Download Him Or Herself As a Ringtone Pointed to a Broad-Based Dissatisfaction with the Overall Economic Structure of the Nation

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Download Him Or Herself As a Ringtone Pointed to a Broad-Based Dissatisfaction with the Overall Economic Structure of the Nation UCLA UCLA Electronic Theses and Dissertations Title American Liberation Mythologies: Democracy and Domination in U.S. Visual Culture Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/3gx7g43c Author Williams, Kathleen Publication Date 2012 Peer reviewed|Thesis/dissertation eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Los Angeles American Liberation Mythologies: Democracy and Domination in U.S. Visual Culture A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree Doctor of Philosophy in Culture & Performance by Kathleen Michelle Williams 2012 ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION American Liberation Mythologies: Democracy and Domination in U.S. Visual Culture by Kathleen Michelle Williams Doctor of Philosophy in Culture and Performance University of California, Los Angeles, 2012 Professor, Allen F. Roberts, Co-chair Professor David Shorter, Co-chair A myth of liberation saturates the cultural landscape of the United States, structuring the collective consciousness, guiding political action, and disguising the nation’s patterns of domination. This study grew out of a concern over the United States’ engagement in two wars with the stated aims of liberation and the spread of democracy. Anthropological theories of myth assert a reciprocal relationship between political action and creative expression; through myths we reflect upon culture, in culture we enact myths. Popular media is a prominent realm for the creation and performance of contemporary myths. By analyzing performances of popular culture as expressions of the myth of liberation (Bruce Willis’ Tears of the Sun, American Idol, and Clint Eastwood’s Gran Torino), this dissertation delineates the parameters of the national myth that declares an identity of the U.S. as liberator to the world’s oppressed, sanctifies the democratic ideal, and valorizes consumer capital. Analyses also reveal a U.S. identity of dominator in the global community, the betrayal of the democratic ideal through the commoditization of the democratic gesture, and the implementation of segregation and ! ""! terrorization to support the exploitation of consumerism. Myths are paradoxical, and this study asserts that U.S. culture exhibits a societal tension between liberty and domination. In the form of popular culture, myths attempt to mediate this social paradox. Drawing from the methodologies and theories of cultural anthropology, folklore, sociology, media studies, performance studies, U.S. history and international relations this dissertation offers insights into four issues of vital importance: the role of the U.S. in globalization, the recent national crisis in democracy, the violence of consumerism, and the dialectical relationship between popular culture and political action. This research is grounded in the anthropological understanding that cultural products are both models of, and models for, cultural action. Following such an understanding, it concludes by asserting, through reference to the variations of the myth explored, that the producers and consumers of culture have the ability to reconstruct the myth of liberation and move U.S. culture out of its socio-historic patterns of violence and domination and toward a mythic construction of creative intervention and cross- cultural dialogue. ! """! The dissertation of Kathleen Michelle Williams is approved. Stephen Aron Donald J. Cosentino Allen F. Roberts, Committee Co-chair David Shorter, Committee Co-chair University of California, Los Angeles 2012 ! "#! Table of Contents Introduction …..……………………………………………………………………………………..………………………… 1 Part I: Approaches …....…………………………………………………………………..……………………………….. 9 Chapter 1 – Motivations and Methods …..…………………………….…………………………………. 11 Chapter 2 – Standards of Evaluation …..…………………………….………………………………….. 24 Part II: Myths of Intervention …..………………………………………………..………………………………….. 40 Chapter 3 – The Strongest of Mythic Imperatives ….………….…………………………………… 42 Chapter 4 – Violent Intervention …..………………………….………………………………………….. 55 Chapter 5 – Economic Intervention …...…………………………………………………………………. 67 Part III: Scenarios of Democracy ……………………………………………………………………………………. 