Thursday 9 April 2015

The Vintage Hunt



Any new addition to a wardrobe is cause for celebration, but for some the prospect of a non- new item can cause an even bigger shopping high. No one can adequately put their finger on what makes vintage or second-hand clothing so dang appealing but appealing it most definitely is. Perhaps it’s the desperate desire to have an out-there original piece or the triumphant feeling of the hunt as you grasp in your clutches the only item in the charity shop that isn’t four sizes too big. If the faint smell of grannies and moth balls isn't too overpowering for your taste or a recent trip into Topshop made you want to weep at the state of your expenses then maybe you too should try the pre-owned love hype! Before one goes into battle, however, there are a few important hints and tips any second-hand soldier should know.
Shot taken from a recent Lou Lou's Vintage Fare I attended in Swansea 
Know the difference between second-hand and vintage. Yes, there is a difference and yes, they are often confused for one another. To put it simply, second hand is pre-owned and no longer wanted, often cheap and cheerful, think charity shop and normal Ebay auctions; Vintage is from a specific era and so reflects it, also reflected in its price (££££££), often rare. If it’s genuine vintage you aspire to then try to keep to classic pieces such as a black 60’s shift dress or perhaps a timeless 50’s prom dress to keep the cost minimal. If second hand is more your cup of tea then the world is your oyster!
Plenty of places in Swansea cater for the second-hand and vintage inclined. Talking to some of my friend’s on the subject, Gemma says, “charity shops are the best because if you search for vintage online it’s usually just a copycat style and it’s so much more expensive”, she also personally recommends the British Heart Foundation. Also look out for pop-up vintage stalls that are becoming more and more popular.  Poppy also suggests, “Hobo’s, near Wetherspoon’s in town. It’s my favourite place in the city center, they do vintage esque-novelty things too and things for the home as well as clothes!” With a whole selection of vintage Levi denim jackets it’s certainly worth a visit.
Traipsing round charity shops can, however, have a horrible habit of being fruitless, with nothing to show from your efforts than blisters and a tension headache. That’s why your best second hand resource, and in life in general, is the internet. Imagine the scene – you walk into a Shop and see the most beautiful *insert your clothing of choice* ever but with a hefty price tag, is an infeasible dream. What do you do? Walk away? Abandon it? NEVER!! Try searching the realms of Ebay and other clothe selling platforms online. For instance the app industry has developed some amazing platforms for selling and buying clothes. Try Depop and Vinted, you can be amazed with what you could find! Someone else’s trash is another’s treasure. Wait long enough and SOMEONE, SOMEWHERE will be selling the item you wanted in your size, often at a starting bid of 99p. Trust me it’s worth the wait.


Now you’re equipped with a few hints and tips that should allow you to go into battle with the endless rails of rubbish to find that shining beacon of light, a.k.a something pretty and unique, that can’t be find on the high street. 

Sunday 11 January 2015

Harry Potter and the Bible by Richard Abanes Review



Plot Description: Is the Harry Potter series a dangerous influence on children? Does its anti-Christian values make it an inappropriate influence?




When I uploaded a picture of this on my Instagram account I got a lot of messages along the line of, “oh my god, cooooool!!” “Where’d you get this from?!” “F4F?” and “Send me nudes”. The latter two are, admittedly were just Instagram spam, but the amount of interest of what is basically literacy theory surprised me. The appeal perhaps proves the first point Richard Abanes makes, Harry Potter is one of the most, if not THE most popular book series ever written, and if it has Harry’s name on it, people are likely to be interested. This is, however, where mine and Mr. Abanes occurring views end.

Abanes states the argument of the book clearly on the front cover:

Harry Potter: Harmless Fantasy or Dangerous Fascination?

How many of you will be staring at your computer screens perplexed at this question? Harry Potters just a nice story about an orphaned wizard, right?! There’s nothing harmful in the plot that makes J.K. Rowling’s series inappropriate to children, Christian or not? Well just to cut a long story short you’re right. I’ll briefly sum up the main points of Abanes argument:

  1.     Rowling’s representation of Magic is too close to the occult form of Magick denounces by the Bible, making it inappropriate of children.


Abanes states examples of how Rowling takes real figures and references of the occult world and intertwines them with her fictional world. Mythological, astrological, even the Arthurian legend and how they are used to gently and skillfully introduce the occult world in an appealing form to children. The occult, if you’re wondering is essentially ANY form of thinking or reasoning as to what or how we are here, that does not conform to Christian beliefs and the Bible. For example, the use of the feline in the series (Mrs Norris, Crookshanks, Professor McGonagall’s animagus) is used in clear reference to Wicca. And what we would think of as clever intertextuality of Harry’s books for class authored by Wicca figures and the reference to Nicholas Flamel is denounced as Rowling subtly trying to link the real to fiction to influence the reader.

      2) Ron, Hermione and Harry, in particular, portray behaviours and attitude             that make them dangerous heroes for young children.

*eye roll*

Sorry I couldn’t help it.

Abanes cites numerous examples of Harry and Ron sneaking out of their dorm, trespassing, lack of respect for adults, drinking, cursing and a general lack of Christian values. The faults to this argument are laughable.

·        As Rowling CONSTANTLY AND REPEATEDLY tells us: not all bad people are completely bad, and not all good people are completely good, this I believe is a very good lesson for children to learn. Harry, Ron and Hermione are Gryffindor’s. This means they are brave, courageous and loyal. However, they can also be pig-headed, stubborn and too fast to rush into things without thinking. If Rowling presented us with a 2 dimensional representation of a person with solely good values, not only would this be an inaccurate portrayal of human behavior, it would also be plain boring!

·        Harry Potter is a teenage boy. He’s going to be full of angst. He’s going to do things he’ll regret. If you try and deny that this will happen to your child and shield them from the world, that’ll blow up in your face. Big time.

·        Harry apparently shows bulling tendencies. For example, as Abanes cites, Harry and Ron’s attitude to Hermione and Neville in the Philosophers Stone.

“Hermione succumbs to peer pressure after overhearing Ron and Harry say she is disliked at the school. Hermione endears herself to them by telling a “downright lie” to a teacher in order to cover up for the boys… This morally troubling scene concludes with Hermione and the boys becoming friends” (p36)

This scene is in no way put into context. Harry and Ron on hearing there’s a “TRRRROLLLLLL!!!! TROOOLLLLL IN THE DUNGEON!!!!!!!!!!!!!!” rush to try and warn Hermione as they are both extremely worried for her safety. Then on finding her in mortal danger save her life! If Hermione were to turn them into the teacher then she’d be a downright dislikable person. Perhaps, Rowling intention then, was to teach children a lesson about abandoning childhood self-centeredness in order to make friends. And as for Neville, yes Hermione curses him when he attempts to stand up to them leaving the dorm. Rowling however, more than makes up for this by making Neville the hero at the end of her book with Neville being the reason Gryffindor win the house cup, teaching children, that it is worth standing up to people.

                  3 )Due to the fact that Rowling places her fiction novel in the world of reality           (e.g. Kings Cross Station, locations in Surrey ect.) children will be unable           to distinguish what is fiction and what is reality.

If this is a genuine concern of parents then there’s no more hope for mankind. Let’s all just burn every fantasy and fiction book ever written. We wouldn’t want children thinking then short people are hobbits, would we?

 People really don’t give children enough credit, they’re capable of understanding and grasping maturer content that you’d think. Harry Potter is, after-all, a story about friendship and love; magic is a mere narrative backdrop. If children were to grow up with no fantasy, imagination or magic (see what I did there) it wouldn’t be much of a childhood at all.

I did, in a way enjoy this book. It made me slightly angry and annoyed, but being British I gain pleasure from this. I also enjoy reading literary theory, and Harry Potter being my favourite book series it was nice to read a critical theory on it. This is however, where my enjoyment ended. The examples cited were random at best and used only to fit his argument. The argument itself is EXTREMELY weak, and despite not being a Christian myself, I’m sure they too would find this reading hard going and disagreeable (Abanes himself uses multiple quotes from influential people in the Christian world who have only praise for Rowling’s series).

Of course make your own mind up whether you agree with the argument, after all what do I know? It’s interesting, none-the-less, to know other people’s opinions and thoughts. It’s like soup of the mind to read arguments that oppose our own!

Leave comment letting me know what you think!

Lots of Love,
Rhian
Xoxo

Richard Abanes, Harry Potter and the Bible: The Menace behind the Magick, Christian Publications, Inc, Horizon Books [2001]