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Fox News’ Bill Hemmer Introduces the New Fox Theme: Nukes Are Safe. Really. They are.

Click here to view this media All of us are watching what’s happening in Japan with wide-eyed horror. A country hit with a 9.0 earthquake followed by a 30-foot tsunami followed by possible partial meltdowns in more than one reactor is more disaster than any single country deserves. But while the first two are acts of nature, the third is man’s own doing and no one else’s. As a Californian, seeing this disaster unfold in real time has been almost too much to bear, especially knowing there’s a nuclear power plant about 100 miles or so down the coast in an earthquake-prone state. San Onofre nuclear generating station ‘s operating reactors were built in 1982 and 1983 and took into account the earthquake technology available at the time. Since Japan’s disaster, many Californians are questioning the wisdom and safety of a nuclear reactor on the California coast. Well, let’s leave it to Bill Hemmer to reassure us all that it’s just perfectly fine because it has a 25-foot seawall and is certified for a 7.0 earthquake. Again, to review Japan’s current predicament: 9.0 earthquake 30-foot tsunami How exactly should we feel reassured about a nuclear reactor that officials claim will withstand a 7.0 earthquake and is protected by a 25-foot sea wall? Just for perspective, the Northridge earthquake was 6.8 and was not considered being even close to “The Big One” we’re all expecting here in California at some point. But San Onofre isn’t the only power plant on the California coast . There’s the El Diablo Canyon plant located near Avila Beach in San Luis Obispo. That plant’s specs certify it to a 7.5 magnitude earthquake. It also lies close to 4 separate earthquake faults. Experts are predicting that the next quake on the San Andreas Fault could be up to an 8.1. When? Thomas Jordan, Director of the Southern California Earthquake Center, has said repeatedly that the San Andreas fault is “locked and loaded. It’s been a long time since an earthquake has occurred on that fault — over 150 years.” We are being reassured that quakes of around 8 are the most we could expect in California because the fault geology is different here than it is in Japan. In fact the biggest quake recorded in California history was the 1857 Fort Tejon earthquake, on the San Andreas fault, which reached 7.9. This segment seems so mild and calm, but it plays right into the agenda we’re seeing in play right now touting nuclear power as being so “clean” and “safe”. For many Californians watching the tragedy in Japan, there’s nothing clean, safe or desirable about it at all. That includes me. Why not solar? Why not anything but nuclear? Why is it that in 30-plus years there hasn’t been more development of alternatives? Oh, wait. I know the answer. Thanks, Exxon/Mobil and Chevron.

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Fox News’ Bill Hemmer Introduces the New Fox Theme: Nukes Are Safe. Really. They are.

Click here to view this media All of us are watching what’s happening in Japan with wide-eyed horror. A country hit with a 9.0 earthquake followed by a 30-foot tsunami followed by possible partial meltdowns in more than one reactor is more disaster than any single country deserves. But while the first two are acts of nature, the third is man’s own doing and no one else’s. As a Californian, seeing this disaster unfold in real time has been almost too much to bear, especially knowing there’s a nuclear power plant about 100 miles or so down the coast in an earthquake-prone state. San Onofre nuclear generating station ‘s operating reactors were built in 1982 and 1983 and took into account the earthquake technology available at the time. Since Japan’s disaster, many Californians are questioning the wisdom and safety of a nuclear reactor on the California coast. Well, let’s leave it to Bill Hemmer to reassure us all that it’s just perfectly fine because it has a 25-foot seawall and is certified for a 7.0 earthquake. Again, to review Japan’s current predicament: 9.0 earthquake 30-foot tsunami How exactly should we feel reassured about a nuclear reactor that officials claim will withstand a 7.0 earthquake and is protected by a 25-foot sea wall? Just for perspective, the Northridge earthquake was 6.8 and was not considered being even close to “The Big One” we’re all expecting here in California at some point. But San Onofre isn’t the only power plant on the California coast . There’s the El Diablo Canyon plant located near Avila Beach in San Luis Obispo. That plant’s specs certify it to a 7.5 magnitude earthquake. It also lies close to 4 separate earthquake faults. Experts are predicting that the next quake on the San Andreas Fault could be up to an 8.1. When? Thomas Jordan, Director of the Southern California Earthquake Center, has said repeatedly that the San Andreas fault is “locked and loaded. It’s been a long time since an earthquake has occurred on that fault — over 150 years.” We are being reassured that quakes of around 8 are the most we could expect in California because the fault geology is different here than it is in Japan. In fact the biggest quake recorded in California history was the 1857 Fort Tejon earthquake, on the San Andreas fault, which reached 7.9. This segment seems so mild and calm, but it plays right into the agenda we’re seeing in play right now touting nuclear power as being so “clean” and “safe”. For many Californians watching the tragedy in Japan, there’s nothing clean, safe or desirable about it at all. That includes me. Why not solar? Why not anything but nuclear? Why is it that in 30-plus years there hasn’t been more development of alternatives? Oh, wait. I know the answer. Thanks, Exxon/Mobil and Chevron.

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Bill O’Reilly: NPR must have liberal bias because Fox News has conservative bias

Click here to view this media There may be nothing more ironic than watching Bill O’Reilly huddle up with Bernard Goldberg to natter on about NPR’s current bucket of hot water, and how they deny liberal bias. The best line is at the end, where Goldberg says that if liberals think Fox News is biased, it’s perfectly natural for conservatives to think NPR is biased. It drives me crazy that NPR is just rolling over and refusing to defend themselves over this even after Glenn Beck’s site, of all places, proved the tape was edited to distort the context of what was said. But their passivity notwithstanding, the logic in their little discussion here is non-existent. Ira Glass addressed this in this ” On the Media ” segment this weekend. He flatly states (and I agree) that NPR isn’t left-wing news, but also has serious frustration about NPR not fighting back. He’s right. There’s nothing liberal or liberally biased about NPR, unless you count the fact that they actually bother to cover books and entertainment that aren’t just banal nonsense. In fact, I’ve had WTF moments with their reporting where I’ve wondered who paid for that broadcast from the corporate world. But this is all noise anyway, because like it or not, Ron Schiller wasn’t remotely involved with reporting or editorial content. He was a fundraiser. It was his job to go court wealthy people and get donations because the government doesn’t fund NPR, and it’s a struggle to keep those small rural radio stations on the air (and competing with the likes of Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck, I might add). As for Vivian Schiller, the only reason she should have resigned was because she apologized for Ron Schiller instead of standing up for the integrity of her reporters and news operation. And in what may be the supreme example of conservative bias, Bill O’Reilly and Bernie Goldberg natter and gabble about NPRs “bias” as if that twerp O’Keefe actually did something worth talking about. It wasn’t anything more than yet another dishonest, edited effort to bolster the right-wing agenda of killing all things public in favor of private concerns. No, O’Reilly and Goldberg just blather on without any regard for what really took place on those tapes, and what a non-story this whole thing should be. Note to NPR: Quit apologizing for this. If someone lies and elicits statements that they then edit to make sound worse than it is, it hardly deserves you pulling out the sword and falling on it, over and over and over again. Knock it off. Step up and push back.

