Monday, February 11, 2013

The Millions : Tillie Olsen and the Writing of Fiction

This piece was produced in partnership with Bloom, a new site that features authors whose first books were published when they were 40 or older. Click here to visit Bloom, where Tillie Olsen will be the featured author throughout the week.

coverSometime in the seventies, in a dilapidated New Haven bookstore I picked up a paperback copy of Tell Me A Riddle, Tillie Olsen?s collection of four short stories. The book had been celebrated when it came out in 1961, but I hadn?t known about it. I was the mother of young children, beginning to publish poems. I wanted to write fiction, but couldn?t. Tillie Olsen?s stories (and Grace Paley?s, which I discovered at around the same time) turned me into a fiction writer, as if they pointed to a door in what had looked like a blank wall?a door to which, as it turned out, I owned a key.

I thought then that short stories weren?t an interesting form, but I had read few of them, and almost none by contemporary American women. I associated short stories with tight plots and surprising endings that affected the reader intellectually more than emotionally.

The four stories I now read by Tillie Olsen, about ordinary life ? children, parents, old people, black and white people trying to lead lives that included one another, people worrying about money, people whose friendships were strained by human weakness and societal pressures ? did not have surprising endings, only endings that showed how the difficult truths that the author had laid out were even more true than you might have expected, but that love was also more possible than you might have thought. Tillie Olsen?s characters had faults. They were likelier to say the wrong thing than the right. They hurt one another. But nobody disappeared permanently from anybody else?s life. Like the family I grew up in ? my parents were the children of immigrant secular Jews, like some of Olsen?s characters and like Tillie Olsen herself ? they said the unspeakable to one another, and continued going about their business together, wounded or not. Moreover, Olsen?s stories were political without being preachy, without sacrificing the particular person to the general truth. They are as strong today as when they first came out. They have psychological precision, musical language that reveals feeling and experience by entering into a character?s sensory experience, and political ferocity expressed in plausible generalizations from the experience of intensely real men and women.

Here?s the opening of ?Hey Sailor, What Ship??:

The grimy light; the congealing smell of cigarettes that had been smoked long ago and of liquor that had been drunk long ago; the boasting, cursing, wheedling, cringing voices, and the greasy feel of the bar as he gropes for his glass.

?He? is Whitey, a Merchant Marine on shore leave, trying to get himself sufficiently under control to reach the house of the old friends who deplore his drunkenness and despair but let him in. I?d never before seen a story about that kind of friendship, but in my own life I?d known some of them ? friendships that are mostly painful, hard to justify to skeptical onlookers, but indispensable.

?O Yes,? also about friendship, begins with a young girl and her mother, ?the only white people there, sitting in the dimness of the Negro church that had once been a corner store, and all through the bubbling, swelling, seething of before the services, twelve-year-old Carol clenches tight her mother?s hand, the other resting lightly on her friend, Parialee Phillips, for whose baptism she has come.? The story is about two girls, one black and one white, whose friendship is destroyed as they become teenagers by the differing expectations of teachers, the pressure of their friends, and the contrasting lives they live because of poverty and race. Even now, decades later, I?ve read few stories, especially by white people, about the stresses of black and white friendship ? as opposed to stories about black servants and white employers.

Those two stories are my favorites, though the others are more anthologized and famous. The first story in the book is ?I Stand Here Ironing,? in which a mother ironing clothes outlines, in an imaginary conversation with a social worker or guidance counselor, the obstacles in herself and in her life that kept her from caring properly for her oldest child ? who, she hopes, will at least learn ?that she is more than this dress on the ironing board, helpless before the iron.? The last story ? almost a novella ? is ?Tell Me A Riddle,? about the dying of a passionately political old woman who was an imprisoned Russian radical in her youth and cannot relax, ever; her husband, who just wants to move to someplace comfortable and live out their remaining time peacefully; and the granddaughter who nurses the old woman and makes the couple behave like human beings, forcing them to become the old lovers they still are by rejecting any other view of them except as people who love and are loved.

The paperback I read, back in the seventies, had no cover. Later I learned that when you bought a paperback without a cover, it meant that the author and publisher were being deprived of money: booksellers tore off covers and returned them to publishers for refunds, and they were supposed to discard the books. But if Tillie Olsen had known how I came by her stories, I don?t think she?d have objected. A Communist when she was young ? she was born in 1912 and was in her twenties during the Great Depression ? she was a lefty all her life and, apparently, took delight in almost any disruption of established order. In her last decades she was a vocal feminist who regularly used more than her allotted time as a public speaker, and jumped from subject to subject, resisting all demands ? benign or not ? for coherence and logic. Her passionate speeches about feminism and the thirties inspired many. When she was invited to Yale, a mile away from my house, I heard her speak. She spontaneously sang ?Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?? and I was smitten. She died in 2007.

coverHer biographer, Panthea Reid (Tillie Olsen: One Woman, Many Riddles), provides useful and fascinating information, but disapproves of her subject. Tillie Olsen wasn?t truthful, regularly fictionalizing her experience. Her extreme disorganization and heedlessness sometimes did harm. And like the regretful mother in ?I Stand Here Ironing,? she didn?t take good care of her first child. Reid still manages to show that Tillie Olsen was a splendid, larger-than-life woman, and that many people forgave her faults, finding a great deal in her to love.

