IDEAS FROM POP CULTURE TO POLITICS, TECHNOLOGY, PHILOSOPHY, BUSINESS, MEDIA, SPORT, AND LIFE
Tuesday, June 21, 2005
Spent an incredible summer day watching the first Monday of Wimbledon with some new Canadian friends. Watched Sharapova, Henman and Nadal (see picture right) practice. Watched a number of matches and just reveled in the atmosphere which was the best I remember at the old English club.
See the pictures in the
Chris Brauer Media Gallery for a sense of how close you get to the action.
Off to
Glastonbury this weekend so will report on return. Suppose there should be a few stories ...
Labels: london, photography, sport
Saturday, June 18, 2005
It is with great pleasure that I announce the launch of BlogScholar (www.blogscholar.com)!
Blogscholar is a brand new non-profit website designed to serve as a community for academic bloggers. It currently includes a directory of academic blogs, news and polls about the challenges and opportunities of academic blogging, and RSS Newsfeeds by topic from the likes of Noam Chmosky, Larry Lessig, and Joi Ito.
Built with Mambo open source software, the community is designed to be shaped by its users. The launch of Blogscholar as a hub of activity for academic blogging precedes the September, 2005 launch of my PhD research portal Netmodern (The Rebirth of the Sociological Imagination).
So visit to see what's happening in the world of academic blogging or sample blogs by academics generally about academic topics. If you are currently a teacher or student set up an account to add your blog to the directory, read/write comments and contribute news.
After six days of strenuous development from the conception of the idea to the implementation of the site this is a quiet launch, posted here on the perimeter of the blogosphere.
I dedicate the launch of this site to my parents, Jorn and Shirley, both educators, who fostered a healthy respect for learning and sharing knowledge in our house even before I can remember. :-)
Labels: education, internet
Wednesday, June 15, 2005
Living in London provides lots of time for contemplation, if not quiet contemplation. Traveling by public transport is usually the best and most effective way of getting to your destination. That gives lots of time for reading a book or newspaper, listening to music, playing chess on your PDA, or tap-tap-tapping on mobiles.
My latest fascination (I am definitely not alone) is Sudoku, a Japanese number puzzle game that is now a mainstay promotional element of nearly every daily newspaper in the UK. It is also starting to spread around the world.
The recent fad found its roots in the Times in November, 2004 and has a rich recent history. To learn the rules, this flash tutorial is fun or read a textual description of how to play (it is so simple).
So take a look at your local newspapers to see which one is carrying the game on a regular basis or just try out Sudoku online at the following spots. Sometimes you will actually be able to hear your brain sizzling. According to scientists to promote a healthy mind eat eggs, listen to Mozart and play Sudoku. Not necessarily in that order. Don't say I didn't warn you:
Sunday, June 12, 2005
Russian mystic and novelist Leo Tolstoy said
everyone thinks of changing the world, but no one thinks of changing himself. And you know the world is changing when the
slang word used for
cool is
book, the first option given by the
predictive text on mobile phones when typing
cool. And from the
Daily Mirror last week comes an offering and translation of London street slang from the baffling phrase:
"I hope these skangers are wankstas because if they're langers we could get happy slapped - be careful, some of the kutas are carrying chibs."to the Collins English Dictionary translation:
"I hope these casually dressed working class youngsters are pretend gangsters because if they are disagreeable men we could get beaten up and filmed. Be careful, some of the nasty youths are carrying knives."
Filmed with a camera phone in a craze that has reached sufficient penetration in the general London population that it is not unusual to hear on a night bus one say to the other, only half joking: "Don't fall asleep! You'll get happy slapped!" Naturally there has been discussion of how these acts might relate to the violent tv and video games available in the market.
When Frankie Roberto first published his take on the happy slapping phenomena he never could have guessed that the article would become the most popular page on his website overnight. Scroll down on this page to read the comments (commenting no longer permitted) for an idea of the slang used in discussion of the fad, probably by teenagers searching for happy slap videos. Living in south London where the craze is said to have emerged it is a recognizable meme, on the lips at watercoolers and bus stops. Recently the idea of using your phone to capture video to later show off has led to the even grimmer bravado of 'train chicken' in some kids.
It is difficult to reconcile this craze of filming violent attacks on mobile phones with the fanfare that greeted the initial sale of 3G licenses and the subsequent, if delayed, arrival of the advanced networked multimedia capabilities delivered by the third generation mobile networks.
