August 26, 2025

ngrams: funk, spunk

Contrasting Literary and Genre Fiction

August 25, 2025

Interesting: Noah Smith thinks that what separates literary fiction from genre fiction is that literary fiction has unrealistically interesting characters (as opposed to sci-fi and mystery novels which have unrealistically interesting settings.) He also seems to think this creates a problem of thinking that people in real life are more interesting than they actually are.

I suppose my first response to this is that literature has many more uninteresting characters than it has interesting ones — to every Hamlet there are many Osrics and other bit players.

But secondly, even the Hamlets are interesting to us precisely because we recognize in them our own behavior. Achilles and Agamemnon, far from seeming strange to us, are like two kids quarrelling on a playground, (or more exactly, like two CEOs acting like two kids quarrelling on a playground.)

I think that the first thing people tend to notice about literary fiction is that it can be a little challenging to read and that this points to what really separates literary from genre fiction: its use of language. But perhaps an even more obvious answer is that it is just a story that is artfully constructed. You could of course have a sci-fi novel that was also a literary work, it would just have to be really well told.

As to his second point, about literature making people seem more extraordinary than they are, I think the danger lies the other way, and that readers of literature are apt to read themselves into books in a way that is not necessarily helpful: “Oh, I am just like King Lear,” etc.

Finally, as a side note, I’d observe that having read these Econ / data analysis types for years — Smith and Krugman and Yglesias and the late Kevin Drum — I’ve found it notable that these super smart guys (with Yglesias being somewhat of an outlier, particularly recently) don’t have a lot interest in the literary but are more about sci-fi and history. I don’t have anything to say about that, just something I’ve noticed.

August 25, 2025

Assassination of Henry IV

Knight Errantry and Conspiracy Theories

August 23, 2025

Feel that with each adventure we’re being shown a different aspect of Don Quixote’s folly.

In the adventure of the windmills, he mistakes windmills for giants. He says wizards changed the giants to windmills.

In the adventure of the sheep flocks, something similar happens but with a twist: he mistakes two approaching flocks of sheep for warring armies — he admits, after having been stoned, they look like sheep– then tells Sancho as soon as the sheep get out of visual range, they will reveal their true human forms again.

In the adventure of the fulling hammers, there’s a bit of an inversion; he at first believes the sound of the hammers to be something terrible and a source of adventure, then discovers them to be mere fulling hammers. (Why didn’t he imagine them to be Giants, like the windmills? In this instance, he goes from imagining something fantastic to realizing the banal reality, unlike the sheep and windmills.)

[Note: it is interesting Quixote encounters industrial things as antagonists. Quixote resists the world’s progress, while acknowledging and respecting this progress.]

With respect to the Helmet of Mambrino, he can see that it *looks like* a barber’s basin, but not that it is that and only that. (That it *looks like that* becomes part of the story of how it’s really not that.)

[Note: Quixote imbues the ordinary with the exceptional.]

In the whipping of the servant incident, he misapprehends the facts of the situation *and* misapplies chivalric code; while in the releasing of the prisoners incident, he seems to apprehend the situation clearly enough, but then he uses bad judgment.

In the Cardenio episodes, Cervantes purposely juxtaposes a truly dejected lover, with Quixote, who’s only pretending to be one. The *truly* mad one is Cardenio, who actually experiences fits of madness, while Quixote is quite rationally, but crazily, pretending to be something he’s not.

In chapters 29 and 31 Quixote’s forced to confront the ill consequences of have “rescued” the whipped servant and having freed the galley slaves (interesting that both these adventures involve the liberation of people who shouldn’t be, or shouldn’t necessarily be). In both cases, he seems clearly to realize the actual case, that he has done something egregiously stupid, but he is unable to draw any broader conclusions from that….

Conclusions. First, on a very perfunctory level, one observes a pattern, of Quixote imagining something that isn’t so, acting on it, often courageously, and then being badly beaten for it, often savagely. Secondly, as a person of my times, I am tempted to ponder whether Quixote’s pursuit of knight errantry might be compared to the pursuit of a political ideology, or conspiracy-theorizing — arranging contradictory facts to fit a preconceived outlook or disposition.

August 23, 2025

This is the first time the IPC has recorded famine outside of Africa… a “man-made disaster, a moral indictment, and a failure of humanity itself […] People are starving. Children are dying. And those with the duty to act are failing.”

Opening of Achilles’ and Agamemon’s dispute

August 22, 2025

Comparing Achilles’ and Agamemnon’s opening remarks in their dispute in book 1, (1.121-129) and (1.130-147).

Similarities in language:

Both Agamemnon and Achilles use flattering as well as slighting language in their addresses. Achilles calls Agamemnon “noblest” (κύδιστος) while Agamemnon calls Achilles “good” or “brave” (ἀγαθός) and “godlike” (θεοείκελος).

The slighting words they use of each other are both in the superlative. Achilles calls Agamemnon φιλοκτεανώτατε πάντων (“most greedy of all”), while Agamemnon calls Achilles πάντων ἐκπαγλότατ᾽ ἀνδρῶν (“most greedy of all men.”)

Both speeches also use the phrase “great hearted Achaians,” μεγάθυμοι Ἀχαιοί in statements that involve the Achaians giving (Achilles: “how can the great hearted Achaians give you a gift.” Agamemnon: “if the great hearted Achaians give me a gift”). Perhaps the phrase is meant to indicate the generosity of the Achaians.

Besides the similarities in language, there is a similarity in their arguments, in that both envision the source of dispute as being resolved in the indefinite future: for Achilles, Agamemnon does not need to worry about getting a prize now, as he will get it when Troy is sacked; for Agamemnon, he will worry about what prize the Achaians will give him, willingly or not, at some future time. Meanwhile, both agree that the important thing right now is returning Chrysies to her father.

