I'll get to Christmas and New Year's posting later. For now, to get a new post started, I'll begin with a narrower topic.
Earlier posts this year have reviewed the work of others, and uncovered tons of signs from my own investigations, pointing to Ashkenazi Jews being converts to Talmudic Judaism during the 2nd half of the 1st millennium AD, and coming from mixed Indo-European sources -- one East Slavic, the other East Anatolian / Armenian / Iranian -- that eventually genetically merged into a single-mode genepool, after forming a loose cultural coalition based around controlling trade routes in and around the Khazar Khaganate.
So for the Christmas season, I naturally wondered, "How much of Hanukkah came from Christmas, Nowruz, or even earlier Indo-European holidays of this time of the year?"
Before getting to the main topic of Christmas, my investigation led me to stumble upon another highly distinctive Indo-Euro tradition that Ashkenazi Jews practice, but for Rosh Hashanah -- New Year's. They bake a loaf of challah bread for the occasion, but this isn't any ordinary loaf for any ordinary occasion -- the new year is all about bringing good luck, improving over the bygone year. So for Rosh Hashanah, they bake a key -- yes, a literal metal key -- into the loaf. This is meant to be a magic charm that will bring good luck in the new year.
Recall an earlier post that surveyed this very same ritual from Ireland to Iran, including a good luck charm in the dessert for the New Year's holiday. In some of those cultures, it is tied to Christmas, like the "king cake" from Spain and France (and places influenced by them, like New Orleans in America). They bake a figurine into a cake, and whoever gets the piece with the good luck charm will have good luck in the new year!
Well, the Ashkenazi "shlissel challah" (after the Yiddish word for "key" and the Hebraized word for "loaf of bread") is not fully identical to the Indo-Euro tradition, since there's no practice of dividing up the loaf and whoever gets the portion with the metal key has good luck. Apparently, the good luck belongs to the baker of the loaf, regardless of who finds it when eating the loaf. Also, the food item is not specifically dessert.
And yet, it's impossible to ignore the striking similarities. The "baking a key into a loaf of bread" seems to go back several centuries, although perhaps not much further. I think there must be an earlier form that this ritual took, where it was a sweet baked good and not just a typical loaf of bread, and where the good luck only belonged to the individual lucky enough to get that portion of the dessert that contained the charm -- not the preparer of the food.
But somewhere along the way, this ritual was lost, and a diluted form remained in the newer shlissel challah tradition. Needless to say, Jews from the Saharo-Arabian sphere, such as Moroccan Jews, do not practice this tradition -- it's a distinctly Indo-Euro thing. And the fact that Ashkenazi shlissel challah is 90% identical to Irish Christmas pudding and Iranian samanu for Nowruz, is a powerful testament to the Indo-European-ness, rather than Saharo-Arabian-ness, of their culture.
Moving on now to Hanukkah, two of the major features of contemporary Ashkenazi Hanukkah -- gelt and the dreidel -- are fairly recent, going back maybe a few centuries in Europe, so it's hard to infer anything about Ashkenazi roots from them. Maybe they just picked it up from their European hosts, like they did with the dreidel (teetotum). Maybe they invented it themselves, but long after Ashkenazi ethnogenesis had taken mature form (like the gelt).
However, the most prominent symbol and practice -- lighting the menorah -- is more revealing, since it goes back further.
Here is a good review of the earliest Hanukkah menorahs, whether surviving examples of them, visual depictions of them in old sources, or written accounts.
The earliest accounts of them date to circa 1000 AD in Europe, followed centuries later by illustrated depictions and surviving examples. They do not trace back to Classical times, or Bronze Age times, or anything related to Second Temple Judaism and its account of the past. They're absent for most of the Dark Ages, for that matter.
That is just after the collapse of the Khazar Khaganate, though, when the Jewish converts who controlled the trade routes would have had to migrate further westward into Europe to earn a new living. 14th-century Jewish cemeteries, like the one in Erfurt, Germany, show that they had developed a culture of their own, having their own section of a cemetery, although their genepool was still bi-modal at that point.
But sometime between the fall of the Khazar Khaganate and these 14th-C. cemeteries in Germany, Ashkenazi ethnogenesis had taken off.
The lack of menorahs during most of the Dark Ages shows that, yet again, there is no evidence showing a cultural continuity from Second Temple-period Judaeans and the Ashkenazi Jews. Most notably, the Ashkenazis have never been documented as speaking a Semitic language (until some of them began LARP-ing as neo-Judaeans, moving to Palestine and reviving Hebrew), or any other member from the Saharo-Arabian family broadly. Only Indo-European ones, like Yiddish.
Moreover, the menorahs from the earliest depictions do not resemble the Temple menorah from the Classical period, which had 7 branches, with 1 in the center, and 3 pairs of symmetrical branches leading out from the center. This verbal description and visual depiction is widely attested in Classical times themselves, e.g. in the Arch of Titus from roughly 80 AD that shows the Roman removal of the Temple menorah after destroying the Temple 10 years earlier.
Re-shaping the Hanukkah menorah to take this form, but with 4 pairs of branches plus a central branch, is pretty recent, perhaps from the 19th C or so, and maybe connected to or pre-figuring the Romantic nationalist movement of Zionism.
At any rate, the early Hanukkah menorahs don't resemble the Temple menorah whatsoever. They don't have a single branch and pairs of symmetrical branches. And the structure is not a pedestal or base, with the light-bearing elements being held aloft by the branching section. Rather, the light-bearing elements were all resting flat on a single horizontal surface, like a shelf or fireplace mantle, with no branching or supporting elements underneath the shelf.
More tellingly, the earliest depictions show candles as the light-bearing element -- a practice that continues to this day, even after the change in the shape of the main supporting structure, from a shelf to a Temple-esque design.
The original Temple menorah did not use candles at all -- the end of each branch held a cup for oil, in which a wick was dipped. Even further back, in the narrative that motivates the holiday of Hanukkah, there is a miracle of oil -- which continued to burn for 8 days and nights, when supposedly there was only enough oil to burn for one. It's not a miracle of a candle that continued to burn longer than it should have -- there's no mention of candles, only oil lamps.
Throughout the Medieval period in the Saharo-Arabian sphere, including our Western contempo depiction of it, oil lamps were the defining way of portable artificial lighting.
In fact, to this day, Moroccan Jews -- who *do* come from the Saharo-Arabian sphere, and *are* documented as speaking a Semitic language historically -- use an oil lamp form of a menorah for Hanukkah, unlike the candle-based form that the Ashkenazis use.
Did anyone in the Middle East adopt candles as much as the Europeans did? Yes -- the Persians! And the Indian groups further to their east. Candles are not so ancient, but they're ancient enough -- going back to the Romans. And yet, their spread seems to have been confined to the Indo-European sphere, with Greeks and Persians and Indians adopting them, but not so much the Arabians or North Africans.
See the article on candles from the Encyclopedia Iranica for the full history of candles in Iranian culture, but the fact that it has its own entry testifies to how central they are to Iranian culture.
And -- wait, what's this? -- Iranians light candles to place on the main table during Nowruz, along with the Half-Seen items. And like the early Ashkenazi menorahs, they are not held on a branching symmetrical candelabra, just on top of the table top. Nowruz and Christmas overlap a lot due to them being "end of the year" holidays, although over the centuries, Iranian New Year's has stayed in the arrival of springtime (when the Proto-Indo-European New Year's holiday was likely held), while the Indo-Euros who adopted Christianity moved it back toward the new central holiday of Christmas, nearly at the end of their calendar year.
Candles have been central to European Christmas traditions for centuries, including placing them on the Christmas tree in the Modern era, until there were electric lights. Or the Lutheran practice of Advent candles, which are similar to the Hanukkah menorah in keeping track of the time during the late December holiday. Candlemas, in early February, is the end of Christmas / Epiphany season, transitioning into the New Year.
Candles on a Hanukkah menorah places the Ashkenazi holiday within the Indo-Euro, rather than Saharo-Arabian, traditions. But maybe it's just the Ashkenazi adopting or assimilating to practices of their Euro hosts? How do we know it goes back further and may originate outside of Europe?
Back to those Nowruz candles! Some practitioners of Nowruz include one candle for every child in the household, making the number of candles variable -- a multiple of the number of children in the home.
Wouldn't you know it? -- the Ashkenazis also tend to increase the number of candles, as a multiple of the number of children in the home! They give everyone their own individual menorah, each of which has 9 candles.
So it's not exactly the same as Nowruz, where each child only gets one candle. But the Ashkenazi child getting 9 candles is due to the invariable nature of 9 in the Hanukkah holiday -- it celebrates the 8 nights of the miracle of the oil, plus the 1 candle to help light the others. Each child must get 9 candles, not just 1, otherwise it wouldn't commemorate the 8 nights.
However, the number of candles does increase as a multiple of the number of children in the home, for both Nowruz and Ashkenazi Hanukkah. I don't know of a similar "certain number of candles per child at home" tradition in other Indo-Euro cultures during Christmas or New Year's. If it exists, it must be fairly marginal, whereas the practice is widespread enough to this day for Nowruz that it's mentioned in reviews of the holiday rituals.
And the good ol' Moroccan Jews seal up the other side of the argument -- they don't have one menorah per child, or anything that varies with the number of children at home. They only use one menorah for the entire household, no matter how many people live there.
So, Ashkenazi Hanukkah rituals more closely resemble Iranian Nowruz than Moroccan Jewish Hanukkah, aside from the indisposable elements like commemorating the number 8, artificial light-bearing things, etc.
Those Late Medieval depictions of menorahs in Europe only show them lighting 8 candles in a place that is probably a synagogue. And in that context, there's no family living there -- so they can't, in principle, vary the number of menorahs with the number of residents. Perhaps as Hanukkah became a popular holiday within the domestic setting, it met an older ritual that involved "increasing the number of lights according to the number of children". And that older ritual came from the Iranian sphere.
