cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/57405501
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“As with hit tunes and hit pictures and hit entertainments, fashion rushes in to fill the vacuum in our senses created by technological displacements. Perhaps that is why it seems to be the expression of such a colossal preference while it lasts. James Joyce gives it a key role in Finnegans Wake in his section on the Prankquean. The Prankquean is the very expression of war and aggression. In her life, clothing is weaponry: “I’m the queen of the castle and you’re the dirty rascal.” In the very opening line of Finnegans Wake — “riverrun, past Eve and Adam’s…”— Joyce thus indicates the reversal of nature that has taken place since the fall of man. It is not the world of Adam and Eve, but one in which there is priority of Eve over Adam. Clothing as weaponry had become a primary social factor. Clothing is anti-environmental, but it also creates a new environment. It is also anti- the elements and anti-enemies and anti- competitors and anti-boredom.” - Page 21, 1968 “War and Peace in the Global Village”, Marshall McLuhan
James Joyce apparently wrote the post title and description underneath. If you can figure out Ulysses, this post should be decipherable.
stellar–more gratuitous name-dropping things I also don’t know. Kinda sad way of just answering, ‘no’ but since it isn’t explicit enough…I read the title and description 3 times and don’t know what I’m look at here. What does suits have to do with the current conflicts?
Now I have to ask of your non-answer, who is Ulysses? And please don’t answer with riddles or trivial info that does the opposite of clarifying the content if possible. (Large ask, I know)
Alright, party pooper.
I don’t really know what this thing is about. I am guessing from context it relates to Zelenskyy not wearing a suit, which he started when Russia invaded. That became news again recently because some shitheel sycophant in the Whitehouse thought he could lecture the Ukrainian President about how disrespectful that was.
This whole post is incredibly opaque. It also references James Joyce. Joyce was a writer famous for being difficult to understand, and Ulysses is one of his novels.
University of Toronto professor Marshall McLuhan’s words.