80 Chapter 6 – From Discovery to Democracy …..………………………………………………………. 82 Chapter 7 – The Democratization of Television …..………………………………………………… 96 Chapter 8 – Traditional Authority Intervenes ………………………………………………………. 111 Part IV: Dimensions of Liberation ……………………………………………………….……………………….. 129 Chapter 9 – On Semiospace ……………………………………………………………………………….. 131 Chapter 10 – Death of the Gunfighter …………………………………………………………………. 147 Chapter 11 – Dilemmas of the Nation …..…………………………………………………………….. 163 Conclusion …...……………………………………………………………….……………………………………………. 179 Notes and Citations …………………………………………….……………………………………………………….. 185 Bibliography ……………………………………………….………………………………………………………………. 200 ! #! List of Figures W. W. Rostow’s stages of economic development …………………………………………………………….. 63 Semiotic chart of Idol Gives Back …………………………………………………………………………………… 73 Richard Schechner’s model of social and stage dramas …………………………………………………….. 99 ! #"! Acknowledgements I offer special thanks to the mentors, colleagues, family and friends who supported me during the duration of this degree. To David Shorter for his interest in my ideas, constructive criticism, theoretical guidance, and for reminding me of the value of topic sentences. To Al Roberts for teaching me that by examining what people create I can come to understand them better. To Don Cosentino for introducing me to post-modernism and critical theory, and for validating my interest in popular culture. To Steve Aron, for indulging my amateur interest in U.S. history and guiding me toward a more thorough understanding of cultural expansion and national development. To Behroze Shroff, for enriching my encounter with post-colonial theory, literature, and film. To Peter Sellars for inspiring me to make this work an act of love. To the Graduate Division of UCLA for awarding me both a Graduate Research Mentorship Fellowship and a Summer Fieldwork and Archival Research Fellowship. To the Department of World Arts and Cultures/Dance for the unparalleled community that it is. To the many friends and colleagues who kindly cared for my children while I scratched out time for studying and fulfilled my apprenticeship duties: Waewdao Sirisook, Cedar Bough Saeji, Mathew Sandoval, Amanda Harrison, Edy Pickens Levin, Sarah Blahut, Hannah Rothblatt, Youn Mee Woo, John Orcutt, Amy Schwartz, Adam Battaglia, Jennifer Musi, Rahel Woldegaber, Carolina San Juan, Sabela Grimmes, Kingsley Irons, Eva Ayamami, Allison Wyper, and Nguyun Nguyun. To the Collard family and the Camp Trinity community, who welcomed my family to the Bar 717 Ranch where much of this dissertation was written. To the Hyampom Arts Magnet School whose staff educated my children while I occupied their library and wrote. To my parents who never doubted any of my abilities and always encouraged me to follow my interests and dreams. To my husband Jeff for his devotion and constancy as we journey together. ! #""! Vita Education University of California, Los Angeles, MA in African Studies 2006 University of Kansas, BA in African & African-American Studies (Departmental Honors) 2003 University of Kansas, BFA in Design/Metalsmithing 2003 Kenyatta University, Kenya - Study Abroad 2002 Teaching Experience Department of World Arts & Cultures/Dance, University of California, Los Angeles Culture: an Introduction Winter 2011 & Winter 2010 Teaching Fellow to Aparna Sharma Teaching Associate to Donald Cosentino Introduction to World Arts & Cultures Fall 2010 Teaching Associate to David Gere Art as Moral / Social Action Spring 2010, Fall 2009 & Winter 2007 Teaching Associate to Peter Sellars Introduction to American Folklore Studies Winter 2008 & Fall 2007 Teaching Assistant to Kerry Noonan Publications Book Review: Every Woman is a World: Interviews with Women of Chiapas. by Gayle Walker and Kiki Suárez. Edited by Carol Karasik. 