I first heard about the fad months ago when speaking with a young man living in Kennington who told me about it as he frantically texted a friend: "They just slap you silly. You fall asleep or they just come across you in numbers. It's crazy innit?"
Issues of appropriate use of camera phones is an issue all over the world, see this article for example from the early days of the technology in Japan, or this piece on how Rumsfeld banned camera phones from US military installations in Iraq out of fear of misuse (not much imagination needed here). And Africa is the fastest area of global growth in mobile phone use.
The sociological conclusion is that camera phones are a technology like any other, open to benefit or misuse depending on who is in control. As a society we need to evolve flexible ways of interpreting, understanding and responding to the impact of the technologies on our communities and social interaction. Policy makers are slowly adjusting to the new forces of power introduced by technologies like mobile camera phones. Or maybe we just need to admit that we haven't actually advanced much further beyond life as apes, who would undoubtedly find a happy slap a funny gag.
See also on the Chris Brauer Media Project:
Labels: london, sociology
Saturday, June 11, 2005
There are few stories in the brief history of the WWW that better describe the sociological conflict embodied in humanity's interaction with modern media.
If you are not familiar with the story of Quebec teenager Ghyslain (it's like asking if you are familiar with the Internet), a brief synopsis will suffice as there are countless sites out there providing
complete histories of his saga. In 2003 a video of him using a golf-ball-retriever as a light saber and making Jedi sounds was released on Kazaa by fellow students, apparently without his consent. Within five days this video was "remixed" to include special effects, sound and graphics. Here you can watch the
original, and the
remix (files are windows streaming media and windows player is required). Subsequently and with a little less originality he was remixed into
Lord of the Rings,
Braveheart,
Kill Bill,
Undercover Brother, the
Matrix, and even somewhat unconvincingly in Canadian cult classic
Strange Brew.
What kind of insight can we glean into the WWW society that with over 12 million people saving the original video Ghyslain is "the most downloaded man on the Internet" (Paris Hilton is the most downloaded woman)?
Well somewhat unsurprisingly it suggests that sex and geekdom are the two big sellers on the Internet. And while the former attracts widespread appeal in the population both on and off line, it is in the latter that the Internet has uniquely provided a vehicle for voice. For although these videos can be seen from bland to mildly amusing and even hilarious it is in the sociological interpretation that the popularity resides. Geeks are a rambunctious bunch at the moment, organizing their own dinner parties, punts, and parties and though some geeks have been self-identifying forever it has never been easier. The speed of change in technology and the benefits and methods of harnessing technical knowledge to promote a lifestyle of choice has made being a geek more desirable than ever.
Maybe that is why this community seems so determined to embrace Ghyslain as one of their own. A unscientific but nonetheless textual analysis of the comments on many of the major posts regarding the Star Wars Kid reveals traditional themes in this regard. Sixty-four per cent of the over 200 posts that are positive about Ghyslain make some reference or similar to how he is "one of us" or that "we were like you" and how cool it is that he has been "embraced" by the geek community.
The only problem is that there is precious little evidence that Ghyslain self-identifies as a geek or is pleased with the attentions of the community. In fact quite the opposite. The only two interviews available with him are a National Post email correspondence shortly after the video was released where he indicates that he "wants his life back" and a transcript of a telephone call that reads like an iPod advertisement with Jish Mukerji of the now defunct Jish.nu who along with Fark and Andy Baio of Waxy.org helped propel Ghyslain's popularity. Baio and Mukerji were later responsible for the campaign to buy Ghyslain an iPod and some Future Shop certificates as a symbol of their allegiance and support. The only problem again is that none of this seems to be driven by any expressed desire by the Quebec teenager. Could anything be more revealing of the lack of regard for his wishes than the lack of questioning in this interview of whether he wanted them to promote his cause (instead ... Do you also read weblogs????). In a French interview with Radio Canada his lawyer (the family sued the other teenagers who put the video up on Kazaa) indicates that the family had pleaded with all media to stop promoting the story and drawing attention to Ghyslain's situation. Is it a big leap to assume that all media applies to online media?
So before the geeks start slapping each other on the back for a job well done getting the boy an iPod, and starting a campaign to get him into Star Wars III (how about over 146,000 signatures???) it should be noted that all of this goodwill may not have been received as such. Despite repeated pleas from Baio for an update including this one just months ago, the silence from Ghyslain and his family speaks volumes.
Perhaps surprisingly the most lucid response to the situation came from Lucasfilm spokeswoman Jeanne Cole: "We are deeply saddened by this current situation and any difficulties this uninvited publicity might be causing Ghyslain and his family. We have no other statement."
