Tuesday, November 9, 2010
Youtube Playlist for me for November
Can't find the real Dylan version of this song -- and the best cover version (of hundreds) is the heartbreaking Bruce Springsteen one. But this is a nice clip--my two favorite actors, but Im not really allowed to watch it here in the cyber cafe. Wish I could do a road trip in a car like that, but I'm glad to live through this in a vicarious way for now. Best part of that movie!
Saturday, November 6, 2010
The Weekend of Canceled Plans
Thursday, November 4, 2010
Something to share from GOODREADS.com - Daphnis and Chloe
La decouverte de Chloe (All of the pictures here, I recommend clicking and
making them full-size -- they are so beautiful)
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Books like this make me lament the difference in curriculum between what I studied in school in the US and what my friend studied in Italy in Lecce. At least I'm aware that I missed out, and so I have to fill in the gaps! The way I do so is through this: the Penguin Classics list I found on Wikipedia (see below for the links).
So, Daphnis and Chloe? This is exactly one of the kinds of books that make me glad to have this list to refer to when I choose the next book to read--especially since most of them are free and I can put them immediately on my Kindle.
And as an American, how would we have had exposure to this, unless some Hollywood film company decides to make a new iteration of it? Without that kind of leverage behind it, it's not something that would ever come again onto the Bestseller list even if it is better than the majority of those books there.
Last week I was listening to a great episode of RADIOLAB ''Words'' about how a language spontaneously grew among the deaf community in Nicaragua, and how the second generation had 10x more subtle words for the idea of ''to think''. This had the result that the 2nd generation scored many orders of magnitude better on a test that examined their ability to have strong interpersonal empathy. I.e., their ability to think from the point of view of another person was much stronger because their ''islands of information'' in their brain had more subtle bridges that could be more fully utilized, and so they functioned at a higher level (until the 2nd gen taught the 1st gen the new words, and then the scores normalized). To me, this says a lot about the influence and evolution of literature, even the use and function of it. Furthermore, larger vocabulary literally is empowering in a very concrete way, and that applies also to the way words are used and the kind of constantly evolving complexity in the spiritual field of the different worlds created by good literature. You can become more human by reading books. In the program, the man says the 27 years when he was deaf and languageless -- not even knowing until then that objects had names that people used -- were his dark years, and once he had the growing vocabulary, he was less and less able to remember what he felt then before his first teacher opened him up, and was never able to interact in the same way with his other languageless friends because he could no longer think in a way that was intelligible to his friends.
So with this in mind, I open a Penguin Classic and I wonder, how far removed am I from the way this writer understands his world? And its a tricky thing, especially in this instance. Longus wrote the amazing Daphnis and Chloe 1800 years ago. Which in Greek antiquity time, is the end of Greek antiquity time. Its surprising that it doesn't feel dated. It isn't overly elaborate, but neither is it extremely simplistic. It has great humor and wisdom, a false naivete that is so charming. The writer really seems to have thought about the arc of the story, when to bring or when to pull the emotional punches. Things are mentioned that have an impact dozens of pages later, there's a good economy of words, but the author also is able to elaborate when necessary rather than rushing the story. I read it in about 3 hours, and didn't once have my attention wander. I meant to read half last night and half today but I liked it enough that I kept going until 1230 AM.
It's worth your time! It easily rivaled any other classical text that I've come across. I've not really read a lot from this time, but have enjoyed nearly everything that I've come across. Other Antiquities classics that I love: Xenophon's Persian Journey, the Satyricon, the Heroides by Ovid, and Edith Hamilton's Mythology. Drama, I like : The Seven Against Thebes, Aristophanes and Aeschylus. People make a great to-do about Euripides, but I read a thing about him that was pretty scathing and have stayed away from him. Plus there are many good Shakespeare plays that incorporate these characters.
