Existential Ennui

~ Searching for Meaning Amid the Chaos

Existential Ennui

Tag Archives: reading

Well, You Can Always Think About Sex Instead

22 Thursday May 2014

Posted by Sherry in American History, An Island in the Storm, Editorials, Education, Humor, Psychology, Satire, Sociology

≈ 12 Comments

Tags

critical thinking, democracy, economic systems, opinions, political systems, reading

burning_planetSee? I’m learning. Wanna get somebody’s attention? Mention sex in the title. Works every time. Just what does that crazy lady have to say about sex? Let’s see.

Nothing.

This is not about sex.

It’s about dumbing down the conversation in the hopes that a certain bunch of yahoos might actually recognize that that thing attached to their shoulders actually can be used for deciding more than whether to have the spaghetti Lean Cuisine for dinner or the Salisbury steak.

Okay, so I said that wrong, and all the knuckledraggers I got to read at the mention of sex, now vaguely think they’ve been insulted and have clicked this off.

No matter, what follows is way over their comprehension level anyway. Only the bright bulbs will continue.

There’s a conversation that seem to be in the offing here, yet it’s not a good idea to say it too loud. The conversation revolves around the question: Is democracy the best choice in a modern world?

It’s a hard question, since there is pretty good evidence that we don’t have anything remotely like democracy, have never had anything remotely like it, and probably won’t have anything like it, so how to compare? Let’s not forget that at the beginning of this great adventure, the real argument was between state’s rights and the central government, and that in most places religion was state ordained, and the people who voted were property holders. Women? They voted only by the power of persuasion.

Basically power in a democracy is wielded by the “eligible” voter (who is eligible becomes rather significant wouldn’t you say?), either directly or through elected representatives who enact laws that are applicable to everyone in a just, fair, and equal way. Greece started the whole thing in Athens, but of course women and slaves were not part of that “eligibility” requirement there either.

So how democratic one is starts with who gets to be part of “the people”. Thus my statement that we have never remotely been  a democracy from the start.

People of course, (mostly the one’s who have already dropped out of this conversation) get democracy all confused with socialism, and all confused on top of that with communism, and theocratic states, and oligarchies, and monarchies, to name the most prominent of the “forms of government”. But not all these are actually forms of government. Socialism and communism are more properly economic systems, akin to capitalism or free market economies.

That’s the problem in a nutshell. We claim that communism is “bad”, but communism as practiced by Lenin and Stalin the late ungreat Soviet Union had little to do with Marx and Engel’s ideal which was a marriage of a communist economic system married to a democratic political system. Similarly, American Democracy joins capitalism with a representative “democracy”. For a good while France and England and others married a theocratic/monarchical political system to a feudal system of economics.

Today, in the US we have an acknowledged mess. Our economic system seems to have led us to a new animal called a corptocracy for want of a better word. An increasingly smaller and smaller number of corporations “owned” by a very few men and even fewer women, control larger and larger portions of the national and increasingly international economies. They “buy” politicians and direct them as to what legislation they wish, and how to vote. They often, through groups like ALEC, even write the legislation themselves. By controlling economies they effectively control politics, and thus are the heads of the political system.

Although the trappings of “democracy” remain, through elections, more and more those votes don’t really count. The corporate interests choose the candidates, and fund their campaigns. As studies show, they have the greatest of influence on the introduction and passage of laws.

Perhaps it is time to at least begin the conversation as to whether or not capitalism or free markets are at all compatible with democracy as we might wish it to be? This is the question asked in This is Not What Democracy Looks Like: The Long Slow Death of Jefferson’s Dream.

The problem with posing the problem, is that it presupposes that the average American can (1) recognize the importance of the question, and (2) critically discern the arguments to be made and choose one that is both logical and right.

And there is much that suggests that this is not possible. In an seemingly endless list of studies done at different universities by respected scholars, the answer remains the same:  If your belief is a necessary part of the your world view, then NO evidence no matter how stellar, no matter how obvious, no matter how unchallenged by any contrary fact, is going to change your mind. You will continue to believe as you always have, because it’s necessary to your psychological well-being. Actual facts to the contrary become merely “conspiratorial” insertions. You don’t have to prove them to be a lie, (because of course you could not), but you can dismiss them out of hand.

This is sad news indeed. It means that much of what I do, is wasted. The people I can convince are already convinced more than likely. Those I need to convince will never be, no matter what proofs I bring to the table.

It seems the new studies need to focus on how one convinces a stone that is about to get crushed by the boulder, that it should roll on down out of the way.

Which all leads to another piece of sad news I’ve come across lately.

I’m reading a book entitled “How to Read a Book“. Now before you laugh and say, oh, for starters, take the cover and bend it to the left, and then look for words, continue to move pages to the left until you find some, then read them. Before you do that, listen a bit.

This book was written by a college professor in the early 1940’s and he updated it in the early mid-70’s, and he now dead. I heard about it in another very modern book I read, whose author suggested that it had impacted him like no other he has read since. It changed how he read. On that note, I purchased it.

So far it’s proving to be both provocative and enlightening. It’s could well be titled today, “How to Read a Book Critically” for that’s what it mostly is designed to do. The author, Mortimer Adler announces that there are four levels of reading. The first, is what passes for competence upon finishing high school. It is akin to being able to read the words and get a basic understanding from the sentences in fairly simple things, like a job application, or reading traffic signs.

Yes folks, that is the level of reading you acquired in high school. You were not taught to read anything beyond the level of basic comprehension. You were not taught to understand the deeper meaning of an author’s arguments, see their flaws or their merits. You were not taught anything about judging the value of what you have read. You read simply for information and not for understanding.

And the sad thing, is that the levels 2 and 3 and 4 are not mastered simply by attending college. Adler posits that some graduate students are still struggling after two years with mastering level four reading, the ability to properly analyze and compare works on the same topic with each other.

Critical thinking is still by and large not taught anywhere.

But you can learn.

If you buy the book and read it.

And it is hopeless to conclude that much will ever change in America until enough of our people can read and think critically. Certainly they cannot now, for if they could, there would not be a Tea Party, there would be no creationists, and there would be no climate deniers. Such people as these would remain hidden in their closets with their goofy ideas. They would certainly not have media access to spew their garbled thoughts across America.

So, you might as well think about sex instead.

 

 

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Go On, Read About it!

08 Monday Aug 2011

Posted by Sherry in Barack Obama, Budget, Corporate America, Economy, Education, Herman Cain, Humor, Islamophobia, Michelle Backmann, Mike Huckabee, Muslim, Satire, teabaggers, terrorism, What's Up?

≈ 12 Comments

Tags

Books, debt crisis, Donald Trump, education, GOP, Herman Cain, Humor, Michele Bachmann, Mike Huckabee, Muslims, Obama, reading, Standard & Poors, teabaggers

Or don’t. As it turns out you really can’t teach a love of reading. It seems something that you either do or don’t. And it has little to do with opportunity either. Over time, the number of “readers” hasn’t changed a great deal. And readers lament the same problem (so much to read, so little time) over the centuries. A great little read over at The Chronicle, called “We can’t teach students to love reading.” Go see where you fall.

♦

 

All roads seem to lead to the financial crisis these days. With Standard & Poors lowering the rating of the US, everybody is wondering what ensue.

Whatever you position (and plenty of folks don’t credit S&P with much savvy), their report was pretty clear in laying the blame. Although they spoke about the gridlock in Washington in general, their greatest finger-pointing went to the GOP’s delinquency-prone child–the TeaNutz®. While the National Journal report didn’t explicitly say Republicans, there was little doubt that they felt that the political brinksmanship of holding the country hostage and failure to consider revenue increases as “possible” were largely to blame. This link has a link to the full S&P report as well as some other good links.

