Month: March 2007

  • The Punctum

    Today's birthdays:

    Jennifer Jones,
    film star and arts patron;

    Tom Wolfe, author of
    The Painted Word.

    "Hunt for the best."
    -- Norton Simon 

    The image “http://www.log24.com/log/pix07/angel_angel_down_we_go2A.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.


    Cover detail,
    soundtrack recording

    of the Jennifer Jones film

    "Angel, Angel, Down We Go"

    The girl's left eye in the above
    portrait illustrates a remark
      in yesterday's New York Times
    on a figure in a painting:

    "His head recedes into shadow, so you barely see his face. But a tiny
    fleck of white in his eye, a light that kindles his reawakening, brings
    him to life. It’s what Roland Barthes, the French critic, liked to call
    a punctum, the spot, marking time, that burns an image into memory."

     (This remark, by Michael Kimmelman,
    comes with a headline--

    Lights! Darks! Action! Cut!  
    Maestro of Mise-en-Scène
      

    -- that seems to have been inspired
    by Tom Wolfe's prose style.)

    For further details, see
    Barthes's Punctum,
    by Michael Fried.

  • ART WARS, continued

    A stich in time
     saves...


    A 3x3 grid

    Click on picture
    for further details.

  • Philosophy Wars, continued

    Senior Honors


    Notes in Memory of
    a Father, a Son, and a Holy Ghost

    From the obituary in today's New York Times of historian Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr.--

    "Mr. Schlesinger, partly through his appreciation of history, fully
    realized his good fortune. 'I have lived through interesting times and
    had the luck of knowing some interesting people,' he wrote.

    A huge part of his luck was his father, who guided much of his early
    research, and even suggested the topic for his [Harvard] senior honors: Orestes
    A. Brownson, a 19th-century journalist, novelist and theologian. It was
    published by Little, Brown in 1938 as 'Orestes A. Brownson: A Pilgrim's
    Progress.'"

    -- Douglas Martin

    From The Catholic Encyclopedia:

    "It is sufficient for true knowledge that it affirm as real that which
    is truly real."

    -- Article on Ontologism

    From The Diamond Theory of Truth:

    "Was there really
    a cherubim waiting at the star-watching rock...?
    Was he real?
    What is real?

    -- Madeleine L'Engle, A Wind in the Door, Farrar,
    Straus and Giroux, 1973, conclusion of Chapter Three, "The
    Man in the Night"

    "Oh, Euclid, I suppose."


    -- Madeleine L'Engle, A Wrinkle in Time, Farrar,
    Straus and Giroux, 1962, conclusion of Chapter Five, "The Tesseract"

    Related material: Yesterday's first annual "Tell Your Story Day" at Harvard and yesterday's entry on Euclid.