2008. Austin: University of Texas Press. Reviewed in “The Journal of Folklore Research” June 18, 2009 Exhibitions “Dear Beavers,” medium: poetry. Read in conjunction with Nick Cave’s Soundsuits. Fowler Museum, University of California, Los Angeles May 22, 2010 “WACtivist Demand Banners 1-4,” medium: fabric. Exhibited at It’s all been done before but not by me. UCLA student exhibit at the Hammer Museum, University of California, Los Angeles April 29, 2010 Presentations and Interviews “Save a Life Tonight, Save the World Tomorrow: the Structural Mythology of Global Poverty in American Idol” – Popular Culture Assoc./American Culture Assoc. Annual Meeting, New Orleans April 2009 ! #"""! “A Divided Nation, United in ‘Idol’ Worship,” – by Kim Masters on National Public Radio’s Morning Edition April 16, 2008 “Democracy TV: an Ethnographic Inquiry into American Idol” – presented at Chew on This, Department of World Arts & Cultures/Dance Lecture Series University of California, Los Angeles January 2008 Community Service Hyampom Arts Magnet School – Hyampom, CA Site Council Member, Literacy Tutor, Substitute 2011- present Department of World Arts & Cultures/Dance, University of California, Los Angeles Chew on This Lecture Series – Committee Member, Outreach Coordinator 2008-2010 Los Angeles Unified School District – via K.O.R.E.H. L.A. Literacy Tutor 2004-2006 Awards University of California, Los Angeles: Graduate Research Mentorship Fellowship 2008-2009 Fieldwork & Archival Summer Research Grant 2007 Graduate Fellowship
Recommended publications
  • Hoover Digest
    HOOVER DIGEST RESEARCH + OPINION ON PUBLIC POLICY SUMMER 2020 NO. 3 HOOVER DIGEST SUMMER 2020 NO. 3 | SUMMER 2020 DIGEST HOOVER THE PANDEMIC Recovery: The Long Road Back What’s Next for the Global Economy? Crossroads in US-China Relations A Stress Test for Democracy China Health Care The Economy Foreign Policy Iran Education Law and Justice Land Use and the Environment California Interviews » Amity Shlaes » Clint Eastwood Values History and Culture Hoover Archives THE HOOVER INSTITUTION • STANFORD UNIVERSITY The Hoover Institution on War, Revolution and Peace was established at Stanford University in 1919 by Herbert Hoover, a member of Stanford’s pioneer graduating class of 1895 and the thirty-first president of the United States. Created as a library and repository of documents, the Institution approaches its centennial with a dual identity: an active public policy research center and an internationally recognized library and archives. The Institution’s overarching goals are to: » Understand the causes and consequences of economic, political, and social change The Hoover Institution gratefully » Analyze the effects of government actions and public policies acknowledges gifts of support » Use reasoned argument and intellectual rigor to generate ideas that for the Hoover Digest from: nurture the formation of public policy and benefit society Bertha and John Garabedian Charitable Foundation Herbert Hoover’s 1959 statement to the Board of Trustees of Stanford University continues to guide and define the Institution’s mission in the u u u twenty-first century: This Institution supports the Constitution of the United States, The Hoover Institution is supported by donations from individuals, its Bill of Rights, and its method of representative government.
    [Show full text]
  • Ledding Library News Volume 15, Issue 4 April 2014
    Ledding Library News Volume 15, Issue 4 April 2014 Food For Fines Library Calendar Are your overdue fines growing bigger by the day? Relief is in PROGRAMS FOR ADULTS sight. In honor of National Library Week, the library will be KNIT NITE: THURSDAYS, FROM 6:30PM -8:00PM – FICTION ROOM accepting canned food donations to waive fines Sunday, April 13th FILM & OPEN MIC: WEDNESDAY, APRIL 2ND FROM 7:00PM – 9:00PM POND HOUSE through Saturday, April 19th. Every donated can of food will waive CULTURAL FORUM – SALLIE TISDALE: THURSDAY, APRIL. 3RD AT 7:00PM – 50 cents in fines. This offer applies to late fines only; donated MILWAUKIE HIGH SCHOOL BLACK BOX THEATER, food may not be used to pay for lost items. All of the food will be 11300 SE 23RD AVE. given to the Oregon Food Bank for local distribution. This is a FIRST SATURDAY MUSIC SERIES: SATURDAY, APRIL 5TH AT 2:00PM, great way to eliminate your library fines and help reduce hunger in “PICKLED PEPPERS KITCHEN BAND” IN THE LIBRARY our community at the same time. In the past few years, up to LIBRARY2GO HELP: MONDAYS, APRIL 7TH, 21ST, & 28TH, 1100 pounds of donated food have been collected at Ledding BY APPOINTMENT FROM 6:00PM - 8:30PM – REFERENCE DESK Library during that single week. CALL (503) 786-7546 DR. BUTTLER’S WELLNESS CLASS: TUESDAY, APRIL 8TH AT 6:00PM – POND HOUSE (RSVP AT 503-786-2181) TH New Online Resource Coming This Month: POETRY SERIES – JOHN BEER: WEDNESDAY, APRIL 9 FROM 7:00PM - Pronunicator 8:00PM – POND HOUSE TRIVIA NIGHT WITH “THE LIBRARIAN”: THURSDAY, APRIL 10TH AT 7PM - Pronunciator is a fun and easy way to learn to speak GAMEROOM, 1926 SE SCOTT ST.
