2005/01/25

Columbus Day

Columbus Day?

백과 사전을 살펴보면 다음과 같이 나와있다.
1492년 10월 12일 이탈리아 탐험가 콜럼버스가 아메리카 대륙을 발견한 것을 기념해 미국과 중앙아메리카 일부 국가에서 지정한 기념일.

국가 미국과 중앙아메리카 일부 국가
행사시기 매년 10월의 두번째 월요일(미국)

그런데 이날을 폐지하려는 운동이 있다고 한다. 그것도 꽤나 조직적이다.
Transform Columbus Day
Why Transform Columbus Day?

The Transform Columbus Day Alliance actively rejects the celebration of Christopher Columbus and his legacy of domination, oppression, and colonialism. We also reject historical misconceptions regarding Columbus and his "discovery" of the Americas.

특히 Venezuela의 대통령 Chavez는 "Day of Indian Resistance"로 바꿀 것을 주장하기도 한다.
Chaves: 'No reason to honor Columbus'
Columbus Day on Oct. 12 is celebrated as a holiday in the United States and several Latin American nations, but Chavez said it should be remembered as the "Day of Indian Resistance."

"We Venezuelans, we Latin Americans, have no reason to honor Columbus," he added.


Chaves의 Reuter 인터뷰 내용 중에 흥미로운 내용이 있다.
He said even the continent's geographical names, like America and Venezuela, were imposed by foreigners.
The Venezuelan leader hailed as heroes Indian chiefs who had fought against the invaders, such as Guaicaipuro who resisted the Spanish founders of Caracas, and American Indian chief Sitting Bull, who defeated U.S. Gen. George Armstrong Custer at the Battle of Little Bighorn in 1876.
자료를 찾아보니 America는 신대륙임을 발견한 Amerigo Vespucci의 이름을 따라 Venezuela는 Alonso de Ojeda에 의해 little Venice라는 의미로 명명되었다고 한다.

그밖에 Gen. George Armstrong Custer와 the Battle of Little Bighorn에 대해서는 아래의 링크를 참고.

Reference
Venezuela
General George Armstrong Custer
the Battle of Little Bighorn(Custer's Last Stand)

Venezuela

Who named "Venezuela", and what does that mean?

Venezuela Map

The pre-Hispanic Indian cultures of Venezuela, which arose from approximately 14,000 BC, did not form part of the better-known Andean or Central American civilizations, and were primitive in comparison. From around 2,000 C, the isolated tribes settled extensively in the coastal and Llanos (plains) regions, and developed into culturally distinct groups of different ethnic origin. Formerly nomadic, their now settled lifestyle brought about a significant increase in population, and on the eve of the Spanish conquest, it is estimated that about half a million Indians inhabited what we now know as Venezuela belonging to three principal ethno-linguistic groups – the Cariban, Arawak and Chibcha.

It was on his third voyage of discovery that Christopher Columbus sighted Venezuela, and, on discovering the mouth of the Orinoco River, realized he had come across something far greater than another island. The following year, the explorer, Alonso de Ojeda, sailed up to the western tip of the country and into Lake Maracaibo. There, observing Indian houses sitting on wooden stilts above the waters’ edge, he christened the land ‘Venezuela’, meaning ‘little Venice’. The first Spanish settlement on the mainland was established at Cumana in 1521.

The indigenous tribes put up a strong struggle against the colonial depredations of both the Spanish and the Germans, who left a swathe of the chimerical El Dorado. In the end, though, their resistance was subdued when many tribal communities fell victim to European diseases such as smallpox, which wiped out two-thirds of the population in the Caracas Valley alone.

However, the lack of lootable wealth in Venezuela soon led to colonial neglect, which in turn prompted dissatisfaction and resentment among the American-born Spanish elites. The Spanish rulers were eventually thrown out by the young Simon Bolivar, known locally as ‘El Libertador’. He seized Venezuela from Spain in 1821 with a decisive victory at Campo Carabobo, near Valencia, aided by British mercenaries and an army of horsemen from Los Llanos, Bolivar had already brought independence to Colombia, and went on, with his lieutenant Antonio Jose de Sucre, to liberate Ecuador, Peru and Bolivia. His dream of a united state of Gran Colombia, which would unify Colombia, Venezuela and Ecuador, did not survive his death in 1830, when Venezuela declared full independence under a new constitution.

From 1830-1858, Venezuela found itself controlled by a succession for military dictatorships, and underwent a period of political strife and civil war. Internationally, too, there were problems. In the 1840s, Venezuela laid a claim o two thirds of British Guyana territory, giving birth to a long running border dispute that was to put a heavy strain on the relations between the two countries. Today, Venezuela still claims this land and modern Venezuelan maps mark his region as a ‘zona en reclamacion’ (territory to be reclaimed).