♦

Meanwhile Michele (I make it up as I go along) Bachmann was at it again. She just days ago, was a no vote on the debt ceiling bill. She of course went much further, claiming that the threats of the credit agencies to downgrade the US’s  rating were nonsense and of no consequence. Now that that has happened, she spins on the proverbial GOP plug nickel and screams that Obama is responsible, and he must return to Washington “immediately” and address the American people with a plan to pay down our debt by “trillions”, and this too immediately. Oh if wishes could come true, Ms. Idiothead will be the candidate and as Governor Rendell suggested, the “no slaughter” rule would be invoked at the Obama-Bachmann debate ten minutes in.

♦

Speakin’ of the Palin replacement, there is a great article at the New Yorker Magazine written by Ryan Lizza called Leap of Faith. Lizza traveled with Bachmann for some time as she moved between Iowa and New Hampshire and has done a good job of peeling off the whitewash that masks a lot of uncomfortable truths. Bachmann’s background is just chock full of extremists whom she has embraced and taken as her personal gurus. Her dominionist beliefs cause her to take extremist views on subjects such as gay, abortion, and even slavery. She’s going to have a very difficult time distancing herself from all this now. And it’s full of more of her twisting and contorting facts and outright lying to present herself as something she very much is not. Do read it.

♦

Drew Weston has written an important opinion piece in the NYTimes. It blasts Obama pretty badly frankly. I tend to feel like a pinball when it comes to the President. I am constantly disappointed and hopeful, careening between those two points. He’s more conservative in reality that I want, and less a master of the message that I expected. Weston points out how he failed miserably in this debt ceiling crisis, and frankly, I can’t disagree. “What Happened to Obama?”

Weston calls it ” his deep-seated aversion to conflict and his profound failure to understand bully dynamics — in which conciliation is always the wrong course of action, because bullies perceive it as weakness and just punch harder the next time. . . .” It’s hard to not agree.

♦

Don’t forget your late night humor from Political Irony. Always a lovely way to relax and enjoy some political truths tongue-in-cheek. And if you humor runs religious, here’s a mighty cute little story that we found from our new friend, LOLgod.

♦

When will it get through the American psyche that the debt is only a symptom of the problem and not the problem itself as the ignorant TeaNutz® erroneously believe? Robert Reich once again tries in very plain English to straighten out the issues. Reich always is clear. We are heading toward another recession. Will we act in time? Bets are definitely divided.

♦

Oh and did ya hear this one? Mikey (I like money more than my country) Huckabee has called for the appointment of Donald Trump as a new Secretary of the Treasury. I guess this should come as no surprise. If you’ve seen Huck’s shameless lying and misleading innuendo commercial about “Obamacare” then you know this dude is simply another huckster ala Newt “how long will you support me” Gingrich. Just another grifter. Huck has pretty much given up any pretense of being a “Christian” leader. Any idea Mikey how many times the Trumpster has declared bankruptcy?  . . .I thought not.

♦

Herman Cain is getting more lessons on how to be a good house Negro. The teaNutz® have made it clear that Cain will be back to being “part of the problem” along with all other darker than lily-white citizens, if he keeps going around apologizing to Muslims for his racist remarks about them. After posting his apology on Facebook, he got some really unfriendly responses from his “peeps”: (H/T to The Grio for the link)

“it’s all or nothing with the muslim religion…no means no…please stand firm Mr Cain please or run on the democrat ticket”

“what in heaven’s name are you doing? Don’t you know you can’t trust ONE WORD that comes from their mouth? they’re lying to get on your good side, Mr. Cain! :/”

So, listen up Mr. Cain. Ain’t it nice being owned, Sir?

 

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What’s Up? 07/17/10

17 Saturday Jul 2010

Posted by Sherry in Evolution, Gay Rights, GOP, Humor, LifeStyle, Literature, Media, Satire, The Wackos, What's Up?, Zoology

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

critical thinking, dogs, gay rights, GOP, homesteading, Johnny Depp, media wackos, off the grid, reading, right wing

It’s getting insufferably hot again today. It was tolerable yesterday, but today, is gonna be worse. Not as bad as Wednesday, but bad enough. We seem to get nothing but either rain or heat and humidity.