Tillie Olsen was forty-nine when Tell Me a Riddle was published. After writing the stories in it and publishing them in journals, Olsen won lucrative grants and fellowships. Publishers twice gave her contracts for novels (back in the thirties, Bennett Cerf, at Random House, worked hard to get her to write, and provided over a thousand dollars as an advance to support her meanwhile). Olsen repeatedly told her publishers she was almost done with a novel, but she never completed one, or any stories except for those four. She promised to write, accepted money to write, but didn?t write. Reid describes these periods as if Tillie Olsen was making irresponsible choices, but any reader who has tried writing a novel will guess how much pain she must have felt.

coverOlsen did write part of a novel. It was lost among her papers, found forty years later, and published, when the author was in her sixties, as Yonnondio: From the Thirties. Its harrowing, gorgeous, sensitively written chapters recount the childhood of Mazie Holbrook. Her father works in the Wyoming mines, then becomes a tenant farmer whose large family nearly starves. He finds work digging in the sewers, where the men are forced to work more quickly than is safe, and finally he gets a job in a slaughterhouse, where he is in danger from scalding water. The story is an indictment of injustice, callousness, and lack of opportunity, a chronicle of the Great Depression ? and also a sharply observed account of kids growing up. It is even more fervent in its outrage than Tell Me a Riddle, but no less exact and irrresisitible in depicting life moment by moment. It breaks off at page 132 with a note from Olsen that starts, ?Reader, it was not to have ended here.?

covercoverTillie Olsen?s only other book was Silences, published in 1978. I still have the hardcover edition I bought for $10.95 when the book was published: I didn?t deprive Tillie Olsen of all the royalties I owed her. Silences consists of quotations, lists, transcripts of talks. It includes an essay about Rebecca Harding Davis that Olsen wrote for a reprint of Davis?s nineteenth-century novel Life in the Iron Mills. In disconnected or partly connected paragraphs and footnotes, Silences argues that life as we?ve known it through most of history discourages writers ? especially women ? from writing. It looks at all the reasons women have failed to write and publish over the centuries, from the need to take care of children, to biased reviewers, to lack of confidence and emotional breakdowns. Olsen barely mentions her own situation, but it becomes clear that when she did have enough time and money to write, she simply couldn?t. We learn from her biography that she worked full time as an activist for the Communist Party for years, including the years when Bennett Cerf was waiting for his novel. It must have been hard to believe that she could do more for the world by sitting alone writing and rewriting paragraphs than by going out and fighting for social change. Also, my guess is that Tillie Olsen didn?t know how to write a novel ? it?s not obvious ? and resisted the consecutive thinking it would require. She had no one to talk with ? either in a formal class or in friendship with other novelists ? about just how writers plan, shape, and complete novels. She wrote the four stories in Tell Me A Riddle, in fact, when she was allowed to audit a creative writing class, taught by Arthur Foff, which one of her daughters attended. He encouraged her, told her about writing fellowships at Stanford, and urged her to apply. She won a fellowship and was helped further by a teacher there, Richard Scowcroft. But still couldn?t produce a novel.

A novelist friend told me recently that she was thrilled to come upon Silences when it was published. My recollection is that I didn?t like it. I wanted more fiction from Tillie Olsen, not an explanation of why there wouldn?t be any. And Silences was alarming. When it came out I had three children under the age of eight and had published no books. It did offer a little bit of hope, finding some cause for optimism in the accomplishments of the women?s movement. It still must have been difficult for me to believe, reading it, that I could write and publish when so many couldn?t. But I did write and publish stories and novels, partly because of what I learned from Tillie Olsen?s work. She wrote so little, but she did write those forthright, honest, unsentimental stories about city life and family life in an imperfect society. Living her politics, she wrote with keen attention and respect about people and situations that might have seemed too insignificant for fiction. Decades later, I am still trying to emulate the courage in those four stories.

For more on Tillie Olsen, and other authors who ?bloomed? after the age of 40, visit Bloom.

