วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 16 ธันวาคม พ.ศ. 2553

Blood stem cells for research

Cord blood stem cells are cells that human bodies have the potential to develop into different cell types in cells are in a very early stage of development. Stem cells in the laboratory can develop into specialized cells such as liver cells, nerve cells, lung cells, etc. These cells can be taken from umbilical cord blood and grown outside the body. This allows scientists and Researchers are studying these cells in isolation from other cells and under controlled conditions.

Previously, the research has been done mainly with embryonic stem cells, as they were known to work well. With new and more advanced research techniques, scientists have discovered that the collection of umbilical cord stem cells work just as well and in some cases even better. There is a large amount of stem cells that there can not touch> Blood stem cells as a by-product at every birth. Even more encouraging is that cells taken from embryos are not a concern because of previous debate.

Blood Cells

Scientists are excited about the ability of cells to heal and cure many different diseases in the future with blood stem cells. Already the results of a recent research shows encouraging results. The scientists were able to grow a mini-blood-liver in the laboratory using stem cells from umbilical cordCells and are confident that in future, be able to develop an organ transplant that would be available to all.

Blood stem cells for research

While much more research is needed to continue the collection of blood stem cells, which looks very promising. Umbilical cord stem cell banks are now available to collect and store stem cells, making them available for later use. Parents must apply for a bank of stem cells before birth. Tell your doctorand hospital, so that the cord blood and are collected at the bank. The bank controls the blood and records a count of stem cells available. The blood is then packaged, sealed and stored frozen in appropriate areas for future use.

Currently, most hospitals are not equipped to save the cord blood unless they are given prior notice. Hopefully this will change in the future to save more people, or to donate stem cells to promoteCells at birth to make an immediate choice. With its own stem cells for future transplantation reduces the risk that the tissues of the body rejecting the organ, or because the DNA is an exact match. The brothers and other family members can take advantage of the bank of stem cells, if necessary.

Blood stem cells for research X-Men Evolution: Season 4, Episode 2 Video Clips. Duration : 21.90 Mins.


GET ALL FOUR SEASONS ON ITUNES! X-Men: Evolution Season 1 itunes.apple.com X-Men: Evolution Season 2 itunes.apple.com X-Men: Evolution Season 3 itunes.apple.com X-Men: Evolution Season 4 itunes.apple.com In order to boost their reputation, the Brotherhood decide to stage accidents and then rescue the bystanders. In the beginning, they are successful, but then, a staged accident runs out of hand. The X-Men just save the day, and the Brotherhood stops with their deeds.

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วันอาทิตย์ที่ 20 มิถุนายน พ.ศ. 2553

Umbilical Cord Blood to Extract Stem Cells


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It is postulated that volume reduction of umbilical cord blood units in albumin or dextran before infusion into patients results in improved cell viability. In order to get the best stem cells possible, it is best to take them in the umbilical cord blood. They can then be stored in a cord blood bank or stem cell bank for the best cord blood collection.

This is based on an in vitro study, which showed that the stem cell viability could actually be improved by volume reducing the umbilical cord blood units before infusion to restore the osmolarity of the suspension.

It was suggested that this process could protect the stem cells from the severe osmotic stress associated with infusion of cells suspended in medium with high concentrations of dimethyl-sulfoxide.

Neutrophils were the major cell population affected by the in vitro incubation whereas mononuclear cells that include the pluripotent stem cells were relatively resistant to the in vitro toxic effects of dimethyl-sulfoxide.

By reducing the volumes of both dimethyl-sulfoxide and cell lysis products, washing may also decrease the adverse reactions associated with the infusion of cryo preserved units.

However, volume reducing grafts after thawing can reduce the number of hematopoietic stem cells infused into the patients because of cell loss during manipulation.

Many studies have shown that infusing a high nucleated cell dose is a good prognostic factor for both engraftment and survival in umbilical cord blood transplantation. It is known that the number of cells infused during transplantation is one log less than in a standard allogeneic bone marrow transplant.

In addition, the manipulation may cause qualitative changes in the product that may affect engraftment. The slow engraftment because of the limited number of hematopoietic stem cells available in a single unit of umbilical cord blood may contribute to high peritransplant mortality and limit the success of umbilical cord blood transplant especially in adult patients.

Therefore, any process that may result in hematopoietic stem cells loss or adversely affect hematopoietic stem cells viability, that is, manipulation, should be avoided especially in umbilical cord blood units with low number of hematopoietic stem cells.

An earlier study observed delayed neutrophil recovery in three patients receiving unmanipulated umbilical cord blood. However, these patients received Methotrexate that impacts on hematopoietic recovery.

It was found that the hematopoietic recovery and survival of the recipients of unmanipulated umbilical cord blood were comparable to those of volume reduced umbilical cord blood.

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วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 29 เมษายน พ.ศ. 2553

Humorous Journey Through The Human Body

I sat daydreaming in my chair one day as my mind started to wonder about what it would be like to shrink down to size to make a journey through the human body.

My first step is to find a suitable mode of transport. I cast my eyes on a tiny toy submarine and step into its interior to find to my delight that it's fully equipped for the journey. As I position myself at the helm of the submarine I familiarize myself with the controls and check that everything else is in working order.

Suddenly I find myself being shaken; I look into the periscope to see a child has picked up the submarine and throws it. It misses its target and lands in the food, unnoticed by the person eating I am in the process of being consumed.

