Testing — please help

I have upgraded this to Movable Type 4.1; a lot may have gone wrong, and I am in any case taking off to Norfolk for the day. So will kind commentators please comment here and let me know if there are problems? Also, the picture at the top looks much too light. Again, comments are welcome. I should perhaps change it if I can do so without too much drama.

Posted in Housekeeping, nördig | 10 Comments

Beat that, Bishop Dow!

An excellent piece from Rolling Stone of all places about a sort of turbo-charged alpha course. This is more perceptive about the real dynamic of American evangelicalism than you might dare hope: in particular, he gets right the way in which converts, for the most part fat, sad losers, hope to acquire some of the mana of the preachers, who are all manly, happy winners: it is something like the Roman relationship of clienthood.

But it is also, in parts, extremely funny. Here is an exorcism scene, from the end of the weekend:

“In the name of Jesus Christ,” said Fortenberry, more loudly now, “I cast out the demon of lust!”
And the man began power-puking into his paper baggie. I couldn’t see if any actual vomitus came out, but he made real hurling and retching noises.
Now the women began to pipe in. On the women’s side of the chapel the noises began, and it is not hard to explain what these noises sounded like. If you’ve ever watched The Houston 560 or any other gangbang porn movie, that’s what it sounded like, only the sounds were far more intense.
It was not difficult to figure out where the energy was coming from on that side of the room. Some of the husbands glanced nervously over in the direction of their wives.
“In the name of Jesus Christ, I cast out the demon of cancer!” said Fortenberry.
“Oooh! Unnh! Unnnnnh!” wailed a woman in the front row.
“Bleeech!” puked the bald man behind me.
Within about a minute after that, the whole chapel erupted in pandemonium. About half the men and three-fourths of the women were writhing around and either play-puking or screaming. Not wanting to be a bad sport, I raised my hand for one of the life coaches to see.
“Need . . . a . . . bag,” I said as he came over.
He handed me a bag.
“In the name of Jesus, I cast out the demon of handwriting analysis!” shouted Fortenberry.
Handwriting analysis? I jammed the bag over my mouth and started coughing, then went into a very real convulsion of disbelief as I listened to this astounding list, half-laughing and half-retching.
“In the name of Jesus Christ our Lord, I cast out the demon of the intellect!” Fortenberry continued. “In the name of Jesus, I cast out the demon of anal fissures!”
Cough, cough!

It is necessary to prepare people quite deeply before they can get into this state; and the most frightening part of the piece is the description of the preceding routine, which is worthy of L Ron Hubbard himself—a combination of Evangelicalised (reborn?) Freudianism with strenuous prayer pressure over two or three days until gibbering in tongues seems entirely unavoidable and natural.

Posted in God, Journalism | 3 Comments

Comment superfluous

Below the fold is a screenshot from the Daily Mail’s coverage of the Max Mosley scandal: this is part of an article by Stephen Glover arguing that the world does not need a privacy law, even though the News of the World is disgusting.

Continue reading

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For the Duck who has everything

Queen Anne is one of the most sought-after architectural styles. Now your ducks, too, can enjoy it … From The Field, which curiously fails to report that the firm describes the duckhouse (a floating nesting box) as “inspired by Country Life“.

Also, the Field reports that the duckhouse is £2,200 + VAT, which is of course ludicrous. The web site says it’s only £763.75, including VAT. But I fear they have left £2000 off their price, because the other three on there are all £2,500 or more, including the one modelled on a house in Skansen.

Posted in Blather | Comments Off on For the Duck who has everything

Ecstatic blurb

To London, to meet with Pru Rowlandson, the publicity director at Granta. Stunned to discover that she has actually read the book and thought about it. Has no one told her how publishing works? Also, a lovely cover blurb has been secured already from Sean French. So I am feeling extremely smug.

Remind self: must do web site for the book.