Source: http://www.themillions.com/2013/02/tillie-olsen-and-the-writing-of-fiction.html

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Former Florida GOP chair pleads guilty to theft and money laundering

Former Republican Party of Florida chairman Jim Greer pleaded guilty to theft and money laundering charges Monday just before jury selection in his criminal trial was to begin.

Greer pleaded guilty to four counts of theft and a single count of money laundering for funneling money from the Republican Party of Florida to a company he set up with his right-hand man. He could be sentenced to a minimum of 3 ? years and a maximum of 35 years in prison at his March 27 sentencing.

The plea deal avoids would could have been an embarrassing trial for the state GOP. Soe of Florida's most powerful politicians were scheduled as witnesses, including former Gov. Charlie Crist, former U.S. Sen. George LeMieux, former Florida Attorney General Bill McCollum and several state House and state Senate leaders.

"There were a number of people who did not want this trial to go forward and the trial isn't going forward," said Damon Chase, Greer's attorney. "Once again, Jim Greer is falling on his sword for a lot of other folks."

Topics that were covered in pretrial depositions included allegations of prostitutes at a state GOP fundraiser in the Bahamas, lavish spending on fancy restaurants and luxury hotels by state GOP leaders, the drinking habits of Crist and party leaders stabbing each other in the back.

"He has acknowledged he is guilty. That is what the party has wanted since the case started," said Stephen Dobson, an attorney for the Republican Party of Florida.

The plea deal was reached at the last minute. Jury selection was set to begin early Monday, but neither Greer nor prosecutors had appeared in the courtroom an hour after the trial was supposed to start.

Greer had earlier pleaded not guilty to allegations that he funneled almost $200,000 of party money into a company he had formed with his right-hand man.

Greer had said party leaders were aware of the company and that his prosecution was political payback.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/NydnRss/~3/cB7klgtsE4k/story01.htm

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More coincidence than conspiracy at fashion week

A model walks the runway at the presentation of the Altuzarra Fall 2013 fashion collection during Fashion Week, Saturday, Feb. 9, 2013, in New York. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle)

A model walks the runway at the presentation of the Altuzarra Fall 2013 fashion collection during Fashion Week, Saturday, Feb. 9, 2013, in New York. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle)

A model walks the runway during the Alexander Wang Fall 2013 fashion show during Fashion Week, Saturday, Feb. 9, 2013, in New York. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)

The DKNY Fall 2013 collection is modeled during Fashion Week, Sunday, Feb. 10, 2013, in New York. (AP Photo/Louis Lanzano)

The DKNY Fall 2013 collection is modeled during Fashion Week, Sunday, Feb. 10, 2013, in New York. (AP Photo/Louis Lanzano)

The DKNY Fall 2013 collection is modeled during Fashion Week, Sunday, Feb. 10, 2013, in New York. (AP Photo/Louis Lanzano)

NEW YORK (AP) ? During every season of designer previews at New York Fashion Week a few key, quirky items seem to pop up on different runways. They're not quite trends since one has to think they're partly for runway effect not retail orders, but they're part of the style zeitgeist nonetheless.

This time there were fur mittens ? oversized like boxer mitts ? at Alexander Wang and Altuzarra. What were the odds? And how does the ball start rolling on items such as oversized fur mittens, harnesses or sleeveless coats?

It's safe to say designers don't take a meeting together to decide what direction to go in.

"The honest answer is some of it is plain and simple coincidence," said Cindi Leive, editor in chief of Glamour magazine. "These designers are creating hundreds of looks over the course of a season. It would be more unusual if there were no overlap."

Still, she said, there also are fashion cycles and sociological factors to consider as catwalk collections are prepared.

Take fur ? both real and fake. Leive said Sunday it has been on every runway so far on this fourth of eight days of fashion week.

After the recession, no one was touching fur, she said, but it has slowly made a comeback as people feel a little more comfortable about spending money. The interpretation this go-around has been impactful, with an emphasis on oversized unexpected fur touches such as hoods, handbags and boots, but they're not as expensive as a full-length coat.

It's important for fashion insiders to be aware of what's happening in other parts of culture, including politics and art, said Marie Claire executive editor Nina Garcia earlier in the week as she prepared to judge aspiring designers at "Project Runway."

"Successful designers soak it all in," she said.

Fashion week continues in New York through Thursday, when the influential Marc Jacobs closes out things. Runway previews then move on to London, Milan and Paris.

VICTORIA BECKHAM

The opening look at Victoria Beckham's show was a windowpane plaid coat. She also incorporated more sweaters and knits into her collection, with a nod to mod with some geometric, colorblocked shift dresses.

The most unexpected looks were the flashes of bright yellow, including a sleeveless trench; the techno shine she added to pleated skirts that the audience could only see as the models walked; and the long cape-style tuxedo coat.