My entrance into the mouth is like entering 'Luna Park' without paying for the admission fees; gleaming white teeth close like trap doors behind me and throw me into complete darkness. With my high beam lights on, I look through the periscope and see that the salivary glands in the mouth, located in the cheeks and under the tongue, are continuously and slowly releasing moisture in the mouth to soften and lubricate the food, so that it can be swallowed easier. The sight or smell of food or sometimes the thought of it starts a reflex action that causes the mouth to water! And because of this I am experiencing some turbulence in this area as my sonar is picking up some peculiar sounds, the splashing of the saliva juices, and a belching sound of a volcano is echoing in my ears. I experience a tumbling movement of the tongue as it is manipulating the food around the interior of the mouth. The teeth are housed in the upper and lower jaws and the gnashing sound of them is thunderous, as the food is being ground down to smaller portions! My ride is a bumpy one and I steer my submarine to avoid being crushed to death! As the force of the food being swallowed is causing my submarine to be propelled down a narrow tube, the passage of which is called the gullet, leading me directly into the stomach.

I experience a wave like movement in this tube causing my submarine to be whisked along to the stomach, but decide that I will detour and head towards the upper region of the throat, I see an organ that looks like it is made up of cartilage, muscles and ligaments. The two most important ligaments are the vocal chords, which, when air passes through them - at varying degrees - cause the cords to tense, (being like pulling a guitar cord tight and then releasing it), causing a vibration and an audible sound, being part of the airways system by which I now make my way down towards the lungs.

I head in the direction of the lungs and whilst the airway leading into this area is closed off by a small door which stops the food from entering into it, I use my controls on my panel to suspend my submarine above it and wait for my host to take a deep breath of air. This opens the door so that I can navigate my submarine into the opening. I make my way into one of the lungs and find that the air sacs which are surrounded by a network of web like blood vessels allowing the spent air in the blood to be passed through the lung wall and into them to be breathed out again. When fresh air is breathed in, it combines with the red blood cells and is carried by them to all parts of the body. In the meantime my sonar has picked up some sounds caused by some of the cells heading in my direction which have been alerted by my host's brain, it has detected an unbalance of air in one of the airways which I am exploring and has been sent to expel me as the intruder As the cells have not reached me yet, I prepare my torpedo tubes for launch as soon as they are sighted. In the meantime I hear what sounds like coughing. I engage my thrusters to direct my submarine into the gullet as I hear the next bout of coughing: the force of this action causes my submarine to rise, the power of my motors forces me along the passage and towards where digestion takes place.

My journey continues into the stomach, and as I enter I look through my viewing windows and turn on my windscreen wipers. I can see the contents clearly. I see it contains a membrane to protect the walls from the enzymes and acids, this sac like organ has a lining to protect it from the acids which are secreted by glands in the stomach wall, breaking down the nutrients in the food into simpler forms which are carried in the bloodstream to different parts of the body.

I exit the stomach and use my laser gun to make an opening in the wall of the small intestine and head towards the pancreas, noticing that this organ lies under the stomach, aids the further breakdown of foods, by supplying enzymes which break down starches, and balance the blood sugar levels. I leave the pancreas and speed towards the liver (which is the largest organ in the body). It is located on the right side of the abdomen under the diaphragm, it works at breaking down the fats, and it filters harmful substances from the blood, whilst acting as storage for vitamins and minerals. It maintains the proper level of sugar in the blood and it produces cholesterol in the body. Some of the nutrients are stored in the liver for later use.

Upon exiting, I enter the gallbladder, which is connected to the liver and looks like a small pear shaped organ, which stores bile. The bile is a yellowish greenish liquid, continuously made by the liver and stored in the gallbladder. When the fat leaves the stomach, it enters the small intestine, where it stimulates the flow of bile from the liver and gallbladder, which in turn digests and absorbs the fat.

I have now left the gallbladder and make my way towards the spleen, which is an organ that looks like a bean and is found under a muscular structure, called the diaphragm. The spleen acts as a blood reservoir and supplies the body with blood in emergencies such as severe blood losses, providing the body in time of need, maintaining blood volume and pressure. I make my way out of the spleen and torpedo the wall of the tube leading towards a skeletal muscle which is the diaphragm, being a dome shaped muscle which lies between the chest and abdomen and is attached to the lower ribs at each side of the breastbone and backbone. It acts as a platform for the lungs when atmospheric pressure forces the air into them, expanding when the diaphragm is relaxed and flattened. When it expands, however, it pushes the lungs upward, causing my host to breathe out.

As I am cruising along I now re-enter the small intestine from the hole in the wall which I made when I exited to go through to the pancreas. I look through the periscope and notice, that thread-like projections from the membrane lining in the intestinal wall absorb the products of digested food and also, that the intestinal tube ahead is broadening, indicating to me that I have reached the end of this passage. I torpedo the wall to gain entry into a hollow space through which blood flows, my vision has now become obscured with the parts of the intestinal wall floating around me so I engage my wipers to clean my viewing screens. My indicator lights on the instrument panel shows that the submarine is weighted down with the burden of the rubbish which it has collected on the surface and this must be removed to gain my buoyancy back before I can continue my journey. On the instrument panel I press the oscillate button and this, when engaged, is like a good shake to get rid of the debris that has adhered to the submarines surface. Unfortunately this did not remove all of the rubbish, I pump out the ballast tanks to get rid of the weight, but I am unsuccessful. My only other choice is to get out and sweep it. I anchor the submarine and enter the room where I can change into a suitable diving suit. When ready, I take with me an underwater cleaner, torch, sample bottle and remote control.

I plug in my cleaner and start sweeping the deck. Surprisingly, it is easier to get off than I imagined. I switch on my powerful torch so that I can check every nook and cranny on the deck and make sure it is spotlessly clean before I leave it. As I head back towards the submarines exit hatch I take a sample of the blood for later inspection. I then disengage my plug in and open the hatch door with my remote control and enter the change room, closing the door behind me. With my diving suit removed and stored I make my way towards the control area, releasing the anchor and engaging the motors. Now that the debris has been removed and the buoyancy been restored, I check the map and can resume my journey and make my way through to the veins and towards the heart.

