August 11, 2003, 6:06 p.m.
reading: Imagine Otherwise, Kandice
Chuh; The Healer's Keep, Victoria Hanley; Race and
Resistance: Literature and Politics in Asian America
, Viet Thanh Nguyen
listening: The Kills' Keep on Your Mean
Side
LP, Feelings on a Grid demo CD
"The individual in any given nation has...a
terrible opportunity to convince himself of what would occasionally
strike him in peace-time -- that the state has forbidden to the
individual the practice of wrong-doing, not because it desired to
abolish it, but because it desires to monopolize it like salt and
tobacco. The warring state permits itself every such misdeed, every such
act of violence, as would disgrace the individual man. It practices not
only the accepted strategems, but also deliberate lying and deception
against the enemy; and this, too, in a measure which appears to surpass
the usage of former wars. The state exacts the utmost degree of
obedience and sacrifice from its citizens, but at the same time treats
them as children by maintaining an excess of secrecy, and censorship of
news and expressions of opinion that renders the spirits of those thus
intellectually oppressed defenceless against every unfavourable turn of
events and every sinister rumour. It absolves itself from the guarantees
and contracts it had formed with other states, and makes unabashed
confession of its rapacity and lust for power, which the private
individual is them called upon to sanction in the name of
patriotism."
--Sigmund Freud, "Thoughts on War and
Death," translated by E. Colburn Mayne, in Collected Papers, ed. Joan
Riviere (New York: Basic, 1959) 4:293-94.