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Mutiny! Why We Love Pirates, And How They Can Save Us
 
 

Mutiny! Why We Love Pirates, And How They Can Save Us [Kindle Edition]

Kester Brewin
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

Kindle Price: £4.99 includes VAT* & free wireless delivery via Amazon Whispernet
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Product Description

Product Description

What is it with pirates?

From Somali fishermen to DVD hawkers to childrens parties, pirates surround us and their ‘Jolly Roger’ motif can be found on everything from skateboards to baby-grows. Yet the original pirates were mutineers, rebelling against the brutal and violent oppression of the princes and merchants who enslaved them.

How has their fight become ours?

In this highly original and ground-breaking book, Kester Brewin fuses history, philosophy and sociology to explore the place of piracy in history and culture, and, calling on Blackbeard, Luke Skywalker, Peter Pan and Odysseus, chases pirates through literature and film into the deepest realms of personal development, art, economics and belief.

Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 787 KB
  • Print Length: 165 pages
  • Simultaneous Device Usage: Unlimited
  • Publisher: Vaux; Second e-Edition edition (8 Jun 2012)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B008A5FVMY
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • X-Ray: Not Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #144,783 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Buried Treasure 23 July 2012
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We has some friends round for supper the other night and the topic turned around, as it so often does to what we're reading. Various people proffered titles known and unknown - a Fifty Shades here, a biography there, some theology, some current affairs. What could I say about the book that has gripped me for the past few weeks? Well its a book about history - not quite although there is some history in it, OK its a book about economics and the emergence of forms at the stretching point of capitalism and the enclosure of various commons - yeesss, but its not an economics text either, its a book of theology, of philosophy, of cultural analysis - maybe but not really. So what is it? It's a book about Pirates!

In this third book Kester brilliantly riffs and mashes across the literary genres, like some anarchic librarian - trying to see what Peter Pan, Star Wars, The Odyssey and the parable of the Prodigal Son look like on the same shelf. The answer is profound and one that, as soon as you have read it you want to go back to the beginning to make all the links that were present in the text but absent from the naive first pass. The second reading is like going back to the desert island with a map, albeit a tatty map composed by a rum sozzled liar.

I hestitate so say what the book is "about", other than its about Pirates. One could say its about freedom, about the law, about death, about life, its about me and its about you.

One final nugget of buried treasure - the piratical reading of the parable of the prodigal son - is absolute dynamite (or at least gunpowder) - I was amazed to see such a fresh reading of such a familiar text.

Buy it. Read it, Rip it. Share it.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Another great offering from Brewin 27 Jun 2012
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Whilst I'm not particularly taken with the strap line, I really enjoyed the book. Kester Brewin draws on wide ranging sources to put this prescient book together. With the recent global Occupy movement and myriad Springs as well as a worrying Copyright culture getting out of control, this little treatise points in different directions without advocating outright anarchy. It asks us to think about our interaction with oppressive systems, our family connections, and does so from the perspective of sociology, psychology and theology. Who'd have thought that 'Pirates' would function as such a good example or springboard into reflecting on our own behaviour in today's world? Anyway, off to pour another rum and coke...
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Amazon.com: 4.0 out of 5 stars  2 reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Do We Really Need Pirates? 4 Oct 2012
By Kevin E. Ruffcorn - Published on Amazon.com
Mutiny: Why We Like Pirates, by Kester Brewin

I've been given a rare opportunity to review some very thought provoking books and write about them in my blog. This is a rare opportunity, not only because I am able to read some of the latest books in the area of Christianity, religion, and society, but I am also challenged to question some of my unquestioned assumptions and to sharpen my critical thinking abilities.

The latest book that I have read is Mutiny: Why We Like Piraes, by Kester Brewin. Brewin poses an interesting question, "In a world that always cheers for the good guys, why are we drawn to the bad guys--pirates?" Pirates costumes are non-faddish Halloween attire. Pirate themes are common for birthday parties, miniature golf courses, children's fantasies, and athletic teams. Yet, pirates are the bad guys. They killed people indiscriminately, live amoral or anti-moral lives, and often depicted as the refuse of society.

Brewin believes that we love pirates because the fought against the authoritarian and unjust forces of society. He makes a strong case for the anti-establishment struggle that was and is instigated by pirates. I must admit that I will forever view pirates from a different perspective after reading this book. And, I must confess, that I agree that sometimes governments and other authorities are unjust, favor the rich while ignoring the needs of the poor, and attempt to keep their power and riches by force. I also agree that there are times when legal authorities must be opposed and justice must be sought. As the saying goes, "Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely." Common people must stand against those in power.