Posted in Literature, Sweden | Comments Off on Ecstatic blurb

Thought for the Day

(nothing to do with my life in particular; just a general thought about religion and New Atheist optimism) It is very difficult to live with as little hope as the situation warrants.

Posted in God | 4 Comments

Bad Sex

I have just reread, for the first time in years, David Lodge’s novel of the breakup of pre-conciliar Catholicism in England How Far Can you Go? It is probably the book of the worst sex ever written: that is to say good descriptions of bad sex, rather than bad descriptions of good sex, which are what the Literary Review prize is awarded for each year. At the end of the book I wondered whether God might not, despite everything, take a personal interest in what Catholics do with each other in bed, since it appears miraculous that their activities should ever result in fertilisation. Here is a honeymoon passage:

Though he knew much more about sex, in a second-hand way, than when he was a student, from barrack and mess-room conversation, from reading the manual of military law, and from censoring the mail of other ranks in the Suez crisis, Adrian was shy of talking about it to Dorothy during their short engagement. She was a virgin, of course-so much so that when, prior to retiring to bed on their wedding night, he kissed her attired only in a dressing-gown, she inquired what hard object he was concealing in his pocket. Under the bedclothes she snuggled up to him happily enough, but when he tried to enter her she went rigid with fear and then grew hysterical. It transpired that she knew almost nothing about how a marriage was consummated. Adrian turned on the bedside lamp, sat up in bed, and lectured her on the facts of life. He was a good lecturer, having benefited by his training in the Army and the Catholic Evidence Guild, though he spoke rather more loudly than was necessary and after a while somebody banged on the wall of the adjoining room (they were spending their honeymoon in a small hotel in the Lake District). Adrian continued his lecture in a lower tone, making three-dimensional diagrams in the air with his fingers. Dorothy watched him wonderingly, with the bedclothes drawn up to her chin.

Posted in Blather | 4 Comments

Manly

All modern publicity campaigns centre around a big lie, because they start with surveys of public opinion to discover what is the most inconvenient truth1 about the subject and then deny it. Enjoy then, the RC diocese of New York’s campaign for vocations, whose general theme is “That’s not incense: it’s testosterone”. Priests are manly, manly, manly men. So what is the truth they are ignoring here? Not, of course, that celibacy is particularly unmanly, though it is hard and may be unmanning. No, the problem is that in the USA the priesthood is becoming a largely gay profession. I am not sure that stressing the enormous butchness of the men in frocks is going to solve this problem.

1 sorry, perception

Posted in God | 3 Comments

Revenge!

There is a quite fantastic article by Jared Diamond in the current New Yorker about revenge, which concludes with the touching story of how his father-in-law’s life was poisoned because he never shot a fascist whom he had at his mercy in Poland when the war was ending. I can’t link, because it’s not online, and I can’t scan anything in, because I am on a train. I will try to enlarge this later. In the meantime, get out and buy it.

UPDATE: still not on the New Yorker site, but linked off Brockman’s.

Posted in Journalism | 1 Comment

Students

The use of “Students” in the following story seemed to me to make an important point about higher education today:

Sion Hardy, 24, a town planning student at Liverpool University, had been enjoying a night out at a club in the city centre. As he was leaving in the early hours he bumped into Stephen Lunne, a childhood friend, and another man who had earlier been involved in a violent confrontation with other students. It was the latest skirmish in a long-running feud.
Tania Griffiths, QC, for the prosecution, told the jury that as the men were making their way home through an underpass close to the nightclub they were set upon by four students intent on revenge for an earlier incident in the club.
Mr Hardy fought valiantly to defend himself but was dealt such a severe blow, possibly a kick, to the base of the skull that he collapsed and died of a brain haemorrhage.

The alleged assailants were studying “Sports Science”. I can imagine that drunken students have always fought, but surely one aim of any education, even at primary school, is to instill in people a belief that you should never kick anyone, especially not in the head when they are lying on the ground?

Posted in Blather | 2 Comments