know more about her,” he said, and even got playful with pronouns: “The more we know about her and the world she lived in, the more we’ll know about Shakespeare, whoever she was.”
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    Such Ado: The Fight for Shakespeare’s Puns
    Shakespeare in Love, or in Context

    In the fall, I joined the annual meeting of the Shakespeare Authorship Trust—a gathering of skeptics at the Globe—feeling excited that gender would be at the top of the agenda. Some eyebrows were raised even in this company, but enthusiasm ran high. “People have been totally frustrated with authorship debates that go nowhere, but that’s because there have been 200 years of bad candidates,” one participant from the University of Toronto exclaimed. “They didn’t want to see women in this,” he reflected. “It’s a tragedy of history.”

    He favored Sidney. Others were eager to learn about Bassano, and with collaboration in mind, I wondered whether the two women had perhaps worked together, or as part of a group. I thought of Bassano’s Salve Deus, in which she writes that men have wrongly taken credit for knowledge: “Yet Men will boast of Knowledge, which he tooke / From Eve’s faire hand, as from a learned Booke.”

    The night after the meeting, I went to a performance of Antony and Cleopatra at the National Theatre. I sat enthralled, still listening for the poet in her words, trying to catch her reflection in some forgotten bit of verse. “Give me my robe, put on my crown,” cried the queen, “I have / Immortal longings in me.” There she was, kissing her ladies goodbye, raising the serpent to her breast. “I am fire and air.”

  • Will Robots Change Human Relationships ? - The Atlantic
    https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2019/04/robots-human-relationships/583204

    In this experiment, we found that by adding just a few bots (posing as human players) that behaved in a selfish, free-riding way, we could drive the group to behave similarly. Eventually, the human players ceased cooperating altogether. The bots thus converted a group of generous people into selfish jerks.

    #coopération et #réseaux : #théorie_des_jeux plutôt que #AI

  • Encore un qui a lu nos grands intellectuels:
    https://actu.orange.fr/monde/un-extremiste-de-droite-tire-dans-deux-mosquees-neo-zeolandaises-49-mort

    Avant de passer à l’action, l’homme, qui se présente comme un blanc de la classe ouvrière aux bas revenus, a publié sur Twitter un « manifeste » raciste de 74 pages intitulé « Le grand remplacement », en référence à une théorie née en France et populaire dans les milieux d’extrême droite selon laquelle les "peuples européens" seraient « remplacés » par des populations non-européennes immigrées.

    • Sinon, se souvenir qu’avant le « Grand remplacement » de Renaud Camus, il y a eu l’« Eurabia » popularisé en Europe par Oriana Fallaci, reprenant le concept de Bat Ye’or. Concept lui-même dérivé de la « dhimmitude », de Bachir Gemayel, auquel le Nouvel obs tendait le crachoir en 1982 à ce sujet.

      Ça donne une nébuleuse reliant l’extrême-droite chrétienne libanaise, les propagandistes d’Israël, l’extrême-droite raciste (souvent antisémite) française et européenne, souvent derrière un alibi laïcard, tout ça dans un univers médiatique européen particulièrement complaisant avec tous ces complotismes islamophobes.

      Et en gros le même « arc » aux États-Unis, où il faut ajouter les fondamentalistes chrétiens, à la fois frénétiquement pro-israéliens et fondamentalement antisémites.

    • Les chrétiens du Liban, la dhimmitude, l’Eurabia, le marxisme culturel propogeant l’islamisation de l’Europe… toutes foutaises déjà présentes dans le « manifeste » de Breivik (2011) :
      https://seenthis.net/messages/28765

      Mais le nouveau « Manifeste » est beaucoup plus au ras des pâquerettes.

      Et en gros rien sur Israël (contrairement au manifeste Breivik), à part une mention :

      Were/are you an anti-semite?

      No. A jew living in israel is no enemy of mine, so long as they do not seek to subvert or harm my people.

    • @reka Puisque tu cites Millet, remarque qu’on est dans le même « arc » (caution intellectuelle et ancien de l’extrême-droite libanaise) :
      https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Millet

      En 2012, il publie chez Pierre-Guillaume de Roux un essai intitulé Langue fantôme, suivi de Éloge littéraire d’Anders Breivik, dans lequel il s’en prend au multiculturalisme et à la perte de repères identitaires à l’origine, selon lui, du geste du tueur norvégien. Frappé par la « perfection formelle » des actes de Breivik, Richard Millet leur prête une « dimension littéraire » qui aurait été mal comprise et mal interprétée par la presse : d’après lui, seule une littérature qui ose s’intéresser à la question du mal est valable à une époque où le divertissement domine, et donc l’insignifiance. Tout en condamnant les actes d’Anders Breivik, Richard Millet affirme qu’il est « sans doute ce que méritait la Norvège et ce qui attend nos sociétés qui ne cessent de s’aveugler » sur « les ravages du multiculturalisme », « l’islamisation de l’Europe » et son renoncement à « l’affirmation de ses racines chrétiennes ». Richard Millet considère Anders Breivik comme « tout à la fois bourreau et victime ». Il assimile ce massacre à un nouveau symptôme de l’échec de la littérature, supplantée par le fusil d’assaut.