    [Show full text]
  • JMGC Vol 7 Is 1
    Vol 7, Iss 1 ISSN: 2165-7726 Jan-Mar 2019 Journal of Military and Government Counseling In this issue: ♦ PTSD and Moral Injury ♦ Military Sexual Trauma ♦ Children in Military Families ♦ First Responders ♦ Brain-Gut-Microbiome Axis Military and Government Counseling Association A Division of the American Counseling Association Journal of Military and Government Counseling Volume 7, Issue 1 ©2019 Letter from the Editors The Journal of Military and Government Counseling (JMGC) is an official publication of the Military and Government Counseling Association (MGCA), a division of the American Counseling Association. The mission of the journal is to promote reflection and to encourage, develop, facilitate, and promote professional development for administrators, counselors, and educators working with all members of the Armed Services and their families, whether active duty, guard, reserve, retired, or veteran; civilian employees of the Department of Defense; first responders including EMS, law enforcement, fire, and emergency dispatch personnel; and employees of Local, State and Federal governmental agencies. Welcome to the latest edition of the JMGC. Starting with this issue we will be expanding the JMGC’s offerings to include more and deeper conversations that will help clinicians to better understand and work with military and first responder personnel. We hope to expand our professional perspectives so we can better understand how to work with and support these populations, their families, and their communities. We intend to include perspectives that you may not expect, but that may (re)open our clinical eyes to the many perspectives that can be included in this area of professional work. So, keep those manuscript submissions coming in and contact us if you are interested in being a reviewer for the JMGC.
    [Show full text]
  • Gran Torino: the Old Cowboy, the Pretty Girl and the Cool Car1 João De
    Gran Torino: The old cowboy, the pretty girl and the cool car1 João de Mancelos (Universidade da Beira Interior) Keywords: Grand Torino, American dream, Hmong, ethnic interaction, hybridity Palavras-chave: Grand Torino, sonho americano, Hmong, interação étnica, hibridismo “Torn from my homelands, I was left to flee. Like dust in the wind, I dispersed silently”. — Shanyia Vang, “My name means free” 1. The silent diaspora Few ethnic groups suffered a diaspora as hard as the Hmong did, forced to abandon China, in the 18th century, and to migrate to Vietnam, Laos, and Thailand, for political and territorial reasons. Between 1919 and 1921, they fought the French colonial authorities in Indochina; after the defeat of the South in the Vietnam War, they endured the revenge of the northern invaders; in 1975, in the year zero of the revolution, they were massacred by Pol Pot. As a result of all these conflicts, numerous Hmong travelled to the US and France, silently dispersing through several other countries (Vang 17-35). The saga of the Hmong has rarely been object of the interest of the North-American cinematography. One notorious exception is the movie The Killing Fields (1984), directed by Roland Joffé, and winner of three Academy Awards. It denounces tyrant Pol Pot and his campaign of terror and ethnic cleansing, during the civil war. The Cambodian leader and his Khmer Rouge were responsible for mass murdering nearly two million individuals, including intellectuals, proprietors, businessmen, and Hmong anticommunists (Olson and Beal 294). In the field of documentary, few movies approach, with scientific rigor, the challenges faced by the Hmong in the US.
