• What we saw at the coronation was the beautiful monstrosity of a past e

    From ltlee1@21:1/5 to All on Thu May 18 08:36:34 2023
    "When British people say ‘we do pageantry like nobody else’, they are indirectly admitting that we depend disproportionately upon the past to give meaning to the present. When the re-enactment of ancient custom takes on such importance, this implies
    some absence or uncertainty in contemporary life.

    When cultures are in the ascendant, dominant and expanding, they are impressive and intimidating, particularly since they find it impossible not to express their supremacy over others by conquest or colonisation; but when they are in retreat and have
    lost their hold over the imagination of the people, they become poignant and show a vulnerability that had never appeared at the height of their power. It was this that inflected the extravaganza of the coronation; created a spectacle in full
    consciousness that the display of splendour does not belong to any conceivable future.

    This is something the British ought to know well since we spent the long imperial moment destroying or tearing down the cultures of others, their sacred rites, practices and traditions. With missionary fervour and unequalled military power, we scythed
    our way through ‘lesser’ civilisations, scorned their heathenish beliefs, extirpated their superstitious rituals and put an end to their barbaric customs, bringing, in their stead, what we saw as civilisation, truth and freedom.

    The time has, perhaps, come for us to undergo a similar experience, although no one has invaded our sacred groves and forests, trampled our tabernacles or desecrated our gods. The beliefs at the heart of our culture have become corroded by the rust of
    disuse, the holy texts eaten away by the insects of indifference, the vestments invaded by the moth of doubt, even though the outer forms remain, resplendent, apparently unimpaired. If our culture has also been colonised, overtaken by more powerful
    entities, the chief of these is Time itself, which has caused us to forfeit our dominant place in the world and to withdraw from the territories we occupied, so that on great State occasions we re-enact with magnificent vanity an illusion of continuity
    with vanished glories.

    What we saw at the coronation was the beautiful monstrosity of a past embalmed in ceremonial, nostalgia materialised."

    https://thewire.in/world/coronation-grandeur-past-future

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