One of the important evolutions for fall is the softer shoulder, which she used to tweak one of her popular zip-back, slim-fit dress silhouettes.

For shoes, she put models in lower kitten heels, made in collaboration with Manolo Blahnik, which was a bit of a surprise for a woman known for skyscraper stilettos.

"I'm always designing what I want to wear," she said.

DKNY

Donna Karan's DKNY label features a lot of lipstick red and hot pink looks for fall.

Yes, there were tough-girl looks, including a long quilted bomber jacket and a long silk-and-jersey dress with sheer panels in black. But it was the brights, and especially the animal-print brights, that lit up the runway

There was a "heartthrob red" quilted crop top worn over a flowing, long silk dress and a tailored, peak-lapel blazer in "pop pink" over a button-down shirtdress. The animal prints showed off a long tunic-length sweater silhouette.

Colorblocking was freshest when Karan used sophisticated camel, crisp white and downtown black on a paneled parka, and when she mixed gray herringbone, white and black on a flirty dress with a slim bodice, full skirt and soft shoulders.

DEREK LAM

Derek Lam says a navy-black mix is one of his favorite combinations.

"There's something very unpretentious about navy, and black is very crisp and stark. The navy breaks up the black. And black gives the navy an urban feel," the designer said backstage after his fall-winter preview.

Lam paired a navy-and-white satin top with a black wool trouser. A navy-and-gray wool jersey T-shirt came with a navy-and-black jacquard trouser, plus black shoes and bag. A felt coat came in navy, black and white wool, covering an ivory lace dress.

Another big color on Lam's runway this season: luxurious camel. A classic, loose coat in camel cashmere opened the show, and a roomy cashmere duffel coat looked glamorous with sunglasses of the same color. Camel was also used for a wool cashmere pullover, a wool-and-cashmere dress and a big boucle cape.

Capes in general were a popular item. One particularly nice look was an elbow-length black leather cape that tied in front.

A red, knee-length fox fur vest, paired with wine-colored flat boots, was by far the most flamboyant item in the show. A shorter, navy fox vest was more understated and in line with the rest of the collection. It was paired with a navy crochet dress and brown ankle boots.

CHRISTIAN SIRIANO

The "Project Runway" alum used the Russian opera as the inspiration for his fall runway show, using a book of Russian opera houses as reference.

The girl wearing this collection, he said, was on her way to see the Russian opera.

"I wanted it to be a story of what she wears during the day, what she'll wear for a cocktail dress, what she'll wear to the opera," he said.

His vintage-inspired day looks evoke many eras, from the 1940s to the 1960s, and were mostly separates of turtlenecks paired with loose leather trousers and faux fur vests in muted colors such as white, black and camel.

One ensemble included a pointed-toe flat in a penny loafer style, a surprise inclusion given fashion's love for the high heel. Siriano explained it as a way to ensure its wearability, and also because he "wanted it to be a bit more demure, a bit simple."

Other shoes in the collection included bootie heels and heeled penny loafers with gold trim, echoing the filigree that anchored many of the evening dresses that closed the show.

JOSEPH ALTUZARRA

Joseph Altuzarra's urban, confident, fashion-forward customer wears graphic black-and-white leather ? layers it on, in fact ? and then there's the fox or mink fur on top. She's not shy about drawing attention in fur mittens, shiny grommet embellishment and strategically placed zippers. She wears her high-waisted trousers with a low-slung belt.

His fall-winter collection also includes optic white pants and a khaki cotton sleeveless trench worn with a khaki four-button tailored skirt.

The silhouette he offers his customers is strong and slim, sometimes with a little bump at the hip.

"The design and construction emphasize the nip of the waist and exaggerate the hip, while shrunken proportions mixed with a bolder shoulder volume sharpen the classic silhouette," he says in describing the shape.

___

AP Writers Jocelyn Noveck and Amanda Kwan contributed to this story.

___

Follow Samantha Critchell on Twitter at http://twitter.com/AP_Fashion

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-02-10-NY%20Fashion%20Week-Day%204/id-5d0f3007345b4ac0812ea49709570116

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Sunday, February 10, 2013

NASA rover Curiosity drills into Martian rock

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - For the first time, NASA's rover Curiosity used its on-board drill to collect a sample of Martian bedrock that might offer evidence of a long-gone wet environment, the U.S. space agency reported on Saturday.

Drilling down 2.5 inches into a patch of sedimentary bedrock, Curiosity collected the rock powder left by the drill and will analyze it using its own laboratory instruments, NASA said in a statement. This is the first time a robot has drilled to collect a Martian sample.

Images of the hole, along with a shallower test hole nearby, can be seen at http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.php?release=2013-052 .

