(Pace Yosemite Sam.)
Thursday, August 6, 2020
Wilford Brimley as Wyoming Rabbi: “Yo, Pickle!”
Wednesday, September 2, 2015
Sorry, Wyoming… Here’s Faust.
“Your work for the next four years is about discovery:
discovery of the world and its past and future;
discovery of one another and discovery of yourself,”
President Drew Faust told the 1,664 students who have
come to Cambridge from 79 countries — everywhere
from Algeria to Zimbabwe — and from 49 of the 50
states (sorry, Wyoming!).
Click image for a related post from August 3, 2013.
Monday, April 22, 2024
Friday, January 20, 2023
Sunday, September 6, 2020
Logo Detail
Tuesday, August 11, 2020
Tuesday, July 18, 2017
Death and the Compass
Or: Emma Watson at the Church of Synchronology .
Amir Aczel was the author of, among other books,
The Mystery of the Aleph :
Mathematics, the Kabbalah,
and the Search for Infinity , and
The Riddle of the Compass :
The Invention That Changed the World .
He reportedly died on November 26, 2015.
Thursday, March 31, 2016
Devil’s Gate Revisited
The revisiting, below, of an image shown here in part
on Spy Wednesday, 2016, was suggested in part by
a New York Times obituary today for a Nobel-prize
winning Hungarian novelist.
Note the references on the map to
"Devil's Gate" and "Pathfinder."
See also the following from a review of The Pathseeker , a novel
by the Nobel laureate (Imre Kertész), who reportedly died today —
… The commissioner is in fact not in search of a path, but rather of traces of the past (more literally the Hungarian title means ‘trace seeker’). His first shock comes at his realization that the site of his sufferings has been converted into a museum, complete with tourists “diligently carrying off the significance of things, crumb by crumb, wearing away a bit of the unspoken importance” (59). He meets not only tourists, however. He also comes across paradoxically “unknown acquaintances who were just as much haunted by a compulsion to revisit,” including a veiled woman who slowly repeats to him the inventory of those she lost: “my father, my younger brother, my fiancé” (79). The commissioner informs her that he has come “to try to redress that injustice” (80). When she asks how, he suddenly finds the words he had sought, “as if he could see them written down: ‘So that I should bear witness to everything I have seen’” (80). The act of bearing witness, however, proves elusive. In the museum he is compelled to wonder, “What could this collection of junk, so cleverly, indeed all too cleverly disguised as dusty museum material, prove to him, or to anyone else for that matter,” and adds the chilling observation, “Its objects could be brought to life only by being utilized” (71). As he touches the rust-eaten barbed wire fence he thinks, “A person might almost feel in the mood to stop and dutifully muse on this image of decay – were he not aware, of course, that this was precisely the goal; that the play of ephemerality was merely a bait for things” (66). It is this play of ephemerality, the possibility that the past will be consigned to the past, against which the commissioner struggles, yet his struggle is frustrated precisely by the lack of resistance, the indifference of the objects he has come to confront. “What should he cling on to for proof?” he wonders. “What was he to fight with, if they were depriving him of every object of the struggle? Against what was he to try and resist, if nothing was resisting?” (68) He had come with the purpose of “advertis[ing] his superiority, celebrat[ing] the triumph of his existence in front of these mute and powerless things. His groundless disappointment was fed merely by the fact that this festive invitation had received no response. The objects were holding their peace” (109). In point of fact The Pathseeker makes no specific mention either of the Holocaust or of the concentration camps, yet the admittedly cryptic references to places leave no doubt that this is its subject. Above the gate at the camp the commissioner’s wife reads the phrase, “Jedem das Seine,” to each his due, and one recalls the sign above the entrance to the camp at Buchenwald. Further references to Goethe as well as the Brabag factory, where Kertész himself worked as a prisoner, confirm this. Why this subterfuge on the part of the author? Why a third-person narrative with an unnamed protagonist when so many biographical links tie the author to the story? One cannot help but wonder if Kertész sought specifically to avoid binding his story to particulars in order to maintain the ultimately metaphysical nature of the quest. Like many of Kertész’s works,The Pathseeker is not about the trauma of the Holocaust itself so much as the trauma of survival. The self may survive but the triumph of that survival is chimerical. Translator Tim Wilkinson made the bold decision, in translating the title of the work, not to resort to the obvious. Rather than simply translate Nyomkereső , an allusion to the Hungarian translation of James Fenimore Cooper’s The Pathfinder , back into English, he preserves an element of the unfamiliar in his title. This tendency marks many of the passages of the English translation, in which Wilkinson has opted to preserve the winding and often frustratingly serpentine nature of many of the sentences of the original instead of rewriting them in sleek, familiar English. . . . — Thomas Cooper |
"Sleek, familiar English" —
"Those were the good old days!" — Applegate in "Damn Yankees"
(See previous post.)
Wednesday, March 23, 2016
For the Sweet Dave* Chair of Theology
From a post of August 3, 2013 —
Note, on the map of Wyoming, Devil's Gate.
There are, of course, many such gates.
* A character from the recent film "The Hateful Eight."
Saturday, August 3, 2013
In the Details
By chance, the latest* remarks in philosopher Colin McGinn's
weblog were posted (yesterday) at 10:04 AM.
Checking, in my usual mad way, for synchronicity, I find
the following from this weblog on the date 10/04 (2012)—
- The Shining (politics and philosophy)
- Big Bird (Kerouac on jazz)
- Kids Grow Up (children's books and philosophy)
Note too the time of this morning's previous post here
(on McGinn)— 9:09 AM. Another synchronistic check
yields Log24 posts from 9/09 (2012):
- Decomposition Sermon (mathematics and poetry)
- Grid Compass (philosophy and death)
Related to this last post:
Detail from a stock image suggested by the web page of
a sociologist (Harvard '64) at the University of Washington in Seattle—
Note, on the map of Wyoming, Devil's Gate.
There are, of course, many such gates.
* Correction (of about 11:20 AM Aug. 3):
Later remarks by McGinn were posted at 10:06 AM today.
They included the phrase "The devil is in the details."
Yet another check for synchronicity leads to
10/06 (2012) in this journal with its post related to McGinn's
weblog remarks yesterday on philosophy and art.
That 10/06 Log24 post is somewhat in the spirit of other
remarks by McGinn discussed in a 2009 Harvard Crimson review.