Printer Friendly
The Free Library
19,122,083 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Phil Redmond: The colour purple.


PURPLE. Is this the colour of the moment?

Perhaps because it is one of the main colours in the 2008 dressing the city initiative, now starting to appear around Liverpool.

At the recent Radio City Local Heroes Awards, the stage was washed in purple, as was the opening of the Royal Variety Performance at the Empire. I'm sure it was part of the Turner Prize at the Tate. Perhaps it's culture's new black, or perhaps just my eyes.

Purple does, however, enliven the streets of the city on a regular basis, albeit not as often as some would like, in the formand shape of wheelie wheel·ie  
n.
A stunt in which the front wheel or wheels of a vehicle, such as a bicycle or motorcycle, are raised so that the vehicle is balanced momentarily on its rear wheel or wheels.
 bins.

Perhaps regular exposure has imbued a sense of purpleness within us all which, perhaps, also links to the fact that the city is still estimated to house 30% of all UK Catholics, who associate the colour with penitence, mourning and suffering.

As it is not just the colour of wheelie bins, but the city council itself, there are some who may suggest an obvious political link.

On the other hand, the dye used to originally create purple, Tyrian, was made from crushing the shells of the Mediterranean mollusc mollusc

members of the phylum Mollusca, which comprises about 50,000 species. Includes snails, slugs and the aquatic molluscs—oysters, mussels, clams, cockles, arkshells, scallop, abalone, cuttlefish, squid.
 Murex mu·rex  
n. pl. mu·ri·ces or mu·rex·es
Any of various marine gastropods of the genus Murex common in tropical seas and having rough spiny shells, especially M. trunculus, the source of Tyrian purple.
 and was worth more than its weight in gold, taking ten thousand Murex to provide enough dye for just one Roman toga!

Therefore, it soon became associated with wealth and power, so perhaps any council connotations end there.

Then again, councils are notorious for turning people purple; with rage, as Knowsley's potential plan to spend around pounds 32m on CCTV CCTV
abbr.
closed-circuit television


CCTV closed-circuit television
 lamp-posts may be a case in point.

To be fair to Knowsley, described on the CTTV Core website (yes, there is such a thing) as a district of Liverpool (which in itself is an interesting point for both Evertonians and the Open Culture Scouse scouse  
n.
1. A lobscouse.

2.
a. often Scous·er A native or resident of Liverpool, England.

b. often Scouse The dialect of English spoken in Liverpool.
 Map project) it has only been invited to bid for funding from the latest Government Big Brother scheme.

This particular erosion of privacy involves replacing around 14,000 lamp-posts in Knowsley with new ones that would, wait for it, incorporate not only CCTV but an audio system that would allow operators in a central control room to give people a public ticking-off for any anti-social behaviour.

At the risk of slipping into purple prose, spying lamp-posts begs the question: exactly where the anti-social behaviour is taking place? And, how many operators will be needed to monitor 14,000 lamp-posts, at what cost, and how else could that money be better spent? Answers on dental appointment cards, if you can find one.

And, like everything these days, the colour purple has its own website, www.purple.com.

It's a great cultural site for 2008 as, like the Turner Prize, it is designed to provoke thought and comment. Because it's just that. Purple.

Provide enough dye for just one Roman toga
COPYRIGHT 2007 MGN Ltd.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2007 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:Features
Publication:Daily Post (Liverpool, England)
Date:Dec 7, 2007
Words:468
Previous Article:OBITUARY: Liana Burgess.
Next Article:THOUGHT for the DAY.

Terms of use | Copyright © 2012 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles