Sunday, 8 March 2009

Internet Dating Chinese Style

Recent received first message from a guy on a dating site. I love the punchy straight to the point first line.

"I like you and want to marry you,do you want marry me too?"

Then followed by a brief education CV starting with primary school.

Then a long list of character traits, including the awesome "team spirity". Contact details then a no pressure final line as follows.

"do you want to marry me this year?my parents and my sister hope me get marriage this year,too."

Amazing!
Will have to meet him just for the experience.
None of this "get to know each other first", or "see how it goes".

Saturday, 7 March 2009

New(ad)Venture Shanghai

Thank you for everyone who came to the exhibition. It was a great success and was great to see everybody's work.

Please feel free to look at my new artwork on my new website.

http://lucindaholmes.org/home.html

Best wishes

Lucinda

Thursday, 29 January 2009

Saturday, 24 January 2009

speech - when to say and when not to say

Just been listening to some Chomksy talking on youtube. I am interested in the question of freedom of speech. Do I have the right to say things that would cause the death of many others, even if my hand is not the cause of their death, but the result of the context in which I speak? The site of the utterance I have already discussed being the underlying content rather than the content.

Saturday, 10 January 2009

Thoughts - propoganda

I was thinking about freedom of speech again today. It is obviously important to be able to freely express your opinions. But, at the same time things like the MMR scare illustrate the power of comment, and the lack of criticality in the general public. The press in the west is not 'free' we pay for it, and they write and cover what the general public is interested in, and its reportage manner is generally lacking in complexity, whether that be in-depth / historically or contextually based.

Has there been a survey of the type of vocabulary used in left newspapers over the last 20 years and how has its difficulty/accessibility has changed.

Is there any relation between freedom and speech and consumerism?

I am living in China and i like it here, but freedom is speech is not the same. It is not really what I say, but where it is said, what context it is placed, who I am saying it to. Or, rather who really is my intended audience. There are similarities in the UK, there are many things I can't do, for example read out a list of the soldiers who had died in the Iraq war anywhere near Whitehall (I can't remember whether this is still the case). But, ridiculous as it is or was it was very real. There is thought and things said that aren't in awe of China's government here.

In the UK, I also felt that there were things that I could not say. The power of shared Nationhood is just as powerful, but the consequence may well be different. The construction of political correctness, the UK's idealism of multiculturalism and individualism, ironically is its national heart that is not to be criticised. How does that fit with freedom of speech? The UK's multiculturalism is represented as still something that is subservient to the state, brought about because of those in power. The balance of power is still, what the government/controlling authorities can do for you (they hold the power + control + decision making) and not what the people can do for themselves and there country.

Anyway I am especially interested in looking at how the Chinese and UK government bodies promot themselves in the building up to 2010 and 2012.
So far we have the Olympics with the torch hand over illustrating the two differing attitudes to the construction and maintainance (perpetuation) of the myth of the nation state.

Saturday, 27 December 2008

Diagrams




Wednesday, 17 December 2008

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