I’ve eaten more pasta salad than the state of pasta contains. Assuming that there is a state of pasta. Which you can or cannot assume depending on your state of mental acuity.

I’ve a late night treat in store for myself tonight. Johnny Depp was on Dave Letterman. The Contrarian taped it. Lucky me. Only fair. He got that chick Harmon the other night on some new cop show. He ogled. I saw him.

The Harmon chick (she was on Law and Order many years ago) is a self professed Republican. That is a strike against her in my book, but the Contrarian makes excuses. Men always do. When it comes to their nether regions that is. He taunts me by claiming that Depp is probably a closet teabagger. How stupid is that. He couldn’t be. I am not making excuses for my nether regions.

Anyway, I am willing to grant that there are a couple of actually decent Republican conservatives. I may not agree with them, David Brooks, and George will are good examples, but they aren’t flaming idiots either. She might be one like that. I don’t know.

But, granting that she might be rational in her conservatism, as much as that can be possible, given that conservatism is indefensible really, I wonder at her public admission of same.

I mean, given that with no effort I can list a good 35-40 over the top, crazy, certifiable, looney toon baffoonish examples of GOPism, wouldn’t you kinda keep it quiet if you actually worshiped at the foot of Alexander Hamilton? Who would voluntarily subject themselves to ridicule by being associated in the same party with the likes of Sarah, Rush, Sean, Michelle (2), Sowell, Sharron, Carly, John (2), Tom, David, ad nauseum?

These people are not right wing, they are batwing nutsos. Beyond the pale, not sane, blatantly racist hate mongers who all have no doubt still saved their white sheets far back in the closet. They are dispensationalistic, Armageddon welcoming, wild-eyed beasties of demon spawn. Yes they are.

Rational people liberal, middle of the road or conservative move carefully to the other side of the street when they pass. We frantically make the sign of the cross, toss salt, or invoke the spirit of Carl Sagan to ward off the evil eye that they represent.

So I just wonder about Harmon and people like her. It makes me suspicious that there is more to her and them than meets the eye. More like, maybe they are only cover, engaged in covert operations to infiltrate and make us feel at ease while their knuckle-dragging minions subvert the very fabric of space, time, and our way of life. It’s OUR WAY OF LIFE too your miscreant teasippers.

Something to think about.

Dusting myself off, and going on.

Speaking of reading. The Contrarian is an odd reader. When he gets his teeth into something, he almost grinds to a halt. The thing is, he rereads and ponders a couple of pages, sometimes for days. He may reread a chapter three or four times. I guess he would appreciate this link, to the wonders of slow reading.

The Contrarian live in the outback so to speak. It worked fine for a while. We are both 60 now, and it ain’t so fun any more. Going “off the grid” is I think, a young person’s gig. Unless you are wealthy enough to have all the accoutrements to make up for not having paved roads and flat yards, cable,  and all that rot. The LATimes gives you a slue of books about how to do it if you are so inclined. I do agree with the author, somehow, this is all Thoreau’s fault for making us think that this was sublime. It’s also called homesteading and “living beyond the sidewalks.”  Even if you don’t want to go full bore, these kinds of books often offer useful tips to save money and energy. And that’s always a good thing. As one of the featured books says, “it’s more about intent than location.”

Scientific American raises a challenging question: Are stray dogs vastly different in cognitive social functioning? A study suggests that they are not like your average pet. Also so quite interesting explanation of the human trait of finger pointing.

The right wing continues to aver that it is neither racist nor homophobic. That of course is not true. WorldNetDaily proves once again that it makes no pretence to “loving the sinner, hating the sin” in its anti-Christian hate mongering in the form of verbal assault on gays. RightWing Watch has the story, about the “comedienne” DJ Dolce and her rant of hate, featured in the “Christian” news site, WND.

And that’s enuf for now.

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How Deep Can You Go?

