Showing posts with label literature. Show all posts
Showing posts with label literature. Show all posts

Link Love

I thought I'd share a few of my favourite links I've encountered on the web of late.  Enjoy!

Ideas about what to do when you wake up at 6am and feel like you're alone in the world with time to kill...
A Guide to Literary New York (anyone keen to sponsor me on an educational excursion?)
A great Guardian piece about Literary Non Fiction
This inspiring video of Dr Ryan Reynolds speaking at the recet Tedx EQChCh Conference
An easy literary D.I.Y.


Check out more awesome literary photos here.

Reading List: Second Semester


Today I'm sharing my reading list for next semester to see if anyone has delved into the depths into dystopian literature (yes, that was intentional alliteration) and / or the film adaptations of the work of one William Shakespeare.  Here's what's on my agenda for the next few months...

Paper 1:
Oryx and Crake - Margaret Atwood
The Player of Games - Iain M Banks (have started this, but am finding it quite hard going...)
Erewhon - Samuel Butler
Do androids dream of electric sheep? - Philip K Dick*
Brave New World - Aldous Huxley*
The Dispossessed - Ursuala Le Guin
Utopia - Thomas More
The Republic - Plato*
Gulliver’s Travels - Jonathan Swift*

Paper 2:
Hamlet;*
Macbeth;*
Othello;*
Richard III; *
The Taming of the Shrew;

Films:
West Side Story (Robert Wise and Jerome Robbins 1961)
Kiss Me Kate (George Sindey 1953)
William Shakespeare's Romeo + Juliet (Baz Luhrmann 1996)*
10 Things I Hate About You (Gil Junger 1999)*
Hamlet (Michael Almereyda 2000)
Scotland PA (Billy Morrissette 2002)

(* = texts/films I've read/seen so far)

I'm looking forward to both of these papers - there's some interesting subject matter in the first, and it will be nice to reacquaint myself with Shakespeare in the second.   It'll also be good to be back in a lecture theatre again after two self-directed assignments this semester (lonely much?!) Please feel free to leave your thoughts /reviews/ advice etc if you've read / seen any of these.  In the absence of a book club (and with the hope of gaining a few insights prior to class starting) I'm keen to hear what you think!

Haiku Experiment

     I.                                                  II.                                                      III.
     Now all that is left                          See the fallen leaves                            My cold hands, outstretched
     Is seasonal confetti                        Hear them crack and crumble               Become ghostly in the fog 
     Strewn across my path                   Winter's breath has come                     Stolen by the grey




Book Review: "Death and Fame: Last Poems" - Alan Ginsberg

"Who cares what it's all about?
I do!  Edgar Allan Poe cares! Shelley cares! Beethoven & Dylan care.
Do you care? What are you about
or are you a human being with 10 fingers & two eyes?"

From "Is About"
New York City, October 1995
Death and Fame: Last Poems

I, like so many others, was introduced to the incomparable Alan Ginsberg through his infamous work "Howl." I remember sitting in an English lecture, lamenting the fact that I was indoors on a Friday afternoon, counting the ways in which I could better spend the time, when I heard a recording of Ginsberg reading from his monumental piece of literature.  I was instantly enthralled, entertained, and intrigued by way in which he belted out lyric upon loaded lyric with such passion and enthusiasm. I've come to learn he had that effect on many people fortunate enough to find themselves invited into his world.

"Death and Fame: Last Poems" is a collection of Ginsberg's work that he penned in the final four years leading up to his death in 1997.  The poems portray a Ginsberg dealing with the ailments of old age, lyrically laughing in the face of such challenges, making games of the mundane or slightly squeamish topics other poets might leave absent from the page.  Such works are interspersed with the political and social commentary Ginsberg is so famous for; works entitled "New Democracy Wish List: for President Clinton White House" and "Newt Gingrich Declares War on McGovernik Counterculture" amongst others, are rife with sarcasm and satire (the former was actually sent to The White House and received "politely" apparently).  One can't help but smile at the fact that the two things that appear to be in the forefront of Ginsberg's mind as he was writing the collection were bodily functions and government policy.  For him they appear to have more similarities than differences...

I enjoyed the collection; it's short enough to be enjoyed in one sitting, yet diverse enough to get a good feel for Ginsberg's work as a whole.  The only downside for me was the explicit sexual content - this only bothered me in a couple of the poems, though I realise it's Ginsberg's challenge to the conservative and prudish pieces of my personality!  My favourites were 'Peace in Bosnia - Herzegovina' with the poignant last stanza: "Who'll council who lives where in the rubble / who'll sleep in what brokenwalled hut / in the full moonlight when spring clouds / pass over the face / of the man in the moon at the end of May?" and the haunting "New Stanzas for Amazing Grace": "So rich or poor no gold to talk / A smile on your face / The homeless ones where you may walk / Receive amazing grace...".  "The Ballad of the Skeletons" is exceptional also; you can watch a performance of this piece with Ginsberg accompanied by Paul McCartney on guitar here.

A recommended read.  


Excerpt Soup


“For how long can you behold another person? Before you have to think of yourself again, like dipping the brush back in for more ink…”

Miranda July "Ten True Things"



When I read something that captures my imagination, takes hold of my heart, needs reading twice to comprehend or describes the world in way I've never encountered before, I write it down on whatever piece of paper I have in front of me at the time, and file it away in a folder I informally call "excerpt soup".  There are napkins in there, where coffee spots and smudges decorate prose in ball point pen, there are corners of magazine pages with scribble over make up advertisements, lines of poetry on crumpled paper ripped from exercise books, diary pages with pencil sentences I have to strain to see.  When I'm a little angry at the world and feeling slightly despondent at the prospect of an empty page, or stuck in the middle-mud of a daunting project, I turn to the words of others for an injection of inspiration.  They never fail to amaze me, no matter how many times I may have read them.  Here are a few of my ingredients...

“We wanted to strike lightning in dark waters, to see, if only for a second, the entire world that lives down there, the ten million species in amazing colors and patterns; show us life, now”.
Miranda July: No One Belongs Here More Than You

“So many had written, conversed and convulsed in these Victorian dollhouse rooms.  So many skirts had swished these worn marble stairs.  So many transient souls had espoused, made a mark, and succumbed here.  I sniffed out their spirits as I silently scurried from floor to floor, longing for discourse with a gone procession of smoking caterpillars.”
Patti Smith: Just Kids

“I will not wait to love as best as I can. We thought we were young and that there would be time to love well sometime in the future. This is a terrible way to think. It is no way to live, to wait to love.”
Dave Eggers: What is the What

“Perhaps it's true that things can change in a day. That a few dozen hours can affect the outcome of whole lifetimes. And that when they do, those few dozen hours, like the salvaged remains of a burned house---the charred clock, the singed photograph, the scorched furniture---must be resurrected from the ruins and examined. Preserved. Accounted for. Little events, ordinary things, smashed and reconstitutred. Imbued with new meaning. Suddenly they become the bleached bones of a story.” 
Arundhati Roy: The God of Small Things

What would you put in yours?