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What Glee has to say about #KUboobs, Beyoncé, and Self-Objectification

7 Feb

Glee Naked Calendar

Yes, I still watch Glee. And I’m glad I do, because otherwise I would’ve missed last week’s fascinating Naked episode about the phenomenon of self-objectification, choice, and empowerment, so timely in the wake of #KUboobs and Beyoncé’s recent sexy Super Bowl performance.

I love that this episode is so playful in its exploration of sexiness and agency.  And it’s not the first time Glee has explored body issues — the series often charts the waters of bulimia, handicapability, steroids, and gender identification, all with its signature playful pop-culture sensibility.  Read ahead for the highlights: Continue reading 

In Three Acts

12 Jun

Since I’ve been contributing to everyone else’s blogs lately, I thought you all deserved a little update, too.  Here it is, in three acts.  Happy birthday!

act i: what I’ve been reading

scene 1: Fifty Shades of Grey

This book really is as terrible as everyone says it is.  But I still loved reading it and would do it again; here’s why.  For the cynical take, you’ll have to check-in with twitter friends @knsstxs (“reading that book is my own red room of pain,”) and @theluckynun  (“I could write better one-handed reading with one hand tied behind my back & some gross dude spanking me.”)  I also enjoyed Chip’s ostentatiously lazy review.

scene 2: Love is a Mix Tape

Gawd, what a great piece of pop culture writing.  I heart Rob Sheffield, and this book made me cry like a baby, even though (or perhaps because) it was about Duran Duran and Missy Elliott.  I’m going to cheat by linking to my brand new review for Lawrence Public Library — this review isn’t officially published until tomorrow.  Doesn’t it feel exclusive?

scene 3: 2666

Roberto Bolaño is totally freaking me out, in that way that only the best writers know how.  I loved Savage Detectives, but 200 pages in and I’m already calling it: 2666 is Bolaño’s masterpiece.  I’m crawling along, reading just a few pages at a time, because it’s too much to take in.  This business with Amalfitano and the geometry textbook is KILLING me.

Continue reading 

Marie Antoinette: Royally Frocked

28 Oct

(This post originally appeared in the Lawrence Public Library Spotlight.)

From the masculine equestrian outfits that made her Louis XV’s favorite, to the regal counterrevolutionary gowns in green and violet that exposed her as an enemy of the state, Marie Antoinette’s fashion statements were always unfailingly both fabulous and controversial. In Queen of Fashion: What Marie Antoinette Wore to the Revolution, Caroline Weber paints a comprehensive portrait of the fashion icon, from Dauphine until death. Weber is not only a brainy Barnard scholar, but also a fashion connoisseur herself, and her fastidiously researched political fashion memoir satisfied both my inner Vogue subscriber and my inner history nerd.

Anyone who’s watched Sofia Coppola’s film Marie Antoinette as many times as I have can easily rattle off the basics of her biography: born an Austrian, Marie Antoinette disavowed her native country in a political alliance with France to become its eventual Queen. A newcomer to the highly ritualized and chic court at Versailles, she navigated her tepid political reception as a suspect foreigner in the best way she knew how — in impeccable style. And although it all started out as fun and games, eventually it cost the Autrichienne her head on the guillotine.  From her powdered, sky-high hairdos to her divine selection of costly satin footwear, Marie Antoinette won over her adoring public at first, but quickly became a lightning rod for criticism of the French monarchy’s decadence during a national economic recession (… sound familiar?). Continue reading 

Lipstick Librarians and Party Girls

19 Oct

(This post originally appeared in the Lawrence Public Library Spotlight.)

Party GirlWhen I told my friend Valerie five years ago that I was going back to grad school to become a librarian, the first thing out of her mouth was “You’ve seen the movie Party Girl, right? You’ve got to see Party Girl.”

Although I didn’t know it then, now I know that Party Girl is a rite of passage for librarians of a certain ilk.  “Lipstick Librarians,” we’re sometimes called, and we go by online monikers such as “ScrewyDecimal,” “LibraryLadyJane,” and “Poesygalore.”  The New York Times once ran a feature spread on us called “A Hipper Crowd of Shushers.”   We take our jobs as information activists pretty seriously, but with a fun-loving retro twist.  And our icon isn’t Marian the Librarian, but rather the reinvented “Mary,” à la Parker Posey in Party Girl. Continue reading 

Reading Smutty Books, In Honor of Banned Books Week

20 Sep

“How wrong is it for a woman to expect the man to build the world she wants, rather than to create it herself?” – Anaïs Nin

Banned Books Week starts this Saturday, on 9/24! Here’s the book I picked to write about for my library’s banned books feature. Although on the surface they might just look like naughty little stories, Anaïs Nin’s Delta of Venus and Little Birds represent a breakthrough for women’s lib and a reclamation of female sexual identity. While still often considered a serious taboo in American culture, Eros — sensuality, erotic love — is an integral facet of the human experience, and I believe that we risk losing a core piece of ourselves when we begin challenging and suppressing these voices.

Nin, a French-Cuban author who lived in Paris during most of the 1940s, is hailed by critics as one of the first women to explore fully the realm of erotic writing; before her, erotica written by women was rare, with a few notable exceptions. The story goes that an anonymous patron paid Nin and her friend Henry Miller $1 per page to write erotic vignettes, and that the pair continued writing the stories as a little joke. Whatever the true genesis of Delta of Venus and Little Birds, the income sustained one of the most mysterious, sensual, and feminine voices of the 20th century.

What I admire most about Anaïs Nin as a writer, and these two volumes in particular, is that she had the courage to challenge a masculine construction of the female experience and instead offer something wholly female. She believed in sharing her own unique voice, and then used that authorial voice to create a world all her own. Fearlessly, Nin plunged the depths of an American taboo, staying true to her view that “The role of a writer is not to say what we can all say, but what we are unable to say.”

