29.9.11

Art Spiegelman, MetaMaus

New multimedia publication explores the legacy of Spiegelman's graphic novel, Maus

Art Spiegelman is releasing a new multimedia publication, MetaMaus, addressing the questions and the legacy of his acclaimed graphic novel about the Holocaust (link via The Casual Optimist). The following is a press release from the publisher's website:
In the pages of MetaMaus: A Look Inside A Modern Classic, Maus (going onsale October 4), Art Spiegelman re-enters the Pulitzer prize–winning Maus, the modern classic that has altered how we see literature, comics, and the Holocaust ever since it was first published 25 years ago.

In MetaMaus, Spiegelman probes the questions that Maus most often evokes—Why the Holocaust? Why mice? Why comics?—and gives us a new and essential work about the creative process.

MetaMaus includes a bonus DVD that provides a digitized reference copy of The Complete Maus linked to a deep archive of audio interviews with his survivor father, historical documents, and a wealth of Spiegelman’s private notebooks and sketches. [Read more]

You can also browse some of the MetaMaus spreads at the Random House website [See more]. The volume, with bonus DVD, will be published on 4 October 2011.

Praise for The Cahiers Series

A collection of 'really, really beautiful' volumes
George Craig, Writing Beckett's Letters (The Cahiers Series)
Cynthia Haven of Stanford University is singing the praises of The Cahiers Series (and rightly so!): 'In a world where everything is becoming faster, cheesier, and more functional – when books are no longer tactile, sensual objects, but characters on Kindle – it’s cheering to see anything swimming upstream. Bonus points if it extols that most underrated of literary trades, translation.' [Read More]

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28.9.11

Gerhard Richter: Panorama

6 October 2011 - 8 January 2012
Gerhard Richter, '1025 Colours' (1974)
Tate Modern in London is launching an ambitious exhibition of Gerhard Richter's work: 'Since the 1960s, Gerhard Richter has immersed himself in a rich and varied exploration of painting. Gerhard Richter: Panorama highlights the full extent of the artist's work, which has encompassed a diverse range of techniques and ideas. It includes realist paintings based on photographs, colourful gestural abstractions such as the squeegee paintings, portraits, subtle landscapes and history paintings.' [Read More]

Peter Mendelsund in Design Bureau

Designer interviewed on work for literature and music

Book designer Peter Mendelsund has been interviewed in the new issue of Design Bureau. On Jacket Mechanical, Mendelsund's website, he writes: 'They also devoted six pages to some of my music designs (designs for records and cds and animations and other music-related items) which was super nice of them.' [Read More]

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J. M. Coetzee on Les Murray

Coetzee takes a look at a collection of Murray's poetry and a recent memoir
J. M. Coetzee has reviewed Les Murray's Taller When Prone: Poems and Killing the Black Dog: A Memoir of Depression for the New York Review of Books: 'Murray’s wholesale rejection of Modernism may seem to mark him as simply an isolated provincial conservative swimming against the tide of the times. But there was more substance to his response than that. For a poet to repudiate newfangled foreign fashions and stand up instead for a home-grown tradition that celebrated the life of the mounted frontiersman (or his outlaw cousin the bushranger) was, in its Australian context, a clear political statement.' [Read More]

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The Lost Art of Walking

Stephen Mitchelmore reviews Geoff Nicholson's new book
Over at This Space, Stephen Mitchelmore reviews Geoff Nicholson's The Lost Art of Walking: 'It helps that Geoff Nicholson is almost the perfect walking companion: never boring, cheerfully opinionated but not self-obsessed, and full of engaging examples and personal anecdotes.' [Read More]

Polytropic(al) Joyce: Call for Papers

2 - 4 February 2012 · Queen's University, Belfast
A call for papers has been issued for the fifth annual Joyce postgraduate conference, to be held in Belfast in February 2012. The conference is entitled Polytropic(al) Joyce, and invites papers on addressing issues of 'geography, history, time, language and politics in context'. The deadline for submissions is 30 November 2011 [Read More]

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24.9.11

Tom McCarthy on the International Necronautical Society (INS)

Online excerpt from an interview with The White Review
'Navigation Was Always A Difficult Art. General Secretary's Report to the International Necronautical Society.' Tom McCarthy, International Necronautical Society
The White Review has published online a brief extract from their interview with Tom McCarthy:
About ten years ago, I was very interested in the art manifesto as a literary form. It’s a wonderful form and it belongs to a particular era. It’s the early twentieth century really – a time of revolution, where political and aesthetic radicalism were going hand in hand.

