Rencontre
June 19th
Female
Wellington
witty sarcasm, intelligent conversation, F1 (if you're a Ferarri fan), government bashing and political debates (taking political science next trimester. joy. Machiavelli.), predicting impending WARS and cursing idiotic bigshots with bellies larger than their freaking brains (hint: bush), WMD, Michael Moore, NOVELS, philosophy (Kant, anyone? spare me from Freud), KAFKA, chocolate, ROCK and METAL, the local music scene, jazz (DIANA KRALL) and blues (Chet Baker), Lara Fabian, Cat Stevens, classical and accoustic music, history and literature (classics i.e. greek literature and myth.), exotic food (or just food... camembert.... mmm), art attacks, bursts of inspiration, getting down on the dance floor, BLACK, anything Gothic, symbolic or Celtic, RED, death, damnation and purgatory, superstition, VAMPIRES, witchcraft and the afterlife..
   

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Friday, June 22, 2007
Quick updates

Exams are over! woop woop!

Michael F left for Europe today and we won't be seeing him again for the next 5 weeks. Michael W and Janice are still studying because they are still having exams... sucks. The flat went for the All Blacks test match which was awesome. No prizes as to guessing who won.

The flat's pretty excited about the Louis Vuitton/America's Cup. Team New Zealand is going up against Alinghi - and we're hoping to bring the cup back from Spain. Cross your fingers for good wind!

On another note, I heard from Juho, whom I haven't heard from in ages! Apparently, he's working in Khartoum, Sudan now and is anticipating the mid-summer festival in Ethiopia! Random isn't it? While we're here on the other hand, experiencing the bitter cold of mid-winter, but Janice and I are going to a mid-summer party at Anna's tomorrow. It's going to be fun. Bet she's still working on Swedish time!

Going to Charlotte's tonight to watch 'The Lion King'. Apparently, it is a crime that I haven't watched 'The Lion King' - and so this is to be remedied.

My birthday went well. I will post further updates soon. We had dinner at La Casa Pasta, and then drinks at the Matterhorn - the 5th best bar in the world apparently, and therefore, the best in New Zealand. We shared this really obscure drink called Mega Mai Tai =) Sounds weird? I thought so too.

Cheerios!

 


Posted at 07:00 pm by Rencontre
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Monday, May 21, 2007
Doing my bit for CLS

I am so wound up for my upcoming exams. Law school just does not know when to give us a break!

 

If you're wondering where I have been hiding, I've been busy with study. For the past week, I have been working on this; my jurisprudential essay on critical legal studies. If you've never heard of it, I don't blame you. It is, after all, one of the more obscure branches of jurisprudential discourse. I suppose now you will understand why law students walk around with that blank look on their faces, because their thoughts are occupied in verbose theories that could have been better served in simple terms. 

 

I hate writing essays, I think the footnoting here is a bit faulty since I couldn't transfer the whole thing properly from word.... but meh. It's not like you're going to analyse my footnotes, are you?  

 

Here's a sneak peak at what goes on in our heads...

 

I           INTRODUCTION

 

"Poor is the man whose pleasures depend on the permission of another."[1]

 

Mimicking Foucault, this punch line from Madonna's 'Justify My Love', captures the rebellious drive behind the initial critical legal studies (CLS) movement. It defies legal hierarchy and challenges accepted standards in our society imposed by an elite state capture. Kennedy's 'Polemic' urges resistance against the perpetuation of the hierarchy and the exploitation of the legal community as ideological instruments.[2]

 

However, this drive has been tempered by a variety of interpretations of CLS offered by the crits themselves that even Schlegel struggles to understand what the 'occluded battle' is about save one on the definition of CLS.[3] Whilst Gabel advocated a constructive enterprise, Kennedy maintained a radical stance in fighting legal liberalism.[4] This splintering has, in part, ironically been caused by its own indeterminacy and gave birth to alternate discourses like Critical Race Theory (CRT) and Feminist Legal Theory (FLT). I opine that CLS is still relevant today, albeit in a different light, despite its turbulence through the 1980s. Its relevance despite its changes is to be illustrated in three issues.

