Sunday, February 26, 2017

`The Great Dream of History'

`The Great Dream of History'

Some writers turn their work into a long meditation on the past, the vagaries of history and the nature of man. A few of them are formal historians, like Gibbon, who characterized all of history as “little more than the register of the crimes, follies, and misfortunes of mankind.” Others are poets or playwrights, like Homer or Shakespeare, and some are novelists, like Solzhenitsyn. Janet Lewis identifies this quality in the French novelist Marguerite Yourcenar:

“She is as much a historian as a novelist. Elsewhere (in Les Yeux Ouverts) she speaks of the great dream of history, that is to say, the world of all the living people of the past, so that when one loves life one loves the past. She even uses the word vivants, which includes more than people -- animals, plants, the moving air.”

Blue Mountains and Oravske Memories: Casting Stones



INK BOTTLE“We can all take the book and go ‘Do-re-mi,’ but you got to find the other notes for yourself, and that takes time. You got to live. It takes years.”
~ Louis Armstrong (quoted by Hal Boyle, Allentown Evening Chronicle, Sept. 15, 1952, courtesy of Ricky Riccardi)


Not From Venus, Not From Mars: What We Believe About Gender and Why It’s Often Wrong NYT
THE LIVERY STABLE BLUES - 100 Years ago: February 26, 1917. It’s still a controversial recording. But then, man, like, “what qualifies as jazz?”

Strange contemporary resonance:

The New York Times published editorial after editorial throughout the late 1910s and 1920s touting the dangers of jazz, which had historically been associated with the brothels where it was initially played…





Brave Wylies Baths Swimmer

TripAdvisor reveals Australia's best beaches


IT MIGHT seem a great time for indie cinema. The Academy Awards on February 26th will be something of a showcase for films not financed by a major studio. “Manchester by the Sea”, a contender for six Oscars, including best picture, was a darling of the Sundance Film Festival last year. Kenneth Lonergan’s masterpiece (one scene is pictured) about family and loss has earned $46m in cinemas in America and Canada, a spectacular return on its production costs of $8.5m. Amazon, which bought distribution rights, will benefit. Movie buffs can find all manner of films online that are made more cheaply still. “The Break-In”, a horror film shot by Justin Doescher on his girlfriend’s iPhone for less than $20, has earned him more than $20,000, with more than half a million people having watched at least part of it on Amazon’s streaming-video platform.
For every success story there are thousands of indie films that go unwatched. The digital age has made it easier than ever to make a film, but also harder than ever to break through the clutter of entertainment options to an audience It is easier than ever to fund Cold River and other indie films, but harder than ever to get people to see it...

 

 Bezos: Amazon plans to sell beer and wine at its new high-tech convenience store


  Why 1977 Might Be the Greatest Year in Music History


The leaves of memory seemed to make 
      A mournful rustling in the dark
… Forgotten Poems #19: more Henry Wadsworth Longfellow!




Andy Warhol: Art, Fame & Social Media



Poetry Is In Desperate Need Of A Revolution



Or really, more than one revolution – and constant revolutions: “Art isn’t easy. It’s not just that we need a revolution in style but also a revolution in audience, distribution, circulation, performance, perception and, indeed, motivation. These revolutions are never a question of being marked as ahead of the times. … Rather, the issue is staying in and with the times and not letting the times drown you.”


How We Discovered Vampire Bats That Have Learned to Drink Human Blood The Wire 

Google can bring you 100,000 answers but a MEdia Dragon librarian can bring you the right one, By Mahesh Rao
NEWS YOU CAN USE: Vitamin D ‘proved to cut risk of colds and flu’ Guardian

  Will I Go Bald? “It turns out that hair loss is very complicated genetically.”
Plus: “Male pattern baldness affects around 80 percent of men by the age of 80 years.”

Maxine Waters Thinks Trump Is a Secret Member of the ‘Kremlin Clan’ and Needs to Be Impeached


Juan Luis Vives in Paris, Erasmus in Venice. Does the mobility of 16th-century intellectuals explain Europe’s rise in fortunes?... Imrich  


5 Reasons ‘Seinfeld’ Would Get Crushed by SJWs    


       The most recent addition to the complete review is my review of Jela Krečič's None Like Her. 

       This is one of the first in the first trio of books in Peter Owen's World Series-series, devoted to Slovenia (and published in association with Istros Books); the second trio is from Spain. 
       And not that it should matter in the least -- but, hey, anything to get more attention for a book, right ? --: Krečič's husband is one of the few Slovenians you may actually have heard of -- Slavoj Žižek. 


Winner of Planeta’s Azorín Prize, Valdés’s novel follows the relationship of Picasso and his lover-muse Dora Mara, the subject of many of the Spanish artist’s paintings, including, you guessed it, one titled “The Weeping Woman.”

At first blush, the novels of Elena Poniatowska come to mind, especially Querido Diego and Dos veces única, both of which rescue the memory of two women who were married to and served as muses for Diego Rivera, but with hints to Jackie Collins. Unlike Poniatowska’s novels, The Weeping Woman seems less inclined to rescue Dara Mara than to novelize her. The prose, at times, reads like the light literature of nineteenth-century French feuilletons of writers like Ponson du Terrail:

Yes, it was a young woman, not exactly pretty, but by her shape she was the type of woman the artist might find attractive. Blond, sublime green eyes, shock of straight and slightly flaxen hair, a soft complexion. She wasn’t vulgar, and she knew how to walk—that is, she walked with a sway in her hips, as if she were dancing, undulating with the rhythmic disdain of a mermaid. 