    [Show full text]
  • Choosing Detroit As a Backdrop for the Movie Gran Torino Was Obvious
    Gran Torino Choosing Detroit as a backdrop for the movie Gran Torino was obvious. After all, the Motor City put the world on wheels! PHOTO: THE HENRY FORD By the mid 20th century, Detroit had become the motor and young entrepreneurs that are reshaping the city and metropolis of the world. The car industry was on the cutting travelers from around the world are taking notice. edge and the “Big Three” auto companies, Ford, General Motors and Chrysler, forced most smaller competitors out In the movie, Walt Kowalski (played by Clint Eastwood), a of business. recently widowed Korean War veteran, is alienated from his family and angry at the world. The auto industry employed vast numbers of working Detroiters; hundreds of thousands of blue-collar workers Follow in the footsteps of the actors in this four-time award- found work on the assembly lines—one of every six people winning movie. Tour the film locations sites and explore the worked for the automotive industry. places where Clint Eastwood and fellow actors spent their downtime. Get the scoop and discover entertaining behind- Today, Detroit is still the world headquarters of the Big the-scene stories and more. Three, but the Motor City is also home to developers PHOTOS: PHIL ROSSI, THE PADDLE LLC PHOTOS: PHIL ROSSI, THE PADDLE GRAN TORINO STREET SCENE Inside the store is a sign that says, “Clint GOODNITE GRACIE 13140 Charlevoix Street Was Here—Gran Torino 2008.” It is the Royal Oak Grosse Pointe Park exact spot Clint Eastwood stood when The kick-off party for the actors was Take a ride over to this location and see picking out the tools for Tao.
    [Show full text]
  • Cultural and Religious Reversals in Clint Eastwood's Gran Torino
    RELIGION and the ARTS Religion and the Arts 15 (2011) 648–679 brill.nl/rart Cultural and Religious Reversals in Clint Eastwood’s Gran Torino Mark W. Roche and Vittorio Hösle University of Notre Dame Abstract Clint Eastwood’s Gran Torino is one of the most fascinating religious films of recent decades. Its portrayal of confession is highly ambiguous and multi-layered, as it both mocks con- fession and recognizes the enduring importance of its moral core. Equally complex is the film’s imitation and reversal of the Christ story. The religious dimension is interwoven with a complex portrayal and evaluation of multicultural America that does not shy away from unveiling elements of moral ugliness in American history and the American spirit, even as it provides a redemptive image of American potential. The film reflects on the shallowness of a modern culture devoid of tradition and higher meaning without succumbing to an idealization of pre-modern culture. The film is also Eastwood’s deepest and most effective criticism of the relentless logic of violence and so reverses a common conception of East- wood’s world-view. Keywords Gran Torino, Clint Eastwood, film and religion, confession, violence, self-sacrifice, Christ, American identity, multiculturalism, redemption lint Eastwood’s standing as an actor and a director has received Cincreasing attention in recent years, not only in popular books, but also in scholarly works. A sign of Eastwood’s reputation is that both Unforgiven (1992), a revisionist Western, and Million Dollar Baby (2004), a film about a struggling female boxer and her moving relationship with her trainer, received Oscars for Best Director and Best Film as well as nominations for Best Actor.
    [Show full text]
  • UNIVERSITY of CALIFORNIA, SAN DIEGO the Mechanics of Race
    UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, SAN DIEGO The Mechanics of Race: The Discursive Production of Detroit’s Landscape of Difference A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the Requirements for the degree Doctor of Philosophy in Ethnic Studies by Rebecca J. Kinney Committee in charge: Professor Natalia Molina, Chair Professor Lisa Sun-Hee Park, Co-Chair Professor Luis Alvarez Professor Yen Le Espiritu Professor Adria Imada 2011 Copyright Rebecca J. Kinney, 2011 All Rights Reserved The Dissertation of Rebecca J. Kinney is approved, and it is acceptable in quality and form for publication on microfilm and electronically: _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ Co-Chair _________________________________________________ Chair University of California, San Diego 2011 iii DEDICATION The dissertation is dedicated to: Darlene Hall, Amanda Guanco, André Guanco, and Archer Guanco. Thank you for your love and support throughout this journey. And to John Williams—thank you for always believing. I love you. iv TABLE OF CONTENTS Signature Page……………………………………………………………...…………iii Dedication………………………………………………………………………….. …iv Table of Contents…………………………………………………………………... ….v List of Figures……...………………………………………………………………….vi Acknowledgements…………………………………………………………………...vii Vita…..…………………………………………………………………………..........xii Abstract of the Dissertation….………………………………………………..……..xiii Introduction: Tracing
    [Show full text]
  • The Ithacan, 2009-01-29
    Ithaca College Digital Commons @ IC The thI acan, 2008-09 The thI acan: 2000/01 to 2009/2010 1-29-2009 The thI acan, 2009-01-29 Ithaca College Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.ithaca.edu/ithacan_2008-09 Recommended Citation Ithaca College, "The thI acan, 2009-01-29" (2009). The Ithacan, 2008-09. 11. http://digitalcommons.ithaca.edu/ithacan_2008-09/11 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the The thI acan: 2000/01 to 2009/2010 at Digital Commons @ IC. It has been accepted for inclusion in The thI acan, 2008-09 by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ IC. OPINION CARD KEY ACCESS FIRST STEP IN SAFETY, PAGE 10 MIRROR IMAGE SPORTS STAYING ACTIVE IN THE ITHACA COLD, PAGE 23 StudentsStS udents cope wwith physical insecurities, page 13 PHOTO FINISH HITTING THE PITS AT CORNELL, PAGE 28 ThursdayThursday Ithaca, N.Y. Januaryuary 29,29, 2009 The Ithacan Volume 76, Issue 16 wo popular Ithaca restaurants have recently been cited Full card key by the New York State Department of Labor for under- Tpaying and overworking their kitchen staff s. On Jan. 21 a NYSDOL press release cited Taste of access begins Th ai and Tamarind for several infringements of labor Seekingjustice laws. Th e NYSDOL charged the restaurants with not in residences paying their employees minimum wage or overtime, keeping inaccurate records and not allowing employees BY DAVID DURRETT for immigrant workers a day of rest during the week. Tips meant for the wait SENIOR WRITER staff were also being misappropriated to the kitchen All students living on campus staff .
    [Show full text]
  • Gran Torino and Star Trek Adrienne D
    Washington University in St. Louis Washington University Open Scholarship Women, Gender & Sexuality Studies Research Women, Gender & Sexuality Studies 1-1-2010 Film Review: Gran Torino and Star Trek Adrienne D. Davis Washington University in St Louis, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://openscholarship.wustl.edu/wgss Part of the Film and Media Studies Commons Recommended Citation Davis, Adrienne D., "Film Review: Gran Torino and Star Trek" (2010). Women, Gender & Sexuality Studies Research. 13. https://openscholarship.wustl.edu/wgss/13 This Journal Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Women, Gender & Sexuality Studies at Washington University Open Scholarship. It has been accepted for inclusion in Women, Gender & Sexuality Studies Research by an authorized administrator of Washington University Open Scholarship. For more information, please contact [email protected]. FACULTY RESEARCH PAPER SERIES PAPER NO. 10-03-07 March 15, 2010 Gran Torino and Star Trek by Adrienne D. Davis William M. Van Cleve Professor of Law Electronic copy available at: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1571713 New Political Science, Volume 32, Number 1, March 2010 Film Review Gran Torino and Star Trek Race has long been a central object of political reflection. The salience of racial difference remains hotly debated, figuring in both “utopian” and “dystopian” visions of America’s political future. If race is a primary configuration of “difference” and inequality in the nation, then intimacy between the races is often construed as either a bellwether of equality and political utopia or a re-inscribing of political dominance, typically represented as sexual predation by men against women.
