Trespassing Tourism

My friend at school is subletting his apartment. It evaporates for him next wednesday. So he decided that a good way to find a new place would be to go to University buildings and look for ads posted on message boards there. So yesterday, we went on a little tour of basements of the Paris Universities. I’m trying to cut back on my caffeine intake, so I don’t know exactly which schools I wandered in to. The institute of Art and Archeology’s building looks like Babylonian fortress. The building is a copy of some buildings in the archeology museum in Berlin. They have a copy of the greek temple frieze ringing the building and the front looks like the aforementioned temple, complete with winged lions on either side.

Some of buildings were impressive, like that one. Some, like the unguarded side of the École Normale Superior were ugly. None of them seemed new. The schools are all public, but many of them looked a lot like Columbia University in New York. They look like elite, Ivy league schools, which is what they are, even though they’re not.
i walked into the Sorbonne campus. It was lined with a gate and they had a security guard who was supposed to check IDs, but I guess I looked enough like a student and he didn’t stop me. They have a large courtyard in the part I was in. One end is a huge patriotic mural. There are statues above it that are plated in new brass or gold. On the other end is a domed building, with imposing stairs leading up into it. There are to larger than life statues next to the stairs. One is Pascal. I didn’t want to be too obviously sightseeing, so I didn’t take any pictures.

My fellow trespasser was a Marxist. “How many black people do you see?” He asked, angrily, “How many arabs?” From where I was standing, I saw one person with darker than average skin and I saw one black person earlier in the hallway.
The security guards were inside as well as outside. I felt their eyes on me, as if they could tell that I didn’t belong because I was too old, too casual, no backback, looking around in wonder, some reason. We left through a stricter gate where they were patting people down and checking every ID.
We looked at the books for sale in the bookstores right outside of the exceedingly posh, wealthy campus. Most were from the 19th century. A few got into the early part of the 20th. “It’s like a school from another century” my companion said. I felt lucky and privileged not to have gone to such a prestigious school for my undergrad, where I could learn new ideas, unencumbered by history or tradition but also old ideas, which I was free to ignore if needed. Music history and tonal harmony were required classes, but nobody demanded I write in those styles. John Cage could never have been associated with the Sorbonne, nor Lou Harrison, but both were attached to Mills.
In the United States, we have discussions about accessibility in education. I don’t know if this is talked about in France or not. For all the discussions, you could walk around Mills or Wesleyan and see it’s absence, but maybe not so pronounced. The entrance to the nice side of the École Normal Superior is though a set of two locked doors with a gatekeeper watching everyone who passes through. This would be controversial on most American campuses. The path through the booth included three stairs.
These schools are for the young, for the able-bodied and for the bourgeoise. Just like Wesleyan, but public. And the kids who graduate from the Sorbonne and other schools have guaranteed lifetime employment once they get out and become functionaries. They’re smart and exceedingly well educated and set for life.
Meanwhile, the youth in the suburbs continued to set fires, protesting their lack of access to education.
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Media

So last night, round midnight, I was sitting around my home wondering if it was just so cold that I should go to bed. (Yes, I have heat, but it’s cheaper just to sleep at night than to run it.) I realized that there probably warm and toasty car fires going on right at that very second! So, since I’m an American, I tuned on the TV.

Channel 1 was showing a French movie. Channel 2 was showing “Cold Case” (The case of the murdered white woman who lived alone followed by the case of the murdered black woman who expressed sexual otherness). Channel 3 was showing a reality show set in Prague. Channel 4, which is always fuzzy shows nothing but football day or night. Channel 5, the arte channel, was showing an angsty american woman artist talking about something. Channel 6, the commercial channel (M6), was showing an old movie with people in funny hats inspecting a chamber pot.
Meanwhile, more cars were burned than ever. And one person died (the first and only one) from injuries received on Friday.
I don’t have cable or anything. But there were no program interruptions. No live pictures of burning cars. No live views from the nine helicopters flying over the suburbs. Liberation and Le Monde were not posting live updates to their web pages.
This may be one of those cultural differences I’ve been reading about.
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Wine Review: Le Vin de la Fromagerie du Marché