      À bonne école :

      Il participe à la guerre du Liban en 1975-1976 en tant que volontaire auprès de la communauté chrétienne, plus particulièrement au sein des Phalanges libanaises.

    • Et ça n’a pas traîné : sur RMC (via Arrêts sur image), Olivier Truchot, Elizabeth Lévy, Gilles-William Goldnadel s’inquiètent que le massacre perpétré par un islamophobe donne une mauvaise image de l’islamophobie.

      Face aux 40 morts de Christchurch, les télé-islamophobes ne désarment pas
      https://www.arretsurimages.net/articles/face-aux-40-morts-de-christchurch-les-tele-islamophobes-ne-desarment

      https://video.twimg.com/ext_tw_video/1106851251306811392/pu/vid/640x360/lxvwcd397Lpmp8WJ.mp4

      Caroline Fourest sur Twitter (via @mona) :
      https://twitter.com/carolinefourest/status/1106509831026999298

      Un terroriste d’extrême droite qui croit au « grand remplacement » n’est pas juste « islamophobe », il n’a pas peur de l’Islam. Il est RACISTE, anti-Musulmans. Il voit tous les Musulmans, et non leur religion, comme une menace. Mal nommer, c’est minimiser. #ChristchurchShooting

      Renaud Camus sur Twitter :
      https://twitter.com/renaudcamus/status/1106870609168994304

      L’attentat de Christ Church est d’abord atroce et criminel, c’est un monstrueux forfait. Très accessoirement, il est aussi imbécile, puisqu’il dessert gravement la cause que (peut-être) il prétend servir, la lutte contre le remplacisme global, crime contre l’humanité du XXIe s.

    • Soyons précis avec Jean-Yves Camus : Breivik citait Finkielkraut et l’Eurabia, le nouveau taré titre « Le grand remplacement », mais ça n’a rien à voir.
      https://www.ladepeche.fr/2019/03/16/on-retrouve-lhypothese-dune-riposte-aux-attaques-islamistes-selon-jean-yve

      Le tueur fait référence à une théorie élaborée par le Français Renaud Camus intitulée le « grand remplacement ». Est-ce une référence pour les extrêmes droites radicales ?

      C’est une théorie en vogue, mais Camus, qui a formulé la théorie du grand remplacement, n’est pas sur la même ligne que le tueur. Quel que soit le caractère contestable des idées de Renaud Camus, il n’a jamais prôné la violence, il ne fait pas référence au nazisme et ne se présente pas comme fasciste. Il est souverainiste, anti-immigration et proche du Siel (Souveraineté Identité et Libertés, extrême droite, NDLR). La théorie du grand remplacement a « fait sa vie » et est arrivée dans les mains de gens pour qui l’action politique est devenue insuffisante et qui ont basculé dans la violence.

    • 24h Pujadas sur Twitter : Guillaume Tabard « joue à de la comptabilité »
      https://twitter.com/24hpujadas/status/1106606907723264005
      https://video.twimg.com/ext_tw_video/1106606702189776897/pu/vid/640x360/L3JsLBliVVfRoNa-.mp4?tag=8

      « On a vécu en France un terrorisme islamiste assez meurtrier, si on veut jouer à de la comptabilité, on n’est pas encore dans l’équilibre. Il ne faut pas s’aventurer sur le terrain du match retour » @GTabard @Le_Figaro

    • Remarquez bien, dans le genre « meurtrier », ce matin je lisais ça : https://www.francetvinfo.fr/monde/asie/attentats-a-christchurch/attentat-en-nouvelle-zelande-ou-que-j-aille-les-envahisseurs-etaient-la

      Son parcours de radicalisation

      Le tireur décrit les raisons de sa radicalisation en évoquant l’attentat de Stockholm (Suède) en 2017 et sa déception lorsqu’Emmanuel Macron l’emporte face à Marine Le Pen. Mais ce qui le décide à commettre cette attaque, ce sont ses impressions lors d’un voyage en France : "Le déclic final fut l’observation de l’état des villes et villages français. Où que j’aille, les envahisseurs étaient là."

      Charles Martel, sors de ce corps !

      Les médias français ne feraient-ils pas preuve d’une certaine #complaisance vis à vis de la radicalisation d’extrême-droite, des théories du grand remplacement et du suprématisme blanc ? (C’est une question que je n’arrête pas de me poser).

