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Cheesetown

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I’m doodling a lot at the minute. It’s fun; Lynda Barry (also see her Wikipedia entry) says in her book “What It Is” that drawing is a form of play, and whilst I’m living in the Twilight Zone of Mid-Bedfordshire, play is one of the things that keeps me sane.

The technique of drawing “Cheesetown” is pretty easy; it’s just a lot of rhombus-shapes given depth. I’ve been drawing and doodling all over scrap bits of paper in order to get over the feeling that working in a notebook makes things more important. I called the original drawing “Cheesetown” because it looked like it could be a bunch of cheeses. Next, I grabbed a piece of paper that I had lying around and created Cheesetown v.2:

Which I then offered up on Twitter. With the combined efforts of me and the Post Office (but mainly the Post Office), this should now be at the home of Scottish-based artist Cassandra Harrison. Hope you enjoy it, Cassandra!

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Confederacy of Dunces: Book Review

Confederacy of Dunces is a book from the late 1960’s, set in New Orleans. I first heard of it from the writer/speaker/internet guy Merlin Mann, who uses a line from it as his Twitter ‘handle’, differentiating his presence on the mighty microblogging service from his more professional website, 43folders.com.

As I said in my last post, I’m trying to read my way out of the sci-fi genre. More accurately, I’m trying to expand my knowledge of literature, and as I consistently find Merlin Mann’s web writing approachable and interesting, I wanted to see what sort of book he find inspiring. I came across my copy by accident in Black Flame Books – after guiltily buying another SF book to add to my collection, I turned to the non-genre piles, grabbed the first book at random, and it happened to be Confederacy. Score!

Confederacy is a book that belongs wholly to a subsection of American literature, the humorous look at American society. Other authors working in that subsection might be Pynchon, Dave Eggers, and David Foster Wallace, all of whom have written books that use wry humour to reflect on contemporary American life. I have to say “might be” because I’m just not an expert, and I don’t have a lot of literary knowledge about American writers.

I was prepared to not enjoy this book. I’d brought it on a whim, and I have plenty of other books that I could have switched to if I had found it tedious. But much to my surprise, I enjoyed it and found myself reading it quicker than I thought I would. It’s main strength is the way the author, John Kennedy Toole, manages to create a wide range of interesting characters, and yet keeps them as separate individuals. There is no sense in this book of the individual characters merging into one, as can happen with some novels.

Not one of the incidental characters seems to drop in to serve a plot function, unlike, say Paul Coelho or other Magical Realism authors. By using New Orleans as a backdrop, perhaps Toole has a easier time of it – the city is famously strange – but instead of the shorthand “N’awlins” that you see in films such as Easy Rider, it is the strangeness of any small community. Everybody knows each other, and the interconnected actions of the characters drive the plot in an understandable manner that actually makes sense.

Despite the tone of the book, it does have a happy ending – not that I’m against sad or sorrowful books, I just don’t want to wade through a few hundred pages of misery to find that all the characters die in the end. In fact, the ending is almost setting the book up for a sequel, but one of the saddest things about this book is that it was published posthumously, eleven years after the death by suicide of the author.

The fact that the book is so good, is commonly regarded as so good, and yet the author never saw any acclaim for his work is very thought provoking. Like Infinite Jest, it’s a book that today’s leading internet writers and commentators are really keen on. Are these long-form texts the product of the same drive to making jokes that we see in the writing of Gruber and Mann? As extremely short-form texts start to dominate – shorter even than blogging – will we lose the future novelists who would make us laugh in a way that questions our short-termist society?

I don’t know the answers to these questions, but reading Confederacy of Dunces made me want to both read and write more. That’s surely a sign of a good book, right? I’d advise you to pick it up if you were looking for something new to read, because in it’s dense text we see the sort of authorship that might be dying out now.

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Essay: I See What You Did There

This site’s not finished yet – the ‘about‘ page is less than informative, the theme’s a little clunky – so you might not know that I’m doing a leading-edge research course in academica. Well, I haven’t really brought it up.

As part of that course, we are occasionally required to write essays, and I wanted to post up my essay that I’ve just completed. The full title is “I SEE WHAT YOU DID THERE: How are the use of memes and tropes by those within online communities
building a self-critical approach to contemporary cyber-culture?”

I’m also going to post up the proposal for the essay, which was radically different to the actually essay (in my opinion). This was mainly due to the fact that, upon really reading some of the authors namechecked in the proposal, I found my skin crawling at their apparent misconceptions of contemporary internet culture. This is one area where I find that the value of fiction writers such as Charles Stross far outweigh the perceived academic value of authors such as Paul Virilio. Why?

Where this essay goes into a academic discourse about the effects of a convergent culture on socialisation, and how networked lives will be different to what has gone before, Stross has written a novel called “Halting State” that looks at the dramatic knock-on effects of today’s technology. Some of the questions he poses are what will it be like when the police start to use networking in a realistic way, and how will the future economy cope with online gaming?

I am planning to post a longer article about Stross’s work and other sci-fi authors who are influencing and predicting the changes related to technology, but that will have to wait.

I-see-what-you-did-there (Essay)

online-essay-proposal (Essay Proposal)

Topics covered in these essays include 4chan, twitter, and social networking. All constructive comments are gratefully recieved.

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Macbook Air

Macbook Air; not small enough, not enough ports, too much bling. I wanted a macbook swiss army knife, but we got a macbook porsche instead.

Well, that’s what I just posted on Twitter. Okay, it’s pretty, but I need a digital leatherman more than some pretty laptop. I want something I can use for a variety of purposes in a variety of places, and the damn thing looks far too bling. I also don’t think that there will be a version of it in my (very low) price range.

I would have thrown my budgetary caution to the wind for a cut-back Macbook. One with no optical drive (useless things anyway) and less power. Instead, I find myself casting more towards the Linux end of the pool to give me what I want. No, not one of those Asus EEE’s, but a Thinkpad. If only I had some money…

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