Posts Tagged ‘Carnegie Library’

Dawn Naret is rad.

Tuesday, December 1st, 2009

At my Aunt’s house over Thanksgiving, I read this

But what surprised her more were the message-board posts and emails from homeless people who’d been living in their cars, on the streets, in squatted houses or in shanties. To read these, you’d think that half her readership was sleeping rough and getting online at libraries, Starbuckses, and stumbled wireless networks that they accessed with antique laptops on street-corners.

in Cory Doctorow’s Makers and the following in the Trib.

Those who know Naret describe her as intelligent, neat — even elegant. A prolific blogger, Naret spends many days using computers at Carnegie Library in Squirrel Hill, where she writes on 20 blogs.

“I am a disabled lady, living in the street,” she wrote in one blog. “Being homeless, I have no bed to sleep in at night. Sleep only comes in naps, sitting in my chair.”

On another, she wrote: “I am waiting for a chance to lie down and at least have a place to die. There is not much hope of healing.”

Libraries with computers have become a magnet for some people who are homeless, said Dennis Culhane, a University of Pennsylvania professor and nationally recognized expert on homelessness.

“They can access information on jobs and housing, and connect with family members and other supports. The most common path out of homelessness is through family and friends, and the Internet is one of the primary vehicles our society has for connecting us,” Culhane said.

Naret’s blog topics range from government corruption, to war, to health care and politics. Her “Hey Buddy, Can You Spare a Latte” blog includes jokes, prayers and newspaper articles. She has a Sub Atomic Quantum Humor blog for science buffs.

“She considers herself a bit of an Internet rabble-rouser. Her goal is to be heard,” said Mark Russell, a Carnegie librarian at Squirrel Hill.

Twelve-year street woman finds purpose as a blogger” by Craig Smith, The Trib 11-26-09

Condescending though it may be, this article sparked my curiosity.  As it turns out, Dawn Naret and I cover many of the same topics (smoking and police obnoxiousness issues, Oz and Harry Potter, DIY mysticism and ancient civilizations), albeit from rather different perspectives.   For sheer prolificity and entertainment value, Dawn clearly cleans my clock at blogging.

Respect.

Have fun and cuídate.

The Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg, Vol. 4: Trips 1972-73

Friday, November 6th, 2009

On the first day of the summer my month wife, Silena Ruiz, filched our district’s master program from the Ganfield Hold computer centre and disappeared with it.  A guard at the Hold has confessed that she won admittance by seducing him, then gave him a drug.  Some say she is in Conning Town now, others have heard rumors that she has been seen in Morton Court, still others maintain her destination was the Mill.  I suppose it does not matter where she has gone.  What matters is that we are without our program.  We have lived without it for eleven days, and things are starting to break down.

***

Tonight at the capital they are planning next month’s rainfall patterns for districts that the planners have never seen.  District food allocations – inadequate, always inadequate – are being devised by men to whom our appetites are purely abstract entities.  Do they believe in our existence, at the capital?  Do they really think there is such a place as Ganfield?  What if we sent them a delegation of notable citizens to ask for help in replacing our lost program?  Would they care?  Would they even listen?  For that matter, is there a capital at all?  How can I who have never seen nearby Old Grove accept, on faith alone, the existence of a far-off governing centre, aloof, inaccessible, shrouded in myth?  Maybe it is only a construct of some cunning subterranean machine that is our real ruler.  That would not surprise me.  Nothing surprises me.  There is no capital.  There are no central planners.  Beyond the horizon everything is mist.

***

I knew her only eleven weeks, she was my month-wife only for two; I had not realized she had come to mean so much to me so quickly.

- from “Getting Across”

The notion that I could singlehandedly end the war in Vietnam, or the oppression of the oppressed, by writing a science-fiction story always seemed transcendentally dim-witted to me.