    [Show full text]
  • Xavier Newswire Volume XCIV Published Since 1915 by the Students of Xavier University Issue 18
    Xavier University Exhibit All Xavier Student Newspapers Xavier Student Newspapers 2009-01-28 Xavier University Newswire Xavier University (Cincinnati, Ohio) Follow this and additional works at: https://www.exhibit.xavier.edu/student_newspaper Recommended Citation Xavier University (Cincinnati, Ohio), "Xavier University Newswire" (2009). All Xavier Student Newspapers. 554. https://www.exhibit.xavier.edu/student_newspaper/554 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Xavier Student Newspapers at Exhibit. It has been accepted for inclusion in All Xavier Student Newspapers by an authorized administrator of Exhibit. For more information, please contact [email protected]. January 28, 2009 XAVIER NEWSWIRE Volume XCIV Published since 1915 by the students of Xavier University Issue 18 Sports, pg 9 Feature, pg 12 The Musketeer defense Dana’s: a history ALWAYS ONLINE: Doug Tifft analyzes the pack line Madeline LaFave chronicles the xavier.edu/ defense employed by Xavier. Xavier mainstay’s storied past newswire inside @ Tuition to approach $14,000 for 2009-10 Graphic by John LaFollette Task Force, which convened to BY JOHN LAFOLLETTE identify potential permanent bud- Editor-in-Chief Percent tuition increase getary improvements in the uni- The price of a Xavier educa- { } versity’s operating budget, though tion will reach an all time high next he could not say with certainty Between +6.3 percent, year, after the University Board of 2008-09 & to $13,950 because next year’s budget will Trustees approved a 6.3 increase 2009-10 not be finalized until the end of in undergraduate tuition and fees February, at the earliest. for the 2009-10 school year at its Between Graduate school tuition also 2007-08 & +6.4 percent, December meeting.
    [Show full text]
  • The Cord Weekly (January 21, 2009)
    The tie that binds since 1926 The Cord Weekly LOW-FLYING fjCW WATERLOO BREW SWEEPSTAKES and Students professors discuss the value and The Cord profiles local beer makers Laurier's curling team prepare for existence of bird courses PAGES 16-17 in the Waterloo PAGE 20 in China PAGE 14 ... region ... games ... Volume 49 Issue 19 WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 21,2009 www.cordweekly.com Radio Laurier set to lose current space Station volunteers are circulating a petition calling for contingency plans in is issue has its REBECCA VASLUIANU Still question the of place on campus and has NEWS EDITOR for Radio dedicated volunteers but the space Laurier next year. its In an interview in December, Le reality is what's more important to Since the Wilfrid Laurier Univer- Fevre stated that the fate of the sta- students? Getting their books," he Students' Union tion's still in the air. sity (WTJJSU) an- space was up explained. that nounced its restructuring plan at "There's various uses that the When asked, Le Fevre said a December 2 board meeting, the university would want it for, there's the decision to let the bookstore future of Radio still that the Students' the made around Laurier remains various uses use space was uncertain. Union would want it for, there's the same time that the restructur- At the meeting, Union President various uses that Student Publica- ing was presented, commenting, "it Colin Le Fevre revealed that the tions would want it for, so it's really was bad timing." campus club would be moved about finding what is the best use WLUSU General Manager Mike under Wilfrid Laurier University for that space," he stated.
    [Show full text]
  • Clint Eastwood's Gran Torino 1 Anthropoetics 16, No
    Machuco - Clint Eastwood's Gran Torino 1 Anthropoetics 16, no. 2 (Spring 2011) Violence and Truth in Clint Eastwood's Gran Torino Antonio Machuco Universidade do Porto, Portugal [email protected] Abstract This article presents a thematic analysis of the latest movie that Clint Eastwood has directed and participated in as an actor, Gran Torino. We claim that Gran Torino is a cinema masterpiece. To support this view, we show that the subject of the movie is the mechanical logic of violence, its evolution and the possible ways of stopping it; Eastwood's intuition about violence follows the same logic that underpins René Girard's work: The leading character in the movie, Walt Kowalski (Clint Eastwood), displays his understanding of violence with outstanding conceptual accuracy, of a kind which none of Eastwood's previous movies has reached. We show that the crucial moment of the movie is the scene where Walt Kowalski sacrifices himself to end violence and for others (a Hmong community) to live. We stress that the movie explicitly states that this scene is a recreation of the Passion of Jesus Christ, and that such a Passion is the revelation of the dynamics of violence and the only way to really bring it to an end. We then show how the character of Walt Kowalski is both a summary and sequence of the different roles that Eastwood played throughout his acting career. If, almost to the end of Gran Torino, Kowalski is still the god of violence, typical of other Eastwood movies ("Dirty" Harry Callahan or William "Will" Munny, for example), he finally breaks away from those characters.
    [Show full text]