Sunday, December 08, 2024

Nostalgia Used To Be A Bad Thing. Now It Seduces Us



 When dams were erected on the Columbia, salmon battered themselves against the concrete, trying to return home.

 I expect no less from us. We too must hurl ourselves against and through the literal and metaphorical concrete that contains and constrains us, that keeps us from talking about what is most important to us, that keeps us from living the way our bones know we can, that bars us from our home. It only takes one person to bring down a dam.

“The best music is the clink of the knife and fork on the plate and gentle chatter”

Poor Things

The Delinquents [Los Delincuentes], from Argentina, tragicomedy

The Teacher’s Lounge

All of Us Strangers

Anselm

The Zone of Interest

Smoke Sauna Sisterhood

You Can Call Me Bill

Lynch/Oz

Miracle Worker, that is a very old Arthur Penn movie, about Helen Keller and Anne Sullivan.  Interesting throughout, and some parts were stupendously good, especially when dialogue was absent and Helen and Anne are simply fighting.

Civil War, and much more here.

Challengers

About Dry Grasses

Do Not Expect Too Much from the End of the World

Twisters

Megalopolis

Blitz

So overall a pretty good year, even though it never felt like it on any single weekend.  I will post on anything notable between now and year’s end, noting that I simply treat those Dec.31 Academy Award releases as 2025 movies.


John Ma, Polis: A New History of the Ancient Greek City-State from the Early Iron Age to the End of Antiquity.  I didn’t read much of this book, mostly because it is too good for me to understand just how good it is.  Que triste!  It is like those GPT “advanced reasoning” answers that also can be too good to digest fully.  A small number of you, however, should read this book very carefully and perhaps you already have.

Gina Consing McAdam and Siobhan Doran, Houses that Sugar Built: An Intimate Portrait of Philippine Ancestral Homes.  An excellent picture book, these are art traditions, and bits of history, you otherwise never would see.

Sohrab Sardashti, Iranian Architecture:A Visual History.  One of the very best picture books, both for intrinsic reasons and because many of us cannot expect to see these landmarks anytime soon if at all.

Caroline Potter, Pierre Boulez: Organised Delirium.  An excellent work, explores the deep links between Boulez’s music and French surrealism (and to a lesser degree expressionism).  One of the best books for understanding Boulez and indeed serialism more generally.  Is serialism is most misunderstood musical movement to this day?

Ola Olsson, Paleoeconomics: Climate Change and Economic Development in Prehistory surveys plenty of information about what the subtitle suggests.  I found the material difficult to evaluate, and so only read part of this one.  Nonetheless I suspect it is the best book on its topic.

Emily Van Duyne, Loving Sylvia Plath: A Reclamation.  I don’t feel this book is what I need at the margin, but it is a very good and engaging addition to the canon surrounding Plath.

Uncle Rabbit & the Wax Doll, edited by Jonathan Amith, illustrations by Inocencio Jiménez Chino, a very good and beautiful children’s book, also in Nahuatl and Spanish.


Nostalgia Used To Be A Bad Thing. Now It Seduces Us

Nostalgia is a universal malady for which there is no effective remedy, and throughout its long history it has served politically diverse ends. - Washington