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- Newsgroups: rec.arts.books
- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!umn.edu!csus.edu!netcom.com!tmaddox
- From: tmaddox@netcom.com (Tom Maddox)
- Subject: Re: Cultural Appropriation and the New Age
- Message-ID: <1992Dec23.192222.10975@netcom.com>
- Organization: Netcom Online Communications Services (408-241-9760 login: guest)
- References: <18844@mindlink.bc.ca>
- Date: Wed, 23 Dec 1992 19:22:22 GMT
- Lines: 27
-
- In yuppie shops in Berkeley, you will find "primitive" artwork from
- Central America, Armenia, and Asia, much of it straightforwardly part of the
- religious practice of the people who made it (this includes paintings on
- leather, cement statuary, tapestries, various icons, etc.).
-
- The work is usually divorced entirely from its original context and
- is in fact being offered for the esthetic pleasure of the urban dweller with
- (often significant) disposable income.
-
- Next year, or the year after, I imagine these relics will no longer
- be chic.
-
- While I generally stand foursquare in favor of cultural mixing
- (which has given us, e.g., much of the best popular music of the 20th
- century), I confess the practice I've just described makes me uneasy.
-
- If not wrong in some sense, it seems callous, tasteless, at least
- tangentially dehumanizing. Or just in touch with the times. (Welcome to
- the late 20th century, Mr. Maddox. You're a science fiction writer, are
- you not? I thought you *lived* here.)
-
-
- --
- Tom Maddox
- tmaddox@netcom.com
- "That's a bird bone, chair, Bob. I don't know if I should sit there."
- Tom Waits
-