"The most advanced planetary robot ever designed is now a fully operating analytical laboratory on Mars," said John Grunsfeld, NASA associate administrator for the agency's Science Mission Directorate.

Curiosity drilled into a rock called "John Klein," named for a Mars Science Laboratory deputy project manager who died in 2011.

In the next few days, ground controllers will command the rover's arm to process the sample by delivering bits of it to the instruments inside Curiosity.

Before the rock powder is analyzed, some will be used to scour traces of material that may have been deposited onto the hardware while the rover was still on Earth, despite thorough cleaning before launch, NASA said.

The drilling and analysis is part of NASA's Mars Science Laboratory Project, which is using the Curiosity rover to figure out whether an area in Mars' Gale Crater ever offered a hospitable environment for life.

(Reporting by Deborah Zabarenko; Editing by Vicki Allen)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nasas-robotic-rover-curiosity-drills-martian-rock-183308243--sector.html

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M@h*(pOet)?ica Karl Kempton

#StorySaturday is a Guest Blog weekend experiment in which we invite people to write about science in a different, unusual format ? fiction, science fiction, lablit, personal story, fable, fairy tale, poetry, or comic strip. We hope you like it.

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Karl Kempton, whose math-related poems will be the subject of this entry, and I have been friends for some 30 years. It?s been an odd relationship. On the one hand, we?ve both made all sorts of different kinds of poems, particularly visual and mathematical ones, written about such works, and run money-losing enterprises committed to the advancement of the same kinds of otherstream poems, as I call them, he with his famous newsprint magazine, Kaldron, now become a website, I with my Runaway Spoon Press. On the other hand, when it comes to philosophical outlook on existence . . . Well, maybe a few words about the following two poems, one I wrote for him, and one he wrote for me, may best reveal our differences there:

Mathemaku for Karl Kempton

Mathemaku for Karl Kempton

Mine is pretty straight-forward, just a long division in which an attempt is made to divide Psyche, the goddess of the mind whom Cupid fell in love with, into summer. But it?s a joke: Karl?s favorite bird (I believe), the crow, who should be the quotient, flies into what I call the dividend shed, breaking up and scattering the summer?and yielding, when multiplying Psyche, just a fragment of autumn, the latter equaling the scattered pieces of summer when a fragment of laughter is added to it.

The idea of the poem goes along with a favorite belief of Karl?s, which is that western math and science can?t significantly help us understand things like summer or crows. A dividend shed can?t contain summer, nor can a long division example keep a crow from acting up.

The irony of the piece is that I completely disagree with what it?s saying. Okay, not completely disagree. What I believe is that the use of mathematics (and other scientific techniques) not only can get us as close to absolute truth as it?s possible to get, but that they are the sole effective means of understanding existence. I know, even scientists haven?t believed that for the past hundred years or so. But I do agree that some forms of science?scientism, some call it?are awfully superficially at explaining things like summer and crows. So my poem works, for me, as a portrait of science going wrong, as it sometimes does.

Karl?s poem for me shows how close we are as artists, in its playfulness and?of course?its moves beyond conventional poetry. But, unlike most of my poems, it is didactic, focused, as so much of Karl?s work is, on the value of selflessness. It flares out of its mathematics into eastern mysticism, too, as I, strictly a scientific materialist, never let mine do (although some of those can get a bit metaphysical). When it comes to philosophical outlook on existence, Karl and I are not at all on the same page: think Plato versus Aristotle, Hamlet versus Horatio, Eastern Mystic versus Scientific Materialist. The arguments we have!

Crow Mathematics

Crow Mathematics

Note: the backward parentheses are intended to emphasize what they enclose; they have no mathematical meaning. The j represents the selfless devotee of bhakti, the I the brash individualist, ?proud of its muse numerology,? by which I suspect Karl means the rationalism of mathematics-based science. Basically, it is a celebration of his spiritual way of life, which I can empathize with as a celebration of the search for meaning.

Karl had what he considers a Karl had what he considers a ?timeless, spaceless, non-duality, Bliss-filled? mystical experience at the age of 14 that didn?t take; in fact he left his childhood religion shortly after having had it. Later, on first meeting the man who become his guru, he had the experience again, and has spent his life refining on it, and expressing in his art the spiritual outlook which, for him, makes such experiences possible, and opposing outlooks he deems more limited?generally in a quiet, non-confrontational way. It has made him an active advocate of sane ecology, a defender of sacred Amerindian sites from what he considers archaeological abuse, a committed student of various ancient stone monuments he believes were used as sophisticated astronomical observatories, a champion of women?s rights, and long ago an opponent of the Vietnam War, which his first (very conventional) poems were about, among other things. What?s most important as far as my blog is concerned, though, is the importance of his spirituality for his poetry.

