Suggested Syllabus From A Class That Allen Ginsberg Taught In 1977


5-22-13_Ginsberg

Weekend Reading – West Virginia Leads The Way


A Republican politician in West Virginia wants to put science fiction in schools.

A magical time, with sexual fetishists, future mass murderers, and radical intellectuals (sometimes, all three at once).

Decline of a once (surprisingly) great art museum.

Takeaway quote: ‘Philosophy – it’s a bag of d–ks.’

The bookishness of books.

Midweek Staff Meeting – Use Your Words


_65587521_20011de3-1c96-48cb-8fec-63b6a0141238Vocabulary is the secret to success.

Poetic picks.

Reading is expensive.

A city that truly loves its books.

Used e-books. This could be a real thing (actually, no it couldn’t be a ‘real thing,’ but it could be an elaborate scheme Amazon uses to get a monopoly on the business of books).

Weekend Reading – The Real Advantage


The reason why Borders went bankrupt and Barnes & Noble is still surviving actually has little to do with differing e-books and online strategies.

College kids still prefer the old fashioned kind ‘o textbook and aren’t really into ‘enhance e-books’ or other such nonsense.

What is ‘the work of art?’

An interview with Michael Moorcock.

For the third year in a row, Washington, DC is ranked the most literate city in America. I can only assume that my New Year’s resolution to read a book a week will help us secure the title a fourth year running, so… you’re welcome, DC.

The Sunday Paper – Freakin’ Texas


IMG_2599Sexism (and harassment) are too prevalent for comfort in male dominated university philosophy departments.

That’s right: the first ‘book-less’ library is in, you guessed it, Texas. Apparently, the Texas GOP has decided to  turn the lemons of their embarrassingly low literacy rate into the toxic lemonade of deciding to save money on buying books.

Rethinking decline.

Weekend Reading – Save The Books!


201212-w-americas-coolest-bookstores-politics-and-proseNo. Seriously. Save them.

Even the weird ones.

You can start here.

Poetry to look forward to in 2013.

Poetry and the casualization of academic labor.

“I say you have to be a visionary, make yourself a visionary. A poet makes himself a visionary through a long, boundless, and systematized disorganization of all the senses. All forms of love, of suffering, of madness; he searches himself, he exhausts within himself all poisons, and preserves their quintessences.” – Rimbaud

School Book Fairs


work 2Do you remember school book fairs? Where you were left to wander an elementary school library with the tables stacked with copies of books whose information could be written on a card and then taken to a grown up for purchase?

At Larchmont Elementary School in Norfolk, Virginia, these events took place after school and with our parents.

Being a precocious little p—k, I passed by most of the tables of books as too far beneath me, but still being a creature of the id (monsters from the id! Forbidden Planet!), I did gravitate towards anything with monsters: dinosaurs, dragons, etc.

This resulted in some flops: especially some Hardy Boy’s book about a dragon (hint: it’s actually a freaking train). I never read the Hardy Boys before nor after that. Not my thing.

I also got Madeleine L’engle’s A Swiftly Tilting Planet. It had a youngish man riding a winged horse. But I was not ready for it, not in the least because, as it happens, it’s the third in a trilogy, beginning with the fantastic A Wrinkle in Time.

My mother was always very generous about letting me pick out a bunch. I’m not sure what my limit was nor whether it was based on volume of books or combined cost, but I always left with a selection of five or six books. But you didn’t get them right away – they always had to be ordered and were then delivered to the school. And while an adult my describe delaying gratification as delicious suffering, as an eight year old, I found it freaking irritating.

Weekend Reading – Selling Yourself


Selling your e-book in the brave new world.

Let’s hope not.

Kids don’t need to learn how to ‘read’ any more than they need to understand ‘critical thinking.’ Pfft. Silly whiny liberals, always wanting kids to ‘understand’ and ‘think’ and ‘explore the world of ideas.’

A museum of math.

The terrorist and the invented language.

First Staff Meeting Of The New Year – No Kids, Please


 

Red, 1963, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco, Evelyn and Walter Hass, Jr. Fund Purchase, 82.155, © Ken Price
Red, 1963, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco, Evelyn and Walter Hass, Jr. Fund Purchase, 82.155, © Ken Price

Philosophers should stop talking about their kids.

What’s killing opera? Hint: it’s not opera.

Philosophy, poetry, Craigslist, and language.

The humanities: not as bad as you thought!

This year, be still.

The theater and drink.

The best of art in 2012.

Sunday Paper – Big Brother Is Reading You


Your e-reader is spying on you.

Matrix Press.

Followed by Goliard Press.