Showing posts with label fun. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fun. Show all posts

Friday, August 16, 2013

The History of Playing-Cards: Hand-Crafted Art, Gutenberg, and All That

"A Concise History of Playing-cards"
The World of Playing-Cards

"Playing Cards have been around in Europe since the 1370s. Some of the earliest surviving packs were hand painted works of art which were expensive and affordable only by wealthy patrons. But you can play card games with any old pack so as demand increased new, cheaper methods of production were discovered so that playing cards became available for everyone...

"The history of playing cards in popular art is fascinating and has a long tradition. This section is an online tutorial covering the early history of playing Cards...."

It's an "online tutorial," but the Lemming had fun with The World of Playing-Cards' "Concise History. Your experience may vary.

The title is accurate, by the way. Their history is a quick shuffle through Europe's encounter with playing cards. Apparently they showed up in Europe about two decades after the Black Death, which may explain some of the more colorful playing card art.

After reading this and other histories of playing cards, the Lemming is quite certain that they came from the Middle East or somewhere else.

The World of Playing-Cards - good grief, that's a long name. Let's call them WoPC. Where was the Lemming? Playing cards. History. Really long names. More history. Right.

WoPC takes you through the social, economic, and artistic sides of playing cards: which isn't as boring as you might think.

These things started as one-of-a-kind handcrafted playthings of the aristokrater. That didn't last. New technology, woodcuts and Gutenberg's movable type, let new players deal in: starting near the end of the 14th century. Breakthroughs in printing tech eventually led to mass produced Harlequin romance books and Hoyle playing cards.

By now, just about anybody in Europe or North America can get their hands on a deck of playing cards. Or, in the case of the Lemming, paws.

There's more to WoPC's history:
And, if you just can't get enough of this sort of thing, IPCS has a history, too:
IPCS says playing cards must have been invented in China, because that's where paper was invented. They may be right. On the other hand, paper isn't papyrus or vellum, which has nothing much to do with Velcro.

The Lemming needs to get more sleep. Definitely.

Nearly-related posts:

Friday, June 21, 2013

Kleptomaniac Octopus: the Video

"octopus steals my video camera and swims off with it (while it's Recording)"

chimpsnatch, YouTube (April 15, 2010)
video 3:21

The Lemming has no trouble understanding why a human would chase after a kleptomaniac octopus. Humans like their tools, and that camera was a particularly valuable tool.

What an octopus would want with a camera: That is what puzzles the Lemming. It's not as if the octopus could have any use for the camera.

Unless, that is, humans aren't the only ones sharing videos on this planet.

Not-entirely-unrelated posts:

Friday, March 2, 2012

And Now, For Something Completely Different: "The Typewriter" in Concert

"The Typewriter Leroy Anderson Martin Breinschmid with Strauß Festival Orchestra Vienna"

martinbrei123, YouTube (September 10, 2009)
video, 2:11

"Viennese Percussionist Martin Breinschmid with his version of the "Typewriter" Live at the BASF concert hall Ludwigshafen,Germany 2008,Strauß Festival Orchestra Vienna"

For the benefit of folks who never saw an IBM Selectric, let alone a Royal Model O, the machine that looks like a desktop printer with a keyboard is a "manual typewriter." Quite a few folks, including the Lemming, learned keyboard skills on something like that.

The Lemming remembers when typewriters sounded like that - minus the orchestra, of course. Ah, the 'good old days' of correction fluid, jammed keys, and - - - there's a reason why manual typewriters are mostly in museums, antique collections, and the occasional orchestral performance.

A Half-Century of ClickatikatikatikatikaDing!

"The Typewriter"
PBS - The Music of Leroy Anderson

"As with all his other compositions, Leroy Anderson wrote The Typewriter for orchestra, completing the work on October 9, 1950. The Typewriter received its first performance when Leroy Anderson conducted his short piece (only one minute and forty-five seconds) for a Decca Records recording session on September 8, 1953. Mills Music published the orchestral version in 1953. Soon after a band arrangement by Fred Werle was also published.

"The Typewriter is used as a theme for numerous radio programs and some television shows. The 1963 film 'Who's Minding the Store?' features Jerry Lewis pantomiming playing the typewriter part in mid-air. Candid Camera, a television show from the 60's, ran a humorous feature of novice typists in a typing class to the music of 'The Typewriter'...."

