Wednesday, June 25, 2008

ARM-RAISING FEMALE BEHAVIOR BY EARTHLINGS


After genuflects of delving into the practice of “arm raising by Earthling females”, Martian Professor Tudor Revival has unearthed and collected thousands of documents which reveal the practice in all its permutations. He has recently communicated to me samples of his vast collection of “arm raising female Earthlings” after collaging them on 8-1/2 by 11 specimen paper.                    

Arm raising among Earthling females seems to have increased in scope and significance in 20th Century world culture, but we do not know whether this is because they did not develop the technology to document the practice before that time or whether it simply was not practiced before then. Martian archaeologists assume that any practice they uncover in an Earthling era must have roots in its earlier times. That is the case with most cultural practices archaeologists examine. If we find it at one time and place, we generally can expect to find it in permutations at other times and places. Cultural change functions in that manner.

We do have a single piece of evidence that nearly proves that the Earthling arm raising practice dates at least to mid-19th Century on the NATO continent. There an artist named John September Ingrate painted the piece of work below, sometimes called simply “odaliskue” and sometimes by others “risqué” in tones of opprobrium. In that painting [below] the raised arms are obvious already in practice. And one cannot escape the conclusion that the large figure on the right, in white wrappings but nearly without facade, in Dr. Revival’s specimens is copying almost identically the pose of the female earthling in the Ingrate figure.

Did the practice have religious significance? Professor Big House suggests in his paper, “The Religious Significance of Arm-raised Gestures in Late 20th Century Earth Culture” (genuflect 200,956) that indeed they were religious gestures. He points out the almost universal expressions of joy or transcendence on the malleable faces of the Earthling females in Professor Revival’s examples. However, Professor Large Rancher 2br & 1/Bath, in his paper, “Uplifting Gestures of Disgust” (genuflect 400,321) notes that the earlier figure by Ingrate doesn’t seem happy at all, and he notes the bored expression of the figure (male or female) beside the reclining female. If it were a religious posture, he reasons, the figure to the left would not be bored with what he is watching, unless, of course, the painting is a sly or ironic comment on the religion of the females. Maybe the figure on the left is the artist himself, commenting with his bored expression on the arm-raised female Earthling.

Finally, what are we to make of the dark figure in the background? That adds a very interesting ambiguity to the entire motif, religious or otherwise.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Note to Chronicler. This entity (I, me, my) is a layman entity, not a professional in any analytical capacity, yet I am compelled to comment upon Chronicler entity's (YOU/your)) theoretical interpretations of possible meaning of the "uplifted arms behavior" (UAB) among late 1st Millennial Earthling females. I am appalled! (which as you know, can devolve into a entity life continuance issue due to SSEDS *infectious silicon synapse emoto-destructo syndrome*). In your quest for behaviorial hypothesis of "uplifted arms positioning" (UAP)among the images of Earthling Females(EF) submitted by Prof. Tudor Revival, I feel you have sadly neglected myriad other avenues of potential interpretation, possibly an effect of your educational brainiactic-isolationist situation, coupled with being so focused on sociological/archaelogical research, that your entity has experienced narrowed atrophy of situation, a serious loss of objectivity, per se. You juxtaposed two widely, wildly divergent, extremely primitive, (though both are 2-dimensional) archival images for comparison and the potential for mis-interpretation is magnified to a level beyond comtemplation. A collage/montage of various photographed EF's, all seemingly standing on lower appendages, all with visual orbs opened wide, all baring ferociously white eating-breathing aperature teeth in excruiciatingly feral, carnivorous grimaces, all covered (except for various smaller appendages) in sack-like husks, all with luxuriously fine-wire string-like growths topping the brain-cases, all UAP: What has that to do, other than being a 2-dimensional artifact example, with a painting (we don't even know how or why they did this) of spots and splotches (which resemble, somewhat, a photographic image) of one EF, glowing, mostly un-covered by husks, reclining, mouth aperature closed, eyesockets closed, with two dark attendants in background, none showing teeth. large while growths on brain-cases, the one closest, holding what looks like a weapon of some sort.
Happy? Bored? The hypothesis of "emotion"(first coined by Dr. Visible-Invisible), first of all, is just a hypothesis. Martians' have no idea what "emotions" actually are or how they affected Earthlings, or their importance in Earthling society and culture, or even if they existed at all! Then, to bring religion into the mix? Why, to me, your examples better illustrate "sated" with food vs "unsated" with food, especially as the collage shows obviously thin hungry unsated EF's UAP, whilst the painting shows a sated, fat sleepy EF UAP. The EF's husk has even torn from gluttony. I believe most Earth mammals were continuously hungry with need to be sated in sundry ways, with food, sex, entertainment, etc. Possibly, the on-looking attendants appear static, or "bored", as they have just finished feeding the EF, and are now guarding her in her sated state. Maybe UAP was an Earthling natural position while in food consumption mode: before, during and after.

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