Achilles’ remarks seem intended to reassure Agamemnon, that he will eventually get what is owed him; he tacitly acknowledges Agamemnon is due a prize and doesn’t blame Agamemnon for his disparagement of Chryses. Agamemnon’s remarks seem intended to say, while he’s serious about getting his due, what he really cares about is the safety of the people; he tacitly acknowledges his treatment of Chryses is to blame. They are both making an effort to preserve their own dignity, and each other’s, and do what’s right; but the good intentions don’t rate, and the situation escalates, indeed explodes.

A basic observation about these two speeches is that Agamamenon’s remarks seem to echo Achilles’, and I’ll be curious to see if that situation obtains as the dispute develops.

August 21, 2025

Kadavergehorsam: blind obedience, fanatical or excessive loyalty.

August 18, 2025

Iliad (1). Having noticed, not that it’s much, that Chryses, priest of Apollo, having walked “far from” (ἀπάνευθε) the Achaean camp, prays to Apollo (1.35), and Apollo “far from” (ἀπάνευθε — 1.48) the ships of their camp, starts to rain arrows upon them, in response to Chryses prayer.

We’re reminded often Apollo strikes from afar. Chryses, to consider it naturalistically, probably only had self-possession enough to pray once he felt physically safe, and was at a remove from the Achaean camp.

((Idea:… Apollo strikes from afar, so do priests in general?)

August 15, 2025

assart: To clear forest land for agriculture; remove stumps.

August 13, 2025

Tweet (FBI on high alert in Georgetown): “Trump is sending federal agents to walk circles in the safest parts of DC and I’m supposed to believe this is a real anti crime strategy.”

July 25, 2025

Sarah Paine: China, Russian, Japan, 19thc-20thc.

July 25, 2025

Noah Smith: Center-left types are incredibly susceptible to B.S. about AI taking jobs. It’s like rightists with seed oils and soy.

July 20, 2025

Surprised to find it’s strongly suspected, but not definitively known, whether the words ‘Syria’ and ‘Assyria’ are linked. Wikipedia article, Name of Syria.

July 18, 2025

It’s the Mount Everest of corruption” said Sen. Jeff Merkley, an Oregon Democrat.

Find myself vulnerable to writing a bad poem

July 16, 2025

The feeling of love is like wondering if it’s started raining again or if it’s only the wind in the trees full of rain.

Thinking of your photograph, I find myself vulnerable to writing a bad poem. I feel on my skin, the rain from the trees, but upon myself, the rain.

PHOSPHENES

July 15, 2025

I was okay with having woken late in the morning, since I was awake for more of the night than I could handle. So much to handle, at 2 am, at 4 am, I had to pick up the Emerson.

I laughed, I shut the book, I read L’Homme and La Mer, I turned off the light, I laughed, I failed to return to sleep. I listened to “I Think I’ll Just Sit Here and Drink” and did just sit there and drink. Though I failed to return to sleep, I did not turn on the light, or sit there and drink. I did not try to read Emerson. I lay there alone and patient in the dark. “I Think I’ll Just Sit Here and Think.”

Sometimes, I thought how that one passage of Emerson seemed to relieve the moral imperative of another passage. Sometimes I felt anxious that I was not asleep, and of what that would mean for me the next day at work, and sometimes I would tell myself “don’t think, don’t think–” for it was Thought, I imagined, that was somehow keeping me awake, rather than what was keeping me awake keeping me thinking — thinking “don’t think, don’t think, don’t think.”

Then I woke with pleasant dreams and I spent some of the time lying there, trying to live again in my dreams, my dreaming self being spatially so close to my conscious self it seemed incomprehensible that I couldn’t shift back and forth. I spent some of the time, knowing I would be lying there for a while, seeing if those “visions,” (what are they called again?*), on the insides of my eye lids would appear (I’d been looking for them too in the middle of the night) then rose for work.

* phosphenes.

July 15, 2025

Yglesias: “All the places whose ‘character’ one might want to preserve were created during periods of openness to change.”

A passage in Walden

July 14, 2025

A passage in Walden reminding me that birds don’t have “backwards knees”: rather, what we think are their knees are in fact their ankles…. (What did the Archaic English word ‘yclept’ mean again?) (It meant “Named, called.” “He was yclept Paul,” for example). Photography was a technology and so was writing, but didn’t linguistic thinking precede imagistic thinking? Wasn’t Thought essentially verbal?

Making preparations for a guest. Wheel chair and other medical apparatus *outta here* (the guest needs lively invigorating sights and entertainments, not wheel chairs, pill bottles, bandages, gait belts, blood pressure monitors, elaborate harnesses for arms and chests, “grabbers”… or maybe I can wheel my guest around in the chair, if things get sufficiently lively, maybe I can achieve a meaningful type of holding with these “grabbers”…?) A new cutting board because food borne pathogens may be alright for the attendant (though he’s not actually all that crazy about them) but they are not alright for his guests!

Thought is essentially verbal not visual or aural, I tell you, I don’t know why. There is a reason that scientific papers aren’t written in music. (And there is a reason, too, that often they contain a lot of math, I admit.)

July 13, 2025

Derek Thompson: “The quiet miracle of charity and global aid is that the uneven distribution of global wealth creates an asymmetry by which relatively trivial amounts of money from the rich can prevent immense suffering and death among the poor.”

July 11, 2025

CNN: But even as Texas rescue crews raced to save lives, FEMA officials realized they needed Noem’s approval before sending those additional assets. Noem didn’t authorize FEMA’s deployment of Urban Search and Rescue teams until Monday, more than 72 hours after the flooding began, multiple sources told CNN.