Saturday, June 21, 2008

SAVE OUR COASTS

To: Prime Minister of India and To: Secretary, Ministry of Environment and Forests, Government of India

WE REJECT THE PROPOSED CMZ NOTIFICATION

On 1 May 2008 the Government of India has published the draft Coastal Management Zone (CMZ) Notification, with the ostensible purpose of seeking from the public objections or suggestions, to be sent in within 60 days of the aforementioned date.

The CMZ notification, in terms of its character and contents, in the nature and course of its preparation and in the way it is being thrust upon us, is the perfect embodiment of callousness, injustice and assault on environment and livelihood.

THE BACKDROP TO CMZ

With some 8000 Km of coastline, India possesses an unbelievable wealth of coastal biodiversity, important for its own sake and for ensuring the livelihood security of tens of millions of fishworkers and nutrition security of hundreds of millions of India’s citizens.

One would have expected the Government to take the greatest pains to protect this incredible asset. But the most it did was to promulgate, in February 1991, the Coastal Regulation Zone (CRZ) Notification. Please note, not an Act, nor even a set of Rules, but only a Notification; something that by its nature is not sufficient for dealing with a multi-disciplinary matter involving multiple existing statutes and something that may be amended without consulting the Legislature. But notwithstanding this and other important limitations, the original CRZ notification, had it been properly implemented, would have been considerably effective in protecting coastal environments and resources from depredations.

But that was not to be. Amendments came in droves, the great bulk of them directed towards diluting the intent and scope of the CRZ. And the tragedy is that the CRZ today, even in its grossly diluted form, remains unimplemented along long stretches of the Indian coastline.

What is the reason for this non-implementation? It is administrative lethargy, myopia and yielding to the pressures of lobbies having an unhealthy appetite for coastal land and resources.

But with astonishing temerity, the same governmental setup that is guilty of not implementing CRZ has proclaimed this non-implementation as the reason for a new and atrociously permissive notification, the CMZ!

And what is this CMZ? Notwithstanding repeated demands from coastal fishworkers, environmental activists and the civil society, the government has not come up with a comprehensive legislation (Act). What it has proposed instead is another Notification to replace the CRZ Notification. This proposed Notification, to put it in brief, regularizes the violations to CRZ and opens the way to further depredations of our coastal ecology and environment. And as it is just another notification, it can easily be made still more permissive through a new set of administrative amendments.

WHY WE REJECT THE CMZ NOTIFICATION

I. Conservation of coastal resources and protection of lives and livelihood options of communities dependent thereon is a multidisciplinary exercise involving multiple existing statutes. Therefore only a comprehensive Act and not a Notification can provide the legal framework for the same.
II. The contents of the draft CMZ notification were decided without consultation with fishworkers’ (the main stakeholders) organisations or with citizens groups directly involved with coastal environmental issues.
III. The publication of this draft, inviting “objections or suggestions”, was confined to the Gazette of India and to a site on the Net, and is in English, so as to keep the bulk of concerned citizens unaware of its contents.
IV. The CMZ condones and regularizes all violations of CRZ Notification 1991.
V. Its implementation has been left on the same CZMAs (Coastal Zone Management Authorities) that have so shamefully failed in implementing CRZ norms.
VI. It replaces clearly delineated restrictions with yet to be prepared ICZMPs (Integrated Coastal Zone Management Plans) having vague and inappropriate guidelines, thus removing the restrictions on damaging activities.
VII. Moreover, the aforesaid guidelines, as opposed to the far clearer CRZ restrictions, are incomprehensible to common coastal and fisher people – largest stakeholders and custodians of our coastal resources – making it more difficult for them to intervene.
VIII. While for CMZ-I areas the main concern appears to be conservation, for areas under other categories (CMZ II to IV) the only concern appears to be vulnerability. Thus the ‘set back line’ has no conservation parameter attached to it. This is dangerous for large tracts of the coast.
IX. The area indicators of CMZ categories are confusing and contradictory; this will make implementation and enforcement impossible.
X. The CMZ Notification fails to indicate basic parameters of integration in the suggested ICZMPs, thus divesting it of any significance and turning it into a misnomer that can be used by powerful interest groups.
XI. It indicates no regulation with regard to fishing and fishery related activities and this is ominous for both coastal ecology and traditional fishers. It welcomes unbridled exploitation of coastal water life through use of aggressive and destructive gears.
XII. The Management Methodology given in the draft CMZ Notification confines itself exclusively to technical criteria of management. There is not even a word regarding the human resources of management. It describes (inadequately) how to manage without indicating who is to manage.
XIII. It has continued with the main negative aspect of CRZ – shutting out the main stakeholders, the traditional fishworkers, from management and monitoring.

