Month: January 2009

  • Annals of Education:

    Catholic Schools Week

    Today is the conclusion of
     Catholic Schools Week.

    From one such school,
    Cullinane College:

    Cullinane College school spirit

    Cullinane students
    display school spirit

    Related material:

    James Joyce, A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man:

    He turned to the flyleaf of the geography and read what he had written there: himself, his name and where he was.

    Stephen Dedalus
    Class of Elements
    Clongowes Wood College
    Sallins
    County Kildare
    Ireland
    Europe
    The World
    The Universe

    That was in his writing: and Fleming one night for a cod had written on the opposite page:

    Stephen Dedalus is my name,
    Ireland is my nation.
    Clongowes is my dwellingplace
    And heaven my expectation.

    He read the verses backwards but then they were not poetry. Then he read the flyleaf from the bottom to the top till he came to his own name. That was he: and he read down the page again. What was after the universe?

    Nothing. But was there anything round the universe to show where it stopped before the nothing place began?

    Alfred Bester, Tiger! Tiger!:
    Gully Foyle is my name
    And Terra is my nation
    Deep space is my dwelling place
    The stars my destination

    “Guilty! Read the Charge!”
    – Quoted here on
    January 29, 2003

    The Prisoner,
    Episode One, 1967:
    I… I meant a larger map.”
    – Quoted here on
    January 27, 2009

  • Annals of Aesthetics:

    Two-Part Invention

    This journal on
    October 8, 2008,
    at noon:

    “There is a pleasantly discursive treatment of Pontius Pilate’s unanswered question ‘What is truth?’”

    – H. S. M. Coxeter, introduction to Richard J. Trudeau’s remarks on the “story theory” of truth as opposed to the “diamond theory” of truth in The Non-Euclidean Revolution

    Trudeau’s 1987 book uses the phrase “diamond theory” to denote the philosophical theory, common since Plato and Euclid, that there exist truths (which Trudeau calls “diamonds”) that are certain and eternal– for instance, the truth in Euclidean geometry that the sum of a triangle’s angles is 180 degrees.

    Insidehighered.com on
    the same day, October 8, 2008,
    at 12:45 PM EDT

    “Future readers may consider Updike our era’s Mozart; Mozart was once written off as a too-prolific composer of ‘charming nothings,’ and some speak of Updike that way.”

    – Comment by BPJ

    “Birthday, death-day–
     what day is not both?”
    John Updike

    Updike died on January 27.
    On the same date,
    Mozart was born.

    Requiem

    Mr. Best entered,
    tall, young, mild, light.
    He bore in his hand
    with grace a notebook,
    new, large, clean, bright.

    – James Joyce, Ulysses,
    Shakespeare and Company,
    Paris, 1922, page 178

    Related material:

  • Annals of Philosophy:

    Dagger Definitions

    From 'Ulysses,' 1922 first edition, page 178-- 'dagger definitions'
     
    Midrash by a post-bac:

    Wednesday, August 27, 2008

    “Horseness is
    the whatness of allhorse”:
    Thingism vs. Thisness

    By Amy Peterson

    Jacques Derrida once asked the surly and self-revealing question, “Why is it the philosopher who is expected to be easier and not some scientist who is even more inaccessible?” As with philosophers generally, literary critics come with their own inaccessible argot, some terms of which are useful, but most of which are not and only add more loops to literary criticism’s spiraling abstraction. Take for example, James Wood’s neologism thisness (h/t: 3 Quarks Daily):

    The project of modernity in Wood’s eyes is largely in revealing the contour and shape, the specific ‘feel’ of that essential mystery. He even borrows a concept from the medieval philosopher Duns Scotus, haecceitas or ‘thisness,’ to explain what he means: ‘By thisness, I mean any detail that draws abstraction toward itself and seems to kill that abstraction with a puff of palpability, any detail that centers our attention with its concretion.’ (my emphasis)

    Wood is clearly taking his cue here from the new trend in literary criticism of referring to realism by its etymological meaning, thingism. Where thingism is meant to capture the materialism of late nineteenth and early 20th century Realist literature, thisness, it seems, is meant to capture the basic immaterialism of Modern realist literature. In this, it succeeds. Realism is no longer grounded in the thingism, or material aspect, of reality as it was during the Victorian era. In contemporary literature, it is a “puff of palpability” that hints at reality’s contours but does not disturb our essential understanding of existence as an impalpable mystery. So now we have this term that seems to encompass the Modern approach to reality, but is it useful as an accurate conception of reality (i.e. truth, human existence, and the like), and how are we to judge its accuracy?