The Lemming likes "The Typewriter" partly because it's part of childhood memories: mostly as something playing on the radio. That was back when AM music was state-of-the-art, and that's another topic.

Odds are pretty good that you're younger than the Lemming: but maybe you'll enjoy the peppy little melody, too.

Allegedly-related posts:

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Sydney Opera House: Lego Version

"Sydney Opera House honoured with Lego Architecture model"
David Wheeldon, Architecture & Design (February 17, 2012)

"The Sydney Opera House is being made into an official Lego product, joining a select few architectural icons recreated in miniature architecture collection.


(Architecture & Design, used w/o permission)

"The Opera House is one of seven brick-built models in the new architecture range, which will also include New York's Empire State Building and Seattle's Space Needle. It's due to be released in March.

"Of course people have been making their versions of the iconic building with the famous toy for many years, although it is often cited as one of the most challenging of buildings to replicated in Lego...."

The article says this Lego model of the Sydney Opera House has 260 pieces. It doesn't look a whole lot like the original: but that's probably not the point. Folks who like snap-together models of famous buildings should like Lego's new contribution to world culture. The thing would probably be fun to assemble.

Parents might buy Lego's Sydney Opera House in hopes that it would be 'educational.' As a recovering English teacher, the Lemming thinks that kids would probably enjoy the model anyway. They might find creative ways of re-arranging the components, too. Some of the roof segments look like they'd look good on a giant robot.

According to the article, Lego's got a small line of 'famous buildings' models:
  • Jorn Utzon
    • Sydney Opera House
  • Mies van der Rohe
    • Farnsworth House
  • SOM
    • Burj Khalifa
  • Frank Lloyd Wright
    • Fallingwater
    • Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum
    • Robie House

Parking? What Parking?

New South Wales has a pretty good history of the Sydney Opera House on its website:
They don't, understandably, emphasize a curious point about the Sydney landmark: parking. But - hats off for government transparency - the website's chronology has the facts:
  • 1955
    • (September 13)
      International competition for Opera House design opens, attracting
      • 233 entries
      • 32 counties
  • 1957
    • (January 29)
      Jørn Utzon wins first prize
  • 1966
    • (February 28)
      Jørn Utzon resigns
    • (April 19)
      Utzon replaced by a government panel
      • E.H. Farmer, Government Architect
        Peter Hall, Design Architect
      • D.S. Littlemore, in charge of supervision
      • Lionel Todd, in charge of contract documents
  • 1972
    • (December 17)
      First test concert
  • 1973
    • (September 29)
      First public concert
  • 1993
    • (March 17)
      Parking for Sydney Opera House built

Two decades before parking facilities were retrofitted into the Opera House area? That was a long wait for a parking spot. Seriously, the Lemming is sure that folks in Sydney found a way to park somewhere within walking distance of the place - or that there was a really big demand for taxi service before the in-house parking came. If memory serves, Minneapolis, Minnesota, realized that their Metodome might need parking accommodations after it was built, too. There's a lot of parking lots around that place now: where a neighborhood or two used to be. And that's another topic. Vaguely-related posts:

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

It's Bright, Shiny, and Spins: the Mall of America's Americana Carousel

"Minnesota Carousels (page 1)"
Bloomington, MN
RoadSideArchitecture.com

"The 'Americana' Carousel at the Mall of America is a reproduction style carousel ('a hand-painted contemporary version of the classic American merry-go-round'). It features 34 figures and one chariot. Despite its lack of historic value, it is in great shape and wonderful in its garishness which will hopefully instill appreciation for carousels and ensure their preservation."

"Garishness?" One of the photos of RoadSideArchitecture.com's page shows a (horse? hippocampus? seahorse?) that's a bright, intense blue - and very shiny. If the photographer had taken a step to the right or left, light might not have been reflected into the lens quite so much.

That said, the carousel critters are new. And still have that fresh-from-the-factory shine. Which, along with the amusement-park colors, make them anything but subtle.

Here's a photo of the carousel, taken by someone else: who used existing light. Interestingly, the animals don't look quite so garish this way:


(Baseball Bugs, via Wikimedia Commons/Wikipedia, used w/o permission)
Mall of America Carousel

Maybe, decades from now, when the Americana Carousel isn't quite so shiny, folks will remember those shiny horses, cat, goat, and - thing. Then it'll be 'historic.'