Hopefully we will never know whether the publicity avalanche drove Ghyslain into permanent psychiatric care (his parents indicated that he would be under such care for an indefinite amount of time when filing their lawsuit) or if he felt deep gratitude at his fame and has been reveling in it ever since.
The sociological conclusion is that none of this was ever about the Quebec teenager but instead fed the need for the geeks, bloggers, privacy lawyers, guerilla video editors and star wars aficionados to express themselves through his story. All of the rest of it is just bold-faced speculation, unnecessary and uncomplicated and unfortunately Ghyslain has been forced to embody this meme by an excitable audience. It provides unwelcome support for Thomas Hobbes' view of man as naturally selfish hedonist -- "of the voluntary acts of every man, the object is some good to himself". Important to note that while Hobbes held this view of the world he also saw that men would rebel against recognizing this indication and would often see themselves as outside but observant of this natural law.Labels: internet, sociology
Friday, June 10, 2005
So what's all the fuss about?
Podcasting is
growing fast and is part of a revolution in mediums, this time stomping on the turf of traditional radio. I built my first podcast by learning from this tutorial on
creating the audio feed, this tutorial on
creating the rss to make it available and
this feed to get the date format right. I
validated my rss to know that it was built correctly.
Everything seems fine so I hope you enjoy it. For my first podcast I chose to conduct a reading of
Allen Ginsberg's
Howl, one of my favorite poems of all time. There are a variety of ways you can access the file:
- Howl - Allen Ginsberg (rss podcast - ipodder or other required)
- Howl - Allen Ginsberg (windows media stream - windows media required)
- Howl - Allen Ginsberg (mp3 - save to your machine and play)
Labels: internet
Tuesday, June 07, 2005
Just created my first
Google sitemap for the Chris Brauer Media Project. You can see it by visiting
this .xml page . Google lists the advantages of creating a sitemap as:
- You want Google to crawl more of your web pages.
- You want to be able to tell Google when content on your site changes.
Well who doesn't want that? Sounds like a great way of optimizing your site for Google search bots. So how do you create a sitemap?
This article explores the options around this new Google experiment.
Developers are a frantic bunch at the best of times but the release of a new Google service offering like this one really gets them agitated. For the intrepid blogger or webmaster keen to create a sitemap there are already a number of wizard and generator options available.
You can install and execute the official Google Sitemap Generator on your web server. This requires some configuration, specific server requirements and preferably the ability to run cron jobs if you are on a unix server. I didn't select this option mainly because I wanted to quickly generate a sitemap to test the service and also because my web host doesn't allow cron jobs. I'd need to find a different scripting option to take advantage of the recurring script functions (eg. generate a new sitemap and notify Google every time you change the content on your site)
Considering Google only released sitemaps on June 2nd there is an incredible number of options already available for small software applications and wizards helping generate sitemaps. Of course because it is the wild west early days of testing for the programs there is a wide variety of stability and quality out there.
- I tried a couple of web-based options, here, here, and here, but none of them worked for me, indexing only a fraction of the pages on my www.chrisbrauer.com site in the generated sitemaps;
- If you are into ASP (which I am not) you might want to try out this ASP sitemap generator;
- If you have a weblog powered by Blogger you can use this hack to get your blogger template preview to generate a sitemap. I didn't choose this option because I want my sitemap to reflect all the content on my site (gallery, blog postings, basic html pages, etc);
- There is a Windows-based option apparently coming soon at this site;
- This Perl sitemap generator is just some raw code that hasn't been thoroughly tested but pick your poison;
- And finally the option I chose to use, this PHP Generator from Tobias. I installed it on my web server, changed the permissions on the files (666 for sitemap.xml and 775 for phpsitemap.php), and ran the script. I picked the directories and file types I wanted to exclude from the sitemap output and it generated a script that was subsequently submitted to Google through the script. I followed up at Google and submitted my sitemap.xml file myself. This is useful as you can track status (my submission is currently pending);
There are bound to be many more options available to generate sitemaps so I will try for this initial period of this release to keep this list updated. Send me an email at blog at chrisbrauer.com if you know of other available options and I will add them to the list. Otherwise it is useful to keep your eye on Google groups for the latest discussions on sitemaps.
Obviously my initial submission is a test to see how Google handles my sitemap file but in the future it would be useful to find a solution that automatically handles all the necessary script generation and Google notifications each time my site is updated. It's exciting that there might be a straightforward way of ensuring Google indexes all of your content on a timetable of your choosing.