That spirituality thrives most for him outside established, religious organizations. Hence the following work that I had at my first installment of this blog:

Buddhist Temple

Buddhist Temple

Here he compares Buddhism as an institution versus what he terms ?its mystical ch?an/zen paths to enlightenment. religious setting has its closed gates and no trespassing signs.?

?the spiritual path,? he goes on to say, ?is such that the temple is wherever one sits or stands, i.e. within. there and here are the same or have no real difference?the words themselves are identical when one is deep in meditation.?

The T

The T

This makes sense to me. Where the gulf between us shows up most is in the few works of his that take on the conflict between the idea of realities mere rationalism is helpless at dealing with such as the following:

What to say about the above? It?s one of the visioconceptually most interesting pieces in Karl?s Three Cubed, an extensive selection of his mathematical pieces my Runaway Spoon Press published in 2003. I struggled mightily trying to figure it out, though, finally giving up and asking him for help. Here?s what I first got from him (slightly modified for clarity):

T stands for the edifice, the central architecture of the piece

on the lefthand side are 3 less-than signs and 3 identical signs, the right = signs

empty sets divided by over-lapping empty sets

full sets divided by empty sets

squashed empty sets = two overlapping empty sets divided by full sets

right side 3 greater than signs and 10 equal signs equaling nothing and zero

right side under the cross bar or bridge of the T is an array of empty sets and sets with a mark that is open to interpretation. the same mark also free in places

all this adds up to or down to the metaphor for philosophical and mathematical architectures of rational interpretation made by the mind within the mind that can not explain that which is outside the mind.

I?m afraid this left me more beleaguered than I?d been before. I needed more details. As we continued discussing the piece, a bit heatedly at times, I learned that the T stood for ?Truth? which made the piece a satire on science?s attempts to come significantly close to it. I felt it wasn?t at all fair to science since it didn?t show any process close enough to actual science effectively to mock it. We ended at the same nowhere our discussion had begun at.

That wasn?t the case with Karl?s ?The Root of Pi?:

The Root of Pi

The Root of Pi

The first version of this I saw had no labels. It made no sense to me. With labels, it?s clearly an ?visioarchaeomathematical? poem tracing the source of the invention of pi to ancient like Stonehenge. How valid it is archaeologically I don?t know, although the ancients? use of circles may well have originated when their study of the sky caused them to create their observatories?the first buildings for science? In any case, the piece certainly works as art.

A useful sort of comment on it is Karl?s poem, ?Ka?:

taking away the hands

the egyptian glyph for soul

ka

flipped

stands as a doorway

measured by those hands

taken away

the value of

the golden section

and pi

the greek letter

stands as a doorway

the three poles |||

the number ka makes

the call of the crow

(Note the crow.)

Probably my favorite mathematical poem of Karl?s is the following poem for Amy Francheschini, his ?bonus daughter,? an artist who seems to be at least partially influenced by him if the title of a book she recently contributed to, Variation on Powers of Ten, is any indication.

daughters

daughters

Clearly, verbo-visual puns are a key element of Karl?s tool kit. One you may have missed in the preceding is the black dot?s representation of the sound ?awe.?

Next up is one of the first math-related poems Karl made that he was satisfied with:

Four Infinities

Four Infinities

When I sent a copy of this to a friend of mine on the Internet who calls herself, ?Knit Witted,? and blogs at https://knitwitting.wordpress.com, we had a discussion about it after which she sent me the following, which I liked enough to add it to this entry. Another good reason for its presence is the way it illustrates my understanding of Karl?s piece. I take it to be showing Zeno?s four steps from his starting place, which we can assume is zero, any line?s starting point, to . . . zero?as his famous paradox proving change is impossible because it requires a thing to move and nothing can move, because in order for it to move from anywhere at all to anywhere else, it would first have to move to the point halfway between its starting point and its goal; and in order to do that, it would have to move to the halfway point between its starting point and the halfway point to its goal; and so on ad infinitum. In other words, it would always have an infinity of points to reach before it could get to its goal, so would never get there, or get anywhere.

A Variation on Four Infinities

A Variation on Four Infinities

Since there seem to be philosophers who still believe that Zeno was on to something of intellectual importance rather than merely revealed an example of the kind of paradox every system of thought will have, but the real world will never have, like Georgi Cantor?s infinities that are larger than the number of integers, I feel compelled to point out why Zeno was wrong. It is that in the real world there is no such thing as an infinitely small distance. There is, so far as we?re concerned, a smallest possible distance?I imagine it as a sort of quantum locus in space. In any case, it is a space without any halfway point between it and the similar space right next to it. An object in that second space can get to it without first being at a halfway point. And that, my friends, is why our eyes tell us thing move.