Which is pretty much what happened to the Cafesjian carousel: which is another topic.

Posts, related and otherwise:

Friday, January 27, 2012

The Lemming Meets Cleverbot

Cleverbot

"...PLEASE NOTE: Cleverbot learns from real people - things it says may seem inappropriate - use with discretion, and at YOUR OWN RISK...."

"...PARENTAL ADVICE: Visitors never talk to a human, however convincing it is - the AI knows many topics - use ONLY WITH OVERSIGHT...."

Cleverbot is an intriguing artificial intelligence that can converse with people. Here's how the Lemming's dialog with Cleverbot went:

"User: Okay, so what is Cleverbot, and what does it do?

"Cleverbot: I don't really know.

"User: Right. I suppose self-awareness is a bit much to ask at this stage.

"Cleverbot: So you don't know who aleister crowley is?

"User: I don't know aleister crowley, but I know who he is. That was a non sequitur.

"Cleverbot: So you are using me?

"User: In one sense of the word, yes.

"Cleverbot: So your christian?

"User: With a capital 'C,' yes.

"Cleverbot: Why a capital y?

"User: That's the conventional spelling. It has to do with proper names.

"Cleverbot: Really?

"User: Really.

"Cleverbot: Ookaayy.

"User: Goodbye.

"Cleverbot: Adios."

In the Lemming's opinion, it's going to be a long time before we see something like the robots and sentient computers of science fiction. HAL 9000 or C3PO, Cleverbot is not.

On the other hand, the Lemming has had conversations with real human beings that that made about as much sense. And that's another topic.

Slightly-related posts:

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

St. Paul, Minnesota, and The Curious Case of the Cherished Carousel

The Lemming had planned to write about what happened to St. Paul's Town Square Park. It used to be a remarkable indoor park area - occasionally used for social gatherings like high school proms. Alas! The fate of St. Paul's downtown Town Square Park remains a mystery. To the Lemming, anyway.

In sharp contrast, the fate of Cafesjian's Carousel, once of the Minnesota State Fair grounds, and briefly in residence at Town Square, was in the hands of folks who know how to tell a story.

A tip of the Lemming's hat to Our Fair Carousel, Inc., the not-for-profit owner and operator of Cafesjian's Carousel.

Who's carousel? As the Lemming hinted, there's quite a story about that.

Cafesjian's Carousel

Oddly enough, someone named Austin McFadden paid to have Cafesjian's Carousel built. The Lemming guessed that someone decided that "Cafesjian's Carousel" sounded cooler than, say, "McFadden's Merry-Go-Round." The Lemming was wrong. More about that later.

Cafesjian's Carousel/ourfaircarousel.org has a nicely-done website about the St. Paul cultural landmark.

Excerpts:

"Cafesjian's Carousel--History"
Our Fair Carousel

"A State Fair Tradition... Back in 1914, an enterprising man named Austin McFadden paid the Philadelphia Toboggan Company $8,500 to build a carousel, bring it to St. Paul, and assemble it on the grounds of the Minnesota State Fair. He ran it as a concession for many years, after which it passed into the hands of other families.

"Each year during the fair, Minnesota families would ride the carousel. Parents brought their children, grandparents rode with grandchildren, young people rode with friends and sweethearts, and over the years the carousel wove itself into the stories of thousands of families.

"Most of those families, perhaps believing that the State Fair owned the carousel, took for granted that 'their' carousel would be at the fair forever. That was not to be.

"Slated for Auction... In 1988, Minnesota carousel fans were shocked to learn that the privately-owned carousel had been put up for sale. By the time the story hit the newspapers on November 11, twenty horses and a chariot were on a truck headed for a December 10 auction in New York. According to the story, the carousel's owners had tried unsuccessfully to find someone to buy the carousel and keep it intact...."

There's more on that page, about what it took to keep the carousel in Minnesota, and in one piece. Not that "twenty horses and a chariot" are exactly one piece. "Intact" was a good choice of words, in the Lemming's opinion.