- from the introduction to “Ms. Found in an Abandoned Time Machine”

For instance, does it mean anything to you when I tell you that I have two womb-mothers, one ovarian and one uterine, and that my sperm-father in the somatic line was, strictly speaking, part dolphin and part ocelot?  Or that I celebrated my fifth neurongate raising by taking part in an expedition to Proxy Nine, where I learned the eleven soul-diving drills and the seven contrary mantras?

***

If you need gadgetry to get yourself off, you use gadgetry; the superficials simply don’t enter into any real consideration of how you get where you want to be from where you’re at.  The aim is to eradicate the well-known evils of our society, and if we have to get there by means of time machines, thought-amplification headbands, anti-uptightness rays, molecular interpenetrator beams, superheterodyning levitator rods, and all the rest of that gaudy comic-book paraphernalia, so be it.  It’s the results that count.

- from “Ms. Found in an Abandoned Time Machine”

Oh, Christ, how awful it is to be trapped in an era where everybody goes around like some sort of zombie, cut off from the energies of the spirit, ashamed even to admit there are such energies.

- from “Breckenridge and the Continuum”

What lies beyond the ship is neither a blank wall nor an empty tube; it is a stunning profusion of interlocking energy fields, linking everything to everything; it is music that is also light, it is light that is also music, and those aboard the ship are sentient particles wholly enmeshed  in that vast all-engulfing reverberation, that radiant song of gladness that is the universe.  The voyagers journey joyously toward the center of all things, giving themselves gladly into the care of cosmic forces far surpassing human control and understanding.  He presses his hands against the cool glass.  He puts his face close to it.  What do I see, what do I feel, what am I experiencing? It is instant revelation, every time.  It is almost, almost! – the sought after oneness.  Barriers remain, but yet he is aware of an altered sense of space and time, a knowledge of the awesome something that lurks in the vacancies between the spokes of the cosmos, something majestic and powerful; he knows that the something is part of himself, and he is part of it.  When he stands at the viewplate he yearns to open the ship’s great hatch and tumble into the eternal.  But not yet, not yet.  Barriers remain.  The voyage has only begun.  They grow closer every day to that which they seek, but the voyage has only begun.

- from “Ship-Sister, Star-Sister”

They descended toward the place where the Snow Hunters had made their camp.  Breaking a long silence, Shadow said, “There must once have been a time when the world was different, when all people were of the same kind, and everyone lived in peace.  A golden age, long gone.  How did things change, Leaf?  How did we bring this upon ourselves?”

“Nothing has changed,” Leaf said, “except the look of our bodies.  Inside we’re the same.  There never was any golden age.”

“There were no Teeth, once.”

“There were always Teeth, under one name or another.  True peace never lasted long.  Greed and hatred always existed.”

“Do you believe that, truly?”

“I do.  I believe that mankind is mankind, all of us the same whatever our shape, and such changes as come upon us are trifles, and the best we can ever do is find such happiness for ourselves as we can, however dark the times.”

“These are darker times than most, Leaf.”

“Perhaps.”

“These are evil times.  The end of all things approaches.”

Leaf smiled.  “Let it come.  These are the times we were meant to live in, and no asking why, and no use longing for easier times.  Pain ends when acceptance begins.  That is what we have now.  We make the best of it.  This is the road we travel.  Day by day we lose what was never ours, day by day we slip closer to the All-Is-One, and nothing matters, Shadow, nothing except learning to accept what comes.”

- from “This is the Road”

Pitkin, who had watched the interchange from the far side of the lounge, came striding fiercely toward him as the Spicans glided off.  “What are you up to now?” he demanded.

“How about minding your own business?” Schwartz said amiably.

“You’re trading pills with those snakes, aren’t you?”

“Let’s call it field research.”

“Research?  Research?  What are you going to do, trip on that orange stuff of theirs?”

“I might,” Schwartz said.