This is yet another sign that the source populations for that coalition that would eventually become the Ashkenazi Jews definitely included one in or around Iran.
But more than that -- I think most of their religious and sacred traditions were carried over from that Iranian source, and not from the East Slavic source that also held sway in their coalition.
I've mentioned the divide between Germanic-surnamed Ashkenazis, who seem to have a higher proportion of genetic and/or cultural background in the Iranian source, vs. the Slavic-surnamed Ashkenazis, who have less of it and more of the Slavic source.
The Iranian source seems to have been more cultured, elite, prestigious, sophisticated, with a long history of being administrators, bureaucrats, scientists, artists... and perhaps also priests. Not merely "religious officials," but priests as an elevated specialist elite stratum in society, propped up by the material surplus of a large sedentary agrarian economy.
East Slavs in the Dark Ages simply did not have that kind of economy, nor did the West Slavs for that matter. Only the South Slavs did -- namely, the Bulgarian Empire, who sponsored and spread the Cyrllic Alphabet among the previously illiterate Slavs, adopted and codified Christianity for the Slavs (including the use of Old Bulgarian, AKA "Old Church Slavonic," as the liturgical language, even for other Orthodox Slavs to this day), founded the Orthodox Slav style of churches through their proximity to the Byzantine Empire, and so on and so forth.
East Slavs were semi-nomadic, mainly peasants, no large or powerful central state ever in their history, illiterate, with a folk culture but not much of a high culture, etc. They represented the brusque, pushy, materialistic trader type. That type also exists in a civilized culture like Iran, but there's also the spiritual specialist type, who fill a permanent role of "priest".
So when it came time to come up with rituals for the new converts to Judaism, the Ashkenazis all looked at each other and decided, "Well, you Iranian types seem to know what you're doing with the whole priestly role -- why don't you handle that part of our culture-to-be? As long as we East Slavs don't find anything too fishy about it, we'll just take your civilized word for it."
This ties into the genetic data on Ashkenazi Jews, where there are certain genetic markers for the so-called "priestly bloodline" AKA the kohanim (such as those with the surname Cohen). They are supposedly descended from the temple priests of the Second Temple era, who, after the temple was destroyed in 70 AD, continued to play some kind of new priestly-ish role in society, just not the same was as tending to the now-destroyed temple. And they supposedly kept that role within their bloodline, only marrying into other priestly families.
Well, the "keeping our bloodlines priestly" I can buy -- but not them tracing back to the Second Temple Judaeans. We know from all the other evidence that they have no genetic or cultural connection to them, not even religiously -- the Ashkenazis are only documented as practicing Judaism from the Talmudic era, not Second Temple Judaism.
However, if the kohanim within the Ashkenazis were more likely to come from the Iranian rather than the Slavic sub-population of their founders, then they'll at least pass as "Middle Eastern", which is always a weasel-word in genetic studies. Middle Eastern meaning an Indo-European-speaking "fire worshiper"? -- or a Semitic-speaking monotheist? Very different cultures!
And who knows? Maybe there was one actual Judaean priest who wandered into Persia in order to help train the new converts, and he left some of his kohanim bloodline there, where it got preserved through priestly caste endogamy. I highly doubt that, but even if true, it only says there was that one ancestor who was Judaean, vs. 99% of Ashkenazi "Middle Eastern" ancestors being Iranian / Armenian / East Anatolian.
That suggests that, like Iranian bureaucrats, Iranian priests are mainly based on their role in society, not on the specific institution it serves. They were priests under Zoroastrianism, then mullahs under Islam, and some of them as kohanim within the Iranian-derived portion of the Ashkenazi Jews.
That makes me wonder about when Christianity used to be a big deal in Persia and further east ("Nestorians"). That was during the Dark Ages, when Zoroastrianism, Islam, Christianity, and Judaism were all vying with each other for influence. There were certainly Iranian Christian priests in those days.
Maybe there's a common priestly genetic sub-population that they all came from, no matter which religion they performed the priestly role within. At that narrower level, I'm sure there are genetic differences -- Zoroastrian priests wouldn't have married into Christian priest families (knowingly), or with Muslim clerics (knowingly), and so on.
Maybe take the Parsis in India as a convenient example of Zoroastrian priests, although DNA from actual Late Classical / Medieval Zoroastrian priests would be ideal. Muslim clerics in Iran are still around, with some families or bloodlines being well known already, I'm sure. And then use Ashkenazi kohanim as the other comparison.
I'll bet, at a certain level, they all came from the same priestly genepool in Iran! Just like Iranian bureaucrats who were famously adept at serving one empire, or another, or another still. It's the specialized role, not the master, that they preserved. Iran is not an anarchic, tribal, nomadic culture of honor like it used to be way back in the Bronze Age, or like many of its neighbors have been (Turkic, Mongol, Arabian). It's one of the most thoroughly and thorough-going civilized cultures on Earth, for better or worse.
Where else would new converts to Judaism recruit their priests from, if Iranians were an option? For the Ashkenazis, it was -- and they did.
December 26, 2024
The Indo-European-ness of Ashkenazi Hanukkah, Rosh Hashanah, etc.
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"That makes me wonder about when Christianity used to be a big deal in Persia and further east ("Nestorians"). That was during the Dark Ages, when Zoroastrianism, Islam, Christianity, and Judaism were all vying with each other for influence. There were certainly Iranian Christian priests in those days."
ReplyDeleteMany have speculated that in a reality where Sassanian Persia was never conquered by the Muslim Arabs in the 7th Century, Nestorian Christianity may have eventually become the dominant religion in the empire, whether from the bottom-up (gradual mass conversion) or the top-down (through the conversion of a particularly enthusiastic emperor).
https://www.amazon.ca/Great-Arab-Conquests-Hugh-Kennedy/dp/0753823896
According to this author, at the time when the Islamic Arabs began to invade Sassanid Persia, the capital city of Ctesiphon was mostly Jewish and Nestorian Christian. Zoroastrianism was mostly popular just with the elites.
The oil lamp vs. wax candle divide actually reminds me of a broader divide between Saharo-Arabian and Indo-European cultures -- vegetable vs. animal fats (and other products).
ReplyDeleteS-A cultures are more into vegetable fats, like the olive oil used to light the menorah historically (and still among S-A Jews, like Moroccan Jews). I-E cultures are more into animal fats, and candle wax was historically made from tallow (beef fat) or bees' wax (a fatty substance produced by bees).
I attribute this to the S-A sphere being the cradle of civilization, where large sedentary agrarian economies first evolved. Agrarian economies have nothing *but* plant substances to make use of, with only a residual amount of animal products from the few pastoralists attempting to graze their livestock on land that the farmers want to use for planting their crops.
Economies with more pastoralism have more abundant animal products, and incorporate them more into their folk culture. And the I-E sphere was originally pastoralist or at most agro-pastoralist -- not a large sedentary agrarian state. They were semi-nomadic raiders who practiced animal husbandry.
There are tons of semi or fully nomadic pastoralists in the S-A sphere, like the Bedouin, the desert Arabians, and Saharan nomads. But they do not drive the culture overall, since they are historically preceded by, and eclipsed by, the agrarian states that sprung up in the Cradle of Civilization, and later along the Mediterranean coastline.
Cultures from the I-E sphere did not grow up in the shadow of large agrarian states -- their homeland is to the north of the Caucasus Mountains, on the Steppe. They were more like the nomads of the Arabian or Saharan deserts, or the Turkic or Mongol nomads from Central Asia. And China has been more like the Cradle of Civilization states, in the Far East -- large, agrarian, sedentary.
Even after adopting some degree of sedentary agriculture, Indo-Euros have preserved their barbarian origins in all sorts of cultural domains -- and the preference for animal rather than plant products is a broad category of such barbarian tastes. We are closer to the Noble Savage than are the plant-loving decadent civilizations that arose to our south.
At the first opportunity, we invented a portable light source that relied on animal fat, and later another animal product, rather than stick with the plant-based fuel of our civilized southern neighbors. Bye-bye olive oil lamps, hello candles!
Much like other forms of degradation in the neoliberal era, candles are now made from plant oils, mainly soy, solely to cut costs, deliver a worse product to the consumer, and boost profit margins to the greedy and mediocre business owners. But historically, candles were anti-vegan, not vegan compatible.
I've mentioned before the animal fat vs. plant fat desserts as a dividing line between Indo-Euro and Saharo-Arabian cultures.
ReplyDeleteS-A cultures prefer almonds or other nuts, and seeds (like sesame), for their dessert fats. For savory fats, they also use fruits (olives) or legumes (chickpeas).
I-E cultures prefer dairy fat for their dessert fat, whether it's milk, yogurt, cream, butter, ghee, etc. And further animal fats like eggs, which are not as central to S-A cuisine.
This is true from Ireland to India. And in the Middle East, there's a great comparison in that the "same" dessert actually comes in two different varieties -- halwa / halva, whose main fat is plant-based in the S-A cultures (sesame), but dairy in the I-E cultures (milk, cream, butter, or ghee).
Turkey provides an even finer-grained view, since they are at the cross-roads of the I-E and S-A spheres, and they in fact have both varieties. But the truly Turkish variety -- the one that is treated with the utmost ritualistic sanctity for special occasions -- is the dairy one.
They're Anatolian, after all, and spoke Greek and Hittite historically. Even after the Turkic conquests, they spoke a Turkic language, not a Saharo-Arabian language, and the barbarian tastes that they had back in their fully I-E days were compatible with the new Turkic tastes of their conquerors, since both were nomadic raiders who practiced animal husbandry.
Without reviewing every Ashkenazi vs. Sephardic dessert, I'll simply note the higher prevalence of dairy / animal fat as the main fat among Ashkenazi desserts.