This is the intro text on GR from the Marc Chagall version :
In 1831 Goethe called Daphnis and Chloe 'a masterpiece ... in which Understanding, Art, and Taste appear at their highest point, and beside which the good Virgil retreats somewhat into the background ... One would do well to read it every year, to be instructed by it again and again, and to receive anew the impression of its great beauty. 'Touching yet humorous, naive and at the same time highly sophisticated, Daphnis and Chloe is the story of a shepherd boy and girl who fall desperately in love yet find themselves facing great obstacles, because in their passion they behave, as the author says, even more awkwardly 'than rams and ewes.'.
One last thought (me again):
With the Greeks, Romans, even all the way up to Rabelais and Cervantes, I heard my friend observe that, ''Our 'modernity', ... We're just now remembering the things that we forgot during the Middle Ages, it's taking us this long. The Judeo-Christian-Muslim tradition kicked into overdrive, the conquerors went to Egypt/Sudan and defaced all of the relics. But thankfully these great texts were saved from the fires in the giant library at Alexandria, and among the scholars of the Middle East and now we can go back and try to remember what we once had.
Daphnis and Chloe I first heard about this from Kundera's Book of Laughter and Forgetting -- this was one of the few parts I liked from his book.
The mentioned segment from Radiolab's WORDS
''New Words, New World''
And a beautiful (!!), short film accompanying the episode:
Penguin Classics Complete:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Penguin_Classics
Penguin 20th Century/ Modern Classics (what they call Novecento in Italian):
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Penguin_20th_Century/Modern_Classics
This is the TIME 1923-Present list that is very nice, too.
http://www.listal.com/list/times-100-greatest-novels-1923
View all my reviews
PS --
I tell people, my dream job would be as an opera singer, but I think I was made more for ballet.
And I tell young people :
''If you're interested in girls, don't join the football team; instead, sign up for classical dance! You just pick up girls for hours a day and spin them around. And get paid to do it, and you don't have to hit anyone with your face, noone's trying to hit you with their face, no stinky locker rooms (or at least, these ones are not so bad as theirs), and even better, there's only one of you and 50 of them, instead of a team full of guys that do the sport better than you...'' xD
Because I got the feet.''Most dancers try to be able to do that for years, and never get them.'' a former pro dancer told me last spring in Ourzazate.
Tuesday, November 2, 2010
15 Books in 15 minutes
The Rules: Don't take too long to think about it. Fifteen books/authors (poets included) who've influenced you and that will always stick with you. List the first fifteen you can recall in no more than fifteen minutes. Tag at least fifteen friends, including me, because I'm interested in seeing what authors my friends choose. (To do this, go to your Notes tab on your profile page, paste rules in a new note, cast your fifteen picks, and tag people in the note.)
Poetry
John Keats' Poems
Rilke's Poems
Lat-Am Literature
100 Years of Solitude by Garcia-Marquez
Dona Flor and her Two Husbands by Jorge Amado
Rayuela (Hopscotch) by Julio Cortazar
Budapeste by Chico Buarque
Modern American Lit
Angle of Repose by Wallace Stegner
The Time Traveler's Wife by Niffenegger
East of Eden by Steinbeck
Everything by Philip Roth so far!
Penguin Classics
War and Peace by Tolstoy
Middlemarch by George Elliot
Other
Japan : Nigerian Wood and Wind-up Bird Chronicle by Haruki Murakami
Italy: If on a Winter's Night a Traveller by Italo Calvino
England: Atonement by Ian McEwan
Monday, November 1, 2010
http://www.repubblica.it/spettacoli-e-cultura/2010/10/31/foto/street_art_baci_e_amplessi_sui_muri-8606468/1/?ref=HRESS-7
It's number 13 out of 14, with the Muslim girl walking by the mural.