“How do you know what its effects on the human metabolism might be?  You could end up blind or paralyzed or crazy or –”

“–or illuminated,” Schwartz said.  “Those are the risks one takes in the field.  The early anthropologists who unhesitatingly sampled peyote and yage and ololiuqui accepted those risks, and–”

“But those were drugs that humans were using.  You have no way of telling how – oh, what’s the use, Schwartz?  Research, he calls it.  Research.”  Pitkin sneered.  “Junkie!

Schwartz matched him sneer for sneer.  “Economist!

- from “Schwartz Between the Galaxies”

Trips is a collection showcasing Silverberg’s preoccupations of the period: senescence, death (The Book of Skulls and Dying Inside [the only Silverberg novel I've read aside from his three collabs with Asimov when I was a kid] are also products of ‘72) and what he saw as not-all-that-wonderful currents in SF itself.  The 14 stories, though occasionally nihilistic, are all solid fun and cast interesting shadows on 2009, and Silverberg’s introductions give a sense of where his head, and the SF field, were at during those strange years.

Rating: 5/5 stars

Trips contains the stories “In the Group” (written for the rad-sounding sex-themed SF anthology Eros in Orbit), “Getting Across” (Silverberg moved from New York City, where he’d lived up to then, to California before writing this tale of a dystopian world-city), “Ms. Found in an Abandoned Time Machine” and “The Science Fiction Hall of Fame” (vignettish meta-SF send-ups of SF that’s more polemic than story and SF fandom, respectively), “A Sea of Faces” (therapist uses “consciousness-penetration treatment” on patient), “The Dybbuk of Mazel Tov IV” (from the intro,

Then my good friend Jack Dann asked me to do a story for a book called Wandering Stars, an anthology of what he called “Jewish science fiction.”  I thought that was an odd idea for a book, even a wrong-headed one.

but of course he did it anyway and the story’s awesome, kind of a mirror-world take on Bradbury’s “The Fire Balloons”), “Breckenridge and the Continuum” (more sorta nonlinear meta-SF, my least favorite in the book, but still fun), “Capricorn Games” (Comte de Saint-Germain character undecided on unto whom to confer his secret of longevity attends a birthday party, against a backdrop of global cooling), “Ship-Sister, Star-Sister” (set on a starship for which a blind woman’s telepathic bond with her twin is the only communication link to Earth; my favorite of all these stories and the basis for Silverberg’s 1996 novel Starborne), the novella “This is the Road” (four folks [three of different imaginative mutant races, one old school human] hit the road together after beings called Teeth destroy their homes), the titular “Trips” (guy seeks a version of his wife through a series of alternate Californias), the novella “Born with the Dead” (guy stalks his dead wife [the "rekindled" don't mix with the living] to the amusement and irritation of her dead pals and lover; Nebula and Locus winner), “Schwartz Across the Galaxies” (meta-SF again, anthropologist from homogenized “global village” near-future longs for contact with romanticized alien cultures), and “In the House of Double Minds” (where kids are commissurotomized and trained to be oracles).  Most of these stories were originally written for anthologies and have been subsequently reprinted prior to this collection, so the introductions are really the only novelty; but if you haven’t read these stories before, may as well read them here!

I won’t tell you not to click on my Amazon links, but if you’re in Pittsburgh you can definitely get Trips from the Carnegie Library (I just returned a copy) and maybe drop those folks some cash while you’re at it.

Happy reading and cuídate.

Library benefit reading/dance party

Monday, November 2nd, 2009

Going to check this out.

Have fun and cuídate.

Bloomsday 09 Bibliomancy

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

My fascination with synchronicity grows more out of Joyce than out of Jung.  Ulysses and Finnegan’s Wake are all about synchronicity, and they came out long before Jung ever wrote anything on the subject.