But I was interested in how the art manifesto might play out now. It seems like nowadays you could only have an inauthentic or an ironic version. So I wrote this pastiche-manifesto, which the art world picked up quite quickly, and that led to exhibitions, residencies and the like. I appointed INS committees and subcommittees. The INS became a structure. I call it a ‘fiction’ – not that it isn’t real, but because it’s a construct that not only references but also cannibalises a whole bunch of other cultural moments – the avant-garde, the bureaucracy of Kafka, the secret networks of Burroughs. [Read More]

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21.9.11

Brian Leiter on Friedrich Nietzsche

FiveBooks Interview in The Browser

Brian Leiter of Leiter Reports answers questions about his interest in Friedrich Nietzsche: 'I had actually become interested in philosophy from reading Sartre as a high school student in French classes. The essay Rorty assigned starts on a very existentialist note – and of course the writing was very evocative. At this point I was reading it in English but Walter Kaufman’s strength as a translator is that he captures the flavour of Nietzsche in English. He’s not the most literal translator but he is the most evocative. So it was a combination of the proto-existentialist themes and the style of the writing that I found very gripping. And that sense never left me – I still always enjoying reading and re-reading Nietzsche.' [Read More]

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Tom McCarthy on Film, Art and Writerly Advice

On some of the influences behind C
Tom McCarthy
Tom McCarthy talks about David Lynch, William Burroughs and Jean Cocteau in a brief interview for The Guardian website [Read More]

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19.9.11

The Irish Times publishes Beckett Letters

Extracts from The Letters of Samuel Beckett: 1941-1956
A collection of Beckett's letters auctioned in 2006. Photographs: Lipnitzki/Roger Viollet/Getty and Niall Carson/PA
The Irish Times is offering an exclusive peak into the second volume of Samuel Beckett's Letters (1941-1956), published later this month (link via 3:AM Magazine): 'These six letters that Samuel Beckett wrote between 1946 and 1956 are mostly about topics related to Ireland and his relationship to the homeplace.' [Read More]

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Kafka's Metamorphosis as Dance Theatre

19 September 2011 - 24 September 2011 · Linbury Studio Theatre

The Royal Opera House in London is promoting a dance theatre adaptation of The Metamorphosis: 'Franz Kafka's novella of the absurd and unexpected makes a fascinating subject for Arthur Pita's first commission for ROH2. Following last year’s sell-out run of God’s Garden Pita returns with this major new dance theatre piece, featuring acclaimed Royal Ballet Principal Edward Watson in the central role of Gregor Samsa, a travelling salesman who awakes one morning to find himself transformed into a giant insect. Starkly designed by Simon Daw, the Linbury auditorium will be transformed, in traverse, to provide an intimate, surreal Kafka-esque experience. Gregor Samsa’s unspeakable nightmare is brought to life by innovative composer Frank Moon – who will play live, an international cast of uniquely individual performers, and Pita’s distinctive theatrical style.' [Read More]

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Documentary: Philip Roth Without Complexes

New documentary film to be broadcast
Philip Roth. Photograph: AP Photo/Douglas Healey
Philip Roth Without Complexes, a 'rare and moving documentary' on the American writer, is to be screened today on the French-German channel Arte:
Based on eight hours of interviews, the hour-long film "Philip Roth Without Complexes" was shot a year ago between the 78-year-old writer's Upper East side apartment and his forest lodge in Connecticut.

Roth describes how he writes standing up after finding it freed his mind to "walk around", building his characters for "a year, or two or three" until a book takes shape -- then mailing it off to a small group of friends, the actress Mia Farrow among them.

Tackling one of the labels often attached to him, Roth tells the film's director William Karel and journalist Livia Manera he is "not crazy about being described as a Jewish-American writer. I don't write Jewish, I write American."

But whether it is his Jewish upbringing or his home town of Newark, where many of his works are set, Roth says it was a turning point when he realised he could use his own world as raw material.

"You can't invent out of nothing, or I can't certainly," he said. "I need some reality, to rub two sticks of reality together to get a fire of reality."

After his first short story was published - "about some Jewish guys in the army" - he was "assailed as an anti-Semite, this thing that I had detested all my life."

But that did not stop him writing more about American Jews, including tales of adultery that earned him fresh attacks but were rooted, he insists, in real life.

Good fiction, he tempers, also needs to overshoot reality - because "life isn't good enough in some ways."

Take the sex in his books, often copious and graphic, from the now-famous masturbation scenes in "Portnoy's Complaint" to the no-holds-barred portrayals of grown-up sex in his later works.

"I love to write about sex. It's a vast subject. And depicting it, describing it is hard," Roth says. But he adds: "Whether you believe me or not, most of the events in my books never happened."

Roth also readily admits writing is a way to keep depression at bay: "My worst times are when I'm not writing. I'm prone to get unhappy, depressed, anxious. So I need it."

Suffering, whether it is memories unraveled on the psychiatrist's couch or the physical kind - he suffers from chronic back pain - has played a large part in Roth's journey.

The writer admits that pain has driven him to the brink of suicide in the past.

"When you're not crazed by the pain, you're crazed by the drugs. It's a plague," he says. "It's there when you wake up in the morning and you've got to be a lot stronger than I am to not begin to be affected psychologically."

"You don't have to go looking for suffering if you want to be a writer - it will find you soon enough," he says with a chuckle.

The documentary wraps up on a poignant note, as Roth reflects on death and "how dying affects the lives of those who are going to die" - the subject of four of his recent works including "Everyman" and "Nemesis."