Something disturbing
One girl comes to study, my best student. Before, the one major distinction with her was the fact that she would watch TV, and write her favorite stories in prose in English for me to check later. Doing this, her English has improved at an unbelievable speed. I'm able to have long conversations with her and only rarely is she unable to follow what I mean. I dont hardly need to simplify what I say at all. What made this even more special was the fact that she first started with me knowing nearly nothing (or else she wanted to start again from scratch, having studied some maybe at the lycee). She is very devout -- often telling me stories of how science is just now affirming the truth and wisdom of what the Prophet announced to the world 1400 years ago-- ''Science has said that the ideal is to fast one day for every ten normal days, which we do already, fasting 30 days in Ramadan and 6 more during the year! And science has proved this to be the right way!''. Most of her stories are moral allegories that concern parents and children, and the need to respect and obey them.
While her earnestness was unusual, none of this disturbed me until last night she said how she has stopped listening to music now, ''because I know the truth'' after watching something about it on television. So now its only drums and singing, but no instruments at all.
In my life I've gone through this same thing -- taking 40 of my heavy metal albums to sell at CD Warehouse back when I was an impressionable Freshman under the influence of an extreme-right church in Tennessee. In our service, it was acapella. The disturbing thing about this is the self-assurance much more than the self-denial, and of course the influence of television. And its disturbing in how it makes me sad, there's an even larger chasm between where I am and where this girl is.
The last thing after our lesson that night, I gave her two magazines that she could read to study in English, THE NEW YORKER and the SAUDI ARAMCO magazine. I flipped through the first one and took a pen to whatever was there that might be too risque, sometimes I took out a whole page. Did I feel ashamed about what those pages had on them? Not a bit. We can sit at a table and bond, certainly, but I feel a huge gulf between the place she is coming from and the one from where I am. If she were to occupy my inner life for some moments, it would be shocking--the books, the magazines, the values I have. But of course, those were things that would be difficult for the people from my old church as well -- they would get alone magnificently, if only they were to meet and bypass those barriers they erect between each other. Barriers that don't exist for me so much.
Faces of Morocco (updates to come shortly)
These first three are from Adriana, ''Z'', ''La Gitana'', my friend! Soon to work for National Geographic...
I'm always too shy to try and get photos of any women, so these are valuable for me.Thanks Z!
(careful, the girl with the big smile and luscious brown skin on the left
is NOT to be considered a Face of Morocco)

Look near the end for Tinzouline! One of my favorite towns here along the Draa Valley route
JFK’s Wordsmith…Ted Sorensen
http://peacecorpsworldwide.org/babbles/2010/10/31/jfks-wordsmith/
Posted by John Coyne on Sunday, October 31st 2010
[On the 35th anniversary of the Peace Corps, in March of 1996, Mark Gearan, then Director of the agency, had the wisdom to stage three days of celebration for the agency in Washington, D.C. One event was at the Mayflower Hotel--where the agency was hatched in a suite of hotel rooms--was a dinner and speeches by key figures in the creation of the agency and in the administration.
Coming to that event that evening where many of the 'cast of characters' who first brought the Peace Corps into being, including Warren Wiggins. Harris Wofford was there that night and spoke; Sarge Shriver spoke, as did PCV Congressman Sam Farr, former Director Loret Miller Ruppe, and a good friend of Mark Gearan, the Ambassador to the UN, Madeleine K. Albright. Also speaking was Theodore C. Sorensen, speechwriter and special council to President John F. Kennedy. Sorensen wrote most of JFK's speeches, including the one JFK gave at the Cow Palace in San Francisco that mentioned the name "peace corps' for the first time.
That night in D.C. Sorensen delivered, what I believe to be, his last speech on the Peace Corps. I have retyped it into this blog this evening as I think we all need to read it once more, to be impressed by Sorensen's prose and sentiment, and also his wonderful personal connection to the Peace Corps. Today, the White House announced that Ted Sorensen passed away at the age of 82.]
The Honorable Theodore C. Sorensen
John F. Kennedy often invoked the old saying that “success has a hundred fathers and failure is an orphan.” He would be the first to acknowledge that the Peace Corps, one of his proudest achievements, had a hundred fathers: a bill by Hubert Humphrey, a speech by John Gavin, an article by Milton Shapp, the example of the Mormons and a dozen other religious organizations, a petition from Michigan University students responding to his impromptu midnight challenge, and dozens of others.
