Friday, January 31, 2014

I am Not-Being Aristotle


In footnote 2, page 71, Chapter 3 SOT:
Had Straka lived to review my final revisions of this translation, he likely would have quarreled with my choice to use oblivion here. His original phrasing translates directly as not-being, which I find nonsensical. How can one fail to be? If one is, one is. (Of course, the philosopher—and curiously popular Straka candidate—Guthrie MacInnes could no doubt fill up several volumes addressing such matters. I have concluded, though, that it is far better simply to be than to obsess over what, who, or even whether one is.)
"Not-being" must come from Aristotle's Theory of Act and Potency.  For Aristotle, "being" is the actualization of potential.  A monkey can be described as having fur and a tail, other creatures can have fur and tails. These characteristics have the potential for the monkey, but only once the characteristics are united to form the monkey does the monkey become actualized.

For Aristotle, potentiality is the possibilities that any given thing can be said to have, but he acknowledges that these possibilities are not all equal; some possibilities are more likely to lead to actualization. Potentiality may have a strong tendency to occur on its own or could be the result of chance. As described by Sachs
The man with sight, but with his eyes closed, differs from the blind man, although neither is seeing. The first man has the capacity to see, which the second man lacks. There are then potentialities as well as actualities in the world. But when the first man opens his eyes, has he lost the capacity to see? Obviously not; while he is seeing, his capacity to see is no longer merely a potentiality, but is a potentiality which has been put to work. The potentiality to see exists sometimes as active or at-work, and sometimes as inactive or latent.
I find it interesting that the Greek work for possibility is the root word for a number of other tantalizaing words.  It makes me wonder if the munitions explosion was the dynamite or impetus for an actualization of some sort.  I also wonder if Hobbes' and Locke's use of the word "power" is related in some way too in reference to "The Power 15" ad in the pages of the McKay's review.
Dunamis is the ancient Greek word for possibility or capability. Depending on context, it could be translated "potency", "potential", "capacity", "ability", "power", "capability", "strength", "possibility", "force" and is the root of modern English words "dynamic", "dynamite", and "dynamo".  In early modern philosophy, English authors like Hobbes and Locke used the English word "power" as their translation of Latin potentia.
Actualization is the process of becoming; it is the fulfillment of possibility; and within it exists a paradox. 
In a sense, a thing that exists potentially does not exist, but the potential does exist.

Actualization or a unity of possibilities is the expression of being for Aristotle.  Also interesting is Aristotle's idea of not-being.
If, then, some things are always combined and cannot be separated, and others are always separated and cannot be combined, while others are capable either of combination or of separation, 'being' is being combined and one, and 'not being' is being not combined but more than one. Regarding contingent facts, then, the same opinion or the same statement comes to be false and true, and it is possible for it to be at one time correct and at another erroneous; but regarding things that cannot be otherwise opinions are not at one time true and at another false, but the same opinions are always true or always false.
For Aristotle "'not being' is "being" not combined but more than one."  More than one? Could it be that we have just gotten a hint from Straka or Caldeira that there is no single person who writes under the identity of Straka?  A collective of possibilities that could also be a collective of writers?  Because what are writers?  In reality, aren't they truly the scribes of all possibilities, realities and worlds by actualizing potentiality when putting paper to ink?

(8/17/14 grammar edits and tags added)



The espionage of the Black 19?

One of the comments of Mystimus' blog pointed to Robert Ludlum.  It started as a joke, I tweeted a comment about Jason Bourne being a lot like our favorite amnesiac.  I thought it was a total wagtail.

Then I saw one of his books mention Salonika in the summary page on amazon.com. On a whim, I googled "robert ludlum dahomey" and got a hit.  And I kept getting hits for the most of the other locations. This list may be incomplete and some may be incorrect, please let me know if you see something I missed.

  1. Dahomey- The Janson Directive
  2. Salonika- The Gemini Contenders (another drifting twins reference?)
  3. Calais (Pas de Calais)- The Gemini Contenders, The Tristan Betrayal, The Prometheus Deception, The Sigma Protocal
  4. Ypres- no mention that I can find yet
  5. NV- Nevada in The Aquitane Progression
  6. Taranaki- no mention, but I did find a Ludlum's Valley in New Zealand.  New Zealand does make an appearance in The Matarese Circle
  7. Odessa- The Odessa File
  8. Galway- despite numerous mentions of Ireland and Irish in several of Ludlum's books, no action takes place there in any of his books.  Is that why nothing happened in Galway 1831? 
  9. Bijapur- The Bourne Objective takes place in the capital city, Bangalore, of Karnataka.  Bijapur can be found in Karnataka, too 
  10. Adana- no mention, but Turkey can be found in four of the Bourne novels and in The Hades Factor
  11. Rio Negro- The Sigma Protocol 
  12. Barkol- no mention that I can find yet 
  13. Tangier-  The Janson Directive mentions Tangier Island, Virginia
  14. B___-  mentions a "B-team" in The Lazarus Vendetta
  15. Los Angeles- The Lazarus Vendetta
  16. Tripoli-  The Prometheus Deception, The Hades Factor, The Janson Directive
  17. Berlin/Danzig- Berlin in The Scarletti Inheritance
  18. New York- The Ambler Warning (there may be others) and it should be noted that Ludlum was on the NYT bestseller's list several times. 
  19. Toronto- The Lazarus Vendetta

(8/15/14 edited for grammar and tags added) 



Saturday, January 25, 2014

Vevoda's Cellar or Events in Time and Space

Update: I think I have them figured out, I put Berlin/Danzig back together, took out Standefer and realized that there were two locations listed on the copyright notice page.  That makes 19 total. And after I updated this post, I remembered that geekyzen had found some additional info on Calais for me. That's been added too.