ReplyDeleteRugelach use a dough made with sour cream or cream cheese. Babka uses a very buttery dough. Blintzes use a batter with milk and eggs for the pancake part, and are stuffed with cheese, often served with sour cream on top as well. Cheesecake is ancient Indo-Euro (with the Romans having something like it), and is common as an Ashkenazi dessert.
Like halva, there's a great comparison in the "same" dessert that has two totally different varieties among Jews -- hamantaschen (the Ashkenazi form) and orejas de haman (the Sephardic form). The Ashkenazi one uses butter in the dough, while the Sephardic one does not (although like the Ashkenazi one, it uses eggs). The fatty content from the Sephardic kind comes from deep-frying it in vegetable oil.
Sephardic desserts are more similar to other Mediterranean desserts, using nut fats like almond paste instead of dairy. E.g., Italian marzipan and Sephardic masapan.
Spain and Italy are both Indo-Euro, and despite these nut-based desserts that they absorbed from Saharo-Arabian cultures around the Mediterranean, both countries do have more dairy in their desserts than Saharo-Arabian cultures. E.g., Italy's tiramisu (made with mascarpone cheese) and gelato (ice cream), and Spain's flan (egg and milk custard), mel i mato (using a fresh cheese similar to ricotta), and crema catalana which is the twin of creme brulee from France.
Very dairy, not-so nutsy.
Lemme take a break, and I'll come back and talk about fur hats, or animal hides as clothing / accessories in general, separating the Indo-Euro from the Saharo-Arabian spheres.
ReplyDeleteIf you didn't already know what Hasidic headgear looks like, take a wild guess what material it's made from...
Ashkenazis are Indo-Euros, yet again!
Does Japan prefer animal or plant fats?
ReplyDeleteGlorious Nippon is an animal fat culture these days. They're one of the beef-eating Asian groups, and those groups tend to practice animal husbandry more than the chicken-eating Asian groups to the south. Pork is consumed by both.
ReplyDeleteJapanese people like dairy products a lot, too, compared to other Asians.
Historically, though, they were closer to being a mix of agrarian -- mainly cultivating rice -- and hunter-gatherer, relying on wild-caught seafood. They didn't use cooking oil of any kind, for the most part -- sometimes eating a raw meal, or steaming it, or fermenting it, or grilling it. But they were not into frying or baking, so adding fat for either purpose was not done.
Most of the fat in their diet, though, *was* from animals, namely seafood. Not just the oily fish like salmon, sardines, etc., but even the Pacific bluefin tuna (80% of whose consumer market is Japan) has a nice fatty belly.
As for desserts, traditional Japanese cuisine had very little in the way of sweets. One form didn't have much fat at all -- mochi, in which steamed rice is ground into a paste with other sugary and starchy ingredients. But no fat added. It's sweet, but not rich, due to no fat. Red bean paste is similar -- it has some fat from the beans, but there's not enough fat in a bean to give it a really rich sumptuous mouthfeel.
But once the Meiji Restoration opened up Japan to foreign influences, they went immediately to animal fats instead of vegetable fats. As they began baking for the first time, they chose dairy fat instead of vegetable oil, and by now dairy products are fairly popular in Japan, relative to other Asian countries.
They did have early contact with the Portuguese, so it was possible for Japan to receive Mediterranean tastes, like vegetable oil or nut paste or frying sweets instead of baking them. But they've had limited success, other than their mutual love of seafood. Japan was more interested in French, British, American, and even Indian food like curry.
Still, they rely on vegetable oils in other contexts like frying -- sesame oil, rice oil, etc., rather than tallow or lard or butter (to coat a pan).
As in so many other domains of their culture, the Japanese have taken an eclectic pick-and-choose approach. Overall, though, I'd say the strongest influence on them has been good ol' American. ^_^
The other huge change that the Japanese made, to distance themselves from other Asians, is to replace rice with wheat. Japanese people still eat rice regularly, but not nearly as much as before, and they eat a lot more wheat than they used to, whether it's noodles, bread, or a piece of a larger item (like hamburger buns, cheesecake crust, etc.).
ReplyDeleteGlorious Nippon is probably the most unfriendly place in Asia for Western striver diets like vegan, gluten-free, and dairy-free.
Southeast Asia -- which begins at Shanghai -- would suit those diets better.
The movement that founded itself on valorizing competition, moralizing Darwinian "survival of the fittest," and praising winners while spitting on losers in societal competitions -- now impotently cries and copes as they have become the downwardly mobile losers, whose foreign replacements are, by their own ideology, superior to them in virtue of being the winner in the competition, and who must accept being spit upon for not amping up their hustle stats so they can BE MORE COMPETITIVE.
ReplyDeleteFor a moment in 2016, it seemed like these wannabe but failed yuppies had realized where all that "greed is good" stuff had gotten them -- not just others in society, but them themselves -- and were now going to promote protection over competition, inferring no moral superiority from someone being a winner in some societal competition, and trying to humble the winners and lift up the losers...
But these greedy scum just can't shake their neoliberal Reaganite fantasies about being the yuppie skull-crusher stacking totally ill-gotten gains, which they were born too late to enjoy, unlike their Boomer parents. Live by Darwinian fanfic, die by Darwinian fanfic.
Sorry, but it's not possible to feel sorry for these deluded right-wingers who are no populists after all, just bitter failed yuppies / grinders / strivers / hustlers / etc.
They blew their chance to team up with others in society to take on the very wealthy and powerful corporations, oligarchs, etc. who are dead-set on replacing them with cheap foreigners. That would require disowning neoliberalism, Reagan and his descendants, and praising the New Deal as a utopia that we should aim for, however short we may fall of re-attaining it.
Now that it's clear their material standard of living will get worse forever, and so will any kids they have, and their kids, for many generations into the future -- all they have left is coping about how they ratio'd the guy who fired them en masse. Sad, but predictable.
And another bitter reminder that the right wing in America is the sclerotic dominant party of this era, which began with Reagan. They have no possibility to realign out of this era and into a new one, which will only come from the left.
Such an anti-woke, populist left is already realigning out of the neoliberal era in Denmark, under their longstanding left party -- they didn't even need to form a new party. But after so many failures from the dominant right party during neoliberal hell, the left finally had the opportunity and seized it, to become the new dominant party. They're the ones deporting, remigrating, closing borders, all while protecting the existing populist policies of the welfare state.
American leftists are insanely more woke and neoliberal than Danish ones, so it will take longer and require a more vicious battle, but eventually there will be an anti-woke populist left that realigns out of the current era in America. At least, there will be in one of the rump states to the collapsing American Empire (something the Danes are fortunate enough not to have to deal with).
They can't even fumble for the correct answer when the debate over infinite cheap foreign replacements is framed about "America winning over its rivals".
ReplyDeleteWell, whether America has to win over its rivals, or just win in some abstract sense without being compared to other nations, the only way to fuel competition at the between-group level is to minimize competition at the within-group level.
"OK, so just be a total slave and cuck to your masters and overlords, right? Got it!" -- typical Darwin-oid slave morality.
No, a well-oiled society does not have the elites absolutely abusing the shit out of their inferiors, while the inferiors just sit there and take it, or even beg for more abuse.
Minimizing competition is a TWO-WAY STREET, as any class relation is. It means the commoners aren't lobbing literal bombs at the elites -- but it also means the elites are practicing altruism toward the commoners. Skin in the game, honest signal, loyalty from above not only from below. But for failed wannabe yuppies, "altruism" as a label and practice is anathema -- one-a them commie-nest ideas, at least in the context of outside of a family.
When the elites are unanimous about "worker harder, longer, and for cheaper pay and worse conditions, or you're dead to us and will be discarded for foreign bug-people who will outbid you in the labor market" -- that is clearly the opposite of altruism. That would be parasitism, exploiting the commoners for their own gain.
In the good ol' days of the New Deal, elites voluntarily submitted themselves to astronomical tax rates, which did not fund libtard bullshit social engineering, but useful public goods and services for the public, like the interstate system, the space race (the circus part of bread and circuses, neither part of which our current elites will fund), R&D through the Pentagon and federal grants generally, Midcentury Modern civic architecture, and the whole rest of Midcentury utopia.
They accepted living in far more modest houses than the Gilded Age elites or even the Roaring Twenties elites, who preferred Victorian mansions or palatial estates. They were fine with a ranch home or a split-level home, not too much larger than what the middle and working classes lived in.
See my old article reviewing the history of house types in America, which links to a seminal contemporary article in Fortune Magazine from 1955 about how "top executives" live, which has a new link below.
https://akinokure.blogspot.com/2013/12/history-of-home-prices-and-conspicuous.html
https://fortune.com/article/how-top-executives-live-fortune-1955/
Until the elites begin practicing altruism toward the commoners / general public, on a massive scale in multiple domains of society, like they used to not so long ago, they can get fucked about asking for loyalty and cooperation from the commoners. Hosts owe no loyalty and should never cooperate with their parasites -- that's suicide.
Loyalty and cooperation are always a two-way street. As long as the elites are hell-bent on grinding the commoners into dust, what other choice do the commoners have but reciprocating the sentiment -- and the behavior? The elites reneged on the fragile social contract first, during the neoliberal Reagan revolution -- they must be the first to signal and implement a ceasefire on their side.
But the way they're chimping out over getting infinite cheap foreign replacements for Americans, Americans will have no choice but to chimp out over being replaced. The collapse of the American Empire is just getting started...
And speaking of cheap labor, that Fortune article details how top executives in the New Deal were living lifestyles without hired help -- maybe a cook who showed up once in awhile, but did not live in the home, let alone having multiple hired hands living under their roof. Elites agreed to do more of that work by themselves, rather than hire cheap slaves to do it for them.
ReplyDeleteGilded Age elites had whole armies of hired help, live-in and otherwise.