OUR DEMANDS

In view of the above we demand the following:

- Scrap the draft CMZ Notification, 2008

- Prepare and enact, through democratic consultation with all stakeholders, especially fishworkers, a Comprehensive Legislation (Act) that will ensure conservation of coastal environment, ecology and natural resources and protect traditional livelihood options dependent on those

- Invoke the Original CRZ Notification 1991 pending the enactment of the Comprehensive Legislation,

- Bring all violators of CRZ norms to book, and immediately


Sincerely,

The Undersigned


Click HERE to signe the petition

Friday, June 20, 2008

Deals With Iraq Are Set to Bring Oil Giants Back

ANDREW E. KRAMER
NYT, June 19, 2008

BAGHDAD — Four Western oil companies are in the final stages of negotiations this month on contracts that will return them to Iraq, 36 years after losing their oil concession to nationalization as Saddam Hussein rose to power.

Exxon Mobil, Shell, Total and BP — the original partners in the Iraq Petroleum Company — along with Chevron and a number of smaller oil companies, are in talks with Iraq’s Oil Ministry for no-bid contracts to service Iraq’s largest fields, according to ministry officials, oil company officials and an American diplomat.

The deals, expected to be announced on June 30, will lay the foundation for the first commercial work for the major companies in Iraq since the American invasion, and open a new and potentially lucrative country for their operations.

The no-bid contracts are unusual for the industry, and the offers prevailed over others by more than 40 companies, including companies in Russia, China and India. The contracts, which would run for one to two years and are relatively small by industry standards, would nonetheless give the companies an advantage in bidding on future contracts in a country that many experts consider to be the best hope for a large-scale increase in oil production.

There was suspicion among many in the Arab world and among parts of the American public that the United States had gone to war in Iraq precisely to secure the oil wealth these contracts seek to extract. The Bush administration has said that the war was necessary to combat terrorism. It is not clear what role the United States played in awarding the contracts; there are still American advisers to Iraq’s Oil Ministry.

Sensitive to the appearance that they were profiting from the war and already under pressure because of record high oil prices, senior officials of two of the companies, speaking only on the condition that they not be identified, said they were helping Iraq rebuild its decrepit oil industry.

For an industry being frozen out of new ventures in the world’s dominant oil-producing countries, from Russia to Venezuela, Iraq offers a rare and prized opportunity.

While enriched by $140 per barrel oil, the oil majors are also struggling to replace their reserves as ever more of the world’s oil patch becomes off limits. Governments in countries like Bolivia and Venezuela are nationalizing their oil industries or seeking a larger share of the record profits for their national budgets. Russia and Kazakhstan have forced the major companies to renegotiate contracts.

The Iraqi government’s stated goal in inviting back the major companies is to increase oil production by half a million barrels per day by attracting modern technology and expertise to oil fields now desperately short of both. The revenue would be used for reconstruction, although the Iraqi government has had trouble spending the oil revenues it now has, in part because of bureaucratic inefficiency.

For the American government, increasing output in Iraq, as elsewhere, serves the foreign policy goal of increasing oil production globally to alleviate the exceptionally tight supply that is a cause of soaring prices.

The Iraqi Oil Ministry, through a spokesman, said the no-bid contracts were a stop-gap measure to bring modern skills into the fields while the oil law was pending in Parliament.

It said the companies had been chosen because they had been advising the ministry without charge for two years before being awarded the contracts, and because these companies had the needed technology.