      Vous avez aimé la lepénisation des esprits. Alors passez sans plus attendre à la trumpisation. ---> Trump again punts on white supremacy after New Zealand attacks - CNNPolitics
      https://edition.cnn.com/2019/03/16/politics/donald-trump-new-zealand-white-supremacy-muslims

    • Mais aussi Géraldine Woessner sur Twitter (repéré par @le_bougnoulosophe) – attention, attrape un sac à vomi avant de te lancer :
      https://twitter.com/GeWoessner/status/1107071339016392704

      C’est insupportable. Si les mots on un sens, celui de « théorie » du grand remplacement est particulièrement mal choisi. Petit thread à l’attention des apprentis-combattants de la droite-extrême et des populismes.

      La « théorie du Grand Remplacement » n’est PAS une « théorie » : c’est une PEUR, qui s’appuie sur des éléments concrets, que nous fournissent les pays qui, contrairement à la France, tiennent des statistiques ethniques....

      Le « remplacement » de populations n’a rien de fantasmatique : il est advenu dans maintes villes des USA ou du Canada, où les Latinos sont maintenant majoritaires, et nos grands médias s’en sont fait l’écho : https://t.co/OjbJKtLHgB

      Ce n’est pas un mal : c’est un FAIT. Dicté par la science démographique, avec lequel il faut composer. Il explique en partie l’élection de Donald Trump. Parfois, on sait l’affronter avec sang-froid et pragmatisme. On en débat ouvertement. On discute des politiques à conduire...

      Le fait que des extrêmes aient repris ce concept n’y change rien : JE ne crois PAS qu’un pouvoir « remplaciste » œuvre pour m’imposer un ordre « mondialiste ». Je ne crois PAS à la supériorité d’une race sur une autre. Ma si la pression démographique m’inquiète… #CestGraveDocteur ?

      En France, on ne débat PAS. RIEN. On préfère NIER les taux de natalité plus élevés de populations allogènes, au motif que la République, très forte, serait capable d’intégrer chacun dans son grand creuset laïc et républicain...

      Tant pis si ça ne marche pas.
      On fera semblant que si.
      Et ceux qui ont "peur", parce qu’ils voient les populations changer autour d’eux, qu’ils doutent de la volonté de l’ État d’imposer ses standards, seront vilipendés.
      Votre peur ? « Un fantasme. Une théorie ».

      Cet argumentaire, en plus d’être absurde, est d’une violence inouïe.
      UN sentiment, par définition, ne peut être une « théorie. » Si autant de gens, en France, en GB, en Allemagne, en Hongrie… Sentent leur « identité culturelle » menacée et le disent, QUI sommes-nous...

      ...pour décréter que leur ressenti ne vaut rien ? Ne devrions-nous pas, plutôt, entendre leurs craintes et tâcher d’y répondre ?
      Si nous sommes sûrs que ce risque de « grand Remplacement » est un fantasme, ne devons-nous pas apaiser aves des études basées sur des données fiables ?

      Nous sommes tellement habitués à contempler l’UE marcher sur la tête et s’autodétruire, que nous ne songeons même plus à exiger d’elle qu’elle se dote des instruments de sa survie. Des outils, une recherche, une prospective intelligentes. Des instruments statistiques signifiants.

      A défaut, et vu le niveau du débat, marqué de haines, de rancunes, d’amalgames, je redoute que tout cela finisse dans un bain de sang... Je pèse mes mots.
      Il n’est jamais trop tard pour s’ausculter, pour faire Nation. Je veux savoir QUI sont mes frères...

      Ce qu’ils pensent, ce qu’ils croient, ce qu’ils espèrent.
      Des statistiques ethniques me donneraient l’occasion de partager leurs vues. De comprendre. De connaître.
      Leur absence est un voile, une insulte à l’avenir, terreau de l’outrance. Un blanc-seing pour tous les extrêmes.

      Si on a vraiment besoin d’arguments sur ces histoires d’allogènes qui nous remplacent avec leur taux de natalité de lapin sous Viagra, on a le thread de Jacques Caplat ici :
      https://twitter.com/nourrirlemonde/status/1107282903996743680

    • [ARCHIVE]

      Two sentenced to life imprisonment in hate media trial (2003)
      https://rsf.org/en/news/two-sentenced-life-imprisonment-hate-media-trial

      “We are pleased that this case has finally reached a conclusion despite countless procedural delays and obstacles,” Reporters Without Borders secretary-general Robert Ménard said. “This is the first time that journalists have been sentenced to life imprisonment for incitement to murder and violence in their reports,” he said.