The Curious Case of the Cherished Carousel Continues

"...Operating at St. Paul's Town Square... The carousel moved into a new home at Town Square Park, an enclosed city park on the top level of a building in the heart of downtown St. Paul. The building housed a variety of stores and restaurants, and for about two years, business at the carousel was good...."
("Cafesjian's Carousel--History," Our Fair Carousel)

From another page on the website:

"In 1990, the carousel opened in an enclosed city park on the top level of Town Square in downtown St. Paul. (Note escalators in the foreground and shops on the level below the carousel.) Initially a shopping center, Town Square soon began to evolve into an office building, drawing few carousel visitors. By 1993, slow business at the carousel forced Our Fair Carousel to seek a new location."
("Town Square Larger View," Our Fair Carousel)

A Four-Season Indoor Carousel: Closing?!

"...By 1993, however, downtown retail business was in decline and Town Square itself was beginning a transition from retail to office space...."
("Cafesjian's Carousel--History," Our Fair Carousel)

Even the best merry-go-round needs people who want to go around merrily. And have time to do so. That transition from urban shopping area to buildings with 'office space for lease' in the windows was not good for Cafesjian's Carousel.

It's probably difficult to feel like a merry-go-round ride, when you're on coffee beak and worried about downsizing. And that's another topic, probably for another blog.

The Curious Case of the Cherished Carousel Concludes: For Now

"...New Home in Como Park... In spring 2000, Cafesjian's Carousel opened in a new, $1.1 million copper-roofed pavilion in Como Park. When the carousel is in operation, eight 14-by-14-foot garage-style doors can be opened in various configurations to suit the weather. Just outside the doors..."
("Cafesjian's Carousel--History," Our Fair Carousel)

The Lemming's glad that folks with the skills and level of interest it takes to work out arrangements for Cafesjian's Carousel. Moving that twenty-horse piece of Minnesota history across town, and having a place to set it up at the end of the trip, was a big job.

So was bringing it back to the way it looked in 1914. And that's another story:

Cafesjian's Carousel: Cool Name, and More

As the Lemming said, the carousel that Mr. McFadden paid a toboggan company to build didn't get its name on coolness alone. Back to Our Fair Carousel's website:

"Our Major Benefactor..."
Our Fair Carousel
"Cafesjian's Carousel is named for Gerard L. Cafesjian, who has contributed more than $1.2 million to its purchase, restoration and operation. Mr. Cafesjian was an executive with West Publishing Company; he is now retired and lives in Florida....

"...'I believe something special happens on a merry-go-round,' he said. 'The music, the magic and the movement combine to create a one-of-a-kind experience. When we preserve the carousel we also preserve that joy and hope--that happiness--for the entire community, for years to come.'..."

A sincere tip of the Lemming's hat to Gerard L. Cafesjian.

The Lemming Sounds Off

Folks like Mr. Cafesjian, Jacques-Yves Cousteau, and others, are part of why the Lemming doesn't mind living in a world where a great many people have a great deal more money than the Lemming.

The Lemming thinks it's easier for a wealthy individual to decide that an old carousel is worth restoring, than it would be for some collection of bureaucrats.

Then there's Cousteau, who decided that Earth's oceans were more than just water, salt, and seaweed.

The Lemming's also run into self-important boors with more money than sense: but like everybody else, they buy food, clothing, and other necessities. Some of them pay a staff to carry out their crazy orders. That's where folks like the Lemming sometimes get their paychecks. And that's yet another topic.

St. Paul's Town Square: Closed Since 2001

"St. Paul's Town Square Park will be shuttered by year's end; The indoor downtown park that has hosted proms, weddings and noontime concerts has fallen to budget cuts.(NEWS)"
Joe Kimball, Star Tribune, via Highbeam Research (December 22, 2000)

"With little fanfare, downtown St. Paul's indoor Town Square Park will close at the end of the year, a victim of budget cuts.

"Closing signs had not yet been posted Thursday in the city-run park that has hosted band concerts, weddings, corporate events and lunch-hour naps for 20 years.

"By late next week, however,a gate is expected to be installed at the top of the escalators that come up from the skyway level, eliminating access to the 26,000 square feet of gurgling fountains and plants and trees that thrive under a canopy of windows...."

