Thursday, 10 October 2013

Stranger in Durham

“Slight not what’s near through aiming at what’s far”- Euripides, Greek Tragedian.

Beyonce - exemplar of a woman
What Are We Talking About Then? 


If we never aimed at what's far, we would be thought of as being timid and having no ambition. The problem arises if by aiming at what's far, we actually start to ignore and despise what's within our grasp. I won't use Beyonce as an example in this article, because then people will know more about me than I want them to know (including why I, yes, hate Jay - Z!). Let me, for want of a better example, use shelter instead to clarify my point: you can't be homeless because you are aiming to own a marble palace one day. Live in that shack until the time comes when you can afford the palace. That's as clear as I can make it in generic terms. Coming to the specifics; what's at issue is the tourist's malaise of travelling to attractions that are 4 000 miles away while completely ignoring the local ones. This is what a moment of sober reflection yielded to me as I drove on the A1 Motorway from London to take up my place in Durham. 

Thus, Euripides' above remark, has helped me to think in the same terms, and so point an accusing finger towards myself on the "tourist malaise" charge. Guilty is the verdict I returned!

Why this trip had to be made
The long road
I have been to Real Madrid's Stadium, 2 hours away by powered flight in excess of 870 Kilometres per hour (540 Miles per hour or Mach 0.82 to the technically minded). Yet, I have never seen Chelsea's Stadium, even though I have lived in London for over 5 years. Those who concern themselves with facts will argue that there is no comparison between an empire like Real Madrid and a club that had not won the league since 1955 (i.e. Chelsea). I will concede that to be a valid point, but it does not invalidate the wisdom of Euripides. I only truly realised this on my drive to Durham. Nothing like the solitude of an open road at 4am to exercise clear thought.

Arriving in County Durham after a 4 - 5 hour early morning drive

Why Does This Happen?


To be fair to the other tourists, familiarity does breed contempt (will Beyonce get tired of Jay Z? we can only hope!). So indeed, it's hard to become excited by a monument you see everyday during rush hour to work. Travel is usually about getting away from the mundane, the grinding boredom of your day to day life. So it is logical to choose somewhere exotic, which will refresh and re-invigorate you. Counter-intuitively, another reason is that it is cheaper to fly to continental Europe than to take a train to the North Pennines. Did I tell you? My famed trip to Madrid in January 2012 cost me £34.00 return! While one way from London to Durham set me back £80.00 in fuel! So unless a very compelling reason be found, it's not very inviting to visit local attractions. Luckily for me, I had the most compelling reason to be in Durham. Luckily again, Durham just happens to be part of the world reknowned North Pennines, an area of outstanding beauty.

Durham University


I have always been (up to now) very careful not to pronounce any political ambitions, partly because I have none, despite my keeping close contact with world affairs and getting animated and annoyed by politics in equal measure. The fact of the matter is that unless the choice is made for me by circumstances, I will never go into politics. However, should circumstances see it fit to call me into politics, what can it hurt to be ready? Right? It was with this in mind that I accepted an offer to study at Durham University in the School of Government and International Affairs. For this reason, I had to drop all the things I had become familiar with in the South to start again over here. But, what a blessing it has turned out to be with regards the fact that this area I am now in is very much like the area I will retire to in my homeland. But I am getting ahead of myself. Let's return to my subject: that it is not a good idea to ignore local attractions in preference of those on the other side of the world.


DU 1832.

Granted, not everyone's University is in a World Heritage Site but the logic still holds. Consider this then, even when I had been offered a place here, in March of this year, I was still plotting how I was going to "conquer" The Great Wall of China. I was still deciding which part of the wall to visit and what other surrounding attractions I shouldn't miss since China is so far. But do you know, a wall of great antiquity and superior value to the Great Wall of China lies not 20 miles from Durham University.



Durham University, 1832.


Where I will do all my studying for the next 4 years!
I would like to also talk about my excellent experiences so far, the welcoming atmosphere and the promise of the best academic training possible at my new institute, but I will reserve that for my next article: The Durham Papers. For now I just want to impress upon you that world class tourist attractions are everywhere, even in your hometown.

Formal Dinner and Welcome to Hatfield College MCR.

Hadrian's Wall Saves Me!


