Monthly Archives August 2011

The Voyage Out and Beethoven’s Op. 111

While prepping for tomorrow’s class, I came across an interesting note on Virginia Woolf’s The Voyage Out (which everyone should delve into, if only because it is available online for free). Woolf describes the mental state of her heroine, a truly genius piano player, as follows: Inextricably mixed in dreamy confusion, her mind seemed to enter into [...]

Stories and song for Hurricane Irene

The New Yorker has a list of stories to read and songs to listen to as we hunker down for the hurricane.  I hope everyone stays safe this weekend!

TFL: The Birth of the Western Genre

It may seem counter-intuitive that film — a rising technology which in part heralded the death of the romantic period of cowboys, high plains drifters, lawmen and lawlessnes at the turn of the century — would so strongly embrace the very culture it helped to destroy. But consider the concerns of the first examples of [...]

Vintage Movie Monday: Stage Door (1937)

On a recent late-night TCM binge, I came across this 1937 gem starring Ginger Rogers and Katharine Hepburn.  These are two of my favorite actresses, and I’d had no idea they had done a picture together.  What’s more, the film featured a slew of other notable faces, including Lucille Ball and Ann Miller, both at [...]

The Influence of Gertrude Stein

Notes: My first real exposure to Gertrude Stein was in a creative writing course at Pratt Institute.  I still can’t claim to understand exactly what she was doing with her experimental poetry, but I did find certain lines that have stuck with me for years.  Many of her poems repeat one line or phrase as [...]

Tom Service on Britten’s The Turn of the Screw

Further files of musical education on the internet: The Guardian has a ten-minute primer on Benjamin Britten’s opera version of Henry James’ masterpiece psychological thriller The Turn of the Screw.

Annotating the annotations: On “Cassandra of the Bridges”

Notes: The epigraph to “Cassandra of the Bridges” comes from the following passage: I have written letters that are failures, but I have written few, I think, that are lies. Trying to reach a person means asking the same question over and again: Is this the truth, or not? I begin this letter to you, [...]

TFL: The Stylization of Jesse James

The Film League is focusing on Once Upon a Time in the West this month, which is a great Western but actually not one I count among my all time favorites.  I chose to write up a little article about the visual style at work in a great modern Western, The Assassination of Jesse James by [...]

Announcing: Chapbook!

Because a Girl: Selected Writings 2001 – 2009 When you move a lot, you lose things.  I thought for over 3 years that I had lost the bulk of the writing I did (and published) in the past decade.  Just this summer, after yet another move, I opened up a box and discovered that I [...]

Alex Ross explains musical forms on YouTube

If you ever find yourself questioning the relative value of YouTube (something I do constantly even though I blog there), try watching this short video, in which Alex Ross and several musicians teach you more in five minutes than high school music class ever could.