Stowaway

on 1 November 2007 at about 1:43

Ownership of Ideas: Part 1: The Romantic Author

Cross-posted to CEMP

This lecture takes a historical view of laws relating to copyright, and locates it in differing approaches to creativity; it examines the extent to which copyright protects, as its proponents claim, the livelihood of authors and creators, and the extent to which copyright damages, as its detractors claim, the fertility of the public domain. It takes a detour into the modern ages of man, and looks at Enlightenment, Romanticism, Modernity and postmodernism. It also examines some poetry as primary evidence, alongside more vernacular forms of cultural production, on the basis that poetry might help us to illuminate the extremes of human creativity, in order to look again at the more demotic (commonplace) things we encounter.

This lecture is split into three parts: PART 1: The Romantic Author; PART 2: The History of Copyright; and PART 3: The Contemporary Author. By the way, this lecture is best consumed while listening to The Kleptones, Dean Gray or Bootie.

PART 1: The Romantic Author

The author

God

We begin by looking back to the 19th century. In 1816, Samuel Taylor Coleridge wrote his poem Kubla Khan after consuming some opium. Coleridge famously stated that he fell asleep after medicating himself with an 'anodyne', while reading the following sentence from Purchas's Pilgrimage:

"Here the Khan Kubla commanded a palace to be built, and a stately garden thereunto. And thus ten miles of fertile ground were inclosed with a wall."

Upon waking, he says, he immediately wrote down the poem, but was disturbed by "a person on business from Porlock", and "to his no small surprise and mortification", found on returning to the poem that the vision had departed. Thus Kubla Khan is the fragment that remains.

In Xanadu did Kubla Khan
A stately pleasure-dome decree :
Where Alph, the sacred river, ran
Through caverns measureless to man
Down to a sunless sea.
So twice five miles of fertile ground
With walls and towers were girdled round :
And there were gardens bright with sinuous rills,
Where blossomed many an incense-bearing tree ;
And here were forests ancient as the hills,
Enfolding sunny spots of greenery.
But oh ! that deep romantic chasm which slanted
Down the green hill athwart a cedarn cover !
A savage place ! as holy and enchanted
As e'er beneath a waning moon was haunted
By woman wailing for her demon-lover !
And from this chasm, with ceaseless turmoil seething,
As if this earth in fast thick pants were breathing,
A mighty fountain momently was forced :
Amid whose swift half-intermitted burst
Huge fragments vaulted like rebounding hail,
Or chaffy grain beneath the thresher's flail :
And 'mid these dancing rocks at once and ever
It flung up momently the sacred river.
Five miles meandering with a mazy motion
Through wood and dale the sacred river ran,
Then reached the caverns measureless to man,
And sank in tumult to a lifeless ocean :
And 'mid this tumult Kubla heard from far
Ancestral voices prophesying war !

The shadow of the dome of pleasure
Floated midway on the waves ;
Where was heard the mingled measure
From the fountain and the caves.
It was a miracle of rare device,
A sunny pleasure-dome with caves of ice !
A damsel with a dulcimer
In a vision once I saw :
It was an Abyssinian maid,
And on her dulcimer she played,
Singing of Mount Abora.
Could I revive within me
Her symphony and song,
To such a deep delight 'twould win me,
That with music loud and long,
I would build that dome in air,
That sunny dome ! those caves of ice !
And all who heard should see them there,
And all should cry, Beware ! Beware !
His flashing eyes, his floating hair !
Weave a circle round him thrice,
And close your eyes with holy dread,
For he on honey-dew hath fed,
And drunk the milk of Paradise.

Creative Genius

Coleridge's poem is often interpreted by scholars of literature and the Romantic era as an analogy of the creative process; a 'deep romantic chasm', which is savage and wild, and which may represent the human psyche or subconscious, at times thrusts up a fountain into the overland wood and dale of our consciousness. The fountain forms a river which is sacred - the precious outpourings of the creator - before it plunges once more into caverns measureless to man, and the magical access to that hot creative process is gone as quickly as it came.

This Romantic (note the capital R) vision of creativity is a notion that remains with us today. The creative act is a mystical, ungovernable ability - the gift of the creative few who are better able than most of the rest of us lesser mortals, to access that resource from which creativity is borne - the human subconscious, formed as it is from the sacred river 'Alph' - a cipher for the beginning, the alpha, the original - the source.