Robert Anton Wilson, 1988 interview

Among the volumes on occult subjects he had in his personal library in Trieste, we find many texts concerning occult matters, like Jacob Boehme’s The Signature of all Things, Emanuel Swedenborg’s Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell, two books on theosophy and discipleship by Annie Besant, a tract on the occult meaning of blood by Rudolph Steiner, a study in French on Spiritism, a volume by Merlin called The Book of Charms and Ceremonies Whereby All May Have the Opportunity of Obtaining Any Object They Desire, a translation of Plutarch’s theosophical essays, a study on Yogi philosophy and oriental occultism, a work by Giordano Bruno and a study on him, and finally several works by Blake and Yeats.23  Joyce remained interested in the occult also in his more mature years. In the Paris library we find a copy of The Occult Review (July 1923) which features essays and articles on the “Practical Qabala,” the “Akasic Records,” and “the alleged communication with Madame Blavatsky.” The Paris library hosts also other books on similar subjects, though not as many as the Trieste library.24 Such a variety of texts would suggest that Joyce’s position towards the occult
was very eclectic, as if the subject were a kind of amalgam of different traditions, all marked by the signature of secrecy. Theosophy, mysticism, magic, spiritism, and the so-called occult science in fact blend together to form a cluster of obscure erudition where Joyce eventually finds useful ideas, helpful in building up what looks literally like a cryptic system. This is consistent with the ways in which scholars use the word occult as an umbrella term.

Enrico Terrinoni, Occult Joyce: The Hidden in Ulysses

On June 16, folks gather to celebrate polymath literary trickster and all-around cantankerous goofball James Joyce and to read from Ulysses in particular.  Last year’s last-minute bibliomancy yielded up the esoteric secrets of the banana split, but I missed all the readings.  This morning I had the fun to hear the Telemachus/Martello tower episode (1) read at Bloomfield’s Crazy Mocha, and this afternoon caught the Scylla and Charybdis/National Library episode (9) at the Carnegie Library in Oakland. I did my own bibliomancy too, twice again, this time both from Ulysses.

THE FLYBILL

K. 11. post no bills.  Strictly confidential.  Dr Hy Franks.

HENRY

All is lost now.

(Virag unscrews his head in a trice and holds it under his arm.)

VIRAG’S HEAD

Quack!

(Exeunt severally.)

pg 510/523 Circe/Night Town episode (15)

K. 11. can also be read as K. K., K2/2K, and 11.11.,  but to what in Ulysses does Bloom’s talking flybill refer?  Round two answers this question and provides another instance of the 11-11/15 mirroring I first picked up [appropriately, given the adjectival use of "treacle" here] in the first Harry Potter novel.

His eyes sought answer from the river and saw a rowboat rock at anchor on the treacly swells lazily its plastered board.

Kino’s

11/-

Trousers.

Good idea that.  Wonder if he pays rent to the corporation.  How can you own water really?  It’s always flowing in a stream, never the same, which in the stream of life we trace.  Because life is a stream.  All kind of places are good for ads.  That quack doctor for the clap used to be stuck up in all the greenhouses.  Never see it now.  Strictly confidential.  Dr Hy Franks.

pg 150/153 Lestrygonians/lunch episode (8)

First let’s take the rowboat to the First Pennsylvania State Normal School at Millersville, where, in 1881, pedagogy and grammar prof (and future principal and textbook author, PA Teachers’ Association and NEA President, and 33rd degree Freemason) Eliphalet Oram Lyte saw the publication of The Franklin Square Song Collection and his most enduring contribution to human culture: the music (which he may not have actually composed, but adapted) to “Row, Row, Row Your Boat”.  Here’s another adaptation (of the lyrics) by local puppet regent King Friday XIII.

Propel, propel, propel your craft,
unforcefully down the liquid solution.
Ecstatically, ecstatically, ecstatically, ecstatically,
existence is merely an illusion.

Lyte fled this illusory existence in 1913.