Today’s wine, a fabulous value at 4€, is easily obtainable at the Fromagerie at the Saint Martin Market in the 10th arrondissement of Paris, France. Simply pop in and explain to the proprietor, “Je voudrais acheter le vin de la fromagerie du Marché – le vin rouge, si vous plait.” To get there, from the United States, first get on an airplane to Charles de Gaul airport, then take the RER train (but not at night – alas!) to the Garre du Nord. From the Garre du Nord, transfer to the metro 5 line towards Place d’Italie. Get off at the Jacques Bonsergent stop. When you get out of the metro station, walk down Rue Pierre Chausson and turn left on Chateau d’Eau. Walk a couple of blocks. The Marché Saint Martin will be on your left. Remember that it’s closed Mondays.

Ok, so this is not the most internationally useful wine review ever, but the wine was quite good. It had legs that Cola described as “excellent” and a spicy nose with strong hints of cinnamon. The flavor is subtle. This wine is not a spotlight-stealer. It won’t direct attention away from your food, which you slaved over. Instead, it will quitely compliment your spicy tomato soup or whatever you happen to be eating.
According to the bottle, this wine is “selection Laurent Bouvet,” the winery is independant, “Christophe TERRIER Vigneron” and it has some address type information: Saint-Amour-Bellevue – 71570 France. Telephone: 03 85 37 19 70.
Interestingly, this is only the second wine I’ve had with a plastic, fake cork. The other was the generic Monoprix brand wine. I hope you don’t think I’m putting on airs by going up to 4€. The next wine is even pricier at 4,50€, but will probably have to wait until Nicole comes back. She’s gone to Spain again (again!) and won’t be back for a bit, alas and woe.
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And it continues

More than 1200 cars were bruned last night, a few of which were actually in Paris, near the Place de la Republique . . . Hey, that’s my neighborhood!

I saw a LOT of flics around there this afternoon. Several police vans. (Maybe somebody had his feet on his seat.) A few other cop cars were on their way. I didn’t see any smoking remains of cars, but I wasn’t looking until after 5:00 pm and I can’t imagine they would still be there by that hour.
I don’t talk to real French people very often, so I don’t know how on their mind this is. It wasn’t overwhelming Radio France until today and was growing in Liberation’s RSS feed, until it finally, today, outnumbered other stories. I have no idea where it was in print newspapers and I don’t know if people are talking about it. Right now, It’s all over Radio France. I went out for dinner last night at the restaurant across the street from my building and the restaurant was packed. Oddly, it was packed with Americans(!). My apartment building is next to a Hotel which seems to have a mostly American clientele. The food was really really good Lebanese food. The laso had Lebanese wine, which is kind of a surprising thing to exist . . .. Anyway.
This uprising is very strange, because I just can’t imagine it in the USA. They would have been shooting rioters by now. Also, it’s really brilliant to be sending guys on motorbikes out with molotov cocktails. In an alarming sort of way. How could you stop that? So it’s partly shocking because of how un-violent the “violence” is. Partly shocking how the cops aren’t escalating things in the way they would at home. Partly shocking because this never happens at home. Why shouldn’t oppressed people burn cars in the USA?
Ok, so, since this is now close to my abode, I’m making sure that Cola and I always carry our passports when we go out, in case we get stopped. Tomorrow, when the BHV opens again, I’m going to go buy a smoke alarm. And aside form that, I don’t know. I’ve been around Republique around 2:00 AM and there were a lot of people out. The fires there were apparently set near 3:00 AM. I don’t feel unsafe as long as it’s crowded. And . . . well, this is just part of life here. Nobody seems to be freaking out.
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International Media

