Check it out, my new Tumblr site. No registration, no fees, no exams. Pure pleasure.
Check it out, my new Tumblr site. No registration, no fees, no exams. Pure pleasure.
Posted at 09:40 PM in Art, Books, Cartoons, Collecting, Current Affairs, Education, Erotica, Film, Food and Drink, Humor, Photography, Poetry, Politics, Post Cards, Quotations, Recommended Reading, Writers | Permalink | TrackBack (0)
There Is a “Darned” Thing Wrong with Reading the Wrong Books
This “freecard” (a free postcard distributed by businesses and companies as advertising) from the days when Tower Records was a going concern is rich in many ways.
The Catholic Church has been notorious, among people who think for themselves, for ruling certain books off limits. And, unrelated to Catholicism, but certainly in bed with it, are all manner of censors (religious and non-religious) on the political right (and, yes, on the “cultural” left) and the general blockheadism (to borrow a word from Carlyle) of the general public that foists its laziness and timidity and cowardice and reactionary politics and leftist ideologies in the form of “judgments” onto all manner of classic pieces of writing as well as contemporary work that should win their serious attention if not approval.
In the freecard above, we see, from left to right, mom (with her traditional concern for family), sister (with her devotion to love stories and “’hit’ movies,” not art house films, mind you, but movies that have pleased the masses), brother (who, as a young male is expected to get a rise out of mystery and adventure), and dad (who must be concerned with economic value, not value in a larger sense, but merely the economic side).
Of course, the person who created this freecard for Tower Records may well be reading Sartre’s Nausea when he or she isn’t creating visual concepts for money, and the old-school visual and phrases such as “mighty satisfying” and “top notch” may well imply a tongue-in-cheek criticism of such philistine values; but the fact is that Tower Records wanted to move books. (“Hey, hipsters, pick up a couple of CDs and then wander back to our poetry shelf where we represent poets 'all the way from' Kerouac to Burroughs to Morrison [yes, with all the great poets to choose from, they offered up Jim Morrison as a poet].”)
Reading, as many believe and as the mom in the freecard suggests, is merely a pastime. The truth, though this fact is known by far too few, is this: the reading of literature that challenges the reader is a primary means for transformation of the self. That the masses don’t know this concept of reading is not news. May they come to know this through education. That far too many students supposedly educated in universities do not understand this is a travesty. May their grades reflect their philistinism. And may these graduates not carry their philistine values into “education” as teachers themselves.
Popular books that are easy to read and far below the “grade level” of university students should be left behind. More challenging fare (as well as more entertaining fare) is available, and the professors are available who want to teach such works. The university student who wants to teach seventh grade English (and a noble goal that is) should not be reading every book that’s popular with seventh graders. Those seventh graders should be transformed by the reading they’ll do. University students who will become teachers must transform themselves first through quality reading in order to turn to others and help them do something beyond learning how to read a TV Guide or the latest “it” book as judged by the masses who haven’t read much and when they have read a few books haven’t read much that’s worth reading.
If the following ad for a “book” makes you want to throw up, you might want to consider working toward obtaining a teaching position. You’re needed.
Posted at 10:32 PM in Academe, Books, Current Affairs, Education, Poetry, Recommended Reading, Writers | Permalink | TrackBack (0)
Technorati Tags: bestsellers, Britney Spears, freecards, graduates, quality literature, reading, reading list, recommended reading, Tower Records
I will be reading from my chapbook of poems (and some prose on poetry)--Greatest Hits: 1979-2008--at the Forest Grove City Library in Forest Grove, Oregon, on Tuesday, April 7th, at 7:00 p.m. The reading is free to the public. Given my respect for the work done at public libraries, I consider it an honor to read at one.
Posted at 02:23 AM in Books, Poetry, Recommended Reading, Writers | Permalink | TrackBack (0)
Technorati Tags: Doyle Wesley Walls, Forest Grove City Library, Greatest Hits: 1979-2008, poetry, poetry reading
John Updike is now dead at the age of 76. He was a great writer who should have received the Nobel Prize for Literature.
Posted at 12:59 PM in Academe, Art, Books, Education, Recommended Reading, Writers | Permalink | TrackBack (0)
This article by David Simon in The New Yorker (Jan. 26, 2009) provides a very interesting background concerning one of my favorite Bob Dylan songs. A short article well worth the read. In addition, here is a quality version of Dylan singing his song. (This clip was on television? Note the pinups on the wall in the first 2-6 seconds of the clip. And what's being rolled in those papers?)
Posted at 04:18 PM in Art, Current Affairs, Education, Politics, Race Relations, Recommended Reading, Writers | Permalink | TrackBack (0)
Technorati Tags: Bob Dylan, David Simon, The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll, William Zantzinger
I take the following straight from andrewsullivan.theatlantic.com/the_daily_dish for October 11, 2008 (Sullivan himself is recommended reading):
Sullivan quotes Theodore Dalrymple on apology projection:
The False Apology Syndrome flourishes wherever there has been a shift in the traditional locus of moral concern. At one time, a man probably felt most morally responsible for his own actions. He was adjudged (and judged himself) good or bad by how he conducted himself toward those in his immediate circle. From its center rippled circles of ever-decreasing moral concern, of which he was also increasingly ignorant. Now, however, it is the other way round. Under the influence of the media of mass communication and the spread of sociological ways of thinking, a man is most likely to judge himself and others by the opinions he and they hold on political, social, and economic questions that are far distant from his immediate circle. A man may be an irresponsible father, but that is more than compensated for by his deep concern about global warming, or foreign policy, or the food situation in Africa.
I appreciate the way Dalrymple isolates and damns the phony here. The first time I saw this idea was in a poet's book of prose on poetry. If only I could remember which poet and give credit. Marvin Bell? Philip Levine? Louis Simpson?
Posted at 02:21 AM in Academe, Books, Current Affairs, Politics, Quotations, Recommended Reading, Writers | Permalink | TrackBack (0)
Technorati Tags: Andrew Sullivan, ethics, false apology, Theodore Dalrymple
Posted at 02:09 AM in Art, Books, Erotica, Photography, Quotations, Recommended Reading, Science, Writers | Permalink | TrackBack (0)
Recommended reading:
John McQuaid (of THE HUFFINGTON POST) offers intelligent commentary--amidst all the stupidity--concerning the "controversial" cover illustration on the latest issue of THE NEW YORKER.
Please tell me the American electorate is smarter than so many think who are wringing their hands over this cover. Please tell me we haven't become a nation of morons with teddy bears. If this cover ends up "hurting" Obama, then everything was already lost because too many of us cannot think or aren't even the slightest bit aware of what's going on.
I, in particular, appreciate McQuaid's last two sentences. I've seen enough of that fear of self-expression concerning "what words can be uttered and images can be shown": that fear comes from uneducated conservatives and uneducated "liberals" (that is, people who like to think of themselves as liberals but do not really believe in free expression).
Posted at 10:15 PM in Art, Current Affairs, Humor, Politics, Race Relations, Recommended Reading, Religion | Permalink | TrackBack (0)
Technorati Tags: art, John McQuaid, Obama, satire, The Huffington Post, The New Yorker
Posted at 12:35 AM in Art, Current Affairs, Erotica, Humor, Photography, Recommended Reading, Web/Tech | Permalink | TrackBack (0)
Posted at 09:38 PM in Academe, Education, Recommended Reading | Permalink | TrackBack (0)