All that the Lemming has been able to learn about what happened to that outsized indoor facility is this caption: "The Town Square courtyard has been reopened in early 2003, but as a rentable space for events, owned by a private company." ("Town Square Complex," Fotki)

What the name of that rental company is, and whether the indoor park is still in use, seems to be one of the more jealously-guarded secrets in St. Paul. There's a hotel adjacent to the old Town Square Park, but they're remarkably reticent. 'Nuff said.

Thursday, June 30, 2011

Amerikansk dressing, Skåne Tourist Board, Volvo, Lots of Color - but No Swedish Chef

"Snapshots from Sweden: Roaming Around a Swedish Supermarket"
Robyn Lee, Serious Eats (June 30, 2011)

"From June 5 to June 11, I visited Western and Southern Sweden on a trip sponsored by Visit Sweden, West Sweden Tourist Board, Skåne Tourist Board, and Volvo as part of their CAR + VACATION contest. Here's a look at something I saw during my trip.

"It was supposed to be a quick stop, but by pulling into the parking lot of ICA, one of Sweden's largest supermarket chains ... when I'm in a supermarket outside my home territory, I look at everything and take bright-eyed joy in everyday items like cereal and mayonnaise. Kids love candy stores; I love supermarkets...."

A tip of the Lemming's hat to anyone who, as an adult, still knows how to "...look at everything and take bright-eyed joy in everyday items...." And, even better, can share that experience with others.

Speaking of "bright" - quite a few displays in the Swedish supermarket were most sincerely not drab.

Besides the colors, the Lemming enjoyed looking at a familiar setting - a supermarket - which featured somewhat exotic foreign items like Amerikansk dressing (hampurilais kastike). Which might have been labeled "American dressing (hamburguesa salsa)" if it were on the shelf of the supermarket down the street from the Lemming's house. Although the Lemming is pretty sure that, whatever 'hamburger sauce' is, that's not what we call it here in America.

It's a fun post - the Lemming liked it, anyway: your experience may vary - with 17 photos from a Swedish supermarket. Including a full-size version of the one you see here.

Swedish supermarket, by the way, doesn't have all that much to do with Swedish Chef, which is another topic.

Related (sort of) posts:

A tip of the hat to williamcooks, on Twitter, for the heads-up on this 'Swedish Supermarket' post.

Thursday, June 23, 2011

Banana Wallpaper! It's Yellow!

"Banana wallpaper"
by ~Cysiunio: original art in .png format, 900 x 628 pixels.
by ~Cysiunio

Just when you had despaired of finding banana wallpaper for your desktop: this 900 x 628 pixel ping pic, peerlessly pixilated: positively pleasing!

And very, very yellow.

Related (?) posts:

Thursday, April 7, 2011

What's With 'Buffalo Buffalo Buffalo Buffalo Buffalo.'

"A History of the Sentence 'Buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo.' "
William J. Rapaport, Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Department of Philosophy, Department of Linguistics, and Center for Cognitive Science, State University of New York at Buffalo, (May 4, 2008)

"In 1972, I was a graduate student in the Department of Philosophy at Indiana University. One of my professors, John Tienson (now [2006] at the University of Memphis), in a course on Philosophy of Language, gave the following example of a grammatical sentence: Dogs dogs dog dog dogs....

"...Several of us students found the plural "-s" endings to lack a certain aesthetic simplicity, and we searched for a better word. I came up with

"Buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo.

"I.e., buffalo who are buffaloed by other buffalo themselves buffalo still other buffalo.

"However, my fellow graduate students and I were not satisfied. So I concocted:

"Buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo.

"The syntax of the following sentence is close to the previous one:

"Boston mice [that] Boston cats 'Boston-chase' 'Boston-eat' Boston cheese...."

The page starts with a link to ""Buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo", Wikipedia (accessed May 4, 2008). For OCD folks, that's eight buffalo - or three Buffalo and five buffalo.

And the Lemming's pretty sure you've heard the one about the fellow who's CDO - OCD with the letters in alphabetical order, the way they're supposed to be.

That's it for today. And the Lemming still hasn't gotten around to that water-powered spaceship.