 

II         THE STRUGGLE WITH MARXISM

 

            By advocating a normative position of radical egalitarianism, CLS has its roots in Marxism. CLS remains a legitimate movement because of its essentially Marxist criticism of illegitimate social power.[5] However, the crits' scorn of 'vulgar' Marxism; its call for revolution and the crude superstructure of class distinctions, leaves CLS in an undesired position – that of the immobilised. It cannot attack liberal theories, being a liberal theory in itself and it fails to strongly challenge conservative ones.[6] In my view, it desires to champion the oppressed but constrains itself from revolutionary tendencies, favouring 'baby steps' instead.[7] This binds CLS because although the legal community engages in the indeterminacy debate and empathises with the oppressed, it is still merely a discourse which causes but little change. Indeed, there can be no change unless CLS fully embraces its Marxist roots.

 

            This is, of course, an oversimplified view. CLS has distinct intricacies to Marxism. Deconstruction of the legal hierarchy may seem to lie in the heart of CLS, but that has been dismissed by a number of theorists, notably Kelman.[8] It is true that Marxism and CLS share common grounds but the motivation behind CLS differs from Marxism. I find CLS to be more of a reaction to the incoherence and indeterminism of liberal and conservative legal theories. It provides the legal community with the tools necessary for self-critique in order to better the system through gradual improvement - hence, the denunciation of revolution.[9]  

 

            However, indeterminacy would be ineffective in changing a legal system that is so established. Kennedy's calls to "resist!" from being manipulated by the perpetuation of the hierarchy calls for more than an exercise of self-criticism. Indeed, CLS' adoption of Gramsci's notion of hegemony encourages the movement to play a more proactive role in instituting change.[10] By recognising that the law provides "rights" to buttress social objection, CLS recognises the manipulation of the hierarchy. Although I appreciate the subtle nuances that set CLS apart from Marxism, I also consider the predicament that the movement has put itself in. In distancing itself from Marxism, it distances itself from the very essentials that fuelled its political drive in the first place – its desire to overthrow the legal hierarchy. Due to this struggle, it has been increasingly harder to locate the strength in the movement needed to affect change and therefore is widely seen as useful only as an educative tool.

           

III        AN ALTERNATE SYSTEM AND CLS AS AN EDUCATIVE TOOL

 

            Crits has often been chided for their inability to produce an alternate system in place of what is already in existence. Even Kennedy claimed that in the face of Gramsci's hegemony, "the left should not pretend that it has a solution."[11] A justification may be found in Fischl's research scientist analogy.[12] In this analogy, research scientists wrote a report on the side effects of a widely-used drug. They were then asked to establish that there is some escape from the side effects in order to legitimise their report despite their meaningful criticisms of the drug. He argues that the merits of the report were sidestepped in search of that escape, which goes beyond the point.

 

In a similar way, CLS is that report on the "side effects" of the current legal system; these side effects being the perpetuation of the hierarchy. Instead of appreciating the merits that could eventuate from the critique, CLS has been asked to produce an alternative escape from these "side effects". He argues that an alternative system that would provide an escape from our current system cannot even be contemplated without an examination of our current legal system itself. He states that:[13]  

 

The point of critical scholarship is that the law is far better understood as a significant aspect of the complex interplay between our culture and our structures of thought than it is as something that has some sort of room of its own. We can't step outside of "law" and look at it; we are looking at us.

 

            This justification further emphasises the point that CLS is, more often than not, a legal scholarship. Indeed, the core of CLS is that "legal scholarship can be a kind of transformative political action."[14] Notably, this scholarship renders it an extraordinarily useful teaching tool in order to enhance critical thinking. For example, the cases of Powell v Taylor[15] and Elston v Paal[16] continue to facilitate the indeterminacy debate. The availability of legitimate legal arguments on both sides will eventually lead to a determination more motivated by the perpetuation of the hierarchy than real justice.

