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    recent reading

    I find myself, this summer, with less disposable income than I have had at any time in the past ten years: my paychecks are covering rent and bills but just about everything else (including, say, groceries) either needs to be put on credit or done without.

    This has kept me suspended in a foul mood that's hard to shake but it has also resensitized me to just what a friend the university library can be. Needless to say, I've been reading a lot. Here are some books I completed last month, with some brief notes:

    Planet of Slums by Mike Davis
    MacArthur fellow Mike Davis hunkers down and attempts to produce a readable synthesis of the enormous body of current literature on global urban poverty in this book, which ends up averaging about four footnotes per page. The general adherence to hard fact makes it difficult for Davis' usual theoretical insight to shine through, but the urgency of the subject matter more than compensates. Required reading.

    Europeana, by Patrik Ourednik
    Twentieth-century events, intriguingly reordered and recontextualized into something that more closely resembles experimental fiction than a history book. No characters as such: Ourednik instead works mostly with collective masses such as 'scientists' or 'soldiers' (although a few representative individuals shimmer through occasionally). Fascists and communists factor in as the big baddies, with capitalists and neoliberals getting more of a free pass than I'd be inclined to give. But then again I'm not Czech.

    Are Prisons Obsolete?, by Angela Davis
    Slim, readable critique of the prison-industrial complex. Points out ample racism and sexism, although, oddly, the titular question of "obsolescence" is mostly left unaddressed. Useful as an introduction to the prison abolition movement, although newcomers to the topic may want more convincing that punishment and/or reformation would function better in a post-prison world.

    I've completed four other books this month; expect some notes on those soon. And the list of all the ones I've read this year lives here, as always.

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    Friday, June 23, 2006
    7:06 PM
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    linkfarm XXXXV

    1. The Athanasius Kircher Society has a blog archiving many entertaining varieties of human weirdness

    2. Logic puzzle of unclear origin may be map of nine-dimensional hypercube?

    3. Bunnies

    4. Cactus beings

    5. Elaborate quiz reduces your identity to a colored strip

    6. Gridlove: collaborative photo-arranging project

    7. Art and text by Jim Woodring appearing regularly at his blog

    8. "How to write about Africa"

    9. Odd device key to system of outsider logic

    10. A brief history of color systems (with diagrams)

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    Wednesday, June 21, 2006
    4:24 PM
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    Afternoon Meeting


    Afternoon Meeting
    Originally uploaded by jbushnell

    spring 2006

    It rained a lot of the week—it was, in fact, the rainiest Spring Retreat we've had in its now six-year history—so I didn't do quite as much photo-taking as I sometimes do. But I still managed to come home from New Hampshire with 29 pretty good shots. Here's the set.

     

    Wednesday, June 14, 2006
    8:25 PM
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    the return

    What I've been up to for most of June to date: the Spring conference (aka "hippie camp"). Check back later (tomorrow?) for photos.

    What I've been up to for the last 48 hours: wandering around Harvard's campus, reading Celia Farber's Serious Adverse Events: An Uncensored History of AIDS and Harry G. Frankfurt's On Bullshit, giving a secret to a stranger who solicited one, playing Katamari Damacy with April and Thor, eating ham and jalapeno pizza, and using each of the following modes of transportation at least once: plane, subway, automobile, and ferryboat.

    What I plan to do for the next 24 hours: rest, take a bath, and start thinking about which dormant project to reactivate first.

    Thanks to everyone who put me up over the last couple of weeks.

     

    Tuesday, June 13, 2006
    3:12 PM
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