Civil society tends to become a sort of artificial reservoir for an endangered species: the democratic intellectual, protected by the international institutions
Civil society tends to become a sort of artificial reservoir for an endangered species: the democratic intellectual, protected by the international institutions
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Marina WarnerMarina Warner is a renowned novelist and cultural critic. Her many books include Alone of All Her Sex: the myth and cult of the Virgin Mary (1978) and Monuments and Maidens: allegory of the female form (1985). Her most recent novel is The Leto Bundle (2002), and she has co-curated the major exhibition on the theme of Metamorphosis at Londons Science Museum from October 2002.London Recent articlesDisembodied eyes, or the culture of apocalypse Is photography a threat to memory? Marina Warner on how images can dissolve rather than preserve the past. A life for freedomMarina Warner writes from The Italian Academy at Edward Saids own Columbia University, New York about a great public intellectual and a rare, true friend. Wrapping up 'Hair'From pre-historic bog-people to big hair; virgin martyrs to dresses spun from lost souls, to the hairy Devil himself, the author of The Beast to the Blonde takes us on a final grand tour of openDemocracys virtual museum. Sorry: the present state of apologyThe theme of apology is in the air: governments are saying it to former colonial subjects, or to political prisoners in post-dictatorships; former terrorists to their targets; banks and businesses to looted or polluted clients; churches and cults to victims of abuse. Why are they doing it? In her approach to todays latest political enthusiasm, we accompany Marina Warner novelist, critic, and subversive anatomist of myth and the collective subconscious on a sparkling tour of the literature of apology over twenty-five centuries. This article is the first in a series of six published on openDemocracy. Scene One: IoIn which the archetypal figure of human heroic suffering meets the persecuted eternal feminine. Before history invented public apology, was there any solace? |
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