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Nifty Screensavers: An Old Review, Micro-Reviewed

"Screensavers - Best Of"
Sven Lennartz, Smashing Magazine (October 4, 2007)

"Long, long time ago screensavers have been used to prevent the so-called screen-burn-effect — a permanent disfigurement of areas on a CRT display caused by non-moving text or graphics being displayed continuously for long periods of time. To avoid this effect, screen savers have been used to blank the screen or fill it with moving images or patterns when the computer was not in use. Today, screensavers don't serve their original purpose and are primarily used for entertainment.

"In fact, we don't need screensavers any more, however we tend to use them as eye-candy fjavascript:void(0)or our coffee breaks...."

It's a (three year old) set of reviews of screensavers, with links. The reviews start with PolarClock, Twingly, and UniqLock.

The Lemming went further down the list, and picked up a set from Really Slick Screensavers. The one from RSS (!) called "Flux" is on the Lemming's computer now.

Some of the more nifty screensavers from Really Slick Screensavers either run with glacial speed - or don't run at all - on the Lemming's machine, but some, like Flux, will. Flux tried to call home after being installed - which got the Lemming's attention. The Lemming's son, the one with A+ certification, wasn't concerned. He figures it's probably looking for updates.

Since the Lemming's malware detectors aren't concerned, either, Flux has been cleared for Internet access. And the Lemming enjoys the light show now and again.

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

The Terminator, Astro Boy, Bender, Marvin, and More

"All Hail Our Robot Overlords! Sci-Fi’s Best Bots"
Underwire, Wired (January 25, 2011)

"Czech playwright Karel Capek popularized the term robot in the 1921 play R.U.R., spawning a deluge of artificial life forms in popular culture.

"Wired.com assembled this list of androids, cyborgs and other memorable machines that left their indelible imprints on movies and television shows in the ensuing nine decades...."

The list starts with Futurama's Bender, then the things from The Matrix. The list is a pretty broad selection - from Atro Boy to those squishy bots in the Alien films, including the Terminator and Marvin the Paranoid Android from The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy Poster." Speaking of Marvin, the Lemming thinks he gets some of the best lines in the movie. But that's just one Lemming's opinion.

One more thing - there's a photo or picture with each bot's bio.

Related post:

Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Kitten; Foosball; Video: Fun

"funny kitten playing foosball "

mykidsthrillme, YouTube (December 26, 2010)
video, 1:21

"kitten, funny, foosball, playing, cute," - - - and the Lemming couldn't have put it better, myself.

The kitten seemed to be having a great time, stepping (with the occasional stumble) over the foosball bars, batting the ball into the goals, and entertaining the people around the table.

A tip of the hat to Cute Overload, which featured this video today ("Gooooooooooooooooooaaallll!," Not That Mike The Other Mike), and to irish_brigid, on Twitter, for the heads-up on this video.

Saturday, December 18, 2010

Christmas Lights & Music at Disneyworld

"Disneyworld Christmas Light Show"

camspeedy, YouTube (December 12, 2006)
video, 3:44

"Awesome Festival of Lights at Disneyworld"

A somewhat more conventional holiday light display, with Christmas music. There's quite a lot of crowd noise in the background - hardly surprising, considering the throng you see at the bottom of the screen.

This is clearly a 'home video' recorded with a hand-held camera.

I liked it. Enough to replay. A few times.

Oddly, the background sounds didn't bother me in this video, as they did in the one I micro-reviewed in today's earlier post. I suppose it could be because these people are moving around - and quite clearly in a normal - and festive - state of consciousness. Also, this video doesn't remind me quite so much of my 'good old days' in the sixties - which is a whole other topic.

Bottom line, watching this video probably isn't as much fun as a trip to Disneyworld: but it doesn't cost anywhere near as much, either.

Monday, November 22, 2010

Juggling Smorgasbord

"a juggling smorgasbord"

pogentertainment, YouTube (November 14, 2006)
video, 3:36

"A selection of some of our juggling takeouts and passing.

"For bookings or more info about circus performances and workshops, please visit http://www.circusentertainment.com.au"

Three - and, once, four - folks juggling Indian clubs. No food. Also no sound.

These folks definitely practiced before shooting the video: an impressive, if impassive, display.

Enjoy.

Saturday, November 13, 2010

Robert Louis Stevenson: "Lacked Originality?!"

Another day, another Google doodle.