Pound first heard of James Joyce through Yeats, and contacted Joyce in Trieste in 1913. Joyce was at a low point; his book of poems Chamber Music had been published six years earlier and was his only book in print, and he was in poor financial straits trying to support his wife and two children. Joyce’s difficulties in publishing his collection Dubliners were legendary; it took him almost ten years for the volume to be published without expurgation. Pound was drawn by Joyce’s travails with censorious publishers, and his support resulted in the publication of A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man as a serialization in The Egoist in 1914.

Jesse Rossa, “Joyce, Lawrence and Frost

This essay on how the magic arts of marketing are used in Ulysses offers further clues.

The most striking thing about the Kino’s advertisement, as an “answer,” is its opacity. This is not language spoken by one human voice in response to another; the words are just there, buoyant and energetic, a quotation from some mysterious and otherworldly source: Kino’s 11/-Trousers. The rowboat serves as a simple metaphor for the peculiar linguistic condition of the phrase, suggesting its quoted, artificial status and its separation from the ordinary give and take of conversation. In the characteristic mode of advertisement, this piece of text is adrift in the natural world, impenetrable and stubbornly detached. Perhaps the boat is also meant to draw our attention to the mobility of the Kino’s ad, since it does in fact wander on the treacly swells of Ulysses, reappearing twice in “Circe” as the gnomic sign “K. 11″ (15.1658, 2633), which Bloom says is “the parallax of the subsolar ecliptic of Aldebaran” (15.1656), and then again in “Ithaca,” as an example of “the modern art of advertisement . . . condensed in trilateral monoideal symbols” (17.581-82).(2)

Daniel P. Gunn, “Beware of imitations: advertisement as reflexive commentary in ‘Ulysses.’” 1996

Thanks, Daniel!

The two other references to the ad are

CHRIS CALLINAN

What is the parallax of the subsolar ecliptic of Aldebaran?

BLOOM

Pleased to hear from you, Chris.  K. II.

pg. 478/488 Circe/Nighttown episode (15)

and

What also stimulated him in his cogitations?

The financial success achieved by Ephraim Marks and Charles A. James, the former by his 1d. bazaar at 42 George’s street, South, the latter at his 6½d. shop and world’s fancy fair and waxwork exhibition at 30 Henry street, admission 2d., children 1d.; and the infinite possibilities hitherto unexplored of the modern art of advertisement if condensed in triliteral monoideal symbols, vertically of maximum visibility (divined), horizontally of maximum legibility (deciphered) and of magnetising efficacy to arrest involuntary attention, to interest, to convince, to decide.

Such as?

K. 11.  Kino’s 11/- Trousers.

House of Keys.  Alexander J. Keyes.

pg. 667/683 Ithaca/Bloom & Stephen at No. 7 Eccles St. episode (17)

Aldebaran, then.  Don Gifford and Robert J. Seidman’s Annotated Ulysses (which, remarkably, was shelved at the library on Bloomsday) tells us that,

“Subsolar ecliptic” is a phrase no longer in use in astronomy.  Callinan’s question in effect means, “What is the angle between a line from the center of the earth to Aldebaran and a line from the center of the sun to Aldebaran?”

and that,

The correct answer to Callinan’s question would have been 0.048 seconds of arc.

but also that,

in the Harvard system of classification of stars by temperature (1890), K would correctly identify Aldebaran as a somewhat cooler than average star.

In fact, Aldebaran is a K5III star (for another 11-15 link), the brightest star and “bull’s eye” of my tropical zodiac Sun sign, Taurus, and the 13th brightest star as seen from Earth.  Wikipedia’s Aldebaran page also provides a hypothetical K2

In 1997, a possible substellar companion was reported, with a mass at least 11 times that of Jupiter with an orbital period of around 2 years; however, this has not been confirmed.

and an occult 15.

This star is close enough to the ecliptic to be occulted by the moon. Such occultations occur when the moon’s ascending node is near the autumnal equinox, as will be the case around 2015.

For a running start into the last quotation, note that the Tribe of Ephraim is also linked to the bull, and not just by the ancient Egypto-Israelites.