    I think that, as far as literature is concerned, the test of the term’s accuracy lies in the interpretation of the Modernist texts that Wood champions as truthful but largely abstract depictions of human experience:

    ‘Kafka’s ‘”Metamorphosis” and Hamsun’s “Hunger” and Beckett’s “Endgame” are not representations of likely or typical human activity but are nevertheless harrowingly truthful texts.’

    For brevity’s sake, I’ll pick a passage from a different Modernist text that I think exemplifies the issues involved in the question of thingism and thisness’ reality. In James Joyce’s Ulysses, a pub discussionhttp://www.log24.com/images/asterisk8.gif of art’s purpose arises in which the writer Geoffrey Russell asserts that “Art has to reveal to us ideas, formless spiritual essences”; in his thoughts, Stephen Dedalus prepares to counter this:

    Unsheathe your dagger definitions. Horseness is the whatness of allhorse. Streams of tendency and eons they worship. God: noise in the street: very peripatetic. Space: what you damn well have to see. Through spaces smaller than red globules of man’s blood they creepy crawl after [William] Blake’s buttocks into eternity of which this vegetable world is but a shadow. Hold to the now, the here, through which all future plunges to the past.

    To give my best translation of Stephen-think: The physical being of the horse (“horseness”) grounds the over-arching, abstract idea of the horse (“allhorse”) in reality (“whatness”). God—the ultimate abstraction—is elusive and rarely manifests himself as a material reality (when listening to children playing earlier in the book, Stephen asserts that God is a “shout in the street”). Space—the material world—must be observed to make sense of abstract ideas (like God). Stephen’s opponents who believe that art must depict the abstract and the essential make claims about existence that have very little basis in material reality so that they can grasp at the divine through the work of such famously fantastic artists as William Blake, whose unrealistic poetry and paintings Stephen evidently holds in little esteem here, though he’s kinder to Blake elsewhere. Finally, the present makes concrete the abstract possibilities of the future by turning them into the realities of the past.

    Ulysses elucidates the distinction between abstractly based and materially based realism because, while abstract to be sure, Joyce’s writing is deeply rooted in material existence, and it is this material existence which has given it its lasting meaning and influence. The larger point that I’m trying to make here is that material reality gives meaning to the abstract. (As a corollary, the abstract helps us to make sense of material reality.) There can be no truth without meaning, and there can be no meaning without a material form of existence against which to judge abstract ideas. To argue, as Wood does, that the abstract can produce concrete truths with little reference to material reality is to ignore the mutual nature of the relationship between material reality and truth. The more carefully we observe material reality, the more truth we gain from our abstractions of its phenomena, or, to state it in the vocabulary—though not the style—of literary criticism: thisness is a diluted form of thingism, which means that thisness is productive of fewer (and lesser) truths.

    http://www.log24.com/images/asterisk8.gif “Space: what you
      damn well
         have to see.”

    Amy Peterson
    has failed to see
    that the unsheathing
    of dagger definitions
    takes place not in
    a pub, but in
    The National Library
    of Ireland
    .

    The Russell here is not
    Geoffrey but rather
    George William Russell,
    also known as AE.

    Related material:

    Yesterday’s Log24 entry
    for the Feast of
    St. Thomas Aquinas,
    Actual Being,”
    and the four entries
    that preceded it.

  • Annals of Philosophy:

    ACTUAL BEING
    continued from
    October 25, 2008


    John Updike at Boston Public Library, 2006, photo by Robert Spencer for The New York Times



    “The only wealth he bestowed on his subjects lay in the richness of his descriptive language, the detailed fineness of which won him comparisons with painters like Vermeer and Andrew Wyeth.”

    Christopher Lehmann-Haupt in today’s International Herald Tribune
     


    “These people have discovered how to turn dreams into reality. They know how to enter their dream realities. They can stay there, live there, perhaps forever.”

    — Alfred Bester on the inmates of Ward T in his 1953 short story, “Disappearing Act”

    Related material:
    Is Nothing Sacred?


    When?

    Going to dark bed there was a square round Sinbad the Sailor roc’s auk’s egg in the night of the bed of all the auks of the rocs of Darkinbad the Brightdayler.

    Where?

    Black disc from end of Ch. 17 in Ulysses

    Ulysses, conclusion of Episode 17


    Cover of 'Through the Vanishing Point,' by Marshall McLuhan and Harley Parker

    Happy Feast of
    St. Thomas Aquinas.

