Oh hai.
University has started again, I’m doing courses that I love and hence, for once, I’m actually doing all my readings and listening to all the lectures. Textbooks this semester totalled to around $400, which equates to pretty harsh rapeage of my bank account. Couldn’t buy any second hand textbooks, and believe me, I’ve searched high and low for alternate sources. :( Other than that, I have been sick, mostly resulting in coughing and the loss of my voice. I was prescribed antibiotics that absolutely crippled my abdomen on the third day. I was told during a check-up with another doctor, that all I have is a cold and that the antibiotics were unnecessarily screwing with my system. Bah. I’m on the road to recovery now.
So there we go, boring stuff. Let’s talk about something interesting.
Law of Defamation
I cannot express how much I love this area of law. It’s just so… upstanding and practical and most of all, it makes a lot of sense. All the other law subjects I’ve done always have stupid exceptions and nonsensical distinctions. The one that jumps to mind is patent law, and its crazy distinctions between novelty, innovation and invention. The whole idea of owning information, which form the very basis of intellectual property law, just gets under my skin. So as much as I loved that subject, it was mostly because of how jurisprudentially inconsistent it is, in my opinion.
But Australian defamation law… it’s straightforward and awesome. Now, it could’ve been a huge mess. Australia doesn’t have a Bill of Rights (the only developed nation to not have one, hooray for us -_-), which means we don’t have an expressed and protected freedom of speech nor a right to privacy. However, the Australian law have recognised that both are important, and tries to reflects these values. It’s especially difficult to balance a person’s right to free speech and another person’s right to not be defamed.
One way that the law have tried to juggle the two is to make it rather difficult to have someone stop someone else (usually the media) from publishing something defamatory, so that recognises the right to free speech. However, the law also acknowledges that once such defamatory information has been published, the victim has a right to pursue damages. It’s a little clumsy I guess, but it’s an admirable attempt at reconciling the two conflicting rights.
Another cool thing about defamation is that it’s a full defence if what is published, while it might ruin someone’s reputation, is true. If, for example, someone was accused of having an illicit affair and that proved to be true, that person can whinge all they like about being embarrassed and having a ruined reputation, but since that actually happened and it was merely revealed to the public, then it’s not defamation. Hooray for recognising the value of true information.
Oh and also, you can’t sue on behalf of a dead person because someone else published something unseemly about the dead person. That’s an awesomely practical law. The law could’ve gone the other way, and protect the “sacred” or “revered” or whatever “rights” of the dead, but they didn’t. They were all like, “look, reputation is what living people have, not dead people, therefore they can’t get defamed”. That doesn’t stop people from complaining when things like the Eulogy Song gets aired of course, but the law doesn’t get involved and that’s the way it should be.
Modern Art
I was at the Art Gallery of NSW with my relatives the other day and we were making our way around the exhibits. We got to the “contemporary” art section, and I found myself looking for the placards that explained each exhibit before looking at the exhibits themselves.
I don’t get modern art, especially the really abstract *coughlazycough* type. Sometimes there are good ideas behind a piece of art, but it simply doesn’t show when the piece is so damn abstract. There was one sculpture thing, constructed with little bits of useless material (e.g. bottle caps, paper clips, bits of paper) that have been spray painted with very bright, pastelly colours. They were all arranged in no particular order on a table. The placard explained that it was supposed to represent a city, of modern life, and how many things around us, while looking valuable and pretty and nice, is in essence, just rubbish. It’s a neat idea, but I wouldn’t have picked it up just by looking at the artwork. And that was one of the more explicit pieces. There were plenty of canvases with just big sploshes of colour on them.
That’s why I’d love to just collect all these placards and just read what the ideas are being projected. The actual artwork, while perhaps having quaint and interesting aesthetic value, and perhaps adds a visual representation of the idea, is secondary in my eyes.
What is entirely awesome though, are the old paintings that date back centuries. I can’t help but be entranced by the idea of being up close to artwork that someone once spend many hours on, who are now long dead, painting subjects who were also once very much alive but is now also long gone. It’s a sobering feeling. Oh that and there’s so much talent in the way the scenery, mood and characters are captured in the art. Have I mentioned that one of my favourite artists is Carravagio? Yay, dramatic shadowy paintings. :D But yeah, museums are awesome.
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