"The time is running out," he says matter-of-factly. "There's nothing I can do about that, there's nothing to be done."[Read More]

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Sylvia Plath on US Postal Stamp

American poet celebrated on a commemorative stamp
bookforum.com reports that 'Sylvia Plath, e.e. cummings, Joseph Brodsky, and Elizabeth Bishop are four of the nine poets who will be commemorated on a new series of US postal stamps.' [Read More]

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Arthur Rimbaud, The Poems

Matthew Bell on the 'libertine linguist'
Matthew Bell of The Independent discusses Arthur Rimbaud, and a new collection of his poetry: 'He was the archetypal Romantic figure, a drunken libertine who inspired artists from Picasso to Bob Dylan. But Arthur Rimbaud was more than a poetic pin-up. A new anthology of the French 19th-century poet's work will include five previously unseen verses written in Latin, which show him to have been a gifted classicist.' [Read More]

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Philosophy and Failure

Why do we think of Plato and others as great philosophers?
Scott F. Aikin and Robert B. Talisse on the failure of philosophy: 'Some philosophers are nearly unanimously considered great. Plato, Aristotle, and Kant make the short list. But that happy unanimity does not persist when the question is which is right. Of these three, at most one is. Likely none is. And so it is appropriate to ask: How can we consider someone to be a great philosopher yet mostly wrong? By many lights, Plato was wrong about ethics, politics, knowledge, and the basic structure of reality. That is, Plato was wrong on most of the big questions that philosophers try to answer. Yet Plato was a great philosopher. Why?' [Read More]

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17.9.11

Vladimir Nabokov: Literary Psychologist

Has Vladimir Nabokov's writing anticipated trends in modern psychology?
Vladimir Nabokov. Photograph: Yousuf Karsh
In The American Scholar, Brian Boyd asks whether Vladimir Nabokov could be our greatest literary psychologist: 'We could move in many directions, which is itself a tribute to Nabokov’s range and strengths as a psychologist: the writer as reader of others and himself, as observer and introspector; as interpreter of the psychology he knew from fiction (Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, Proust, Joyce), nonfiction, and professional psychology (William James, Freud, Havelock Ellis); as psychological theorist; and as psychological “experimenter,” running thought experiments on the characters he creates and on the effects he produces in readers.' [Read More]

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Philip Larkin, Letters to Monica

'Stylishly written and punctuated with drollery'
Philip Larkin
Christopher Hirst reviews Philip Larkin's Letters to Monica for The Independent: 'Discovered after the death of his lover Monica Jones in 2001, this epistolary haul traces Larkin's life from "frowning" Belfast to the "dreary dump" of Hull, with occasional visits to the "dirt and chilliness" of London.' [Read More]

Anaïs Nin and Henry Miller

'School seemed like a prison'

Anaïs Nin shares her thoughts on education and individual creativity. The latter part of the clip includes a conversation between Nin and American writer Henry Miller (via 3:AM Magazine).
15.9.11

When Dylan Thomas Met Henry Miller

Dan Davin recounts the day Dylan met Henry

3:AM Magazine quotes an extract from Dan Davin's Closing Times: 'Miller was drunk and also extremely short-sighted. He was convinced that Dylan had taken him to a brothel and that the plain uniforms and innocent bearing of the waitresses were the last word in lubricious sophistication. Dylan had great difficulty in averting calamity and never succeeded at all in convincing Miller that he was mistaken. We speculated on how many similar misunderstandings might underlie the exploits so boringly recounted in Tropic of Capricorn and Dylan went on to improvise a new work of Miller’s of which the dairy was the transmuted centre and in which Miller played a grotesquely comical role, rather like Mr. Magoo.' [Read More]

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The Real Socrates?

Loeb Classical Library paints a fuller picture of the renowned philosopher

Writing on Salon.com, Adam Kirsch celebrates the hundredth anniversary of the Loeb Classical Library: 'For me, certainly, the Loebs have been an indispensable introduction to classical literature and thought, despite my knowing only a little Latin and no Greek. In the coming weeks I will discuss a few examples of the way reading the Loebs can enrich, or even overturn, our usual picture of the ancient world. And there's no better place to begin such an anniversary tribute than by using the Loebs to triangulate the greatest man of antiquity -- Socrates himself.' [Read More]

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14.9.11

Review: Arthur Rimbaud, Illuminations

John Ashbury's new translation of Rimbaud's poetry

In The Independent, Michael Glover reviews John Ashbery's new translation of Arthur Rimbaud's Illuminations: 'Thief, teenage master-poet, gun-runner in Africa, attempted murderer: the short life and sensational achievements of Arthur Rimbaud fascinate us. When I finished re-reading Carcanet's parallel-text edition of his cycle of visionary poems in prose, in its new translation by John Ashbery, my head was full of words by those whom Rimbaud so palpably influenced, from Bob Dylan's "Desolation Row" to John Lennon's "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds" and "I Am the Walrus". It struck me that there was no real distance between Dylan, Lennon and Rimbaud.' [Read More]

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Simon Critchley's How to Read Series

Monographs on philosophy, theory, politics and religion

Brain Pickings offers a summary of Simon Critchley's series, How to Read: 'Each of the books tackles one of humanity’s great texts of literature, philosophy, science and religion, from Shakespeare to Freud to Darwin to the Bible, and enlists a leading scholar in that subject to break down the classic in a way that facilitates, deepens and enriches your understanding of it.' [Read More]