And of course, if we accept that only a few of us are gifted enough to access the wild and savage human psyche, the numinous and the mystical, and 'momently' force it into consciousness and create beautiful 'sacred' things with it, then those lucky few ought really to be protected by copyright law and adequately compensated.

What is Romanticism?

So we've said that Coleridge's poem expresses a Romantic view of creativity, but what do we mean by Romantic? The Romantic period refers to the 19th century and its tempestuous outpourings in literature and the arts. It is the period of poets like Wordsworth, Shelley, Keats and Coleridge, who placed man in a landscape of spiritual intent. It is the era of the pre-Raphaelites, who painted unapproachable ideals of beauty and innocence. It is the era of a Victorian return to morality and Christian values in the shape of poets like Chistina Rossetti (the pre-Raphealite Dante Gabriel's sister) whose poetry captured the stifled suppression of sensuality, but also the wayward 'new-morality' of William Blake and his naturism and visions of worlds beyond the senses. It is the era of Beethoven and Brahms, and their swelling and tumultuous innovation in bending the rules of composition, and their blasting of polite, courtly music right out of the water. It is also the era of the Gothic in literature - of Emily Bronte's Heathcliffe and Catherine in Wuthering Heights, Bram Stoker's Dracula, and Mary Shelley's Frankenstein. It is, in many ways, the age of the genius, the magical, the era of awe and the 'awful' in the original sense of the word, where one is 'in awe'.



W.B. Yeats, often thought of as one of those seminal poets who straddle ages (in his case, Romanticism and modernism), and whose poetry therefore gives great insight into the shifting ground beneath society and its culture's feet, wrote to his friend in 1892, that -

"I have always considered myself a voice of what I believe to be a greater renaissance - the revolt of the soul against the intellect - now beginning in the world".

Sadly for Yeats, he was always looking idealistically at things fading, and thinking of things very old as very new, so his prognostication was a good 90 years late. Only when he looked ahead at the looming of the 20th century and the death of his ideals did he really hit upon the heart of the matter, in poems such as 'Sailing to Byzantium' and 'The Second Coming' in which the second coming brings not a new Jerusalem, but apocalypse. The two great wars of the 20th century are as close to apocalypse as you might care to get, and his refrain that 'the centre cannot hold' has been taken up by many late modern (and postmodern) thinkers to characterise the babel of contemporary humanity.

However, his point still holds good for Romanticism. Whence, then, this revolt against the intellect? In what ways did Romanticism revolt against reason?

What is Enlightenment?

This is the name of a famous piece written by Michel Foucault, in response to Emmanuel Kant's piece, also by the same name. However, the substance of their pieces is not of concern here - indeed if you read either Foucault's reflexive meanderings or Kant's metaphysical musings, you'll probably end up thinking: "no, but really, what is it?"



When we speak of the Enlightenment we tend to mean a period roughly spanning the 18th century, in which we might argue the birth of 'science' as we know it took place. As clever men (and it was men) peeped out from the receding gowns of the clergy and the Church, they started to attempt to analyse the world from 'first principles' - from the evidence of their senses. Instead of accepting that the world was made by God, they were curious enough to reject 'argument from authority' and to attempt to understand the world using reason.

Indeed the century preceding the Enlightenment (C17th) is often known as the Age of Reason precisely because, following the Renaissance (rebirth or rediscovery), in which western Europe emerged from the Dark ages by rediscovering the (literally) monumental achievements of the ancient Roman and Greek civilisations, scholars began to attempt to piece together the world that was forming in the shape of the rise of the nation state, the emerging body of knowledge made possible by the printing press, and the increasing prominence that 'ration' seemed to have in the destiny of man. All these things began to militate against the authority of the Church, God's institution on earth.

So we might say that the Enlightenment was a fruition of the rise of reason and rationality, of investigating the world as evidence. Institutions such as the British Museum were formed in this period as explorers 'civilised' savage countries, and brought home their antiquities and plunder. The American Constitution was written at the end of what we call the Enlightenment, and the writers of that constitution, the Founding Fathers, were keen to base their dream of a modern, democratic, egalitarian nation on the Enlightenment principles of equality, fairness and reason, which were quite vehemently in opposition to previously traditional, even feudal, ways of seeing the world as framed by the absolute power of God, the absolute power of the Monarch (God's representative on earth) or the absolute power of the Church, which held the keys to eternal damnation, and thereby maintained a tight grip on permissable behaviour.