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Harriet Fraad

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Harriet Fraad

There’s a reason psychiatrists prescribe drugs rather than talking therapy: the latter makes no money for pharmaceutical firms The New York Times recently led with a front-page splash about psychiatry’s propensity to prescribe pills, “Talk Doesn’t Pay, So Psychiatry Turns Instead to Drug Therapy” . That news is already widely known in the mental health field, but it has vast ramifications for Americans trying to maintain their sanity in our market-driven and medical system for delivering mental healthcare. What does the turn to drug therapy mean for the mass of Americans? Mental illness has not decreased with the change from talk therapy to drugs. In fact, as Robert Whitaker’s book diagnoses , mental illness in America has become an established epidemic. So-called miracle drugs like Prozac are taken by 11% of the population – and Prozac is only one of the 30 available antidepressants on the market. Antidepressants are accompanied by anti-anxiety and anti-psychotic drugs. Xanax, America’s leading anti-anxiety medication, is so ubiquitous that Xanax generates more revenue than Tide detergent, reports Charles Barber in his Comfortably Numb . Anti-psychotics drugs alone net the pharmaceutical industry at least $14.6bn dollars a year. Psycho-pharmaceuticals are the most profitable sector of the industry, which makes it one of the most profitable business sectors in the world. Americans are less than 5% of the world’s population, yet they consume 66% of the world’s psychological medications. Do these psycho pharmaceuticals work to restore mental health? Actually, the evidence is overwhelming that they fail. Antidepressants, the most popular psycho-pharmaceuticals, work no better than placebos. They work 25% of the time and stop working when the user stops taking them. In addition, they may actually harm patients in the long run. They disrupt brain neurotransmitters and may usurp the brain’s organic soothing functions. Psycho-pharmaceuticals are less effective in the long run than talk therapy. Talk therapy, like drugs, does change brain and body chemistry; unlike drugs, though, talk therapy has no side-effects. Instead, talk therapy gives a patient tools that usually help to solve future problems. The latest research is most clearly expressed in both Irving Kirsch’s Antidepressants: The Emperors New Drugs and Gary Greenberg’s, Manufacturing Depression , both published last year. Kirsch is one of the world’s leading psychiatrists; Greenberg is one of the world’s most prestigious psychologists. Their views are echoed by many voices in the field of mental health. Why is prestigious and extensive research so widely ignored by doctors and patients alike? Our market-driven healthcare system gives us clues. All 30 of the available antidepressants have suffered lawsuits within five years of their appearance on the market. These suits are often settled with large payments and gag clauses. The new generation of anti-psychotics are the latest case in point. Anti-psychotics were the single biggest targets of the False Claims Act . Every major company selling anti-psychotics – Bristol Meyers Squibb, Eli Lilly, Pfizer, Johnson and Johnson and AstraZeneca – has either settled investigations for healthcare fraud or is currently being investigated for it. Two recent settlements involving charges of illegal marketing set records for the largest criminal fines ever imposed on corporations. Their corporate logic is expressed in the words of Dr Jerome Avorn , a medical professor and researcher at Harvard: “When you are selling a billion a year or more of a drug, it’s very tempting for a company to just ignore the traffic ticket and keep speeding.” There is also the widespread practice of paying physicians and psychiatrists heavy subsidies to recommend psycho-pharmaceuticals to their colleagues in small meetings at which a drug company representative is present. If doubt or criticism of the discussed drug is expressed, the doctor’s stipend stops . Another legally acceptable tool is to publish praise of a company’s drug in a scholarly article, which is often written by drug company personnel and simply tweaked by the physician whose name appears on the article. The physician is paid handsomely for such a service. Under the pressure of legal settlements and embarrassing disclosures, eight pharmaceutical companies began posting doctors’ names and compensation on the web. ProPublica compiled these disclosures, totaling $320m, into a single database that allows patients to search for their doctor. Receiving payments for publishing articles written by drug companies is not illegal. Two doctors, Dr Joseph Biederman and Dr Timothy Wilens of Harvard University Medical School, illustrate the close and cozy relationship between medical “scholarship” and drug companies. Drs Biederman and Wilens netted $1.6m each from drug companies for their work in recommending powerful anti-psychotic drugs for children. Biederman, Wilens and other extremely well-rewarded child psychiatrists are in part responsible for giving children the diagnosis of paediatric bipolar disorder for which anti-psychotic drugs like Risperidal and Zyprexa are used . Experts agree that there is no long-term improvement in children’s lives from taking anti-psychotic drugs. In fact, these drugs have a substantiated pattern of metabolic problems and rapid weight gain that often leads to diabetes . The use of bipolar diagnoses and bipolar medications is one small example of how market-driven mental healthcare works in the United States. It illustrates the transformation of US healthcare into a system dominated by some of the richest corporations in the world. Caring about profit is first, and that is why psychiatry has turned to drug therapy. Psychology US healthcare Pharmaceuticals industry Drugs United States Mental health Harriet Fraad guardian.co.uk

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Spain ‘wrongly jailed’ Basque leader

European court of human rights says Arnaldo Otegi must be compensated after being wrongly imprisoned for insulting King Juan Carlos Spain must compensate the radical Basque separatist leader Arnaldo Otegi after wrongly sentencing him to jail for insulting King Juan Carlos, the European court of human rights has decided. The court in Strasbourg ruled on Tuesday that Spain must pay €23,000 (nearly £20,000) in compensation to Otegi for breaching his right to freedom of expression after he accused the Spanish monarch of protecting police torturers. Otegi made his comments after police raided and closed down the Basque-language Egunkaria newspaper in February 2003. The editor, Martxelo Otamendi, and other executives, claimed they were tortured. When Juan Carlos visited the Basque country soon afterwards, Otegi said that as “supreme head of the civil guard police force”, the monarch was effectively in command of those who had tortured Egunkaria staff. Otegi claimed the king “protects torture and imposes his monarchical regime on our people through torture and violence”. Three years later a Spanish court found him guilty of insulting the king, handing down a one-year suspended jail sentence and imposing costs. But the Strasbourg court has decided Otegi was within his rights as a politician to air his grievances against the king, though the torture allegations were never proved. Otegi’s remarks were “made in his capacity as elected member of and spokesperson for a parliamentary group …in the context of the recent closure of the Egunkaria newspaper and the complaint alleging ill-treatment”, the Strasbourg judges ruled. They accepted that his words “could be understood as contributing to a wider public debate on the possible responsibility of the state security forces in cases of ill treatment”. Spanish judges last year threw out a case alleging that Otamendi and other Egunkaria executives had collaborated with Eta. The decision came too late to save Egunkaria. Four civil guard police officers were found guilty last December of torturing members of an Eta unit that killed two people with a bomb at Madrid’s Barajas airport in 2006. Otegi is one of a group of separatist leaders now trying to persuade Eta to end four decades of terrorism. Spain European court of human rights Human rights Europe Eta Giles Tremlett guardian.co.uk