The best coverage on the Iraqi war and the Israel / Palestine conflict comes from France. The best coverage of the French riots is by Al Jazeera. They’ve got a timeline. It ends before last night when 900 more cars were torched (or some number, I think some of the numbers I’m seeing are cumulative and are being mis-reported in the English-language press as nightly totals). Anyway, between 1000-2000 cars have been burned so far, since this uprising started. Apparently burning cars is a fairly normal happening in poor areas. And a handicapped woman was injured when her bus was set on fire and she couldn’t get out quickly. (Reports that she specifically was doused with gasoline while trying to exit the bus seem exceedingly unlikely.) But so far, most “violence” has been limited to property damage.

It’s looking like 1968, they say. Rumors are flying. I think Liberation has the best coverage aside from Al Jazeera, but they suck for trying to get a big picture or find out how many cars have been burned. There’s some word that riots will continue until Sarkozy, the Interior Minister who called poor youths ‘scum’, steps down. There’s also word that rioters are organizing via blogs and cell phones to motivate youths in other city to set fires and to keep track of police locations. And a lot of what passes for news is a whole lot of rumor.
The French police are not reacting like the American police would. No rioters have been shot. They didn’t even bring out helicopters until a night or two ago. The political rhetoric is unfortunate, but the actions of the flics seems somewhat restrained. Maybe because they’re in the spotlight? Maybe because they actually got shot at recently? Maybe because they only feel bravado when they outnumber their targets by mass numbers? (I read a news story where a kid complained because the police called for backup to give him a ticket for having his feet on the seat in the subway. Three police vans showed up, he said. So, if it takes three police vans for feet on your seat, they would need at least 12 per rioter . . ..)
Sarkozy should resign. His replacement, hopefully, can enter into dialog with the rioters and maybe there’ll be calm.
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Queer visibility

I had been thinking queer visibility was really low here, but then I saw two lesbians (you know what i mean) on tuesday and a queer looking womean today and I thought I saw three drag queen on tuesday also, but then today I was looking at a picture of Camilla Parker Bowles (the royal person currently visitting america) and I thought she was a drag queen. While this would explain why the royal family wouldn’t initially let charles marry her, I can’t beleive they tabloid press wouldn’t have picked up that story by now. I think I have my queer meter set on over-sensitive.

But at least one of the people I spotted really was a TG hooker, wearing these incredible clear plastic platform shoes, big enough to keep goldfish in and wearing a metal belt with bells on it that rang when she swung her hips. I could fall in love with a girl like that if I weren’t already in love with a girl not like that. As Lynn Breedlove once sang, “I’m a tranny chaser. Give me chicks with dicks. I’ll bring them beer and dasies. And lollypops to lick.”
I said something to a guy at school about how Joan of Arc was burned at the stake for cross-dressing and he said, “You must feel very proud.”
For her martyrdom, he meant. I guess I’m not very subtle.
Princess Di was totally hot. I don’t know what was Charles’ problem.
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Vine Review: Pigmentum

Pigmentum Wine
My mates and I just opened and consumed all of a quite lovely bottle of red wine: Pigmentum: Vin de Pays de Comté Tolosan. I bought it this very same day at the market de Saint Martin, which is conveniently located mere meters from my house. They have two vegetable dealers, an Italians food sales thing, a butcher, a fishmonger and a wine and cheese shop. They were featuring a wine for 3€, so I bought a bottle of it. It is by far the best wine I have yet tried. I may give up on grocery store wine and subsist totally on wine I can get from le cave.