I note with interest, whilst traveling through the bloodstream, that I am continually showered with blobs of blood and must maneuver between and around them to avoid the collection of more rubbish, adhering to the submarines surface. In the meantime I test the sample of blood which I brought back with me after cleaning the submarines surface, finding something interesting! For instance: that blood carries nutrients from the intestines to the liver and tissues and it takes the core substance from urine, and filters off other waste products for elimination. Also there are two kinds of glands: one is ductless (which means it secretes the products called hormones, which are the body's chemical messenger's, being carried by the bloodstream to the target organ, irrespective of how far it has to travel from the hormone producing gland. And the other one secreting its products into ducts which carries the secretions to other parts of the body: such as sweat, oil and digestive extracts).

Another amazing feat is, when the body's chemical messengers are alerted by a master gland called the Pituitary (which is situated at the base of my host's brain). It directs all other glands by releasing hormones, which control the activity of all other glands in the body. One other gland is called the Thyroid, which is actively involved in the body's metabolism and the way it uses its energy, as I have encountered next. It controls nutritional deficiencies and diet of the individual determining its general state of health.

Whilst traveling along the arterial routes, I have found that in places the tube was so narrow, that I could not go any further. I had to use my laser gun to remove a thick substance adhering to the walls, which looked like covering of fat and calcium deposits and other related substances, which the blood carries on its journey throughout the network of veins and arteries. Some of the wastes in the blood build up are caught in the narrowing of their walls, causing them to thicken and harden, making them less elastic. This causes the heart to work harder whilst pumping the blood into the narrowing passages. I will need to get out with a shovel to remove the fatty deposits on the deck to get my balance back, and work quickly before another army invasion sent by the body's immune system blocks my way. I change into my diving suit and take the remote control, torch and shovel. And I head out of the submarine turn on my torch and start shoveling the deck as quickly as possible. When all the fat is removed, I head back into the submarine and use the remote control to open the exit hatch door and close it behind me, taking all the implements with me, changing out of the diving suit and making my way back into the control room.

In the meantime my hosts' body has detected that something is wrong and its natural defense system has gone into full alert. An army has been dispatched by the body which detaches into units, each group attacks the body's invader in a different way, some release tentacles to which they attach themselves so that they can swallow up and digest my submarine, others become larger to make antibodies and this provides immunity against later attacks by the same invader. However, before they can get a stranglehold on me, I press the cloning button on the remote control. This sends in a replicated image of my submarine, whilst this army are kept busy I make my escape. Phew! That was a close call!

I am cruising along the vein that leads me towards the heart. I check the map and find that I have to turn left to reach my destination. I reach the heart and see it is a muscular pump the size of a fist, which is situated towards and slightly to the left of my hosts' chest, where it circulates the blood throughout the body. Each time the heart beats, it exerts pressure on the veins and arteries and this is called blood pressure. I note its division is in four chambers; of which the top left, with the corresponding bottom chamber circulates oxygenated blood from the lungs via the main arterial trunk, whilst the right chambers circulate the blood carrying the body's waste products, via the lungs and out of my hosts system.

I enter the pulmonary vein which will take me into the left top chamber of the heart. I enter, I hear a deafening sound of the heart beat, caused by the abrupt closing of the hearts inlet and outlet valves. I notice that the heart muscle in which I am in, causes me to wait for the pressure of the blood which will lead me to the exit of this chamber, continuing my journey out of the heart. I enter the main arterial trunk of the body and it supplies oxygen rich blood through arteries which branch from the main arterial trunk to other parts of the body.

As I leave this area and head down from the chest, I proceed towards the body's main artery at level with the diaphragm, which is a dome shaped skeletal muscle that's forming the floor of the chest area. According to my map, I reach the intersecting arteries and note that I have to turn right and into a kidney artery.

I continue my journey along this artery, which leads me into the kidneys! These organs function to remove waste products from the blood and regulate the salt and liquid content of the body. At the outer covering of the kidney I come across a tube producing urine, I see a dense forest of spider like veins and filters.

My descent from the kidney region is from a narrow tube which allows the passage of urine into the bladder. And as I enter, I find that it reminds me of a deflated balloon when empty and when full, the appearance of a pear because of its squeezing some of the bladder into the abdominal cavity.

I noticed that whilst I am in the bladder that the air in the submarine has become unpleasant, so I turn the air purifying system on and find that it does not seem to make any difference, as the fumes from the concentrated urine are overpowering. I wait for the bladder to fill and position my submarine to fire my torpedoes at the bladder wall to give my host a sharp pain. The stretch receptors in the bladder send signals to my host's brain for the internal valve to be relaxed through which urination is prevented until it is relaxed voluntarily. Normally my hosts' bladder and the abdominal muscles should cause the excretion of urine, but not in this case, since I am the cause of my hosts' discomfort. In the meantime I position my submarine in the narrow tube, which transports the urine to the outside.

My host has experienced discomfort in the bladder and has gone to a physician regarding this irritation, in order to find out the cause of the complaint he is supplied with a small bottle and asked to give a specimen.

At last daylight!!

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วันเสาร์ที่ 10 เมษายน พ.ศ. 2553

The Injury Healing Process

There are three distinct phases involved in the healing of an injury. The first of the three phases

of injury healing is called the inflammatory stage, which simply involves white blood cells, called

phagocytes, which help remove debris and damaged tissue and further help recirculation of

the area. The second stage is called the proliferative phase, where red blood cells called fibroblasts form a glue-like substance, which acts as a scaffold or infrastructure of new tissue to be laid down. The last stage, known as the remodelling stage, is where more cells are added to the glue and strengthened to form a substance called type 1 collagen, which is thick, strong and resistant.