      “We hope these sentences are seen as a warning to the many journalists in Africa and elsewhere who also stir up hate in their writing,” Ménard added. “Even if no country is today in a situation comparable to Rwanda’s at the time of the genocide, these sentences should serve as a call to order to all the publications that constantly flout the most elementary rules of professional ethics and conduct.”

      en français:

      « Nous souhaitons que ces condamnations soient perçues comme un avertissement en direction de nombreux journalistes qui, en Afrique ou ailleurs, attisent, eux aussi, les haines par leurs écrits. Même si aucun pays ne connaît aujourd’hui une situation comparable à celle qui prévalait au moment du génocide rwandais, cette condamnation doit résonner comme un rappel à l’ordre pour toutes les rédactions qui bafouent quotidiennement les règles les plus élémentaires en matière d’éthique et de déontologie professionnelles », a ajouté Ménard.

      https://www.ifex.org/rwanda/2003/12/05/rsf_welcomes_life_sentences_against/fr

    • Hier soir, le Centre Anne Frank a choisi très curieusement de partager un lien vers un article du néoconservateur David Frum expliquant qu’il faut fermer les frontières, « sinon ce sont les fascistes qui le feront » :
      https://twitter.com/annefrankcenter/status/1107383900471521281

      We need compassion and deliberation in our approach to #immigration. #education #humanity ⁦⁦@davidfrum⁩

      avec en référencement cet article :
      https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2019/04/david-frum-how-much-immigration-is-too-much/583252

      If Liberals Won’t Enforce Borders, Fascists Will - We need to make hard decisions now about what will truly benefit current and future Americans - David Frum

      Énorme retour de manivelle, le centre publiait ensuite une série de 10 messages pour tenter d’expliquer qu’il s’agissait seulement d’ouvrir un dialogue. Mais le timing d’un tel référencement (« fermer les frontières sinon les fascistes s’en chargeront », au lendemain du massacre en Nouvelle Zélande) n’est pas expliqué.

      EDIT. Finalement tweet retiré, avec un message posté à la place :
      https://docs.wixstatic.com/ugd/7279dd_c6e89ff1f5f74d269aab5418f1c657e7.pdf
      (et toujours pas d’explication sur le timing d’un tel sujet).

    • Le grand remplacement est en marche et l’absence de LBD est responsable du saccage des Champs-Elysées
      https://www.telerama.fr/television/le-grand-remplacement-est-en-marche-et-labsence-de-lbd-est-responsable-du-s

      Nathalie Saint-Cricq salue une Marine Le Pen “consensuelle”, David Pujadas laisse libre court à Robert Ménard pour soutenir la théorie du grand remplacement, un expert de BFMTV estime que les LBD sont trop dangereux pour les employer ailleurs que “dans les banlieues”… Nous sommes en France, en 2019. Bienvenue à la télé.

  • #collapsologie en mode administration du désastre parce que ce terme est tellement galvaudé qu’il est devenu le “backdoor” de tous les suppôts du productivisme en mode “globalized” qui nous enjoignent de devenir “résilients”. La “résilience” est un vaste enfumage, seule la Résistance paiera.

    Un texte de Nicolas Casaux (Deep Green Resistance) #DGR qui commence par cette introduction :

    J’ai récemment proposé une tribune à Reporterre. Elle ne leur a pas plu. Je la publie donc ici avec, en complément, un passage rapidement traduit du dernier livre de Theodore Kaczynski, Anti-Tech Revolution, Why and How ? [Révolution anti-tech, pourquoi et comment  ?], qui rejoint l’objet de ma tribune.

    Le ton est donné, je vous livre la suite :

    http://partage-le.com/2019/02/sauver-la-civilisation-sauver-le-monde-regler-tous-nos-problemes-etc

    • Pour mémoire (la mienne, œuf corse) la bio de Theodore Kaczinsky (alias « Unabomber ») : https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theodore_Kaczynski

      Bien évidemment, les technophiles ne parviendront pas à « déterminer les avancées » du progrès technique, ni à s’assurer qu’elles « améliorent la société » et soient amicales envers les humains. Sur le long terme, les avancées technologiques seront « déterminées » par les luttes de pouvoir intestines entre les différents groupes qui développeront et utiliseront la technologie à seule fin d’obtenir plus de pouvoir. […]

    • Et donc, suite à la lecture de la « fiche » du bonhomme sus-cité (wow !), j’en conclus que la « deep green resistance » fait fausse route si elle n’a à nous proposer comme référence que ce genre d’allumé. Il faudra que j’en parle à Nicolas Casaux (quand j’aurai un moment).

    • " Pourquoi l’avenir n’a pas besoin de nous ". Par Bill Joy

      L’avis du co-fondateur et Directeur Scientifique de Sun Microsystems, et coauteur de La Spécification du Langage Java sur les prévisions de Theodore Kaczinsky :

      « Je ne suis aucunement un apologiste de Kaczynski. Ses bombes ont tué trois personnes pendant une campagne de terreur de 17 ans et ont blessé plusieurs autres. Une de ses bombes a gravement blessé mon ami David Gelernter, un des informaticiens les plus brillants et les plus visionnaires de notre temps. Comme beaucoup de mes collègues, j’ai senti que j’aurais facilement pu être la cible suivante d’ Unabomber.