The same must apply to signal the eventual ceasefire from today's rapacious elites. They will agree to fix their own meals, not demand an infinite army of cheap foreign slaves to prepare meals in a restaurant, and another army of cheap foreign slaves to deliver to their doorstep. They will drive themselves around, like Don Draper did -- not rely on an army of cheap foreign slaves to drive them around in Ubers.
They must agree to destroy the cheap-paying, undignified shit jobs that they have funded over the past several decades, and replace them with high-paying, dignified jobs like they have off-shored over that same period, but used to be there during the 1955 Fortune article's time. Manufacturing being the main sector that needs to come back.
And for the love of God, they can at least begin with the cheap talk / lip service, humbling themselves and ennobling those below them.
ReplyDeleteY'know, like "Hey, please, enough praise, I'm not a Nietzschean ubermensch or Ayn Randian demigod or Darwinian fittest survivor -- I'm just some midwit who razzle-dazzled the disbursers of the nearly 10 trillion dollars that the Central Bank just printed up out of thin air and handed out for free to the Wall Street banks to then hand out to whoever they felt like. I don't deserve a red cent of it, but I am very grateful to have it, but since I don't deserve it, I'm happy and feel obliged to send a big chunk of that toward the general public, who were not lucky enough to be in a position to razzle-dazzle a bunch of Wall Street suits who were throwing someone else's fake money wherever they felt like. Accepting a high tax rate on myself / personally funding a nationwide network of libraries that are well-made with good materials / etc."
And that's in the best of cases -- others like Ramaswamy will have to admit they outright pulled a pump-and-dump scam to get their claws on their ill-gotten wealth, and play Robin Hood to cement their altruism cred:
"I don't regret scamming those rich investors one bit -- but since I don't deserve it, I'm happy to spread a big chunk of it around to those who were not lucky enough to be in a position to pull a pump-and-dump IPO scam. *Points indiscriminately around him* YOU get your roads fixed, and YOU get your neighborhood pool repaired, and YOU get trees planted along both sides of your streets!"
It's not just cuz of the clash between their midwit / mediocrity / scam / fraud reality, and their ubermensch self-aggrandizing narratives -- that's an aesthetic offense. But it's also a moral offense, broadcasting their plan to act like treasonous parasites toward the commoners, which prompts the commoners to reciprocate and act antagonistically toward the elites out of self-preservation.
The easiest first step in de-escalation is in this immaterial lip service narrative domain. Just admit that you're not the creme de la creme of a meritocracy, but someone who got lucky when other creme de la creme types did not -- cuz there are too few slots for winners, vs. the number of qualified aspirants for those slots -- or an outright fraudster. But that, regardless of the reasons that you attained high status, power, wealth, etc., you're going to use that for the benefit of the general public and commoners.
Neo mafia dons will successfully replace the mittel-mensch types, as our empire collapses, cuz they'll be honest and generous. " 'Ey, don't ask where I got da money from -- just take it, and buy somethin' nice for yourself, gabeezh? Your kid needs glasses? Consider it done, and don't worry about what I had to do to make it happen."
'Ey, no problem, Don! We don't gotta know how da sausage gets made, as long as it shows up on our tables at dinner, ya know whadai mean?!
I hate having to wade into a big steaming pile of dIsCouRsE like this, I'll have to get to Indo-European fondness for animal hides and furs tomorrow. Probably a broader thing, BTW, tracing back to the Paleosiberians, since it's also common among Turkic and Mongol groups, and even somewhat into NE Asia like North Korea, as well as some Native American groups who began in NE Asia before crossing over into the New World.
ReplyDeleteQuite the full circle for the wearers of coonskin caps to face off against wearers of big ol' feather headdresses, once we showed up in America from the other direction.
A worthy fuckin' adversary, Dude...
But on a final and brief note about Glorious Nippon, they too have a penchant for wearing animal fur on their head, especially in a military context. This article is about the red-colored type of headgear, but there were other colors as well. It was made out of yak fur, and not woven into a fabric in a semi-civilized kind of way -- but allowing the natural appearance of yak fur to remain (only differing in its color), to give it that wild look:
ReplyDeletehttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shaguma
You don't fuck around with someone who's wearing bright-red yak fur on his head!
Another brief note about wearing fur (or simulated fur) in Japan, in the early 2010s there was a huge fashion craze for wearing animal tails at the hips or waist, as well as fur collars, cuffs, boots, leg-warmers, and so on.
ReplyDeletehttps://thejapans.org/2013/01/19/furry-business/
http://www.unmissablejapan.com/etcetera/tails
https://jlandstrange.wordpress.com/2012/03/01/furry-japan/
Calling this a "furry" look is projection and cope from Americans or Westerners. Furries are deliberately weird, off-putting, creepy, poorly made, slop, gay, degenerate, alienating sub-culture.
These fur tails, collars, cuffs, etc. on Japanese girls in 2012 are fashionable, kawaii, wholesome, natural, well-made, heterosexual, and mainstream or at least a sub-culture that appeals to the mainstream -- cool rather than weird.
This is yet another example of the copium behind the anti-weeb meme about, "X: -_-, X in Japan: :O". This would only be an own if the two things were the same, but usually they are polar opposites, which is why weebs and many others have the excited reaction to the Japanese version -- the version that is not gay, weird, poorly made slop.
Also, Japan has a national holiday since 1949, Coming of Age Day, which is just what it sounds like. To get in the festive mood about reaching maturity, girls dress up in somewhat more mature clothing. A crucial item of this outfit is a prominent fur collar (real or simulated), usually white, on top of a traditional Japanese kimono.
https://blog.japanwondertravel.com/coming-of-age-day-in-japan-30415
Finally, Pekora from Hololive has a prominent fur collar or scarf as a signature look. Supposedly it's just a fluffy scarf in the shape of a rabbit, but it looks like it's a fur collar.
Not to mention the abundance of animal-looking people or animal-people hybrids in Japanese folk culture, including in contemporary media like vtubers (Pekora being part-rabbit, Mio being part-wolf, Okayu being part-cat, etc.). Having prominent fur is part of that look. And again, this is meant to be kawaii, staying in touch with nature, wholesome, etc. -- not a weird gay degenerate fetish like Western furries.
Cool vs. weird -- this needs a whole post of its own, but since I mentioned it in passing about fur in Japan vs. furries in the American Empire, I'll also note its connection in the GOP civil war about immigration.
ReplyDeleteRamaswamy was praising nerds and slandering jocks, like a typical bitter failed nerd. In his rant, he said America needs to valorize Screech instead of Zach and Slater, from seminal early '90s teen sit-com Saved by the Bell.
However, Screech was not smart, accomplished, innovative, or anything else -- he was just a weirdo. The actual academic striver obsessed with grades, test scores, studying to the point of getting addicted to pep pills, college prestige, etc. was Jesse. But she was not a nerd or weirdo -- she was just as pretty and popular as Kelly.
And as it turned out, popular heartthrob Zach was the one to get a perfect score on the SAT, not Screech.
This was back when nerds were recognized for what they are -- weirdos, and that's it. They may be smart, but usually they are not. They're obsessed with some fixation, they have poor social skills, and nobody aspires to be them -- just the opposite.
During the revenge of the nerds phenomenon of the 2010s, possibly going back into the 2000s, these awkward anti-aspirational midwits rebranded themselves as child prodigies who everyone looks up to and will save the world through their genius inventions.
Back on Planet Earth, they were just the ones who had a hook-up to the nearly $10 trillion in fake money printed up by the Central Bank, to fund their obsessive fixations.
But the nerds did not win this rebranding war on their own -- society as a whole had already turned away from "cool" as the aspirational quality to pursue, and re-oriented itself toward what is "weird" instead. This is when everything became based on what is ugly, what is slop, what is crappy, cringe, cursed, weird, disgusting, off-putting, "so bad it's good (not)", and so on.
The origins of this lay in the '90s credo of grunge icon Kurt Cobain -- "rather be dead than cool". He himself mainly pursued cool, but did introduce some cringe / weird / off-putting elements into the aesthetic mainstream, like greasy unkempt hair, sometimes wearing a dress (and looking ugly in it), etc. Or Mystery Science Theater 3000 focusing only on poorly made B movies, to the exclusion of well-made B movies or good blockbuster movies.
Actually, Marilyn Manson was more central to this transition from cool to weird, than Kurt Cobain was. Talk about deliberately weird, disgusting, etc. -- in the look as well as in the music, which was not as melodic or catchy as Nirvana. There was still some glam-rock coolness to his persona, and which babes he chose for arm candy, but you can clearly see the origins of "weird replaces cool" in '90s alternative culture.
To spell out what the major difference is b/w cool and weird -- cool is something a minority of society possesses, that the rest of them (or a large chunk) aspire to or at least give respect and validation to. It's about improving the broader culture through being a role model. Not necessarily being avant-garde, ahead of the curve, trend-setting, etc. -- you could be a total follower of trends, rather than a setter of trends, and still be cool. It's more about being a minority that others want to emulate, or at least respect and value.
ReplyDeleteWeird is about being off-putting toward the rest of society, not something alluring to them. It's everything that others DO NOT want to be, what they DO NOT respect, DO NOT value, etc. It is deliberately anti-aesthetic, and a form of anti-entertainment.
No one watches a movie whose sole or dominant value is its weirdness and thinks, "Well, it's not exactly my taste, but it's still well made and a good creative outcome." It's just crappy boring slop to be avoided, and denigrated if anything -- "Oh God, more of this crappy slop, enough already..."
Because only a small minority of slop-slurpers will eagerly consume weird culture, it does not go mainstream, unlike cool culture. It does not inspire the masses to adopt it, however imperfectly -- they just tune out and ignore weird culture altogether.