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Pavel Schmidt: Franz Kafka

13 September - 16 October 2011 · Harvard University
Pavel Schmidt, 'Klamm'
Harvard University is hosting an exhibition of the work of Pavel Schmidt, based around the writings of Franz Kafka (link via Times Flow Stemmed): 'The Kafka cycle presented here consists of forty-nine sketches created over the past four years by Pavel Schmidt, Swiss painter, illustrator, and installation artist. The title of each drawing is the name of a character from one of Kafka’s narratives or someone the author personally knew. Schmidt juxtaposes each drawing with a fragment from Kafka’s previously unpublished writings, which are presented in the German with English translations. The texts are not meant to explain the images, nor the images the texts. There is nevertheless a correlation between the works of the two artists: for Kafka, writing was an inner necessity. He created his characters by wrestling with, rejecting, molding, and inventing language—a creative process that Pavel Schmidt deliberately explores in his work. The cycle has been previously exhibited in Zürich, Berlin, Prague, New York, and Princeton.' [Read More]

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$50,000 Letter from J. D. Salinger

History for Sale to auction 'extremely rare handwritten letter'
Dave Itzkoff reports that a letter written by J. D. Salinger, just one sentence in length, is up for auction: 'We’ve heard that contributors to The New Yorker get paid handsomely for their work, but J. D. Salinger might outpace them all if a Las Vegas-based company realizes its asking price for a brief letter by that reclusive writer it is selling on eBay for $50,000.' [Read More]

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On Samuel Beckett's Molloy

'The nature of the narrative is uncertain, yet somehow a story is told.'
Over at literary blog Times Flow Stemmed, Anthony discusses Samuel Beckett's puzzling novel, Molloy: 'A significant departure from earlier Beckett’s stories, Molloy resists summary. It is a strange loop of a novel that winds up where it started out. A dying narrator writes words onto paper, pages that are paid for and collected each week. A journal, a diary, a report perhaps? Though both parts are written in the first person, the identity of the narrator is unclear, though the author appears to reveal himself.' [Read More]

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Jonathan Rodden, The Unexamined Orwell

Debunking the Orwell myths

Adam Kirsch reviews Jonathan Rodden's collection of essays, The Unexamined Orwell for The Barnes & Noble Review: 'just about the last word you could apply to the man born Eric Blair is "unexamined." He is the subject of numerous biographies and studies, and one of the rare twentieth-century authors to have been honored with a full-dress Collected Works -- a twenty-two-volume set. Of course, Rodden, who is the author of several books about Orwell's work and influence, knows this perfectly well. What he objects to is the way Orwell is too often replaced in the public imagination by " 'Orwell,' the myth, not the man or the writer" -- the image Rodden also refers to as "St. George." The purpose of this collection of essays is not so much to debunk the Orwell legend as to offer "fresh perspectives on him and his work, either by challenging broadly accepted appraisals of his achievement or pursuing new lines of inquiry about it."' [Read More]

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13.9.11

Review: John Baxter's J. G. Ballard Biography

The Inner Man received with skepticism
Where's the author? J. G. Ballard's writing room in Shepperton.
The first reviews of John Baxter's biography of J. G. Ballard are not altogether positive:
John Baxter's The Inner Man, the first biography since Ballard's death in 2009, sets out to challenge the idea that his darker impulses were restricted to his writings. Ballard, he contends, was a "master of self-promotion" who cultivated his affable public image in order to disguise a "troubled personality". He was bitter, resentful, harboured odd sexual proclivities, and on at least one occasion in the early 1970s, struck his girlfriend, Claire Walsh.

This last allegation – attributed to the writer Michael Moorcock, who knew the couple – is disturbing, and should give pause to any reader of Ballard. But Baxter's wider argument, that his subject was a slippery manipulator whose equable persona was wholly at odds with his true character, is unconvincing. There is no evidence here, for instance, to suggest Ballard was anything other than a loving and supportive father. (He raised his three children alone, after the death of his wife Mary in 1964, and they have spoken warmly of him.) [Read More]

Writing in The Observer, Robert McCrum offers a similar appraisal. [Read more]

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Amazon to create 'Netflix for Books'?

Amazon considers offering a digital e-book rental service
Stu Woo and Jeffrey A. Trachtenberg of The Wall Street Journal are reporting that 'Amazon.com Inc. is talking with book publishers about launching a Netflix Inc.-like service for digital books, in which customers would pay an annual fee to access a library of content, according to people familiar with the matter.' [Read More]

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Georges Perec: Poet, Playwright, Artist

'With every novel or piece of writing produced by Perec I cannot help but revere the mind behind it.'

Over at design blog We Made This, graphic designer and teacher Paul Finn shares his admiration for Georges Perec: 'I am fascinated by the French writer Georges Perec (1936—1982). I first read Species of Spaces and Other Pieces (1974) and was hooked. It instantly appealed to my typographic sensibilities; the opening pages are striking, the homage to Lewis Carroll’s Hunting Of The Snark empty ‘Map of the Ocean’ to the exploratory ‘Space’ poem (above) are inspiring.' [Read More]

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12.9.11

Review: Will Self, Walking to Hollywood

Part memoir, part autobiography
Anthony Cummins reviews Will Self's recent book, Walking to Hollywood, in The Observer: 'Travelogue, film criticism and autobiography are among the genres fused in this surreal narrative, in which a neurotic Self-alike tries to shake off his obsessive-compulsive disorder by taking a trip to Los Angeles to find out who or what "killed film" (the suspects include Sony, CGI and Mike Myers).' [Read More]

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Review: T. S. Eliot's Letters