Hadrian's Wall has been standing since A.D. God knows when, the purpose of Hadrian's Wall is not dissimilar to that of the Great Wall of China, if we eschew pedantry from our discussion. The question I want to answer when I visit ancient monuments relates to strategy, which is what I am studying. I want to know what purpose did a monument serve, what was the logic behind it and; did it succeed in that? If not, what lessons were learned and remedies instituted? These questions, I can ask and get equitable answers at the Great Wall of China as well as at Hadrian's Wall. The only difference would be it was going to cost me in the region of £1 500.00 to visit the Great Wall of China, whereas it cost me £5.00 (Five!) to visit Hadrian's Wall. This was thanks to my college here in Durham, Hatfield College. Motto: 'Vel Primus Vel Cum Primis' translated: 'Be the best you can be!' 


Hadrian's Wall at Hexham. The Northernmost point of the Roman Empire.

Hadrian's Wall, Hexham

De Re Militari

Importantly, the military my work will benefit - when circumstances choose the time for my involvement - is an army predicated on the Western model of fighting. So, lessons from the Roman Empire are more pertinent to me than what I would learn from ancient China. This is not to say that I can't learn anything from China. This is just a dawning on me that if I was in China, I would probably have been plotting to conquer Hadrian's Wall, at great expense to myself. It (Hadrian's Wall) would be attracting me like a magnet attracts a rusty iron nail. So I guess the point I want to make in this hurried article (University work constrains me), is that; don't ignore the gem in your backyard while aiming at some distant and costly gem. Within the month, I hope to go horseback riding in the Pennines proper, I will also take in the High Force Waterfalls, between watching Newcastle and Sunderland's games with the big boys in the English Premier League.



Vindolanda Roman Fort

Land's End in Sunderland


PHOTO ESSAY:


Pictures from the surrounding areas in no particular order.

The entrance and roof of the National Glass Centre Centre.

On the roof of the National Glass Centre.

Sunderland A.F.C after match interview spot.

St Peter's Church.

St Peter's Church, Sunderland one of the oldest on these isles.

Night falls at Durham Market 

At Wearmouth Bridge on a short visit to Sunderland.

Myself at Durham Cathedral

The Palatine Centre Building

Agriculture meets power supply.

Entrance to Durham University.

The Palatine Centre which houses Durham Law School.

The power supply

The Agriculture.

Taking in the sights at the northernmost Fort of the Roman Empire.

De Re Militari

Strong because prepared

Prepared because strong.

Conversing with ancient history at Vindolanda Fort

Walking from the Vindolanda Fort to the wall, 3 miles distant.

At the outset of our trek along the wall.

Picture perfect. Hadrian's Wall with Crag Lough providing the stunning background.

The tree that appears in the Robin Hood film. Sycamore Gap.

Walking into a castle that housed 20 soldiers for every mile of the wall.

Not exactly a Roman Milestone but the concept is the same.

The extent of the Roman Empire

Main entrance to the home of Sunderland AFC

The Angel of the North at Gateshead.

The River Wear at Durham Students' Union.

With the Middle Common Room rep at my assigned College. Hatfield

Hadrian's Wall at Hexham

A sheer drop that forms part of Hadrian's Wall

A full view of the Vindolanda Roman Fort.

Roker Beach, Sunderland

Thursday, 22 August 2013

SADC Fully Revisited



by Kudakwashe Kanhutu

Here, I talk about the Southern African Development Community (SADC). A lot of people have overestimated SADC's reach. I have attempted to look at its foundational principles so as to understand its essence and its inherent limits. Knowing the foundational principles will allow anyone to then discuss ANY superstructural issue, whatever the permutation.

Tuesday, 6 August 2013

What Use Intertextuality for Strategy?

"Poetry is finer and more philosophical than history; for poetry expresses the universal, and history only the particular" - Aristotle. 

I travelled to Greece to acquaint myself with the culture that has informed strategic thought.
by Kudakwashe Kanhutu


I was walking in the City of London with a brilliant mathematician friend who is employed in the top end of the banking sector. The reason why I mention his profession and disposition is to place a contrast between him - a man trained in the exact sciences - and myself; someone trained in the expansive, indeterminate and indeterminable field of strategy. We were talking about Homer's epic poem: The Iliad. My mathematician friend, brilliant as he is, assumed that The Iliad was an actual account of actual events that took place in antiquity. Therefore, he did not take it well when I told him that it was all a fiction. 

For my training in Classics, we had to look beyond the text to context, intertextuality, intention, and the question of authorship so as to have a deeper understanding of the texts we were handling. To take just one aspect as example, intertextuality; this refers to how different texts can refer to each other as part of their story telling. Indeed it was on this count of intertextuality that I inadvertently disappointed my mathematician friend with the revelation that Homer's works are fiction.

On the route to Delphi to see some of the places the literature says events took place.