It fragments what used to be a broad mainstream culture, and prevents such a broad mainstream culture from cohering in the future. It is socially corrosive rather than constructive, deliberately -- as judged from their anti-social, shut-in, entitled personalities, rather than someone cool who doesn't mind, or even enjoys, being the life of the party.
Weirdness hates culture, and seeks to undo it from inside -- both on the production side, and on the consumption side, where slop-slurpers become the remaining splinter-group that fixates on new culture, while the dreaded nOrMieS drop out of the audience altogether.
Cool people never made fun of "normies" -- they made fun of "squares". You could be weird and square -- like Screech from Saved by the Bell, or most other nerds from real life. You could be normie and cool -- like Zach and Lisa.
Not all normies were cool -- only a minority were -- but most normies respected and valued coolness, even aspired to attain coolness. This allure gave it a mainstream presence.
Few people, no matter where they come from, aspire to be weird, off-putting, cringe, etc. This blandness, crappy sloppiness, or disgusting repulsion, prevents weirdness from going mainstream in the population -- however much it may take over new cultural production (which most people tune out).
You REALLY see this shift among gays, who went from emulating cool straight guys of their day, to polluting the mainstream with ugly, campy, demonic, disgusting culture -- with the emphasis on "queer-ing" culture, i.e. making it weird, not cool.
ReplyDeleteI don't blame the gays themselves, they're a symptom rather than underlying cause. They are always bandwagon jumper-onners, never trend-setters. Jesus, they're still sporting gay whoosh hairdos (undercuts, severe side parts, faux-hawks, etc.) and skinny jeans in the 2020s!
First it was straight cool guys like Kurt Cobain, then Marilyn Manson amping it up, who began the trend toward queer-ing culture -- not the fags themselves. Probably the one area of life in which they are risk-averse -- being a daring cultural trend-setter, or only jumping on the bandwagon when early adopters have given them permission.
This assessment is not just from a cool straight guy who finds gays generally off-putting, as most straight guys do -- which is why straight guys, even super-libtarded leftists, never seek out a gay BFF or an entire gay friend circle.
Gays themselves say this, over and over, e.g. on the Red Scare subreddit. How their ancestors in the '70s like Yves Saint-Laurent used to look so handsome, chic, debonair, etc. -- both in personal appearance, and in their residence.
But YSL just looked like a "standard" cool straight guy from the '70s, you wouldn't instantly clock him as a fag by looking at him. And so did his apartment -- standard hetero cool-guy Midcentury Modern playboy bachelor pad (with some distinguished trad accents).
For that matter, his cultural creations did not look weird or off-putting or ridiculous -- it was cool, chic, aspirational, etc. The clothing, the perfume, the ads, everything.
This was just one facet of gays being pressured, sometimes bullied, into joining the mainstream. That allowed them to be cool, if they in the minority who could pull it off of course. He was not in the closet, did not get sham-married to a beard, etc. But he was still reflecting the pressure from hetero normie mainstream society to join it, rather than carve out an anti-societal weird niche for his fellow gays and a tiny pool of straight slop-slurpers.
As coolness has been killed off by weirdness, gays have eagerly abandoned any pretense of being cool, something that others would respect or value or aspire to be. Obviously not in the cock-sucking part -- I mean how they dress, look, live, etc. No guy sees a severe under-cut on totally gray hair on a guy younger than 60, and says "If only I could look like that..." No guy sees a fat neckbeard with greasy stringy thin green hair that's poorly cut, while wearing a dumpy dress, and says, "Y'know, I never thought of that, but now that I see it being modeled, I oughtta copy that look!"
In an era of ugly cringey slop, gays go the extra mile to look like ugly, disgusting, cringey, anti-aspirational piles of ridiculous slop. They've gone from gay to queer.
The Village People of "Y.M.C.A." fame are another example from the before-times. They weren't chic denobair playboy types like YSL, they were based on macho stereotypes -- Indian warrior, construction worker, policeman, biker, cowboy, soldier (from the Navy).
ReplyDeleteBut focusing on the macho-ness is missing the bigger picture -- the personas were all from normie mainstream society, not personas from an anti-aesthetic anti-social weird queer niche.
And although their facial expressions, mannerisms, and their stage performance would have given them away as gay, the costumes themselves did not. They were not a ridiculous camp-y caricature of a construction worker or policeman -- just their usual uniforms. The camp value came from their mannerisms, behavior, and performance, and their song lyrics.
It wasn't appropriating mainstream normie culture in order to destroy or corrode it in front of the normies -- it was their way of showing they were going to join the normie mainstream, at least in their clothing (if not in their sexual behavior).
And these were all roles that normie straight guys looked up to as cool or badass -- who didn't think cowboys and Indians and bikers were cool or badass? Again, the gay group was following and joining the normie hetero mainstream, not setting itself up in ugly corrosive antagonism to it.
Nowadays it's either generic bland yuppie striver slop, weird slop, or outright tranny demonic goblin slop. Like I said, they're just imitating the straight guys as always, who gave up on cool decades ago. Still, gays go over-the-top in whatever the current trend is -- extra-crappy, these days.
Is the weirdness replacing coolness a function of neoliberal Darwinist striver crap or America's collapsing asabiya?
ReplyDeleteOn an uplifting note, it's still possible to be cool if you want to, and plenty of people IRL will appreciate it -- if not the minority of slop-slurpers, who are to be ignored and denigrated anyway.
ReplyDeleteYesterday I got tons of spontaneous compliments on my plaid wool poncho, mainly a red background with dark blue secondary, and off-white and yellow as accent colors. Very rich colors, well made, all-wool, no tag but obviously vintage and made in USA or maybe the UK. Outline is just a rectangle or square, with a hole cut for the head that forms a rounded V in front and in back, and oriented so there's a corner lying at the bottom in front and in back and on the left and right sides -- not tailored to fit the torso, but the "just threw on a throw blanket" kind of look.
Wore it with a cotton button-down shirt that's butter color, and a bit heavier than an Oxford shirt but not as much as a flannel or shammy, dark-blue jeans in a straight leg, Western boots in a ruddy brown color, and similar-looking wide belt with chrome buckle.
Casual, informal, cozy -- but put-together, pleasing to look at, cool / boho, and a distinctly American folk costume. All I was missing was a wide-brimmed dark-brown hat, and a revolver on my belt!
Clint Eastwood's most iconic Western look features a big drape-y poncho, too, and with a bold contrasting geometric pattern at that.
I'm not lying when I say multiple women stopped me to tell me how great it looks, engaging in a back-and-forth for a minute or so, not just a quick "looks nice!" And the teenage Latina cutie cashier at the supermarket who, even though I wasn't at her lane, just strolling by on my way out, made big wide eyes and a bright smile at me --
byyyyyyeeeee... :)))) have a good niiiiiiightttt... :)))))
Luv girls ^_^
Weirdness is more about collapsing asabiya, attending imperial collapse -- just like the explosion of deliberately ugly art and entertainment, and self-proclaimed "anti-art" in the early 20th C, within the collapsing Euro empires, especially Weimar Germany.
ReplyDeleteThat nearly Euro-wide phenomenon did not infect America, cuz we weren't a collapsing empire back then -- still expanding, still cohesive. As we absorbed the collapsed Euro empires into our sphere after WWI and II, they drew on the culture of their new overlords, which was not degenerate or openly anti-art / anti-aesthetic. God knows how long it would've lasted over there if not for being rescued by America.
Or by the Russian Empire, rebranded as the Soviet Union. They rescued a lot of the collapsed Austrian Empire, like Czechoslovakia and Hungary, and the core of the collapsed German Empire (Eastern Germany, where the Prussia-Brandenburg origins of the empire were located).
Stalinist architecture -- AKA Art Deco in America -- Soviet Realism, Midcentury Modern furniture, science-fiction, etc., saved those collapsed empires from staying mired in degenerate ugly-on-purpose art. Just look at what a shithole Prague has turned into after the Soviets collapsed...
Without knowing the specifics, I'm sure the Saudi Arabian Empire had a similar rescuing effect on the Middle Eastern parts of the collapsed Ottoman Empire. The Ottomans were pretty decadent by that point, too. Probably like the Taliban putting an end to gay pedophile sex trafficking in Afghanistan, which was organized by the local clients of the collapsing American Empire.
Certainly the Saudi rescue effort took on a more overtly religious tone than the American or Russian rescue efforts, but all were purging decadence and degeneracy one way or another, leading the Arab world into a more proud and stoic Midcentury militarism with wholesome values and lifestyles.
I don't know if the Ottomans were as into gayness as the Afghan clients of America, but they sure were into white slavery to fill their harems. Once the still-cohesive empires of Russia and Saudi Arabia, and somewhat America, are the main forces near Turkey, it's bye-bye to trafficking pretty young girls from Circassia, Lebanon, and wherever else. The newly unified Yugoslavia -- not an empire, but more cohesive than the fragmented Balkans before it -- must have put a stop to white slavery from the Balkans into Turkey. They were similar to America and Russia, on a smaller scale, part of the wholesome Midcentury Modern period.
Glorious Nippon has not yet descended into deliberately ugly anti-art, nor promoted a broad crusade of anti-aesthetics. Like America, Russia, and Saudi Arabia, they were still cohesive and expanding during WWI and WWII -- until they were defeated by us.
ReplyDeleteBut when we absorbed them, to some extent, into our sphere, there was no rescue effort needed -- they were not suffering from imperial collapse like the Euro empires were. So they were not mired in anti-art garbaggio. They still had a healthy thriving creative dynamic culture.
It's just that it was going to take on more American influences, which only reinforced its wholesomeness and creative dynamism. Neither side was a collapsed empire mired in sclerotic languid ugliness and poorly made crap.
Somehow Japan has managed to avoid taking in the anti-cohesive, anti-aesthetic, iconoclastic, heritage-hating, woketard trash that has plagued America for several decades now. Even though we still occupy them militarily.