For more recent Chris Brauer Media Project WWW tips see New Media Notes or Blogger/Blogkomm
Labels: internet
Monday, June 06, 2005
There are three main problems for bloggers using
Blogger to power their sites:
- a clumsy comment publishing option that forces users into a different interface (hosted by Blogger) and cannot be integrated into existing web pages;
- lack of Trackback function that can track discussion on a topic across the WWW;
- no category options for publishing different feeds into different categories for navigation and syndication (Update: The new version of Blogger incorporates Labels. See the Blogger Guide to Labels on this site for details.)
This 12-step article looks at how you can address the first problem by integrating comments into your blog using Blogkomm. It concentrates on integration with Blogger, but if you have experience with other blog software or comment integration tools please add your thoughts to this post. After all, I need to wear it in!
So let's get started! I stumbled across the possibility of integrating Blogkomm into Blogger when reading Anne Galloway, a fellow Canadian and PhD student in sociology. Like most Bloggers I am acutely aware when someone is using the same software as me and has some as yet undiscovered functionality available. I followed the link on her blog to Blogkomm, and so began the half-day installation journey documented here.
The WWW is full of stories of people's frustrations at trying to install an not comprehensively documented piece of open source code that promises so much if you could only get it to work. Installing Blogkomm can be a frustrating experience as the intrepid blogger looks to piece together resources from across the Internet with the eventual goal of integrating the commenting system into your blog. It is by no means the only commenting system out there for bloggers using software that doesn't deal well with comments but in the end it provided an elegant and effective solution for me. I have listed the steps I eventually took as contribution to future efforts to install and integrate comments into blogs.
- Visit http://www.blogkomm.com/index.php and try out the commenting system by posting a comment on any of developer Holger Kreis' postings. You can see a number in [square brackets] under each post indicating the number of comments. Click on this link to open up comments for that post. If there are no posts this will simply open up the comment authoring form embedded in each post. Also take a whirl around the admin-demo to get a sense for how you can manage and moderate comments (a nice feature of the latest release of Blogkomm offering some protection against comment spam)
- Click on download on the left navigation and follow a link to the appropriate blogkomm_2_3_final file (either .tar.gz or .zip) and 'open'. Unpacked the file includes a folder 'Blogkomm'. Rename this folder something else and upload to the root directory of your weblog (where your index page for your blog is located ... e.g. for me it is http://www.chrisbrauer.com/weblog/
- There are three useful pieces of support on the Blogkomm website. Open up two browser windows (file > new>window) and navigate to the "how-to" section and the .pdf document supporting Blogkomm 2.2. You will need to consult these documents regularly as you make your way through the install. Also useful if the the FAQ. Open a third window and point your browser to the set-up index page http://root_directory/blogkomm_directory/setup/index.php. Follow these steps that are well documented. You can also configure your setup through the conf file in blogkomm/module/conf on your server for those who don't want the wizard functionality. You should arrive at a point where you have a PHP "code snippet" that you are instructed to insert into your Blogger template.
- At this point you can either go into your Blogger settings and 'hide' comments or just let them appear where they normally would in your blog and when you are satisfied with the appearance of the new commenting system remove them. Also note that blogkomm will pick up the email address you have on file for your Blogger profile, NOT the one you have normally associated with your comments if you indicated that you wanted email notification when comments are posted on your site. So change your profile email address to the one you'd like to be notified on. Insert the PHP code snippet into your template in the location you want the [n] of comments to appear. Also insert the following code at the very top of your template:
<?php
if (isset($rem)) {
setcookie ("blogKo_name", $comm_name,time()+1209600);
setcookie ("blogKo_mail", $comm_e_mail,time()+1209600);
setcookie ("blogKo_www", $comm_website,time()+1209600);
}
if (!isset($button)) {
$comm_name = $_COOKIE["blogKo_name"];
$comm_e_mail = $_COOKIE["blogKo_mail"];
$comm_website = $_COOKIE["blogKo_www"];
}
session_start();
?>
This will ensure your admin functions work.
- First make sure that none of the stylesheet classes being used are already on your site. Copy the stylesheet data from the blogkomm.css file in the blogkomm directory you unpacked and paste it into the head of your Blogger template. This will ensure that the commenting functions will pick up the appropriate styles generated automatically by the script. Save your template
- Go into your Blogger settings and change the name of the index pages for your blog and your archive to a .php extension (eg if your blog is http://yoururl.com/index.html the new address will be http://yoururl.com/index.php). In archive you can change the name of your archive page (default is archive.html) to archive.php. This step will ensure that your PHP code will work on your blog pages to allow the commenting system to function. When you next publish your entire blog the index page will change to index.php and your archive directory pages (eg months/weeks) will also change. But making this change will not change the individual blog pages to .php extension. You do that in STEP 8. Now publish your entire blog. Don't worry about your existing comments as they are still stored and are not impacted by the implementation of Blogkomm.