I would add that the fact that we can see things moving demonstrates that not everything true in mathematics is true in the real world, as many mathematicians and physicists seem to think. That mathematics has an infinite number of dimensions does not mean our reality has more than four.

Okay, if all that doesn?t at last get me some comments here from mathematicians, nothing will!

That Karl?s poem got me going the way it did, and inspired Knit Witted?s zany piece about the relationship of infinity and zero is really the important thing here. I contend that a prime value of it, and other works like it, is their power to trip those encountering them into offbeat?perhaps even preposterous but interesting?otherthinking like Knit Witted?s about the inter-relationship of zero and infinity, and mine about absolute positions in space.

Another of Karl?s earliest works is the following:

Some Roman Math

Some Roman Math

Here?s what I said about this many years ago when I first saw it: ?When in the poem above Karl Kempton repeats his first word in steps distributed through three lines, a reader not familiar with his work might be puzzled. Of course, the sentence that the poet has converted his small word to should soon become apparent. But that sentence makes no sense?the ?1? that Kempton has punned out of the letter ?I,? can?t equal ten. Is his stunt only clever, then? I say no, for to me it buoyantly shows, even as it asserts, the multiplicative power of both ?listen,? the word, and listen, the act: if only we listen, truly listen?not only to a text, but into it, down to its very letters, and the cracks between them?our world will increase tenfold.

?No, wait. Not tenfold but fiftyfold! Or so the poem goes on to state, whereupon the poetic rightness of Kempton?s claim suddenly marries the counter-poetic rightness of a roman numeral l?s equaling fifty.

?Through this rich interplay of the intuitive and the rational, the poem draws us into the concrete heard of ?loose and klinking chanj? (like the loose and clinking letters in Kempton?s repetition of ?listen?)?and at the same time into the high generality of change, as a pocketful of pennies becomes a boy?s magico-economic version of the?magico-esthetic transformative device that words and letters are in the pockets of poets. Thus does Kempton?s trinket deepen dozens of colors beyond mere cleverness into a full-scale lyrical celebration of boyhood, coins, letters, Rome, mathematics, English?and the secret of listening things into poetry.?

I still think I know what I was talking about.

While some not in sympathy with mathematical poems call them puzzles as though that were some kind of mordant disparagement, I?ve always tended toward the belief that a poem that is not a puzzle is limited. True, if a poem is nothing but a puzzle, then one might properly argue that it lacks the substance to be considered a Major Poem. To which I say, ?So what?? Puzzles are fun!

They are more, too, not that fun should ever be considered not enough. They are good exercise for the brain. In the case of the following, they give a viewer exercise at something hardly anything else does, reading and seeing a path to a solution, or a kind of double scrutiny that too few are good at, or even capable of doing?or, worse, even aware can be done?and, I hold, can sometimes lead to a solution nothing else will.

Be that as it may, the first of Karl?s puzzles below is also a joke (as I hope some of my visitors will instantly know). The second is a variation on the first in which the eye becomes more important.

2 root poems

2 root poems

Then we have a similar joke. Explanations of the three at the end of my entry?because I want you to think about them for a while (as I had to, not being that swift in spite of how familiar I am with Karl?s work).

33

33

The next joke by Karl is mainly verbal:

Space Formula

Space Formula

For Karl at his pop art best there?s this:

Sport Math

Sport Math

I thought I?d end with one more of Karl?s highly visually appealing efforts in spite of my inability to follow the logic I prefer poems to have:

I take it to be a dynamic representation of gravity in all of its infinitesimal manifestations down & up the three spatial dimensions of our world.

That?s it for our too-brief visit to one of the odder but most profound frontiers of the meeting of mathematics and poetry. I hope you enjoyed it.

P.S., Karl?s first math joke shows an eight as the square of a zero?since the eight is a sort of sideways multiplication of two zeros. The poem under it finds the eight to be zero taken to the fourth power, but this time the zero is one- rather than two-dimensional. The key to solving the poems with 180 degrees in it is that the 180 degrees should be taken as rotating the E?to go with one-half of an 8 to make a 33.

Previously in this series:

M@h*(pOet)?ica
M@h*(pOet)?ica: Summerthings
M@h*(pOet)?ica?Louis Zukofsky?s Integral
M@h*(pOet)?ica?Scott Helmes
M@h*(pOet)?ica?of Pi and the Circle, Part 1
M@h*(pOet)?ica ? Happy Holidays!
M@h*(pOet)?ica?Circles, Part 3

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=b862cdb23d801f00c17e79380cec6ca9

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Police: 4 wounded in Bourbon Street shooting

NEW ORLEANS (AP) ? Gunfire wounded four people on New Orleans' famed Bourbon Street as a costumed crowd partied amid the countdown to Mardi Gras, sending people running, police and bystanders said.