Romanticism vs Enlightenment

So, since the Romantic era follows the Enlightenment, it might make sense to think of it as a reaction and revolt against the rise of rationality and reason. The Romantic poets were deeply interested in the idea of pantheism - an adaptation of religiosity which saw God as the breathe of life in the world, the player of the 'The Aeolian Harp' of both mankind and his natural world. Mary Shelley's Frankenstein is often interpreted as a fore-warning of the arrogance of the rational man who takes it upon himself to play God by harnessing the forces of life itself. Yeats later on became interested in mysticism and automatic writing (where one writes without conscious thought in order to become a medium for the numinous forces at work in the unseen world around us). Keats the poet was even very explicit about it by speaking of the 'unweaving of the rainbow' in his long poem, Lamia, which base fellows like Newton were attempting by splitting light into its components hues:

Do not all charms fly
At the mere touch of cold philosophy?
There was an awful rainbow once in heaven:
We know her woof, her texture; she is given
In the dull catalogue of common things.
Philosophy will clip an Angel's wings,
Conquer all mysteries by rule and line,
Empty the haunted air, and gnomed mine-
Unweave a rainbow...

It's worth noting that this common interpretation of Keats's 'unweaving the rainbow' is disputed.

Unweaving the Rainbow

Richard Dawkins in his book of 1998 later took up this phrase as his motif in arguing that science, far from wrecking our aesthetic appreciation and ability to have 'awe', actually inspires yet further awe as the terrible complexity and mind-exploding enormity of the universe and life within it emerge from the laws of physics - all the more awe-inspiring precisely because we need not look to some mischevious God to explain it all, and thereby belittle the infinitely aesthetically pleasing world around us which somehow managed to create itself from a primeval soup of crap...

However, that Dawkins felt impelled as late as 1998 to pick up the cudgels and defend the beauty of science tells us something important about the simplistic story of the 'ages of modern man' that we've seen so far.

The weaved, linear, rainbow of the modern ages of man

It is very easy to say that the Age of Reason and its child, the Enlightenment, are a reaction against the absolute authority of the Church, as though the 17th & 18th centuries were an antithesis to the Dark Ages; it is easy to say that the Romantic era was a reaction against the Enlightenment, as though everyone in the 19th century was fainting and waiting to be possessed by the spiritus mundi; it is easy to say that modernity is a reaction against Romanticism, in which everyone wanted to turn the world into a machine, and that the human self achieved its apotheosis in antithesis to its subjection to the forces of spiritualism and the occult; and that, finally, postmodernity is a reaction against modernism, in that we no longer want to mechanise the world, have given up on the dream of progress, and are happy merely to consume, rather than conquer.

It is, indeed, far too easy to think that each age is a (Newtonian) equal and opposite reaction against the former. Indeed, it is (to digress totally) a classically structuralist idea to think of the modern ages as such antithetical reactions. It makes much more sense (and is a usefully postmodern thing to do) to think of all these movements (Enlightenment, Romanticism, modernism) as movements in the last half of the last millennium which stay with us today.

Postmodernity is an unravelling and reravelling rainbow


Here's an important idea: the definition of 'ages' - such as the Enlightenment, the Romantic era, 'modernity' - are recent and retrospective classifications which people in the 20th century used to describe a history of contemporary society. Postmodernism is the recognition that, far from these movements swinging backwards and forwards like a pendulum over the people of the past, actually, we might think of them as currents in cultural thought that all remain with us today.

Hence it is that we can see that our ideas of creativity are still close to the Romantic notion - and that much of our popular culture is dominated with deeply Gothic trends such as the stream of horror movies in the cinema, the perennial remakes of Frankenstein, the presence of the emo-kid.

And hence, too, we see the influence of the Enlightenment today, the technocratic belief in science from some quarters, and the (Romantic) anti-GM movement in others. Hence, also, the continuing ('modernistic') mechanisation of all sorts of cultural processes such as media-making, war-mongering and urban-planning.

The Age of Reason, the Romanticism of the Gothic, the modernity of technocratisation are all still present and active in postmodernity. Not so much 'anything goes' as 'everything goes'.

Erm, where are we going with this?

And, to finally return to the point, our Romantic ideas of what creativity and authorship are, are still used today by industries who defend copyright law as the justification for their maintenance and furtherance. In a contemporary society in which awe for genius does not pay for a starving artist's food, the stalwart reliability of copyright law will protect the author's freedom to pursue their gift.