  • Annals of Aesthetics:

    A Kind of Cross

    “For every kind of vampire,
    there is a kind of cross.”
    Gravity’s Rainbow  

    Page 16 of the New Directions 'Stephen Hero,' 1963

    The above text on Joyce’s theory of epiphanies:

    “It emphasizes the radiance, the effulgence, of the thing itself revealed in a special moment, an unmoving moment, of time. The moment, as in the macrocosmic lyric of Finnegans Wake, may involve all other moments, but it still remains essentially static, and though it may have all time for its subject matter it is essentially timeless.”

    – Page 17 of Stephen Hero, by James Joyce, Theodore Spencer, John J. Slocum, and Herbert Cahoon, Edition: 16, New Directions Publishing, 1963

    Related epiphanies –

    Detail from
    the above text:
    The word 'epiphanies' followed by a footnote dagger
    Cover of
    a paperback novel
    well worth reading:

    Dagger on the cover of 'Fraternity of the Stone,' by David Morrell

    Related material:

    “Joyce knew no Greek.”
    – Statement by the prototype
    of Buck Mulligan in Ulysses,
    Oliver St. John Gogarty,
    quoted in the above
    New Directions Stephen Hero

    Chrysostomos.”
    – Statement in Ulysses
    by the prototype
    of Stephen Dedalus,
    James Augustine Aloysius Joyce

    See also the link to
    Mardi Gras, 2008,
    in yesterday’s entry,
    with its text from
    the opening of Ulysses:

    “He faced about and
    blessed gravely thrice
    the tower,
    the surrounding country
     and the awaking mountains.”

    Some context:

    (Click on images for details.)

    'The Prisoner,' Episode One, frame at 7:59, map of The Village

    and

    Escher's 'Metamorphose III,' chessboard endgame

    “In the process of absorbing
    the rules of the institutions
    we inhabit, we become
    who we are.”

    David Brooks, Jewish columnist,
    in today’s New York Times

    The Prisoner,
    Episode One, 1967:
    I… I meant a larger map.”

  • Annals of Hogwarts:

    Harvard, Magic,
    and The New York Times,
    continued from Jan. 15:


    The New York Times Jan. 15:

    Magic and Realism,
    by Roger Cohen –

    “… what I want from the
     Obama administration is
     something more than
    Harvard-to-the-Beltway
     smarts. I want
       magical realism.”

    Google News, 4:19 PM ET today:

    Obama to reverse Bush climate policies; 93-year-old man freezes to death in home

    “My shavin’ razor’s cold
    and it stings.”
    – Song quoted here on  
    Mardi Gras, 2008

  • Happy Birthday, Paul Newman:

    Episode One

    For the Hole in the Wall Gang:

    http://www.log24.com/log/pix09/090126-Map.jpg

    Shopkeeper: Good morning, sir. And what can I do for you then?
    Prisoner: I’d like a map of this area.
    Shopkeeper: Map? Colour or black and white?
    Prisoner: Just a map.
    Shopkeeper: Map…

    He pauses to remember where he keeps such a thing.

    Shopkeeper: Ah. Black and white…

    He produces a map from a cupboard.

    Shopkeeper: There we are, sir. I think you’ll find that shows everything.

    The map is labelled “map of your village.” The Prisoner opens it; it shows the village bordered by “the mountains”: there are no external geographical names.

    Prisoner: I… I meant a larger map.
    Shopkeeper: Only in colour, sir. Much more expensive.
    Prisoner: That’s fine.

    The shopkeeper fetches him a colour map as inadequate as the last. It folds out as a larger sheet of paper, but still mentions only “the mountains,” “the sea,” and “the beach,” together with the title “your village.”

    Prisoner: Er, that’s not what I meant. I meant a… a larger area.
    Shopkeeper: No, we only have local maps, sir. There’s no demand for any others. You’re new here, aren’t you?

    – Comment at 
    The Word magazine,
    January 16, 2009

    Comment by m759,
    January 16, 2009:

    “In the pictures of the old masters, Max Picard wrote in The World of Silence, people seem as though they had just come out of the opening in a wall… “

    – Annie Dillard in
    For the Time Being

    “Shopkeeper:
    Only in colour, sir.
    Much more expensive.

    Prisoner:
    That’s fine.”

  • Today’s Sermon –

    Review:
    The Maker’s Gift

    The Maker's Gift -- Sayers, 'The Mind of the Maker,' and Nabokov, 'The Gift'

    Click on image for details.

  • To the Academy:

    In Memory of
    Composer George Perle

    (See previous entry.)


    CHANGE
    TO BELIEVE IN

    1. 12-tone temperament
    2. 34-tone temperament
    3. First-class temperament

    For related material
    on the word “gift” in
    the previous entry, see
    Midnight Cowboy
    (Log24, July 28, 2003)