To this day, Japanese vtubers, and most people in Japan, resonate with things that are kakkoii, kawaii, and sugoi -- cool, cute, and awesome / amazing. Americans resonated with those qualities not too long ago.
Also like Americans from decades past, the Japanese still use intensifiers to express how great something -- meccha-something, like meccha kawaii -- *really* cute, or *soooo* cute.
As of the 2010s, Americans use minimizers like "kind of" and "sort of", e.g. "kind of amazing". How can something be "kind of amazing"? They're just trying to lower the intensity, so that society-wide excitement does not catch on.
As recently as the '80s and '90s, something was not "kind of awesome" -- it was TOTALLY FUCKIN' AWESOME.
Also, the Japanese never learned English, unlike most other countries in our imperial sphere. They've been occupied by us just as long as the Euros have, and just about as long as South Korea has. Even places we do not formally occupy, like Indonesia, speak more English than Japan does.
I don't begrudge them that -- it's a sign of how healthy their own Japanese culture is, that they don't need to learn a foreign language in order to participate in a thriving dynamic creative culture, which is entirely mediated by Nihongo.
Indonesia has no authentic, internal dynamic culture of its own these days (traditional yes, but not a modern / contemporary one), so it has to learn English and participate in the American-led global culture.
Japan has remained far more culturally autonomous, and the fact that 80 years after defeating and occupying them, still hardly anyone there speaks English, is a testament to how well they have managed to preserve their autonomy and internal cohesion.
Unlike other wealthy nations in the American imperial sphere, Japanese elites have not flooded their country with poor foreigners in order to drive down wages and boost profit margins. That would be obscenely treasonous, and any Japanese elite who suggested it in public would be forced to commit seppuku, literally not figuratively.
At most, the Japanese have a partial fondness for "kusoge" -- crappy game, or shitty game, referring to video games. However, there is not Cult of Kuso, where they indulge in crappily made things in all sorts of domain, aspire to make their own creations crappy, and so on.
ReplyDeleteIt's more like a momentary bit of light comedic relief, in between something serious, cute, cool, or awesome. It's not a single-minded crusade to deprive the culture of things that are cool, cute, and awesome.
And not all Japanese vtubers or streamers are into kusoge, only some of them (as comic relief, not their main source of content). It's not as all-strangling as the Cult of Crap here in America.
"Why would we spend all of our precious, fleeting time playing crap, when there are games that are cool, cute, and awesome?!?!?!"
And although I'm not an expert in Nihongo, I'm pretty sure there's still a connection between "weird" and "disgusting". "Kimoi" means creepy or gross, and they use that when they see, e.g., ugly bug-like aliens in a Metroid game (I remember Okayu using this word a lot in her Metroid series of streams). "Kimyouna" means odd, strange, weird, queer, etc. Given the similarity, it seems like they still connect weird / strange with creepy / gross. It still has a negative connotation, not a positive one.
Again, weirdness doesn't exactly have a positive connotation in America either -- it's more like it's taken over, despite most people not wanting it and tuning it out. But among culture-producers, it is spoken of as a desirable quality to aspire to. Japanese culture-producers would never say their ultimate aesthetic goal is to create something kimoi or kimyouna. One or two misfits? Maybe. But not the broad crusade of the Cult of Crap that infects America and most of its sphere more and more every year.
Other major Euro cultures that did not descend into degeneracy during the early 20th C -- Scandinavia and Italy, neither of which were collapsing empires of their own, nor did they belong to someone else's collapsing empire.
ReplyDeleteItaly was in fact on a unifying trend, not a fragmenting trend, following their 19th-C unification.
Sweden was a regional great power in the 17th C, but not an empire, and the other Scandi countries were even less imperial. Only one empire in history came from Scandinavia -- the Vikings, whose heyday was 1000 years before the early 20th C. No imperial collapse symptoms left by that point.
Likewise, the Roman Empire's collapse from the 3rd C onward was dramatic, but by the early 20th C, Italy was no longer plunged into the social-cultural refractory state that they were in during Late Antiquity and the early Dark Ages. They had healthy city-states in the Center and North by the Renaissance, including a regional great power in the Venetian Republic, and they had just unified as a nation in the 19th C. Not breeding grounds for degeneracy and deliberately anti-aesthetic "art".
Italy's main contribution to art of that time was Futurism, which is just about dynamic motion, sublime forces, over-awing massiveness, etc. It fed into Art Deco, which was also not degenerate or anti-aesthetic -- quite the contrary.
The one partial exception was De Chirico, but he wasn't about anti-aesthetics. More about creating an atmosphere that was sublime, if unsettling. Haunting, dream-like, uncanny, hinting at surrealism. Not ugly, iconoclastic, or crappy. Not anti-art.
And this "metaphysical phase" of his only lasted a few years, after which he disowned it and went in a Renaissance-inspired direction, becoming a bitter critic of modern art (meaning, from the collapsed Euro empires of France, Germany, Austria, Spain, and Britain).
Also, he was born and raised in Greece (collapsing Ottoman Empire), studied and trained further in Munich (collapsing German Empire), and spent some time after that in Paris (collapsing French Empire). He only settled in Italy when WWI broke out, during his mid-to-late 20s. He's not really an Italian figure, but a cosmopolitan figure from the various collapsing empires of the fin-de-siecle.
In any case, both Scandinavia and Italy went on to become major cultural forces during the Midcentury -- movies, design, architecture, fashion, you name it. They left most of their collapsed Euro imperial neighbors in the dust. They were not on the level of America and Russia, but they were still holding their own -- as was Japan, the other example of "not a collapsed empire". Oh, and of course Switzerland, but they're a little too small to contribute very much.
And to this day, as far as I can tell, Scandinavia and Italy are not members of the Cult of Crap, not nationwide anyway. I'm sure there are some sub-cultures that are into slop, but it hasn't taken over their entire cultural production.
Italy, like Japan, did have a brief moment where it was synonymous with gory ugly disgusting horror movies. For Italy in the late '70s and '80s, for Japan in the late '90s and early 2000s. But those were fleeting phases, not an ongoing crusade. And also not an iconoclastic attempt to erase and denigrate everything that came before them, whereas the American Cult of Crap seeks to erase, censor, problematize, or slander everything that was created before Obama's 2nd term.
In the 1960s, the Italians even briefly beat the US at making Westerns in the form of "Spaghetti Westerns"
DeleteI know Greece won formal independence from the Ottomans in the 1820s, but when de Chirico was born and raised in Greece in the late 1800s and early 1900s, it was still very much part of the Ottoman orbit and afflicted by all the collapsing empire problems, which is what "Balkanization" refers to -- their specific flavor of a general pattern, namely imperial collapse, especially among the peripheral provinces rather than the core.
ReplyDeleteLikewise, Lebanon was free from Ottoman rule after the Ottomans bit the dust after WWI. And even being ruled by the French protectorate only lasted until the early '40s, until France became a collapsed empire in turn.
That didn't stop Lebanon from showing the symptoms of imperial collapse -- it still has many of them to this day, although it has had the unifying, constructive influence of having to face a new meta-ethnic nemesis, namely the Zionists from Israel.
Other than that, the Levant might as well be the Balkans, and for the same reason -- both are peripheral provinces of the collapsed Ottoman Empire, and those symptoms do not go away overnight. It's barely been one century.
That's how it was in post-independence Greece during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Nominally independent, yet still burdened and plagued by the symptoms of the collapse of the empire it used to belong to.
Would you say India's mass culture export, largely wholesome, colourful musicals, is evocative of a growing empire?
ReplyDeleteIndia was part of the British Empire and is now an asabiya black hole low trust society.
ReplyDeleteNo one outside of South Asia watches Bollywood movies, whether musical or otherwise. We may know about it, but we haven't seen any of them, can't name a single one by name, nor any actors, directors, composers, dance numbers, songs, plot summaries... etc.
ReplyDeleteEveryone outside of Japan is very familiar with their video games, and a decent amount of their anime -- either the ones made for Japan, like Dragonball, or ones made for overseas audiences but animated by Japan, like Transformers, G.I. Joe, Jem, etc. in America during the '80s.
In fact, most or all of those Rankin & Bass Christmas TV specials that you may have been watching recently, were animated in Japan, both the hand-drawn and the stop-motion type. Nothing is more all-American than stories and voice performances by Americans, with animation by Japanese.
https://www.nishikata-eiga.com/2010/12/rankinbass-christmas-specials-made-in.html
ReplyDeleteYou can bypass the paywall for that Fortune Mag article by copy-pasting the URL into the Wayback Machine, BTW.
ReplyDeleteI didn't check, figuring they wouldn't try to paywall an article from 1955...
One other item of note there is that the top executives were not only voluntarily submitting to high tax rates, but agreed to underwrite all sorts of losses for public goods and services -- like the San Francisco Opera, the Boy Scouts, and a variety of charities, out of their own pocketbook.
Actual charities, i.e. that give people free stuff that helps their lives. Like providing palliative care for people with cerebral palsy. Not "teaching BIPOC trans kids from low-income neighborhoods how to program in Python" or something fake & gay like that, which doesn't give the unfortunate the things that they need. No responsibilizing, just giving them what they need.
Also not "funding genetics studies that may one day discover a gene-based / stem-cell therapy cure for cerebral palsy" -- your genes are not there to program your impairment.
Jesus, without having looked into it before, I just knew there would be all sorts of pointless genetic bullshit going on with this disease. Genetics "play a role" -- but are not the cause, otherwise those genes would get eliminated by Darwinian natural selection.
ReplyDeletePrevalence is a shocking 1 per 500 live births, highly common -- not a 1 in 10,000 or 100,000 or 1,000,000. And also present for a long time, documented by Hippocrates himself way back in the 5th C B.C.