The author, that rare and ideally gifted individual who is more creative than the rest of us, is protected by copyright law from merciless exploitation, and it is the role of industries such as the RIAA, the MPAA and the Author's Guild, to ensure that those authors' income is ensured.

Remember: God = maker = creator = author = authority

In part two...

In part two of this lecture, we'll look at the history of copyright laws, and see if they measure up to this Romantic defence.

Archive

  • Gaps in the digital fossil record (5 August 2015)
  • 'feedparser.py', Kurt McKee & Mark Pilgrim (11 May 2013)
  • 'Better Stakeholder Interviews', Chris Cashdollar, Happy Cog (10 May 2013)
  • Wordpress, menus and Suhosin (28 June 2011)
  • More on storing directions for google maps (9 May 2011)
  • Profile (7 May 2011)
  • GMaps and storing directions (6 May 2011)
  • gibbetware (14 July 2010)
  • fibbitware (13 July 2010)
  • Production - [Critical Media Concepts and Contexts] (28 November 2009)
  • some notes on sound (24 August 2009)
  • Hauntology: Intellectual development #1 (16 June 2009)
  • hauntology (19 May 2009)
  • Narratives: Performers and Players (29 January 2009)
  • Intro to Media and Participation 2008 - 2009 (3 December 2008)
  • On Atavism and Enlightenment (10 November 2008)
  • land's end closed bridge danger - [Flickr:Places-And-Non-Places] (11 September 2008)
  • Homo Googlens (11 September 2008)
  • land's end vacant picnic tables - [Flickr:Places-And-Non-Places] (11 September 2008)
  • land's end facade - [Flickr:Places-And-Non-Places] (9 September 2008)
  • land's end private welcome - [Flickr:Places-And-Non-Places] (9 September 2008)
  • beach at night - [Flickr:Places-And-Non-Places] (24 July 2008)
  • Pixel Pier (30 May 2008)
  • housman (30 May 2008)
  • Pixel Pier: BAIMP Grad Show 08 (26 May 2008)
  • Arcade - [Flickr:Places-And-Non-Places] (20 May 2008)
  • Atrium - [Flickr:Places-And-Non-Places] (18 May 2008)
  • Seats - [Flickr:Places-And-Non-Places] (18 May 2008)
  • Places and non-places (15 May 2008)
  • Pythonesque (5 May 2008)
  • Open Flash (30 April 2008)
  • Facebook Facework (27 April 2008)
  • Pixelate the world (23 April 2008)
  • Phenomenology, positivism, and prozac (19 March 2008)
  • Hello world, my imagination (15 March 2008)
  • Community of Scholarly Practice (14 March 2008)
  • Inflexible structures (29 February 2008)
  • Flexible structures (28 February 2008)
  • Foucauldian Confession (20 February 2008)
  • The Writerly Text: Part 1 (1 February 2008)
  • Media & Participation: Truth (23 January 2008)
  • Media & Participation: Citizenship (8 January 2008)
  • Media & Participation: Culture (5 December 2007)
  • Musings on Plagiarism (6 November 2007)
  • Ownership of Ideas: Part 2: The History of Copyright (2 November 2007)
  • Ownership of Ideas: Part 1: The Romantic Author (1 November 2007)
  • Emancipatory Power of Online Spaces (20 October 2007)
  • Bournemouth Soundseeing: collaborative authorship (17 October 2007)
  • Key concepts: Ideologies ...a historical view (14 October 2007)
  • Marx's Critique of Capital: 101 (14 October 2007)
  • Splat Pedagogy (12 July 2007)
  • New Blood awards for Media School finalists (29 June 2007)
  • iheartplay: BAIMP Grad Show (6 June 2007)
  • BBC still innovative, says Highfield (16 May 2007)
  • Transmediale.07, Berlin (6 February 2007)
  • Vive la revolution! (30 January 2007)
  • Vive la Revolution (30 January 2007)
  • Biblipedia beta site (27 January 2007)
  • Fornicate with your actual genitals (27 January 2007)
  • Fornicate with your actual genitals (23 January 2007)
  • Awesome 2007 (16 January 2007)
  • Awesome 2007 (16 January 2007)
  • The Paedo-net (11 December 2006)
  • unprofessional and without redress (4 December 2006)
  • unprofessional and without redress (4 December 2006)
  • Smartlynchmobs (27 November 2006)