Homer recounts the tales of heroes who fought a 10 year battle at Troy over a beautiful woman, Helen, who had been seduced by the Trojan Prince, Paris. At the end of this battle, the heroes return home to different fates. Christopher Marlowe's Doctor Faustus has the famous passage on Helen which opens with the iconic words "Is this the face that launched a thousand ships..." Another great author of antiquity, Virgil, uses the ending of the Iliad as a starting point for his work, The Aeneid. He took the story in the Iliad to be true and then invented his own hero, who survived the siege by Greek heroes and escaped to start the Latin civilization. This is one aspect of how intertextuality works, but this is not the aspect I discussed with my friend on our walk in the City of London.


At Delphi. The centre of the Classical world.

Because after my study of the Classics, I was made to turn to international relations as an enhancement of my grasp of strategy in the contemporary world, I had yet come across another form of intertextuality. This type of intertextuality does not take a written text as gospel truth but contends against the other author's assertions. When I turned to international relations, my bedside book was by another great Greek author, Thucydides, and the book is The History of the Peloponnesian War. It was in this book that I first heard Homer contradicted and it surprised me. Homer wrote that the reason why King Agamemnon, the brother-in-law to Helen, managed to raise a great army to pursue the Trojans when they ran away with Helen, was because there was a pact made by every suitor for Helen that even though they had failed to win her hand in marriage; they would come to the aid of whoever became her husband should the need ever arise. An iron clad pledge to defend the honour of Greece's most beautiful woman. Thucydides objects to this, he openly says Homer was wrong to think that the reason why all those thousands of men joined Agamemnon was because of this pledge, instead Thucydides avers that it was because of Agamemnon's power that they followed him. Thucydides is thereby arguing that men were not moved to confront danger because of some high minded pledge, but by fear of the consequences of refusing to aid the most powerful King in Greece at the time.


After 3 years studying the Classics, I was forced to study IR to remain relevant to contemporary strategy.

Of course Thucydides would say this, he is known as the foremost forbearer of realist thought in international relations - realist thought in international relations assumes that power is the only force that all humans respond to. So, I was saying to my friend that "how conceited can you be, that someone wrote his work of fiction from scratch and it became a classic, then you come, some 4 centuries later and claim that that someone was wrong in saying why such and such a thing happened? But sir, you were not there and furthermore, this story is fiction, so however the author said it happened is exactly how it happened!" I thought my friend would commend me for being hawk-eyed and picking up on this, but instead he censured me for ruining what had all along been, for him, a beautiful tale of heroism in ancient Greece. I am now closer to the point I want to make in this paper.

The broader question I should have asked is what use a knowledge of Classics for Strategy? A knowledge of history, economics, mathematics, biology, agriculture, law and warfare? What use all these branches of knowledge for the strategist? The answer to that can be revealed if we take intertextuality to be a metaphor of the inevitable interconnection of everything. Nothing in this world is free standing, if you think something is unconnected to anything else that is only because you have not thought long enough about the interconnection. All those branches of knowledge I enumerated above intersect in interesting ways at the point that the strategist is standing. The more branches he is acquainted with, the more choices at the strategist's disposal. Let me make my answer emphatic by returning to the subject of my article; intertextuality. 

"The term Intertextuality, popularized especially by Julia Kristeva, is used to signify the multiple ways in which any one literary is in fact made up of other texts, by means of its open or covert citations and allusions, its repetitions and transformations of the formal and substantive features of earlier texts, or simply its unavoidable participation in the common stock of linguistic and literary conventions and procedures that are 'always-ready' in place and constitute the discourses into which we are born. In Kristeva's formulation, accordingly, any text is in fact an 'intertext' - the site of an intersection of numberless other texts, and existing only through its relations to other texts."* 

A man trained to understand that even the texts we think are very original are not original if you take a closer look; trained to understand that there are structures already in place which the text either follows or attempts to subvert; trained to know that if you look wide enough you will see how everything intersects, is a man forearmed to excel in strategy. In any case, silo-thinking has been largely discarded in the 21st Century. So, What Use Intertextuality For Strategy? 

I will tell you. Knowing that everything is interconnected makes one seek the interconnection. Seeking the interconnections increases one's stock of knowledge while at the same time giving him a knowledge of how problems of the past have been solved. Machiavelli captures the essence of what I am attempting to say. He said "Everyone who wants to know what will happen ought to examine what has happened: everything in this world in any epoch has their replicas in antiquity." The strategist in the contemporary world who knows the interconnection of all things must, in turn, be formidable. 

 Notes


 *M.H. Abrams and Geoffrey Galt Harpham, A Glossary of Literary Terms, (Boston: Wadsworth Cengage Learning, 2009), p. 364.