Is Skerries also Bowen Island?
Bowen, Complexity, Containers, Culture, Featured, Uncategorized
I was struck by Daniel Miller’s research on Skerries, a small seaside town in Ireland which he discussed on the BBC’s Thinking Allowed podcast this week. The town he is describing is almost EXACTLY a match for Bowen Island, where I live right down to the demographics, the community dynamics and the fact that we don;t have a swimming pool, a theatre or a hotel and we do drink A LOT and have a cocaine problem. He wrote a book about his research but I was struck by the deep parallels between our two villages. In thinking about the commonalities it strikes me that the homogenous nature of our ethnic and age demographics, language, wealth levels, and isolation from but proximity to a major centre and the major constraints that generate such similar profiles on the surface of it. I can think of other places I’ve been too like Mahone Bay in Nova Scotia, Vankleek Hill in Ontario, Sooke, BC and probably Knowlton, Quebec that probably fit the bill too.
There is a reason for this consistency. The fact that two towns so far away on the globe exhibit such similar characteristics is remarkable but it is a testament to the power of global capitalism that created a class of English speaking upper middle class and wealthy people from similar professions and worldviews and fed us all memes (the original definition) that resonate with the lives we lead. Even the fact that I am subscribed to Thinking Allowed is a part of this phenomenon.
Everything can and should be boiled down in the muddy broth of economics to taste the distilled truth! Here we agree
Yum! Soup!
I wonder if we are more similar than we assume- we assume we are unique individuals, all different yet as social beings perhaps we have similar tendencies, similar DNA’l drives- especially given the similar enviro and eco contexts and dynamics you describe. Interestingly I have lived in Mahone Bay and currently the BC interior village where I live – both could be Skerries.