A Shell spokeswoman hinted at the kind of work the companies might be engaged in. “We can confirm that we have submitted a conceptual proposal to the Iraqi authorities to minimize current and future gas flaring in the south through gas gathering and utilization,” said the spokeswoman, Marnie Funk. “The contents of the proposal are confidential.”

While small, the deals hold great promise for the companies.

“The bigger prize everybody is waiting for is development of the giant new fields,” Leila Benali, an authority on Middle East oil at Cambridge Energy Research Associates, said in a telephone interview from the firm’s Paris office. The current contracts, she said, are a “foothold” in Iraq for companies striving for these longer-term deals.

Any Western oil official who comes to Iraq would require heavy security, exposing the companies to all the same logistical nightmares that have hampered previous attempts, often undertaken at huge cost, to rebuild Iraq’s oil infrastructure.

And work in the deserts and swamps that contain much of Iraq’s oil reserves would be virtually impossible unless carried out solely by Iraqi subcontractors, who would likely be threatened by insurgents for cooperating with Western companies.

Yet at today’s oil prices, there is no shortage of companies coveting a contract in Iraq. It is not only one of the few countries where oil reserves are up for grabs, but also one of the few that is viewed within the industry as having considerable potential to rapidly increase production.

David Fyfe, a Middle East analyst at the International Energy Agency, a Paris-based group that monitors oil production for the developed countries, said he believed that Iraq’s output could increase to about 3 million barrels a day from its current 2.5 million, though it would probably take longer than the six months the Oil Ministry estimated.

Mr. Fyfe’s organization estimated that repair work on existing fields could bring Iraq’s output up to roughly four million barrels per day within several years. After new fields are tapped, Iraq is expected to reach a plateau of about six million barrels per day, Mr. Fyfe said, which could suppress current world oil prices.

The contracts, the two oil company officials said, are a continuation of work the companies had been conducting here to assist the Oil Ministry under two-year-old memorandums of understanding. The companies provided free advice and training to the Iraqis. This relationship with the ministry, said company officials and an American diplomat, was a reason the contracts were not opened to competitive bidding.

A total of 46 companies, including the leading oil companies of China, India and Russia, had memorandums of understanding with the Oil Ministry, yet were not awarded contracts.

The no-bid deals are structured as service contracts. The companies will be paid for their work, rather than offered a license to the oil deposits. As such, they do not require the passage of an oil law setting out terms for competitive bidding. The legislation has been stalled by disputes among Shiite, Sunni and Kurdish parties over revenue sharing and other conditions.

The first oil contracts for the majors in Iraq are exceptional for the oil industry.

They include a provision that could allow the companies to reap large profits at today’s prices: the ministry and companies are negotiating payment in oil rather than cash.

“These are not actually service contracts,” Ms. Benali said. “They were designed to circumvent the legislative stalemate” and bring Western companies with experience managing large projects into Iraq before the passage of the oil law.

A clause in the draft contracts would allow the companies to match bids from competing companies to retain the work once it is opened to bidding, according to the Iraq country manager for a major oil company who did not consent to be cited publicly discussing the terms.

Assem Jihad, the Oil Ministry spokesman, said the ministry chose companies it was comfortable working with under the charitable memorandum of understanding agreements, and for their technical prowess. “Because of that, they got the priority,” he said.

In all cases but one, the same company that had provided free advice to the ministry for work on a specific field was offered the technical support contract for that field, one of the companies’ officials said.

The exception is the West Qurna field in southern Iraq, outside Basra. There, the Russian company Lukoil, which claims a Hussein-era contract for the field, had been providing free training to Iraqi engineers, but a consortium of Chevron and Total, a French company, was offered the contract. A spokesman for Lukoil declined to comment.

Charles Ries, the chief economic official in the American Embassy in Baghdad, described the no-bid contracts as a bridging mechanism to bring modern technology into the fields before the oil law was passed, and as an extension of the earlier work without charge.

To be sure, these are not the first foreign oil contracts in Iraq, and all have proved contentious.

