sovay: (Rotwang)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2011-07-28 02:48 am

Really, really bad electro

Livejournal: still borked! Have a post I have assembled on the hope that it will someday un-bork itself, because I'm certainly not moving all this stuff over to Facebook.

1. Michael Cacoyannis. I was in my first year at Brandeis when I discovered, through some black-and-white stills from Elektra (1962), Mihalis Kakogiannis under his more familiar Anglicized name. Over a decade later, I have still not managed to see any of his classical tragedies—although it strikes me now that I should look for them on Netflix—but I found his translation of the Bacchae some years ago and I wish I'd seen it onstage. I think my mother fell in love with Alan Bates because of Zorba the Greek (1964). I took away that I needed to see more of Irene Papas.

2. Glenn Close in drag. Apparently romancing Mia Wasikowska, if pre-production plot summaries can be believed. I am faintly surprised that I hadn't heard of this film before yesterday, but seriously: I'd watch that.

3. In Hazard (1938). Rudyard Kipling is underrated as a writer of the sea. Judging by this reprint and the introduction by [livejournal.com profile] crowleycrow, Richard Hughes is not, but they have much the same intensely, offhandedly technical approach to the mechanics of the tramp trade, weather and engineering, cargo and the currents of the world—both oceanographic and human—in ways that do not preclude an unspoken, elemental sense of the sea as something that can be described in words, not explained by them; which is precisely what you want for a book about a merchant steamer caught in a hurricane, itself as much of a character as the captain, the chief engineer, the watch officer, the firemen. Also like Kipling it has some problematic representations of the Chinese crew, although a late chapter entirely from the perspective of a young Chinese communist goes some way toward reframing the narrative's previous characterizations as filtered through the bigotry of the British sailors. And it has the narrator who speaks directly, conversationally to the reader, who probably is the hangover of a literary device, but in his ubiquity and his insistence on the first person feels like something faintly supernatural, the Platonic ghost of the stranger at the bar who turns suddenly and tells you a story he cannot possibly have been there for, like Herodotos. (He did not turn out to be a posthumous narrator, but I was wondering.) Possibly I should have given this book its own entry, but instead I am just going to quote from Hughes' afterword, addressing the question of whether he wrote the novel as deliberate allegory or just got lucky with global politics and his subconscious:

For where some tension in the writer's mind has eased itself in symbol, then that symbol may couple itself to a like tension in the reader or even (for that is the ambiguous nature of symbol) to some wholly different one. Indeed, perhaps the real reason we like reading is to have our therapeutic dreaming supplied us, thus, from outside.

It follows that at times of exceptionally deliberate self-deception people tend to shun all poetry and fiction; indeed it is symptomatic of a fear of the naked truth to prefer nonfiction.


4. My brother has just returned from his first blacksmithing class at the Prospect Hill Forge. He has not burnt off all his arm hair, although he claims this is because he was grilling earlier in the week; he is talking about building his own forge. "It is exactly like traditional blacksmithing, except there's a hair dryer instead of a bellows." I think this is awesome.

5. I like this poem.

. . . And as I finish up this post, my mother has just presented me with a long-folded, very frayed, faintly greenish document in Fraktur, with some lines filled out in black ink and four stamps, two red, one purple, one blue. It's a contract for passage on the Hamburg-Amerika Linie (in steerage: Zwischendecksbeförderung-Vertrag) and the signature on it appears to be my great-grandfather's—my grandmother's father, my brother's namesake—under yet another variant of his name, sailing to New York on the Pretoria in December 1913. Unfortunately, I cannot make out his handwriting in the column for previous residence; it seems to start with P, which doesn't help. He gives his age as three years older than family legend said.

Well, now we know when he came over.

Enough with wrestling the internet; I'm going to bed.

[identity profile] asakiyume.livejournal.com 2011-07-28 05:20 pm (UTC)(link)
I like the notion of avoiding poetry and fiction lest you stumble upon the naked truth--and the notion that reading supplies us with our dreams from the outside (what a great way of putting it--though, upon reflection, I suppose that's what all of life is doing, just not in a distilled form).

And very cool about your brother doing blacksmithing. Now to read the poem. And will this post? Maybe. Maybe.

[identity profile] strange-selkie.livejournal.com 2011-07-28 07:26 pm (UTC)(link)
I think this comment will not post -- it hasn't been doing -- but LJ lives!

[identity profile] strange-selkie.livejournal.com 2011-07-28 07:40 pm (UTC)(link)
Lookie there.

Also, I have improved your email slightly in these past few moments. It's aliiiive!

(Pop culture even I know. Hah.)
weirdquark: Stack of books (Default)

[personal profile] weirdquark 2011-07-28 08:49 pm (UTC)(link)
You could join the Dreamwidth migration. I did myself, the last time LJ had issues, though it was more to join a community over there than because of the issues.

I've seen the Glenn Close picture before, though I don't remember hearing about the romance.
rosefox: Green books on library shelves. (Default)

[personal profile] rosefox 2011-07-28 11:55 pm (UTC)(link)
I am reluctant to add any more online accounts to my life that require interaction and maintainance; I can deal with Facebook only because I keep away from posting and intermittently comment.

Would you mind using DW solely for crossposting, for those of us moving toward using it as our primary method of blog-reading?

(Been trying to post this comment for 20 minutes. GAH.)
weirdquark: Stack of books (Default)

[personal profile] weirdquark 2011-07-29 12:28 pm (UTC)(link)
I get not wanting a new social media platform -- my DW account ended up being more of a new thing than I had wanted just because of the new comm and new people I found there. But if you recreate your LJ friends list on DW and don't add anyone on DW that you don't read on LJ, then the only thing you have to do to keep up on both is cross-post, and you can read LJ when it's up and DW when it's not. That would probably help it to feel like DW is more of a back-up than a different thing.

[identity profile] nineweaving.livejournal.com 2011-07-28 11:19 pm (UTC)(link)
Close really does look shyly boyish, like one of those men too diffident to take command of middle age.

Nine

[identity profile] helivoy.livejournal.com 2011-07-28 11:30 pm (UTC)(link)
I have seen two of the three Kakoyannis classical tragedies (Eléktra and Ifiyéneia, though not the Troádhes) and they are a must for someone of your interests and inclinations.

Iríni Pappá was so beautiful that when she was once invited to judge a beauty contest the entire audience and the rest of the judges wanted to give her the award. She was also a good performer when she restrained herself and when she was asked to stretch herself beyond the fiery, flamboyant Mediterranean woman -- what I call the Sylvana Mangano curse.

Glenn Close is underrated and Wasikowska made a wonderful Jane Eyre in the last iteration (Michael Fassbender was not shabby as Rochester either).

[identity profile] ap-aelfwine.livejournal.com 2011-07-30 11:25 pm (UTC)(link)
It follows that at times of exceptionally deliberate self-deception people tend to shun all poetry and fiction; indeed it is symptomatic of a fear of the naked truth to prefer nonfiction.

I like this, very much. Thank you for the sharing of it. Another book I might should read, it sounds like.

Glad your brother's having a good time blacksmithing. I approve of forges as well. I wonder if one could use the design with the hairdryer as a barbecue grill, also--IIRC Alton Brown advocated a charcoal grill that looked very similar to one of those grill-to-forge things with the hairdryer in place of bellows, although I never sat down with the two books side by side to confirm this.

Congratulations on the new document! That's a wonderful find.