James Longenbach on Eliot's visions and revisions
James Longenbach reviews the first two volumes of T. S. Eliot's Letters in The Nation: 'Great things were expected of the youngest Eliot, and a crucial part of his genius was to have achieved greatness in forms that no one in his family was fully equipped to countenance. Simultaneously, he fulfilled and decimated their expectations, constructing a life that allowed his family to admire his achievement only inasmuch as they were also bewildered, incapable of helping themselves to the side dish of self-congratulation that usually accompanies the main course of familial pride. The author of The Waste Land and Four Quartets secured the loyalty of his admirers (as well as the unshakable attention of his detractors) in precisely the same way.' [Read More]

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Don DeLillo: 9/11 and Literature

American novelist on the cultural influence of international terrorism
Laura Miller quotes Don DeLillo's recent comments in the New York Times Book Review: 'Not long ago, a novelist could believe he could have an effect on our consciousness of terror, [...] Today, the men who shape and influence human consciousness are the terrorists.' [Read More]

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10.9.11

Angharad Lewis on André Kertész

Another look at Kertész's photographic collection

Angharad Lewis, co-editor of Grafik Magazine, discusses André Kertész's book of photographs, On Reading, for We Made This: 'Solitary, absorbing, transporting… reading is therapy, escape and meditation. One of my favourite photographers, André Kertész, knew the special pleasures of reading, and captured images of engrossed readers throughout his life. His book On Reading is a collection of the images he made of readers all around the world between 1915 and 1970.' [Read More]

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Will Self: 9/11 short story

iAnna, an exclusive short story published in The Guardian
The Guardian introduces an exclusive short story from Will Self, marking the tenth anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks in New York and Washington: 'News of patients with an unusual set of symptoms tempts Dr Zack Busner back to St Mungo's in the last of our series of fiction marking the anniversary of 9/11' [Read More]

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Mary Gabriel, Love and Capital

Karl and Jenny Marx and the Birth of a Revolution

Troy Jollimore reviews Mary Gabriel's Love and Capital: Karl and Jenny Marx and the Birth of a Revolution: 'As Mary Gabriel's new biography of the Marx family, Love and Capital, makes clear, though, Marx was indeed human: a philosopher and revolutionary thinker, yes, but also a husband and father who loved his family and who experienced a tremendous anxiety over his failure to provide for them.' [Read More]
9.9.11

Tom McCarthy in Praise of Freud

On the connection between psychoanalysis and literature
Tom McCarthy
3:AM Magazine has posted an extract from Tom McCarthy's essay, 'Against Psychology — in Praise of Freud': 'Literature, in short, is not made up of ‘characters’: it understands that existence, whether individual or collective, is formed and unformed within networks of language and ceremony, spread across topographies whose axes, or gravitational force-fields, are law, pleasure and mortality, subject to the exigencies of topography itself. As such, it offers, at its deepest, neither commentary nor entertainment; rather, it is the very source-code of our being, index of its contingencies. Freud understands this too, of course, and directly articulates it more brilliantly and systematically than anyone before or since. Which is why psychoanalysis, and not psychology, can lay claim to an intense, perhaps even an incestuous, relationship with literature' [Read More]

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John Banville on Beckett biographies

Irish writer on the life of Samuel Beckett
John Banville
The ever-observant Susan Tomaselli has spotted an interview with writer John Banville, where he reveals an interest in biography:
Robert Birnbaum: James Atlas has published a series of short biographies, is there one—

John Banville: I think he did ask me to do one. I’d like to do one on [Samuel] Beckett. He deserves a brief sketch—a monograph rather than one of those huge biographies that there are. He is a fascinating character

Robert Birnbaum: But you haven’t been asked

John Banville: I think Atlas asked me to do one of my choice and I didn’t. It wasn’t the time to do it. I was busy doing other things. [Read More]

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8.9.11

Kraftwerk guest-edit Wallpaper*

German music group edit section of leading art and design magazine

Kraftwerk are guest-editing the October 2011 issue of Wallpaper*. Over at the magazine's website, they include 'a taster of Kraftwerk’s exclusive portfolio of 3D imagery with accompanying sound' (link via John Coulthart) [Read More]

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The Philosopher's Arms

A new BBC Radio 4 series
The Philosopher's Arms is a new 30-minute slot on BBC Radio 4, where presenter Matthew Sweet examines philosophical problems with a live audience - in a pub (link via Leiter Reports) [Listen]

Top 11 Existentialist Novels?

Literary classics of angst, ennui and despair
Still from Orson Welles' 1962 adaptation of Franz Kafka's The Trial
Flavorwire lists their top 11 existentialist novels:
  • Paul Bowles, The Sheltering Sky
  • William Faulkner, As I Lay Dying
  • André Gide, The Immoralist
  • Ralph Ellison, Invisible Man
  • Franz Kafka, The Trial
  • William Shakespeare, Hamlet
  • Kobo Abe, The Woman in the Dunes
  • Albert Camus, The Stranger
  • Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Notes from Underground
  • Jean-Paul Sartre, Nausea
  • Margery Williams, The Velveteen rabbit
[Source]

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7.9.11

F. Scott Fitzgerald and Alcohol

On Fitzgerald and 'the art of drunkenness'

Austin Allen takes a look at F. Scott Fitzgerald's work, alongside his collection, On Booze: 'As Kafka was to dream logic, Fitzgerald was to drunk logic. The sensory distortions, the behavior that is at once totally in and out of character, the astonishing coincidences that, on sober inspection, seem inevitable—all come alive with terrible clarity in his prose. Unfortunately, the cost of becoming so intimately familiar with the sloshed mind at work was death at age 44 and a mixed bag of a final novel.' [Read More]

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20 Most Iconic Book Cover Designs?