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The New York Times provided decent front-page coverage of the emerging scandal that took down top executives at National Public Radio, a hidden-camera sting that caught top fundraiser Ron Schiller making prejudicial remarks against Republicans in general and the Tea Party movement in particular. The backlash resulted in the resignation of Ron Schiller as well as NPR President and chief executive Vivian Schiller (no relation). But Times media reporter Jeremy Peters took an incomplete look at the recent rash of hidden-camera hoaxes on Saturday under the strongly worded headline “ Partisans Adopt Deceit As a Tactic for Reports .” Peters falsely implied that “gotcha” journalism had faded from view, ignoring two recent examples in the mainstream media, one from NPR itself. Peters focused on three recent incidents, two involving conservatives taping liberal groups caught embarrassing themselves and getting results – Lila Rose’s sting of Planned Parenthood resulted in the firing of a clinic manager, and James O’Keefe’s hidden-camera hoax of NPR executives supposedly meeting with a Muslim group resulted in a boardroom meltdown. Also, a leftist journalist posed as billionaire philanthropist Koch to try and embarrass Republican Gov. Scott Walker of Wisconsin, to little effect. The reporter in disguise has largely faded from mainstream American journalism. But the tactic is alive and well in the hands of passionate partisans. As their pursuit of the “gotcha” moment has become part of the cost of life in the public eye, one question is how willing politicians will be to advance their agendas on the backs of these muckrakers 2.0. In just the last month, surreptitiously recorded conversations have embarrassed NPR and Planned Parenthood, organizations long under assault from conservatives, as well as Gov. Scott Walker of Wisconsin, a Republican and target of the political left for his anti-union stance. The latest episode came this week, when the conservative provocateur James O’Keefe released a video that included an NPR fund-raiser who makes disparaging remarks about the Tea Party. This led to the resignation of the radio network’s chief executive, Vivian Schiller. …. Defensible or not, use of the tactics seems to be growing. But in fretting over the journalistic ethics of these stunts, Peters ignored hidden-camera reports by mainstream journalists, including a recent one from NPR itself . The Media Research Center’s Alex Fitzsimmons noted an NPR correspondent employed the same tactics used by O'Keefe, going incognito for a sting operation aimed at exposing U.S. border agents who target Muslims for “interrogation” for the March 10 “Morning Edition.” And MRC’s Scott Whitlock documented how the undercover ABC News show “What Would You Do?” searches for bigotry across America. Peters rolled on, as if those sorts of programs were rarities in mainstream journalism: By and large, American news organizations are wary of the toll stunts like Mr. O’Keefe’s can take on their credibility. Some attempts by mainstream media outlets to mask their reporters’ identities, in fact, have caused a backlash. One of the most significant examples was the case involving ABC News and Food Lion, in which the supermarket chain sued the network, claiming fraud and trespassing. Producers for the program “Primetime Live” lied on job applications and obtained jobs in the back rooms of Food Lion stores, where they recorded employees engaging in unsanitary and dangerous practices like bleaching spoiled meat.

