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- Path: sparky!uunet!munnari.oz.au!uniwa!DIALix!tillage!gil
- From: gil@tillage.DIALix.oz.au (Gil Hardwick)
- Newsgroups: sci.anthropology
- Subject: Clinton transition
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <727687368snx@tillage.DIALix.oz.au>
- References: <21612@ucdavis.ucdavis.edu>
- Date: Fri, 22 Jan 93 07:22:48 GMT
- Organization: STAFF STRATEGIES - Anthropologists & Training Agents
- Lines: 42
-
-
- In article <21612@ucdavis.ucdavis.edu> ez012344@chip.ucdavis.edu writes:
-
- > To address the journalist: I'm not sure what the anthropological perspective
- > on media would be, but I suspect that the media is simply engaging in
- > capitalism -- they are more efficient than ever at giving the public what it
- > wants. If the trend was for CSPAN style coverage of political events, the
- > clamor would be such that everyone, in order to stay competetive, would sooner
- > or later be doing it. But CSPANs fanatics are a minority, unfortunately.
- > People magazine's fans are legion.
-
- Perhaps we would be more inclined to stand back away from it a little,
- and make some sort of observation on the event within a wider context.
-
- The previous Stupor Mundi, Frederick II of Hohenstaufen (who had been
- raised by Innocent III, BTW), also had a court to behold. If I were to
- ever (heaven forbid) become the US President, however, I would be quite
- interested also in distracting such an enormous crowd of sycophants
- and lobbyists with entertainments while I settled in, while my aids
- and courtiers achieved some semblance of a queue that I could finally
- begin to hear their pleas in a reasonably coherent order.
-
- That's what jesters are for, isn't it? Frederick had an entire mobile
- zoo full of wild and exotic animals and a harem of Sracen women in tow,
- I believe, as well as such celebrated mathematicians and scholars as
- Fibonachi (sp?).
-
- Indeed, the same can be said here as has been said of Frederick; that
- "he struck men with awe and wonder, but he frightened them too much to
- acquiesce in his rule with equanimity." (Keen 1968, p.165)
-
- Maybe there is something to be said for power being distributed more
- widely, instead of being focussed so in one place. In the end the
- Mediaeval Papacy had itself had a gut full of its own creation, with
- Sicily becoming taxed into oblivion as a locus of civilisation to pay
- for the Emperor's endless wars. It was for no mere children's story
- that the legend of Frankinstein's Monster came into being.
-
- Maybe you bring such monumental bullshit entirely upon yourselves.
-
- Gil
-
-