 

These cases also highlight the manipulation of language in order to secure that perpetuation. Alan Hutchinson stated that political reform must necessarily be a linguistic enterprise because we live in language and expressions are conveyed in language.[17] I agree with him, but to an extent. Although it is true that in legal realism, linguistic indeterminacy is also a basis for structural indeterminacy, I find that too much focus on language itself detracts from CLS' impetus as a catalyst of change.[18]

 

Conversely, although it is tempting for CLS to settle into this general role, it is also this complacency which endangers the drive behind CLS' motion to induce political action, illustrating that the relevance of CLS is society is not always beneficial to the progress of the movement. Nevertheless, CLS was and always will continue to be highly relevant in legal study.

 

IV        CLS' REVIVAL THROUGH POP CULTURE AND ITS RECONCILIATION WITH CRITICAL RACE THEORY AND FEMINIST LEGAL THEORY

 

CLS reasons that the superstructure has evolved from class to identity politics. In 'Sexy Dressing Etc.', Kennedy utilises a hybrid wherein he combined Foucault's view on power relations conditioning social relations with Hale's view that all economic relationships are structured by law. This results in an analysis of the intersection of disciplinary with market power. Rules, when seen as permission rather than prohibition, regulate society inconspicuously. However, this view necessarily presupposes that society is neutral and hence, glosses over the specific needs of CRT and FLT, since it subscribes to legal realism.

 

The reason for the splintering of CLS is that it does not offer the experiential dimension essential to the disempowered.[19]  To quote Sartre in 'Being and Nothingness', there is lived experience and nothing.[20] Hence, CRT and FLT emerged from CLS' lack of representation when these discourses should be natural allies. In addition, there is a wide methodological divide. The CLS view that rights exist merely as a myth to pacify the oppressed are criticised by both CRT and FLT because rights must be validated in order to legitimise both feminist and critical race studies.[21]

 

Nevertheless, CLS is in a process of shift as it begins to recognise that its methods were asserted and maintained by virtue of power rather than truth, which is humbling for a movement dedicated to erasing hierarchies.[22] Indeed, in 'Sexy Dressing Etc.', Kennedy attempts to bridge the divide between the discourses by conceding that experiences in oppression are varied and contingent, instead of being analogous to the entire cross-section of society.[23]

 

CLS is only familiar but to a select few; law students, professors and those within the legal circles but certainly not the general public. However, Kennedy appears to attempt a revitalising of CLS with Sexy Dressing, wherein CLS is seen in the context of popular culture, as opposed to politics. It would seem like he is appealing to the minds of modern youth instead of his peers from the post-Vietnam 1960s mentality. This is evident from the words on the inside flap of Sexy Dressing:

 

[Kennedy's] aim is to wed rebelliousness, irony and irrationalism of cultural modernism and postmodernism to the earnestness of political correctness. The result is a refreshing alternative both to the stalemate of mainstream politics and the self-isolation of the radical fringe.

 

This represents a shift in Kennedy's radical position from 'Polemic' and is implicitly, an appeal to a more mainstream audience. It seems he would agree that the law and legal institutions are inseparable from the complex social and cultural narratives that give them meaning.[24] In my view, the combination of popular culture and a more temperate CLS theory provides an irresistible attraction to youthful modern sophisticates. CLS may well nurture intellectuals who 'await the twenty-first century night when under cover of darkness they will crawl out of the belly of the beast"[25] with this retooling from popular culture and further harmonisation with CRT and FLT. It would seem that Kennedy's quieter strategy to 'undermine and entice'[26] has found its niche in popular culture. Despite being less controversial, this strategy is no less effective than his previous radical stance.  

 

V         CONCLUSION

 

CLS may have lost its strength due to its own identity crisis with Marxism as well as with the birth of CRT and FLT. However, the movement is far from dead. So long as it recognises its Marxist roots and expresses itself through the interpretive vehicle mainstream audiences can identify with, I am of the view that CLS will be able to regain its momentum.

