Archive for the ‘Consumer Culture’ Category

LenormandRevolutionBoxCoverForWeb

  The third edition of the Lenormand Revolution deck is now available!  Click here to order! And here’s a preview of the new box design featuring Eugène Delacroix’s painting Liberty Leading the People—a hint at one of the surprises in the latest edition.  The new deck, at 2.5” x 3.5” is larger than previous editions, a change many of you asked for.  A fantastic improvement! For those of you interested in the history behind our bold cover, read on! Liberty Leading the People or La Liberté guidant le peuple was painted by Eugène Delacroix in 1830 and celebrates the French…

leSoleil

Here’s a preview of Le Soleil or the Sun card from The Lenormand Revolution deck (La Révolution Lenormand), for which I’ve done the art in co-creation with the illustrious Carrie Paris. If you’re new to the Lenormand, it’s a card divination system popularly believed to have been designed by the French cartomancienne Marie Anne Adelaide Lenormand (1772–1843), who was counsellor to Joséphine de Beauharnais, Empress of France (the wife of Napoleon Bonaparte).  She also claimed to have advised several leaders of the French Revolution, including Robespierre and Marat. Lenormand historians assert that the 36-card Lenormand deck, known as le petit jeu de Lenormand was, in fact, created…

somethingsAfoot

One afternoon, you’re shopping for furniture when you happen upon a half-insane, poverty-stricken, poetess/carpenter in her rickety Victorian house with oddly picturesque water-damaged drywall.  The woman who lives here appears to have fashioned a delightful little chair, almost as if by mistake.  Madly, she calls it her “Something’s Afoot Chair” and wiggles her eyebrows at you as she presents it, unadorned, in a glare of natural light.  You’re captivated.  It’s perfectly bespoke, a one-of-a-kind piece of furniture with humor!  You must have it! A wooden hanger, complete with its metal hook, forms the top brace of a sloppily whitewashed chair-back.  A wooden…

obamaStore

Listen, I’m voting again for President Obama mostly because 1) reproductive rights are cool and 2) I never thought he was the second coming in the first place.  But, have you seen the Obama Store?  There’s something deeply wrong with a nation when its president attempts to sell branded consumer loot through an online catalog as a part of his fund-raising and messaging strategy. Mouse over “Collections” to choose consumer products designed expressly for you!  What target market do you fall into? Women for Obama, African Americans for Obama, Latinos/Hispanics for Obama, AAPI (Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders) for Obama,…

whiteRabbitRozFoster

(image by Roz Foster) It’s been almost two weeks since I came back from the Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators conference in LA, where I arrived with the first draft of a novel for young adults (and up), along with an appetite for learning about the industry.  I came away with fantastic feedback on my work from the highly intelligent, market-savvy and craft-wise Josh Adams (Adams Literary).  I also came away with quite the download on the effect the digital revolution has been having on publishing in general. Every keynote and session I attended was packed with inspiration…

aguidetocompositionpedagogies

In their 2001 bibliographical essay, “Cultural Studies and Composition,” Diana George and John Trimbur contribute to the text A Guide to Composition Pedagogies (Tate, Rupiper & Schick) by chronologically mapping the rise and themes of cultural studies in the composition classroom.  They end with a call to hold a key contradiction in sight as cultural studies within the field of composition studies continues to develop: contributors, such as the authors, who create theory and methods for teaching writing through cultural critique engage in “the production of scholarly commodities” at the same time that their work aims to critique the rhetoric…

carts_print_Web

Just as the Iliad and the Odyssey may provide all one needs to know about Ancient Greek mores and the Trojan War, the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day parade and Black Friday may provide all one needs to know about the values inherent in 21st century American consumerism and the Walmart Wars. Visiting my parents’ southern Californian home in Porter Ranch for Macy’s Day, I pull into a nearby shopping center after my two-hour drive north from mellow North County San Diego.  There’s always tension here.  It’s not just the holiday.  Sharply featured women wearing red-lipped grimaces threaten me with their waxed,…

FRANCE-ELECTION-PS-AUBRY

by Roz Foster Photo credit: AFP In 2012, Martine Aubry may become the first présidente (female president) of France.  In 2000, Aubry pushed through the 35-hour workweek along with universal health care for France.  She’s been mayor of Lille since 2001 and the leader of the French Socialist party (the first woman in the role) since 2008.  She is currently a candidate in her party’s primary (which will be held October 9, 2011) for the upcoming 2012 French presidential election.  On July 26 of this year, she revealed a key facet of her proposed presidency.  Publishing an article in Le…

conan-poster01

Conan the Barbarian (2011) with Jason Mamoa may have been secretly written by boozed-up feminists hooting with laughter as they parodied the lost notion of hypermasculinity.

I went to see it with a friend for his birthday. Normally, I’d have pretended not to hear him asking. He’d read the Robert E. Howard books and loved the first two films. Several years ago, when he tried to introduce me to the original movie, he couldn’t believe I’d fallen asleep in the middle of it. So, on the way to the theatre this Friday, he was trying to convince me that there was more to Conan than the muscles. The books were existential, he explained. Conan was a scholar who knew several languages. Listen, I’m not trying to be facetious when I say I believed him. There was obviously something to this American hypermasculine hero for him to have endured for so long…

faireyDanishMural

Photo credit: Tommi Ronnqvist for the Guardian

The American artist Shepard Fairey was beaten in Copenhagen last Saturday after finishing a commissioned mural with which some locals took issue. According to the Guardian, he was commissioned by an art gallery to commemorate the controversial demolition of a youth house that had been used as a base for the left-wing community there. The Danish media reported, in error, that the mural had been commissioned by the city council. His attackers, apparently a part of the left-wing community who had lost their HQ, therefore, thought he was a government-backed propagandist, and after arguing with him outside a nightclub, they bruised one of his ribs and gave him a black eye. Locals also wrote, “No peace,” and “Go home, Yankee hipster” on Fairey’s mural, which features an image of a dove and the word ‘Peace.’…