Online gallery includes classic novels by Salinger, Heller, Lee and Ellison
Anthony Burgess, A Clockwork Orange. Design: David Pelham
Flavorwire lists its top 20 book cover designs (link via Susan Tomaselli) [Read More]

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Man Book Prize Nominations 2011

Six authors with a chance to win £50, 000

On the New York Times website, Julie Bosman lists the candidates for the 2011 Man Booker Prize for Fiction:
  • Julian Barnes for The Sense of an Ending Carol 
  • Birch for Jamrach’s Menagerie 
  • Patrick deWitt for The Sisters Brothers 
  • Esi Edugyan for Half Blood Blues 
  • Stephen Kelman for Pigeon English 
  • A.D. Miller for Snowdrops
6.9.11

Friedrich Nietzsche: A Perspectivist Thinker

David Maier weighs in on current trends
In an article for 3 Quarks Daily, Dave Maier asks how German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche is currently being interpreted:
Nietzsche is often described as a "perspectivist" about knowledge and truth. His remarks on the matter, however, render the issue far from straightforward. He clearly means to reject some form of absolutism, but which? And what does he leave in its place? One's answer to this question depends quite a bit on whether or not one wishes to see Nietzsche as an ally in contemporary disputes. Postmodern relativists, for example, see Nietzsche as a champion of their cause, breaking the chains of "objectivity" and liberating us from the logocentric hegemony of Western rationality or some damn thing. Defenders of metaphysical realism (or of Christianity, NIetzsche's explicit target) are generally happy to agree, allowing them to dismiss him along with his postmodern disciples as wild-eyed lunatics.

However, a recent trend in Nietzsche studies has been to claim him as an exponent of scientific rationality rather than as a critic (as in the work of Brian Leiter and Maudemarie Clark). On these latter readings, Nietzsche's "perspectivism" must then be understood as not at all relativistic, and indeed compatible with, as Leiter puts it, seeing a naturalistic or scientific perspective as "the true or correct" one. [Read More]

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Carol Ann Duffy on Texting and Facebook

Is poetry the original 'text message'?
Carol Ann Duffy
On The Guardian website, Joanna Moorhead picks up on a recent quote by poet Carol Ann Duffy: 'The poem is a form of texting ... it's the original text [...] It's a perfecting of a feeling in language – it's a way of saying more with less, just as texting is. We've got to realise that the Facebook generation is the future – and, oddly enough, poetry is the perfect form for them. It's a kind of time capsule – it allows feelings and ideas to travel big distances in a very condensed form.' [Read More]
5.9.11

Diurnal vs. Nocturnal Writers: Tolstoy and Dostoyevsky

From an interview with Leo Tolstoy
James Warner of Identity Theory draws attention to a passage in A. B. Goldenveizer's Talks with Tolstoy: 'I always write in the morning. I was pleased to hear lately that Rousseau too, after he got up in the morning, went for a short walk and sat down to work. In the morning one's head is particularly fresh. The best thoughts most often come in the morning after walking, while still in bed or during the walk. Many writers work at night. Dostoevesky always wrote at night. In a writer there must always be two people – the writer and the critic. And, if one works at night, with a cigarette in one's mouth, although the work of creation goes on briskly, the critic is for the most part in abeyance, and this is very dangerous' [Read more]

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Marcel Proust on Reading

An extract from Proust's signature work
Marcel Proust
A brief excerpt from Marcel Proust's In Search of Lost Time:
[...] On the sort of screen dappled with different states and impressions which my consciousness would simultaneously unfold while I was reading, and which ranged from the most deeply hidden aspirations of my being to the wholly external view of the horizon spread out before my eyes at the bottom of the garden, what was my primary, my innermost impulse, the lever whose incessant movements controlled everything else, was my belief in the philosophic richness and beauty of the book I was reading, and my desire to appropriate them for myself, whatever the book might be. For even if I had bought it at Combray, having seen it outside Borange's - whose grocery lay too far from our house for Françoise to be able to shop there, as she did at Camus's, but was better stocked as a stationer and bookseller - tied with string to keep it in its place in the mosaic of monthly serials and pamphlets which adorned either side of his doorway, a doorway more mysterious, more teeming with suggestion than that of a cathedral, it was because I had recognised it as a book which had been well spoken of by the schoolmaster or the school-friend who at that particular time seemed to me to be entrusted with the secret of truth and beauty, things half-felt by me, half-incomprehensible, the full understanding of which was the vague but permanent object of my thoughts.