Ephraim Wales Bull (March 4, 1806September 26, 1895) was the inventor of the Concord grape. Born in Boston, Massachusetts, Bull moved to Concord in 1836, settling with his wife on a farm next door to Amos Bronson Alcott.

In 1843, Bull began the deliberate process of breeding a grape that could thrive in the cold New England climate. By 1849, having planted 22,000 seedlings, he had created a large, sweet variety from a native species. By 1853, the grapes were for sale, but within several years, competing growers had begun raising their own crops of Concord grapes, purchased from Bull for $5 per vine. Bull saw little profit from the strain after the initial sales.

Ephraim Bull was elected to the Massachusetts House of Representatives in 1855. In 1893, after a fall, he ended up in the Concord Home for the Aged. He died in 1895. His epitaph reads, He Sowed Others Reaped.

Wikipedia

The Rev. James Flynn also died in 1895, as Joyce tells us in “The Sisters”, first of the fifteen stories in Dubliners, but let that go for the moment.  I’d next like to focus on the terms “trilateral” (as quoted by Gunn, above) and “triliteral” (as printed in my reprint of the 1961 edition [see notes on pagination, below]).  Joyce substituted the word “trilateral” for “infernal” in Finnegans Wake according to this “Genetic Exegesis“, which makes sense considering the Trilateral Commission’s infernality.  While the TLC is very goal-oriented, and there is, fortunately, only one of them, calling it or its symbol

“monoideal” (in category theory, “monoid” refers to a category with a single object) would be rather a stretch, however much it seeks a future in which the category “government” contains a single globe-girdling bureaucracy.

We also find the TLC (footnote 11) rubbing shoulders with Joyce in this Journal of Allied Health publication.  As for “triliteral”, the term applies both to three-letter word roots in Semitic languages and to the third type of Egyptian hieroglyph, which represents a three-consonant sequence (like TLC or, say, CFR in English).  The example given after the K-2/11-11 is “House of Keys.  Alexander J. Keyes.” and Bloom encounters/hallucinates Keyes (for whom he was working on an ad until his drunken editor intervened in the Aeolus episode [7]) in Nighttown.

BLOOM

(Solemnly.) You call it a festivity.  I call it a sacrament.

ALEXANDER KEYES

When will we have our own house of keys?

BLOOM

I stand for the reform of municipal morals and the plain ten commandments.  New worlds for old.  Union of all, jew, moslem and gentile.  Three acres and a cow for all children of nature.  Saloon motor hearses.  Compulsory manual labour for all.  All parks open to the public day and night.  Electric dishscrubbers.  Tuberculosis, lunacy, war and mendicancy must now cease.  General amnesty, weekly carnival, with masked licence, bonuses for all, esperanto the universal brotherhood.  No more patriotism of barspongers and dropsical impostors.  Free money, free love and a free lay church in a free lay state.

pg. 479/489 Circe/Nighttown episode (15)

I leave it as an exercise for the reader to contrast Bloom’s Utopian scenario with that of the Trilateral Commission and to answer the questions, “Which one is more ridiculous?”

One last bit of Q&A, then I’m out:

What did I discover upon exiting the Carnegie Library?

That the front tire of my bike had deflated.

What did I do about it?

I walked it from Oakland to Kraynick’s in Garfield, across Penn Avenue from a convenience store called…

K-2.

Happy Bloomsday & cuídate!

NOTES ON PAGINATION

Page numbers preceding the “/” are from the Random House 1934 edition, the first official American edition of Ulysses, which, hilariously (to me, though maybe not so much to Joyce), was set from an inaccurate 1929 pirated edition.  An accurate US edition (the one I’ve quoted from and the source [by way of Random House's June, 1990 First Vintage International Edition, which includes the 1934 page numbers parenthetically in the margins] of the page numbers following the “/”) based on the one Joyce commissioned Stuart Gilbert to edit for The Odyssey Press in 1932, wasn’t printed until 1961.