Law in Contemporary Society

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ReconciliationOfFreedomAndTheState 2 - 17 Feb 2010 - Main.CarolineFerrisWhite
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 I'm curious about what other people made of Robinson's enigmatic response. In class, Mohit suggested it was an attempt to dissociate himself from his actions in Vietnam. I'm assuming in this view, he saw "reconciliation" as the direct subjugation of Robinson's freedoms to the "needs" (or more accurately power) of the state - and was placing the burden of his actions on the State. In my own view, I saw it as the reconciliation of the ideals. Robinson isn't an anarchist, he seems to feel a need for a state. But in war, he had to come to terms with the inconsistencies between his ideal of freedom and his ideal of state. Similar to Arnold's Folklore, Robinson previously viewed States as actors themselves. But in war, he fully realized that a state can only act through its individuals. Rather than dissociating himself from his actions, he recognizes the essential incongruity and disconnect in those concepts and "reconciled" them. His ideals didn't match reality, but he accepts the moral consequences of his actions. Part of my belief that he isn't dissociative comes from the quickfollowing anecdote about "C. Robinson". C as in "See what you have done".

-- StephenSevero - 17 Feb 2010

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I too have been mulling that over. I tend to agree with the dissociation argument, not because of the meaning of the phrase, but because the phrase, in and of itself, means so little. Robinson doesn't just deliver a terse "reconciliation of freedom and the state" - he "lectures" the narrator at length. He responds to an intimate question about his personal experience with a monologue about abstract ideas. It's a diversionary tactic, a means of shielding oneself from a harrowing experience by translating it into a safe(r) academic theory. But the truth seeps out anyway, filtered but no less potent: the narrator remembers those words verbatim. The phrase is powerful not because of what it says, but because of what it doesn't say.

The C.C Rider moment underscores Robinson's tendency to protect his inner self by sleight of hand (or in his case, sleight of phrase). Rather than reveal what the C. really stands for, he cracks a joke, referencing the old blues song about an "easy rider" woman (you made me love you, now your man done come). I like your reading of that moment, though, Stephen: it ties in well with the weight of his unspoken experience in Vietnam.

-- CarolineFerrisWhite - 17 Feb 2010

 
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ReconciliationOfFreedomAndTheState 1 - 17 Feb 2010 - Main.StephenSevero
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I'm curious about what other people made of Robinson's enigmatic response. In class, Mohit suggested it was an attempt to dissociate himself from his actions in Vietnam. I'm assuming in this view, he saw "reconciliation" as the direct subjugation of Robinson's freedoms to the "needs" (or more accurately power) of the state - and was placing the burden of his actions on the State. In my own view, I saw it as the reconciliation of the ideals. Robinson isn't an anarchist, he seems to feel a need for a state. But in war, he had to come to terms with the inconsistencies between his ideal of freedom and his ideal of state. Similar to Arnold's Folklore, Robinson previously viewed States as actors themselves. But in war, he fully realized that a state can only act through its individuals. Rather than dissociating himself from his actions, he recognizes the essential incongruity and disconnect in those concepts and "reconciled" them. His ideals didn't match reality, but he accepts the moral consequences of his actions. Part of my belief that he isn't dissociative comes from the quickfollowing anecdote about "C. Robinson". C as in "See what you have done".

-- StephenSevero - 17 Feb 2010


Revision 2r2 - 17 Feb 2010 - 05:14:15 - CarolineFerrisWhite
Revision 1r1 - 17 Feb 2010 - 00:36:18 - StephenSevero
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