This child first took breath, I’m proud to say, a few days before the Presidential election of 1960 in a campaign speech in which I had a hand, a speech on world peace in San Francisco on the night of November 2, when nominee Kennedy called for a “Peace Corps of talented…men and women, willing and able to serve their country” as teachers or engineers or doctors or nurses in developing nationsaround the globe. This proposal entered the official national agenda in his first State of the Union Address as President on January 30, 1961, when he called for the “formation of a National Peace Corps, enlisting the services of all those…who have indicated their desire to contribute their skills, their efforts, and a part of their lives…to help foreign lands meet their urgent needs for trained personnel.”
Thirty-five years ago today, less than four months after he first launched the idea in San Francisco, it became a reality. On the same day that he sent to Congress proposed legislation to establish a permanent independent agency, President Kennedy–unwilling to wait for Congress to act–exercised his own initiative an authority, as he did on many occasions, and established the Peace Corps by Executive Order, thereby, enabling it to be organized, fully operational and in the field by the time that bill passed six months later.
He wanted to get it underway before its detractors gained ground. And there were detractors. Many in the opposition party opposed it. Many liberals demeaned it. Many conservatives dismissed it. Many Communist governments denounced it. The Agency for International Development wanted to control it, the CIA wanted to use it. Leaders in some neutral nations, even those most in need to help, heaped ridicule upon it.
But John Kennedy and Sargent Shriver persisted. They persuaded. They prevailed. The legislation and appropriation passed the Congress, and each year of his Presidency the number of Volunteers increased; the number of countries served increased; and the President’s pride in his creation, in these ambassadors of American idealism, increased beyond all measure. He took every opportunity to meet with returning Volunteers and to sing their praises to others. Tragically, his time for pride and pleasure in this epitome of the “New Frontier” spirit–like his time in office–was all too short. After his death, Peace Corps members in some countries were called “Kennedy’s children.” And I feel that all of you, all one hundred and forth thousand of you, are truly Kennedy’s children.
But the Peace Corps’ real history lies not in the story of its birth but in the story of its life, not in the archives of the White House or Capitol Hill but in the deeds of its Volunteers, in their fulfillment of President Kennedy’s original mandate. Tonight, history asks not why or how the Peace Corps was established, but whether it has succeeded, and whether its founder’s expectations have been realized. I know no better way of answering those questions then to compare the words of my favorite President with the words of my favorite Peace Corps Volunteer, to compare the hopes of the original dreamer with the experience of one who is living out that dream today.
“We will only send abroad Americans,” said President Kennedy “who have a real job to do–and who are qualified to do that job.” They would, he had made clear on that November night in San Francisco, be “well qualified through rigorous standards, and well trained in the languages, skills and customs they will need to know…not only talented young men and women but Americans of whatever age who wish to serve the great republic and serve the cause of freedom.”
Last July, my favorite Volunteer described her sixty fellow trainees in Morocco: “They are friendly, smart, funny and, of course, adventurous, with a real sense of solidarity and extraordinarily diverse backgrounds and skills. The majority are twenty-somethings, but there are a couple of thirty-somethings, fifty and sixty-somethings, as well as a seventy-something. There is also a blind Volunteer–talk about courageous!”
Later that same month, she wrote: “It is so exciting to put my knowledge of Arabic to real use. Training is very intense–four hours of language and two hours of technical training every day, six days a week for ten weeks. My job will consist largely of counseling rural Moroccan women on maternal and child health, including family planning, a job that I not only care about but that I think I can accomplish.” And in November, she wrote from her site: “Yesterday, I vaccinated babies all morning. Earlier today, I gave my presentation on diarrhea and oral dehydration, and the conversation evolved into a discussion of nutrition. This afternoon I have a presentation about the merits of breast feeding. I really felt I was doing my job.”
