Iceland review - 2007, Page 98

Iceland review - 2007, Page 98
ICELAND REVIEW 23 These are no ordinary school children. These students, raised on cake and codfish, are the progeny of the nation’s upper echelons, bred pure into Rockefeller-caliber ambition and acuity. Unwittingly I feel a pang of antagonism coming on but swallow it down. “Actually,” I begin, with humility and poise, “I’m American,” and launch into the dry pages of Aspects of Britain and the USA. Verslunarskóli, or Versló as it is affectionately called, is wedged between Kringlan shopping mall and Reykjavík University – a bas- t ion of Iceland’s aff inity for consumerism and commerce. Among its illustrious alumni are the wunderkind of Icelandic business: the CEOs of both Kaupthing Bank and Glitnir Bank, Baugur business mogul Jón Ásgeir Jóhannesson, and the maharajah of Icelandic entre- preneurialism Björgólfur Thor Björgólfsson, Forbes’ 249th richest man in the world. Over the last ten years Iceland has burst onto the international stage under the f lashing marquee of f inance and investment banking with all the pluck and sparkle of Shirley Temple in tap shoes. And the crowds are throwing down their cash hand over f ist. This sudden attention and inf lux of wealth has given rise to a new bourgeoisie in the heart of Northern Europe’s little starlet. In this ostensibly socialist nation – a one-time stronghold for Nordic egalitarianism founded by fishers, farmers and a strong distaste for autocrats – a new class system has emerged with bankers and entrepreneurs f loating to the top of the privileged, moneyed stratum. And the children of privilege gravi- tate towards Versló like Muslims to Mecca. Midway through the first paragraph I look up from the textbook to find 25 pairs of eyes hanging on my every word. What unglues me is the fact that the students are not only diligently following along with every drab sentence, but they do so with backs straight, pensive expressions, jotting down notes. We finish the allotted text for the day early, the class having gobbled up every morsel of knowledge. I ask them what they would like to discuss for the remainder of the period, half expecting them to beg for a supplementary lecture on the House of Lords. But to my surprise the students want to talk about television and celebrities. Our con- versation eventually meanders into the topic of slang and a wave of excitement passes over the class, prodding me to make a lesson out of it with a glossary. Although I f ind it amusing, there is something colonialist about my efforts: the erudite sahib of American imperialism coming to fill the heads of the Nordic rajas’ promising children with New World rhetoric and the secrets to decoding hip-hop lyrics. The kids ada mantly try to memorize nearly three decades of slang, furiously scraw ling down the colloquial ghettoisms of my Waspy upbringing as fast as I write them up on the board: bling – ostentatious, hip-hop inspired jewelry gadonkadonk – a beautifully large booty, complimentary getting crunk – a portmanteau word fusing “crazy” and “drunk” Without any introduction, without so much as a knock, the new world order slips into the room and makes itself at home in the smile and bright eyes of each Icelandic teen learning American ghetto- speak. I want to tell them that the Zeitgeist of modern Iceland does not have to revolve around Brangelina and pop-tarts. I have so many good intentions for them and the nation they will grow up to lead. But I am just the foreign language teacher. And the bell rings. Somewhere a donkey puppet is laid to rest.

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Iceland review

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