I know there had been some discussion as the whether the vintages in Vevoda's relate the Eotvos Wheel as a cipher.  Maybe they are, but it just occurred to me that all the wines of Vevoda's wine that we know start with word noir, or the french word for black, and there have been 19 of them possibly identified on the SFiles22 blog.  The first 11 come direct from Vevoda's cellar, but on page 262, Eric notes that the five cities and dates listed are similar to the markings on the barrels and Eric makes a note about "Standefer 2010" as a joke in relation to the other vintages.  Could these be related to Straka's novel The Black Nineteen in some way as also noted by MJCarp at SFiles22?
  1. Noir Calais 1912: Fictional riot that takes place in 1912 at Calais, France in SOT.  Calais built the monument Le Pluviose in 1912 to commemorate the death of 27 when the steamer Pas de Calaise accidentally cause the submarine, Pluviose, to sink in May 1910, and the monument was not dedicated until 1913.  Per gz: Fourteen people were killed in a coal mine explosion at the Clarence Coal Company at Pas de Calais, France.
  2. Noir Ypres 1915: Ypres, Belgium. Second battle of Ypres during World War I, notable because the it was the first time that the Germans used poison gas on a mass scale. 
  3. Noir NV:  Still not sure on this one, as noted in the comments on the SFiles22, state codes weren't in use yet, so I haven't tracked this one down yet.  (edited to note: it was discussed in the comments that the NV might be an abbreviation to denote current events.  I'm not sure and would like to research some more before I come to a conclusion.)
  4. Black Taranaki 1863:  The Second Taranaki War was a conflict between the Maori and New Zealand government. 
  5. Noir Odessa 1871: The Odessa pogrom, one in a series of violence targeting the Jews in Odessa, a city in Ukraine. 
  6. Noir Dahomey 1840: Dahomey was an African country ruled by a monarchy in what is now Benin.  Dahomey was involved in the profitable slave trade. In 1840, Dahomey attempted to take over Yoruba territory.
  7. Noir Galway 1831:  This one is interesting doesn't appear to reference an act of violence.  The Wardenship of Galway was dissolved by the Church of Ireland in 1831.  Edmund Ffrench was the last warden.  Galway may also reference the tribes of Galway, a group of a powerful families that ran Galway until the late 19th century.  A magistrate does note that something was happening in Galway in 1831, but the details were not given in The Edinburgh Review.
  8. Noir Bijapur 1791: Doji Bara famine in South Asia.  An El Nino event caused a drought in the area from 1791-1792.  In one estimate, famine and disease may have contributed to the deaths of 11 million people. 
  9. Noir Adana 1909: The Adana Massacre occurred in Adana Province of the Ottoman Empire against the Armenian population there.
  10. Noir Rio Negro 1879:  Basically a state-sponsored land grab from the indigenous populations, in 1878, a massive campaign started to clear the land between the Negro River and the Alsina Trench by armed forces. 
  11. Noir Barkol 1756:  Refers to the Qing Dynasty's annexation of the area formerly controlled by the Zunghar Khanate. In 1756, the Chinese emperor ordered the death of all men in Barkol or Suzhou.  The murdered men's wives and children were given to soldiers in the emperor's army. 
  12. Tangier (Jun) 1905:  The First Moroccan Crisis refers to Germany's support of Morocco as an independent state, but the support damaged Germany's relations with France and the U.S.  The crisis reached a peak in June 1905, and is considered a contributing factor to WWI. 
  13. B___ (Oct) 1906:  Unable to locate, still researching. 
  14. Los Angeles (Dec) 1910:  Llewellyn Iron Works bombing was preceded by a bombing of the Los Angeles Times in October and resulted in the arrest and conviction of labor leaders. 
  15. Tripoli (Sep) 1911:  The Italo-Turkish war was Italy's attempt to assert it rights over parts of what is now Libya.  It marked the use of the first aerial bomb dropped from an airplane. 
  16. Salonika (Thessaloniki) (Mar) 1912:  Geekyzen and Jillp have brought it to me that Salonika is an alternate name for Thessaloniki.   And in 1912 Greece sunk an Ottoman ship, the Feth-i_Bülend in the harbor of Thessaloniki.
  17. Berlin/Danzig 1908:  The line from Berlin to Danzig(Gdansk) is a rough border for the Polish corridor.  The German Empire and the Kingdom of Prussia confiscated land and evicted the ethnic Polish population (although this was reversed in 1925). 
  18. New York 1949:  (from the SOT copyright notice) Airplane crash on October 28th in the Azores.  The plane was headed for New York.  Also, the Peekskill riots happened in 1949.
  19. Toronto 1949:  (from the SOT copyright notice) The SS Noronic disaster, a fire started in a linen closet and was fueled by the lemon scented furniture polish which led to several fatalities.  
(edit: minor grammar/spelling fix)
(1/27/2014 added additional places and dates)



Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Monkey's Marginalia, No. 8 or Books Uncovered and Masks Removed

1. On the Eotvos Wheel website, one of Guthrie MacInnes' books, A Swindle of Cowbirds (1966), is listed. The book is reputed to have been published in 1966.  It just occurred to me today why the title sounded so familiar.  Please let me direct you to A Confederacy of Dunces.  Written by John Kennedy Toole, it is considered a comic masterpiece (and by me, too).  Sadly, Toole did not live to see his novel's success.  Toole had been working with a publisher and after several revisions, the publisher rejected the novel.  Toole ended his correspondence with the publisher in 1966.  In 1969, Toole committed suicide.  It was the only due to efforts of Toole's mother that the book was published posthumously.

2. Essad Bey, this is one authorship controversy that Dorst has never mentioned (to my knowledge) but seems to be the stuff S. is made of.  Essad Bey is believed to be Lev Nussimbaum and according to Tom Reiss, author of The Orientalist, Nussimbaum probably used the pseudonym Kurban Said.  Nussimbaum, though prolific, liked to play fast and loose with the facts, so much so, that his non-fictions works are considered garbage today by serious academics.  All of them. There is also some question as to whether he enlisted the help of additional authors due to the large number of books that are attributed to him.

Another interesting thing of note is that he started using the name Essad Bey to write for Die literarische Welt (The Literary World) in 1926.  His politics were far-right; he was considered required reading in Nazi Germany until his Jewish heritage was discovered;  and he was even contracted to write a biography of Mussolini until the nature of his origins came to light.

3.  It was through Essad Bay and Tom Reiss' book that I came across another authorship controversy.  Ali and Nino (1937) by Kurban Said. The players in this drama are:
  • Baroness Elfriede Ehrenfels von Bodmershof.  Although her niece asserts the baroness's authorship, the baroness could have easily gained control of the copyright in Nazi Germany since Nissumbaum, as a Jew, would have had no legal right to assert his ownership of the book as its author. 
  • The book is partially written by Yusif Vazir Chamanzaminli with Nussimbaum filling the rest with passages cribbed from his prior writings. 
  • The book is plagiarized from The Snake's Skin (1926) by Grigol Robakidze.  
4.  And finally, The Snake's Skin appears to echo the idea found in Borges' The Aleph, except the entire world is not found in space at the 19th step in the cellar, but within the book itself.  From wikipedia.org:
The novel The Snake’s Skin is about entire universe, where the space is complete and united. The scene takes place at the entire planet: the West and the East; Russia, Europe and finally Robakidze’s motherland – Georgia. Here one may also find an imaginary world of American billionaire living in his villa at Mediterranean Sea along with various prominent artists.
There is only one tense in the The Snake’s Skin – present, but it includes past and future as well. The main thing is reality, but myths and legends are part of this reality. The way of thinking is not only particularly human, but at the same time metaphysical and idealistic.
The personages of the novel do not live in the particular time period, or represent persons with concrete nationality. The author describes generalized citizen of the world that gets transformed into a particular person or in other words, returns to his roots (actual father, motherland), oneself, and the God. This is an adventure of Archibald Mekeshi’s soul taking place throughout the centuries.
Disappointingly, it appears that a English translation isn't available.

(8/9/14 edited for grammar and clarity, tags added)

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Signe Rabe Spied?

I was playing around today, it kept twitching my mind the Hamlet line "king of infinite space" and the SOT chapter title "Birds of Negative Space."  I put the two lines one on top of the other and checked the letters that fell in between.

I was able to come up with the following:

  • SFEE (as in S. feels?)
  • OIS (O is..?)
  • SOFIESE (?)
Despite the fact that perhaps I was on the right track, I wasn't able to continue the cipher in any meaningful way.  It then occurred to me that Signe Rabe could be found in the chapter title.  
The anagrams I came up with are 
  • SIGNE SPIED VACATE FOR B(some as yet unknown location, perhaps Brazil, Brussels, Belgium, Britain?)
  • SIGNE SPIED VACATE ORB F(ORB is an airport code in Sweden), so I am thinking it would read SIGNE SPIED VACATE ORB, F. 
  • SIGNE RABE SPIED TO CAVE, F. 
I think the first two are the most plausible, but my brain hurts so I need to call it day. 

edit: sometime in January I commented on Mystimus' blog that it could also rearrange to:
SERIN 5(E) SAVED TIAGO, FC.  There were two left over letters, B & P, which when put together could be a reference to BP Oil.




(8/9/14 edited for grammar, updated with new anagram solution, and tags added) 

Monday, January 20, 2014

The Aleph



(image from wikipedia) 


"O God! I could be bounded in a nutshell, and count myself a King of infinite space..."Hamlet, II, 2
"But they will teach us that Eternity is the Standing still of the Present Time, a Nunc-stans (as the schools call it); which neither they, nor any else understand, no more than they would a Hic-stans for an Infinite greatness of Place."Leviathan, IV, 46

And so opens Borges' short story The Aleph.  Borges was a prolific writer, poet and translator (he even translated Hesse's The Glass Bead Game).  In the few short stories I've read, mathematical references and references to works, people, places, both fictional and real, abound.  

In The Aleph, the narrator has never stopped morning the loss of his unrequited love, Beatriz Viterbo, who died in February, 1929.  Every April 30, on the anniversary of her birthday, he goes to her house and pays his respects, a habit he starts in the year of her death.

I recalled that the thirtieth of April was her birthday; on that day to visit her house on Garay Street and pay my respects to her father and to Carlos Argentino Daneri, her first cousin, would be an irreproachable and perhaps unavoidable act of politeness.

Although Daneri annoys the narrator, 
Carlos Argentino was pink-faced, overweight, gray-haired, fine-featured. He held a minor position in an unreadable library out on the edge of the Southside of Buenos Aires. He was authoritarian but also unimpressive. Until only recently, he took advantage of his nights and holidays to stay at home. At a remove of two generations, the Italian "S" and demonstrative Italian gestures still survived in him. His mental activity was continuous, deeply felt, far-ranging, and -- all in all -- meaningless. He dealt in pointless analogies and in trivial scruples. He had (as did Beatriz) large, beautiful, finely shaped hands. For several months he seemed to be obsessed with Paul Fort -- less with his ballads than with the idea of a towering reputation. "He is the Prince of poets," Daneri would repeat fatuously. "You will belittle him in vain -- but no, not even the most venomous of your shafts will graze him."

Later in the narrative, Daneri comes to our protagonist, agitated, and announces the family home is going to be torn down.  Daneri reveal the Aleph to the narrator and offers to show it to him.  Daneri describes the Aleph, "He hesitated, then with that level, impersonal voice we reserve for confiding something intimate, he said that to finish the poem he could not get along without the house because down in the cellar there was an Aleph. He explained that an Aleph is one of the points in space that contains all other points."   The Aleph is in the cellar, where Daneri has a dark room, presumably where he develops negatives and prints. 

First a glass of pseudo-cognac," he ordered, "and then down you dive into the cellar. Let me warn you, you'll have to lie flat on your back. Total darkness, total immobility, and a certain ocular adjustment will also be necessary. From the floor, you must focus your eyes on the nineteenth step. Once I leave you, I'll lower the trapdoor and you'll be quite alone. You needn't fear the rodents very much -- though I know you will. In a minute or two, you'll see the Aleph -- the microcosm of the alchemists and Kabbalists, our true proverbial friend, the multum in parvo!"Once we were in the dining room, he added, "Of course, if you don't see it, your incapacity will not invalidate what I have experienced. Now, down you go. In a short while you can babble with all of Beatriz' images.

...On the back part of the step, toward the right, I saw a small iridescent sphere of almost unbearable brilliance. At first I thought it was revolving; then I realised that this movement was an illusion created by the dizzying world it bounded. The Aleph's diameter was probably little more than an inch, but all space was there, actual and undiminished. Each thing (a mirror's face, let us say) was infinite things, since I distinctly saw it from every angle of the universe. I saw the teeming sea; I saw daybreak and nightfall; I saw the multitudes of America; I saw a silvery cobweb in the center of a black pyramid; I saw a splintered labyrinth (it was London); I saw, close up, unending eyes watching themselves in me as in a mirror; I saw all the mirrors on earth and none of them reflected me; I saw in a backyard of Soler Street the same tiles that thirty years before I'd seen in the entrance of a house in Fray Bentos...

I found an interesting essay by Susana Medina, Hallucinating Spaces, or the Aleph.

Cellars have long been associated with the unconscious, with irrational fears, fears that cannot be rationalised: it could be said that the criminal cellar belongs to the Western collective unconscious. If cellars should send a reader of Borges to Poe, Bachelard, a good reader of the latter, posits the cellar as a place where dark aspects of the psyche can be accessed, explored and integrated. Bachelard tells us that ‘If a house is a living value, it must integrate an element of unreality’, that ‘thanks to the house, a great many of our memories are housed, and if a house is a bit elaborate, if it has a cellar and a garret, nooks and corridors, our memories have refuges that are all the more clearly delineated’. One of Bachelard’s aims was to ‘study a few ultra-cellars which prove that the cellar dream irrefutably increases reality’, since a cellar ‘is first and foremost the dark entity of the house, the one that partakes of subterranean forces... When we dream there, we are in harmony with the irrationality of the depths’. Carlos Argentino’s house contains an element of unreality. His cellar is dark. But it contains all the places in the world, thus all the lamps, all the lights that illuminate all those places. Carlos Argentino’s perfect alibi for going undisturbed into the cellar was to start up a dark-room. ‘Sr. Danieri was in the cellar, as he always was, developing photographs’. A dark room, a space where images emerge with pretences of faithfully representing the real, or where a negative can be technically constructed, re-constructed or deconstructed in infinite ways. A dark room has as a neighbouring concept that of the ‘camera obscura’, which painters have used primarily for topographical detail (the Aleph partakes of some of its qualities, seemingly a transparent surface on which images are projected in a dark room which happens to be lit by the innumerable lights that emerge from the Aleph, which in turn would lead us to representational theories of the mind conceived as a tabula rasa, or mirror as in Aristotle, Hobbes, Locke, or Hume).


The aleph is the first letter of the 22 letter Hebrew alphabet and derived from the West Semitic word "ox."  The aleph is a letter representing a space between vowels or a glottal stop and is also used to represent the number 1.  The aleph, in a sense, is the negative space in language, in words.  It was the letter carved in the Golem that brought it to life. The aleph is used for cardinal numbers used to describe infinite sets as first described by Georg Cantor.  In Hermeticism, the Hebrew alphabet is the mystical alphabet.  "It’s the language of creation power, beginnings and desire made."

Is S. Doug Dorst's Aleph?  A shining sphere that is also a glass bead and part of a great game, the center of the sphere that is everywhere and circumference nowhere to be found?  The place where it all begins, the space on the game board where we make our first move with an "Italian S" and 19 steps?

(8/9/14 edited format, grammar, and tags added)

Sunday, January 19, 2014

Monkey's Marginalia, No 7

The Monkey's Marginalia or the stuff too brief for its own post.

1. Iron gall ink was the primary ink in use for writing and art up until the 19th century.  Requiring high tannic acid vegetable sources in order to precipitate the reaction with iron sulfate, oak and wine were often used to make the ink.  The the resulting ink was acidic, not very stable and would most likely speed up the break down of the paper it was written on.

2.  I did find a real Grimshaw.  Beatrice Ethel Grimshaw was a travel writer, adventuress, and novelist who eventually settled in New South Wales, Australia.  Another excellent site on Grimshaw here.

3.  C. S. Lewis was a member of the Inklings, a loose collective of writers and intellectuals.

4.  The cover for Hesse's Siddhartha (1st English translation, I think)  bears a striking resemblance to SOT's cover as does one of the editions of The Glass Bead Game.


5.  Still looking for the Lenten reading reference advertisement and not having much luck, but I have found a potential candidate, although I am not completely convinced.

6. Aesop's Fables, The Peacock and the Magpie
"The Birds once met together to choose a king; and, among others, the Peacock was a candidate. Spreading his showy tail, and stalking up and down with affected grandeur, he caught the eyes of the silly multitude by his brilliant appearance, and was elected with acclamation. The Magpie then stepped forth into the midst of the assembly, and thus addressed the new king: "May it please your majesty, elect to permit a humble admirer to propose a question. As our king, we put our lives and fortunes in your hands. If, therefore, the Eagle, the Vulture, and the Kite, should make a descent upon us, what means would you take for our defense?" This pithy question opened the eyes of the Birds to the weakness of their choice and they canceled the election."

(8/9/14 edited for grammar and tags added)



Saturday, January 18, 2014

Inkblots, or The Subjective Nature of the Game

Images of inkblots blink in and out on www.whoisstraka.com.  The images are interspersed with images containing words and numbers and the letter "S."  I thought it would be short wagtail and take a few minutes before I could drop it and pick back up on the Lovecraft thread.

Turns out the images are from the original set developed by Rorschach as a diagnostic tool. Card II (could these be the drifting twins?):

Klecksography was used by Justinus Kerner, a poet and medical writer and he was probably the first person to really use the technique extensively.  In 1857, he published Klesksographien, a book of his poetry and inkblot art. 

Inkblots next appear in a children's book by Albert Bigelow Paine and Ruth McEnery Stuart, Gobolinks(1896).  In,Gobolinks, the inkblots are a game.

"TO OLD FRIENDS WITH YOUNG HEARTS AND YOUNG HEARTS GROWING OLD.

Dear Friends of our youth, should you happen to look
At the curious things in this curious book,
And should you, with quizzical countenance, ask
The how and the why of our curious task—
We could truly replyTo the query of "why—"
To the smile on your lip, and your questioning eye,
That the work was begun
In a spirit of fun,
To amuse when the work of the daylight was done;



And continued, because we believed it would be
Amusement to such as were weary as we
To drift for awhile among goblins and elves,
Or haply make shadows and rhymes for themselves.
For though years have passed since we drifted apart,
We're all of us more or less children at heart.
And maybe yourselves and the youngsters 't will please
To dwell for an hour with such creatures as these.
Now, some one has said, in a moment of spleen,
We cannot make pictures of what we've not seen;
But such an assertion deserves only scorn,
For the shape of the Gobolink never was born.
He comes like the marvelous mimes of our dreams,
When one has been supping on salads and creams,
And curious changes of vision take place—
The horse may appear with an elephant face—
The goat with a cane, and the goose with a hat—
Six legs on the dog, and two tails on the cat;
We never can tell, though we're sorely perplexed,
What shape will be shown us, or what will come next;
And these are the things that our Gobolinks do—
Dear friends, and dear children, we give them to you.


The French pyschologist, Alfred Binet had used inkblots to test creativity.  The inkblots as a diagnostic tool are the invention of Hermann Rorschach, who developed the test as a diagnostic tool for schizophrenia.  He had never intended the test to be used for personality testing, but the use began in 1939 and peaked in the 1960's.  Even google used the blots to celebrate Rorschach's 129th birthday.  Unfortunately Rorschach died young at 37, probably of a ruptured appendix.  The test he developed gained so much traction in the mid-20th century, it became a familiar pop-culture reference

As an aside, Eugen Bleuler who was very well respected in the field of psychiatry, had both Carl Jung and Hermann Rorschach as students. 

So I leave you with the some goofiness from bygone days:

(8/3/14 edited for grammar and tags added)  

Monkey's Marginalia, No 6

The Monkey's Marginalia
a gathering of the random bits....

1. This is totally a wagtail (as far as I can tell now), but this would have been a cool name for this blog.


2.  Juan Blas Covarrubias, the last Spanish pirate is completely fiction.  However, one of the last Spanish pirates, Benito Bonito, is rumored to have buried his treasure near Melbourne or Queenscliff in Australia. 

Covarrubias may be a reference to the 16th century Spanish lexicographer, cryptographer, chaplain and writer, Sebastian de Covarrubias, who wrote Tesoro de la lengua castellana o española. (note: you'll need to use a translator on the wiki link since it is in Spanish)  Covarrubias may also be a reference to the artist or a character in the X-files

3.  The overcoat plays a prominent role in SOT,  Proust was know for his stylish overcoast, and just as known for wearing it regardless of weather or season.  Lovecraft's overcoat was stolen in New York City. 

4.  Eric, in a fit of despair floods Standefer Hall.  
  • Standefer v. United States, basically a bribery case. 
  • Robin Standefer is part of the team Standefer and Alesch, who are building and interior designers.  Previously, they were involved in film and their work can be seen here, here and here




(8/3/14 edited for grammar, clarity and tags added) 




Friday, January 17, 2014

Non-Euclidean references to Lovecraft? (part 1)

I'll admit, I'm a bit of a Lovecraft junkie, so something started something ticking in my brain like some alien parasite and then again with the recent discussions regarding Antarctica and Australia catching my eye.  His is a narrative that is almost Victorian in nature; his protagonists include their own thoughts and correspondences in the storytelling.  He uses deep geological time, long almost endless eons, to track the ticking of time.  Weird magic and awful creatures bedevil humanity and cause their downfall.

And apparently I wasn't wrong.  In researching this post I did find an interview on CNN's website
Honestly, I don't know yet if the there are non-Euclidean references, but I couldn't help myself.

Lovecraft, a man reclusive in nature, and who used the Encyclopaedia Britanica for many of his stories became the father of modern horror and inspired legions of authors who came after.  He was a voracious reader and managed truly prodigious amounts of correspondence with his circle of friends, many of whom were writers themselves. He was no stranger to libraries and was a devoted lover of books.  It is well documented that during his time in New York, he was a frequent visitor to the New York Public Library.

Although the first story I am going to reference was written by Caitlin R. Kiernan, it was written for the Lovecraft universe.  Pickman's Other Model (1929) first appeared in print in 2008 and is a direct reference to the short story by Lovecraft, Pickman's Model.  Interesting are the references to lost films and there is a mouth sewn shut!  The story is available in The Black Wings of Cthulhu, edited by S. T. Joshi.

S. finds himself in a strange city in which the street lamps seem to make the building appear at odd angles; "this is a city of ancient and flawed geometries." (page 4)

And a little later we find a reference to deepness of time, "...all through the strata of civilizations..." that Lovecraft was so fond of. (page 10 of Ship of Theseus)

Anybody who knows Lovecraft, knows he like his buildings strange and alien; ancient and confounding.

From The Call of Cthulhu:
"It was Rodriguez the Portuguese who climbed up the foot of the monolith and shouted of what he had found. The rest followed him, and looked curiously at the immense carved door with the now familiar squid-dragon bas-relief. It was, Johansen said, like a great barn-door; and they all felt that it was a door because of the ornate lintel, threshold, and jambs around it, though they could not decide whether it lay flat like a trap-door or slantwise like an outside cellar-door. As Wilcox would have said, the geometry of the place was all wrong. One could not be sure that the sea and the ground were horizontal, hence the relative position of everything else seemed phantasmally variable."

Although The Horror at Red Hook will never be considered Lovecraft's best work (in part due to its racism and in part due to its flawed magical constructs that were cribbed directly from an encyclopedia), there is a passage that I think is still relevant in this discussion.

"He had for some time been detailed to the Butler Street station in Brooklyn when the Red Hook matter came to his notice. Red Hook is a maze of hybrid squalor near the ancient waterfront opposite Governor's Island, with dirty highways climbing the hill from the wharves to that higher ground where the decayed lengths of Clinton and Court Streets lead off toward the Borough Hall. Its houses are mostly of brick, dating from the first quarter to the middle of the nineteenth century, and some of the obscurer alleys and byways have that alluring antique flavour which conventional reading leads us to call 'Dickensian'...It is a babel of sound and filth, and sends out strange cries to answer the lapping oily waves at its grimy piers and the monstrous organ litanies of the harbour whistles."

And then we have Australia.

In his story, The Shadow out of Time begins with Nathaniel Wingate Peaslee who experiences an episode of amnesia which destroys his family and disrupts his life for a period of approximately 5 years and 4 months, May 1908 to September 1913. He comes to find out that he switched bodies with a member of an older race when he goes on a journey of discovery. His journey takes him to the Northwest quadrant of Australia. 22° 3' 14" South Latitude, 125° 0' 39" East Longitude, to be exact where he uncovers the secret of his amnesia.

Lost in a maze of dark corridors and rooms he is forced to flee for his life from a dark menace known by its strange footprints and whistling calls.

