The Mookse and the Gripes discussion

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Diego Garcia
The Goldsmiths Prize
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2022 Goldsmiths shortlist - Diego Garcia
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I've read his previous books and they're accessible but decidedly lawyerly, if that helps, I think he's an excellent non-fiction writer, I particularly liked East West Street: On the Origins of "Genocide" and "Crimes Against Humanity"
I planned to read this with the Sands but when the Sands comes down in price.

Try this David,
A lecture by Professor Philippe Sands: The Chagos Archipelago: The Last British Colony in Africa
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rIRVW...
The lecture starts around the 21-minute mark

I enjoyed it. I didn't find it particularly melodramatic. It was quite lawyerly as Alwynne states. I think the addition of a bit of melodrama made it seem a little more palatable. I found the politics particularly interesting. As an Australian I was a little embarrassed by the way our government kowtowed to Britain (like we were still a colony...perhaps we are...) so I got an insight into a world I know little about.
Also having recently read The Colony and then both Glory and Seven Moons which are set during the turmoil following decolonisation - this gave me more food for thought.

David wrote: "I'm a bit surprised this book is at the bottom or near the bottom of the rankings (so far). This is one of my favorite books of the year. The competition is fierce."
I think it is too early to read much into the rankings beyond it being a tight contest.
I think it is too early to read much into the rankings beyond it being a tight contest.

https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/...
It was fascinating for me as it turns out that one of the main groups of ex Chagos Islanders in the world is based less than 10 miles from my home

(Though less than 10 miles from my home for me where a decent proportion of the UK population live, including most of the famous ones, the King, the Prime Minister etc! Whereas say 10 miles from where our mother lives covers only a few ‘000 people).

Part of our interrogating the novel form involves not just our writing it but our approach to its publication
• It will be published by Fitzcarraldo editions
• But before that, as each chapter is completed, it is published in various journals and magazines (we’ve published chapters in White Review, BOMB, Semiotext(e), Book Works, and others)
• After each chapter comes out we put it on our tumblr and give a series of performances from the work in progress, which we consider part of the publication strategy
• Part of the result of the performances is that they create a kind of social encounter with the text and invite discussion
• We see the project in terms of trying to rethink how we might approach the novel form for our times is also about trying to collapse the distinction between its production its finished form.
• To open out the novel to a kind of continuous practice of writing, writing collaboratively, of living and working together.
Which is admirable and justifies its place on the list, but means the reading of the novel alone doesn’t really capture the full project.
(Links to the tumblr and also another chapter of the book published standalone on my review)



• To open out the novel to a kind of continuous practice of writing, writing collaboratively, of living and working together."
This kind of thing makes me lose the will to live. That's great that they're doing all that... makes a nice publicity tie-in, but the only reason anyone has heard of this is because it's a novel published by Fitzcarraldo.
I'm a big fan of the novel as self-contained world between covers, without tie-ins, performances, wine pairings, dog walkings, sponsored trips or what-have-you.

That may have been my clumsy writing. I was referring to "After each chapter comes out we put it on our tumblr and give a series of performances from the work in progress, which we consider part of the publication strategy."
But it's fair to say this book has rubbed me the wrong way since I heard of it so I'm probably just not the audience...

I like this from the authors:
Part of the result of the performances is that they create a kind of social encounter with the text and invite discussion.

So... like a book presentation then. Or a book club.

So... like a book presentation then. Or a book club."
I'm with you Emily, the Peckham literati have become such a cliche, plus the sequence of events makes reading the novel equivalent to buying the catalogue for an exhibition you didn't see or watching the YouTube video of a performance art piece.


I think that was part of my initial point, that it's great to swan around saying we're unconventional because of this and that but actually it's a book. All that other stuff doesn't strike me as any more relevant than if the authors wrote a controversial tweet (which could also change your reading experience).

Edit: I posted this before I saw your last post, Emily. I think we are seeing the same thing and coming to opposite conclusions :)

It's very Goldsmiths, so make sense it's on the list. The performances were in places like Peckham which used to be considered a cutting-edge, but dodgy, urban area so lots of arty white people moved there and priced out the locals. It's just that, for me, anyway that whole subculture has an air of desperation, an attempt to recreate the radical, performance art scene of the 70s. But actually, carried out in a an extremely self-conscious, artificial way for audiences of people who are very much not radical. And from the extracts I've seen the literary/cultural references are exactly the ones I'd expect to see, the canonical countercultural - if that makes any sense!


It's similar to the now-mainstream reclaiming vinyl trend, so quite a calculatedly fashionable decision. Semiotext(e) as the US publisher makes perfect sense.


https://www.newyorker.com/culture/inf...
tumblr was very popular with art-school students etc a few years ago and that led to it crossing back into the mainstream. So, it fits with the whole Peckham, Goldsmiths scene at the time the book was being "serialised".



I think that's exactly right. Perhaps it should turn me off but it doesn't. It's the opposite approach of engagement by, say, TikTok or even twitter, both of which would make this rather banal.


Edit: I'm not sure how to situate places like Peckham for someone in America - but would be similar to trends around New York neighbourhoods. Although Peckham's pretty much past its prime now and the artists, writers, students who made it fashionable are also being priced out, this is an indication of the kind of cultural groupings at its peak:
https://www.vogue.co.uk/article/new-g...
https://www.timeout.com/london/things...
Before that Shoreditch and before that Hackney/Stoke Newington were the places to be/exhibit etc but again the house prices/rents are too high now for a lot of the people who originally made them the places to be. Now more likely to be run over by an ultra-expensive pushchair wielded by a banker's wife than bump into an artist or student.


Diego Garcia is new and interesting to those unfamiliar with the niche group that created it and contrived to those familiar with that art scene, but wouldn’t that be true of all art projects that are so interesting they capture a wider audience? I can understand people familiar with the group that created it feeling it’s nothing new, but for people unaware it is still something new and interesting.



Yep! Although Converse has fallen, and Veja and Novesta have taken over.

Finding yourself on a narrow pavement with one of them nipping at your heels is not the greatest experience! Although I'm sure yours was steered with the utmost delicacy.

Books mentioned in this topic
East West Street: On the Origins of "Genocide" and "Crimes Against Humanity" (other topics)Diego Garcia (other topics)