This one's about Robert Louis Stevenson. The "Treasure Island" fellow.
"Google Doodle marks Robert Louis Stevenson’s birthday: Poems and Quotes"
MorningCity.com (November 13, 2010)

"Google is honoring yet another person with Google Doodle today. Google, which also celebrated its own birthday few weeks ago, has decorated its homepage to mark the Birthday of Scottish Poet and Novel Writer, Robert Louis Stevenson. Robert Louis Stevenson was born 160 years ago on 13 November 1850...."

That article is chiefly notable for mentioning the Google doodle.

The next one was clearly written by an academician.
"Robert Louis Stevenson | November 13, 1850-December 3, 1894"
Written by: Richard A. Boyle, Whiting, Indiana
Source: Dictionary of Literary Biography, Volume 57: Victorian Prose Writers After 1867. A Bruccoli Clark Layman Book. Edited by William B. Thesing, University of South Carolina. Gale Research, 1987. pp. 294-305.
via Brandeis University, Massachusetts

"When one reads the nonfiction work of Robert Louis Stevenson along with the novels and short stories, a more complete portrait emerges of the author than that of the romantic vagabond one usually associates with his best-known fiction. The Stevenson of the nonfiction prose is a writer involved in the issues of his craft, his milieu, and his soul. Moreover, one can see the record of his maturation in critical essays, political tracts, biographies, and letters to family and friends. What Stevenson lacks, especially for the tastes of this age, is specificity and expertise: he has not the depth of such writers as John Ruskin, Walter Pater, or William Morris. But he was a shrewd observer of humankind, and his essays reveal his lively and perspicacious mind. Though he lacked originality, he created a rapport with the reader, who senses his enthusiastic embrace of life and art...."

"Lacked originality?" Okay. The Lemming, while doing time in American academia, learned that William Shakespeare copied many (most?) of the plots and characters for his plays from other folks - many of them in Italy. No big surprises there: Shakespeare had a business interest in the Globe theater, and there weren't copyright laws in his day.

On the other hand - the only reason that the stories of these other playwrights are known - other than to a handful of dusty archivists and scholars - is that William Shakespeare re-wrote their stories. I suppose the argument could be made that Hamlet, King Lear, and Much Ado About Nothing 'lack originality.' But the Lemming thinks that there's at least craft involved in writing something that folks might want to read. Or see performed.

[END RANT]

That Brandeis U. page as a Stevenson bibliography, with links, too.

And now, more of the same, only different:
"Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894)"
(Some rights reserved Petri Liukkonen (author) & Ari Pesonen. Kuusankosken kaupunginkirjasto 2008)

"Scottish essayist, poet, and author of fiction and travel books, known especially for his novels of adventure. Stevenson's characters often prefer unknown hazards to everyday life of the Victorian society. His most famous examination of the split personality is THE STRANGE CASE OF DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE (1886). Many of Stevenson's stories are set in colorful locations, they have also horror and supernatural elements. Arguing against realism, Stevenson underlined the "nameless longings of the reader", the desire for experience...."

This is a fairly long read, and includes this bit:

"...The story has been considered an criticism of Victorian double morality, but it can be read as a comment on Charles Darwin's book The Origin of Species – Dr. Jekyll turns in his experiment the evolution backwards and reveals the primitive background of a cultured human being. Henry James admired Stevenson's 'genuine feeling for the perpetual moral question, a fresh sense of the difficulty of being good and the brutishness of being bad'. ('Robert Louis Stevenson' by Henry James in Century Magazine 35, April 1888) Modern readers have set the story against Freudian sexual theories and the split in man's psyche between ego and instinct, although the 'split' takes the form of a physical change, rather than inner dissociation. And it has been argued, that the conflict between Jekyll and Hyde reveals era's class phobias...."

The Lemming notes that someone referred to the great pyramids of Egypt as a sort of cosmic Rorschach test: what folks said they were 'really' for revealed more of what was going on inside the writer's head, than what those piles of stone were about.

Recapping, the 'real' meaning of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde were 'obviously:'
  • Victorian double morality
  • Origin of Species and evolution
  • Freudian sexual theories
  • Class phobias
What the 21st, 22nd, and other centuries will make of it? Well, at least we don't hear so much about Freud any more.
"Robert Louis Stevenson"
Literature Network

With a biography of Robert Louis Stevenson, and Biography of Robert Louis Stevenson and a searchable collection of his writing.

