Sunday, January 24, 2016
Friday, January 8, 2016
PHOTO ESSAY BEFORE & AFTER SOCKING ROD SMITH IN THE SHOULDER.
On a night when the Number Of Casual Snake Stories rivaled the Number Of Fine Pints Held Up To The Light, it had come time to sock Rod Smith in the shoulder. I say sock, Dear Reader, but clearly you can judge for yourself the Swiftness & Stealth of this maneuver, as the camera could not capture any small smidgen of its express delivery. Let us note the various aspects of the No Nonsense Reply. The affixing of reading spectacles as if to declare: Thug Life. The Crane Technique aka Looming Machinery Of The Poetry Hammer honed on the Mean Streets of Gallipolis, Ohio. And the Shock Swoop (French: chaque swoop) of the Final Descent. By the final frame, Dear Reader, neither of us could remember what had prompted us to offer the Substantial Ruckus of our Essential Conflict and so, you know, we just took a Regulation Photo, there, as if to proclaim Great Ambivalence about All Things That Squander Our Hopes in the pursuit of what we might call Medium-Tight. Amen.
Sunday, January 3, 2016
TEACHING THE CAN(N)ON.
Imagine a world in which you’re no longer a professor of
literature, teaching the canon, but a professor of cannon, teaching the cannon.
You realize that more sophisticated methods of delivering ordnance have arrived
on the battlefield (and on the briny) (and in the cobalt, cobalt sky) yet you believe
in a simpler, more classical war. “These implements”, you lecture, “might
become requisite again, given the many catastrophes that may befall humankind,
returning us to a more primitive, and enthralling, imposition of will.” A
proper professor of cannon should teach the architecture of the device—the solid
spaces and the negative—as well as the intellectual aspects of field artillery.
Angle of fire and rate of fire, to be sure, but also the type of spark and type
of propellant that ultimately lob the ball toward the fortifications. Your
specialty, “Collateral Damage”, has yet to become unfashionable: the howling cannon-fire
gone astray, and the ensuing despair of the unintended targets. Every so often,
you congratulate yourself on completing a dissertation in this area, as this
specialty provides you with a renewable means of presenting papers at
conferences and pursuing promotions at your institution. “Fire!” you shout at
your students. On cue, each of your students takes a turn shouting “Fire!” at
the blackboard, where you’ve sketched out replica lip, muzzle, neck, and all
the rest. As a special treat, you surprise your classes by playing the R.E.M.
song, “The One I Love”, in which the singer croons, “Fire”, every so often. A very
postmodern debate ensues about the intent of such a lyric, some students
arguing that Michael Stipe must’ve been kindling a fuse a couple paces behind
the chamber, so to speak, of a modern artillery piece, and yet other students contend
that the song, “The One I Love”, belongs in another can(n)on altogether, the
meaning of which troubles you, haunts your sensibilities. Perhaps you repair to
the comfortable trappings of your office with a takeaway mug of decaf, noodling
around in a canonical way: filing cabinet, bookshelf, computer, window,
armchair. You relish the thought that, next semester, you will be on
sabbatical, rising when you wish and working when you wish, if working means to
grind coffee and peruse the Sunday funnies. In your absence, you realize, your
students may be taught a thoroughly different cannon, but of course you, too,
could consider teaching another cannon—or rather no canon, at all.
this post is part of a
double issue. also see: TOPICAL PARADISE.
TOPICAL PARADISE.
Starring:
My Pop. . . . as himself
Director:
Dan Gutstein
Running Time:
0:30
Advance Praise:
“A Common Sense cocktail of ointments.” —Thomas Paine Relief
“A whale of a numbing combination.” —Freeze Willie
“FYI.” —For Your Inflammation
Other Films You Might Enjoy:
this post is part of a
double issue. also see: TEACHING THE CAN(N)ON.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)