The wine has a floral nose, with tones of fruitiness. The legs are more pronounced, um, they seem like normal for wine. The mouth is rich, vibrant and with a note of citrus, in harmony with the nose, as if the nose was the floral note of a lemon tree or something. the wine is smooth and not at all bitey, but not timid either. It’s fine by itself and I imagine it would probably go quite nicely with vegetarian fare.
A lovely, unpretentious wine for a very reasonable price. I just askled nicole to go buy three bottled of it tomorrow, but I think I must continue my quest to review different wines.
If I saw this wine in the US, I would unhesitatingly purchase it and then tell wistful tales about how I drank it in france after school one evening to anybody who would listen. Along those lines, I would like to note, that while many french consumables are quite excellent, much of their beer is on a par with Pabst Blue Ribbon, if not worse and not in an ironic way. TWho tall cans of beer cost the same as this wine. This wine is not only more enjoyable and more tasty, but it’s enough to give four or five people a single serving, thus winning on economic terms as well as gustatory. It is the obvious choice for sharing with friends.
And why is it so good? Tradition!Cork that says

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Wine Review: Carignan 2004


Now I will review the store brand of le Monop, which is totally useless to the majority of my raders who are based in North America. However, whatever suave Europeans stumble across my blog, should note that «monop» is the hip name for the Monoprix, which I know because I read it in the unbearably hipster Parisist.

Fortunately, this 3,something€ wine tells you what to think of it right on the bottle. It has a hint of blackberry, black cherry and vanilla, but it is not, as I initally suspected upon reading this note, anything but grape wine. It informs me of it’s character: a mediteranean personality: hot, powerful and strongly colored. I dunno if that’s a metaphor or not. It’s nose: A fruity scent of cherry and blackberry compote. The mouth: A suple and aromatique attack, in harmony with the scent. And it’s good with grilled meat and some other food item that I’m too lazy to look up in my dictionary.
I will try to imitate this sort of terminology in the future. As for my own ratings, it was kind of fruity, sorta. I tried sniffing it, but I’d already had a couple of glasses by then. Next time I’ll keep a notebook and a list of appropriate metaphors. It’s legs (the lines of wine that run down the cup after you swirl it around) were thin and almost absent, something I’ve noticed in most of the very modestly priced wine that I’ve been drinking. I had sort of a merlot-y bite that didn’t go so well with the bean soup that I ate it with. I don’t understand why you would make a merlot-ish wine in a country without sharp cheddar cheese.
This is one of the best wines I’ve tried here, about as good as the last wine I reviewed. In the US, it would have been $10 or $12 easily. Something about drinking it made me feel like a hipster. This was a vin de pays de l’Aude.
In summary: hot, fruity, strong, tasty, would be good with cheddar or other sharp cheeses.
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Rioting in the Paris Suburbs

Yeah, there’s been rioting here for about week. This is what the San Francisco (California, USA) Chronicle has to say about it:

The violence, sparked initially by the deaths of two teenagers, has exposed the despair, anger and deep-rooted criminality in the poor suburbs, where police hesitate to venture and which have proved fertile terrain for Islamic extremists.

What? Deep-rooted criminality? Police scared to venture? Terrorists? Huh?
Things have been reported somewhat differently locally. I’m sorry, I don’t have links handy, but the story as I heard it is that three teenage boys, believing themselves to be chased by the police, jumped a fence into a power substation where two of them died and one of them suffered extremely severe burns from electrocution. The police, who have changed their story several times, initially denied that they were chasing the boys. One version has it that they were coming home from a soccer match and were hungry after fasting all day and then playing sports. They saw a police checkpoint ahead where cops were checking papers and decided to go via an alternate route because one of the kids had left his papers at home and didn’t want to be held in jail without food. And the cops gave chase.
In the end, it doesn’t really matter if the cops were chasing them or not in this instance. What matters is the idea that they were being chased was credible to the boys and to the rioters. So even if the cops weren’t chasing them this time, they clearly had a habit of chasing people and getting caught is scary enough to risk death. Which means there was also a credible threat of some sort of harm. Which clearly means that police must be abusing suspects in some way.
It doesn’t really sound like the “police hesitate to venture” if they setup random checks of people’s papers.
A bunch of youths were upset about this and gathered to protest against being victimized by the police and the police responded by sending out riot police to bust heads. Yeah, that’ll calm them down. Hence, the riot. One of the public officials in charge of some sort of law and order position here did his part to calm the situation by calling the protesters scum and threatening to crack down on the suburbs and clean out all the undesirable elements. Ah, yet another thing to make protesters feel better.
A “crackdown” is what started this mess. The way to deal with people upset at being constantly hounded and abused by police is . . . more police.
Frankly, I’m shocked the Chronicle chose to run this. I used to think they were an ok newspaper.
(Yes, this is happening outside of where I venture.) More than 250 cars have been burned. I hope this calms down soon, but with the statements being made by public figures, I’m not hopeful. There are posters up in my neighborhood warning of frequent deportations and advising undocumented immigrants to get in contact with a help group. There’s also other human rights orgs around like SOS Racism. I’m more inclined to believe their versions of things. I mean, would anyone rationally really believe that Paris is ringed by terrorists that the police fear? (Of, course, this economic devastation was brought about by Bill O’Reilly’s crushing boycott of France.)
Really, I can’t believe the Chronicle.
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Venezia