24 Thursday Jun 2010

Posted by Sherry in Editorials, War/Military, World Political Affairs

≈ 10 Comments

Tags

appeasement, foreign policy, reading, thinking

I’m not at all sure where my head is these days. I confess to growing tired of the daily political grind. The same voices all saying the expected things.

I’m no different mind you. I can throw the tomatoes with the best of them. But I grow weary too.

Perhaps my weariness is that nothing seems to change much. I can collect a dozen or more instances per day of absolute insanity which passes as some kind of political action. We all know the players. At times it seems that the Republicans are so bereft of ideas about  what to do, that they have made a conscious effort to come up with a unique objection to anything proposed by a Democrat. As one blogger suggested, tomorrows headline will likely be: “Obama ignores efforts to cap the oil well by having dinner with his family.”

Which is all to say  that through reading books and following links, I am at least occasionally seeking more substantive stuff to think about. Websites like 3quarksdaily and Arts and Letters Today have lead me on a trek to a land of high brow intellectual argument that I haven’t indulged in since my college days.

This is the stuff that makes the average working class fundie wanna hurl. It requires real attention to what you are reading. It ain’t like reading People or (gasp) Playboy. Since they don’t take the time to try to understand it, they brush it off as more intellectual elitism. I can understand.

Maybe I’m being snooty here, but frankly, it’s nice to get one’s teeth into something that is not every body’s Chevy. Thinking is a lost art most would argue, in this country at least. It has been replaced with knee-jerk reactions to sensory input in the form of instantaneous images and sounds.

We are as addicted to flipping websites as we are to holding tight to our remotes. A long article means we might miss God knows how many YouTube offerings and blog postings on whatever our favorite pass times are.

I denigrate none of the above of course. Hobbies are essential I believe to well-being. Balance is part of a healthy life.  I confess that I do more than my share of flipping. I read a few paragraphs here, and then skip to the first sentence of each paragraph, then look to see–how much longer is this thing?

I try to give some choices to you, and as I do so with more determination, I find that I read deeply less and less. Except when I slip away to read actual books. I do pretty well at that, by sheer force of will.

I have no clue what I am getting at here, except to say that I’ve grown more thoughtful lately, and my interests, I find continue to broaden. I think that is a good thing, but I’m not sure. How thinly can one spread oneself before you know a tiny bit about a lot of things. That seems not much of a foundation from which to pontificate from.

So I continue to puzzle. What I am getting more sure of is that real knowledge comes with sweat and hard work. Well, maybe not sweat. But important ideas are not simple ones. One that seems so on the surface is seldom so underneath.

I’ve been reading some stuff on homosexuality and the church, and that is what I have come to. There is, it seems to me, taken fairly, enough there for either side to hang a reasonable argument on. I have changed my mind NOT at all, by the way. I am still firmly convinced that the bible doesn’t speak to the issue of homosexuality in any way that is determinative, and in it’s inferences, especially in the New Testament, offers more than enough to suggest that loving committed relationships are to be upheld regardless of the sexual configurations.

What I am suggesting, is that below all the rhetoric are some difficult issues, and although I still come out on the same side, I at least recognize that the other side is not bereft of argument, though most of its actual proponents may be woefully unskillful in either understanding or arguing them. Unfortunately to change their minds would require that they at least learn the real basis of their objections.

This all came to mind with a piece I located at a site called “The National Interest Online. The article is about appeasement as it relates to foreign policy. It raises the important question as to whether it is always a bad thing?  The very word, as we know, suggests yes it is. Neville Chamberlain, Hitler, WWII. Need we say more? But do read, and see what you think.

Think being the operative word. Don’t dismiss it as wrong because we all know appeasement is a bad thing. That’s what is going terribly wrong today. We are captured by phrases and recoil or embrace with little more thought.

 Huckabee is pissy mad because the liberal media has glommed onto his use of “the ick factor” referencing homosexual behavior. Well, he chose to react in typical homophobic fashion didn’t he? What does he expect? Republicans generally loved to use the word liberal because they thought it made most Americans recoil. They found it does not, so they moved on to socialism, Nazism and Fascism, and the ever popular Communism.