Inflammatory stage

Days 1-4: At the site of the injury, cells form a clot following injury to seal the damaged area and to ensure no further bleeding occurs. Similarly, the phagocytes migrate to the same area to "mop up" damaged cells that can no longer function. The damaged cells themselves release a chemical that actually attracts the "mop up" cells to go to the area to begin their job. This process is called phagocytosis. After two days, more chemicals released by the damaged cells attract more white blood cells (monocytes, macrophages and lymphocytes), which also aid in the healing and sealing of damaged cells. Additionally, once cells like the macrophages reach the wound site, they release further chemicals that begin to enhance and promote oxygenation and nutrition, which further aid healing. Once the debris of damaged cells is clear, the space filled with the platelets (the clot that forms to stop the initial bleeding) is broken down and invaded by other cells (fibroblasts). These become more active on day seven, when more glue-like substance is laid down to form a bond. This is known as scar tissue.

Proliferative stage

Days 7-14: At this stage, the fibroblasts lay down more chemicals to begin more solidification of the scar tissue. This is known as the proliferation stage. This solidification of further cells (called collagen) to bond the already forming scar tissue is laid down in disarray, mostly haphazard with no direction of fibre orientation. This makes the tissue weak. During this stage, the original blood clot that had formed to stop the initial bleeding begins to dissipate as more cells are laid down to "glue" the torn fibres together again. Further, more specialised cells are mobilised once the glue has formed, called myofibroblasts, which begin to fuse and connect the torn fibres that were damaged initially.

Remodelling stage

Days 14-90: The last stage is called the remodeling stage. Here is where the haphazard scar tissue (glue) that formed in the proliferation stage begins to orientate itself and becomes more specific to the function of the muscle/tendon. This is greatly influenced by the external stresses placed on it. More collagen is added here to reinforce the weak scar tissue and tensile strength begins to develop as more tissue is laid down.

Collagen reorientation and strength increases slowly, reaching 70% of the initial strength in six months to two years. The new scar tissue remodelled almost always differs from the original muscle/tendon it replaces by having fewer connective tissue cells, fewer blood vessels and more disorganised cells. Most of the time, the new scar tissue/muscle does not restore 100% to what it used to be, and therefore is vulnerable to further injury later on. As an example, a hamstring strain normally takes three weeks

for recovery. However, research has shown through microscopy that the actual damage to the hamstring muscle fibres doesn't fully heal up for at least another two to three months, even though the athlete can run again. Therefore, one can assume that constant strength training and rehabilitation will benefit following return to sport to ensure the hamstring doesn't get damaged again.



In conclusion, fitness professionals must warn clients that once a severe injury occurs to the tissue, it can take more than the "normal" three to six weeks to heal up, and indeed a follow-up programme of rehabilitation will be required if they want the injury to make a full recovery.

If you would like to see Dr Solomon Abrahams to help identify and solve any knee conditions you might have he can be contacted through his website at www.quickrecovery.co.uk

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วันอังคารที่ 30 มีนาคม พ.ศ. 2553

Oral Literary and Historic Echoes from the Novel, Bound To Violence, by Yambo Ouologuem

Malian writer, Yambo Ouologuem's most famous novel Bound to Violence first published in 1968 satirically portrays Africa before and during colonial subjugation whilst assessing the role of local overlords who in league with Arab slave dealers, sold their subjects into bondage. After winning the prestigious French literary prize, Prix Renaudot, Yambo received much media attention, being widely reviewed, appearing on T.V. shows and being interviewed and featured in many prominent publications and with the book being translated into numerous languages. .

Despite allegations that it contained materials drawn from other works, Bound to Violence has been widely read and acknowledged as a wonderful book which this writer himself affims makes quite a compulsive as well as a gripping story though with too horrible revelations to make.

Born in 1940 in Bandiagary in the Dogon country, in Mali to a ruling class family, Ouologuem, the only son of a land owner and school inspector, quickly learnt several African languages and gained fluency in French, English and Spanish. After matriculating at a Lycee in Bamako [capital of Mali] Yambo went to France to continue his education at Lycee de Charenton in Paris and then continued his studies for his doctorate in Sociology. Upon returning to his home country in the late 70's he was made director of a Youth centre near Mopti in central Mali where he remained until 1984. He has led a secluded religious life in the Sahel ever since.

This novel, his first and only, has been widely hailed as the first truly African novel. 'It fuses legend, oral tradition and stunning realism in a vision arising authentically from black roots.' He draws on the history and culture of the great medieval empire of Mali in which Nakem was central in the 13th century, and dominated onwards by the Saif dynasty, whose rule was characterized by ruthlessness marked with bloody and tragic adventures. After a brief, violent fresco depicting Nakem's past, the story moves into the 20th century with the Saifs still in power. But when the French arrive as colonizers, they unwittingly become puppets in their astute hands. But still these native rulers continue to dominate by shadowy and occultic means.. Scenes of violence and eroticism, of sorcery and black magic appear as natural parts of human activity there. From this frightful and horrific background emerges the book's main protagonist, Raymond Spartacus Kassoumi, the son of slaves who was sent to France to be educated and groomed for a political post which could well be the next step to his becoming another puppet to the Saifs.

Ouologuem goes on to show how the ancient African emperors, the Moslems, and finally the European colonial administrators were responsible for the black African's 'slave mentality.' They produce'negraille' a word coined by Ouologuem himself to indicate this servility. His skepticism over the potential for liberation through struggle was also pronounced.