“I am convinced,” said John Kennedy in San Francisco, “that our men and women in this country of ours are anxious to respond to public service, are dedicated to freedom, and are able to join in a worldwide struggle against poverty and disease and ignorance.”
In this spirit, my favorite Volunteer wrote last August: “Life here is hard by American standards–there is no electricity or running water. The health center is insufficiently supplied and a large number of women give birth at home, without ever receiving prenatal care.” And last September, she wrote: “An eleven-year-old girl, Aziza, stops by my house a couple of times a week. Today, her mother wanted me to come for lunch. I observed how sickly her one-year old sister looked, and the mother informed me that the little girl had diarrhea. I returned to the house after work with packets of oral rehydration salt.”
“Life in the Peace Corps,” said President Kennedy on March 1, 1961, “will not be easy. Men and women will be expected to work and live along-side the nationals of the country in which they are stationed–doing the same work, eating the same food, talking the same language.”
Last July, my favorite Volunteer wrote about “the wind from the Sahara, a scorchingly hot, dry wind that blows constantly, rendering daily life like life under a blow dryer!” The following month, spending a week with a local family as part of her training, she wrote: “The family I live with is great. The father is a farmer of sheep and olive trees, and full of questions about the U.S.A. The mother has shown me how to bake bread in a pan over a fire, and how to milk their cow and has said that she will cry when I leave tomorrow.” Then, in November, she wrote: “Winter arrived in the desert. There is a chill which not even the warmth of the ever-present sun can dispel. In a house that is virtually the great outdoors, many layers of clothing are a must. The desert climate is harsh, no matter what he season might be.” And still later that month she wrote: “The weather is cold, but people are fortified by harira, a thick soup, for both breakfast and dinner, with couscous or tajine, a stew, at lunch, and multiple cups of tea and coffee. In the past five days, I have eaten meals in seven different homes.”
“But if the life will not be easy,” said my favorite President on March 1, 1961, “it will be rich and satisfying. For every American who participates in the Peace Corps will know that he or she is sharing in the great common task of bringing to man that decent way of life which is the foundation of freedom and a condition of peace.”
True to his prediction, my favorite Volunteer wrote as early as August about a presentation she had made on family planning that she felt had been a great success. “About ten women gathered and they were full of questions and very interested. I really felt like I was doing my job, and that this was why I was here.” In September, on site at last, she wrote: “I don’t believe how much I have learned in a week! I have weighted new-borns, visited homes of women and gave the oral polio vaccine to hundreds of babies.” After a brief Thanksgiving break, she wrote last November: “I’m glad to be back in Tinzouline. I now feel what two months ago seemed nearly impossible: that this is my home.” And in January, after bringing her services to a nearby village, she wrote that it had “neither running water nor electricity, but its inhabitants are generous and friendly. I arrived not knowing a soul but left feeling as if I had many new friends.” One month ago today, she wrote about her observance of Ramadan, about her fluency in Arabic, about the meals she shared at sundown with so many families, concluding once again: “In short, I feel at home….(signed) Your loving daughter, Juliet.”
I am proud of my daughter. I am proud of my small part in the establishment of the Peace Corps. I am proud of this and other legacies left by the President I loved and served, John F. Kennedy. And I am reminded that his speech in San Francisco concluded with one of his favorite perorations, invoking Archimedes’ words in explaining the principle of the lever: “Give me a fulcrum, and I will move the world.”
[One last note. Juliet Sorensen was recruited out of the New York Regional Office. Her recruiter was Matt Losak (Losotho 1985-88).] Today, Juliet is married and living in Chicago and working as a lawyer. She is also involved in working with the Chicago area Returned Peace Corps Volunteers. Matt Losak lives in the Washington, D.C., and is involved with the PCVs of D.C. Both of these PCVs continue to be fulcrums for the Peace Corps.]





