Thursday, June 28, 2007

Testing the Email Posting

Just doing a little test post to make sure I know how this works. Don't think I'll actually use it much, but I'd rather know the process before I try to use if for real.

J

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Does Anyone Ceili in Selma NC?

Okay, if you have to ask what Ceili is...no, just kidding. If you don't know, Ceili (pronounced kaylee) is a form of Irish dance quite similar in form to square dancing. In fact, I would not be surprised to find that square dancing came directly from Irish immigrants.

I grew up in New Jersey, and was part of the thriving Irish culture there. There were (and still are) several different Irish clubs, dancing schools, and festivals. I know there is one down here in Cary, NC once a year, but when I was growing up (70's and 80's) we could go to some kind of Irish festival almost every weekend of the summer, and that was not including all the dances on Friday and Saturday nights. They were loads of fun. It was a very rich experience, and one I would love to share with my children.

Ceili is fun, and anyone can do it. Its not just for the Irish. Its a great way to get together and socialize, and have a small workout. Its not Jazzersize, but there is some motion going on. It is a dance, after all.

So, anyone in Johnston County, NC (especially the Clayton, Smithfield, Selma area) lets try to set up a Ceili. We can even call it a square dance if it sounds better. I just think it could be a lot of fun, I always looked forward to it as a kid, as did my friends; and I know most of the adults felt the same way. Leave a comment and lets put together a Southern Ceili.

J

The Pentagon - A Book

I saw an awesome piece on the Daily Show tonight, about a book called "The Pentagon: A History" by Steve Vogel. Sounds like a great book, and one I definitely want to read. One juicy tidbit which is a little bit mind-boggling, the ground was broken for the Pentagon on Sept. 11th, 1941. A little eerie. The reason its a pentagon? No, not to contain the soul of Dick Cheney, it was originally designed for another piece of property that was five sided. But Roosevelt decided at the last minute to move it to another location. The name of the new (and final) location? Hell's Bottom. 'Nuff said...

Monday, June 18, 2007

Shakespeare for the masses...

The other day I was listening to the radio, and heard a story that made me question the "knowledge" of the "experts." It was a story on NPR (WUNC 91.5) about Shakespeare and how his work, according to the experts, belongs only to those few "scholars" with the expertise to interpret for us what he meant. I know, too many quotes...Anyway, I searched and searched and could not find the story I listened to on WUNC. If anyone knows the one I am talking about, please let me know. The gist of the story was that, although the scholars believe that Shakespeare's work only belongs to them, the truth of the matter is that he belongs to everyone.

I find it hard to get my head around literary scholars saying that interpretation of any work should be limited to the select few. To me, the act of writing is only half, more like less than half of the whole creation. I guess it smacks of "if a tree falls in the forest," but to me, the only way something that was written can become whole is if it is read. For the author, the writing is a complete process. Not that I am any kind of real writer, no matter what dreams of my youth may say. But the author must give up his creation and let it fly or fall on its own merits. And as in anything, once it is out there, you have to let go and let people react the way they will.

I understand that we don't all know the history, and life of the bard. I sure don't claim any knowledge of his life. In fact I find him rather hard to read. But to say that a person doesn't relate to a character or dialogue in a play because they don't know specifics of the author's life is ridiculous. I think that was why I never really liked high school English. It was just memorizing what the teacher thought the author meant. I found that most times I could get an A without reading the book, just by listening to the class discussions.

Okay, rambling a bit. What I'm trying to say, is that what a book makes you feel is right. Even if it's NOT what the experts say it should mean. Don't be intimidated by a bunch of stuffed shirts. They don't know half of what they think they know anyway. Don't not read something because its too literary. Don't read it because its not good or you don't like it. But the only way to know that is to read it in the first place. Try everything. You'd be surprised by the things that will touch you. Don't spend so much time on the internet. The feel of some good crisp paper is really addicting. And don't worry about what the author meant. If they are good, you are feeling something close to what they wanted you to feel. But they understand that it will mean something to you that only you will understand. At least the good authors will understand that...