Wednesday, October 17, 2007

The Imminent HSC

Well, as the HSC creeps up on me I thought it important to leave some sort of vestige for future reference. There is currently one day and nine-ish hours until my first exam, and I honestly don't feel horrified. I probably should be, but it would almost be an effort to panic at this point - and as panic wouldn't benefit me anyway it seems like way too much work ^_^

What will happen will happen and what won't never would - no use in stressing over that.

There is one thing that's going quite well however - my study pattern.
Unfortunately for any subject I don't innately like it's hard for me to study - for subjects I innately like (such as computing of course) study is almost equivalent to enjoyment - so I need to find some way to force myself to study.

Which brings me to the method that works. Be prepared to laugh =]
Study Block -> Episode of TV Show -> Repeat Ad Nauseum

Using that method for a straight afternoon (about eight hours or so) I got a 100% mark in an Extension Math exam, so it's proven to work in the past. The main advantage with using an episode of a TV show is that, unlike internet or music or whatever else, the break is limited and well defined - when the episode ends it's time to get back to work. When you're just surfing the web, jamming music or playing a computer game the temptation to hang around "just five minutes longer" is much too strong.


Yes, I watch Angel - a vampire with a soul helps me to study

Back then the television series was Stargate Atlantis - unfortunately however I've run out of that series, so I've moved on. I'd comment more on the series, but it's past when I should be in bed (HSC remember =]) but I will simply say that Joss Whedon, whom I've loved since Firefly/Serenity (and unknowingly Buffy) does not disappoint. It seems that Fox enjoy killing his television shows before their time however, but that's a matter for another day.

And a special thanks to Stephen (no, not me, my friend... I do have multiple personalities but I wouldn't insult those other personalities by giving them the same name as myself!) for lending me Season One, Two and Three of Angel on DVD ^_^


Film Noir much? =]

Other than that it's probably best I go. Time flies on, the exam comes nearer, but so too does the end of all of this - now only 15 or so days away =]

Wishing for a temporal fold,
Smerity

Tuesday, October 02, 2007

HSC Post #1 - Consumerism in Brave New World and Blade Runner

As I'm heading into HSC waters I decided I may try something a tad different. It's unfortunate that I procrastinate so much, but if in any small way I can combine procrastination with study then it will not be a loss. One of the main things I need to do at this point is to explore ideas and concepts in Brave New World and Blade Runner (specifically the Director's Cut), so I shall try through my normal blog style discussions.


Feels slightly Alice in Wonderland... Through the looking glass?

Consumerism in Brave New World and Blade Runner
Aldous Huxley, the author of Brave New World, lived through a time of turbulent changes, where society was rapidly being transformed by the advancing state of technology. In his novel he focused on how these advances affected the individual, as opposed to society itself, but it doesn't diminish the advances he foresaw themselves. First amongst them, and something nearly incomprehensible by today's standards, is the loss of craftsmanship.

One must consider that up until only a few decades before Huxley published his novel that when an object was made, it was made one at a time, individual, with great care. This is part of the reason why antiques are so valuable. Antique objects are considered intrinsically individual, not by artificial restrictions (such as Limited Edition promotional objects) but due to the fact that a single craftsman had to dedicate a great deal of time and care into it's creation.

For Huxley it must have been terrifying to see the world move towards Ford's assembly line - where the creators were no longer craftsman but instead automatons, putting no genuine care into their work. Huxley may have feared whether this copy culture would continue all the way up to the arts, removing the creativity and originality from them which in his opinion made them so valuable.

Huxley continued this trend on to human beings, the idea that those individualistic human traits are sacrificed for simplicity and efficiency. This is very much where Brave New World and Blade Runner collide, they both feature worlds in which technology has led to dehumanisation, where due to the forces of commerce and science working hand in hand it is no longer economically feasible to have an individual identity - society is willing to suffer a carbon copy culture for efficiency's sake.


The Carbon Copy Culture

To some degree however we're wandering from the topic of craftsmanship when we talk about individuals as human beings. Whilst yes it is true that the concept of the creation of life (and mass production of it) is being used in both the texts (either through the Bokanovsky Process or by the creation of Replicants in Blade Runner) the fear of individuality is spawned by a different foe - that of power and authority.

In both texts there is essentially a tyrant (Mustapha Mond in Brave New World or Tyrell in Blade Runner) who aim to perpetuate their authority and power by the removal of individuality. In Brave New World this is achieved through Pavlovian Conditioning and peer pressure (in that any slightly taboo topic, such as an appreciation of nature, is either drilled out of them behaviorally or failing that, drilled out of them by the community) and soma, a powerful hallucinogenic drug that is considered (the cure to) "morality in a bottle", whilst in Blade Runner the control is instigated through the life spans of the Replicants. These methods aim to prevent individuals from pushing forth change, quelling any possible uprisings or revolutions well before they could endanger the tyrannical dictators. Of course, that didn't quite work for Tyrell now did it? =]


Soma
Copyright © Miss Emily

I may end it there... It's late and I'm starting to ramble, and I'm not entirely sure any of that moved toward con...

And on top of that Marcus just messaged me with "hey stephen, what do u think about christianity? like are u one or do u believe in god?" - I need my brain cells elsewhere =]

Wishing morality came in pill form,
Smerity