The Mookse and the Gripes discussion

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A Lover's Discourse
The Goldsmiths Prize
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2020 Goldsmiths Shortlist - A Lover's Discourse
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Hugh, Active moderator
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Oct 14, 2020 12:10PM


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(DBC Pierre one I had wished into forgetting about it)

My review
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...





Passages like this on German having der/das/die whereas Chinese doesn't even have articles are funny but not terribly profound:
'You don't have any articles?'
'No. Why bother? We save time for something else.'
'Something else like what?'
'Like enjoying the taste of green tea, or staring into a pond, checking out frogs and lotus flowers.'
and the innovative format seems to lean rather heavily on Barthes.

NB to add, I think my main issue with this was the Brexit part which felt unnecessary, a bit trite (if she'd linked people's sense of 'home'/belonging - on both sides of the Brexit debate - with the main theme it would have made sense but she didn't).

The murmuring mass of an unknown language constitutes a delicious protection, envelops the foreigner (provided the country is not hostile to him) in an auditory film which halts at his ears all the alienations of the mother tongue: the regional and social origins of whoever is speaking, his degree of culture, of intelligence, of taste, the image by which he constitutes himself as a person and which he asks you to recognize. Hence, in foreign countries, what a respite! Here I am protected against stupidity, vulgarity, vanity, worldliness, nationality, normality
the problem is that is it from Barthes