Marcel Proust, 'Combray' in In Search of Lost Time
Translated by C. K. Scott Moncrieff and Terence Kilmartin
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Collecting Paul Celan

An illustrated online bibliography
Ingeborg Bachmann and Paul Celan
Stephen Mitchelmore has drawn my attention to a recent post at Jack Ross' blog, The Imaginary Museum. The post presents Ross' personal list 'of the most useful materials by and about Celan available at present to any reasonably enterprising English-speaking reader.' And quite a list it is, too. [Read More]

Contra Mundum Press

A new publishing venture
Announcing the launch of a new publisher: Contra Mundum Press. Their first publication, due in October 2011, will be Gilgamesh in a new translation by Stuart Kendall, who has also translated Baudrillard, Bataille, Blanchot, Éluard and others. Aside from his many translations of Bataille, Kendall’s most recent book is Terrence Malick: Film and Philosophy (Continuum). Their next publication, due in December 2011, will be Paul Bishop’s translation of Friedrich Nietzsche’s Greek Music Drama, translated into English for the first time (link via Superfluities Redux):
Contra Mundum Press is a new publishing venture dedicated to the value and the indispensable importance of the individual voice. Through the publication of new texts by distinctive contemporary thinkers from all fields of the life of the mind as well as out-of-print titles from innovators of the past, Contra Mundum Press has been organized to demonstrate that the foundation of thought, and of the freedom and the efficacy of thinking, is not in the mash-up of the mob or the eviscerated diversion of social media but in the personal vision, and in the courage required to create it and to put it forth. [Read More]

Forthcoming Titles

  • Gilgamesh. Translated with an introduction by Stuart Kendall 
  • Friedrich Nietzsche, Greek Music Drama. Translated with an introduction by Paul Bishop 
  • W. J. Bate, Negative Capability: On the Intuitive Approach in Keats 
  • Richard Foreman, Plays with Films: Zomboid!, Wake Up Mr. Sleepy! Your Unconscious Mind is Dead!, and Deep Trance Behavior in Potato Land. Introduction by George Hunka. 
  • Georg Trakl, Poems. Translated by Mark Daniel Cohen
  • Louis Auguste Blanqui, Eternity for the Stars. Translated with an introduction by Frank Chouraqui

Contact

Contra Mundum Press
P.O. Box 1326
New York, NY
10276

Email: info (at) contramundum.net

Website

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Documentary: London Perambulator (2009)

Watch John Rogers' documentary online

Strange, fascinating, and at times quite moving. Will Self, Iain Sinclair and Russell Brand introduce us to Nick Papadimitriou in this 2009 documentary from John Rogers (thank you to Charlie Fox for the link):
John Rogers’ film looks at the city we deny and the future city that awaits us. Leading London writers and cultural commentators Will Self, Iain Sinclair and Russell Brand explore the importance of the liminal spaces at the city’s fringe, it’s Edgelands, through the work of enigmatic and downright eccentric writer and researcher Nick Papadimitriou - a man whose life is dedicated to exploring and archiving areas beyond the permitted territories of the high street, the retail park, the suburban walkways.
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William S. Burroughs reads Junky

Free audio recordings from UbuWeb
William S. Burroughs
UbuWeb has posted 36 MP3 audio recordings of William S. Burroughs reading his 1953 novel, Junky. Files are available to stream online, and are freely downloadable. [Listen]

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4.9.11

Simon Critchley/Tom McCarthy Panels

University of Louisville, Literature and Culture Since 1900 · February 23-25, 2012

Call for Papers

Simon Critchley and Tom McCarthy will be presenting at the University of Louisville's 40th annual Literature and Culture Since 1900 Conference. In order to make the most of their visit we are calling for papers that engage with these two contemporary thinkers either alone, in articulation with each other, or with other interlocutors. Depending on the quality and number of submissions we may be able to propose a double session of papers. Below are specific CFP prompts and contact information.

Simon Critchley
Simon Critchley's writings have made a profound impact on shaping the theoretical landscape in the 21st century. In conjunction with his keynote address at the University of Louisville's "Literature and Culture Since 1900 Conference," this panel is calling for papers that engage with any and all aspects of Critchley's work. Possible topics include his work in theorizing and continuing continental thought, his work as a poetry critic, his theory on humor, or his more idiosyncratic works like The Book of Dead Philosophers or his numerous mass media publications (NY Times Column, The Guardian's Blog on Being and Time).

Tom McCarthy
In her much cited 2008 review of his novel Remainder, Zadie Smith describes Tom McCarthy as articulating a kind of 20th century novel that Smith doesn't write, but greatly admires. In conjunction with his creative keynote and symposium at the University of Louisville's "Literature and Culture Since 1900 Conference," this panel is calling for papers that engage with any and all of McCarthy's work. Critics may want to consider how his novels (Men in Space, Remainder, and C) work in conjunction with his critical, essayistic writing in Tintin and the Secret of Literature or his reports for the International Necronautical Society. Papers that situate McCarthy within current theoretical and cultural debates are encouraged, as are papers that offer insightful readings of his literary project.

Submissions

Please send your 250 word abstract to seth.a.morton@rice.edu by Monday 26 September 2011.

