Archived posts for April 2008

» 94: Aimé Césaire

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Aimé Césaire has died at the age of 94.

His words, however, remain with us.


I see clearly what colonization has destroyed: the wonderful Indian civilizations -
and neither
Deterding nor Royal Dutch nor Standard Oil will ever console me for the Aztecs and the Incas.

I see clearly the civilizations, condemned to perish at a future date, into which it has introduced a principle of ruin: the South Sea Islands, Nigeria, Nyasaland.

I see less clearly the contributions it has made.

Security? Culture? The rule of law?

In the meantime, I look around and wherever there are colonizers and colonized face to face, I see force, brutality, cruelty, sadism, conflict, and, in a parody of education, the hasty manufacture of a few thousand subordinate functionaries, “boys”, artisans, office clerks, and interpreters necessary for the smooth operation of business.

I spoke of contact.

Between colonizer and colonized there is room only for forced labor, intimidation, pressure, the police, taxation, theft, rape, compulsory crops, contempt, mistrust, arrogance, self-complacency, swinishness, brainless elites, degraded masses.

No human contact, but relations of domination and submission which turn the colonizing man into a classroom monitor, an army sergeant, a prison guard, a slave driver, and the indigenous man into an instrument of production.

My turn to state an equation: colonization = “thingification.”

- Aimé Césaire, Discourse on Colonialism (Discours sur le colonialisme)

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» The Politics of Language: A Response to Bilal

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The Politics of Language: A Response to Bilal

Jason personally responds to Bilal’s “Notes on Translation”, and broadens out the discussion to the politics of language in general. He argues we need to go beyond the promotion of learning certain languages by learning the language of critique.

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» Notes on Translation

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Notes on Translation

Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak: “Translation is the most intimate act of reading.” With this thought, Bilal, who is currently working on a translation of a novella, thinks about the process of translation and the role of the translator.

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» UC Berkeley Police Chief Lays a Large One

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UC Berkeley Police Chief Victoria Harrison lays a large one for all to see and smell. The following is an e-mail sent to all students of UC Berkeley regarding the tree-sitting protests that are occurring on campus. Indeed, the UC Police are fully in-line with its “long-standing tradition”, namely, fear-mongering and otherwise not making much sense.

If people in a tree pose a “threat” to the student populace, I suggest that the Chief take a stroll down Telegraph Ave. (a street adjacent to the Berkeley campus) and “protect” us from far more dangerous threats to our security.

Needless to say, as a graduate student of the Ethnic Studies department here at Berkeley, I find it absolutely hilarious that the Chief implies that “just because people take over a lab doesn’t mean we change the curriculum”. The fact is, if Harrison and the UC Berkeley Police were truly aware of the “long-standing traditions” of this campus, Harrison would have known that around 1969 and 1999, Ethnic Studies students and members of the Third World Liberation Front (twLF) protested, and indeed, did change the curriculum and university policy, thank you very much.

I suggest that Ms. Harrison take a few lectures in Ethnic Studies. It may just teach her something she doesn’t know.

- Jason Kim

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