Thursday, February 15, 2007

those days when one is able to read...

''Disturbed by the reactions which play upon him from every quarter, the man of to-day is conscious, on the one hand, of a new world which is forming itself regularly, logically and clearly, which produces in a straightforward way things which are useful and usable, and on the other hand he finds himself, to his surprise, living in an old and hostile environment. This framework is his lodging; his town, his street, his house or his flat rise up against him useless, hinder him from following the same path in his leisure that he pursues in his work...
There reigns a great disagreement between the modern state of mind, which is an admonition to us, and the stifling accumulation of age-long detritus.
The problem is one of adaptation, in which the realities of our life are in question.
Society is filled with a violent desire for something which it may obtain or not. Everything lies in that: everything depends on the effort made and the attention paid to these alarming symptoms.
Architecture or Revolution.
Revolution can be avoided.''


- 'Towards a New Architecture', Le Corbusier, pp. 288-99

he wrote this indirectly refering to the social crisis that confronted france after the war... but somehow has perticular relevance in today's times... (at least in some parts of the world)

Tuesday, February 13, 2007

from a personal despair to the despair of a planet

i kept thinking about a little piece from arundhati roy's 'god of small things' till late last night...its about how personal despair has no meaning in an indian's life as it gets lost in the turmoil of the despair of the whole nation...

as my second month in the second phase of my love-hate-relationship with london starts...i inevitably found myself with an intense sense of personal despair yesterday morning, but the world that we live in doesnt allow the personal despair to last that long in a 'responsible global citizen's' life...i spent an evening with myself and half a pint of guiness in some screen/bar in borough watching 'an inconvenient truth'...i was more than skeptical about watching the documentary (despite hearing mostly positive reviews) based on a public speech by a presidential candidate from the united states and based on the 'trendiest'(?) topic in all the public debates including the ones in the fields of built environment now...it was just an idea to escape from my personal despair for me...but i did find myself in despair of 'a slowly dieing planet' instead...

its a documentary worth watching (except for slightly 'un-fitting'(?) american humour and the usual we(as US) should be 'saving the world' bits) about issues related to global warming...it is dense with information... figures... graphs... numbers ....and most importantly photographic evidence that one can not help but see with wide and sometimes watery eyes...evenif one doesnt want to seriously consider the projections made in the movie (as they are arrived at by something called 'fuzzy logic' - which is still a very gray area itself in the field of science/technology), there is enough evidence in terms of what has been happening in the last century, one cant help but be worried if his/her child would see a healthy future and snow capped mountains or not...



_ _ _ _ _



this relates me back to a few things:

. several pieces from another of roy's books - 'an ordinary person's guide to empire'
. one of my previous posts on SEZs in india, my friend R's question about whether SEZs bring problems
. several articles on politics of landgrab, loss of agriculture lands and labour reforms of indian government


. and as i see a lot of despair of the planet is the result of the corporate globalisation (even imperialism with a new label may be) i think more and more about my desire to do a phd involving the notion of power(corporations,government here) and power struggles as a main theme and a strong economic focus (corporate/global vs. agriculture,local,informal) and focus on india and the developing world...the process of germination is still going on...looks like i somehow need to find a term to replace so_much_chewd_upon 'sustainable' but try to come up with an understanding of current socio-political and economic scenario and most importantly come up with a model (may be -outline of) for 'sustainable' development for india in the global context which again has a very strong bottom-up approach instead of the top-down mad decisionmaking that is going on...

. . .