through europe - memory http://th-rough.eu/taxonomy/term/479/0 en Tendencies of Life and Death http://th-rough.eu/writers/locke-eng/tendencies-life-and-death <span class='print-link'></span><div class="rtecenter"> <img alt="" rel="lightbox" src="/sites/default/files2/gallery/vanitas2.jpg" style="width: 500px; height: 399px;" /></div> <div class="rtejustify"> &nbsp;</div> <div class="rtejustify"> Life forever holds within itself, coiled at the very centre of its unfolding, the fearful promise of death. That death, emerging from the shadows of the living, from the darkness that forever follows the living, brings about an absolute end-of-life, brings down its sickle upon the vitality of the existent in order to return it to nonexistence. Death then, the absolute, final end-of-life, is that nothingness, that emptiness, that hollow darkness, which is forever stalking the living, anticipating that twilight upon which it may exercise its right to return ashes to ashes and dust to dust, restoring that which is living to the barren desolation of the non-living. &nbsp;This is the terror that has plagued the thought of the Western <em>episteme</em> since at least the conception of <em>episteme</em> as such.</div> <div class="rtejustify"> &nbsp;</div> <div class="rtejustify"> Such a conception of death, as that which brings an absolute end-of-life, has been persistent, and for all good sense, and indeed philosophy, it appears as though it could be no other way. How can it be possible for one to speak of death other than as an absolute end-of-life? Is it not precisely a complete and absolute lack of life that is characteristic of death? It would appear foolish to attempt to think otherwise, to think death as something other than the final, absolute and total end-of-life. Nevertheless, in spite of its apparent stupidity, its total lack of good sense, its absurdity, and indeed as some might say, its impossibility, that is precisely the task to now be placed at hand, that of thinking life and death tendentially; that is to say what is here sought is an interrogation of the tendential relationship between the living and the non-living. The failure of the Western <em>episteme </em>to think death in a manner other than what I shall be calling the <em>finalist</em> conception does it great disservice (and let me be clear early on that on the one hand there is indeed <em>a episteme</em>, <em>the</em> <em>episteme</em>&mdash;that is the <em>episteme</em> of ontology, metaphysics and logos&mdash;for in no other way and at no other time has <em>episteme</em> been thought as such, that is as <em>episteme </em>and as Western; whereas, on the other hand, there is indeed a heterogeneity of <em>epistemes</em> that is irreducible to <em>an episteme</em>, a difference that is not internal but rather demonstrates unavoidably the open and connective nature of <em>episteme</em> itself, that allows <em>episteme</em> to form from that which is other than <em>episteme</em> and forever prevents its closure). Such a conception, that of absolute death, paralyses thought under the stifling force of fear and sorrow, and leaves us unable to even approach questions regarding the living. Our minds, moulded as they are by the <em>episteme</em> of finalist death, reel in horror at anything that is not static, clear and oppositional, anything that approaches the fluidity of life and indeed its relationship with the non-living.</div> <div class="rtejustify"> &nbsp;</div> <p><a href="http://th-rough.eu/writers/locke-eng/tendencies-life-and-death" target="_blank">read more</a></p> locke-eng ars vitae episteme good death individuality knowledge life memory English Mon, 28 Apr 2014 14:32:13 +0000 Toby Austin Locke 364 at http://th-rough.eu Zakira/Memory http://th-rough.eu/writers/witt-eng/zakiramemory <span class='print-link'></span><div> <div class="rtejustify"> This text comes at the time of great worry for the neighbouring countries of Syria as the violence threatens to spill over further and that there is a consensus to let Syria sort its problems out itself without foreign intervention. It is important to consider the fact that this following text exists as a result of illegal activity in neighbouring Israel that has continued since the second world war to present day and that any military intervention against Syria only serves Israel&rsquo;s interests, either as a diversion for the continual expansion and even advancement further into the West Bank, or for any additional advancement that borders Syria, either for water or land, or for testing out military capabilities.&nbsp; I find it genuinely hard to see if Israel has any concern for its civilian population given its behaviour in international and regional affairs over the last 65 years and the State&rsquo;s refusal to desist in both the advancement of settlements or further attacks and incursions into the West Bank, Gaza, Southern Lebanon, Jordan River or Golan Heights. An allied attack by the US, France - or Israel - on Syria is going to be catastrophic for the region&rsquo;s stability. Watching Britain&rsquo;s offering of televised democracy to pull out of military intervention was a tormenting relief that was almost surreal in both the immediacy of the decision and that the government was actually listening to the public.</div> </div> <p><a href="http://th-rough.eu/writers/witt-eng/zakiramemory" target="_blank">read more</a></p> witt-eng archive art Lebanon memory Palestine Syria youth English Wed, 11 Sep 2013 16:18:57 +0000 Nathan Witt 342 at http://th-rough.eu Abandoning Nationality and Superstition http://th-rough.eu/writers/witt-eng/abandoning-nationality-and-superstition <span class='print-link'></span><div class="rtejustify"> <em><br /> If you take a city such as Salonika or Smyrna, you will find there five or six communities each of which has its own memories and which have almost nothing in common. Yet the essence of a nation is that all individuals have many things in common; and also that they have forgotten many things. No French citizen knows whether he is a Burgundian, an Alan, a Taifale, or a Visigoth, yet every French citizen has to have forgotten the massacre of Saint Bartholomew,&rsquo; or the massacres that took place in the Midi in the thirteenth century. There are not ten families in France that can supply proof of their Frankish origin, and any such proof would anyway be essentially flawed, as a consequence of countless unknown alliances, which are liable to disrupt any genealogical system.(1</em>)<br /> Ernest Renan, lecture given at the Sorbonne, 1882. <p> This is an idea inspired by a comment about Cairo&rsquo;s City of the Dead as a place where the spiritual goal is to celebrate the absence of judgment, which is to be left for God(2) and in many other people&rsquo;s case in God&rsquo;s absence. The City of the Dead reveals more than a vernacularized classification of death or the cultural appreciation of idol worship - regardless of being urban or rural. It is also a place of mutual habitation between the living and the dead where people live, cleaning the family house: the Leichenhauser. That habitation is mirrored, anchored, by the collective memories of people and amnesia, trauma and other emotions. This text is nothing but an attempt to try and encourage an aspiration and joy towards an abandonment of judgementalism in social spaces without discussing participation or religion. The migrancy of people from the countryside to a necropolis might not be borne out of a desire to participate but socio-political pragmatism, or human despair- and motives that are also prone to migrate and change.</p></div> <p><a href="http://th-rough.eu/writers/witt-eng/abandoning-nationality-and-superstition" target="_blank">read more</a></p> witt-eng art Community liminality memory nationalism nationality superstition English Mon, 06 May 2013 15:56:40 +0000 Nathan Witt 329 at http://th-rough.eu