Swing Motorman
One of the Regulars
- Messages
- 256
- Location
- North-Central Penna.
Hi all,
I'm reading through Alicia Appleman-Jurman's "Alicia: My Story," and wanted to seek the advice of some of you more literate and life-experienced folks. As I sit here and read of the horrors and hard-won moments of joy the author suffered through in Nazi-occupied Ukraine, I can easily hear loud hip-hop music blasting from the room next door. I don't listen to the genre enough to feel that I can talk intelligently about it, but the vibes of arrogance in what almost passes for "melody" and the occasional bit of lyrics I can understand... well, they feel so out of place next to the true story I'm taking in. Somehow the "music" is compounding the impact of the story, especially in comparing the problems we face today against the hardships of war, or worse, genocide.
I usually try to restrain myself from seeing devotees of modern culture as shallow, but after digging into so deep a work as "Alicia," I can't help but feel that those who understand and seek out the past are somehow better, more well-rounded, or more understanding than those who disregard the past and turn up the latest thumping bass. But there again, as I face the deeply human struggle of the Holocaust, I instinctively caution myself against dividing people into groups; we all know how THAT idea worked out in Europe of the early '40s...
Well, I suppose I'm really just opening the old mental safety valve and hoping that we can make a well-reasoned intellectual discussion out of it. Hopefully others in a similar position of deep thought can take some refuge sharing also. Bartenders can merge this as needed, and thanks to anyone reading or sharing your wisdom or personal experience with this contrast. The darkness of the Holocaust and the vanity of the world that surrounds us is pretty hard to reconcile sometimes, but it's nice to know I can find people who know the history well here on the Lounge!
Ah, and that darned "music" stopped. I'll count my blessings!
-Steven
I'm reading through Alicia Appleman-Jurman's "Alicia: My Story," and wanted to seek the advice of some of you more literate and life-experienced folks. As I sit here and read of the horrors and hard-won moments of joy the author suffered through in Nazi-occupied Ukraine, I can easily hear loud hip-hop music blasting from the room next door. I don't listen to the genre enough to feel that I can talk intelligently about it, but the vibes of arrogance in what almost passes for "melody" and the occasional bit of lyrics I can understand... well, they feel so out of place next to the true story I'm taking in. Somehow the "music" is compounding the impact of the story, especially in comparing the problems we face today against the hardships of war, or worse, genocide.
I usually try to restrain myself from seeing devotees of modern culture as shallow, but after digging into so deep a work as "Alicia," I can't help but feel that those who understand and seek out the past are somehow better, more well-rounded, or more understanding than those who disregard the past and turn up the latest thumping bass. But there again, as I face the deeply human struggle of the Holocaust, I instinctively caution myself against dividing people into groups; we all know how THAT idea worked out in Europe of the early '40s...
Well, I suppose I'm really just opening the old mental safety valve and hoping that we can make a well-reasoned intellectual discussion out of it. Hopefully others in a similar position of deep thought can take some refuge sharing also. Bartenders can merge this as needed, and thanks to anyone reading or sharing your wisdom or personal experience with this contrast. The darkness of the Holocaust and the vanity of the world that surrounds us is pretty hard to reconcile sometimes, but it's nice to know I can find people who know the history well here on the Lounge!
Ah, and that darned "music" stopped. I'll count my blessings!
-Steven