Monthly Archives: June 2010

this week on the avant guardian\/\/how to be a perfect stranger

June 7, 2010
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this week on the avant guardian\/\/how to be a perfect stranger

The genesis story of the Americas is that in some ancient Jean M. Auel age people with the bleeding-edge technologies of rocks, sticks, fire, and dogs wandered from the tundras of EurAsia and slowly meandered south. With this, U.S. society can historicize a central problem that persistently pops-up (such as the ridiculous situation in Arizona or why we’re still facing the lynching of black teenagers in the South in the 1980s) by talking about how none-y’all from around here, is ya? If none-y’all from these parts, then let’s talk about how to behave around folks different from us. Images: wikipedia, ninepanelgrid (John Gritty’s flyer and comic art)

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sub-entry 10> episode 1.812c \/\/ on job hunting in a struggling economy

June 6, 2010
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sub-entry 10> episode 1.812c \/\/ on job hunting in a struggling economy

The swamp loomed in around the two of us as we stood there, the trees stretching up like odd skeletons grasping at the rising moon. The large pool of swamp water next to us was rife with tiny whirlpools, circling so slowly that they failed to pull much of anything down into them.

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take the corporate option and shove it\/\/the 2010 vision festival unleashes the creative option

June 5, 2010
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take the corporate option and shove it\/\/the 2010 vision festival unleashes the creative option

Muhal Richard Abrams is to jazz like Ché Guevera was to revolution.  He never stops moving and he never stops imagining and striving towards the impossible.  It’s no wonder then that Abrams life work will be celebrated at this years Vision Festival.  For the last 15 years the Vision Festival has celebrated jazz greats while at the same time creating a venue that encourages pushing the boundaries of what is possible in jazz performance.  Over the course of his life, Abrams has worked as a performer, educator, composer and advocate for jazz music. For me, jazz stands as the paradigm for revolutionary performance.  As Terry Eagleton notes, “though each performer contributes to the greater good of the whole, does so not by some grim-lipped self sacrifice, but simply by expressing .”  By becoming better at the thing love, the jazz artist learns from and enhances the abilities of co-performers.  If this isn’t a model for revolutionary activity, I don’t know what is!  A revolution occurs not because one person decides a revolution should occur, but because a group of people are driven to see the world as it might be, and not as it is.  One person

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H20

June 3, 2010
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H20

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the sleep of ondine

June 1, 2010
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the sleep of ondine

Print available here.

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