The Kurdistan regional government, which in many respects functions as an independent entity in northern Iraq, has concluded a number of deals. Hunt Oil Company of Dallas, for example, signed a production-sharing agreement with the regional government last fall, though its legality is questioned by the central Iraqi government. The technical support agreements, however, are the first commercial work by the major oil companies in Iraq.

The impact, experts say, could be remarkable increases in Iraqi oil output.

While the current contracts are unrelated to the companies’ previous work in Iraq, in a twist of corporate history for some of the world’s largest companies, all four oil majors that had lost their concessions in Iraq are now back.

But a spokesman for Exxon said the company’s approach to Iraq was no different from its work elsewhere.

“Consistent with our longstanding, global business strategy, ExxonMobil would pursue business opportunities as they arise in Iraq, just as we would in other countries in which we are permitted to operate,” the spokesman, Len D’Eramo, said in an e-mailed statement.

But the company is clearly aware of the history. In an interview with Newsweek last fall, the former chief executive of Exxon, Lee Raymond, praised Iraq’s potential as an oil-producing country and added that Exxon was in a position to know. “There is an enormous amount of oil in Iraq,” Mr. Raymond said. “We were part of the consortium, the four companies that were there when Saddam Hussein threw us out, and we basically had the whole country.”

James Glanz and Jad Mouawad contributed reporting from New York.

Thursday, June 19, 2008

Advertisements: a literary estimate

----Gargi

A gaze blank and pitiless as the sun,

Is moving its slow thighs, while all about it

Reel shadows of the indignant desert birds. (Palgrave 424)

Yeats seems to have expressed very aptly the condition of the contemporary world in ‘The Second Coming’, with multiple human desires for some unknown bliss, hovering around the Utopian state of existence promised by the bulk of advertisements. As the world has moved on through the labyrinthine route of various ‘ism’s, each generating ‘enlightenment’ for the human species in its own right, this era of advertisements seems to be giving rise to a different sort of ‘enlightenment’ – by creating an unquenchable thirst for a material sense of existence, enriched by the craze to possess and parade.


To say that the advertisements, all under a universal heading, have simply misdirected people would be quite unfair, since some of them like those on epidemics, public health and hygiene and literacy mission, have indeed generated awareness about certain crucial issues related to the masses. As for example, Buladi needs no introduction and along with her the fact that AIDS need not be feared as contagious and can be prevented. Yet, a study of the majority of commercial ads tossed at the people in the third-world countries, more specifically India, would reveal the profitably political use of language, both verbal and non-verbal – mainly utopian and sexist in nature – flourishing parasitically upon the beliefs blindly registered in the name of ‘tradition’ and ‘culture’; those which need to be reviewed and rethought, and indeed are being reanalyzed in the age of intellectual globalization, but at the ground levels, on the contrary, are being reinforced more strongly than ever, for the purpose of bringing in maximum returns.


Let us go then, you and I,

When the evening is spread out against the sky

Like a patient etherized upon a table… (Eliot 13)

Eliot scarcely knew while penning these lines of ‘The Love Song of J.Alfred Prufrock’, that they would form such a perfect invitation sometime down in the twenty first century to make a survey of the advertisements – those that haunt the mind and lure the human beings, the magic of ‘Temptation’ recreated for both the sexes alike, this time. To continue in the words of the poet,

Oh, do not ask, ‘What is it?’

Let us go and make our visit. (13)


The first aspect of the language of contemporary advertisements is the utopian vision they generate in the minds of the consumers. Each ad aims at creating the illusion that just the purchase of that particular commodity would make life complete – in every sense of the term. The problem lies not in blowing one’s own trumpet, since that is the prerequisite for an ad to become so, but rather in the exploitation of human emotions and capabilities, especially the tendency to dream, which is used by the ads today as the principle instrument to achieve their purpose, for Romanticism was not just a literary movement restricted to a particular phase of history, it forms till date the basic pattern of human lives.