- If everything is going according to plan you should see [n] underneath your blog postings. If you are using expandable post summaries on your blog front page like I do, you should see [n] under both the post intro and the full story.
- Now for a bit of the unglamorous slog. I'm sure there is a better way to do this step so don't hesitate to suggest but this is how I did it. In order to change the file names of past individual posts from .html to .php the only method I found that worked was to publish each individual post through your Blogger admin. It seems to be a common challenge but the solution proposed in that forum (to turn off archive and turn back on again) didn't work for me. Oh well, it doesn't actually take that long and it gives you a chance to review all your old posts. Once you have published each individually, publish your entire blog again and all the pages should now have a .php extension allowing comments to function on every page.
- This next step is even stinkier. I wasn't sure what to do about the fact that search engines had indexed all of my blog when the file extensions were .html, also links to my individual posts on other blogs and in forums were aimed at pages with a .html extension. If I left it with my pages being overwriten with .php extensions those links would not work. So I created a quick and dirty redirect page. (Click on this link and hit stop on your browser to view source of my redirect page. Just save the file and change the urls to point to your pages by opening it in a text/html editor) I copied the page as the file names of all my individual posts and added .html extensions. So now in each of my archive directories are a filename.php and a filename.html that redirects to filename.php. When search engines visit or someone clicks on links to .html pages they are redirected to the appropriate .php page. It also helps by not losing any Google PageRank your pages might have. But this took about an hour and was a real pain in the ass. It is also helpful to copy the file into all of your directories as archive directories do not automatically generate index pages allowing access to your file structures online. A common redirect file called index.html can be uploaded into every directory (including your renamed Blogkomm directory) to shift users back to the home page of your blog. If you don't do that this or this can happen.
- To transfer over my old comments I again did it manually by turning comments on in Blogger settings and republishing my entire blog. This led to me being able to see the old comments and the new comment submission form at the same time and transfer over existing comments. Again an opportunity to review blog postings if you haven't had enough of yourself already.
- You can make changes to how the comment form and output appear in your blog by adjusting the content of the appropriate style classes in the HEAD of your Blogger template. These are well commented in the code for you to make changes and you can fiddle with div.blogkbox to control the look of the comment form, and div.blogkcomments for control of the look of the comment output. If you are linking to the stylesheet (eg. link href="/weblog/blogkomm/blogkomm.css" type="text/css" rel="stylesheet") you need to make changes in the blogkomm.css file.
- Optional is to go into your blogger template and insert the code snippet generated from setup/index.php for adding recent comments to your sidebar. You can configure the number of comments and teaser in module/recent_comments_sidebar.php. You can make changes to the style with the style class div.blogkcommentsrecent.
You can decide for yourself whether it is worth your while to integrate the commenting system into your blog. When I installed Blogkomm to my satisfaction I found it to be a big improvement on the default comments. It is so encouraging that one developer can create something of so much use to everyone. It is really our job as users to provide the supporting noise to help with many succesful Blogkomm implementations.
Please comment if you have any tips regarding Blogkomm, commenting software, or further Blogger extensions.
See: Other web tips in New Media Notes on the Chris Brauer Media Project
Labels: blog, internet
Friday, June 03, 2005
Not since the great
Sampras vs Agassi matches at the turn of the century has the tennis world got so excited about a prospective clash.
Roger Federer, 23, is the undisputed number one player in the world but the Swiss artisan looking to inherent Sampras' torch has so far failed to capture the French Open,
elusive to so many of the greats.
Not since the super-cool
Mats Wilander (I loved hearing his
commentary on the Eurosport feed from Paris) has a player won the
French Open on his debut.
Rafael Nadal, the 19-year-old
Spanish phenom, can do it this year if he can overcome Federer and take the final.
Media and fans have been anticipating this match since the draw came out for the French Open. Federer won a grinding 5-set encounter earlier this year in Miami that was the match of the season so far. Nadal won their first and only other match. This is tennis at its best!Labels: sport
Thursday, June 02, 2005
Ridley Scott has a habit of making entertaining movies. I felt my first real chill watching a film, I mean genuinely scared, in the eerie silences of the crashsite in the original
Alien (in space no-one can hear you scream).
