Category: Assortment

10.16.11 – 10.23.11

Reported suicides of LGBTIQ youth this week:

1.

Jamie Hubley, age 15

vinegar man v the future

The first weekend I was here, in an attempt to stop feeling like an alien in San Francisco, I went to an artist talk by Lawrence Diggs, aka “Vinegar Man,” aka this guy, at 667Shotwell, which, to my (pleasant) surprise, turned out to be not only somebody’s home, but in fact the home of an artist who I had seen speak the previous day on a previous anti-alien excursion. Small world? No matter, but it felt good to be at a house event, and a comfortable/welcoming one at that.

my car, sans two windows, alongside its former contents, elsewhere on shotwell street

The talk was, in theory, to be about artists revitalizing small towns, or the opportunities that artists had in small towns, or the opportunities small towns saw in artists – perhaps a combination. Lawrence Diggs, as it turned out, relocated several years ago to Roslyn, South Dakota, one of many declining towns of not-very-many-people in the state, and established the International Vinegar Museum and its attendant Festival, an absolutely preposterous enterprise that nonetheless brings much-needed income and bodies to the town. The talk was billed to center on the prospect of artists moving to declining towns and doing something in them; the positive roles that artists could play in these towns, etc. I was interested in seeing this, having recently driven through portions of southwestern South Dakota – namely the Oglala Sioux Nation through the Black Hills to Custer, SD – and noted not only its beauty but also its wrenching poverty; I had also recently read about Scenic, SD, which is apparently still for sale.

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what news (thus far)

Sunday, July 31:

what news (rooster, asheville)

what news (vendela, asheville)

what news (kelly, asheville)

what news (kyle, fletcher)

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total insanity

On Monday, the racist, Islamophobic government of the Netherlands made a concerted attempt to annihilate their country’s rich progressive artistic heritage. Does anybody care?

Watch (and click link in description):

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Read:

Amongst the institutions that will most likely be shuttered within the next two years are STEIM, a pioneering and vitally necessary electro-acoustic media lab, and the Rijksakademie, an incredible facility and internationally recognized 1 to 2-year residency program for artists worldwide. I cannot believe that these two places, where I spent a week shuttling back and forth between in December, have been so callously excised from the world.

How the hell did this happen?

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the morning after

Last night, around when Gov Cuomo signed the same-sex marriage bill into law, someone I love very dearly texted me something along the lines of “gay marriage legalized in New York, how to feel?” I responded perhaps a little too harshly – I was tired, my flight back from New  York had been delayed by 3 hours, I just wanted to get the hell back to the mountains and eat something delicious at Rosetta’s – but I said: “maybe now they’ll move on to something important.” What I should have said is what I think: that same-sex marriage, if it represents a step forward at all, is but a tiny, baby step, a minor stumble. While I am happy for and proud of all the couples who have dreamt of marriage and who have fought so hard for so long for it, while I am happy for those who dream of getting married and now have that option, it is time to move on to issues that matter to and have an effect on us all.

That is to say, I do not believe that marriage should be illegal or unavailable to those who dream of it or any of that – blind rejection is the same as blind faith. What I do believe – or rather, what I do know – is that I have always been and remain completely ambivalent as regards marriage, but I do not feel ambivalent about my claim to the over 1400 legal rights conferred upon married couples.

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dear john

A letter sent to John Robb at Global Guerrillas is relevant to my interests:

Dear John

I don’t know if you have been following events in China, but I think something quite interesting is happening and I would appreciate your take on it. In summary, several Chinese language, but overseas based, websites have been blogging on the creation of a ‘Jasmine Revolution’ in China. This has been motivated, of course, by events in MENA, and the timing has been significant because it has coincided with two important political conferences in Beijing, but it appears to have no real-world substance whatsoever, to have begun as a hoax at best, and to exist only in cyberspace, and cyberspace outside China at that. But the interesting bit is the real world effect it is having inside China, and the momentum it is generating.

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wants & needs

Jason Ajemian & the HighLife: Episode 10: Train of Love. In which certain tour essentials are not left behind.

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lying in politics, TEPCO edition

From an article in the New York Times:

Japan’s Health Ministry said Tuesday it was raising the legal limit on the amount of radiation to which each worker could be exposed, to 250 millisieverts from 100 millisieverts, five times the maximum exposure permitted for American nuclear plant workers.

The change means that workers can now remain on site longer, the ministry said. “It would be unthinkable to raise it further than that, considering the health of the workers,” the health minister, Yoko Komiyama, said at a news conference.

 

narrative horror

I am just about finished reading Your Face Tomorrow, a sprawling, fascinating, entertaining, etc trilogy by Javier Marías. I am actually a little terrified of finishing it – I’ve been reading these books, off and on, for something like 4 months. Maybe even more than that – since October? It’s possible.

Anyway, something that’s discussed at length in these books is a concept called “narrative horror,” which is essentially a complex by which a person can be driven to kill in order to protect his/her public image. That is, if some event – a crime exposed, a sudden unflattering death – were to occur that were to occlude everything else in this person’s life – as in James Dean’s fiery death, Kennedy’s assassination (less so, because we still have a myth of Kennedy the president that is quite strong), and so on – the person with narrative horror would gladly kill somebody to prevent it. Narrative horror is the terror of one’s image of one’s own image being tarnished.

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point/counterpoint

From today’s Democracy Now! episode: