Ruminations on literature, art, politics, music, photography, design (architecture and landscape), wine and spirits &c.
Friday, July 31, 2009
Philadelphia Phillies vs. San Francisco Giants
Thursday, July 30, 2009
Minimalism Part IV: George Oppen's Discrete Series
Tuesday, July 28, 2009
Homage to Joe Brainard
I remember push-ups, Eskimo pies, fudge bars, and ice cream sandwiches.
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I remember not wanting to get invited to swimming parties, because everyone would see how skinny and pale I was (these were the “Coppertone” years).
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I remember “let’s get that real estate from under those fingernails.”
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I remember going to the theatre, and the floor between the seats being so sticky with old candy and crud that your shoes stuck to it.
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I remember putting unshelled peanuts into the nose holes of the circus elephants (weird).
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I remember Blue Chip Stamps, Green Stamps, funny coupons, and Filling Station maps with little circle-faced mascot figures at the gateways to vacation land.
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I remember telephone party-lines, and once in a while, the neighbor walking right into our house to put the receiver back in the carriage (we’d forgotten to replace it, and he could hear us talking).
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I remember “I Like Ike” buttons.
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I remember sonic booms, and how—for just a second—everyone would worry that maybe it was an atomic bomb.
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I remember “killer knobs”, leather dashboards, wooden station-wagons, and white foam dice hanging from rear-view mirrors.
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I remember being “curious” about what girls had hidden up there between their legs.
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I remember Pendleton plaid wool shirts, pegged pants, and black Chuck Taylor Converse tennis-shoes (had to be black).
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I remember the Edsel.
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I remember liver and onions, fish sticks, cube steak, creamed tuna on toast, and Campbell’s tomato soup.
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I remember being forced to dance with the ugliest girl in class, feeling disgusted that I would get her “cooties” on me (cruel!).
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I remember once reading that everyone on earth has unwittingly swallowed insects, usually in their sleep, and thinking if I was never aware of it, this was probably okay.
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I remember rubber thongs, slinkys, and silly putty.
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I remember full-service gas stations, with attendants (“may I fill’er up, sir”), and watching him spray and squeegee the windshield from inside the car.
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I remember coon-skin caps, Burp Guns, Mouseketeer Ears, and hoola-hoops.
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I remember when parking meters would accept pennies.
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I remember polio shots, castor oil, and merthiolate (hurt like hell).
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I remember Lionel Train sets on Christmas mornings, and not managing to keep all the wheels on the track at the same time.
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I remember going to the circus, watching the high-wire trapeze artists doing routines to the music of “Blue Tango” and always having a funny “sexual” feeling whenever I heard that music again.
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I remember dirt-clod fights, and coming home so dirty your mom wouldn’t let you in the house.
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I remember “don’t ever get in a car with a stranger, no matter how nice they seem.”
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I remember never locking our doors unless we were going on vacation.
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I remember running cross-country on icy mornings, it was so cold your face would be numb, and you'd get so exhausted your tongue tasted like copper pennies.
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I remember "eenie meenie minee moe" and "allee allee oxen free!"
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I remember sparklers, pin-wheels, and glow-worms, and not wanting to wait until it was really dark to start shooting off my fireworks.
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I remember, in the second grade, trying to get the attention of a girl to whom I was attracted, repeatedly tripping her as she walked by my desk, but just making her really angry.
Monday, July 27, 2009
On a Poem by Seamus Heaney - 'The Rain Stick'
Seamus Heaney writes a traditionally structured and valenced sort of poem--he's never deviated very far from his habitual forms--2 or 3 or 4 line stanzas, or outright sonnets--but his inventiveness and light wit have intrigued me since the 1960's, when I first read his poems in The New Yorker.
Sunday, July 26, 2009
The Shawshank Redemption - A Prison Fable
Friday, July 24, 2009
Follow the Money - The New Aggressive Enforcement
The budgetary problems at the State level in California have had, and will have, far-reaching effects on all aspects of public service, from dog-catchers all the way up to the Governor's office. The shrinking American economy is being expressed through the decline in tax revenue at federal, state and local levels, throughout the country. This isn't the fault, in California, of Proposition 13, or irresponsible legislators spending more than they should, though these problems are exacerbating an already precarious financial footing in government. The services which our prosperity funded throughout the so-called "post-War period" can no longer be supported to the degree we've come to expect. Government revenue, expressed as a percentage of our national GDP, will decline in the years ahead, and there is little will at any level of government to address the root causes of this decline.
Thursday, July 23, 2009
Michael A. Smith - The Earth is Flat
The earth is flat. But it's not. It rolls over the horizon, its spherical curvature habitually unperceived in our daily round. Historically, photography has focused on a rectangular image whose dimensions were usually no greater than 1/2, which is to say horizontal or vertical organizations of subject-matter were organized around the human field of vision as we typically experience it. Our peripheral vision is mostly for peripheral awareness, whilst our mental concentration (or focal perception) is roughly confined within the 30-50 degree field ahead of us. Normally sighted individuals may perceive visual data up to 170 degrees across the field of vision, but most of this data is "ignored" by the brain.
Tuesday, July 21, 2009
Shane - The Enigma at the Heart of a Classic Western
Based on the genre novella by Jack Shaefer, the screenplay was written by A.B. Guthrie, Jr. (a successful novelist--The Big Sky, The Way West). Set in the wild newly settled territory of mid-19th Century Montana, it creates the usual dialectic between the tame, civilized rancher-settlers, and the dictatorial outlaw with his band of gunslingers hired to beat back the advance of newcomers, whose smaller claims and subdivisions threatened to end the era of the open range. Schaefer's book holds a unique position in the annals of Western (or cowboy, or "old West") literature. It was the author's first book, and is one of the most sought-after collectible first edition titles in 20th Century fiction. The book starts this way--