 

During this shift, however, it is still very relevant as an educative tool to enrich legal education.  It is essential to realise that in order to realise the changes needed in society's daily interplay with politics and the legal hierarchy, those who are familiar with the concepts of CLS are to play a more proactive role than that of a mere bystander:[27] 

 

For every constitution there is an epic, for each decalogue a scripture. Once understood in the context of the narratives that gives it meaning, law becomes not merely a system of rules to be observed, but a world in which we live.

 

  

                                                                        (1, 796 words)



[1] MTV refused to air Justify My Love when it came out in 1990. Sue Allen "MTV

   Strikes a Pose" (28 Nov 1990) Los Angeles Times 2.

[2] E. Dana Neacsu "CLS Stands For Critical Legal Studies, If Anyone Remembers"   

   (1999-2000) 8 Journal of Law and Policy 415, 418.

[3] John Henry Schlegel "Critical Legal Studies, an Afterword" (1984) 36 Stan L Rev,

   673, 674.

[4] Peter Gabel & Duncan Kennedy "Roll Over Beethoven" (1984) 36 Stan L Rev, 1, 1. 

[5] E. Dana Neacsu, above n 2, 420.

[6] Ibid, 415, 453.

[7] Ibid, 427.

[8] Richard Michael Fischl "The Question That Killed Critical Legal Studies" (1992) 17

  Law and Soc. Inquiry 779, 786.

[9] E. Dana Neascu, above n 2, 427.

[10] Naomi Mezey "Legal Radicals in Madonna's Closet: The Influence of Identity

   Politics, Popular Culture and A New Generation on Critical Legal Studies" (1993-

   1994) 46 Stan L Rev 1835, 1835.

[11] E Dana Neascu, above n 2, 436.

[12] Richard Michael Fischl, above n 7, 801-802.

[13] Richard Michael Fischl, above n 7, 802.

[14] David M Trubek, "Where the Action is: Critical Legal Studies and Empiricism"

    (1984) 36 Stan L Rev 575, 591.

[15] Powell v Taylor (1954) 263 SW 2d 906 (Ark), George Rose Smith J.  

[16] Elston v Paal (1997) 550 SW 2d 771 (Ark), George Rose Smith J.

[17] Ian Ward Introduction to Critical Legal Theory (2 ed, Cavendish, London, 2004) 137-

    149, 145. 

[18] Naomi Mezey, above n 9, 1837.

Posted at 04:53 pm by Rencontre
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Tuesday, May 15, 2007
Lightbulb moment

I.changed.a.lightbulb.today.for.the.first.time.in.my.life.

Okay, so maybe I still needed help... but at least I did half of it! My room is so much brighter now. Sometimes I wonder if I need a switch flicked on in the darkened recesses of my mind. I've always wished for that lightbulb moment where everything in my life is as clear as day; where life is either black or white, not shades of grey.

Janice made a nice roast chicken for dinner. And then the flat played charades. I think the older we get the more childish we can be. Of course, growing old is compulsory, growing up is optional. It was fun though.

I had almost forgotten what fun meant.


Posted at 02:07 am by Rencontre
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Friday, May 11, 2007
We're on the American public radio!

Ok, so it's been a while since I last contributed, but the Cicak have launched so high into the stratosphere I was quite astounded when I was informed that we're being aired on the American public radio.

Yes, in this day and age of free speech, Malaysians have been continuously suppressed by governmental censorship, but the question remains: how long is it going to take before the lid blows?

Click here for the full interview on World Press Day. Kathy Corcoran, former writer of the San Jose Mercury News staff writer interviews Pohsi on free speech in Malaysia.

Pretty stoked.


Posted at 05:47 pm by Rencontre
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The story of the puffed up pufferfish

Right. In addition to Voltaren, Nurofen is now off the list. I am officially allergic to all NSAIDs.