The combination of 1) highly impairing of fitness, 2) highly common, way more than the random mutation rate for genes, and 3) around for a long time, enough for selection to have removed it by now, means that it's not genetic. Guaranteed not genetic. All those millions or billions of dollars flushed right down the toilet.
Rather, it must be an environmental insult of some kind -- toxin, pathogen, something like that. At least the researchers are not totally clueless, and have found a link to infection during pregnancy, and immunizing against that pathogen can help prevent the kid from being born with cerebral palsy.
Unlike harmful genes, natural selection cannot weed out all the environmental insults out there waiting to exploit you for their own gain like pathogens, or inanimate ones like lead paint or whatever.
See Greg Cochran on the new germ theory, back during the 2000s. Some things will never change.
Not only have the current elites flushed all that money down the toilet of genetic research for a common old impairing disease (which is therefore guaranteed NOT to be genetic, and where genetics can only play the role of "susceptibility to an infection"), instead of investing it in worthwhile avenues (like a pathogenic origin), they're also preventing that money from providing palliative care to people who already have the disease and need help.
Such a total fucking waste -- but that's what neoliberal-era "charity" and "research grants" get you. Utterly backwards horseshit that basic biology contradicts (the theory of natural selection).
In the New Deal, they may not have known what caused it, but at least they spent their money on helping people out who had it, not dump it down the drain of "can't even be possible" avenues of research for potential future cures.
And as for public goods like the opera, neolib elites have dedicated their vast ill-gotten wealth to DESTROYING the opera, ballet, movie theaters, malls, parks, gardens, libraries, and so on and so forth.
ReplyDeleteAt best they'll fund a piss-poor crappy slop digital / online replacement -- probably not even that. There's no such thing as a digital mall, with digital versions of the garden, park, sculpture gallery, civic architecture, etc. that were staples of a mall.
Everyone hates streaming services vs. the good ol' video rental store, which had a WAY better selection. You can't stream anything over the new services cuz neolibs demand the distributor to purchase the licensing rights -- and those are for a limited time only. And too exorbitant even for that limited window. So guess what, you just can't see that movie on the services.
At best you have to do the a la carte rental through Amazon Prime, since Netflix, Disney+, Hulu, etc. can't afford the licensing fee to include in on their "stream all you want" program.
Then there are the proprietary properties, that only the streaming service belonging to the rights-holders will be allowed to distribute. It's the rebirth of the vertical integrated movie model that was busted up by the monopoly-busting New Deal Supreme Court back in the good ol' 1940s.
Before then, studios were not just the makers of movies -- they owned the theaters where you saw the movies. So an MGM movie could only be seen in an MGM theater. Imagine having to shop around for the theater to see a certain movie in!
But streaming is worse, cuz it's not a la carte but a recurring subscription. Imagine having to pay membership monthly fees for 10 different theater chains, just so you could have access to any movie that came out!
Video rental stores were allowed to carry whatever the hell they wanted. And every mom & pop store in a bland strip center in suburban Nowheresville America had a full selection of classic Hollywood, foreign, cult, indie, and other niche genres.
Netflix was only worth the money when it was a physical media distributor -- their library was infinite! Just like a mom & pop video store, but on steroids. If it was released on DVD, they had it available, only question is how long the wait was, if someone else had it checked out.
When they went to online streaming, you couldn't find jackshit on there anymore, queue or no queue.
Maybe the Zoomers and later generations will be inspired by Luigi Mangione, and say, "Y'know what? If you tech oligarch scum are just going to destroy all the awesome public goods we used to enjoy IRL, and replace them if at all with some shitty digital version -- how about we just destroy your physical body, right here and now, and maybe or maybe not code a shitty digital substitute of you that can be interacted with on an online app?"
Related article on how Netflix and streaming destroyed the quality of movies and TV shows:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.nplusonemag.com/issue-49/essays/casual-viewing/
Spending New Year's Eve solving mysteries about Caucasus people, since they're an excellent example of the deception of language when looking into who is culturally descended from / related to who else.
ReplyDeleteTurks speak a Turkic language, so do Azeris (in Iran or Azerbaijan). Armenians and Ossetians speak Indo-European. Georgians speak a Kartvelian language. Circassians speak a Northwest Caucasian language. Chechens speak a Northeast Caucasian language. These are purportedly all from separate families, some of which are small isolate families like NWC, NEC, and Kartvelian.
But Hungarians speak a non-Indo-Euro language (Finno-Ugric / Uralic), and everyone knows they're culturally and genetically Indo-Euro, not Uralic. In fact we know exactly when and who brought that language to what is present-day Hungary -- the Magyars, who *were* Uralic, in the late 1st millennium AD. The Indo-Euros of present-day Hungary kept their culture overall, while adopting the non-Indo-Euro language of these invaders.
Ditto for Turks speaking a Turkic language -- they preserved their Indo-Euro heritage, while adopting the language of the invading Seljuk / Ottoman Turks, who showed up in Anatolia during the early 2nd millennium AD.
The point is, language is not a neutral cultural trait -- it has major utilitarian value, depending on who else you're trying to get along with, work for, serve militarily for, trade with, etc. Utilitarian traits can be deceptive for looking at ancestry, cuz it can flip overnight for utilitarian reasons and render their origins 99% opaque, if you judge only from present-day language.
So, look at cultural traits that have no utilitarian value -- the random, idiosyncratic ones, the ones where "we do that just cuz it's our tradition". Since they have no utilitarian value, no outsiders are pressured to adopt them, and they remain indicative of deep origins. If two cultures share them, that reveals a common cultural ancestor -- not one of them adopting it from the other one.
With that said, after I mentioned the Circassians off-hand yesterday, it got me thinking about their place in the big deep cultural history of their region, which is smack dab in the middle of the Indo-European homeland (to the north of the Caucasus Mountains, on the Western end of the Eurasian Steppe).
Then I figured, might as well look into some of the other Caucasus people.
I already suspected this, and provided some prelimary evidence from Chechens about 10 years ago, but I think all Caucasus people share a common cultural ancestor, and that is either Indo-European, or it is shared with the Indo-Europeans, indicating a stage before the Indo-Euros had their own culture. Perhaps only pertaining to the Western end of the Eurasian Steppe -- possibly extending to the Eastern end as well, and into parts of the New World, since they originally came over from Siberia.
As for the Eastern Steppe connection, I haven't looked into it enough to say yet, but there are several telling signs of similarity between Indo-Euros, Caucasus people, and several New World Indian groups like the Na-Dene / Athabaskan wave (including most of the badass nomadic warrior tribes who remain out West in America, like the Navajo).
Because I haven't looked into the Eastern end as much, I'll just mention the possibility that is worth exploring, and leave it there for the time being.
Now, onto the Caucasus people...
Caucasus people jump over fire to purify / get good luck on New Year's, regardless of present-day language.
ReplyDeleteThe Persians are the most well known practitioners of this ancient Indo-Euro ritual -- Nowruz, in their terms. But other groups jump over fire on Nowruz as well, like the Kurds.
And as it turns out, so do the Ossetians, who are an Iranian group that descends from the Northern Iranian groups like the Scythians and Sarmatians, on the Western Steppe, not the Persians or Medes who were from present-day Iran. The Ossetians call it a slightly different name -- Nogbon -- but it's the same holiday, ritual, and purpose. They live in the center of the Caucasus, not even on one of its edges -- and they jump over fire on New Year's.
Armenians do the same, although under a different name -- Trndez. Another Indo-Euro-speaking Caucasus people who jump over fire for good luck. The timing is influenced by Armenians' adoption of Christianity -- they moved it from springtime to February, to coincide with Candlemas, which marks the end of Christmas-Epiphany season, which takes the form of "end of the year" instead of "end of winter / beginning of spring" based on the weather.
Turks also jump over fire for good luck on Hidirellez, which is a Muslim re-branded version of Nowruz, in the same way that Armenians re-branded it in a Christian version. It remains a springtime holiday, though (early May). Turks speak a Turkic language as of the past 5 centuries or so, but are well known to have spoken Indo-European before then (Greek, Trojan, Hittite, etc. back to the Bronze Age).
Now is where things get interesting. It doesn't have its own Wikipedia page in English, but the Georgians also jump over fire for purifying good luck on New Year's! Well, Easter -- but reflecting the pagan New Year's, which was the arrival of springtime. It's called Chiakokonoba. Verbal description and gallery of images:
ReplyDeletehttps://susanastray.wordpress.com/2013/05/02/chiakokonoba/
https://www.shutterstock.com/editorial/image-editorial/georgian-boy-jumps-over-fire-during-folk-7709288a
They are purported to have never spoken an Indo-Euro language (natively), but Kartvelian since ancient times -- and yet they share a common cultural ancestor with Indo-Euro groups from Anatolia, Armenia, Scythia, and Persia.
This is not the only cultural element that they share -- recall that when I discovered circumabulation (walking around a focal area several times) as a common Indo-Euro wedding ritual, I mentioned that the Georgians practice it as well.
Georgians are also clearly on the "animal fat" side of the "animal vs. vegetable fat" divide, indicating a lack of cultural ancestry from the Saharo-Arabian sphere to their south. The national dish of Georgia is khachapuri, which is baked not fried (no veg oil needed for frying), and is a bread-boat filled with cheese, egg yolk, and sometimes butter. Not a vegetable oil in sight!
But wait, there's more! Now onto the Circassians, who are in the NW part of the Caucasus, and speak a NWC language (from an isolate family). The Adyghe refers to the people and language of the western region of Circassia, and one of their tribes is the Bzhedug (Bzhedugh, Bzhedughe, etc.).