It seems to me we need high level discourse on our issues. No amount of simply bandying about the usual catch phrases will do. In order to take our conversation to the next level, we each have to read more and more difficult “stuff.”

There is still plenty of time and room for our usual fun-loving satiric fun. But it cannot replace, as it has now tended to do, really thoughtful reading, contemplating, and discussion.

Just my take on things and you know what that is worth.

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What’s Up? 06/21/10

21 Monday Jun 2010

Posted by Sherry in Bible, Cookies, Desserts, Essays, GOP, Jesus, LifeStyle, Recipes, religion, teabaggers, Uncategorized, What's Up?

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

bible, Books, cookies, gay rights, GOP, heroism, Jesus, reading, Recipes, sacrifice, teabagger, Texas

Take it from me, the Contrarian is a firm firm believer in this adage. You get my drift? You have been warned!

Okay, so it was supposed to rain all day Father’s Day, so you can bet your bippy that it rained nary a drop. Not a drop.

How many fine picnics were not had I have not the number, but I bet the weather people in Cedar Rapids are staying under cover for now.

I had otherwise a lazy day when I returned from church, reading some blogs but not feeling like writing. I noted a few to include today, actually some with significance.

I know this is rare, so hold onto your seats. A few folks wrote of things and did it better than I could. Yeah, I know. Hard to believe isn’t it? As the Contrarian is wont to say, “I made a mistake, then discovered sometime later than I was mistaken.”

Anyhow, I thought these posts were especially noteworthy, so I hope you might drop by and read them in full.

Mompriest talks about yesterday’s gospel reading and proves why she is a priest and I’m not. It’s so thoughtful and provoking and touching all at the same time. I hope you stop by.

D-Cup tells us all about what it takes to be a tea partier. Written with raw wit and so much truthiness it makes your nod while laughing. Don’t miss it.

In a posting on heroism and sacrifice, Tobias Haller, BSG outdoes himself, in a writing entitled The Difference of One.

Something I found so excellent, though it’s short, is from Jan at Yearning for God. Hint: It’s about bookcases. And I just loved it.

Backed to the reality of politics:

Joe. My. God has a rundown of the Texas GOP platform for this year. It’s about as hate-filled as you can get. The teabagger influence is apparent. The bright light here is that it’s hard to find two tea baggers who agree on much. I suspect that is why generally they aren’t doing well in general elections and will continue to fail. As long as they are led by their most rabid, which seems the case, they will continually fail to win votes from the middle.

I was kinda off baking for a while but have started up again, (I made bread sticks today for our spaghetti dinner). And I’ve been thinking a lot about desserts again. I was going to make Ree Drummond’s Malted Milk Chocolate Chip cookies tomorrow, but now, I’m thinking I may have to make these first. Coconut and Lime has S’mores Cookies. (I don’t think I have linked to Ree’s cookies, but I have the recipe and can e-mail it to anyone who wants it.)

Michael Bayly over at Wild Reed has a good post on the latest issue of Tikkum which features a number of articles on homosexuality. Tikkum is a Jewish religious magazine.  We carry it at our church and I’ll be looking for it tomorrow when I go in for a meeting.

Enuf for now!

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Plagued with Thinking

14 Monday Jun 2010

Posted by Sherry in Education, Literature

≈ 14 Comments

Tags

100 top books, Books, education, liberal arts, Literature, reading

Excuse me, but my fixation continues. Don’t blame me, I can’t help what my reader continues to throw at me. It’s all the fault of Dr. James McGrath really–I swear.  I had to go and follow his link to 3quarkdaily, and well, it can all be traced to that–mostly.

I say mostly, because my love affair with arts and letters is pretty well life long anyway, but I managed to submerge it to a degree in favor of politics and religion. It seems to be rearing its head again though. Along with science. I think most of the new sites I’ve added recently are a compilation of those three.

Just so you understand. My head seems a barely contained explosion of thinking. I have to list things, and I’m good at that. It’s the Martha Stewart desire in me to organize.