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Manning doctors accused of cruelty

WikiLeaks suspect treated cruelly, says rights group, which accuses psychiatrists of ‘violating ethical duties’ A leading group of doctors in the US concerned with the ethical treatment of patients has questioned the role of military psychiatrists in Quantico, Virginia, where the suspected WikiLeaks source Bradley Manning is being subjected to harsh treatment that some call torture. The advocacy body Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) has sounded the alarm over the role of psychiatrists at the brig in the marine base where Manning has been in custody since last July. The group sees the psychiatrists as trapped in a classic case of “dual loyalty”, where their obligations to the military chain of command may conflict with their medical duty to protect their patient. Christy Fujio, author of a forthcoming report on the issue, said the main concern was that psychiatrists were allowing Manning’s continuing solitary confinement. “Even if they do not officially approve it, by continuing to examine him and report back to the government on his condition, they are effectively taking part in security operations. Their failure to call it what it is – cruel and inhumane treatment – constitutes a violation of their ethical duties as doctors.” Manning, who has been charged with passing a mountain of digital US state secrets to WikiLeaks, is under a prevention of injury order (PoI) that requires him to be kept alone in a cell for 23 hours a day and checked every five minutes. Since earlier this month, he has also been stripped naked each night and made to parade in front of officers. Manning himself says the conditions amount to pre-trial punishment provoked by a sarcastic remark he made to guards. Official records kept at the brig, released recently by Manning’s lawyer, reveal that between last August and January military psychiatrists made no fewer than 16 recommendations to their military commanders that Manning should be taken off the PoI restrictions because he was no threat to himself. Typical of the entries was that of 29 October 2010, which stated that Manning “was evaluated by the brig psychiatrist and found fit to be removed from prevention of injury classification from a psychiatric standpoint”. Only once in that five-month period did the psychiatrists conclude that the prisoner should be subjected to the restrictions. Despite the clear medical opinion given, brig commanders have repeatedly ignored the advice and retained the harsh regime. That is in itself, PHR says, an indication that the US government is breaking its own clearly stated rules. The group’s Susan McNamara, a doctor who works with victims of torture from other countries, said Manning’s treatment appeared to be an extension of the interrogation tactics used against terror suspects in Guantánamo. “That is a huge problem, as it is designed to break a person down psychologically. Solitary confinement is a form of sensory deprivation, and if you are depriving a person of the human contact they need that can amount to torture.” She added: “In the US, if a patient was treated in a psychiatric hospital in the same way the military is treating Manning, the federal government would stamp all over it … [it] is disobeying its own rules.” The controversy over Manning’s treatment has reached to the heart of the Obama administration. This week, state department spokesman PJ Crowley resigned, having called the confinement “ridiculous and stupid” and warned it could damage the global standing of the US. Obama himself was forced to defend the regime, saying he had been “assured” by the Pentagon it was in Manning’s own interests. While the Quantico psychiatrists are given credit for having consistently argued that Manning should be removed from the current extreme regime, there are serious questions about whether they are doing enough to force change. Doctors have been under tight ethical guidelines to protect their patients since the framing of the Nuremberg ethic at the end of the second world war. More recently, the American Medical Association ruled that physicians “must oppose and must not participate in torture for any reason … Physicians should strive to change situations in which torture is practised or the potential for torture is great”. PHR has called on all doctors to avoid performing evaluations of patients in a manner that facilitates violations of human rights and condemns doctors who remain silent in the face of human rights abuses. The group believes the psychiatrists should act on their duty to report Manning’s cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment and ensure, in line with their ethical duties, that he is kept in the least restrictive environment needed. Bradley Manning US military US national security Human rights United States Ed Pilkington guardian.co.uk

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Get advice from our travel expert

Post your questions to Lonely Planet ‘s Tom Hall, who will be offering expert advice live online tomorrow from 1-2pm Planning a late Easter escape in search of much-needed early summer sunshine, or taking advantage of the extra bank holiday (cheers Will and Kate) to party elsewhere? Maybe you need advice on a specific destination, how to get there or where to stay? Or maybe you’re stuck for inspiration or have a few travel doubts? Fear not, Tom Hall will be live on Guardian Travel offering expert advice. Post questions below in advance or on the day. Tom will get to as many as he can in an hour, but due to the volume of questions, he may not be able to answer all of them in the live blog. Unanswered questions will be considered for future Ask Tom blog posts. Tom Hall guardian.co.uk

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The seductive power of lists

