You are viewing [info]_pratz_'s journal

 
 
23 September 2009 @ 08:07 pm
Interests Meme  
Comment on this post. I will choose seven interests from your profile and you will explain what they mean and why you are interested in them. Post this along with your answers in your own journal so that others can play along.

These were what [info]pyrrhical picked for me: archaeology, fernando pessoa, hijikata toshizou, johan cruijff, minashiro soushi, soekarno, vladimir nabokov

Archaeology:
It's always been a dream for me, a childhood dream I couldn't manage to realize. It all started with my reading an article of Harry Truman Simanjuntak, an Indonesian archaeologist, and the rest was history. I took awfully good care of every National Geographic I got just for the sake of its pictures, archaeology-related photographs of Inca, Egypt or Stonehenge. My favorite subject was history, and mind you, Indonesia is an important milestone in civilization—just Google up names like Dubois, von Koenigswald or Homo erectus and you'll get what I mean. Also, I read and reread Master Keaton for thousands of thousands time. Fine, I'm a humanities student (read: one that deals with literature and stuff XD) and I could still relate to archaeology, but it's still far cry from said dream. You could say that there's this dream, there's me, and there's reality in between.

Fernando Pessoa:
One, he's one of the most celebrated non-English poets (though he could write in English just fine), and he's topped my list with Neruda on that department. Two, he suffered from MPD—and that's one of the sources of his creativity. Three, I always, always like this poem of his:

I am the escaped one,
After I was born
They locked me up inside me
But I left.
My soul seeks me,
Through hills and valley,
I hope my soul
Never finds me.
(I am the Escaped One)


Hijikata Toshizou:
Come on. I mean, this man? This Shinsengumi fangirl in me? Oh Lord. well, he's a man who chose to be a second man on his own, to be a demon because he didn't want others to be one and to uphold his promise of fidelity to the very end. I'm not talking about his standing on the losing side in history or his being a very conservative warrior (though it's debatable, of course); I'm talking about a man who made Japan's recent history possible to be written with pride and dignity.

Johan Cruijff:
Oh yes, I'm, a classic football geek. Dubbed as Phytagoras in Boots, he's the greatest footballer of all time, period. Not meaning to upstage Pele or Maradona, I'd still choose this Dutchman over them. True, Pele was a three-time World Cup winner and Maradona won one almost on his own, but never, ever a player ran a revolution on the field like Cruijff did (though he had to share the credit with coach Rinus Michels) thus the philosophy total football owes him everything. Ever heard someone saying "Every disadvantage has its advantage?" That'll be one example of his simple yet brilliant Cruijffiaans.

Minashiro Soushi:
Give. Me. Back. My. Tragic Love. Or, should I dub it, A Tragic Love So Full with UST It Makes You Choke. I believe Soushi is a person who believes that action speaks louder than the words. The problem is, however, communication is the main theme of Soukyuu no Fafner. Therefore, you-don't-speak means you-can't-communicate means life-is-so-harsh-to-you. Please, somebody please drag him and lock him up with Kazuki because they have issues. Oh yes, Fafner would forever be my dearest anime right after Evangelion.

Soekarno:
In his autobiography as told to American journalist Cindy Adams, he said that he was "praised like a god and cursed like a scoundrel." This man is the man whom Jack Kennedy thought as Indonesia's Washington and Jefferson. He's a founding father, an ideologist, an unrivaled orator/agitator (he's remembered as the Lion of the Podium), an obsessed anti-colonialism dictator and a demigod to a lot of Indonesian. He's also a man who's afraid of butchering a chicken but could declare a war against the Dutch and British colonial, a president whose breakfast didn't differ much from a peasant's, a Javanese sultan-wannabe who read from Marx to Garibaldi and spoke in six languages. He's considered a legend, a third world hero, a Che-like icon, but above all, he's a man who, with all his flaws, had given his all for his country's freedom and unity.

Vladimir Nabokov:
Lolita, yes; he's that perverted old man, Lolita's father. A friend once asked why I read his stuff and she commented that Nabokov's prose was "all about sex but with style." Yes, Nabokov is very much a stylist—so much he often left storyline or the so-called moral message abandoned, but that's what first picked my interest and not the sex. His use of word play, for example, proved to me how powerful language could be. Or, as it is said, "In the beginning was the word, and the word was with God, and the word was God." If you think that way, Nabokov then is a wordmaster of beauty, beauty, beauty. His novelty is sensuous, lush and rich, filling up other spaces he left unfilled. I have no complaint, so yes, thank you for the Nabokovian.
Tags:
 
 
( 6 share — on words )
Pengie.[info]pengiesama on September 23rd, 2009 03:43 pm (UTC)
I'd like to know how someone could think that Nabokov's work was all about sex. >:[ Sounds like your friend has never actually read any of his work.






Yes I wrote an essay on how people who've never read Lolita assume that it's porn why do you ask.
p r a t z[info]_pratz_ on September 23rd, 2009 04:14 pm (UTC)
Haha, yes. I did ask her that too--vehemently. With Lolita splattered as the subject of my undergrad thesis, I couldn't let any of Nabokov's work ends underestimated as a cheap porn novel. That, and Pale Fire.

Speaking of which, do you have a Nabokov favorite?
Pengie.[info]pengiesama on September 23rd, 2009 05:25 pm (UTC)
Agggh. He even wrote an essay himself about the people who label Lolita as porn! Talking about how he tried to write the sex that's actually in there as completely mechanical and unappealing to people who aren't Humbert! That's actually a very amusing essay to slap people with when it's clear they know jack shit about the book; it was included with my copy.

Hmm. Out of his novels I'll have to say Lolita, and I wish I had my book of his short stories so I could pick one of those. One of the ones that's coming to mind I can't remember the name of, but it had the line "a scented, forceful motion". His prose was even lovlier than usual in it.
p r a t z: writer's perfect friend[info]_pratz_ on September 24th, 2009 03:41 am (UTC)
Oh yes, the Afterword explaining "the throb." Still, Lolita's notoriety would make most people squirm even before they actually read. Oh, and I haven't read his short stories book, just one or two I managed to get. ^^

Do you want to do this meme, too, if I may ask?
Liz[info]pyrrhical on September 25th, 2009 05:33 am (UTC)
Toooooootally agreed on Hijikata. ♥ I wanted to know what you thought, because he is one of my favorite people in history, uhm, ever. Any history. Just, so amazing. I have every English-language text on the Shinsengumi that exists (which is sadly very few) and actually began taking Japanese just to be able to read non-English texts on them. ♥

I really do love this meme. You actually learn things about people, rather than going *gigglegiggle* and moving on. *hearts;
p r a t z: hagaren[info]_pratz_ on September 25th, 2009 04:56 pm (UTC)
My Japanese sucks. Or, more aptly, I suck at Japanese. It's just the way it is. :D

Oh yes, this kind of meme really made you think before answering, no? *is bricked* And yes, it's always a plus to know more about a friend--because, hey, what's a friend if you know nothing about them? ^^
( 6 share — on words )