When Atoms Collide

February 5, 2013 by Stan Persky  
Filed under Books, Featured, Reviews

Stephen Greenblatt, The Swerve: How the World Became Modern (2011).   In Stephen Greenblatt’s The Swerve: How the World Became Modern, the renowned Shakespearean scholar and Harvard prof tells a fast-paced intellectual detective story about how, in 1417, an Italian Renaissance book-hunting humanist, Poggio Bracciolini, rescued a key work of ancient Roman thought from a remote German monastery and delivered it to a world that was on the verge of becoming “modern.” The nearly-lost work in... 
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Username: Literature

June 26, 2011 by Stan Persky  
Filed under Books, Featured, Reviews

Marjorie Garber, The Use and Abuse of Literature (Pantheon, 2011). 1. The first thing Marjorie Garber talks about in The Use and Abuse of Literature is the decline of reading. Or, rather, the first subject that Garber, a Harvard English professor and prolific Shakespearean and cultural studies scholar, seems to address in her book about the current state of “literature” is the general decline in “literary” reading. That’s a plausible enough topic. After all, if readers of literature... 
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Naomi Klein’s Excellent Adventures

March 9, 2010 by Stan Persky  
Filed under Books, Featured, Reviews

Naomi Klein, The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism (Picador, 2007); No Logo: Taking Aim at the Brand Bullies (1999/2000; 2010, Fourth Estate). 1. If you’re a teacher, what your students are wearing tells you something about what’s going on in the culture. In the 1980s and 90s, I noticed that walking into a classroom was like hitting a stretch of highway crowded with advertising billboards. The students were wearing T-shirts, sweatshirts, and other paraphernalia that brazenly bore... 
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Decline and Distraction

December 22, 2009 by Stan Persky  
Filed under Books, Featured, Reviews

Chris Hedges, Empire of Illusion: The End of Literacy and the Triumph of Spectacle (Knopf Canada, 232 pages, 2009) One recent end-of-the-semester morning, while taking attendance in the “philosophy and literature” course I teach at Capilano University, I checked off the name of a student who had missed the previous class. “Where were you last week?” I asked. Since attendance-taking is a desultory ritual, I try to liven it up with some low-level banter. But this time, instead of the... 
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Homeland Alone

May 24, 2009 by Stan Persky  
Filed under Books, Featured

For the United States, and parts of the rest of the world, the day of infamy in the first decade of the 21st century was September 11, 2001 (or “9/11,” as it came to be known). That was the morning when four teams of an Islamist terrorist organization, al-Qaeda, based in distant Afghanistan, seized four U.S. commercial airplanes while in flight, crashing two of them into New York’s World Trade towers, another into the Pentagon in Washington, D.C., and one more, intended for a target in Washington,... 
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Heroes

May 6, 2009 by Stan Persky  
Filed under Books, Featured

1. The very first thing that Javier Cercas tells us in his novel, Soldiers of Salamis (2001; translated into English by Anne McLean, 2003), which I re-read recently, is that he initially heard the Spanish Civil War story “about Rafael Sanchez Mazas facing the firing squad” in the summer of 1994, a half dozen years before the writing of the book we’re reading, and more than a half century after the events depicted in that story. So, this is going to be a story about a story, an investigation... 
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Indelible

March 30, 2009 by Stan Persky  
Filed under Books, Featured

1. Philip Roth is quick to remind us, right near the beginning of The Human Stain (2000), that Western literature begins with a bitter argument, one that takes place in the midst of a bogged-down war. If “all of European literature springs from a fight,” so does, not so coincidentally, Roth’s pugnacious novel, set in the midst of America’s “culture wars” at the very end of the twentieth century. Coleman Silk, the book’s protagonist, is a former professor of classics,... 
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Exit Strategies

March 3, 2009 by Stan Persky  
Filed under Books, Featured

1. It’s fitting, I suppose, that I’m only belatedly getting around to Edward Said’s posthumously-published On Late Style: Music and Literature Against the Grain (2006). The multi-talented Said, who died in 2003 of leukemia, at age 67, was a long-time Columbia University literature professor; a cultural critic, the author of the groundbreaking if tendentious Orientalism as well as Culture and Imperialism; a Palestinian political activist; the subtle memoirist of Out of Place; and a non-professional... 
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A Poet and A City

February 2, 2009 by Stan Persky  
Filed under Books

George Stanley, Vancouver: A Poem (New Star, 2008). Something unusual both happened and didn’t happen last year in the poetry sector of the Canadian literary world. The unusual thing that happened is that well-known Vancouver poet George Stanley published the first (as far as I know) book-length poem about the city of Vancouver. It’s called, appropriately enough, Vancouver: A Poem. You’d think, given the hook of its subject matter and the fact that its author is not an unknown, that there... 
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Boobies

January 26, 2009 by Stan Persky  
Filed under Books

Nino Ricci, The Origin of Species (Doubleday Canada, 472 p., 2008). . Remember the opening line of TV’s longest-running cop show, Law and Order: “In the criminal justice system… [there are two groups]… These are their stories”? Similarly, in the post-secondary education system, there are two groups of students: undergraduates and graduate students. In his latest novel, Canadian writer Nino Ricci tells one of their stories. Most professors prefer teaching one or the other group.... 
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