I just got back from Venice. I had a short week at school last week, so on Wednesday, I got on a “fast” train and headed towards Italy. I think “fast” only means “stops infrequently” and implies nothing about speed. On te way, I saw some lovely fall foliage in the Alps. The trees turned all the colors that they turned in the mountains above the vineyards. So lovely.

Once the train crossed the border to Italy, a bunch of Italian police came on the train and demanded to see the papers of all the black people and only the black people. Cola, who might be able to pass for Italian, was spared paperwork examination on the train, but the woman sitting next to me was pulled of the train. She seemed upset. Her papers were the same kind of temporary thing I had for several weeks, which ought to enable her to travel. This extensive passport checking made our train late and we were delayed again in Milan when another set of police insisted on checking every single page of Colas’ passport. Again, I wasn’t checked. Racial profiling is apparently just fine in Italy.
Because we missed our connection, we didn’t arrive until late at night. We stayed at a hotel on Lido, the far-out island with the beaches. Venice is in a sort of a bay – they call it a lagoon – and Lido is the breakwater that keeps the water around Venice calm. I called the hotel before we left to extend our stay by one night and the guy on the phone seemed anxious to give me as much helpful information as possible (too bad he didn’t tell me when to get off the bus, though – Lido has roads and cars and stuff). In person, he was even more anxious to give information, energetically telling us anything and everything we might need to know about mealtimes, where to find cheap food, etc and demanding information in return, “um, I dunno, I just got here.”
We went back into the main part of the city and followed around other confused and hungry people until we found the one open restaurant. When I visited Venice in 2001, it was in the summer, during the high tourist season and the food was fairly awful. However, this one open restaurant made me a special off-menu serving of meatless pasta which was excellent and Cola ordered the cheapest thing on the menu and got a gigantic steak, which she said was also great. Apparently, the food has either improved in the last few years or varies according to season.
The next morning, we went to la biennale. This was the reason for our trip, as it closes on November 6th and doesn’t happen again until 2007. We spent two days looking at the art, which included many many films, but alas, not many sound installations. Some things that stick out:
A short film (maybe by Runa Islam) in the Arsenale. During the film, a woman interacted with several pieces of fine china, first by looking at it, then by using it for eating and drinking and finally by smashing it. The film looped, so when she went back to looking carefully at the china, it seemed as if she was imagining it’s destruction. “Run, teacup, run!” The film built tension in an extremely masterful way. After dropping several pieces of china, the woman began pushing, very slowly, a cup and saucer to the edge of the table. She was moving as slowly as she could and in production, the film was slowed down even further. The inevitable smashing approached, but when would it finally happen??!! In the film, her face featured very prominently at the beginning, but gradually disappeared, until you only saw her arms and hands as she destroyed all the china.
There was a film about a dog dying. It was spread across four screens that were at angles to each other. It started with a dream about the dog in New York, moved to the author’s home country and then went to Africa where dogs would howl at church bells every morning. The artist imagined this as a kind of canine prayer. It made seamless connections between dogs, dreams, prayers and death and tied fairly far afield subject matter together. What the artist did not narrate said almost more than what she did narrate.
