making art

recording prohibited at The Cinema Effect exhibition

The Cinema Effect: Illusion, Reality, and the Moving Image, Part I: Dreams, is on view at the Hirshhorn Museum through May 11, 2008. The exhibition brochure explains:

The cinema was the unrivaled art form of the twentieth century. Film, as well as later incarnations like television and the internet, has penetrated to the culture's core so that the very boundaries between "real life" and make-believe have become at least blurred, if not indecipherable.

No photography or recording allowed.

Today, the cinema is everywhere -- it is in the way we perceive our world, in the way we speak, in the way we dream. We have no need of entering a movie theater to experience cinema; life itself is just like a movie.

No photography or recording allowed.

The exhibition brochure includes a quote from Stephen Fry's book, Making History. Here is the quote, with a minor substitution:

When you walk along the street, you're in a little bottle of oil; when you have a row, you're in a little bottle of oil....When you skim stones over the water, buy a newspaper, park your car, line up in a McDonald's, stand on a rooftop looking down, meet a friend, joke in the pub, wake suddenly in the night or fall asleep dead drunk, you're in a little bottle of oil.

Decide what to do next weekend. Whatever you decide to do, and even if you don't decide to do anything, that weekend will be over soon.

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farmer digs into youtuber

Was rural life once like the Waltons and Little House on the Prairie? Now reinventing the interview on YouTube, a retired farmer asks some tough questions and describes rural life as it truly was in the 1930s, before television.


(If you don't see the video, try here.)

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reading at risk, seriously

The U.S. National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) this fall will release another report lamenting the decline of literary reading. From the late seventeenth century through the early twentieth century, many cultural leaders would have applauded a decline in reading of popular novels. Now, however, such a decline is a cause for grave concern. Fiction has become a major public good.

Appreciating modern fiction requires considerable sophistication. The Executive Summary of the NEA's 2004 report, Reading at Risk, declared:

Reading at Risk presents a distressing but objective overview of national trends. The accelerating declines in literary reading among all demographic groups of American adults indicate an imminent cultural crisis.

The NEA's news release begin with this description:

Literary reading is in dramatic decline with fewer than half of American adults now reading literature.... The study also documents an overall decline of 10 percentage points in literary readers from 1982 to 2002....

The report's Executive Summary included this finding:

4. Women read more literature than men do, but literary reading by both groups is declining at significant rates.

Under that finding was this data:

Literary Reading by Sex
(% reading in given year)
Year
1982 1992 2002
Women 63.0% 60.3% 55.1%
Men 49.1% 47.4% 37.6%

Thus less than half of American men have read literature for at least as far back as 1982. While the overall share of literary readers declined 10 percentage points from 1982 to 2002, the gender protrusion in the share of literary readers (the difference between women's and men's shares of literary readers) has been larger than 10 percentage points from 1982 to 2002. In 2002, the gender protrusion was 17.5 percentage points!

Reading at Risk emphasizes the tremendous public importance of literary reading. In the preface to the report, Dana Gioia, Chairman of the NEA, declares:

print culture affords irreplaceable forms of focused attention and contemplation that makes complex communication possible. To lose such intellectual capability -- and the many sorts of human continuity it allows -- would constitute a vast impoverishment.
     More than reading is at stake. As this report unambiguously demonstrates, readers play a more active and involved role in their communities. The decline in reading, therefore, parallels a larger retreat from participation in civic and cultural life. The long-term implications of this study not only affect literature but all the arts -- as well as social activities such as volunteerism, philanthropy, and even political engagement.

The gender protrusion is literary reading is much larger than the decline in literary reading that the NEA and many concerned persons, including some who note various flaws in the NEA report other than the lack of interest in the impressive gender protrusion, have addressed. Why hasn't the awesome gender protrusion attracted widespread public interest, or at least concern, or at least notice?

The NEA's press release for Reading at Risk detumesces sex. The press release states:

Women read more literature than men do, but the survey indicates literary reading by both genders is declining. Only slightly more than one-third of adult males now read literature. Reading among women is also declining significantly, but at a slower rate.

The first independent clause of the first sentence has "women" as the subject and indicates that women lead men in the valued activity of concern. That sentence then has an attention-deflecting conjunction ("but" rather than "and") linking to a second independent clause indicating a similarity between the sexes. The second sentence returns to the idea of the first independent clause of the first sentence. It presents a statistic about "adult males." It does not, however, present the parallel statistic about "adult females." The third sentence returns to women and slightly qualifies the second clause of the first sentence. This disjoint prose structure doesn't convey what should be a major concern for those who truly believe that literary reading has great public importance: in 2002, 37.6% of men, in contrast to 55.1% of women, were literary readers.

Good literature is an antidote to conventional master narratives and narrow interests that obscure the continually new reality of the world. When it comes to men, failure of imagination may in fact indicate an imminent cultural crisis.

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saturated in literary discourse

sign using quotes

In English literature, the direct speech of imaginary characters is typically marked with quotation marks. An imaginary character says, "Do not throw trash in the tray." Perhaps your mother?

two-voice story on ATM envelope

Literary style seems to have become a deeper part of consciousness than verbal grammar. An ATM deposit envelope provides the setting. Written on it is a bare noun phrase, although it could be an imperative statement if the ATM had needs: DEPOSIT ENVELOPE FOR ATM. Then a stern, laconic voice says, "NO COINS".

The whole world is not naturally made of narrative. Historical contingencies of intellectual life and technology have constructed it that way.

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