Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted (edited)

It looks like this is an exhibition on the evolution of the samurai as a myth in popular culture, they’re talking about films, video games, fashion, even Darth Vader gets a mention. I get the impression swords will only be a small part of the exhibit, and from the video I’d guess not a very throughly examined part either. I have to be in London in April anyway so I might as well go and find out. 

Edited by Pincheck
  • Like 1
Posted
10 hours ago, Hoshi said:

This is not to blame the presenter. His effort is earnest, and I am sympathetic to his predicament in the society he is embedded in, it is a survival strategy.

 

He is but a symptom of a deeper societal issue. 

 

This is a general trend, museums follow the elite taste and ideology of their donors and subsidizing government bodies. Sadly, the BM has been marred in a battle against the Woke Mind Virus and its denunciation of colonial history that renders everything it owns, hires, and does, suspect. The presenter is a product of this tension. It is an unfortunate situation, but this too will come to pass in the broader arc of history when necessity calls back for common sense. 

 

Best,

 

Hoshi

 

Hoshi:  I have to take a bit of issue with this representation of the issue and the video.  An exhibition may focus on any aspect of a subject as long as it does it competently.  For instance, I think an exhibition focusing on the role and lives of women of the samurai class would be extremely useful.  (Probably somewhat selfishly because it is something I am researching for a piece of fiction that I am working on, but still.) 

 

"Woke mind virus" as a characterization rather politicizes things, so I'll leave that alone :) .  The issue with this video is not the subject matter covered, but the factual errors contained.  An institution of the calibre of the BM should work hard to ensure that on matters of fact, it correctly represents its subject, or in areas where there is uncertainty, at least the current range of scholarship.

 

Robert

Posted

Hi Robert, 

 

Quote

An exhibition may focus on any aspect of a subject as long as it does it competently.  For instance, I think an exhibition focusing on the role and lives of women of the samurai class would be extremely useful.

 

I couldn't agree more. My earlier comment was not criticism of the focus

 

The factual errors that we have vehemently denounced are the product of a particular paradigm of historical analysis that focuses on power dynamics, deconstructionism, and post-modern revisionism. In this paradigm, convergence towards historical accuracy is subordinated to the greater goal of pushing novel narratives to enact society change.

 

It is this inversion of teleology that I take as responsible for the fall of Western scholarship in our field. 

 

Or, simply put: when the purpose of scholarship shifts from "finding out what was true" to "changing what people believe," accuracy becomes optional and errors become inevitable.

 

Hope this helps to clarify my position, 

 

Hoshi

  • Like 3
  • Love 2

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...