The utopian nature of the advertisements today is perhaps best exemplified by the automobile ads. As the Santro or Indica or Chevrolet speeds down the splendid streets, smooth and most importantly, unbroken, surrounded by greenery, under the blue sky, every innocent aspiring heart is filled with the desire to own one someday; the dream-colored impact of the visual recreating the magic of Shelley’s ‘To A Skylark’:

All the earth and air

With thy voice is loud,

As, when the night is bare,

From one lonely cloud

The moon rains out her beams, and heaven is overflowed. (Palgrave 244)



The ‘willing suspension of disbelief’ hardly allows the doubt to creep in that it’s no longer ‘one lonely cloud’ but rather, a smog, and the ‘voice’ is in fact, the noise around, both encapsulated within a term better known as ‘pollution’. Incidentally, the advertisement of the latest little one toddling into the big field, better known as Nano, declares its entry as the one ‘to end all speculation, debate and talk’ – a line, though probably unintentionally, nevertheless quite explicitly, silencing the dialogic tradition and denying heterodoxy. One would, however, be reminded of Amartya Sen as he writes in The Argumentative Indian:

A defeated argument that refuses to be obliterated can remain very alive. (Sen 06)

Amidst the joyous celebration of the birth of the little one, there’s always an apprehension about the future, in this case in the minds of the target audience, who rarely are able to forget, after all’s done and said, the exclusively street-made jams and jellies which earn frowns and dissatisfaction at the work-place, even now, when the roads are free of the millions of new toddlers. But nevertheless, initially, the mesmerizing impact of the rose-colored dream is absolute.


The advertisements of the motorbikes would reveal more clearly the second aspect of the language of contemporary ads, i.e., sexism. As the gallant young man in his macho leather jacket rides the brand, say for instance, Pulsar, the beautiful ladies of the neighborhood lose their hearts and long for a chivalrous lift to come their way. The promised prize is not just a dream-ride, but a dream companion, as well. In fact, the man rides on with his beloved clinging onto him like a nail to a magnet, as if living the lines of Robert Browning’s ‘The Last Ride Together’:

What need to strive with a life awry?

Had I said that, had I done this,

So might I gain, so might I miss.

Might she have loved me? just as well

She might have hated, who can tell!

Where had I been now if the worst befell?

And here we are riding, she and I. (Loucks 152)


It would be worthwhile, indeed, to examine the Indian advertisements through the looking glass of gender, for if the advertisements have revolutionized the global economic scenario, then the women modeling for the various products, ranging from washing powder to shaving cream, diaper to automobile, have served as the perfect depiction of gateways to pleasure, thereby enhancing demand and increasing sale. Though it might be argued that ads opened up new employment opportunities for women, which is very true, nevertheless they also led to the complete commodification of the second sex, to the extent that a hoarding advertising sanitary ware at the bypass, near Salt Lake Stadium, showed a woman with bare shoulders wearing a string around her neck with a basin-shaped locket dangling from it, till a few days back. Horrendous exceptions apart, even the normal traditional representation of women as daughters, mothers and wives in these ads tend to strengthen the stereotypes. Though there is a serious subversion in such ads, in treating the things considered as holy and auspicious essentials defining the woman in the society, such as sindoor, mangalsutra and the like, as sheer make-up ingredients, yet this subversion is detectable only to the people offering a serious afterthought to the interpretation of these mesmerizing moments – a number comprising, perhaps, the smallest minority in the contemporary world.


The ads of cosmetics, soaps and shampoos invariably remind one of Byron’s famous proclamation:

She walks in beauty, like the night

Of cloudless climes and starry skies;

And all that’s best of dark and bright

Meet in her aspect and her eyes. (Palgrave 177)

There can perhaps, be no better example to illustrate this than the famous brand ‘fair and lovely’, which assures a girl success in every field hitherto out of reach, be it marriage, job or recognition in the ‘feminine’ fields of glamour, by virtue of fair skin. The fact that ‘fair’ is a visual quality and ‘lovely’, a natural attribute, is completely obliterated, as if ushering in the colonial idea of ‘memsahib’, implying that fair is lovely. Though half the world turns vegetarian, flesh will continue to make a difference. The devastating dream of Toni Morrison’s ‘The Bluest Eye’ is reinforced with added colors and hues; while Melville’s memorable warning is altogether forgotten:

…there yet lurks an elusive something in the innermost idea of this hue, which

strikes more of panic to the soul than that redness which affrights in blood.