It happened on Wednesday. I was feeling a bit off kilter after spending hours on my property opinion (which is finally done!) and decided to take some medication - well, to cut a long story short, I took Nurofen, which unbeknownst to me contains an anti-inflammatory substance common to other drugs, such as Voltaren. Heck, how was I supposed to know? It was just another generic, OTC drug I thought was similar to paracetamol. Besides, I thought I was only allergic to Voltaren, not ALL NSAIDs,

And so, you can guess the rest. It was HITCH all over again! Essie made a mercy dash to the hospital where we had to deal with the inefficient health system before I could get any treatment. My eyes were watering and swollen shut! I swear Malaysia has a more efficient health system than New Zealand! 

In hindsight, it was pretty funny. Micheal and Essie were so stressed out. I could hear her tyres screeching on the gravel in an attempt to get me to the hospital as quickly as possibly despite getting caught in the lights all the time.

Well, I am still breathing and kicking. My face is still slightly swollen but I have no issues with that. At least I am breathing fine. I refused an IV when the doctor suggested it. I also refused an injection, so they had no choice but to give me oral medication. What can I say? I am phobic to needles - a doctor's worse nightmare.

So that's it in a nutshell. Catch up later! Cya!

 


Posted at 11:51 am by Rencontre
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Monday, April 23, 2007
Naturalism

"We hold these truths to be self-evident; that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights; that among those are Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness."

~Thomas Jefferson~


Posted at 01:00 am by Rencontre
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Saturday, April 14, 2007
Wealthy

Ever wondered how wealthy in wealthy? Well, here's an interesting bit of information on how New Zealanders are considered wealthy.

Under the Securities Act 1978, 'wealthy' is defined in s5(2CD) as this:

if an independant chartered accountant certifies that the person has net assets of at least $2,000,000 or had an annual gross income of at least $200,000 for each of the last 2 financial years.

There you go, a quantification of wealthy. So don't ask me how wealthy is wealthy. It's in statute! So stressed out trying to cram everything before I head off on Monday to Taranaki. I have an essay due on the first day back, 2 tests the following day, another test the following week and another essay the week after.

Going for a dinner now. Charlotte's making me her Charlie dish... and I need to steal her colour bleach for my coat. Don't even get me started on my laundry woes!


Posted at 05:16 pm by Rencontre
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Monday, April 09, 2007
Serenity

 

 

Sunrise from our deck... sometimes I stand there and watch the world go by, immersed in thoughts...


Posted at 08:50 pm by Rencontre
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Tuesday, April 03, 2007
Of study and more study

My mornings - capital revenue distinctions, tax, realisation of shares enabling it to be assessable income instead of capital etc.

My afternoons - Kafka, Camus, Dickens, Shakespeare, James Boyd White, Ian Ward, Bruce Rockwood, Richard Posner, feminist legal theory, critical race theory, Derrick Bell.

My evenings - Fight-Do! (need activity after hours of being cooped up in the library.)

My nights - Securities, derivatives, interest rate and currency swaps, TEA, listings, Bills of Exchange Act 1908, Cheques Act 1960, disclosure statements, knowing receipts, knowing assistance, zzzzzz....... should I be focusing so much on Ward for my essay? zzzzzz.... need to finish essay by this week, time is running out! zzzzzzz.... stress, stress, stress zzzzzzz......

NEXT MORNING - Rush for class!

Just a short summary of my day.

I just finished some readings on the European debt capital market (bonds, Euroclear, Clearstream, MTN, ratings, listings, negative pledges, commercial papers, Fitch Ratings, Standard & Poors Corporation, global notes.... Shocked) when I went online to find out that my class in the morning is cancelled! Angry I could have slept in but in a flash of hardworking brilliance today, I booked some jurisprudence material on close reserve for tomorrow morning. Grumble, grumble, grumble.  Richard Posner had better love me for getting myself to law school in the early hours of the morning just to read him! 

Wednesday, Micheal has asked if I would like to go to a book launch at Rutherford House. Apparently, they're launching the "Baubles of Politics" and Winston Peters is speaking. Should be interesting, but maybe I will stay home and cook and be the domesticated little kitten that I am. Will see.