The first part of the novel compresses the history of the first seven hundred years of the Nakem Empire starting from around the year 1200 A.D. with brutality, violence, oppression and corruption,. Slavery iwas also widespread there with 'a hundred million of the damned ... being carried away. This went on along with :' Cannibalism: 'one of the darkest features of that spectral Africa ...'

The Arabs had conquered the land [settling over it 'like ......and the common black] man ... suffers for it. Religion - Islam -is abused in order to consolidate and keep power. It 'became a means of action, a political weapon.'

The brief second part captures the coming of the whites at the close of the 19th century. The empire is 'pacified and divided up by the Europeans, with the French controlling whatever remains of Nakem. Hope that life will improve is seen as:

Saved from slavery, the [negroes] welcomed the white man with joy, hoping he would make them forget the mighty Saif's meticulously organized cruelty.

But the exploitation continues unabated as each side uses the blacks to suit their own ends. The Saif remains influential and powerful even under the French administration whilst the subjugated commoners still have little chance of living tolerable lives.

Much of the book, contained in the third section titled 'Night of the Giants', is set in the first half of the twentieth century where horrific incidents such as the Saif's indiscriminate wielding of whatever power he has left, lots of ugly violence like the Saif's curious assasination technique through trained asps proliferate.

Shrobenius adds another dimension to the exploitation. Learning lately about Nakem, he comes there to buy relics, masks and other cultural artifacts. The Saifs themselves contributed to spreading this exploitation and fraud by making up stories and selling whatever cultural legacy can be procured. Tons upon tons more are thus donated towards the further spread and intensification of what became known as 'Shrobeniusology'. This explicitly shows the mechanism by which the new elite came to invent its traditions through the science of ethnography. Later after Shrobenius has popularized African art in Europe many others came to purchase pieces. No originals now left, Saif had slapdash copies buried by the hundredweight and then dug out later and sold at exorbitant price.

Saif made up stories and the interpreter translated. Madoubi repeated in French, refining on the subtleties to the delight of Shrobenius, that human crayfish afflicted with a groping mania for resuscitating an African universe - cultural autonomy, he called it, which had lost all living reality;...he was determined to find metaphysical meaning in everything...African life, he held, was pure art. Then,'...henceforth Negro art was baptized 'aesthetic' and hawked in the imaginary universe of 'vitalizing exchanges.'

Then after describing the phantasmic elaboration of some interpretative forgeries by the Saif he announces that '...Negro art found its patent of nobility in the folklore of merchantile intellectualism..'Thus comes the exposure of the network of fraudsters starting from Shrobenius himself, the anthropologist, as apologist for 'his' people; that swallows enthusiastically and unquestioningly these exoticized products; African traders and producers of African art, who understand the need to maintain the mysteries that render their products as exotic; traditional and contemporary elites who require a sentimentalized past to authorize their present power. All of them are thus exposed in their complex and multiple mutual complicities.

'Witness the splendor of its art - the true face of Africa in the grandiose empires of the Middle Ages, a society marked by wisdom, beauty, prosperity,order, nonviolence, and humanism, and it's here that one must seek the true cradle of Egyptian civilization.

Ironically, all this earns Shrobenius a two-fold benefit on his return home. He mystified his people well enough to get them to raise him enthusiastically to a lofty Sorbonnical chair. He also exploited the sentimentality of the coons, who were only too pleased to hear from the mouth of a white man that Africa was the womb of the world and the cradle of civilization. The ordinary blacks thus gladly donated masks and art treasures by the tons to the acolyte of 'Shrobeniusology'.

Ouologuem then goes on to precisely articulating the interconnections of Africanist mystifications with tourism and the production, packaging, and marketing of African art works.

An Africanist school harnessed to the vapors of magico religious cosmological, and mythical symbolism has thus been born: with the result that for three years men flocked to Nakem- ..middlemen, adventurers, apprentices, bankers, politicians, salesmen, conspirators - supposedly 'scientists,' but in reality enslaved sentries mounting guard before the Shrobeniusological monument of Negro pseudo symbolism.

Already it had become more than difficult to procure old masks, for Shrobenius and the missionaries had had the good fortune to snap them all up. And so Saif - had slapdash copies buried by the hundredweight or sunk into ponds, lakes, marshes, and mud holes, to be exhumed later on and sold at exorbitant prices to unsuspecting curio hunters. These three-year-old masks were said to be charged with the weight of four centuries of civilization.

Ouologuem in this way forcefully exposes the connections in the international system of art exchange, the international art world, and the way in which an ideology of disinterested aesthetic value - the 'baptism' of 'Negro art' as 'aesthetic' meshes with the international commodification of African expressive culture which requires the manufacture of Otherness . [ Appiah, Kwame Anthony]

There is Raymond Spartacus Kassoumi, a child of poverty who takes advantage of French schooling and achieves academic success through advanced studies in France. There also he experiences failure . He discovers the particularly inescapable long reach of Saif. On his return home his thoughts of a triumphant return were broken by his discovery that he and his country were again being manipulated by the ruling Saif.