ReplyDeleteQuoting from the following article, since again this does not have its own English Wiki article, nor is there any other English web-page about this ritual, since it's mostly Russian ethnographers studying the Caucasus:
https://www.europeanproceedings.com/article/10.15405/epsbs.2019.03.02.111
' The spring game "dzor dzagu" - "the game with the cross" that is traditional for the Bzhedughes (another Circassian tribe) was described by S. H. Mafedzev (Mafedzev, 1979). The game took part in spring, at the end of March and in April (the period of celebration of the New Year according the Adyghe pagan tradition). It contains a number of elements that also indicate its cosmological orientation ("reconstruction of the Universe").
' As described by S. H. Mafedzev, the game consisted in kindling a large fire of straw, which ignited "dzor" - crosses of the participants; two playing teams lined up opposite to each other on the different sides of the fire. "Members of both teams lit their torches from the large fire and when holding them over their heads, took turns jumping over the fire" (Mafedzev, 1979). Jumping over the fire with their eyes closed and performing the song "dzor uarad" - "the song of the cross", the players ran across the field while continuing to sing. Then they returned and jumped over the fire again. One of the players was given the cross to throw it aside and say: "Dzor, dzor, fall where happiness lies and the hearth is rich!"(Azamatova, 1963).'
New Year's, springtime, jumping over fire for good luck -- bingo. They share a common cultural ancestor with Georgians, Turks, Armenians, and various Iranian groups like Persians and Ossetians, regardless of linguistic incompatability.
I couldn't find many details, in English, of their marriage and wedding rituals, so I don't know how much more they share with the Indo-Euros.
However, they do practice a form of playful / ritualistic ransoming of the bride during the wedding, prompting the groom's side to pay a ransom of some kind before she is handed over. This is not bride kidnapping -- it's a playful mock-ransom during the wedding itself. Everyone knows she will be handed over, the groom's side just has to go through with the payment in order to make it official.
The Indo-Euro form is more elaborated, where a specific item is ransomed -- like a shoe in the Indo-Aryan wedding, or a knife in the Iranian wedding. But it's in the same family of wedding rituals.
The Chechens, from the Northeast Caucasusian language speakers, do this as well. I reviewed this all before:
https://akinokure.blogspot.com/2014/02/ransoming-shoes-at-wedding-ancient-indo.html
And this broad overview on the topic of Indo-Euro / Caucasus / Na-Dene connections, from the same time:
https://akinokure.blogspot.com/2014/02/links-among-indo-europeans-caucasus.html
I'll get to dancing styles later, but all Caucasus people share a common dancing style, similar to Indo-Euro step-dancing (Irish dancing, kathak from India, etc.).
The Indo-European-ness of the Basques! Before delving further into the Caucasus examples, I have to provide an example outside of the region to back up a broader pattern, which the Caucasus also belongs to. But just so it is motivated by other examples, not ad hoc for the Caucasus.
ReplyDeleteThe main point is, again, language is deceiving for inferring deep cultural roots. However, the examples I gave -- Turks speaking Turkic, Hungarians speaking Uralic, instead of both of their Indo-Euro original languages -- are of invaders coming in, and the hosts adopting the invading language.
I don't think this happened in the Caucasus, where there are several language isolate families in addition to Indo-Euro and Turkic. It's not like there were separate waves of invaders who brought each family to that tiny little region.
It must have been the reverse -- the expanding invaders, mainly the Indo-Euros, must have adopted the language of the natives who they invaded. These invaders kept most of their original Indo-Euro culture, but NOT their language, which is the only major sign of assimilation to the locals.
Why? IDK, but mountain people are hard to invade and dislodge -- so in order to work with them, get the lay of the land, etc., the invaders compromised to some degree on culture. Namely, the invaders would adopt the local language, but not much else. Mountain culture is harder to dislodge and replace than lowland culture.
The Indo-Euros replaced most of the local mountain culture, since Indo-Euros are the most successful expanding group in world history. But, they couldn't replace the language.
That's my conclusion for the Caucasus, without going further into it.
Are there other examples of this type, to show I'm not just ad-hoc-ing it? There is -- the Basques of the Pyrenees Mountains between Spain and France.
Basques are famous for continually speaking a non-Indo-Euro language that has an ancient and older lineage. It was there before the Indo-Euro invaders showed up in Iberia. It is from a language isolate family -- not from another big family like Saharo-Arabian, Turkic, etc.
ReplyDeleteSo, if you inferred from present-day language, you'd assume these people represent a non-Indo-Euro culture, and that somehow they have withstood assimilating or adopting the foreign culture of their Indo-Euro neighbors who invaded a couple thousand years ago.
Well, not so fast -- let's look at the rest of their culture, that has no utilitarian value, instead of the highly deceptive trait of language.
A timely example, Basques participate in the Yule log tradition, which has very ancient Indo-Euro roots, and their micro-rituals are like those of Provence and Portugal, both Indo-Euro cultures on either side of the Pyrenees. E.g., preserving some embers of last year's log in order to light this year's log, and spreading the ashes around the home and its land in order to spread good luck or protective powers.
https://www.labayru.eus/en/basque-ethnography-at-a-glance/the-yule-log/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yule_log
They also have a Christmastime gift-bringer of semi-supernatural or mythical powers, similar to Santa Claus, Olentzero, a giant who comes down from the mountains to bring children gifts on Christmas:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olentzero
Basques' national headwear is a beret -- just like the French beret, Irish and Scottish bonnet / Tam O'Shanter, the pakol from the Pashtuns in Afghanistan, and all sorts of flat brimless wool caps in between. I reviewed this Indo-Euro hat pattern last year in the comments somewhere, which I won't look up or link right now. Point is: Basques blend right in with the Indo-Euros for their distinctive headwear.
The Basque national dessert is etxeko bixkotxa (cake of the house), simply called gateau Basque in French. It uses butter in the dough, is baked not fried (no vegetable oil for frying), and is filled with a dairy cream. Just like the Indo-Euro dessert pattern, not like the Mediterranean pattern, certainly not like the Saharo-Arabian pattern of vegetable oil in desserts.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G%C3%A2teau_Basque
The visual symbol of Basque country and its people, going back to ancient times, is a variation on the swastika, the Lauburu, with the same basic meaning of good luck and fortune as it has for the Indo-Euro-speaking cultures:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lauburu
Tying back to the Caucasus, see my earlier link above that catalogs all sorts of Indo-Euro elements in Caucasus culture, including the symbol of Vainakh religion (what the Chechens practiced before their very recent Islamization), which is a variation on the swastika.
And the final nail in the coffin is so big I need to start a new comment...
Basques jump over bonfires for good luck! Three times, specifically -- the same magic number of times as in other cases further to the east. And also like those cultures, they prepare some magical herbs etc. to throw into the bonfire beforehand, to give it extra magical powers.
ReplyDeletehttps://buber.net/Basque/2020/06/21/basque-fact-of-the-week-the-summer-solstice/
The only slight difference is the timing -- not the end of winter, not the end of Christmas-Epiphany season, but the end of long days, i.e. the summer solstice. To reflect their adoption of Christianity, it's been tied to a nearby Christian holiday -- the Night of San Juan, which is in late June.
But it is still construed as an "end of the year" kind of occasion, namely when bright season ends and darkness begins.
So it's not quite as adherent to the original form, but it's 95% identical, and is a dead give-away that the Basques are most definitely Indo-Euro in their deep cultural origins. They might as well be from Iran.
And finally, there's the "running of the bulls" that the city of Pamplona is famous for, and that's in the Basque region (Navarre). Bull-fighting is found next door in the Indo-Euro-speaking parts of Spain, where it's their distinctive national sport. And bull-leaping goes back to Bronze Age Indo-Euros, e.g. the depictions of bull-leaping from the period of Minoan civilization after it was invaded / influenced by Mycenaean Greeks, as well as in the Hittites, as well as eastern examples from Bactria.
This daredevil sport involving a livestock species, specifically cows, is clearly from a badass pastoralist culture, not a sedentary agrarian one. Indo-European excellence at its finest.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bull-leaping
So, the Basques certainly do not represent a non-Indo-Euro culture, they do not represent a culture from before the Indo-Euro invasion of Iberia, etc. Only in their language are they non-Indo-Euro, but language is utilitarian.
Looking at all the other non-utilitarian domains of their culture, the domains that preserve rituals just cuz "this is the way we have always done them" and are resistant to change or adoption or replacement, the Basques are clearly and distinctly Indo-European.
The only catch is that they've adopted the language of the mountain people they invaded. There are surely some of the original pre-Indo-Euro population there, but they have adopted almost all of Indo-Euro culture, except for their language.
The genetic data is not necessary to examine, but as it turns out, their closest neighbors are the Spanish, an uncontroversially Indo-Euro genepool and cultural group. Basques do have some unique DNA reflecting the pre-Indo-Euro population, but that was clearly swamped by the Indo-Euro invasion.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Origin_of_the_Basques#Genetic_studies
Oddly enough, some linguists propose links between Basque languages and Caucasus languages of various families, but that's not important to the main argument here -- which is that an expanding invasion swamped a local population, genetically and culturally, but adopted the language instead of imposing their own language.
ReplyDeleteThe same thing, I conclude, happened in the Caucasus -- Indo-Euros invaded and in some cases kept their own language (Armenians and Ossetians), but generally adopted the local languages (Kartvelian, NWC, and NEC families).
The similarity with Basques is the location being heavily mountainous, and mountain peoples and their cultures are much harder to dislodge and replace, for whatever reason. So unlike Indo-Euros invading and replacing all culture in a lowland area, like Russia or the Indus Valley, in a mountain area they had to make one major compromise -- language, which remained the local pre-invasion language.
Amazing! In fact, TOTALLY FUCKIN' AMAZING!
Who on social media even has these mysteries momentarily flitting through their ADHD-addled micro-brains? Let alone pondering them, and solving them? Only among the Cliffs of Wisdom in the ruins of the blogosphere will the mysteries be solved! ^_^