Thursday, I was asked to go to the Law Students' International party at the Occidental. Heimun has also asked if I would like to have a cosy get-together at her home in Khandallah for a hot cross bun party in commemoration of Easter. Home-cooked food vs drunken law students, home-cooked food vs drunken law students... is there even a contest? Missing out on Lizzie's birthday do though because I promised Heimun I'd go to her place beforehand. They're watching 300 after, which I have been dying to see. I will watch it eventually. According to Times magazine, which I was reading prior to this, the movie is "a movie about a graphic novel about a movie about a battle". lol. They're just whining about the whole digital-ness of 300. Being a bit of a classics buff, I don't really mind the graphics as long as they portray the battle of Thermopylae in accurate enough detail.

Going to put out the rubbish now.... and then maybe sleep?  

p/s: Am not getting enough of the Buena Vista Social Club!


Posted at 12:25 am by Rencontre
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Sunday, April 01, 2007
Super 14!

Yes, you got it right. Last evening, the flat indulged in the nation's national religion, RUGBY. I spent the entire afternoon at the public library with Patrick on a frustrating hunt for jurisprudence textbooks so the break was welcome. We caught the Super 14 at the Westpac Stadium where the Wellington Hurricanes played the South African Bulls. Of course, the Hurricanes defeated the Bulls 17 to 9.

Well, as usual, we TRIED to be early. This time, it was Michael F who held the flat up, not me!!! Huzzah! Here's a picture of the exodus. This is called the Fran Wilde Walk, apparently. Oh, and for those not in the know, the Hurricane colours are black and yellow.

Well, exodus was fine... until we reached the ticket booth. Micheal W was grumbling about missing the buildup and things didn't improve when a woman turned around and said all the tickets for uncovered seats were sold out! We still managed to wing some seats though, so it was alright. The queue was long as!   

So here is a wide view of the Westpac Stadium taken from aisle 20.

The mascot walking out into the field. He's one ugly mascot! He was funny though, especially when he imitated the Bulls reserve during his warmup. Everyone was laughing, but the reserve was so caught up in the game that he was oblivious. Well, ignorance is bliss right?

Micheal W and Michael F paying full attention to the game. Makes you wonder if they pay the same attention at lectures....? They were yelling themselves hoarse at the referee. He was a really biased Aussie! (Ok, I was yelling too, but that's not the point! At least I wasn't calling him a wanker like the girls behind us Tongue The boys said I was squealing more than anything else.)

Janice and I, slightly over half time. You can see the scoreboard behind us. We all had pies, fries, beer (I had coke, so there), fish and chips etc at the game. To quote Micheal W, it was a dietician's nightmare. Essie was also working that night, but we didn't manage to see her.

This is what we call a lineout. Ok, let's practice my atrocious knowledge on the finer points of rugby. When the ball goes out, the teams will form 2 straight lines and hoist someone up to catch the ball in their possession as it is thrown at them. I was just thinking that it would've been funny if the ball hit the players square in the face. Anyway... excuse my limited repertoire of sporting vocab. U get the picture. 'Nuff said.

The cheerleaders during half-time. Notice the one in the middle. She's got such a tanned midriff but the rest of her body is lily white. Which cheap back-alley watering hole gave her that fake tan, I wonder?

Overall, it was a good night. The atmosphere at the stadium was awesome and we were such biased spectators! I was just relieved that Michael F and I weren't subjected to the obligatory kiss during half-time! Shades We just retaliated by giving Micheal W and Janice shit about what they'd do if the spotlight was on them. Now, that would have been a spectacle!

The flat later adjourned to Simply Paris to wind down from all the excitement of defeating the Bulls. The cafe was quite packed and we could hear the soothing strains of someone playing the guitar at the corner. We managed to secure a table while trying to avoid talk of politics since it is what we always talk about whenever we sit together! Of course, boys being boys, they kept extinguishing the candle at our table!

I was just contented. It was a Saturday well spent. It'd rather do this than go out clubbing rip-roaring mad. The flat is evil, I tell you. It makes one want to stay at home all the time and never go out. We've got such an awesome view from the deck! Did I mention that I've got a closed-in fireplace in my room? Big Smile


Posted at 11:16 am by Rencontre
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