And in a virtuoso performance of swashbuckling drama and entertainment, who doesn't get tingles down their spine thinking of the mighty
Gladiator bringing his fellow slaves together in a protective circle of shields to thwart their Goliath enemy.
So it was with great expectations that I lined up at
Marble Arch, London to see his new film,
Kingdom of Heaven, not least because of the subject matter. Anyone who has spoken with someone from the Muslim world will know the esteem in which Sultan Saladin, hero of Islam, is held. And the
Crusades are host to some of the most captivating storylines in human history.
The purpose of this review is not to analyze the plot or quality of the film (you can find that here, here, here, or here). The Muslim community warmly received the release of the film. According to Professor Jack Shaheen in his book Reel Bad Arabs, only Native Americans outdistance Arabs and Muslims in being vilified by Hollywood. But Muslim viewers were pleased with the balance in the film.
But a debate has raged over the film and the history it portrays. Some Christians welcome the questions raised by the film but others react with angry rants, call it propaganda, or Osama Bin Laden's version of history.
"Professor Jonathan Riley-Smith, a Cambridge academic and expert on the Crusades, has labeled it 'Osama bin Laden's version of history'. He questioned its historical accuracy, saying its basis lies in the romantic thrillers of Walter Scott, though screenwriter William Monahan has the support of academic experts in pointing to real-life figures and events as the basis for the major characters and events in the film." (Observer)
Of particular interest to me was the historical context of the film, squeezed between Crusades and just prior to the story of the 3rd Crusade, perhaps the most dramatic of them all, when Richard the Lionheart marched on Jerusalem. This is alluded to at the end of the film and several of the stories described are recounted by James Reston Jr. in Warriors of God, a book recommended to George Bush in the wake of Sept. 11. It's not clear if he read it or not but it is encouraging to see how easily people are making connections between events in the 12th century and those currently unraveling. What is clear by watching the film is how relevant the issues causing the strain in relations between people of different faiths remain today. It doesn't take very much imagination to see how Muslim people may view activities in the Gulf as nothing more than continuity of history, another Crusade. Nor is it difficult to imagine how Christians can loop together Bin Laden and Saladin as faces of Islam, though very different men.
This contrast is embodied by Saladin's remarks in the film, when explaining to Ballion, defender of Jerusalem (of all the historical characters in the film Ballion seems the most invented), why he is willing to allow the people sheltered within the walls safe passage in exchange for the city instead of murdering them all as was done in a previous Christian crusade: "I am not like those men."
And in Reston's captivating text we find reference to Richard the Lionheart allowing safe passage for the Muslims inside the walls as Christians took the city. This is the kind of precedence that can inspire reconciliation. For surely the easiest thing to imagine of all is the idea that all humans on earth are linked in a shared humanity. We must respect each other to respect ourselves.
Kingdom of Heaven may be open to many criticisms from many perspectives but it deserves applause for making an effort, in a historical epic movie kind of way, to promote reconciliation between people and faiths. By reducing the contrast between the two sides of the conflict it effectively shows the similarities. And instead we find the distinctions in the characters of the men involved, not the skin or religion.
Other recent Media Project reviews:
Theatre of the New Ear - Coen Brothers and Charlie Kaufmann one-night-only sound play
Dispatches - Michael Herr on Vietnam
Labels: film
One can only imagine the horror on the faces of the organizers of the
Make Poverty History campaign when they learned that the
white armbands at the
heart of the campaign were being manufactured in
sweatshop conditions in China.
The news came as delicious irony to those who see such organized movements as
fruitless but speaks more to the challenges of management than ethics. Of course we can assume the movement would never have used the armbands if they were aware of the conditions at the manufacturing source. But the fact that such a massive undertaken could be duped after all the manufacturing and shipping is complete speaks to the challenges of not just supporting ethical enterprise but practicing it.
Such are the challenges of working within a system to change the system. By the sounds of the explanations it is as simple as not enough research going into the source of the manufacturing in order to save a buck. Classic economics and it is immeasurably difficult to make yourself immune from opportunism when participating in the market.
But sweatshops can come in all shapes and sizes, or not. Wired contributing editor Julian Dibbell wrote about 'virtual sweatshops' for the magazine in January, 2003 but later questioned whether more evidence could be produced of their existence. It seems that by their very nature sweatshops are a dirty secret or an embarrassing mistake for those who employ them. Discreet little enterprises feeding the culture of consumption in rich societies.
Now you see them, now you don't.Labels: internet, sociology