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New Orleans, Louisiana, United States
Admire John McPhee, Bill Bryson, David Remnick, Thomas Merton, Richard Rohr and James Martin (and most open and curious minds)

28.6.17

Writing


"Clay tablets were the world's primary writing material for three thousand years -- a considerably longer period than the reign of paper up until now.
"The banks of the Nile River are softened by thick growths of tall papyrus reeds with feathery tops that bow and sway in the breezes. According to legend, an infant who would be called Moses was found abandoned in a patch of these reeds in about 1500 BCE. At the time, the reeds themselves were already an important Egyptian product, and they would remain valuable for the next fifteen hundred years. ...

"But the plants were most valued as writing material. The papyrus reed peels like an onion, and once the green outer layer is removed, there are about twenty inner layers. These would be unrolled and laid out on a hard and smooth table, with each layer slightly overlapping the next....

"Other civilizations in different climates found other plants to flatten into writing surfaces. ... What was unique about Egyptian papyrus, however, was that it became a valuable commercial product that was exported throughout the known world. ...

Writing with stylus and folding wax tablet. painter, Douris, ca 500 BC
"Papyrus was mostly used by scribes, who wrote with reed styluses, the ends chewed off into stiff brushes. Students studying to become scribes would begin with writing boards that were covered with a soft plaster that was erasable, just like Sumerian clay. You could simply pat the plaster down and start again. But an even more common implement that endured for centuries was the wax tablet, a board with a hollowed­ out center that was filled with wax -- most likely beeswax. In Assyria, such tablets have been found dating back as far as 80 BCE. They were extremely popular in ancient Greece and Rome, where the wax was black and the writing done with a metal stylus that was pointed on one end for writing and blunt on the other for erasing.

"The wax tablet was an important contribution to the written culture of ancient civilizations because it was the first widely used device for casual writing, intended for individuals other than scribes. Before wax tablets, anything that was written down had to be considered of great and enduring importance. But once there is writing, there arises a need for temporary writing -- a quick note to jot down and throw away the next day, an aid in calculating a math problem, a rough draft of a docu­ment that would later become permanent. All the other previous writing surfaces had been, for all intents and purposes, permanent. You could not bake a clay tablet to throw away the next day, or jot down something on an expensive scroll of papyrus and throw it away. And once something is literally carved in stone, it is figuratively 'carved in stone.' It can't be unwritten. The wax tablet, therefore, was the original Etch A Sketch for the ancient world. ...

"Sometimes several [wax] tablets would be bound together; in Latin this was known as a codex. The codex was the forerunner of the book, and while originally it referred to wax tablets, the word was later also applied to codices made of bound papyrus sheets, parchment, and eventually paper. But the codex was of limited use as long as papyrus, far better suited for scrolls, dominated. ...

"Eumenes, the ruler of the Greek city of Pergamum, also wanted to build a great library, but Ptolemy, not wanting a competitor, refused to export papyrus to him. According to Pliny, Eumenes, unwilling to aban­don his grand plan, began searching for an alternative writing material, and in the next hundred years, the people of Pergamum learned how to soak animal hide in lime for ten days, scrape it, and dry it. The hides of young animals -- kid, lamb, and young gazelle -- were used, though the best material was that made from the skin of fetal animals. The flesh side of the hide was smoother than the fur side, and white animals produced the best quality skins. The skins were hung on a stretcher and scraped with a knife until they became smooth and hairless. After drying, they were further smoothed by rubbing with a stone. 
 
"The new product was often called pergamum, after the city in which it was invented, and is still so named in some Latin languages, but is known in English as parchment. A particularly fine parchment made from calfskin is called vellum."

27.6.17

Starbucks

Everything But The Coffee: Learning about Aerica from Starbucks by Bryant Simon. In the 1980s, "conspicuous consumption" reached the middle class, as middle class consumers began to leave behind the practical, but seemingly dated habits of their parents-embodied by Sears and McDonalds-and traded them for consumption that they believed would display their uniqueness and authenticity-buying Evian water and Starbucks coffee. But it was a mass-produced uniqueness and a fake authenticity:

"For much of the postwar era, the broad, somewhat undifferentiated American middle class found itself sandwiched between the rich on top and the working-class below them, with the poor even further below them. Most of these accountants and account executives, furniture storeowners and doctors shared a common commitment to modesty and thrift. The rich might show off and spend wildly, but the middle class demonstrated its sensible frugality by buying convenient and useful items. That didn't mean that they didn't occasionally splurge on a chrome-trimmed car or a cashmere sweater with a mink collar or chicken cordon bleu at a French restaurant. But these weren't everyday things.

"Perhaps no company embodied the consumer ideals of the staid organization men and steady housewives ... more than Sears. The Chicago retail giant offered reliable products at reasonable prices. Good stuff and good value attracted the cautious middle class who cared more about how long things lasted or how convenient they were than how they looked. ... In many middling social circles, the ability to sniff out a deal translated into social standing and respect. But the same deals that brought the middle classes to Sears, and then to McDonald's, and later to Wal-Mart, also attracted working people and the poor. Laborers and the even less well-off went to these places because they had to; saving a few dollars on cereal, batteries, and paper towels left more money for clothes, carpeting, and cars. Yet at the upper edges of the middle class, people with no financial worries didn't want to look, act, or consume like the poor or the ordinary.

"Looking for ways to distinguish themselves-to broadcast their wealth, know-how, and sophistication, all key markers of status as the twentieth century drew to a close-the upper reaches of the middle class developed new consumption patterns in the 1980s, as Starbucks started to take off. Mostly they looked for luxuries, indulgences big and small, that the poor, the working classes, the middle of the middle, and the least refined of the rich could not afford or appreciate. ... Products from Prada, Gucci, Lexus, and Evian became a 'virtual fifth food group,' as the United States, [one commentator] announced, became 'one nation under luxury.' ...

"Increasingly over the last two decades, women and men with higher salaries and more college classes under their belt broke away from the sensible middle class and engaged in a new round of conspicuous consumption. ... Yet they also wanted to show off their education and know-how. That is where the authenticity part mattered and where it became, under Starbucks and Whole Foods and so many other natural-looking chains, more about status and sophistication than it was about the counterculturally tinged consumption and rebellion against the fake that Jerry Baldwin and his fellow travelers favored. Post-post-hippies, like [Starbucks CEO] Howard Schultz, associated authenticity not so much with the search for more genuine products, wrote consumer behavior specialist Michael Solomon in 2003, as with a range of upscale values, 'like a better lifestyle, personal control, and better taste.'

"To display smarts, superior tastes, and even enlightened politics, the upper classes of the 1990s focused their buying on things that looked natural and rare but also required special knowledge to fully understand. They bought a California wine to demonstrate that they knew about exceptional vintages, or a Viking stove because they knew that real cooks used these oversized machines, or a bike trip through Provence because they knew from their college art history classes that the hills and sun there inspired pained and brilliant painters. ... Buying in post-Reagan America was not about keeping up with the Joneses; it was about separating yourself from the Joneses, the conformists in the middle."

The Bookness of Not-Books: Modern and Contemporary Artists' Books

The Bookness of Not-Books: Modern and Contemporary Artists' Books



Essayism by Brian Dillon review – pure creativity on the page | Books | The Guardian

Essayism by Brian Dillon review – pure creativity on the page | Books | The Guardian



Place Saint-Sulpice, Paris.

Essayism by Brian Dillon review – pure creativity on the page | Books | The Guardian

Essayism by Brian Dillon review – pure creativity on the page | Books | The Guardian



Place Saint-Sulpice, Paris.

25.6.17

Critics

Petition
by K.A. Hays

Listen Online

Here floats the mind on summer’s dock.
The knees loose up, hands dither off,
the eyes have never heard of clocks.
The mind won’t feel the hours, the mind spreads wide
among the hours, wide in sun. Dear sun,
who gives the vision but is not the vision.
Who is the body and the bodies
that speak into the dark below the dock.
Who to the minnows in the sand-sunk tire
seems like love.
Make us the brightness bent through shade.
The thing, or rush of things, that makes
an opening, a way.

"Petition" by K.A. Hays from Windthrow. © Carnegie Mellon University Press, 2017. Reprinted with permission. (buy now)




It's the birthday of poet and essayist John Ciardi (books by this author), born in Boston, Massachusetts (1916). He's remembered today for his book How Does a Poem Mean? (1959), which has become a standard textbook in high school and college poetry classes. He also published several collections of his own poetry, and his Collected Poems came out in 1997.
But he may be best known for his translation of Dante's Divine Comedypublished in 1954. More than 50 English translations of the Divine Comedy were published in the 20th century, but Ciardi's is considered one of the best. For years, it was the standard translation used in English classes in the U.S.
Ciardi said, "The reader deserves an honest opinion. If he doesn't deserve it, give it to him anyhow."

