150 Years of Through the Looking-Glass

150 Years of Through the Looking-Glass

Friday, 13 April 2018

Oscar Wilde v The Establishment

I'm excited about giving this talk. It has been accepted for  Satire: Deaths, Births, Legacies at York St John University, Saturday 2 June 2018


This talk (supported by slides) looks at the Oscar Wilde and how his approach has not been adopted by modern satirists to challenge the establishment. It shows how he developed a style to amuse, challenge and provoke the well-to-do, his paymasters. He examined the hypocrisy and morals of Victorian society without taking a political view. His humour is seen in later satirists such as Peter Cook, who also focused on the class system and social stereotypes.  

I will show how Wilde’s work,  ‘Dorian Gray’ and ’The Importance of Being Earnest’, was popular with the people it mocked. The nature of his public work raised questions about his private persona but he avoided categorisation of his work and being co-opted by the establishment. Satire has become a standard weapon in politics, marketing and media and it becomes more difficult to provide criticism to the establishment as it is quickly repurposed and absorbed.

Wilde was an insider/outsider and a reflecting glass on Victorian attitudes. People like  Peter Cook and Bill Hicks are more modern equivalents but today’s insights on hypocrisy and attitudes are more likely seen in ‘Come Dine with Me’ and ‘W1A’ than alternative comedians or satirical quiz shows.

Tuesday, 20 March 2018

'Contemporary Victoriana' March 16th University of Reims, France

I gave a talk on 'The Persistence of Lewis Carroll from the Victorian Culture and Beyond' at the University of Reims, France in March. I've loaded a condensed version of the talk by putting a bit of commentary on the slides I used. Feel free to have a look and comment.

https://www.slideshare.net/SteveFolan1/the-persistence-of-lewis-carroll-from-victorian-culture-and-beyond

It was a fascinating conference with topics around Dorian Gray and the 'Penny Dreadful' television programme (Camille  Martin-Payre); vlog for Lizzie Bennett, Carmilla (Caroline Duvezin-Caubet),; Crimson Tide (Marine Galine) and the keynote was about an intriguing exhibition at the Guildhall Gallery by Katty Pearce.

Tuesday, 13 February 2018

The Fly and Machine Learning

I watched 1986 version of the 'The Fly' last week and realised that the core of the film was about machine learning and it was a good demonstration of how it works and how some limitations. I shan't explain the plot but at one point Jeff Goldblum (playing his familiar role of maverick scientist) realises that the reason his telepods are not teleporting animate objects properly is that they do not understand what organic material is so they create their approximation of it. He proves this by teleporting a piece of steak and cooking it for Geena Davis, his co-star. The steak looks OK but tastes wrong. After he realises this problem he trains the computer by teleporting steak until comes through the other side at a quality that is edible. He then has a workable teleportation machine that successfully transmits live animals and he tests it and it works. 1- 0 to machine learning v human overconfidence.
Alas, when he transmits himself there is a fly in the telepod and the machine hasn't been taught how to deal with two entities and has a guess and decides to fuse them at the DNA level with unfortunate results. The machine could have been taught how to deal with multiple entities but Jeff Goldblum did seem to be a scientist in a hurry with a taste for shortcuts. 1- 1 machine learning v human overconfidence.
Another subtle warning in the film is that the Goldblum character is a scientist/inventor but he does create any of the components. He designs them, other people build them and then send them to him. He puts them together to get the effect he wants without anyone being aware of the objective but he really doesn't know how they are built.
If he had been able to write a few lines of code he could have written something along the lines of:
If NumOf Entities >1 Then
Print "Clean Out The Telepod"
Exit
Endif
Then he would've avoided all the unpleasantness of being turned into a human fly and picked up his Nobel Prize and we would not have overcrowded trains on the way into work.

Saturday, 20 January 2018

Alice, James Bond, Poirot Sequels

I've just finished reading 'The BeeKeeper's Apprentice' by Laurie King. It is a tale of Sherlock Holmes in retirement working with a young lady who is as independent as himself and they solve a number of crimes some of which are linked. It's worth reading and I will read a few more of them as it has an interesting dynamic between the two people and still has the old-fashioned feel of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle writing during a period when the old ways were being replaced by the new.

There are characters such as Alice, James Bond, Sherlock Holmes and Hercules Poirot who attract sequels and re-imagining. I have read some and it's hard for newer writers as the temptation can be to update them for modern tastes and this reduces their impact and freshness because you can't have the behaviours and language of these eras on the stage in London for sensitive ears. The titles of some Agatha Christie books had to be changed to avoid offence.  Sherlock Holmes and James Bond comment on racial stereotypes that are now unacceptable so it is hard to find baddies unless they are English.

Another problem is that you can't put your mind into the mind of the original writer to see how they were going to develop the character. Raymond Chandler left notes with ideas for Phillip Marlowe to be married to a society type and living in Palm Springs. I read that book 'Poodle Springs' and thought that Robert B Parker did a great job. Both Agatha Christie and Conan Doyle were conflicted about the characters they had created and the James Bond stories are very little representative of the films as he was a colder and tougher character than displayed on the screen.

There are so many versions and permutations of the Alice stories but I do wonder what Lewis Carroll would have written if he could've been persuaded or inspired to create a third world for Alice to visit and what it would have been like. If he was reborn today I think his writing would be darker and more like J G Ballard than J K Rowling. Maybe Alice would be trapped in a discount supermarket that had been abandoned and forgotten in a failed business takeover so she would have to fashion a life out of what she found there.



Saturday, 2 December 2017

Vietnam National University - Lewis Carroll

I enjoyed giving the talk and it has given me a structure so I can write it up. The people I met were receptive and had good questions even though I suspected them of googling them during the talk.

One lady asked me a question about the White Queen and it led to a conversation about female mentors, time travel and why modern women aren't as supportive as the two Queens were to help Alice.

The response has been very positive and I may go to Vietnam and Singapore next year.

Sunday, 12 November 2017

The Building where the Lewis Carroll Society Committee Meet.

There is an article in the London Evening Standard about the building where we hold our Committee meetings. I avoid the 'Homes and Property' section of newspapers and magazines so it was a friend who spotted it.


"Playing cards are painted on to the ceiling of the Queen of Hearts meeting room and there are White Rabbit-shaped chairs for the boss in the smaller White Queen rooms, which open up into a bright 40-seat conference suite."


A remarkable space to hold a meeting.

Tuesday, 7 November 2017

Lewis Carroll Reference - David Starkey 'Henry VIII - Peronalities and Politics'



I'm reading the David Starkey book at the moment and saw him speak on the weekend about Henry VIII as 'the first Brexiteer'. I got a signed copy of one of his early books and it is great. I love intelligent, gossipy and analytical writing. There is a Lewis Carroll reference early on one page 7.

"Henry could not simply say, like the Red Queen in Alice in Wonderland, 'off with his head'. Instead, the accused had to be condemned by due process of law. Trials, of course, were rigged. But rigging took much effort and could go embarrassingly wrong."

A great view of History.