      Les actions de Kaczynski étaient meurtrières et, à mon avis, d’un fou criminel. Il est clairement un Luddite, mais se limiter à cette affirmation n’écarte pas son argument ; aussi difficile qu’il soit pour moi de le reconnaître, il y a un certain mérite dans le raisonnement de ce passage. Je me suis senti contraint d’y faire face. »

      https://enuncombatdouteux.blogspot.com/2010/06/pourquoi-lavenir-na-pas-besoin-de-nous_24.html

    • Pas de problème @sinehebdo ça mérite d’être mentionné dans cette compilation (travaux de compilations pour lesquels on ne te remerciera jamais assez) et ça mérite qu’on en reparle ici même parce que, je sais pas vous, mais ça me laisse un peu perplexe, toute cette comm’ de Nicolas Casaux. Enfin, je suis peut-être parano ...

    • @sinehebdo J’ai envie de supprimer cette discussion parce qu’elle ne débouchera sur rien et que la problématique que j’ai évoquée plus haut me prend la tête. J’ai écrit à Nicolas Casaux par le biais de sa page Facebook. Les réponses (la sienne plus celle d’un autre participant) que j’ai eues ne me satisfont pas vraiment, pour ne pas dire pas du tout, à part des recommandations à lire certains livres. Pourrais-tu éditer ton post où tu mentionnes cette discussion et en remplacer le lien
      (https://seenthis.net/messages/680147#message760828) par celui qui mène directement à l’article de Nicolas Casaux sur son site partage-le.com ?

    • Oui, on peut lire ce qu’il a écrit. Et je me reconnais dans ses idées mais pas dans ses actes. Et non, je ne crains pas qu’il sorte un jour de sa prison ou envoie des porte-flingues pour me butter. Il paie sa dette à la société ? Très bien. Seulement, comme je l’ai écrit à N. Casaux :

      je ne peux m’empêcher de penser que Kaczynski était un meurtrier. Vous me rétorquerez peut-être que c’était pour une « juste cause ». Mais à mon avis, la plus juste et plus noble des causes ne justifie pas que l’on use de tels procédés pour la défendre. Oui, on peut être amené à tuer pour défendre sa propre vie ou celle de ses proches mais ici, nous avons à faire à autre chose : une personnalité au mental perturbé reclus dans une cabane isolée et lui-même coupé de toute vie sociale qui fomente ses mauvais coups pour se venger de qui ou de quoi : du mauvais sort que lui a réservé la vie ? Alors il est vrai que je n’ai pour info que celles livrées par Wikipédia. Ce n’est peut-être pas objectif. Éclairez-moi je vous prie car lorsque vous mettez en exergue ce genre d’auteur emprisonné depuis 20 ans et qui parvient tout de même à faire sortir ses publications de son cachot hautement sécurisé, je ressens comme une sorte de blocage.

      C’est une sorte d’empêchement « moral » à cautionner ce qui a été publié sur partage-le.com et ses avatars facebookiens.
      mais bon, ceci dit, je peux aussi me désabonner de la page de Casaux sur Facebook. J’aurais peut-être dû commencer par là d’ailleurs. Par contre il n’est pas trop tard pour le faire.

    • Euh tu fais ce que tu veux sur tes fils hein, mais concrètement c’est quoi l’intérêt de supprimer un seen comme ça ? C’est pas juste une conversation, avant tout seenthis sert à référencer des contenus, faire de la veille, et là bah c’est un article parmi d’autres sur le sujet, et gardé en mémoire par 10 autres personnes. Donc pourquoi le supprimer ?

    • Voir ma réponse ci-avant @rastapopoulos mais sinon, je peux supprimer juste le baratin (le mien, j’entends ainsi que les réponses qui lui ont été apportées) qui pollue le seen. C’est toujours possible, me semble-t-il. Par contre, c’est vrai que j’avais oublié le but premier de Seenthis, à savoir référencer des infos et éviter de faire part de ses états d’âmes. Cela m’a déjà été reproché. So sorry ...

    • Bah non chacun fait part de ses commentaires… ou pas. Chacun fait ce qu’il veut. On l’utilise comme bon nous semble, c’est un outil protéiforme. Mais de mon point de vue, une fois qu’on a référencé un contenu sur internet et qu’il a eut l’air d’intéresser plusieurs personnes (en bien ou en mal, mais qui ont pensé que c’était intéressant de le garder en mémoire), alors c’est un peu dommage ensuite de le supprimer. Ce qui n’empêche ni de supprimer des commentaires ou de les modifier pour enlever ou changer des phrases.