Once upon a time there was such a thing as a liberal arts education. I think it still exists in some form, but is rarely evoked nowadays. Everyone is in a hurry to learn something applicable–as in making a living. I know I skipped it. Like I said, the best I could do was give a passing nod to a list of 100 books “everyone should read before attending college.” I did maybe thirty.

Years later, when I looked that list up, I was shocked to find that there were tons of such lists, and they sure didn’t agree much. Oh, there were obvious choices in the realm of Shakespeare and Plato of course, but there were tons of alternatives. They all have one major flaw–they are hugely Western in orientation. Some were so European they thought America contributed nothing to the mix whatsoever.

Still, I have tried, over the years to dive into more French and English literature. I’ve read all of Plato, most of Aristotle, all of Shakespeare, a smattering of writings from at least Enlightenment philosophers. Hit and miss. I’ve read a fair amount of the fiction listed on most lists.

Since there are few liberal arts students these days, colleges and universities find themselves in somewhat of a quandary. Too many of their incoming freshmen are, shall we be delicate? less than adequately educated in the world of ideas? Big ideas that is. And so lots of schools send out reading lists to prospective freshmen, asking them to read some books before arriving.

Bard college sends out this requirement:

Syllabus Fall 2010

Required Texts (Bard Bookstore):

  • Genesis (Norton; trans. Alter);
  • Plato, Symposium (Oxford; trans. Waterfield);
  • Virgil, The Aeneid (Penguin; trans. Fagles);
  • Virgil, The Aeneid (Vintage; trans. Fitzgerald);
  • St. Augustine, Confessions (Penguin; trans. Pine-Coffin);
  • Dante, Inferno (Oxford; trans. Durling and Martinez);
  • William Shakespeare, Othello (Norton);
  • Galileo Galilei, Discoveries and Opinions (Anchor; trans. Drake).

Symposiums are scheduled to discuss ideas. Another list is set for the Spring of the year.

As I said, scholars argue even about these lists, finding them often one-sided. They tend to favor more recently published books over older ones, they tend to favor liberal interpretations over conservative. There are often intellectually unchallenging.

One of the better programs around seems to be the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) Big Read program. It focuses on fiction and poetry.

A huge list is compiled and broken into categories which seems quite thorough. It is called the College Bound Reading List.  Compiled by the Arrowhead Library System in Wisconsin.

Penguin Classics lists 101 Best Written Books, but from the comments a lot of people don’t agree, and it seems limited to fiction. 

Oh and if you buy Barnes and Nobles “classics” they have all their available titles at the end. I’ve read probably ten or more of them. Nice and cheap, none over $9.95 I believe.

Berkeley gathered their list from their faculty and grouped them into broad categories which you can link to. It is decidedly modern in its outlook.

Many colleges and universities use lists compiled along the lines of the Great Books system, begun in the 1920-30’s. It was developed to use as the basis of a liberal arts education in those years. Optional use of the list is offered in places like Notre Dame and Pepperdine. A sample of “a” list is included in the above link near the bottom. A complete original list of the 60 book set and 90’s additions are located here.

Want to see lots of more book lists? Go here. Actually this one is worth your time. It’s nicely broad.

And I make no endorsement of the featured book in the image. It merely had the right topic. It might be worth a look see at Amazon, but that’s up to you.

Happy reading.

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I’m Stuck and I Can’t Move On!

11 Friday Jun 2010

Posted by Sherry in Essays, Humor, Life in the Meadow, Literature

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Books, Humor, life in the meadow, reading

Not that I mind it mind you. Being stuck that is. Where I’m stuck, is by my account, a quite lovely place to be mired.

You’re wondering, no doubt, of what I speak.

Why books, of course. Yes, books. I’m stuck in books.

What? Meaning?

Just that when I think, “Sherry, there, old girl, what shall thou write about today?” Well the response seems to be “BOOKS!” Don’t ask me why.

