40 Fantastic Lectures for Linguistics Geeks

From Online Universites:

Linguistics is kind of like The Force — it surrounds us, penetrates us and binds the galaxy together. Or at least the planet, anyway. Both this universality and frequent intersections with a diverse array of subjects — including, but not limited to, cognitive science, literature, politics, psychology, communication, anthropology and more — make linguistics a compelling, dynamic, nuanced study. The following lectures, by no means the only ones available online, represent a lovely little slice of how language permeates all things, for better and for worse.

Continue reading

Copyright secured by Digiprove © 2011 James Ament

What Killed American Literature?

I didn’t know it was dead…see The Wall Street Journal.

The Editors of “The Cambridge History of the American Novel” decided to consider their subject—as history is considered increasingly in universities these days—from the bottom up. In 71 chapters, the book’s contributors consider the traditional novel in its many sub-forms, among them: science fiction, eco-fiction, crime and mystery novels, Jewish novels, Asian-American novels, African-American novels, war novels, postmodern novels, feminist novels, suburban novels, children’s novels, non-fiction novels, graphic novels and novels of disability (“We cannot truly know a culture until we ask its disabled citizens to describe, analyze, and interpret it,” write the authors of a chapter titled “Disability and the American Novel”). Other chapters are about subjects played out in novels—for instance, ethnic and immigrant themes—and still others about publishers, book clubs, discussion groups and a good deal else. “The Cambridge History of the Novel,” in short, provides full-court-press coverage.

“In short,” though, is perhaps the least apt phase for a tome that runs to 1,244 pages and requires a forklift to hoist onto one’s lap. All that the book’s editors left out is why it is important or even pleasurable to read novels and how it is that some novels turn out to be vastly better than others…. (Emphasis mine)

Perhaps literature dies with too much analysis.

 

 

 

Copyright secured by Digiprove © 2011 James Ament

James Hilton’s Writing Trick

From Richard Nordquist:

Though he published more than 20 books and wrote countless screenplays, British author James Hilton is chiefly remembered for two short novels, Lost Horizon (1933) and Good-bye, Mr Chips (1934). Shortly after moving from London to Hollywood, he took time out from screenwriting to reveal the secret of his “functional” prose style.

See his comments at the link.

 

Copyright secured by Digiprove © 2011 James Ament

100 Blog Posts Every Grammar Geek Should Bookmark

From Online Universities:

It’s no secret that the English language is a confusing beast full of nuances, inconsistent rules, and usage that is constantly evolving. While many run screaming rather than face it head-on, there are some who bravely charge ahead, embracing the beast. These grammar geeks strive to commit those rules–even the ones that aren’t consistent–to memory and even find enjoyment in learning more about the words they love. Whether you count yourself among the proud grammarians or are just a college student who has to write a paper for class, these blog posts are full of fun and informative tidbits about grammar that will promise to make your writing stronger.

Copyright secured by Digiprove © 2011 James Ament

Black Sparrow: The Publisher Who Backed Bukowski

From Abe Books:

Literary America owes a great debt to the Black Sparrow Press. This visionary California-based publisher was prepared to gamble on Charles Bukowski - the low-life, alcoholic writer other publishers wouldn’t touch with a barge pole – and a swathe of other avant-garde authors who didn’t fit in.

Founded by John Martin in 1966, Black Sparrow also published Paul BowlesJohn FanteDiane Wakoski and other so-called ‘alternative’ writers as well several more mainstream names inJoyce Carol OatesD.H. Lawrence and Wyndham Lewis

(Hat Tip: Frank Wilson)

Copyright secured by Digiprove © 2011 James Ament

Alfred Kazin’s Journals

Philip Horne, in the Telegraph, “finds Alfred Kazin’s Journals edited by Richard M Cook a fascinating, if not lovable, slice of 20th-century life.”

I’ve only read Kazin’s Writing Was Everything, a book I loved back in the late ’90s. As one reviewer of that book wrote, “Kazin mourns the current state of literary academia, in which it seems that criticism can exist only as a political philosophy or as an elitist game of celebrity-making.” I’ll have to reread it one of these days.

(Hat tip: Arts & Letters Daily)

Copyright secured by Digiprove © 2011 James Ament

Doing Everybody

Nathan Englander and Zadie Smith in conversation January 2011. Two star novelists on bringing back wrong and right, micro and macro writing, and David Foster Wallace:

Nathan Englander begins his conversation with Zadie Smith by recalling the two novelists’ first encounter, at the Capri Festival “ten thousand years ago,” and the visible reverence Smith showed for David Foster Wallace, who, along with Jonathan Franzen and Jeffrey Eugenides, was also in attendance. In the conversation that follows, the two discuss the heralded Infinite Jest author (as well as Saul Bellow, George Eliot, and James Baldwin) and topics ranging from seeing yourself as other to morality in writing. The conversation took place at the School of Visual Arts’ intimate Silas Theatre in Manhattan. Hosted by Matawi, proceeds from the event went to benefiting the organization’s Dadaab Young Women’s Scholarship Initiative, which increases access to educational opportunity for refugee women and girls on the Kenyan/Somalian border. (Runs about 45 minutes, with audience questions beginning at 30.)

 

Copyright secured by Digiprove © 2011 James Ament

9 earthquake books revisited

From the Los Angeles Times:

The earthquake that hit the East Coast on Tuesday had a 5.8 magnitude and was centered near Richmond, Va. It was felt by many in New York City and tremors were reported to be felt as far away as Massachusetts and South Carolina.

Although the earthquake was widely felt, early reports indicate that destruction was not extensive. One significant icon, the National Cathedral, has sustained damage; the Washington Post reports that the tip of its spire fell to the ground.

Book critic David L. Ulin is our literary earthquake expert; he’s the author of “The Myth of Solid Ground: Earthquakes, Prediction, and the Fault Line Between Reason and Faith.” In March, after the earthquake in Japan, he wrote, “For as long as we have experienced seismicity, we have written about it, going back to the Book of Acts.” Ulin detailed nine works (one each for the Japanese earthquake’s points of magnitude) that, he writes, “channel both our terror and our awe.”

Continue reading

Copyright secured by Digiprove © 2011 James Ament

Author, Ray Bradbury

Drinking the dandelion wine of Ray Bradbury is the title of the Los Angeles Times piece by Alice Hoffman. It’s a nice tribute:

The writer, who has always seemed to be ahead of his time, turns 91 Monday. His 30 books and more than 600 short stories have influenced a generation of American fiction writers.

 

Copyright secured by Digiprove © 2011 James Ament