    • Salut @Sombre.
      Pour avoir tenté de discuter plusieurs fois avec Nicolas Casaux, en particulier sur des écrits où il fait de la transphobie au prétexte que les trans demandent les mêmes droits à la procréation assistée et favorisent la marchandisation du corps, reprenant le discours de certains chez Deep Green Résistance, je te confirme qu’il a basculé du côté obscur du mec qui adore s’écouter « penser » en public sur facebook quitte a dire des énormités.
      Je l’ai viré de ma liste des gens éclairants et, s’ il continue, il rejoindra celle des confusionistes puisque son explication était qu’il se basait sur la définition anglaise de la trans-identité... je vous laisse juges de l’argument mais pour moi c’est de la fumisterie.

    • Ce que je voulais dire c’est qu’il est parfois intéressant de lire des textes de personnes qu’on désapprouve par ailleurs, et c’est encore mieux si on fait précéder ce texte de réserves, d’un commentaire, d’une mise en contexte, d’une mise en garde, un peu comme tu fais ici, et c’est très bien comme ça, non ?

    • @val_k qui dit que :

      Pour avoir tenté de discuter plusieurs fois avec Nicolas Casaux, en particulier sur des écrits où il fait de la transphobie au prétexte que les trans demandent les mêmes droits à la procréation assistée et favorisent la marchandisation du corps, reprenant le discours de certains chez Deep Green Résistance, je te confirme qu’il a basculé du côté obscur du mec qui adore s’écouter « penser » en public sur facebook quitte a dire des énormités.

      Je connaissais son point de vue sur la question. Bon, en tout cas, comme ce n’est pas vraiment son domaine d’expertise, je ne m’étais pas focalisé plus que ça sur son avis. Pour ce qui est du « reste », euh ... force est de constater que tu n’as pas tout à fait tort, au vu de la réponse qu’il a adressée à mon commentaire sur sa page FB.
      Et sinon, quand on veut de la doc sur un sujet précis, il faut bien reconnaître qu’on l’obtient assez rapidement ici. Et donc, merci à toutes celles et tous ceux qui documenteront ce fil de discussion mais sans tomber dans une exégèse de la « pensée Kaczynski »

    • " La nef des fous " par Théodore Kaczynski ( 1999 )
      http://enuncombatdouteux.blogspot.com/2016/12/la-nef-des-fous-par-theodore-kaczynski.html

      Il était une fois un navire commandé par un capitaine et des seconds, si vaniteux de leur habileté à la manœuvre, si pleins d’hybris et tellement imbus d’eux-mêmes, qu’ils en devinrent fous. (...)
      Le mousse se racla la gorge :
      -- Hem. Vous avez tous de bonnes raisons de vous plaindre. Mais il me semble que ce qui est vraiment urgent c’est de virer de bord et de mettre le cap au sud, car si nous continuons d’aller vers le nord, nous sommes sûrs de faire naufrage tôt ou tard, et alors vos salaires, vos couvertures et votre droit à sucer des bites ne vous serviront à rien, car nous serons tous noyés.
      Mais personne ne lui prêta la moindre attention : ce n’était que le mousse. (...)
      Mais comparées à notre vrai problème – le fait que le navire continue vers le nord – vos réclamations sont mineures et insignifiantes, parce que si nous ne virons pas bientôt de bord, nous allons tous sombrer avec le navire.
      -- Fasciste ! dit le professeur.
      -- Contre-révolutionnaire ! s’écria la passagère.
      Et l’un après l’autre, tous les passagers et membres de l’équipage firent chorus, traitant le mousse de fasciste et de contre-révolutionnaire. Ils le repoussèrent et se remirent à maugréer à propos des salaires, des couvertures à donner aux femmes, du droit de sucer des bites et de la manière dont on traitait le chien.
      Le navire continua sa route vers le nord, au bout d’un moment il fut broyé entre deux icebergs. Tout le monde se noya.

    • 8 février 2010.
      Christopher Lynn Hedges (né le 18 septembre 1956 à Saint-Johnsbury, au Vermont) est un journaliste et auteur américain. Récipiendaire d’un prix Pulitzer, Chris Hedges fut correspondant de guerre pour le New York Times pendant 15 ans. Reconnu pour ses articles d’analyse sociale et politique de la situation américaine, ses écrits paraissent maintenant dans la presse indépendante, dont Harper’s, The New York Review of Books, Mother Jones et The Nation. Il a également enseigné aux universités Columbia et Princeton. Il est éditorialiste du lundi pour le site Truthdig.com.