  • Smartlynchmobs (27 November 2006)
  • This blog will fuel a crisis in politics (20 November 2006)
  • I am in ur website, writin ur nooz (13 November 2006)
  • I am in ur website, writin ur nooz (13 November 2006)
  • myNews (30 October 2006)
  • newsTube (22 October 2006)
  • GooNews (15 October 2006)
  • GooNews (15 October 2006)
  • Satan (Democrat - Florida) (9 October 2006)
  • The CEMPle News Project (8 October 2006)
  • newsPod (2 October 2006)
  • newsPod (1 October 2006)
  • The experimental wing of political philosophy (19 May 2006)
  • Hobbes and Rousseau and Digital Media (19 May 2006)
  • We Media and the great blogging hoax (3 May 2006)
  • Don Chihuahua (30 April 2006)
  • No Fact Zone (30 April 2006)
  • Beeb and us (25 April 2006)
  • My Virtual Money (25 April 2006)
  • SOA (6 April 2006)
  • postel's law and nicotine (30 March 2006)
  • This week: Retro Contrafabulation (26 March 2006)
  • Biblipedia consultation (22 March 2006)
  • This week: The Machine Gun of Reasoned Discussion (18 March 2006)
  • This week: Noah, the Logo Weenie (3 March 2006)
  • stowaway music update (27 February 2006)
  • This week: newsr (24 February 2006)
  • This week: There's More Than One Way to Eat a News (17 February 2006)
  • Web 2.0 is the new Marxism (16 February 2006)
  • Biblipedia Vision and Scope document (12 February 2006)
  • macs, samba and XP (11 February 2006)
  • This week: reintermediate leading-edge eyeballs (10 February 2006)
  • Blog aggregator (10 February 2006)
  • Biblipedia scope (8 February 2006)
  • This week: newsCoat (3 February 2006)
  • This week: xoxbox (27 January 2006)
  • User-contributed content and quality (23 January 2006)
  • Folksonomies and collaborative organisation (23 January 2006)
  • Annotatable Audio (23 January 2006)
  • SCORM (17 December 2005)
  • Edition disambiguation (17 December 2005)
  • Plagiarism issues (17 December 2005)
  • MAG Consultation (17 December 2005)
  • COPAC (17 December 2005)
  • CathBond.com design (12 December 2005)
  • Biblipedia Protoype (10 December 2005)
  • Bibliographical data integration (4 December 2005)
  • Biblipedia project updates (4 December 2005)
  • Narrative and Structuralism and the brothers Grimm (27 November 2005)
  • Social bibliography tool (27 November 2005)
  • Biblipedia (19 November 2005)
  • Welcome (18 November 2005)
  • 3D Solar System - part III (7 October 2005)
  • Cath Bond dot com (16 September 2005)
  • Menticulture (30 May 2005)
  • Intro to Digital Media at BU (19 April 2005)
  • okay, so no post for 3 years (5 April 2005)
  • New Documentary Media (27 October 2004)
  • LCF Multimedia Option Exhibition 04 (28 June 2004)
  • Room (4 August 2003)
  • 3D Solar System - part II (8 July 2003)
  • LCF Multimedia Option Exhibition 03 (19 June 2003)
  • Total Theatre Workshop Company (24 May 2003)
  • The Keyboard and The Mouse (21 April 2003)
  • Reverberate (15 April 2003)
  • Horse (21 December 2002)
  • Dancing Joe (11 October 2002)
  • The Buroughs cut technique (11 October 2002)
  • Nature Girl (5 September 2002)
  • Villainess (11 August 2002)
  • LCF Multimedia Option Exhibition 02 (27 June 2002)
  • Cleggan Bay (13 June 2002)
  • Hierarchical Menu (2 June 2002)
  • threeDworld (25 May 2002)
  • Jack and the Polar Bear (22 May 2002)
  • Lough Corrib (17 May 2002)
  • This whole website is superb, as is the article ... (30 April 2002)
  • Another prolonged absence, I'm afraid (28 April 2002)
  • Sunset (9 April 2002)
  • Tapioca Balls (8 March 2002)
  • Dunguire Boat (6 March 2002)
  • bet you didn't know that road signs are also ... (20 February 2002)
  • 3D Solar System (9 February 2002)
  • Songs For Andrew (30 December 2001)
  • Dreamweaver Tutorial (8 October 2001)
  • PUSH (22 September 2001)
  • Why blog the events unfolding in America myself ... (13 September 2001)
  • LCF IT Dept Website (9 September 2001)