Lists can be reductive, but on the eve of this year’s book prize season, it’s time to celebrate their particular strengths Tomorrow, the Orange Prize announces its 2011 longlist – and fires the starting pistol for the book prize season. For the next six months, until the grand finale of the Booker, interested literary parties of all stripes will be swamped with lists: who’s in, who’s out, who’s favourite, who’s a dark horse, who’s losing, who was robbed. Sometimes it can seem as if the ubiquitous list has replaced thoughtful critical discourse – and there’s no question that the shorthand of a list suits a culture with a limited attention span. Your list is swifter, and less challenging, than a fully articulated analysis; also, more assertive. Blogs have a love-hate relationship with lists. There’s nothing like a Top 10 to provoke controversy, as this blog knows only too well . But, since we’re coming into list-and-prize season, I’ve tried to arrive at a positive approach to the curse of the catalogue. First of all, I note that in Anglo-American fiction, there’s quite a good tradition of list making: Daniel Defoe, the father of the English novel, did not flinch, in Robinson Crusoe, from listing Crusoe’s stores after the shipwreck, or indeed his situation. On p52 of my Oxford Classics edition, he writes, “I had three Encouragements, 1. A smooth calm Sea, 2. The Tide rising and setting in to the Shore, 3. What little Wind there was blew me towards the Land.” See also, on p274, the list of luxuries Crusoe’s rescuer gives him ( “He brought me also a Box of Sugar, a Box of Flower, a Bag full of Lemons…” ) This approach has a long afterlife. Among contemporary writers, Nick Hornby has also turned list-making into a kind of art . In American fiction, Brett Easton Ellis made a memorable polemical point about consumer society in the brand name lists of American Psycho. He was hardly a pioneer. America’s greatest 20th century novelist, F. Scott Fitzgerald, was a master of lists. Perhaps his most celebrated list occurs in chapter four of The Great Gatsby : the roll-call of those “who accepted Gatsby’s hospitality” in that discordant summer after the Great War: “From West Egg came the Poles and the Mulreadys and Cecil Roebuck and Cecil Shoen and Gulick the State senator and Newton Orchid, who controlled Films Par Excellence, and Eckhaust and Clyde Cohen… all connected with the movies in one way or another.” Wonderful stuff: three pages of it, painting a picture of a whole world. That’s the curse of lists. Part of their appeal is how much they leave out, and how much scope they give to the imagination. Robert McCrum guardian.co.uk

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The seductive power of lists

Lists can be reductive, but on the eve of this year’s book prize season, it’s time to celebrate their particular strengths Tomorrow, the Orange Prize announces its 2011 longlist – and fires the starting pistol for the book prize season. For the next six months, until the grand finale of the Booker, interested literary parties of all stripes will be swamped with lists: who’s in, who’s out, who’s favourite, who’s a dark horse, who’s losing, who was robbed. Sometimes it can seem as if the ubiquitous list has replaced thoughtful critical discourse – and there’s no question that the shorthand of a list suits a culture with a limited attention span. Your list is swifter, and less challenging, than a fully articulated analysis; also, more assertive. Blogs have a love-hate relationship with lists. There’s nothing like a Top 10 to provoke controversy, as this blog knows only too well . But, since we’re coming into list-and-prize season, I’ve tried to arrive at a positive approach to the curse of the catalogue. First of all, I note that in Anglo-American fiction, there’s quite a good tradition of list making: Daniel Defoe, the father of the English novel, did not flinch, in Robinson Crusoe, from listing Crusoe’s stores after the shipwreck, or indeed his situation. On p52 of my Oxford Classics edition, he writes, “I had three Encouragements, 1. A smooth calm Sea, 2. The Tide rising and setting in to the Shore, 3. What little Wind there was blew me towards the Land.” See also, on p274, the list of luxuries Crusoe’s rescuer gives him ( “He brought me also a Box of Sugar, a Box of Flower, a Bag full of Lemons…” ) This approach has a long afterlife. Among contemporary writers, Nick Hornby has also turned list-making into a kind of art . In American fiction, Brett Easton Ellis made a memorable polemical point about consumer society in the brand name lists of American Psycho. He was hardly a pioneer. America’s greatest 20th century novelist, F. Scott Fitzgerald, was a master of lists. Perhaps his most celebrated list occurs in chapter four of The Great Gatsby : the roll-call of those “who accepted Gatsby’s hospitality” in that discordant summer after the Great War: “From West Egg came the Poles and the Mulreadys and Cecil Roebuck and Cecil Shoen and Gulick the State senator and Newton Orchid, who controlled Films Par Excellence, and Eckhaust and Clyde Cohen… all connected with the movies in one way or another.” Wonderful stuff: three pages of it, painting a picture of a whole world. That’s the curse of lists. Part of their appeal is how much they leave out, and how much scope they give to the imagination. Robert McCrum guardian.co.uk

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