I agree with Brewin's reasoning until he comes to this interpretation of the parable of the prodigal son from the point of view of piracy. As a practical pastoral theologian, I had to object. Brewin sees the son as a pirate against the father. He does what is called eisegesis; he reads his agenda into the scripture passage. I contend that the gospel writer who included this story in his gospel did not have a pirate agenda. Careful exegesis (pulling out the meaning from the text) considers the context in which the story was originally told and the theological content it was meant to convey. Such exegesis leads to an emphasis on the gracious, steadfast, unconditional love and forgiveness of the father. The parable is about God and not the wayward son. Having said this, I must agree with Brewin that Jesus was thoroughly and unapologetically anti-establishment. He preached a way of life that was diametrically opposed to that of Rome, and he declared himself and his cross as the new temple. In many ways, Jesus could be called a pirate.

There were times when I squirmed while reading this book. I didn't like the favorable light in which Brewin placed the Somalian pirates. Yet, I could see how they carry on the pirate tradition. I was surprised by his perspective on pirating music and movies, but I must concede that he has a point.

Brewin's treatment of the prodigal son caused me to be somewhat skeptical of his other points. But for the most part his arguments appear to be researched, solid and forcefully made. It is one of those rare books that a reader keeps thinking about and struggling with long after the book itself is finished.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Dense, quirky, creative 2 Oct 2012
By Natalie T. Burris - Published on Amazon.com
London-based teacher and writer Kester Brewin recently released this quirky little gem of a book. In only 165 pages, Brewin fits in medieval fiefdom, the colonization of the so-called "New World," Marxism, modern-day Somali pirates, copyright law, punk music, Jungian psychology, and Greek mythology. I didn't always agree with Brewin's take on the world, but his creativity and ability to translate sweeping topics into more easily understandable prose was impressive.

Today, pirates have turned into a kitschy birthday party theme, but Brewin notes that an actual 18th-century pirate would be "shocked at the way in which his rebellion and revolt against and oppressive and wealth-hungry Empire had been castrated into spineless, meaningless nursery pap."

The first mid-Atlantic pirates emerged in the 18th century in response to European monarchies' monopoly that blocked access to the "riches of the New World to any but the most privileged," and Brewin argues that pirates, in any shape or form, emerge at any time when economies become "blocked." Sailors who were forced to work for a pittance, then cast aside when they became disabled by the very work the monarchs charged them to do, joined forces to wreak havoc on the monarchies' work, threatening the imperial order. As a result, sailors-turned-pirates created egalitarian communities that offered fair wages and didn't simply cast aside the disabled or "other".

Piracy arises when a structure becomes unjust, "because it has taken something that should be the 'common property' of all people and locked it behind a pay-wall," and "refuses to share the spoils of wealth with those who have laboured so hard to create it." Pirates offer an alternative that speaks to our desire, our "human ache," for justice. Pirates threaten those in power, petrifying them, "because the laws that they have so carefully constructed to keep everyone in their right place fall utterly flat." And those who don't choose mutiny? Perhaps they believe the "narrative of their oppressors: that remaining law-abiding and dutiful would see them rewarded in heaven."

What can pirates teach us about following Jesus? Brewin argues that we must play pirate to religion. Pirates are heroes who break the law, because "the law needs breaking if it is to be remade more justly." Jesus was, according to the law of his day, "a revolutionary heretic who was quite rightly prosecuted by religious authorities. The law had been broken, and law-breakers needed to face punishment if society was to hold together. But, quite explicitly, Jesus broke Jewish law in order to expose the fact that Jewish law was, in the hands of the Pharisees, broken."

The early church can be viewed as a community who declared mutiny against the religious powers, departing from Jewish orthodoxy. Early Christians entered the heretical waters of a faith that shared all things in common. But, Christianity transformed into the "religion of empire, and quickly settled in the easy throne of fattened calves, of comfortable robes and jewelry."

Brewin challenges us to ask: "what would it mean now to play pirate with the life that I have in the culture I am a part of, among the community I live in and within the power structures and working practices that I am embedded in?"

I don't agree with Brewin's characterization of the "New World," as it ignores and erases the existence of native peoples. Along those same lines, Brewin occasionally praised the U.S. "Founding Fathers," who in reality only played pirate on behalf of white, male landowners against the English. Overall, however, Mutiny! is a creative, dense little book that may spur you to mutiny, to "unblock" power structures, and to seek a more equitable way.

Disclosure of Material Connection: I received this book free from the author and/or publisher through the Speakeasy blogging book review network. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission's 16 CFR, Part 255.
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