The Loneliness of Longing for Other People’s Apartments



Like books or movies, peeks into other people's homes offer us a moment to imagine ourselves transposed


AND HERE YOU PROBABLY THOUGHT THE SCIENCE WAS SETTLED: Earth Has a New Continent Called ‘Zealandia’, Study Reveals


Erotic knowledge

How to make the color red: Scholars and artists long sought the tools. Arsenic, Asian flora, sulfur, mercury, and ox blood have been involved...  Knowledge of Reds Under the Beds  

Alan Light's new book The Holy or the Broken: Leonard Cohen, Jeff Buckley, and the Unlikely Ascent of "Hallelujah" traces the bizarre cultural history of that very unicorn: "Hallelujah," a song that lay dormant in Cohen's vast repertoire for more than a decade before its popularity surged up again with a posthumous Jeff Buckley single. "Hallelujah" has metamorphosed over the years from a cheesy, reverb-heavy B-side oddity on an album Cohen's label rejected to a mystical, soul-stirring pop canticle that's played today at just as many weddings as funerals. Light reverentially details every stage in the evolution—and along the way, he reveals the compelling stories behind some of its most iconic interpretations. How Leonard Cohens Hhallelujah became Everybodys CHallelujah

 No One Can Figure Out What’s Behind a Mysterious Radiation Spike Across Europe. “But what’s most disconcerting about the event isn’t the level of radiation that spread through Europe – it’s the fact that no one can say what actually happened.”

Pope Francis suggests it's better to be an atheist than a hypocritical Catholic; Francis had harsh words for people who observe Catholic rituals but don't treat other people well 

Pope Francis suggests it’s better to be an atheist than a hypocritical Catholic via WP original 

Saturday, February 25, 2017

Politiks: Victorian speaker and deputy speaker resign over expense scandal


It is a vile and scurrilous accusation that during Greg Hywood’s time as chairman of Tourism Victoria the Twelve Apostles became Eight. The last of the iconic limestone stacks to collapse was in 2005, just before Greg arrived ...Morale is poor and editorial authority has vanished in a morass of click-bait and managerial capitulation. It is too late now to reverse the slide
Domain on sale as Fairfax topples like the Twelve Apostles

Daniel Andrews must make real changes to rules on second residence allowances


THE fact Telmo Languiller and Don Nardella have stepped down from their roles as Speaker and Deputy Speaker of the Victorian parliament must not mean the end of this sorry saga.



Victorian speaker and deputy speaker resign over expense scandal



Michael Photios resigns as the leader of NSW Liberal's dominant left faction


As the government dithers over money laundering policy, policy which would keep a lid on Chinese buyers whipping up a frenzy in city property – and as baby boomers and politicians revel in their suite of superannuation tax lurks and holiday homes – an entire generation of young Australians remains locked out of the real estate market Splendid! Let’s lock an entire generation of Australians out of the property market



Swimming and Cooking by Rock Pools

“God is a comedian playing to an audience too afraid to laugh” – Voltaire


French waitress drags huge lizard out of Australian restaurant Telegraph

TripAdvisor reveals Australia's best beaches

 Male models in ‘right place at the right time’ to pull teens to safety from frozen Central Park pond


Photo: Great gray owl goes hunting TreeHugger


We think we know all about the world. But we don't. That's why it's pretty surprising to learn that there may be a new continent underneath New Zealand


This in a letter to her editor at Macmillan, Richard Garnett,

'It worried me terribly when you told me I was only an amateur writer and I asked myself, how many books do you have to write and how many semi-colons do you have to discard before you lose your amateur status?'

and this to Richard Ollard her editor at Collins, where Penelope Fitzgerald had moved with her subsequent Booker winning novel Offshore after feeling unwanted at Duckworth..

'The TLS was also very kind to The Bookshop and said it was a novella in the tradition of Henry James, not a selling point perhaps.'


How A Writer Can Be Harrowing Without Giving Her Soul Away



Finding essays outside one’s personal experience “would be work that was harrowing in another sense of the word, which originally referred to preparing fields for planting by breaking up the soil. A true harrowing essay would dig deeper, ultimately performing a generative function.”





MALE PRIVILEGE: Women’s life expectancy on track to hit 90 in some nations. “The men who could look forward to the longest lives in 2015 were in Switzerland, Iceland and Australia — all within a few decimal points of an 81 year lifespan.” Women eat more butter ...
Cooking with butter may be more heart-healthy than vegetable oil: Study

An algae that survived two years in outer space may hold the secret to growing food on Mars and Maroubra Mahon pool ...








This week’s music is “I’m Gonna Live Forever (If it Kills Me)” by William Tyler

SEXLESS MARRIAGES: A threat to the planet


HMM: Men, Is Exercise Putting a Damper on Your Sex Life? Note that the exercise here — “running, cycling, and triathlon” — all involves lengthy cardio.


  Churchill essay on the possibility of alien life discovered in US college

Opal card data turns up surprise for Sydneysiders wanting 30-minute commute

Rolling Down the River C'mon back to the raft with Huck and Jim




Astronomers discover 60 new planets including ‘super Earth’

NATURAL ANTIOXIDANT could prevent liver disease. I’ve been taking PQQ for a couple of months for its reported cardiac benefits. This is a plus. It’s cheap. I take it with NAC, and, of course, CoQ10. The CoQ10, by the way, is the supplement that seems to have the biggest impact. Everyone I’ve gotten to try it, from the Insta-Wife and Insta-Daughter to my younger brother says they have noticeably better energy levels with it. 


 “This glass fits around your nose so you can smell wine as you drink it.”  NB: the link serves up some noise to you.

 “The state’s manual for execution procedures, which was revised last month, says attorneys of death row inmates, or others acting on their behalf, can obtain pentobarbital or sodium Pentothal and give them to the state to ensure a smooth execution.”  Link here, that is Arizona






Eating up to ten portions of fruit and vegetables a day may reduce disease, early death risk