Enjoy.

Related post:

Friday, November 12, 2010

At Last! Someone's Poking Fun at Design Catalogs!

"High-style silliness: Blogs take humorous jab at home design catalogues"
Martha Irvine, The Canadian Press (November 11, 2010)

"It started with figs, on a plate, stashed under a pool side table.

"The caption under the photo in the home design catalogue urged readers to 'enjoy the comfort and ease of indoor entertaining with outdoor sectionals, pillows and accessories.'

"But Molly Erdman saw something else. She saw a chance to poke fun at something, well ... kinda ridiculous.

"The actor/comedian sat down at her computer last June and wrote her own caption.

" 'Sweetheart,' it said, 'the Turners will be here any minute now! Did you put the plate of figs under the table?'

"And her blog, 'Catalog Living,' was born.

"Erdman didn't necessarily set out to create a daily parody of the sometimes serious, overly put-together nature of photos from high-end home accessory catalogues. She got her start as a comedian with Chicago's Second City and moved to Los Angeles three years ago to pursue an acting and writing career. You might recognize her as "the wife in the minivan" from a series of popular TV commercials for the Sonic restaurant chain...."

The CP article has links at the end, including one to Catalog Living.

So does the Lemming:Except my link is sort of in the middle of this micro-review, instead of at the end.

The posts are funny - some rather in the Charles Addams/Gahan Wilson vein. Like "Let this be a warning…" (November 6, 2010). Others are, in the Lemming's opinion, wonderfully weird, like "Purple mascara majesty…" (October 30, 2010).

There's a photo and a sort of caption in each post. Actually, that's about all there is to each post. Which is a good idea, considering what sort of blog Catalog Living is. When someone has to explain a joke - - - Enough said.

Anyway, the Lemming thought Catalog Living was funny. Your experience may vary. Particularly if you take 'house beautiful' catalogs very seriously.

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Otters, Snow, Ice, and Fun

"Otter Chaos"

NationalGeographic, YouTube (November 24, 2009)
video, 1:38

"Fascinated by these otters? Here's fair warning: cute doesn't necessarily mean cuddly."

There's a (mercifully brief) commercial before the short feature.

National Geographic's "fair warning" is common sense: otters are a whole lot of fun to watch, playful, smart - and wild animals. City folks probably need to be reminded of that from time to time.

The serious stuff out of the way: enjoy that video.

Thursday, October 14, 2010

And Now, for Something Completely Different: Dying Yarn With Kool Aide®

"Homestead Series How To Dye Wool Yarn With Kool-Aid"

HomesteadAcres, YouTube (September 23, 2009)
video, 11:25

"A new hobby of mine is dying yarn. You can easily dye wool with kool-aid or food coloring. In this video I'm using kool-aid.

"Step 1. Put 1 to 2 inches of luke warm water in your crock pot and a 'glug' of vinegar. Place your skein of yarn in the crock pot....

The narrators tell you that this isn't the most color-fast dyeing process around: so you'll have to be careful about washing the yarn later.

These folks do something the Lemming wouldn't have thought of: using two different colors in the same bowl. The yarn is being dyed red on one side, green on the other side of the bowl. Since the bowl is nearly full of yarn (and water), there's surprisingly little mixing of the two colors.

The video talks about another time, when there were four colors: green, orange, blue and brown. That could have been one colorful set of yarn.

This process isn't likely to put commercial yarn dying outfits out of business: there's a lot of labor involved. But as a sort of home craft project - particularly for folks who knit some of their own clothing - this looks practical.

The Lemming appreciated the last words in the video: "Have fun."

(Kool-Aid® is a registered trademark of Kraft Foods. And has its own website: Kool-Aid.)

Monday, October 11, 2010

Maru the Cat: A Too-Small Box

"小さ過ぎる箱とねこ。-Too small box and Maru.-"

mugumogu, YouTube (October 7, 2010)
video, 2:12

"どうしても入りたいようです。Maru loves a box.Even if it is too small one...."

The Lemming enjoyed this video: in large part for the memories of watching other cats find ways to relax. It's a bit long for this sort of slice-of-life vignette. On the other hand, it's good to see that Maru finally found a - somewhat - comfortable position.

Related posts:
A tip of the hat to Cute Overload, which featured this video last week:
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