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(April 19, 2002)

READIN

Jeremy's journal

Understanding makes the mind lazy.

Penelope Fitzgerald


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Friday, October 10th, 2008

🦋 Stesichoros

That story is not true.
You never sailed in the benched ships.
You never went to the city of Troy.
      -- Stesichoros, "Palinode": quoted in Phædrus.
I've been reading some of the introductory material to Autobiography of Red this morning -- it is really interesting and makes me want to read this book sometime. Carson asserts (actually I am not sure if she is writing this introductory material in her own voice: maybe "Carson's narrator asserts") that "Stesichoros released being" by separating Homer's incantatory adjectives from the nouns to which they were attached, by inventing descriptive language.
Here we touch the core of the question "What difference did Stesichoros make?" When Gertrude Stein had to sum up Picasso she said, "This one was working." So say of Stesichoros, "This one was making adjectives."

posted afternoon of October 10th, 2008: 1 response
➳ More posts about Autobiography of Red

🦋 An excellent first sentence

My brother showed me Anne Carson's Autobiography of Red -- I am interested right away just by the coincidental similarity of its title to My Name is Red -- but I just wanted to quote its opening sentence:

He came after Homer and before Gertrude Stein, a difficult interval for a poet.

posted morning of October 10th, 2008: Respond
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Wednesday, October 8th, 2008

🦋 Jellyfish protein


Wow, the stuff they can do nowadays...

posted evening of October 8th, 2008: Respond
➳ More posts about Pretty Pictures

Monday, October 6th, 2008

🦋 Up north

Lots of good stuff at the Disko Bay Expedition (which is almost over) this morning -- audio of Robyn jamming with his shipmates; pictures of Paradise Lost (Marcus Brigstocke, who played Satan, reports of KT Tunstall as Eve, "Sheâ??s a pushover â?? no wonder all humanity is bound to suffer for all eternity, banished from paradise forever if the likes of Tunstall are left in charge.") Feist paints a picture of towns in Greenland and the visual voyage; and best of all Brigstocke reports they have solved the global warming problem -- "It turns out it was the sun."

posted morning of October 6th, 2008: Respond
➳ More posts about Disko Bay Expedition

Sunday, October 5th, 2008

🦋 Saramago Dreamin'

The centerpiece of last night's dream was a new book by Saramago -- wait no, seems like it was an early book of his, but one I had not known about previously. It was pretty fully-formed, wish I could remember how it went! The title was something like "The Sour Grill" and it was explicitly about Portuguese cuisine, something about the national character being rooted in the cooking. A long book! I believe I had checked it out from the library and it was now overdue.

posted morning of October 5th, 2008: Respond
➳ More posts about José Saramago

Saturday, October 4th, 2008

🦋 Directions by train

This is pretty cool -- something that has always annoyed me about Google Maps is the automobile-centric nature of the directions you get there. So now by way of Blog About Town's blogroll, I discover HopStop: directions via public transit and walking. Nice! So far they only cover the NYC area (including NJ, Long Island, and MetroNorth's sphere), Boston, Chicago, San Francisco (this must be shorthand for "the San Francisco Bay Area") and Washington, DC -- that is plenty for me at this point in time.

posted morning of October 4th, 2008: 2 responses

Friday, October third, 2008

🦋 Could it be?

Dave Marc Fischer says Pynchon will be publishing a new book soon, a "noir detective story." This would be terrific! Seems like all my favorite living authors are coming out with new stuff! (via Conversational Reading.)

Update: Penguin Press has confirmed it will be publishing the book; they are not talking about its contents.

posted afternoon of October third, 2008: Respond
➳ More posts about Thomas Pynchon

🦋 More stuff from Greenland

First, just got to say this image (of houses in Uummannaq, shot by Nathan Gallagher) is one of the prettiest things I've seen all week. Uummannaq is the last human settlement they will see on their voyage north, as Robyn says it is "the last place we will visit on this trip that has an ATM."

Francesca Galeazzi did a performance piece yesterday, walking out onto the snow field of the Jakobshavns fjord with a cylinder of 6kg carbon dioxide and releasing it into the unspoiled beauty of the wilderness.

My first reaction to this is visceral disgust -- sort of, "You find a spot that's untouched and you 'pollute it' just to show that you can? What's the point, just to show yourself as a human and an asshole?" But her follow-up post from this morning makes what seems to me like a really good point:

Some of my fellow voyagers were upset about my piece because they could visualise that black â??nastyâ?? cylinder full of CO2 in a way that they couldnâ??t, if I told them that every time they drive their car for 30 miles they emit the same amount of carbon dioxide. So I wonder if the societal shift that I was advocating with my performance could be achieved if we would find a more direct way to visualise the Carbon impact of the resources we use!

This contextualizes the performance piece in a really useful way -- I think my original reaction is kind of the response she is looking for, and that she's trying to extend that visceral disgust to everyday polluting activities.

posted morning of October third, 2008: Respond

Tuesday, September 30th, 2008

🦋 Blogging the Arctic

A boatload of artists is visiting the cold waters of the north, to see what they can of Greenland and its environment before that environment vanishes. You can read their ongoing account of their expedition, with pictures and video, at capefarewell.com; and more images at their Flicker page.

posted morning of September 30th, 2008: Respond

🦋 L'Shanah Tovah

Enjoy the holiday! Enjoy the coming year!

posted morning of September 30th, 2008: 3 responses

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