"Then, just as I approached that primal basalt crypt I had so dreaded, utter madness came. For as the echoes of the avalanche died down, there became audible a repetition of that frightful alien whistling I thought I had heard before. This time there was no doubt about it - and what was worse, it came from a point not behind but ahead of me.
Probably I shrieked aloud then. I have a dim picture of myself as flying through the hellish basalt vault of the elder things, and hearing that damnable alien sound piping up from the open, unguarded door of limitless nether blacknesses. There was a wind, too - not merely a cool, damp draught, but a violent, purposeful blast belching savagely and frigidly from that abominable gulf whence the obscene whistling came.
There are memories of leaping and lurching over obstacles of every sort, with that torrent of wind and shrieking sound growing moment by moment, and seeming to curl and twist purposefully around me as it struck out wickedly from the spaces behind and beneath."

Peasless survives his ordeal, but is almost unhinged. He decides to document what he knows so that he can warn his son. 


We know that the crew of the ship uses whistles to communicate and to coordinate their tasks.  And perhaps even more relevant is the fact that S. "looks away whenever a crewman reaches for the whistle around his neck to plug it between his lips.  The last thing a man needs with no memories is terrible new ones." (pp. 42-43)


Part 2 will feature Anarctica, strange colours and goo.  





The Monkey's Marginalia, No 5

-Nobody here but us gongoozlers...

This is my next installment of the random bits; the things too short for their own post, but interesting enough to talk about.

1. The makers of The Ship of Theseus (film) are going to allow the audience to make their own cut of the movie by uploading the raw footage to the internet.

2.  Interesting article about cracking a code and finding a secret society via Wired.  Plus a link to Uppsala University, as one of the people responsible for decoding the text works in linguistics for the university.

3. The Midrash.
For centuries the Midrash was a way to for Jewish religious leaders to clarify, expound and provide greater understanding of the books that comprise their holy texts.  If I remember correctly, one of my religious professors said this commentary was often written in the margins of the Tanakh.  Originally an oral tradition, it evolved into a written tradition; and is considered to be exegesis as it strives for critical interpretation and explanation of religious texts.
Links:
-wikipedia article on Midrash
-Midrash - The Key to Interpretation
-Is Midrash for Real?

4. Dos Passos
I found a book of reviews written about the works of Dos Passos.  Of note may be this passage from Gore Vidal's review of Midcentury:


The book is available through archive.org here

5. Anyone else been thinking of this one? 


(8/1/14 edited for grammar, format, tags added)

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

The Monkey's Marginalia, No 4

1.  I'd like to start off this post with a short blurb about Malcolm Cowley.  He's been in my radar for awhile now, but then serendipity happened and I was able to pick up his book about the expats in 1920s Paris (for fifty cents!).  Cowley was probably one of the more important critics to the Lost Generation writers.  Hemingway had described Cowley in the Snows of Kilimanjaro as 
"that American poet with a pile of saucers in front of him and a stupid look on his potato face talking about the Dada movement."

Cowley did note in The Paris Review

"Hemingway had the bad habit of never forgiving anyone for giving him a hand up. That may have been the problem between them. Ford was a character; he was a liar, not for his own profit, but just because he had a very faint hold on actuality. He told beautiful stories of English literary life, in which he knew everybody, had a hand in everything, and his hand grew larger as he told the story. He had a roving eye for younger women, whom he especially liked to fascinate. He came to this country after the breakup of his relationship with Stella Bowen. I can remember on one occasion he came up to Robber Rocks—a place back in the woods near the New York-Connecticut line which was the country headquarters for Allen Tate, Hart Crane, and others—where a lot of young wives were around at the party. They would be fondled by Ford, and then escape him up the stairs. Ford, heavy and wheezing by that time, would follow them to the head of the narrow stairs, and the door would close in his face. He would wheeze back down, and a while later he'd follow another young woman until she took refuge behind a locked door."
Although he was an active participant in the Paris circles of writers, artists and poets that comprised the Lost Generation; many of his peers from that era apparently didn't think much of Cowley, but were careful to not let him know of their disdain for the sake of their careers. Additional writers that I have found from that time period include: 
Cowley also started the League of American Writers, but later resigned due to it's ties with the communists.  Notable authors from that group include: 

Other items of note is that Cowley spent some time as the deputy for Archibald MacLeish (writer, poet and Libararian of Congress), who was head of the Office of Facts of Figures under Roosevelt, but Cowley resigned when his liberal political leanings came under fire. 

2.  In other news, The publisher of the Brazilian botanical gardens of the postcard appears to be Lito Tipo Guanabarathe.  In looking at some online auction sites,  there was a company named Lito Tipo Guanabarathe, their cards apparently were often stamped "LITO TIPO GUANABARA."  

3.  Out of pure cussidness (and, perhaps, with some masochism thrown in), I did a worldcat search for Vaclav Straka and found some entries that have strange references thrown in.  These may turn out to have no significance, but the translation of Random Harvest caught my eye. 


















(8/1/14 edited for grammar and tags added) 

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Monkey's Marginalia, No. 3

1.  I am going through the book again as some of the avenues I want to follow are on hold until the books come.  I did notice in the forward that Caldeira lists SOT as Straka's twentieth novel; but there are only 19 that we know of.   So there is a hidden Straka novel?   I apologize if this has been touched on somewhere else.
(7/31/14 edited to note, there is NO 20th Straka novel. I misread a passage in the Forward of SOT in January.) 

2.  I also found the place in one of the postcards included in S.; it's an old photograph of the Botanical Gardens in Rio de Janeiro. (image courtesy of the SFiles22)

3.  Here is the image taken from Google Maps street view for comparison.  


4.  As I posted on twitter a couple of days ago, I found another reference ad for the Grimshaw review posted on twitter by Doug Dorst.   This one also comes from The Saturday Review (October 15, 1949).  


5. And an unrelated bit of minutiae, I did find a Scottish author, Helen MacInnes who wrote spy novels.  



Saturday, January 11, 2014

The Monkey's Marginalia, No. 2

1.  I forgot to include in my post about Sherwood Anderson a bit about his mental breakdown early in his career which mirrors the amnesia of S. in Ship of Theseus a little.  Also the mention of "fugue state" in the wikipedia article may be relevant as a clue.  According to wikipedia,
"On Thursday, November 28, 1912, Anderson came to his office in a slightly nervous state. According to his secretary, he opened some mail, and in the course of dictating a business letter became distracted. After writing a note to his wife, he murmured something along the lines of "I feel as though my feet were wet, and they keep getting wetter," and left the office. Four days later, on Sunday December 1, a disoriented Anderson entered a drug store on East 152nd Street in Cleveland and asked the pharmacist to help figure out his identity. Unable to make out what the incoherent Anderson was saying, the pharmacist discovered a phone book on his person and called the number of Edwin Baxter, a member of the Elyria Chamber of Commerce. Baxter came, recognized Anderson, and promptly had him checked into the Huron Road Hospital in downtown Cleveland, where Anderson's wife (who he would hardly recognize) went to meet him.
Even before returning home, Anderson begun the lifelong practice of reinterpreting the story of his breakdown. Despite news reports in the Elyria Evening Telegram and the Cleveland Press following his admittance into the hospital outlining the cause of the breakdown as "overwork" and mentioning Anderson's inability to remember what happened, on December 6 the story changed. All of the sudden, the break became voluntary when the Evening Telegram reported (possibly spuriously) that "As soon as he recovers from the trance into which he placed himself, Sherwood Anderson...will write a book of the sensations he experienced while he wandered over the country as a nomad."  This same sense of personal agency is alluded to thirty years later in Sherwood Anderson's Memoirs (1942) where the author wrote of his thought process before walking out, "I wanted to leave, get away from business...Again I resorted to slickness, to craftiness...The thought occured to me that if men thought me a little insane they would forgive me if I lit out..." This idea, however, that Anderson made a conscious decision on November 28 to make a clean break from family and business is unlikely."

2.  On 1/10/2014 @kmvastra made two tweets: 

  • The constellations are clear this evening 
  • L-749A-79-46

The tweets lead to a plane crash that occurred on October 28, 1949. The plane was travelling from Paris to New York with a planned stop in Portugal. The crash killed 48 and was attributed to pilot error when the plane flew into a mountain during approach to Portugal airport.
Among the casualities were Marcel Cerdan, world champion boxer, who at the time, was in a relationship with the singer Edith Piaf; and world class violinist Ginette Neveu. It should also be noted that "piaf" means sparrow, yet another bird reference. There is a wikipedia article on the crash here.

3. There is a discussion in the marginalia that S. may actually be a collective of writers, possibly writing under the name of Straka. If this is true, then Straka could be a literary heteronym.  

"The literary concept of heteronym, invented by Portuguese writer and poet Fernando Pessoa, refers to one or more imaginary character(s) created by a writer to write in different styles. Heteronyms differ from noms de plume (or pseudonyms, from the Greek "False Name") in that the latter are just false names, while the former are characters having their own supposed physiques, biographies and writing styles." (from wikipedia)

The heteronym was invented by Fernando Pessoa, a Portuguese poet and writer. At last count, about 70 of his heteronyms have been identified. Other writers who have used heteronyms are Laura Albert (JT LeRoy), Soren Kierkegaard (12+), among others.

4. On page 10, Footnote 3 indicates that "Straka was attuned to the histories of places; he mentioned in a letter to me that he often had dreams that took place on several archaeological strata simultaneously."  For some reason, this reminded me of an archaeological palimpsest.  In looking up palimpsests, I found it can also refer to a state of amnesia.  Palimpsest also used to be title of the journal published by the State of Iowa Historical Society.  In addition a palimpsest may also refer to: 
  • "The word palimpsest also refers to a plaque (in particular a monumental brass) which has been turned around and engraved on what was originally the back. This usage was coined by Albert Way in a paper published in Archaeologia in 1844."
  • "In planetary astronomy, ancient craters on icy moons of the outer Solar System whose relief has mostly disappeared, leaving behind only an albedo feature or a trace of a rim, are also known as palimpsests or ghost craters"
  • "In medicine it is used to describe an episode of acute anterograde amnesia without loss of consciousness, brought on by the ingestion of alcohol or other substances: 'alcoholic palimpsest'."
  • "Several historians are beginning to use the term as a description of the way people experience times, that is, as a layering of present experiences over faded pasts."
  • "Palimpsest is beginning to be used by glaciologists to describe contradicting glacial flow indicators, usually consisting of smaller indicators (i.e., striae) overprinted upon larger features (i.e., stoss and lee topography, drumlins, etc.)."
  • "The term is also used to describe augmented realities brought about by the melding of layers of material places and their virtual representations.(from wikipedia)

The Chicago School of Media Theory has a good article on palimpsests and lists some additional types here



(7/31/14 edited for grammar and tags added)