      Nous sommes à l’orée d’un des moments les plus dangereux de l’humanité…

      Aleksandr Herzen, s’adressant, il y a un siècle, à un groupe d’anarchistes qui voulaient renverser le Tsar, leur rappela qu’il n’était pas de leur devoir de sauver un système mourant, mais de le remplacer : « Nous pensons être les médecins. Nous sommes la maladie ». Toute résistance doit admettre que le corps politique et le capitalisme mondialisé sont morts. Nous devrions arrêter de perdre notre énergie à tenter de les réformer ou à les supplier de bien vouloir changer. Cela ne signifie pas la fin de la résistance, mais cela implique de toutes autres formes de résistance. Cela implique d’utiliser notre énergie pour construire des communautés soutenables qui pourront affronter la crise qui se profile, étant donné que nous serons incapables de survivre et de résister sans un effort coopératif.

      Ces communautés, si elles se retirent de façon purement survivaliste sans tisser de liens entre elles, à travers des cercles concentriques formant une communauté étendue, seront aussi ruinées spirituellement et moralement que les forces corporatistes déployées contre nous. Toutes les infrastructures que nous édifions, tels les monastères du Moyen-âge, devraient chercher à maintenir en vie les traditions artistiques et intellectuelles qui rendent possible la société civile, l’humanisme et la préservation du bien commun. L’accès à des parcelles de terres cultivables deviendra essentiel. Nous devrons comprendre, comme les moines médiévaux, que nous ne pouvons pas altérer la culture plus large, qui nous englobe, au moins à court terme, mais que nous devrions être en mesure de conserver les codes moraux et la culture pour les générations qui viendront après nous. La résistance sera réduite à de petits et souvent imperceptibles actes de désobéissance, comme l’ont découvert ceux qui ont conservé leur intégrité durant les longues nuits du fascisme et du communisme du 20ème siècle.

      Nous sommes à la veille d’une des périodes les plus sombres de l’histoire de l’humanité, à la veille de l’extinction des lumières d’une civilisation, et nous allons entamer une longue descente, qui durera des décennies, sinon des siècles, vers la barbarie. Les élites nous ont effectivement convaincu du fait que nous ne sommes plus aptes à comprendre les vérités révélées qui nous sont présentées, ou à combattre le chaos entrainé par la catastrophe économique et environnementale. Tant que la masse de gens effrayés et désorientés, gavée d’images permettant son hallucination perpétuelle, demeure dans cet état de barbarie, elle peut périodiquement se soulever avec une furie aveugle contre la répression étatique croissante, la pauvreté étendue et les pénuries alimentaires. Mais la capacité et la confiance nécessaires pour remettre en question et défier à petite et grande échelle les structures de contrôle lui feront défaut. Le fantasme des révoltes populaires étendues et des mouvements de masse renversant l’hégémonie de l’État capitaliste n’est que ça : un fantasme.

      Mon analyse se rapproche de celles de nombreux anarchistes. Mais il y a une différence cruciale. Les anarchistes ne comprennent pas la nature de la violence [Pas d’accord du tout avec ce passage et ces déclarations sur « la violence » et « les anarchistes », la violence (définit comme l’utilisation de la force, ou la lutte armée) est une tactique de lutte, elle peut être complémentaire de la non-violence, les deux ne s’excluent pas mutuellement, Chris Hedges se contredit d’ailleurs puisque dans plusieurs articles très récents il incite à l’insurrection et à des « formes de résistance physique », NdT]. Ils comprennent l’étendue de la putréfaction de nos institutions culturelles et politiques, ils comprennent la nécessité de sectionner les tentacules du consumérisme, mais pensent naïvement que cela peut être accompli par des formes de résistance physique et des actes de violence. Il y a des débats au sein du mouvement anarchiste — comme celui sur la destruction de la propriété — mais lorsque vous commencez à utiliser des explosifs, des innocents commencent à mourir. Et lorsque la violence anarchique commence à perturber les mécanismes de gouvernance, l’élite au pouvoir utilisera ces actes, aussi anodins soient-ils, comme une excuse pour déployer une quantité disproportionnée et impitoyable de force contre des agitateurs suspectés et avérés, ce qui ne fera qu’alimenter la rage des dépossédés.

