Report from Babylon

by titaka

This work has been commented by 2 editor(s). Read the comments

Title

Report from Babylon

Concept author(s)

Marita Cosma

Concept author year(s) of birth

1977

Concept author(s) Country

Italy

Friendly Competition

Love Conflict Imagination (2010-2011)

Competition category

Critical writing

Competition field

nonacademic

Competition subfield

activist

Subfield description

search and spread the truth

Check out the Love Conflict Imagination 2010-2011 outlines of Memefest Friendly competition.

About work

Abstract

History is wider and deeper than the propaganda on terrorism, but it is as much bloody and cruel. Too damn much. War is never a solution, it is just a matter of imperialism. No anger, no regret, no revenge, not even defence can ever justify a genocide. Nazism is not just a ghost, we are not blind. It is time for a very deep change, for a safe and fair new world.

Keywords

war nowar terrorism gaza israel nazism genocide humanrights hope change peace

Editors Comments

Daniel Marcus

This is a very impassioned piece of writing and calls mainly for acknowledgement of the pain that Marita felt that inspired her to write it. Thank you for trying to maintain a sense of decency and humanity in a world that too often justifies squelching those feelings in the name of one cause or another. Also, thank you for not simply falling for propaganda from one side or another, even though when we are in distress about the state of the world, it is tempting to look at things only in black-and-white terms that make it all easier to grasp, and then to place it in an intellectual or emotional comfort zone. The best way to confront these feelings is to be involved in an active project where you can see some results, although almost certainly the results will be modest in scope – perhaps you already are doing so.

Nikolai Jeffs

Although I have a lot of sympathy for some of the sentiments expressed in this short non-academic essay, I feel that, precisely in order to be more effective, the arguments presented here should have been subjected to more elaboration and backup. As they stand now they do not do proper service to the case studies and theories offered by critical writing.
Furthermore, the work, concentrating on the specific example of the Israeli-Palestine conflict could also have benefited from seeking to supply answers to questions such as what are the roles of imagination and love as fuelling, transcending, etc., this conflict itself? Given that the essay is written out of an activist competition subfield, a further question that demands answering is what are the possible practical and more collective strategies of resistance? Finally, the effectiveness of the arguments would have gained immensely if the essay had been subjected to a detailed review and correction of its use of the English language.

Comments