(Melville 160)

and further:

Bethink thee of the albatross: whence come those clouds of spiritual wonderment

and pale dread in which that white phantom sails in all imaginations? Not

Coleridge first threw that spell; but God’s great, unflattering laureate,

Nature. (160)


However, leaving the so-called ‘women’s utilities’ apart, the smoothness of a Gillette shave also requires a most economically dressed woman stroking the cheek of the smart dude, as testimony. Even the deodorants for men, logically offering solution to one of the gravest problems faced by humankind, with a flesh and blood body and sweat glands, require women, fair, slim and beautiful, to sniff. It would be worthwhile in this context to remember the happening brand in today’s market, Set Wet, with its lucrative slogan: ‘very very sexy’. Employing rationale beyond the magic of the audio-visual would, however, puzzle the mind in looking for a relationship between the two, the adjective and the noun, suggesting a severe case of malapropism.


It is indeed remarkable to notice how the ads today re-emphasize the socially constructed ‘masculine’ and ‘feminine’ domains of work, representing them as more natural than biological sex. The baby-products, for instance, Johnson’s baby soap or cream or oil or shampoo, will always show the mother toying with the child, recreating the ever-enchanting myth of motherhood; while fathers only appear when the ad deals with something more serious, say an insurance policy or better still, marriage. A glaring example in his context is provided by the advertisement of Vicks Vaporub, which came on screen sometime back, wherein the terribly befuddled father asks his son, who is suffering from a severe cold, what his mother, who has apparently gone somewhere, would have given him had she been at home. Such ads invariably bring to the sensible mind a feeling of awe and an urgency to re-read the books of science, since asexual reproduction in human beings went completely unrecorded until this ad hinted at it. Moreover, such ads are extremely unfair in their representation of the fathers as such terribly unaware and ignorant creatures, when today a large number of men, as fathers, actually take interest in the well-being of their children, even within the domestic space, and are aware of their regular needs too, apart from education, home and marriage loans. This sort of misrepresentation tends to politicize the domestic space to a larger degree, making the divide between ‘masculine’ and ‘feminine’ sharper and stronger.


Incidentally, the children too are males, unless the advertisement specifically requires a female child to serve its purpose, in say for instance, the advertisement of Mediker, probably trying to suggest that Sons and Lovers never have such ignoble problems as lice. But otherwise, be it chyavanprash or health drink, toothpaste or cough syrup, the child in question, is invariably, a male child. Even when the ads seem to be gender-sensitive in the depiction of young boys and girls, advocating the abilities of girls as in case of TVS Scooty, where the girls are shown are riders, a man is always brought in to show how he’s been outsmarted by the girl riding the Scooty. The attitude adopted, immediately reminds one of Alexander Pope’s age of the ‘battle of sexes’, and the issues tend to lose their seriousness under the impact of mockery.


Interestingly, when much is being spoken on the intellectual front, about the ‘family’ as an important social unit, specially in the context of gender, since it has the most significant contribution in the acculturation of an individual, the depiction of ‘families’ in the contemporary advertisements point out how the conventional ideas related to this unit can be kept intact and reinforced as ideal, even in the twenty first century. Apart from the role-identification of ‘mother’ and ‘father’, as discussed above, the ads also try to recreate the magic of certain ‘comic’ experiences within the domestic space. ‘Comic’ remains within quotes, however, since nothing is quite ‘comic’ until it is politically constructed and recognized to be so, in as far as institutions – social, commercial or political – are concerned, at the expense of certain other things, and therefore, need to be examined for their comicality.



The recent ad of Britannia Mariegold biscuit shows a homemaker blissfully sipping her tea while questions are asked to her about how she manages to run such a heavy routine everyday with such perfection, to which she replies: ‘Why! I’m given this fifteen-minutes holiday, each day’, and just as she completes the statement, her mother-in-law’s voice calls her off-screen, to which she replies promptly, exclaims and rushes leaving her tea behind. This is just one instance; however, there are several such ads which tend to keep intact the hilarious ‘monster-in-law’ image to bring in humor and strengthen hegemony. The codes of patriarchy are kept intact, since the poor mother-in-law, is nonetheless, a powerful patriarchal construct, either to be feared or ridiculed; the success of the formula, is tested and confirmed.


