29 January 2012

Week 5: ‘I felt so full of running.’

Wonderdate: 1954
Wondered into being by: Roger Bannister and John Landy
Wonderspan: 10 min
To experience this wonder at its best: Click on the full screen icon and make sure you can hear the sound.

Hello wonder-lovers.  Last week we heard that the Olympics opening ceremony will be based on 'wonder', which is a spooky coincidence because our Monday morning wonder this week has an olympic theme, sort of.  What are the chances?  The wonder schedule here says we got there first, but if they want the credit I'm sure that'll be ok.

This week's wonder is in two parts.  First up is Roger Bannister’s own commentary on the race in Oxfordshire in which he became the first person to run a mile in under four minutes.  This 1954 film is a grainy remembrance of a world first, accompanied by the crowd, increasingly frenzied with will-he-won't-he anticipation as the athletes pick up the pace with each lap.
Just six weeks after Bannister’s achievement, the Australian John Landy, who had been running faster and faster mile races for some time, ran his own sub-four-minute mile.  Finishing a hefty 1.5 seconds quicker than Bannister, Landy took the world record from him.

Seven weeks on and many millions of people around the world tuned in their radios (and a few TVs) for a race billed as the Miracle Mile, in which these two rivals would battle it out.  At the time they were still the only athletes to have run a mile in under four minutes.  Would Landy’s ferocious pace wear his rival out, or would one of Bannister’s blistering finishes win through?  Find out here, and hang on at the end to hear each man pay generous tribute to the other.
Extra…

Landy stops to help competitor and still wins the race.  Now that's a way of loving.  Just extraordinary!

22 January 2012

Week 4: 'My favourite part!'

Wonder spawned in: 2010
Wondered into being by: All we know is he's called Jonathan
Wonderspan: 5 min
To experience this wonder at its best: Click on the full screen icon and make sure you can hear the sound.

He's now three, having started his art at eight months if you don't include (though let's) nine months in the womb using his umbilical cord like an ipod loaded with upmarket, Wigmore Hall stuff thanks to his mum.  And, while many child prodigies can be slightly grave, you'll see from Jonathan's grand finale that he's really just one of us.
Big thanks to Julie S for suggesting this one; her housemate teaches conducting and plays this clip to all his students.

And if you have a wonder to suggest, leave a comment...

15 January 2012

Week 3: 'We float like a mote of dust in the morning sky.'

Wonder spawned in: 1970s
Wondered into being by: Carl Sagan and Ann Druyan
Wonderspan: 2 min reading + 5 min film
To experience this wonder at its best: Click on the full screen icon and make sure you can hear the sound.

If all had been as it should, the T S Eliot Prize for Poetry event in London this last weekend would have included Alice Oswald reading from her new, long poem, Memorial - one of the ten shortlisted works.  But in December she decided to withdraw, followed in short order by another shortlisted poet, John Kinsella.  Why?  Because when the Arts Council withdrew funding for the Poetry Book Society, which organises the Prize, a hedge fund firm called Aurum stepped in.  Many other arts organisations - the National Theatre and the Tate, for example - are turning to similar companies for help and perhaps it is good that wealthy firms are sharing some of their profits with the arts.  But Alice Oswald and John Kinsella believe that what they are trying to do through their poetry, and what hedge funds do, are pushing in different directions.

Alice Oswald explained her decision in a Guardian article, where she also described what she believes poetry can do to/for us: 'I think it's often assumed that the role of poetry is to comfort, but for me, poetry is the great unsettler. It questions the established order of the mind. It is radical, by which I don't mean that it is either leftwing or rightwing, but that it works at the roots of thinking. It goes lower than rhetoric, lower than conversation, lower than logic, right down to the very faint honest voice at the bottom of the skull.'

The setting for Memorial is the human tragedy of the Trojan War.  The poem sketches the ordinary men who were killed in the war, each at the moment of his death.  The text shimmers with Alice Oswald's keen feeling for the aliveness of things, and its fragility.  Poetry like this gives us all something important, in that it stands up for, and appeals to, our common feeling for what can make us more humanely human. But to receive this gift is, I think, also to be disturbed, if it leads to a growing awareness of forces that overwhelm (our) lives today.  To use Alice Oswald's word, a poem that is 'honest' to its own truth calls us to account for how 'honest' we are being in the way we live as individuals and as societies.