The post-independence period was marked by a succession of military dictators, political coups and economic instability, until the discovery of huge oil reserves in the Maracaibo basin in the 1920s brought some degree of prosperity to the country. By the late 1920s Venezuela had become he world’s largest oil exporter, but little of this newfound wealth found its way to the common people. With poverty rife and educational and health facilities in a deplorable state, a series of popular uprisings took place, culminating in the country’s first democratic elections in 1947.

Reference
Think Venezuela
Lonely Planet

2005/01/20

The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen


The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen

Who's who in The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen.

1.Allan Quatermain
H. Rider Haggard, King Solomon’s Mines, 1885

2.Mina Harker
Bram Stoker, Dracula, 1897

3.Tom Sawyer
Mark Twain, The Adventure of Tom Sawyer, 1876
I think Agent Sawyer resembles Billy the Kid(William H. Bonney, 1859-1881) in this movie.

4.Dorian Gray
Oscar Wilde, The picture of Dorian Gray, 1890
The movie implies that Dorian Gray is the Jack the Ripper.

5.Rodney Skinner
H.G. Wells, The Invisible Man, 1897
Actually, the invisible man is Griffin, but he dies in the novel.

6.Nemo
Jules Verne, 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, 1870

7.Ishmael
Herman Melville, Moby-Dick, 1851
Nemo’s first mate

8.Dr. Henry Jekyll and Edward Hyde
Robert Louis Stevenson, Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, 1886

The place where Mr.Hyde was ensnared is Rue Morgue.
Edgar Allan Poe, The Murders in the Rue Mogue, ??

9.Phantom
Gaston Leroux, Phantom of the Opera, 1911

10.Professor Moriarty
Arthur Conan Doyle, The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes, 1893
Reichenbach falls

2005/01/18

Keiner Liebt Mich (Nobody loves me)


Keiner Liebt Mich (Nobody loves me)

Germany, 1995
Cast: Maria Schrader, Pierre Sanoussi-Bliss, Michael Von Au, Elisabeth Trissenaar
Director: Doris Dorrie
Producers: Gerd Huber and Renate Seefeldt
Screenplay: Doris Dorrie
Cinematography: Helge Weindler
Music: Niki Reiser

I watched this movie in 1997 when I was a freshman in my university.
Few days ago, I was watching a movie, "Flawless", and it reminded of this German moive, "Keiner Liebt Mich". So I recollect my memories and write down its brief story here(+/-).

This movie is the story of young woman, Fanny Fink. She is approaching her 30th birthday. She thinks that a woman over 30 is more likely hit by an atomic bomb than find a good man. She has a job, a family, a place, and the right skin color, but no lover. She is obsessed by death: she attends a course, ‘Conscious Dying’, makes her coffin, sleeps in it, and performs her own funeral.

One day, she meets a dark stranger, Orfeo, who is a gay and drag queen, in the elevator. After the elevator gets stuck, his enchanting, shouting and dancing make it move again. She stares him in disbelief, and he hands her his name card, which says he is a psychic and palm reader.

A few days later, she visits Orfeo, and he foretells that Fanny will find her man, who is associated with number 23. She thinks that her destiny is the new manager of the building whose car number is 2323. He, however, turns out to be a two-timing man.

Meanwhile, Orfeo has been evicted from his apartment and abandoned by his gay lover, a local TV weatherman. He says he is dying from a mysterious disease other than AIDS. She provides him shelter in her apartment.

He asks her with the half-filled glass, “What do you see?” Half-full or Half-empty. Orfeo leads Fanny to face reality. She begins to see life through him and undergoes striking internal changes. Orfeo, who always said that his friends from Arcturus will take him to his planet soon, disappears suddenly.

One day after his disappearance, she is stuck in the elevator with her weird neighbors. She shouts and dances as Orfeo did. The elevator begins to move and they clap and applause her.

2005/01/17

I Am Somebody

I Am - Somebody is a poem by Reverend Jesse Jackson, which he recited on Sesame Street in 1971. This inspirational free verse poem was unparalleled with anything ever attempted on children's television in content and delivery, and to an extent still is. The poem fulfilled Sesame Street's initial curriculum for serving the under-privileged city youth, as well as offering cultural understanding. Kids of all races were scattered all over the Sesame Street set, on the street, benches, fire escapes, led by Jackson in the poem.
The following is this poem, in the original structure as written by Reverend Jackson. Lines of "I am/Somebody" or "But I am/Somebody" were recited both by the children and Jackson.
I am
Somebody
I am
Somebody
I may be poor
But I am
Somebody
I may be young
But I am
Somebody
I may be on welfare
But I am
Somebody
I may be small
But I am
Somebody
I may make a mistake
But I am
Somebody
My clothes are different
My face is different
My hair is different
But I am
Somebody
I am black
Brown
White
I speak a different language
But I must be respected
Protected
Never rejected
I am
God's child

Reference
Original Text