Adam Duritz once sang the line: “Gonna get back to basics / Guess I’ll start it up again…” And honestly, it’s all I can think about just now. I’m back, and the site will continue on, and my grasp will refrain from attempting to exceed my reach. I’ve missed you. I wish I could offer you a perfect reason for neglecting this site, but, hey, who are we to fool one another? Life with a dissertation, and a family, and friends, and Sartre is hard. Having said as much, I find that certain songs just push their way forward until it becomes impossible not to write. So, for better or worse, you can thank Yo La Tengo for my deciding to poke my head in…
Site News
Hi, everyone!
Big news in these parts, as I’ve redone the submissions process. You can now click the link labeled “Submit!” in the nav bar to submit anonymously! Of course, the standard procedure is still in place, and you can see that on the “Contributions” page. So, get to it! 🙂
Apart from that, we’ve got a few surprise contributors in the works for the relatively-near future, and, as ever, we’re on the lookout for new contributors.
That’s all for the moment. I leave you with this fantastic bit of vintage Radiohead:
[youtube W6uaTYjCWvY nolink]
The Wombats, “Let’s Dance to Joy Division”
Sometimes, you just have to take a chance on music you wouldn’t normally give a second thought to. This is an accepted truth, and a necessary one if you’re ever going to break free of a musical rut. Yet, at the same time, it can be hard to overcome long-embedded musical prejudices. Take, for example, the above-mentioned song. I’m a bit done with all of the “The…” bands, frankly, and, even though this band promised to deliver two of my favorite things (marsupials and Joy Division), it took me some time to warm up. This snobbery, I admit, is the danger with becoming so very attached to specific types of music – and, yet, without this “Barry in High Fidelity” syndrome, I’d be worth almost nothing as a music commentator. Tricky, tricky…
Social Distortion, “Angel’s Wings”
I triumphed in the face of adversity
And I became the man I never thought I’d be
And now my biggest challenge a thing called love
I guess I’m not as tough as I thought I was
In May of this year, I took the worst beating of my academic life. A savage, intense affair that resembled an extra scene from some literary version of Fight Club. No, I didn’t get to meet Brad Pitt. Instead, I got worked over by a smallish, youngish woman named Helen. In fairness, this wasn’t an entirely unexpected development. I had spent the bulk of that academic year reworking, and reinventing, my quasi-stable thesis, and so the finished product was somewhat… well, unfinished. The draft did, however, attack some of the sacred cows in my sort-of field, and I was rebuffed with extreme prejudice by the guardians of that field. You see, originally, I signed on to do a project on early-modern drama and I ended up in printing. These things happen. The muse takes you where it will, and you have to roll with it. Unfortunately, these changes can have rather severe consequences when they come too late. The beating ended with an ultimatum: “give us something good in the next draft or go home.” { Phrased, of course, in very diplomatic language. This is Britain, after all.} My heart sunk. In a state of utter disappointment, and perpetual anxiety, I began to plan for my trip to Dublin. And, then, for the long, American summer that would somehow pull me through everything. And as luck would have it, it finally did. But the journey, as these things usually work, was far more complicated than I had ever imagined it would be. And here, as a sort of “what I did this summer” that will hopefully make up for a long absence, is that story…
Site News
As Eddie Vedder once said: “I’m still alive.”
And so is this site. It has been a very long vacation, and I certainly do apologize. As some of you may know, I’m a postgraduate student in English. As fate would have it, the birth of this site coincided with the first year (of three) of my Ph.D. program. Consequently, the summer coincided with my frantic rush to ready a chapter for my “upgrade” meeting. (The time when a baby Ph.D. student becomes a man/woman.) { This is usually determined by lottery.} As you can imagine, this has made it very difficult to keep a handle on anything apart from early-modern printing (my “area of expertise”).
Just holding for laughs.
So, having vanquished that chapter (mostly), I wanted to let you all know that I’m planning on getting things started up again in the next week or so. Please let this serve as yet another request for contributions, and a thank you for being so patient with me during this time. And, of course, for being readers of my site!
See you soon…