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Postmodernism: Style and Subversion 1970 - 1990

V&A Exhibition | 24 September 2011 - 15 January 2012

The following is taken from the V&A website:

About the exhibition

Of all movements in art and design history, postmodernism is perhaps the most controversial. This era defies definition, but it is a perfect subject for an exhibition. Postmodernism was an unstable mix of the theatrical and theoretical. It was visually thrilling, a multifaceted style that ranged from the colourful to the ruinous, the ludicrous to the luxurious. What they all had in common was a drastic departure from modernism’s utopian visions, which had been based on clarity and simplicity. The modernists wanted to open a window onto a new world. Postmodernism, by contrast, was more like a broken mirror, a reflecting surface made of many fragments. Its key principles were complexity and contradiction. It was meant to resist authority, yet over the course of two decades, from about 1970 to 1990, it became enmeshed in the very circuits of money and influence that it had initially sought to dismantle. Postmodernism shattered established ideas about style. It brought a radical freedom to art and design, through gestures that were often funny, sometimes confrontational and occasionally absurd. Most of all, postmodernism brought a new self-awareness about style itself.

Presence of the past
The 1960s and 1970s saw widespread experimentation with architectural styles from the past. This tendency was attacked by hostile critics as a retreat, as pastiche or as merely ironic. But historicism could be radically expansive and optimistic, or inspired by an elegiac sense of the past that modernism had excluded. Postmodernism lived up to its central aim: to replace a homogenous idiom with a plurality of competing ideas and styles. That wide embrace was reflected in Hans Hollein’s façade for the Venice Biennale in 1980, which had as its centrepiece a ‘street of styles’ named the Strada Novissima. Hollein designed a set of columns that reprise the history of architecture, from the primitive garden through classical ruin to a modernist skyscraper. This extraordinary set piece is recreated in the V&A exhibition at full scale.

Apocalypse then
If modernist objects suggested utopia, progress and machine-like perfection, then the postmodern object seemed to come from a dystopian and far-from-perfect future. Designers salvaged and distressed materials to produce an aesthetic of urban apocalypse. Ridley Scott’s 1982 film 'Blade Runner' was a postmodern exercise par excellence, while Ron Arad encased a turntable, speakers and amplifier in reinforced concrete: an apocalyptic stereo, a hi-tech commodity recast for a post-industrial world.

New wave
As the 1980s approached, postmodernism went into high gear. What had begun as a radical fringe movement became the dominant look of the ‘designer decade’. Vivid colour, theatricality and exaggeration: everything was a style statement. Whether surfaces were glossy, faked or deliberately distressed, they reflected the desire to combine subversive statements with commercial appeal. The most important delivery systems for this new phase in postmodernism were magazines and music. The work of Italian designers – especially the groups Studio Alchymia and Memphis – travelled round the world through publications like Domus. Meanwhile, the energy of post-punk subculture was broadcast far and wide through music videos and cutting-edge graphics. This was the moment of the New Wave: a few thrilling years when image was everything.

Money
In 1981, as if to greet the new decade, Pop artist Andy Warhol created one of his signature silkscreen paintings. It featured a big, beautiful dollar sign. This ironic acknowledgement of his own work’s market value exemplifies postmodernism in its final stage. As the ‘designer decade’ wore on and the world economy boomed, postmodernism became the preferred style of consumerism and corporate culture. Ultimately this was the undoing of the movement. Postmodernism collapsed under the weight of its own success, and the self-regard that came with it. Yet looking back, we can learn a lot from postmodernism’s fatal encounter with money. Today, when the marketplace has again had its way with us, it is useful to consider the words of theorist Fredric Jameson. Faced with Warhol’s paintings, he wrote: ‘they ought to be powerful and critical political statements. If they are not that, one would certainly want to know why.'

Postmodernism Redux
The excitement and complexity of postmodernism were enormously influential in the 1980s. But do we still live in a postmodern era? In the permissive, fluid and hyper-commodified situation of design today, we are still feeling its effects. The postmodern subject was well depicted by Robert Longo in his series Men in the City. In each of these images, a man in a suit is captured in the throes of a mysterious convulsion. Is he dancing? Or is this the scene of a crime? It is impossible to tell, and that is the artist’s intention. The figure is at once ambiguous, unsettling and ecstatic. In this sense, at least, we are all postmodern now.

Website

1.9.11

Inside David Lynch's Club Silencio, Paris

'Everything is bespoke'
Interior of Lynch's Club Silencio in Paris. Photograph: PR
Interior of Lynch's Club Silencio in Paris. Photograph: PR
Fiachra Gibbons reviews David Lynch's new Club Silencio, soon to open in the city of Paris: 'You do feel you are descending into another world as you go down the six flights of stairs into Silencio.' [Read More]

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Peter Saville on GTF

Designers pick fellow artists they admire
Publicity poster for the Gagosian gallery: 'Pop Art is', designed by GTF (with Peter Saville) (2007)
Emine Saner of The Guardian has interviewed a series of well known graphic artists, asking them to name other designers they admire. Peter Saville, best known for creating record sleeves for Joy Division and New Order - not to mention the 2010 England football shirt - voices his admiration for small, independent company GTF: '[GTF] are perpetuating the honourable idea of the philosophical, professional, commercial artist. They are able to do this by having modest expectations; they have a small practice and they are selective about the work they take on. Communication design is about the message from the source to the audience, being delivered by the designer. A lot of graphic design appears to be all about the designer, but it is not supposed to be. The designer should be invisible, but to do that as well as GTF requires great skill and intelligence. They are manifestly fluent in the meaning of image, line, form and colour, and how people read it. There is always a rightness about their work – an invisible rightness.' [Read More]

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