Babar at 80 and Yoga

 

Here is a lovely interview with Laurent de Brunhof about the origins of Babar and the latest book in the series.  Yoga for Elephants!

http://video.nytimes.com/video/2011/08/12/books/review/100000000995072/babar-at-80.html?WT.mc_id=VI-D-I-NYT-MOD-MOD-M215-ROS-0811-HDR&WT.mc_ev=click

Below you will find a link to my favorite analysis of the Babar stories:  Adam Gopnik reads the first installment in the series as an allegory of French colonialism and its “civilizing” effects.

http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2008/09/22/080922fa_fact_gopnik

 

 

 

 

Childhood in Crisis (Again)

Joel Bakan, a law professor at the University of British Columbia and author of “Childhood Under Siege: How Big Business Targets Children” writes in the NYT about how new technologies, corporate greed, and the pharmaceutical industry are threatening childhood.  Moral panic about childhood has a familiar face, and ever since Fredric Wertham’s Seduction of the Innocent and his planned War on Children, we are right to be suspicious of those who crusade against new media and technologies “for the sake of the children.”  What worries me most is the double standard in effect: we are tethered to our electronic devices, constantly texting and talking, yet we become upset when children mimic our behavior.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/22/opinion/corporate-interests-threaten-childrens-welfare.html?_r=1

There is reason to believe that childhood itself is now in crisis.

Throughout history, societies have struggled with how to deal with children and childhood. In the United States and elsewhere, a broad-based “child saving” movement emerged in the late 19th century to combat widespread child abuse in mines, mills and factories. By the early 20th century, the “century of the child,” as a prescient book published in 1909 called it, was in full throttle. Most modern states embraced the general idea that government had a duty to protect the health, education and welfare of children. Child labor was outlawed, as were the sale and marketing of tobacco, alcohol and pornography to children. Consumer protection laws were enacted to regulate product safety and advertising aimed at children.

By the middle of the century, childhood was a robustly protected legal category. In 1959, the United Nations issued its Declaration of the Rights of the Child. Children were now legal persons; the “best interests of the child” became a touchstone for legal reform.


A New Snow White from Disney?

Currently, there are three Snow White films in development.  This new version is a “re-imagining” of the tale, and production has been delayed, perhaps because of the two other films coming out in the 2012, along with the television series “Once Upon a Time,” based on the Snow White story.  Why has that particular story gone viral?  The key element, a beautiful, seductive, evil woman who plots the death of her more beautiful, innocent, virtuous rival, does not resonate immediately with our cultural fears and anxieties.  But I wonder if the rise of the “cougar” has anything to do with the resurrection of Snow White?  And is it a stretch to consider the Casey Anthony story a grim, modern version of “Snow White”?  Or more importantly, is our cultural obsession with Casey Anthony based to some extent on how she embodies childhood fears about maternal sexual envy turned murderous?

 

http://www.cinemablend.com/new/Director-Hired-For-Disney-s-Snow-White-Adaptation-Now-Titled-The-Order-Of-The-Seven-26041.html

ABC’s Once Upon a Time

 

High production values mark this new series, and the mix of fantasy and reality is exactly what you would expect from executive producers Adam Horowitz and Edward Kitsis, who also made “Lost.

And they all lived happily ever after – or so everyone was led to believe. Emma Swan knows how to take care of herself. She’s a 28-year-old bail bonds collector who’s been on her own ever since she was abandoned as a baby. But when the son she gave up years ago finds her, everything starts to change. Henry is now 10 years old and in desperate need of Emma’s help. He believes that Emma actually comes from an alternate world and is Snow White and Prince Charming’s missing daughter. According to his book of fairytales, they sent her away to protect her from the Evil Queen’s curse, which trapped the fairytale world forever, frozen in time, and brought them into our modern world. Of course Emma doesn’t believe a word, but when she brings Henry back to Storybrooke, she finds herself drawn to this unusual boy and his strange New England town. Concerned for Henry, she decides to stay for a while, but she soon suspects that Storybrooke is more than it seems. It’s a place where magic has been forgotten, but is still powerfully close… where fairytale characters are alive, even though they don’t remember who they once were. The epic battle for the future of all worlds is beginning, but for good to win, Emma will have to accept her destiny and fight like hell.

Peter Pan and Leisure Diving

Link below will connect you with an example of Leisure Diving.  The advocate tells us that what all men hope to do is “never to grow up.”

The clip shows how “Freedom meets expression of self in an artful way.”  I would be game for this sport in a different body of water.  Be patient: it takes about 10 seconds for the video below the photograph to load.

http://bostonherald.com/business/technology/general/view.bg?articleid=1356503