A recent exception, and a happy one at that, has been the ad of Canara Bank, which shows a mother-in-law belonging to a southern state of India, learning Punjabi willingly, in order to make her daughter-in-law belonging to Punjab, feel at home and a part of the family, on her arrival, away from her dear ones. Similarly, the ad of Havell’s cables makes one feel hopeful when the son leaves aside his book to find a bit of cable, which he twists into a holder and brings to his mother ,who’s a daily-wager and was almost burning her hands while making chapattis for him over the naked flame. Such ads, however, transform commercial realities into poetic expression through their profound understanding of human feelings, reminding one of Sidney’s declaration:

Nature never set forth the earth in so rich tapestry as divers poets have done;

neither with pleasant rivers, fruitful trees, sweet-smelling flowers, nor

whatsoever else may make the too-much-loved earth more lovely; her

world is brazen, the poets only deliver a golden.(Enright 08)


But such expressions are rare. Most of the ads retain their characteristic superficiality trying to reap the most out of what the masses of a developing country with massive illiteracy have been used to, thoughtlessly, in the name of legacy. Quite ironically, having attained its climax in Marx, the term ‘revolution’ acquired a dramatic shape and form in the mould of Information Technology – which today by the virtue of ads – has become the largest force which the ‘proletariat’ (in every aspect of the term – class as well as gender) has to combat. But when the exceptions, as cited above, are placed next to the mainstream, one cannot help regretting the gross misuse of such enormous potential, since human beings are driven day in day out in their lives by the impact of these advertisements. On a concluding note, it would be significant to recall Mark Twain, who in puts the blame of the defeat of the Southerners in the American Civil War of 1864 on Sir Walter Scott, saying that:

…for it is not conceivable that this little sham castle would ever have

been built if he had not run the people mad, a couple of generations ago,

with his mediaeval romances. The South has not yet recovered from the

debilitating influence of his books. (Twain 268)

Contemporary advertisements play no less a role in making the global South what it is, giving to the people grossly misdirected dreams and vision, far away from the plane of reality which needs to be acknowledged and introspected, in order to move forward.



If Yeats began the discussion, let Christina Rossetti conclude it with her resonating lines:

Morning and evening

Maids heard the goblins cry:

‘Come buy our orchard fruits,

Come buy, come buy…’ (Ricks 460)

Perhaps, Rossetti would have been astonished to learn that the ‘Goblin Market’ can now seduce both the sexes alike, and probably, this entire phenomenon, i.e. the silver-screen with its portrayal of ‘Lemons and oranges’, ‘Melons and raspberries’ would have found a deserving expression from her pen, for she traced the link between literature and ‘market’ way back in the nineteenth century. Though her motive was largely to examine the condition of the women in nineteenth century England, and to spread the notion of sisterhood, nevertheless, the commercial concepts of ‘value’ and ‘exchange’ attained a literary status in her creation, as she suggested their role and impact on human lives. The turn of the twenty first century with ‘Come buy’ as its all-engulfing slogan, certainly adds a new edge to Rossetti’s reflection, and laments the absence of an updated sequel.








Reference

Palgrave, Francis Turner. Palgrave’s Golden Treasury. Calcutta: Oxford University Press.1992.
Eliot, T.S. Collected Poems 1909-1962. London: Faber and Faber. 1974.
Sen, Amartya. The Argumentative Indian. London: Penguin Books Ltd. 2005.
Loucks, James F. Robert Browning’s Poetry. New York: W.W.Norton & Company. 1979.
Melville, Herman. Moby Dick. New York: W.W.Norton & Company. 2002.
Enright,D.J. English Critical Texts. London: Oxford University Press. 1983.
Twain, Mark. Life on the Mississippi. USA: Penguin Group. 1988.
Ricks, Christopher. The Oxford Book of English Verse. New York: Oxford University Press. 1999.