I’ve achieved a seldom realized goal you see as of yesterday. Well, not a goal really, more a confluence of cosmic forces which is kinda like when Jupiter, Mars and Venus find themselves within shoutin’ distance of each other in the Northern Hemisphere. A thing that happens by happenstance, luck, or merely that old? adage that if it can happen it will somewhere, some time.

Are you now sufficiently sitting up straight and listening? Eager to hear? HA!

Okay, so it wasn’t so big. I finished three books in one week. Not impressed? Well how many did you finish this week? Huh? Honestly?

I have finished more. Nine to be exact in three days. Now that might be a record. It was in my college days, and was when I was on vacation, and I got interested in the Black Panthers and went to the Flint Public Library and got all they had. I never wanted to know another thing after that I tell ya! About the Panthers that is.

So, for years, I was a serial reader. Sounds spooky I know. No I did not murder books, but I read them only one at a time. Course that wasn’t true of when I was in college. That would be suicidal. “Hey professor Spiddlewig, I can’t read your magnificent tome on ancient Sumerian pottery shards, because this semester I’m already reading Plato’s Republic. But you’re in the running for next in line–hold off on grading until I can get to ya.”

So, after college and law school, (now law school will definitely put you off reading–law books are boring to a degree that might approach torture, but I digress, and that’s a ‘nother level of intellectual direction) I was convinced that it was correct to only read one book at a time.

Why? Beats me. But I had a reason–at the time. Except when I really, really thought about it, years later, I had no good reason, so I stopped. I’m like that. Logical, ya know.

Now I read lots of stuff at the same time. I’ve thought about reading a paragraph at a time, but thought it might be confusing.  Seriously, I am being serious you realize that right? So I usually read at least three and sometimes four things at one time (meaning serially during a day, but all in one day). Got that?

And books effect me quite differently as I’m sure they do you, so it can be an emotional rollercoaster around here. I mean sometimes the books get jealous of each other, and well, I like them all for different reasons, and they demand monogamy, and well, I’m just poly amorous if you get my drift. I’ve thought of locking them in separate rooms. I really have.

Like this one I just finished, Anderson’s Understanding the Old Testament. I’ve been reading that as companion text to my EFM studies on the (well obviously) Old Testament. It’s like a good friend, a chapter a week, supplementing my reading, coalescing concepts and broadening my ever burgeoning mind. We were pals, UOT and I, familiar, forgiving, and just relaxed in our having  been married forever, and  in  a completing each other’s sentences kinda way.

Enter the big fella MacCulloch, and his tome The Reformation.  Now we started off passionate but like most who fall head over heels in love, that ended quickly. Soon we were in a “dang dude, I don’t need to know all that! I just wanna have a working conversational knowledge of the high points!” The response was to thwack me over the head with itself suggesting I look at the number of pages first if I wanted a sissy treatment!

So what started with passion ended up being a trial of patience. (that word again!)

Enter the third of my menage’ trois, Peace Like a River, written by a genius. So if I started with passion with TR, I fell IN LOVE with this treat. This is the stuff that lasts. And of course, because you want it to, it doesn’t and by the end, you care so much your heart aches for more.

Course TR turned into a jealous lover as you can imagine which made my daily bouts with it, sometimes excruciating. (They know when you no longer love them.) PLAR pranced like a new colt in a spring pasture just off mommy milk, as old TR lumbered along with arthritic misery. I know I should have chastised PLAR but I couldn’t, cuz well, because he was PLAR!

And UOT just patiently smiled, and like a good grandparent, waiting until I had exhausted myself between the bickering two, and came running to him for some good old time out and comfort.

You notice that all these are boys? That’s not always the case I mean to tell ya, but all these were male. My bi tendencies were definitely not showing on this go round.

I’ve decided on the next three. Reading all my Anglican Theological Reviews (5), followed by William James, The Varieties of Religious Experience, and returning to Dorothy Parker. So one girlie in this group for sure.

No doubt, before long they will begin to bicker and fume, and I’ll be playing referee once again. But oh how delicious to open the cover and BEGIN a new affair, three times over! I am giddy with anticipation I can tell ya.

Just sayin.’

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