Some hope however comes from the brief concluding section 'Dawn'. Abbe Henry, the hunchback priest obsessed by the tragedy of the Blacks, half-crazed with the christian duty of love is humbly beautiful as the despair of a Christian soul is now a bishop. The last section consists almost entirely of a dialogue between Abbe Henry and Saif, both philosophical discourse and power struggle. This Saif appears vanquished, but Ouologuem reminds us:

one cannot help recalling that Saif, mourned three million times, is forever reborn to history beneath the hot ashes of more than thirty African republics,

Using various elements of oral literature Ouologuem enriches the narrative in exploring a wide span of African history to establish how Africa was like before and after the onslaught of the Arab and European slave dealers and colonizers. there

Oral literature enriches the texture of Ouloguem's narration thus giving it its vivacity, its uniqueness, its semblance of authenticity and its immediacy. Given the wide span of African History explored encompassing well over 700 years from 1202 to 1947 the narrative method has of necessity to exceed the bounds of the conventional. The narrative thus reads like an epic oral tale told from a communal point of view. The reader thus feels as if he is listening to a tale being related by a Griot which starts like a legend being told in the village square:

Our eyes drink the brightness of the sun and overcome, marvel at their tears. Mashallah! war bismillah!... To recount the bloody adventure of the nigger... - shame to the worthless paupers - there would be no need to go back beyond the present century, but the true history of the Black begins much earlier, with the Saifs, in the years 1202 of our era, in the African Empire of Nakem, south of Fezzan long after the conquests of Okba ben Nafi al-Fitri

The figurative expressions as 'our eyes drink the brightness of the sun', the frequent interjections and exclamations in the middle of sentences and the religious incantations give the work its distinctive oral Griot-like timbre. In reading, we could easily imagine ourselves listening to the emphatic and dramatic delivery of the story teller. Through his incantations and his comments interlarding the tale, he shows his emotional reactions to the details being narrated, thus giving us the illusion of being part of an audience keenly listening in the village square with our attention being drawn, as it goes on, to particular details. This effect could best be seen in how our attention is drawn to the way the black commoners are ill-used:

They promised their serfs, servants and former captives that, pending the hostilities which the neighbouring tribe was no doubt plotting, they would be 'looked upon - hear! - as provisionally free and equal subjects.' Then, once peace was restored among the various tribes, for the war had failed to break out - out - hee - hee - the same notables promised the same subject that after...hum...hum...a brief' apprenticeship of forced labor, they would be rewarded with the Rights of Man.... As to civil rights, of them no mention was made. Halleluyah.

The interjections throughout this passage are tinged with mockery as well as scorn. The reader is thus alerted to the insincerity of the promises.. The narrator's dismay is captured in the closing exclamation: 'Halleluyah!'

Ouologuem then invokes the lofty and grandiose style and tradition of the African chronicler, the Griot.:

How in profound displeasure,with perfumed mouth and eloquence on his tongue, Saif ben Isaac al - Heit endeavored to mobilize the energies of the fanatical people against the invader; how to that end he spread reports of daily miracles throughout the Nakem Empire - earthquakes, the opening of tombs, resurrections of saints, fountains of milk springing up in his path, visions of archangels stepping out of the sunset, village women drawing buckets from the well and finding them full of blood; how on one of his journeys he transformed three pages of the Holy Book, the Koran, into as many doves, which flew on ahead of him as though to summon the people to Saif's banner; and with what diplomacy he feigned indifference to the gods of this world: in all that there is nothing out of the ordinary.

In this grand sweep of a sentence Ouologuem gives force to the eloquence of Saif ben Isaac al- heit whose 'profound displeasure' allied 'with perfumed mouth and eloquence' mobilized the people to frenzied and fanatical onslaught against the invaders. Through parallel structures and repetitions he also shows the prowess of the Saif in spreading a propaganda of terror to further give vent to the furore of the people in attacking the invaders.

Ouloguem also creates the impression of narrating legends based on factual historical occcurences. This is through his constant recourse to historians and griots as suggested in: ' Afterwards, wild supplications was heard from the village square...Then pious silence and the griot Kituli of cherished memory ends his tale as follows .'and 'The consequences of his audacity are related by Mohamed Hakmud Traore descended in an unbroken line from griot ancestors and himself griot in the present-day African Republic of Nakem-Zuiko.' The impression is thus often given of a teller sifting through the various details from various sources to get at the kernel of the truth. Many a time he would indicate this by either naming the various griots and historians concerned or by merely introducing them as 'according to one version' 'in another version', 'still others claimed that' and so on. His inability to get one authentic report on Isaac al - Heit is explained thus:

At this point tradition loses itself in legend for there are few written accounts and the versions of the elders diverge from those of the griots, which differ from those of the chroniclers.

Through his comments and religious incantations, the narrator conveys the impression that he and his audience share common norms and values. A shared ancestral background is also alluded to through his frequent recourse to such phrases as 'our era'

Ouologuem repudiates the negritudinist glorification of Africa's past by portraying it as an unending cycle of violence, greed, debauchery and exploitation, as reaffirmed in the title Bound to Violence and in this extract from an interview of Ouologuem by Linda Hiecht:

....black people in Africa were oppressed. He has enemies too among what they all black aristocracy, and the black man never was a Negro before the black aristocrat sold him as a slave. It was the black aristocrat who made black people become Negroes. If you look at the entire history, you find there were three stages of oppression: blacks oppressing blacks, Arabs oppressing blacks,and whites oppressing blacks. Look, it took me a lot of courage to write this book which is about oppressors who were my own family and I did my best to be as universal as possible.

Ouologuem's position is then unlike Armah's anti-negritudinist. For he holds Africans as much responsible for the indignities they suffered as the foreign forces,Arabs and Europeans. Thus, he neither idealizes nor endorses either party. His African world has no political system. Traditional religion too seems absent here. Everything is left in a state of chaos and turmoil with the rulers using people at will. The system of justice evident in Two Thousand Seasons could not be seen here. Ordinary people are continually being misused by the notables. Immoralities of the worst kinds are widely practiced. The history of Africa is thus shown as one unending flow of violence which in turn kept them under such dread that they were scared stiff of even rebelling. Thus Appiah's submission that it is a repudiation of national history makes much sense though perhaps it could be more apt as a denunciation of racial or continental history.