      Je ne suis pas un pacifiste. Je sais qu’il y a des périodes, et j’admets qu’il est possible que celle-ci en soit une, où les êtres humains sont obligés de riposter contre la répression croissante par la violence. J’étais à Sarajevo durant la guerre de Bosnie. Nous savions exactement ce que les forces serbes entourant la ville nous feraient si elles parvenaient à percer les défenses et systèmes de tranchées de la ville assiégée. Nous connaissions l’exemple de la vallée de Drina ou de la ville de Vukovar, ou un tiers des habitants musulmans avaient été tués, et le reste regroupé dans des camps de réfugiés ou de déplacés. Il y a des moments où le seul choix qui reste, c’est de prendre les armes pour défendre votre famille, votre quartier, votre ville. Mais ceux qui se sont avérés les plus aptes à défendre Sarajevo provenaient invariablement des milieux criminels. Lorsqu’ils ne tiraient pas sur les soldats serbes, ils pillaient les appartements des Serbes ethniques de Sarajevo, les exécutaient parfois, et terrorisaient leurs camarades musulmans. Lorsque vous ingérez le poison de la violence, même au nom d’une juste cause, cela vous déforme, vous corrompt, vous pervertit. La violence est une drogue, c’est peut-être même le plus puissant narcotique qui soit pour l’espèce humaine. Les plus accros à la violence sont ceux qui ont accès à des armes et un penchant pour la force. Et ces tueurs émergent à la surface de tout mouvement armé et le contaminent à l’aide du pouvoir toxique et séduisant qui accompagne la capacité de détruire. J’ai observé cela, guerre après guerre. Lorsque vous empruntez ce chemin, vous finissez par confronter vos monstres aux leurs. Et le sensible, l’humain et le gentil, ceux qui ont une propension à protéger et prendre soin de la vie, sont marginalisés et souvent tués. La vision romantique de la guerre et de la violence est prévalente chez les anarchistes et la gauche profonde, comme dans la culture dominante. Ceux qui résistent par la force ne renverseront pas l’État capitaliste, et ne soutiendront pas les valeurs culturelles qui doivent être défendues, si nous voulons un futur qui vaille le coup d’être vécu.

      De mes nombreuses années en tant que correspondant de guerre au Salvador, au Guatemala, à Gaza et en Bosnie, j’ai appris que les mouvements de résistance armés sont toujours des produits mutants de la violence qui les a engendrés. Je ne suis pas naïf au point de penser qu’il aurait été possible pour moi d’éviter ces mouvements armés si j’avais été un paysan sans terre du Salvador ou du Guatemala, un Palestinien de Gaza ou un Musulman de Sarajevo, mais cette réponse violente à la répression est et sera toujours tragique. Elle doit être évitée, mais pas au prix de notre propre survie.

      Traduction de Nicolas Casaux sur son site : http://partage-le.com/2015/12/effondrement-du-systeme-point-zero-par-chris-hedges

      L’original en anglais : http://medialeft.org.uk/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=113:chris-hedges-zero-poi

      Par contre, ne cherchez pas la source d’origine : y a plus rien à voir ! ...

      Sur l’auteur de l’article : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chris_Hedges

  • A Story of Slavery in Modern America - The Atlantic
    https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2017/06/lolas-story/524490

    The ashes filled a black plastic box about the size of a toaster. It weighed three and a half pounds. I put it in a canvas tote bag and packed it in my suitcase this past July for the transpacific flight to Manila. From there I would travel by car to a rural village. When I arrived, I would hand over all that was left of the woman who had spent 56 years as a slave in my family’s household.

    #esclavage_moderne et meci @fil

  • America Is Not a Democracy - The Atlantic
    https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2018/03/america-is-not-a-democracy/550931

    The subversion of the people’s preferences in our supposedly democratic system was explored in a 2014 study by the political scientists Martin Gilens of Princeton and Benjamin I. Page of Northwestern. Four broad theories have long sought to answer a fundamental question about our government: Who rules? One theory, the one we teach our children in civics classes, holds that the views of average people are decisive. Another theory suggests that mass-based interest groups such as the AARP have the power. A third theory predicts that business groups such as the Independent Insurance Agents and Brokers of America and the National Beer Wholesalers Association carry the day. A fourth theory holds that policy reflects the views of the economic elite.

    Gilens and Page tested those theories by tracking how well the preferences of various groups predicted the way that Congress and the executive branch would act on 1,779 policy issues over a span of two decades. The results were shocking. Economic elites and narrow interest groups were very influential: They succeeded in getting their favored policies adopted about half of the time, and in stopping legislation to which they were opposed nearly all of the time. Mass-based interest groups, meanwhile, had little effect on public policy. As for the views of ordinary citizens, they had virtually no independent effect at all. “When the preferences of economic elites and the stands of organized interest groups are controlled for, the preferences of the average American appear to have only a minuscule, near-zero, statistically non-significant impact upon public policy,” Gilens and Page wrote.

    #démocratie #etats-unis #kleptocratie «#élite»

  • The Making of an American Nazi. How did #Andrew_Anglin go from being an antiracist vegan to the alt-right’s most vicious troll and propagandist—and how might he be stopped?

    On December 16, 2016, Tanya Gersh answered her phone and heard gunshots. Startled, she hung up. Gersh, a real-estate agent who lives in Whitefish, Montana, assumed it was a prank call. But the phone rang again. More gunshots. Again, she hung up. Another call. This time, she heard a man’s voice: “This is how we can keep the Holocaust alive,” he said. “We can bury you without touching you.”


    https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2017/12/the-making-of-an-american-nazi/544119
    #extrême_droite #néo-nazis #USA #Etats-Unis
    cc @marty