Welcome!
Jemima
John van der Put said something similar in my interview with him (click on the link to read it). It's interesting what people consider to be magic and what they take for granted. Automatic doors, mobile phones and palm-top computers are (at least, in our culture) accepted as standard. Occasionally, we may say, "It's clever what they can do these days, isn't it?" but it doesn't feel like magic. And yet, as John says, when he takes a signed four of diamonds out of his wallet, everyone goes wild because it's 'impossible'.
One man's instrument of magic is another man's everyday gadget - but what makes it amazing is not just not knowing how it's done (how does a mobile phone work?) but unfamiliarity with the whole concept. My cousin's wife, Cassie, wrote a fascinating book about the Congo, where they lived and worked for a few years, before moving to Bangladesh. (My cousin, Mark Dummett, is a BBC journalist and I've put a link to his website in the Links section.) Cassie's book is called Brazzaville Charms: Magic and Rebellion in the Republic of Congo and it describes several instances where things happen - and people die - for reasons that make no sense to a Western mind.
So there we are. A few thoughts for the first day. What do you think?
Labels: family, john van der put, real magic
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