RELATED ARTICLE:

http://ezinearticles.com/?Looking-Back-Through-2000-Seasons-of-Slavery-of-Africans-by-Various-Other-Races-in-Ayi-Kwei-Armah&id=990966

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Appiah, Kwame Anthony , In My Father's House

Ouologuem, Yambo, Bound to Violence, translated by Ralph Manhein, A Helen and Kurt Woolf Book, Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, Inc, New York, 1971

Palmer, Eustace, The Growth of The African Novel, Heinemann

Educational Books , London, 1979

Wise, Christopher[ed], Yambo Ouologuem Postcolonial Writer,Islamic Militant, 1999

'De l'histoire a sa metaphore dans Le Devoir de Violence de Yambo Ouologuem '

By Josias Semajanga in Etudes Francaises, vol 31, no1,etc[1995]

'Fiction and Subversion' by A. Songolo in Presence Africaine no 120 [1981]

Interview of Yambo Ouologuem

'Ouologuem's Blueprint for 'Le Devoir de Violence'' by E. Sellin in RESEARCH IN AFRICAN LITERATURE 2 [1971]

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วันอาทิตย์ที่ 28 มีนาคม พ.ศ. 2553

Gay Men's Influence on Fashion, Style and Popular Culture

Popular culture is constantly evolving. There are many influences on what is considered fashionable and stylish at any one time. Some tend to dominate, however. And one growing trend is the effect of gay male sensibilities on many aspects of mainstream culture including films, television and fashion. No longer on the margins of mainstream culture, gay men are often making its rules.

Take the breakout show Queer Eye for the Straight Guy. This entertaining television program took the (often true!) stereotype of gay males being more fashion conscious, cultured and aesthetically adept than straight males and made it the central idea. These witty gay men ran amock, giving advice to clueless straight guys on everything from their choice of swimwear to their behavior with the opposite sex. The show was a huge hit in the USA and globally, and even spawned localized versions in different countries.

There are other, more general examples. Take the gay ideal of masculinity, which has a focus on good grooming and physical fitness. While gay male icons are often Adonis like, their heterosexual counterparts have long been able to get away with being less than fit and sometimes downright slobby. But this seems to have changed in recent years.

A couple of recent "sword and sandal" epics illustrate this well. In Troy, both main stars (Brad Pitt and Eric Bana) were fitter, stronger and more muscular than in any of their previous roles. A similar look was required for the movie 300 about Spartan warriors. All of the principal actors, as well as the extras, had clearly spent a lot of time at the gym. The star, Gerard Butler, followed a punishing training regime for four months prior to filming, often working out with a well known body builder.

One wonders how many of the original Spartans would have looked so buffed. They certainly didn't have the benefit of digital blood sugar monitors, isometric gym equipment, protein bars and all the rest. (Though they would have been far more lethal, of course!)

Compare these films with the Roman epics of the fifties and sixties. In films such as Ben Hur and Spartacus physical perfection was not nearly as important. Stars such as Tony Curtis, Kirk Douglas and Charlton Heston were certainly fit, but hardly the perfect physical specimens we've seen parading across the screen lately.

The evolving character of James Bond is another case in point. Sean Connery, the original movie Bond, was a masculine icon. He had an imposing physique and was hairy chested. He certainly wasn't overweight, but he wasn't toned either. While he did get around in his swimming trunks in at least one film, this was as much to serve the plot as it was to give the women something to ogle.

Then there was Roger Moore. While he was dapper and stylish, he was not very athletic. He was most comfortable in a suit, and seemed to have an aversion to swimwear.

The latest Bond, Daniel Craig, is more fit and muscular than any of his predecessors. He's probably been training with Gerard Butler! In one purely ornamental scene in Casino Royale he rises from the surf to display his (hairless) barrel chest and washboard stomach. Needless to say, when dressed he's always wearing the most stylish attire.

It's interesting that these are all big budget movies that are made appeal to a broad demographic. They are guy films; not gay films. Yet the action men in them look fit, sleek and often fashionable while killing all the bad guys. While the rising influence of gay male aesthetics isn't the only reason for this phenomenon, it is certainly a major factor.

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วันเสาร์ที่ 27 มีนาคม พ.ศ. 2553

The Spear of Longinus

The prime mover in the assassination of Julius Caesar was married to a Brutus but I suspect he was less interested in restoring power to the Senate (and in some small way the people of Italy) than he was in his own power. The movie Spartacus does see it as I see it. His persona was played by Sir Laurence Olivier. Cassius, who is later called Longinus, dies at his own hand after a defeat in the homeland of Alexander at a city named after the father or another in the family of Alexander.

"The Spear of Destiny, also known as the Spear of Longinus and the Heilige Lance -- Holy Lance -- is one of the most important Christian relics of the Passion of Jesus Christ. As first described in John 19:31-37, the Spear was used by a Roman soldier (Gaius Cassius, later called Longinus) to pierce the side of Christ as he hung on the cross. The Spear, bathed in the blood of the Lamb and playing a significant role in the fulfillment of Old Testament prophecy, is believed to have acquired tremendous mystical power. The first sign of that power was the purported healing of Gaius Cassius's failing eyesight by blood from the wound.

The centurion later become an early convert to Christianity. The Spear subsequently passed through a multitude of hands, coming into the possession of many of Europe's most important political and military leaders, including Constantine I, Alaric (the Visigoth king who sacked Rome in the year 410), Frankish general Charles Martel, Charlemagne, Frederick of Barbarossa, and Frederick II. A leader who possessed the Spear was said to be invincible; Charlemagne and Frederick of Barbarossa were undefeated in battle until they let the Spear fall from their hands. A legend arose that whoever claimed the Spear 'holds the destiny of the world in his hands for good or evil.'