Four shots rang out rapidly Saturday night, followed by screams as some in the crowd staggered into one another and a nearby wall, video taken by a bystander and released by police showed. Authorities said in an email Sunday that an argument involving one of the victims led to the shooting. They described the video ? released early Sunday ? as showing two men leaving the argument and returning with a third before the gunfire erupted.

No arrests were immediately reported, and police said they were seeking the three men who fled.

The wounded were two males and two females, New Orleans Police spokesman Frank B. Robertson said. One male victim was in guarded condition Sunday with shots to the abdomen, thigh and pelvis, Robertson said. The second male was shot in the buttocks, one female was shot on the chin and right foot, and the second female was shot on the toe, according to Robertson's statement.

Police had said late Saturday that the most severely wounded man was undergoing surgery while the others were stable. None was identified by age or name.

The shooting came on the last weekend of partying before Mardi Gras, the Fat Tuesday celebration that is the signature tourist event of the year in New Orleans. And for thousands, the partying continued despite the shooting.

New Orleans has been plagued for years by violent crime, including gun violence that has soared since Hurricane Katrina devastated the city in 2005.

In 2011, sixteen people were shot and at least two killed in Halloween shootings in New Orleans. One of those killed ? a 25-year-old local resident ? was shot near the famous Chris Owens nightclub, about a block away from Saturday's incident.

Police placed the Saturday shooting in the 400 block of Bourbon Street.

Patrick Clay, 21, a Louisiana State University student, told The Times-Picayune that he was standing on the corner of Bourbon Street on Saturday night when suddenly he saw a crowd running and people screaming that there had been a shooting.

"Everyone immediately started running and the cops immediately started running toward where people were running from," Clay said. "I was with a group of about seven people and at that point, we all just kind of grasped hands and made our way through the crowd as soon as possible."

Some bartenders and revelers said the block of Bourbon Street where the shooting occurred was closed for a time while detectives investigated, but partying resumed hours later across that stretch.

Julia Rosenthal, a 19-year-old from Westchester, N.Y., had mixed feelings about hanging out in the French Quarter after the shooting. "It's not an OK thing that happened, and it's definitely scary. But I'm not going to let it affect my night," she said.

Peter Manabani, an employee at the Rat's Hole bar, said police had shut down a whole Bourbon Street block for an hour to investigate but allowed people to return to the area later.

Hours later on Sunday, there was little evidence that a shooting had occurred. Overnight revelers were in full party mode, packing the block amid a heavy police presence.

Laura Gonzalez, 21, of Baytown, Texas, said it was her first Mardi Gras and she spent some time in the Fat Catz bar nearby as police investigated. She said the bar locked its doors quickly after the shots rang out and wouldn't let anyone in or out while police went to the scene.

Asked if it was frightening, she responded: "Not really. We were just locked in a bar and we weren't going to let this one incident wreck our party."

Parades rolled all day Saturday but none on Bourbon Street because the streets are too narrow. One of the biggest Mardi Gras parades, the Krewe of Endymion, rolled down a major thoroughfare and just skirted Bourbon Street a few hours before the shooting. Typically, once the parades end, partygoers head to the French Quarter.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/police-4-wounded-bourbon-street-shooting-081910314.html

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Friday, February 8, 2013

Etsy Is Trying to Pop Silicon Valley's Meritocracy Bubble

While we were talking?about the barriers outside of Silicon Valley facing certain kinds of people when trying to make it in, Etsy was busy fixing the problem. Because of its strong female demographic ? 67 percent,?according to Quantcast?? the craft e-market wanted to hire some female engineers to reflect the user base. But even when a concerted effort resulted in four women on a staff of 85, the cutesy retail site actually went and did something about it, as The Atlantic's Rebecca Rosen notes:

Saying diversity was a value wasn't enough. Etsy decided to put some real muscle behind its priority, developing a package of grants that would be targeted at women participants in its Hacker School, a program for young engineers. Though the program was free, living in New York is not, and a couple-thousand-dollar grant could really entice someone to take the opportunity. Perhaps even more importantly, by aggressively promoting the grants to young women, Etsy signaled: Please come.?

Thanks to Etsy's grants for a three-month intensive program in New York that describes itself a "writers retreat for hackers," female attendance went from one to 23. Etsy hired five of those women.

RELATED: Silicon Valley Is a Big Ole Fraternity

The rest of Silicon Valley should listen up: Intentions aren't good enough. Even when a company abides by the so-called Silicon Valley meritocracy (which isn't backed up by the numbers), other factors can prohibit entry for certain groups. Good news bears from Etsy, though: Things can change.?

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/etsy-trying-pop-silicon-valleys-meritocracy-bubble-232506558.html

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