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  1. Culture
10 March 2008

The students boycotting Shakespeare

By Nichi Hodgson

If you teach us, do we not learn?
Jewish students at Yesodey Hatorah school who boycotted an exam on the Merchant of Venice because they found it anti-Semitic, were backed by their head teacher, despite damaging their key stage 3 assessment results and demoting the school from 1st to 274th place in performance league tables. An ex-teacher of the school blogging on the Talkback message board for the online edition of Israeli newspaper Haaretz opposed Rabbi Pinter’s decision to support the students’ veto, advocating instead closer textual reading, but there were plenty more who supported the students.

The play David Jays once called a “nasty piece of work” here in the New Statesman was pronounced “one of the liveliest, toughest and most necessary conversations about art, prejudice and performance in Western culture” by Boyd Tonkin in the Independent. “What could be more pitiably prejudiced than to refuse to engage with it?” he asked, a view shared by Haaretz’s editor,
Simon Spungin.

Tonkin cited playwrights Harold Bloom and Arnold Wesker as examples of how Jewish engagement with the text could rescue the play from pound-of-flesh stereotyping.

‘Off’ to the Proms?

In the government’s quest to promote British values, Culture Minister Margaret Hodge declared the Proms an arcane cultural event with an exclusive audience that’s “still a long way from demonstrating that people from different backgrounds feel at ease” in British cultural life. Although Gordon Brown was quick to clarify that the Proms are “a wonderful, democratic and quintessentially British institution”, ex-Lambeth Councillor blogger
Gertsamtkunstwerk translated Hodge’s comments thus: “We can’t begin to understand how you little people without our obvious advantages need anything more challenging than Coronation Street. Just crawl back to your hovels please.” Over on the Guardian blog, South African-born David Juritz explained why Hodge was wrong for pronouncing the Proms an inclusive failure, and there were one or two sheepish souls grappling with an illiberal guilt for disliking so-called “alternative” cultural events: “I’m not comfortable at the Notting Hill Carnival. I went once and once it got dark I was really scared,” StuartP conceded in a post. Telegraph blogger Rick, meanwhile, was quick to suggest a more temperate climate for “Comrade Hodge”: “If La Hodge and her ilk do not like the Proms, Cuba still offers what they may have in mind, I’m sure expenses will cover their trip there.”

The New Statesman had of course already probed the issue of cultural exclusivity last August, when Tory politician Brian Coleman railed about the sea of white faces that swathe the Promtime Albert Hall.

When life gets in the way…

– Died – Pavarotti – with debts of around £7 million (or £12 million, if the Daily Mail’s “official document” figure is to be believed). Properties worth considerably more than either sum may be sold to settle the debt providing daughters from the tenor’s first marriage cease inheritance-wrangling with second wife Nicoletta Mantovani.

– Revived – Bolshoi Ballet boss 81-year-old Soviet-era Yuri Grigorovich for a new 3-year directorship.

– Awakened – young people by pop music, and that’s sexually awakened by the way. A survey conducted by Jamaican researchers found that music rather than alcohol or peer pressure is the main instigator of sexual activity in young people aged between 9 and 17. A list of the top lust-inducing tunes has not yet been released.

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