As a young man Adolf Hitler was fascinated by the Spear of Destiny, which he first saw displayed in the Hofsburg museum in Vienna, Austria in 1909. Hitler was familiar with the legend of the Holy Lance. His interest in the relic was further amplified by its role in the 1882 opera Parsifal -- by Hitler's favorite composer, Richard Wagner -- which concerned a group of ninth-century knights and their quest for the Holy Grail. Hitler's fascination with the Spear was pivotal in sparking his interest in the occult, which gave birth to his ideas on the origins and purpose of the Germanic race and contributed to his belief in his own destiny as a world conqueror.

{This is the spearhead of the Holy Lance of Hapsburg and they spend millions trying to authenticate these things but always end up finding out they are not as the myths do tell us. History may soon have to answer to forensics, I hope.}

On October 12, 1938, not long after the German annexation of Austria, Hitler ordered the S.S. to seize the Spear and other artifacts from Vienna. They were taken by train to Nuremberg, where they were stored in St. Katherine's Church. The Spear remained in St. Katherine's until 1944, when it was moved to a specially constructed vault beneath the church, built in secret and at great expense, intended to protect it and the other stolen relics from Allied bombs. Nuremberg was captured by Allied troops in April of the following year. The vault was subsequently discovered by American Army officers. The Spear was confiscated by American forces on the afternoon of April 30, 1945, less than two hours before Hitler's suicide in his underground bunker in Berlin. Like the Spear's previous owners, Hitler perished after the relic was taken from him.

Like most holy relics, the history of the Spear of Destiny is complex and difficult to authenticate. The earliest reports of the Spear were circa 570 A.D., when it was said to have been on display in the basilica of Mount Sion in Jerusalem alongside the Crown of Thorns. The point of the spear's blade was apparently broken off following the Persian conquest of Jerusalem in 615 A.D. The point, set into an icon, found its way to the church of Saint Sophia in Constantinople and later to France, where it remained in the Sainte Chapelle until the 18th century. It was briefly moved to the Bibliotheque Nationale in Paris during the French Revolution, but it subsequently disappeared. Meanwhile, the rest of the spearhead was transferred from Jerusalem to Constantinople sometime in the eighth century. It was taken by the Turks in the 14th century and sent by Sultan Bajazet as a gift to Pope Innocent VIII in 1492. Innocent ordered the relic placed in Saint Peter's in Rome, where it remains today, although the Catholic Church makes no great claim as to its authenticity.

There are several other competing relics in different locations. One such "Holy Lance" was allegedly unearthed by Crusader Peter Bartholomew in Antioch in 1098. That Lance is now at Etschmiadzin in Armenia; scholars believe that it is not actually a Roman lance but the head of a standard, although it may have an interesting history of its own, separate from the legend of the Lance. Another claimant has rested in Krakow for about eight hundred years.

Hitler's lance was the fourth Spear, called the Lance of St. Maurice and the Holy Lance of Hapsburg, which is part of the Reichkleinodien (Imperial Regalia) of the house of Hapsburg. This spearhead is bound with gold, copper, and silver threads to a nail -- purported to be one of the nails of the Crucifixion. The earliest verifiable account of this Spear was its use in a coronation ceremony in 1273. It rested in Nuremberg during the Middle Ages, but by the early 20th century it was placed on display at the Treasure House of the Hofsburg museum in Vienna, where Hitler saw it in 1909.

This Spear has no greater claim to authenticity than any of the others, although Hitler -- who conducted his own less-than-rigorous investigation into its history -- was firmly convinced that it was the genuine article, leading to its confiscation by the S.S. in 1938. In 1946 the Spear and the rest of the Imperial Regalia were returned to Austria. Today they are once again on public display at the Hofsburg museum." (2)

The people mentioned as having had possession of the spear are all Merovingians (Family of Jesus) and they had built a ritual energy Construct around the spear regardless of whether or not it is or ever was authentic. I cannot expect academicians to understand that and I am not going to address it in this book. I will have to do a book called The Jesus Conspiracy. I have explained these things in other books as far as the ritual acts of these Merovingians.

I wonder why this Spear is called the Spear of Longinus in so many places. Maybe I just missed something but if Joseph of Arimathaea is the Roman Minister of Mines, (slavery) as well as a member of the Sanhedrin which was bought by Rome as was Herod, what is going on? When you know that Paul/Saul is a Roman from Tarshis and he was out stoning St. Stephen and he worked for the Sadducee Temple priests of the Sanhedrin you start to see things fall in place. Joseph takes the body of Jesus to his family crypt where Jesus had brought Lazarus back from the dead (or out of a near coma caused by drugs just as Jesus had been given when on the cross to appear dead. Joseph had to be related to Jesus or Pilate (From Scotland perhaps according to current archaeological digs there.) could not have released the body to him despite the fact that Pilate would be from the area Joseph's tin mines had been central to an enormous money-making machine for his Benjaminite family. It is the Roman law that the body can only go to the family and that would include the father of Mary Magdalene/Bethany (same person - he owned homes in both cities plus in Egypt where Mary and Jesus had studied while growing up).

Do you think Gaius Cassius was stupid when he refused to do what other Senators wanted as he fought to defend Rome? Do you think he was in on the supposed death of Jesus or whatever actually happened there? There are many dots worth connecting here. I think there were powerful people who wanted to build the kind of Empire that Rome shortly became. Their purpose or plan was an Empire with ever fewer numbers of actual participants in the decision-making. It continues long after the so-called fall of Rome. Cassius knew the Senate was a paper tiger or mere façade.

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