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Category Archives: literat

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teach yourself italian

February 15, 2016 by slow shimo

Teach Yourself Italian (jhumpa lahiri) The New Yorker, December 07, 2015     EXILE My relationship with Italian takes place in exile, in a state of separation. Every language belongs to a specific place. It can migrate, it can spread. But usually it’s tied to a geographical territory, a country. Italian belongs mainly to Italy, and I live on another continent, where one does not readily encounter it. I think of Ovid, exiled from Rome to a remote place. To a […]

Categories: i like short stories & sometimes poetry, literat, uncategorized • Tags: december issue, fiction, italian, jhumpa lahiri, short story, the new yorker

the naysayers

November 15, 2015 by slow shimo

The Naysayers: Walter Benjamin, Theodor Adorno, and the Critique of Pop Culture (alex ross) The New Yorker, September 15, 2014   In Jonathan Franzen’s 2001 novel, “The Corrections,” a disgraced academic named Chip Lambert, who has abandoned Marxist theory in favor of screenwriting, goes to the Strand Bookstore, in downtown Manhattan, to sell off his library of dialectical tomes. The works of Theodor W. Adorno, Jürgen Habermas, Fredric Jameson, and various others cost Chip nearly four thousand dollars to acquire; their […]

Categories: i like short stories & sometimes poetry, literat, philo & crit • Tags: adorno, critical theory, the new yorker, walter benjamin

sight unseen: the hows and whys of invisibility

April 20, 2015 by slow shimo

Sight Unseen: The Hows and Whys of Invisibility (kathryn schulz) The New Yorker, April 13 2015 It is possible, according to many sources, to become invisible, but you must be patient, methodical, and willing to eat almost anything. One characteristic spell, recorded by the British polymath John Aubrey around 1680, instructs you to begin by acquiring the severed head of a man who has committed suicide. You then bury the head, together with seven black beans, on a Wednesday morning […]

Categories: i like short stories & sometimes poetry, literat • Tags: invisibility, Philip Ball

minima moralia: gaps

March 7, 2015 by slow shimo

entry 50, minima moralia (t.w.adorno) Gaps. — The injunction to practise intellectual honesty usually amounts to sabotage of thought. The writer is urged to show explicitly all the steps that have led him to his conclusion, so enabling every reader to follow the process through and, where possible – in the academic industry – to duplicate it. This demand not only invokes the liberal fiction of the universal communicability of each and every thought and so inhibits their objectively appropriate […]

Categories: literat, philo & crit • Tags: adorno, gaps, minima moralia

the young painters

March 6, 2015 by slow shimo

The Young Painters (nicole krauss) The New Yorker, June 28, 2010 Four or five years after we got married, Your Honor, S. and I were invited to a dinner party at the home of a German dancer, who was then living in New York. At the time, S. worked at a theatre where the dancer was performing a solo piece. The apartment was small and filled with the dancer’s unusual possessions, things he had been given or had found on […]

Categories: i like short stories & sometimes poetry, literat

the essay as form

March 3, 2015 by slow shimo

The Essay as Form (t.w. adorno) Theodor W. Adorno, “The Essay as Form,” Notes to Literature, volume one. Trans. Sherry Weber Nicholsen. New York: Columbia University Press, 1991, 3-4. That in Germany the essay is condemned as a hybrid, that the form has no compelling tradition, that its emphatic demands are met only intermittently – all this has been said, and censured, often enough. “The essay form has not yet, today, traveled the road to independence which its sister, poetry, covered long […]

Categories: literat, philo & crit • Tags: adorno, essay as form

missed connections for a-holes

March 3, 2015 by slow shimo

Missed Connections for A-Holes (ethan kuperberg) The New Yorker, May 06,2014 I was at a coffee shop in Park Slope. You were sitting next to me, talking to your friend about how you’re a vegan but you secretly eat eggs. I really wish I had said something to you. Your voice was loud and distracted me from my work. * * * You: sitting next to your backpack on the Brooklyn-bound L train last night. Me: super tired, holding onto […]

Categories: i like short stories & sometimes poetry, literat • Tags: ethan kuperberg

bohemians

March 3, 2015 by slow shimo

Bohemians (george saunders) The New Yorker, Jan 14, 2004 In a lovely urban coincidence, the last two houses on our block were both occupied by widows who had lost their husbands in Eastern European pogroms. Dad called them the Bohemians. He called anyone white with an accent a Bohemian. Whenever he saw one of the Bohemians, he greeted her by mispronouncing the Czech word for “door.” Neither Bohemian was Czech, but both were polite, so when Dad said “door” to […]

Categories: i like short stories & sometimes poetry, literat • Tags: bohemians, george saunders, new yorker, short story

if black english isn’t a language, then tell me, what is?

February 24, 2015 by slow shimo

If Black English Isn’t a Language, Then Tell Me, What Is? (james baldwin) St. Paul de Vence, France–The argument concerning the use, or the status, or the reality, of black English is rooted in American history and has absolutely nothing to do with the question the argument supposes itself to be posing. The argument has nothing to do with language itself but with the role of language. Language, incontestably, reveals the speaker. Language, also, far more dubiously, is meant to define the […]

Categories: literat, philo & crit • Tags: james baldwin

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