Skip navigation . This website will look much better in a browser that supports web standards. However its content is accessible to any browser or internet device.

Archive for June 14th, 2008

Dust to dust

posted by Cptn

Some dusty

We’ve heard of books picking up dust but news from Plymouth Arts Centre takes it one step further.

When you’re out and about in Plymouth, be on the lookout for Lau Thiam Kok’s new book, DUST, which will be turning up on park benches, bus seats and cafe tables.

The book is filled writings about ‘palpable place or metaphysical place’ (now that’s what we call ‘fear in a handful of dust’), which has been commissioned through Plymouth Arts Centre’s artists and curators residency project; a programme which supports emerging artists in the city of Plymouth to develop their practice.

Some 1,000 copies of DUST will be left in random places across Plymouth, and can be taken from place to place – left on a park bench, at a coffee shop, or the bookshelf.

You can join the online Flickr group to watch and share these found books, or visit Lau Thiam Kok’s site.

————————————————————————————
Has this information been useful?

If you liked this story, you could buy us a coffee --------------------------------------------------------------------

June 14th, 2008

1 comment

The Circle of Strife

posted by Jess Sains

Revolutionary Rants boot

As I have mentioned before in my weekly ramblings for People’s Republic of South Devon, when a student of politics (if you can ever stop being such a thing once you’ve started…) one of the questions that kept me pondering throughout my four years of marked study was the circular nature of politics, or whether such a nature existed, at least.

This week David Davies, the Shadow Home Sectary and Conservative MP for Haltemprice and Howden, resigned his position and seat in protest at New Labour’s victory on the 42 day detention vote in the Commons. He says it infringes of British civil liberties.

Now, apart from including the word ‘British’ this sounds a distinctly airy-fairy, Amnesty-Internally, wishy-washy lefty statement, doesn’t it? And here is the major, frightening issue facing people of my generation – old enough to have lived in the Thatcher era as children and seen the state of the country at that time, but young enough to mostly have been teenagers and adults during the Blairite era – are the Tories now more left-wing than Labour? Is anyone left-wing at all? If there isn’t a political split between our major parties what is left for the electorate to decide on, to vote about?

I stayed up all night to hear the results come in in 1997. I dragged my sorry self out of bed again, having headed up there at about 5:30am after dancing when Portillo fell to Twigg, to see the Blair arrive at Number Ten. I hoped. Oh how I hoped. I hoped that they were just faking the grinning, the spinning and the middle-ground; that now in power they would reveal themselves as lovely, lovely lefties after all.

Eleven years later and I am now older and… cynicaler. The landscape of British politics has changed so greatly since the early 1990’s that it is no longer recognisable. I don’t blame this all on the Blair, Campbell and Mandie, either, the beginnings come from Kinnock’s leadership. The foundation for the removal of Clause IV and the rumblings of ‘one-member-one-vote’ appeared in the lead-up to the 1992 election. If Labour had won that election, things might have been different, the old party faithful might have reared up again and prevented some of the things that were pushed through being pushed through, but in the utter dejection of defeat in came John Smith and out went Socialism…

The rest is, as they say, history. The future, however, is a topsy-turvy type of place. The Tories have principles and don’t ask questions for cash, their leader is more likely to be seen (when the media is about…) with his family or on a bike than sinking the Belgrano. New Labour is more likely to be pushing through a piece of legislation where by ever adult person has to wear a camera, surgically placed in their eye for the rest of their life, because if we are not terrorists or paedophiles we should all be happy to have cameras in our eyes for the safety of our children…

Only one thing remains constant. The Northern Ireland Unionist parties still have a casting vote that holds a lot of power in Westminster. Everyone else in Parliament is huddled round the centre ground like a flock of frightened turkeys as the fox draws near. And then they wonder why people don’t want to vote, when there really isn’t that much to vote on any more. Who has a better smile, David or Gordon? Who is ‘greener’ of the two? Then we, the great British public, get accused of being celebrity obsessed no-brainers because we are told that we shouldn’t be voting on smiles.

Well, then, give me something to vote on. Give me a left, a right: give me a bloody choice. Give me something to get my teeth in to, because even I, a politics geek through-and-through, can no longer see the point in there being more than one party. But, unlike Winston, I don’t love Big Brother yet, either…

————————————————————————————
Has this information been useful?

If you liked this story, you could buy us a coffee --------------------------------------------------------------------

June 14th, 2008

2 comments

Mr Punch Crocodile Hunter

Greetings People’s Republicans, Phig Billy here, your friendly neighbourhood gonzo cartoonist. Yesterday, my attorney and I took a tour of the Arts and Crafts Fair in Exeter on the Cathedral Green, and it was well worth it.

Phig Billy's Crocodile Hunting Mr Punch

I shall be writing up my conversations with some of the stall holders that I met presently, but in the meantime I wanted to let you know that the fair is on again today, so if you happen to be in Exeter or feel like a trip to see and maybe purchase some arts and/or crafts, then you should definitely go.

There is a fantastic variety of stuff on display: from the customary watercolours, ceramics and basketwork to crazy wooden mirror frames and gorgeous Chinese ink paintings. There are even people on stilts and African dancers.

But most importantly there’s a Punch and Judy show. I hadn’t seen a Punch and Judy show in years and I found it to be most entertaining. But if Punch and Judy is supposedly such an English tradition (albeit originally from Italy, so Wikipedia informs me), why a crocodile? Where the hell is it supposed to have come from?

Answers on a postcard… or leave a comment.

————————————————————————————
Has this information been useful?

If you liked this story, you could buy us a coffee --------------------------------------------------------------------

June 14th, 2008

1 comment


Subscribe to PRSD

Get all stories straight to your browser. Click to subscribe.

Add to any service

Search the PRSD

Artsculture

The Natural Collection

Nigel's Eco Store

D+CFilm

T-Shirt

Green Books

Green Books banner 3

Downloads

Find us on

The People's Republic of South Devon on Facebook The People's Republic of South Devon on Bebo The People's Republic of South Devon on MySpace The People's Republic of South Devon on Twitter

Ethical Directory

Calendar

June 2008
M T W T F S S
« May   Jul »
 1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
30  

Posts by Month

E-Newsletter

Dear Citizen,

Welcome to the People's Republic of South Devon. Your subscription will begin with the next newsletter. Keep up to date by visiting the blog regularly and make sure your voice is heard. Many thanks, The People's Republic of South Devon.

Accessibility Options

To adjust the text size of this site please click the icons below.

Small Text Medium Text Large Text

View full Accessibility Statement

Posts by Category

E-Newsletter

Dear Citizen,

Welcome to the People's Republic of South Devon. Your subscription will begin with the next newsletter. Keep up to date by visiting the blog regularly and make sure your voice is heard. Many thanks, The People's Republic of South Devon.

Accessibility Options

To adjust the text size of this site please click the icons below.

Small Text Medium Text Large Text

View full Accessibility Statement