23.6.17

Conserve elephants. They hold a scientific mirror up to humans

Conserve elephants. They hold a scientific mirror up to humans



Renée Fleming and Alan Gilbert Take Their Bows | The New Yorker

Renée Fleming and Alan Gilbert Take Their Bows | The New Yorker

The Lifestyle Beat | The Smart Set

The Lifestyle Beat | The Smart Set

Turns of Phrase (Paid Post by TNT From The New York Times)

Turns of Phrase (Paid Post by TNT From The New York Times)

Shakespeare & Politics

Shakespeare’s Politics
We know little of his political opinions, but there’s much we can learn of them from the recurrent themes of his works.

22.6.17

Samantha Bee Mourns the Death of Language - The New York Times

Samantha Bee Mourns the Death of Language - The New York Times




Thomas More

HOMILY for the Feast of SS John Fisher & Thomas More
2 Maccabees 6:18,21,24-31; Ps 125; Matt 24:4-13
We live in a country of legal positivists. What this means is that for many of our contemporaries, the Law determines what is right or wrong. Or, indeed, what popular opinion takes to be right and good, the Law ought to permit, then encourage, and even enforce at the expense of contrary opinions. Our contemporary secular landscape is such that the State adjudicates on the rightness or wrongness of our moral actions, determines what constitutes our happiness, and many seem to think that our fundamental human dissatisfactions and dis-ease can be, under the right conditions, ultimately solved by politics. In doing so, politics, the State and her Laws presume to take the place of Christ.
As the Lord prophesied in today’s Gospel: “Many will come using my name and saying, “I am the Christ,” and they will deceive many.” This is not a recent phenomenon. The 16th-century was such a time, and although it was not the start of such an usurpation of Christ, it was a start since Henry VIII arrogated substantial powers and wealth and theological support for the Crown.
Many stood up against this, and many stood for Christ against the State, and they were felled for it – martyred for Faith in Jesus Christ and for clinging to the Truth he taught – Truth handed on faithfully from generation to generation by Christ’s holy Church. But of the hundreds who were martyred for the Catholic Faith from 1535 onwards, two are especially eminent, and they were the first to be canonised by Pope Pius XI in 1935. St John Fisher was the saintly Bishop of Rochester, Chancellor of Cambridge University, Tutor to Henry VIII, Confessor to Lady Margaret,  mother of Henry VII. Erasmus considered him to be “incomparable for uprightness of life, for learning and for greatness of soul.” In short, he was an luminary of the Church. St Thomas More was a luminary of the State. He was Lord High Chancellor of England, a noted Humanist philosopher and lawyer, and a Scholar.
The combination of these two Saints reminds us that neither spiritual nor temporal lords could stand against the State and the will of the Crown. Nevertheless, both men remained steadfast in upholding the Truth of the Gospel, particularly concerning the indissolubility of Christian marriage. For their fidelity to Christ’s Word, they were executed in 1535, St John Fisher on this day (22 June), and St Thomas More on 6 July.
In our own time, the teaching of Christ on the permanence of Christian marriage, and thus the refusal to accept divorce, is largely seen as irrelevant or outdated. And, it appears, that some, even within the Catholic Church, regard this stance to be “rigid” and lacking in “mercy”. And yet, today’s Saints clung to the perennial teaching of Christ, and they were willing to die for this Truth. They died not simply as ‘conscientious objectors’ but, more fundamentally, as witnesses to the Truth of the Gospel. Truth is everlasting and it is not changed to suit us, but rather, we must conform to the Truth, above all, to the Person of Jesus Christ and to his teachings. Today’s Martyrs taught this with their lives.
As such, these great English Martyrs interrogate us: Does the Gospel Truth matter to us? Are we willing to die for the Truth? Do we even know the Truth that Christ’s Church proclaims? For happiness and right moral activity is not determined by the Law but something far more enduring and reliable: Truth. Indeed, what is right and wrong, and what will truly satisfy us as human beings is grounded in God who is Truth. It is Jesus Christ who saves us and gives us true joy and peace.
Therefore, as we honour Saints John Fisher and Thomas More today, let us ask them to pray for England and the Church in this land. And let us honour them by desiring to know, to uphold, and defend the Truth that comes from Christ. For as the Lord said: “I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life. No one comes to the Father except through me” (Jn 14:6). That is to say, our salvation comes from Christ, and not from the State, nor politics, nor the Law, nor anything that Man can manufacture. Salvation comes from a living faith in Jesus, and from a genuine relationship of humble trust in the Blessed Trinity. So, we turn now to the Altar as it is the Eucharist that draws us more deeply into God.