Then there were two sets of films, once about motherhood and one about fatherhood. I think they may have been by Candice Breitz. She took a bunch of popular films, like Mommy Dearest and Kramer vs Kramer and used the to examine motherhood as it’s presented in popular culture. The films were edited so only the mother character was visible against a black background. Each mother had her own screen, making six in all. The artist grouped the words of the mothers by content and created dialogs between them about selfishness, love and other themes. Motherhood, according to popular culture is a constant battle with inadequacy. None of the women felt like they were doing enough. They had to sacrifice their sense of self. But was it really enough? Were they good mothers? Did they even have the right temperament for it, woman’s highest calling? the films about fatherhood were organized the same way, with just the main protagonist on his own screen with other people and backgrounds blacked out. She also used Kramer vs Kramer but also movies like Father of the Bride with Steve Martin and She’s Out of Control with Tony Danza (which alas, I saw at a multiplex before I was old enough to know better. In contrast to the ever-insecure mothers, the fathers believe themselves to be superdads because they make any sort of effort whatsoever. I wiped my kid’s nose, therefore I am the greatest. Fatherhood is a joke, not to be taken seriously, but if it must be for some reason, well, fathers deserve a medal. They were angry at their ex-wives for foisting this valor upon them, screaming and implying violence. The motherhood films were more powerful and that piece could have stood on it’s own, but the fatherhood half couldn’t it, it needed contrast. The visuals provided a lot of clues as to the movie and became an integral part of the work, but it could have been possible to make it a solely text piece, which would have also been nice. However the images increased the accessibility.
In the Korean Pavilion, there was another great piece with video and voice where the artist took nightly news anchors and spliced together single words to make them say things like, “With a comb and a mirror, if you have a good memory of what you look like, you can make your hair look the same as it did the day before.” and reminders to eat well and sleep adequately. Each word came from a different night of TV, but with the same anchor used for the phrases, only their clothes and the floating graphics to their right changed. The visual element was essential to this piece, which was helpfully subtitled in English.
In fact, english was everywhere. There were many many films and those that weren’t in English were subtitled in English. Signs were bilingual. The large installation on the Italian Pavilion was in English (and by an American artist.) The amount of English language stuff vastly outnumbered the amount of Italian language stuff. English is the international language of art. There’s an idea, especially in the national pavilions of the artist exploring their identity and the identity of their nation. But there’s a contrary and equally strong notion of the artist as international and transcending boundaries. This is why you get a film made by a chinese person raised in Austria talking about American (and Chinese) identity in English.
I wear my privilege on my sleeve. Why should my native tongue be the one used everywhere? Why couldn’t the English-language works have had Italian subtitles, at least? All the non-Italian speaking foreigners were speaking English to each other. I heard Germans, French folks and Italians all speaking accented English, asking about menu options and boat schedules. This not only confers an unfair advantage to English-speaking countries, it builds resentment by non-native english speakers. English is an extremely idiosyncratic, difficult language which it takes years of study to master, time that could maybe be better spent doing other things. It also will create an underclass as the European economy unifies, workers will become more migrant, like the are in the US. However, the ones that can’t speak English or the native language will be stuck in menial jobs. In the short term, the owning class might like the downward wage pressure, but in the long term, it’s a hindrance to a unified economy and it traps useful talent in the lower rungs and harms the economy overall. They should all speak an easier language which nobody speaks natively so as to make things more equal, avoid resentment and make the labor pool more mobile. Europe needs Esperanto.
But I digress… More about art and Venice coming soon.
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