  • Well thanks to the pages of The Guardian's ... (29 August 2001)
  • Very pretty pictures of space ;) (15 August 2001)
  • Very cool stuff from FFF (8 August 2001)
  • I have to say I thoroughly approve of this ;) (7 August 2001)
  • "I made you some coffee" (26 July 2001)
  • LCP - Intro to web design (10 July 2001)
  • This has got to be one of the most wonderful ... (5 July 2001)
  • What more can you ask for than a site which links ... (4 July 2001)
  • Well, now I've become a late Flash convert (23 June 2001)
  • LCF Multimedia Option Exhibition (15 June 2001)
  • Sourced from the pages of the somewhat poncey web ... (13 June 2001)
  • Fucking superb (16 May 2001)
  • Okay the fight link listed below has disappeared ... (2 May 2001)
  • Okay (30 April 2001)
  • Sites like this almost make you want to pack up ... (15 April 2001)
  • Most amusing from the halfbakery (5 April 2001)
  • This is another cute site (16 March 2001)
  • I've no idea why, but I guess it's time to ... (16 March 2001)
  • Absolutelely fascinating article by Jon Ronson ... (10 March 2001)
  • Very, very groovy site playing with Shockwave toys (16 February 2001)
  • From Gilbert and George's site (16 February 2001)
  • Well hello February (16 February 2001)
  • This is a cute site with early photos capturing ... (8 February 2001)
  • Okay (5 January 2001)
  • Mmmm (14 December 2000)
  • "This is ridiculous" ... (14 December 2000)
  • Okay, suffice to say I bottled my prank at the end ... (11 December 2000)
  • Incidentally, this is the unspeakably shite ... (10 December 2000)
  • Ahh, Sunday afternoons (10 December 2000)
  • The new release of Netscape 6 is so much better ... (7 December 2000)
  • new life on Mars ... (7 December 2000)
  • Time for some geek links (7 December 2000)
  • Now this is a stowaway kind of site (30 November 2000)
  • This is where I work (30 November 2000)
  • EEEuuuuwwwrrrgggghhh (29 November 2000)
  • My absence has been due to my uncle Fred dying (28 November 2000)
  • Actually, the tribune page below is only cool in ... (28 November 2000)
  • Okay I have to agree with tom@plasticbag (23 November 2000)
  • An old joke but a good one, Ben (22 November 2000)
  • hey its turning into a good day for homepages (20 November 2000)
  • Absolutely superb website (20 November 2000)
  • And while I'm on it, wasn't 4AD the best ... (19 November 2000)
  • Recently rediscovered Throwing Muses after leaving ... (19 November 2000)
  • Went to see Simon Russell Beale in Hamlet at the ... (19 November 2000)
  • Many thanks to Peter who brought Untitled Document ... (17 November 2000)
  • It's been a good 24 hours for amazing natural ... (16 November 2000)
  • Oh God I'm disappearing under a mountain of ... (14 November 2000)
  • Now, I'm not a war kind of person (11 November 2000)
  • Laugh? I nearly lost it at a site I found while ... (10 November 2000)
  • Good grief ... (10 November 2000)
  • it has to be /usr/bin/girl that gets the ... (4 November 2000)
  • ok, so now i've got the damn thing running (4 November 2000)
  • So, if you're wondering how (31 October 2000)
  • Huzzah!! The next / previous tags are working!!! (31 October 2000)
  • Oh, and if you're still looking at ~/index (27 October 2000)
  • Okay, so this is number 13, and we're only ... (27 October 2000)
  • ummm (27 October 2000)
  • Now, this is number eleven (23 October 2000)
  • Okay, this is entry 10 (23 October 2000)
  • etc (23 October 2000)
  • This, of course, will be entry number 5 (23 October 2000)
  • This is entry four in the stowaway blog database (23 October 2000)
  • This is entry three in the stowaway blog database (13 October 2000)
  • This is entry two in the stowaway blog database (13 October 2000)
  • This is entry one in the stowaway blog database (13 October 2000)
  • Small Print

    Joe Flintham 2000 - 2015

    Long form: Menticulture

    Professional Services: Fathom Point