As for hedge funds, few people properly understand them, me included, but they are rightly notorious for representing a particularly aggressive, greedy form of gambling on the world's financial markets.  Hedge funds make a few rich people very rich indeed.  However varied their executives' personal ethics may be, the character of the business itself is to pursue profit as if other people and the planet really didn't matter.  For example, Aurum's 'philosophy' is 'to generate superior risk adjusted returns over the long-term investment horizon', which seems like a bleached way of saying they exist only to to make as much money as they possibly can for as long as they possibly can.  Like most hedge fund outfits, Aurum gives a small fraction of its profits to charity but appears to have no ethical policy for its investments.

So a poem might excite a sense of wonder and challenge us in our humanity, and we might need this when thinking about whether to endorse the sponsorship of a hedge fund,  yet that means questioning not only the mind's 'established order' but that of society as a whole.  But as Alice Oswald notes in her article, 'It is increasingly difficult to articulate any kind of unease about a system that puts profit before ethics and makes protest a criminal act.'  In other words, perhaps: it is seen to be increasingly out of step with reality to allow the tug of a poem to prevail over the demands of a certain economic system, even one leading to increasing injustice and violence. 

For its part, the Poetry Book Society's website omits to mention that two poets pulled out of the Eliot Prize shortlist for reasons of ethics, but its presiding judge, the poet Gillian Clarke, has written a response to Alice Oswald.  Here, she respects her fellow poet's stand but also argues pragmatically that the Prize 'cleans the money' it receives from Aurum by taking it from the rich and giving it to poetry. Her argument will appeal to those who believe the ends justify the means, but does not seem to recognise that the way we do things matters.

This week's Monday morning wonder comes from the world of science rather than that of poetry, but concerns the same fundamental question of whether a personal sense of wonder might inspire passions that would if they could change the way society works.  That is, can wonder recover a feeling for what life is really about and so help to throw a question mark over some of our more damaging, deadening norms? During the 1970s, Carl Sagan and Ann Druyan bet that it could when they co-created the pioneering popular science TV series, Cosmos

At the time the whole planet was held in ‘a perpetual hostage crisis called the Cold War’, says Ann Druyan, and then, perhaps as now, we the peoples felt increasingly frightened by the future.  In this vein, Cosmos hoped not only to raise public awareness of science but to excite collective imagination and humility about our place in the universe.  Ann Druyan and Carl Sagan believed that if we could find ‘our own part in [the] great story’ of the universe, then we might see the grandstanding and brinkmanship of the cold war as the hubris of a species that did not yet know itself. Wonder, then, powered as it is by awe and hope, might become a quietly redemptive force.

And Ann Druyan and Carl Sagan shared both the same political concerns about the cold war and a strongly poetic feeling for the wonder which runs like a seam of gold through the exploratory project of science.  For Carl Sagan this started when he was a kid: ‘I went to the librarian and asked for a book about stars ... And the answer was stunning. It was that the Sun was a star but really close. The stars were suns, but so far away they were just little points of light ... The scale of the universe suddenly opened up to me. It was a kind of religious experience. There was a magnificence to it, a grandeur, a scale which has never left me. Never ever left me.'  The sun is a star and it's just there!

Bringing this feeling for wonder to their work, Ann and Carl brought the cosmos to life for millions of people.  Without dumbing things down, the authors peppered the script with playful metaphors, such as when Carl Sagan sums up cosmic evolution in a few words: 'If you wish to make an apple pie from scratch you must first invent the universe'.  The same serious purpose still suffused the project, though: 'I believe our future depends powerfully on how well we understand this cosmos in which we float like a mote of dust in the morning sky.'  Incredibly for a science programme, Cosmos became the most popular series in the US from 1980 to 1990.

Meanwhile, off air the couple were arrested multiple times for nonviolent direct action against nuclear weapons installations including the Nevada test site.  Sagan resigned from a military research job in protest at the Vietnam war.  He was also one of the five co-authors of the first scientific paper showing that a nuclear war would result in a ‘nuclear winter’, in which most of the higher taxa of the Earth's ecosystem, including humans, would be wiped out.  Rather as Alice Oswald is doing now, Carl Sagan and Ann Druyan were taking their own honest stand against the violations of their times.

So are you ready for a little cosmic wonder?  Here's how Cosmos opens:
More Carl Sagan later in the year, but not as you know him.

Extras...

But if you have a little more time, you might like to hear Carl Sagan talking about the human meaning of the Earth:
...and this spooky/dreamy/eerie piece by Vangelis called Albedo 0.39 about the properties of Earth as seen from space.  'Albedo' is the reflective property of a body’s surface in space. In other words, it’s how much light the Earth reflects back into space forever – the chance of being seen by aliens or gods.
And if you have a wonder you'd like to share, why not add it to our growing collection... Click on comments below to deposit something or other.


Source credit for 'I went to the librarian...' quote: Keay Davidson (1999), 'Carl Sagan, A Life'