manners…

Saturday, January 8th, 2011
Moctezuma meets Cortez

Moctezuma meets Cortez © 1922 Keith Henderson

When Cortez first met Moctezuma, the emperor of the Aztecs advanced towards him half-carried by a couple of his relatives, as if he were some fragile invalid. This affectation was one that Moctezuma could allow himself, lord as he was of the conquerors of Central America that, to its inhabitants, was the navel of the Earth and the greater and best part of the world. No doubt this kind of posturing was copied by lesser lords who aspired to the power and sophistication of their masters.

Wealthy Chinese grew their finger nails to such lengths that they had to protect them with jewelled sheaths. Such elevated personages were thus rendered incapable of even dressing themselves. This of course was the point – for it showed that they were above the need to use their hands for anything practical. Indeed, in China, it was long a tradition that men of august rank should become increasingly effeminate as a consequence and sign of their refinement. Even Mao, a son of peasants, cultivated this tradition.

There are countless other examples of elites becoming ever more mannered – imagine the courts of France, with their bouffant white powdered wigs, their extravagant lace cuffs, their beribboned shoes, their rouged cheeks and beauty spots. What I find interesting is that these affectations are only sustainable as long as the society that contains them is a dominant one. The moment that it ceases to be so, the once admired and copied manners become if anything an object of contempt and even mockery. The warrior who is feared can be a lover of men – the Spartans, the samurai – but once he is defeated, such habits become despised. If the Japanese had won the Second World War, perhaps their men would be less likely to wear Western suits. If China begins to dominate the 21st century, it seems to me likely that it will be their manners that the rest of the world will emulate, not those of the Americans. So it is that we have perhaps not come as far from aping the alpha male as we might like to think we have…

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a visit to London…

Friday, October 2nd, 2009

I have just returned from 8 days in London. I hung around in the British Museum and there saw an exhibition on Moctezuma. None of the really big artefacts displayed in the museum in Mexico City were there but it was still impressive enough. There is something about the Mesoamerican aesthetic that seems to me incredibly fresh – and strangely modern – almost Art Deco…

London is an intoxicating metropolis: layer upon layer, like paint thickly applied to canvas – not just of structures, but the people too – of every kind, from everywhere…

As part of my struggle to walk away from the Stone Dance, I met up with my editor, Simon, and my agent, Victoria – trying, with their help, to feel my way to new work. Although I am not ready yet to talk details, I think it likely that my next book will be a historical one… though, to echo Deng Xiaoping, a historical novel with Pintoesque characteristics… *grin*

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