MFreeZone: Ian Irvine
At the beginning of the modern period, all the prerogatives of the continental states accumulated in the hands of those princes who most relentlessly took the course of administrative bureaucratisation. It is obvious that technically the great modern state is absolutely dependent upon a bureaucratic basis. [Max Weber.]
They wanna jab her full of drugs: In using the term petrification, one can exploit a number of the meanings embedded in this word: 1. A particular form of terror, whereby one is petrified, i.e. turned to stone. 2. The dread of this happening: the dread, that is, of the possibility of turning, or being turned, from a live person into a dead thing, into a stone, into a robot, an automaton, without personal autonomy of action, an it without subjectivity. (R.D. Laing, The Divided Self.)
Womb Decay: Most adults cannot comprehend the agony that a newborn is in, even though he may be crying and screaming his heart out. But because he cannot speak, we act as though he hasnt said anything. Because he cannot explain himself we discount his pain as harmless. We expect newborns to writhe and scream ... [Arthur Janov, Imprints: The Lifelong Effects of the Birth Experience.]
Ian Irvine, is an Australian who has lived in NZ, the US, and the UK. He has a great deal of poetry and short stories and essays published about the place, most recently by the Canadian Journal 'The Antigonish review', Lotus magazine. The Age (newspaper, Melbourne) and Parabola. My reviews and poetry appear regularly at Australia's major literary literaray net site 'Ozlit. He is also editor of 'The Animist' http://www.diskotech.com.au/asphodel which is, we like to think, one of Australia's leading literary e-journals.The Animist is archived by the Australian National Library as a journal of national cultural significance.
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