What about you — do you have a favorite banned book?  ALA has a great list of banned book resources ready to go for Banned Books Week.

Guest Column: The Larryville Chronicles

7 Aug

Are you ready for the big Poetry reveal?  Too bad!  I’m going to make you wait until later this week.  Today instead I offer you a little guest column I contributed to my friends over at The Larryville Chronicles, the finest in Lawrence, KS, arts & culture criticism.

The rest of my perfectly lazy Sunday afternoon was spent as all Sundays should be: with a cold beverage, a book, and some of Beethoven’s weirder string quartets.  I also put up some new reviews on my Goodreads page, including an indictment of an overly theoretical book on Graphic Design, praise for the fine-tuned yet wholesome sarcasm of Ms. Sarah Vowell, guilty pleasure over the classic liberal-arts-girl fantasy, and some polyjuice potion.  Enjoy, and we’ll meet again later this week!

Thank You For Inspiring Me

1 Feb

A new February, a new Black History Month, and a new chance to reflect on some of the century’s most inspiring artists and intellectuals:

Toni Morrison

Toni Morrison

Toni Morrison’s Beloved is ghostly, strange and mysterious, and remains one of my all-time favorite books.  Using the novel as a canvas to push the boundaries of a mother’s love, she inspires me to explore the unexplored and ask forbidden questions!

Lauryn Hill

Lauryn Hill

I weep that Lauryn Hill’s one gift to the world is her lone album, The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill!  But I also deeply admire her resolve to remain centered on the things that are truly important to her, instead of being swayed by the lure of the limelight.  She inspires me to be courageous and to listen to my heart.

Chuck D

Chuck D

I’m inspired by so many early hip-hop artists, from KRS-One to Salt-N-Pepa to De La Soul.  But Chuck D is and always will be my very favorite.   Although Public Enemy’s militant image came under attack after its 1988 release of It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back, Chuck D’s raps remained relentlessly honest, courageous and insurgent.  He inspires me to speak up instead of choosing silence.

bell hooks

bell hooks

Teaching to Transgress might be one of the most important books I’ll ever read.  When I picked it up, I’d been wrestling with the decision to become an academic or a civil servant.  bell hooks has written that “education is the practice of freedom,” and she inspires me to transgress the boundaries of conventional education and practice what is closest to my heart.

Malcolm X

Malcolm X

I felt confused when I first read The Autobiography of Malcolm X a few years ago.   I didn’t fully understand his criticism and rejection of my (white) culture.  But these days I think I understand his message a little bit better, and can see that what he rejected was the practice of assimilation.  Malcolm X was a great hero and tragic martyr; he inspires me to claim a radical, subjective identity for myself.

Spike Lee

Spike Lee

Spike Lee has given us some of the most complex and thought-provoking films of the past quarter century: Bamboozled, Jungle Fever, Malcolm X, When the Levees Broke. And as much as I love all of these movies, my favorite scene of all is the boxing girl during the opening credits of Do the Right Thing! Spike Lee inspires me to be a strong woman.

Who inspires you?

Eating Animals, With a Side of Transliteracy

27 Jan

Eating AnimalsI know many of you have been gripping the edges of your seats in suspense, white-knuckled, wondering what has become of my quest to avoid meat!  Well, I’ve taken your suggestions and browsed lots of excellent vegetarian cookbooks:  World Vegetarian by Madhur Jaffrey, Vegetarian Cooking for Everyone by Deborah Madison, How to Cook Everything Vegetarian by Mark Bittman.  I’ve also gone against your explicit advice not to read Eating Animals by Jonathan Safran Foer.

I wasn’t sure what to expect when I picked up Eating Animals.  I’d really enjoyed Everything is Illuminated after hearing Foer read from it at a tiny bookstore in St. Paul in 2003.  I associate his writing style with lush, almost giddy romanticism, and thought, “well, that plus vegetarianism, sounds warm and fuzzy.”  Readers: Eating Animals is not warm and fuzzy.

What it is is two things mostly: a philosophical exercise, and an exposé on factory farming.  I really loved it, and recommend it to anyone who’s morbidly curious about the gruesome underbelly of industrial-scale farming.  Foer really crystallized my desire to stop eating meat, and freaked me out about eggs and dairy while he was at it! But I’m not here to proselytize, so I just want to briefly critique two aspects of the book as a whole — one thing that I didn’t like very much, and another that I absolutely loved. Continue reading 

Poetrying Your Way Through the Public Library

17 Jan

Many thanks to poet and birth doula V. Wetlaufer for penning this guest post on poetry & public libraries!  V. is a Lambda Literary Fellow, the author of two chapbooks — Scent of Shatter and Bad Wife Spankings — and her poetry has appeared in Drunken Boat, Word Riot and Bloom.  She also blogs regularly at The V-Spot.

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Poetry Shelf

I owe my start in poetry writing to my undergraduate college’s library. Crossett Library is small, but what they lack in numbers they make up for in the quality of their collection. I was in my regular library carrel, where I went to complete all my schoolwork senior year, writing a paper for a literature class, when I decided I needed a break. Off to the shelves I went to find a collection of poetry. I randomly selected a collection of Adrienne Rich’s poetry and opened the volume at random. So moved by her work was I that, having never written a poem before, I scribbled my very first poem inspired by a book plucked at random from the shelves.

I’m fortunate enough these days to live in a city with a fantastic public library, Salt Lake City, as well as a truly incredible university library I rely on for my PhD program. However, I am always saddened when I turn to a library to feed my poetry needs and the poetry collection is sadly lacking. I am especially sad when there is a dearth of contemporary poetry. I am a huge fan of poetry from Chaucer to Wordsworth, Whitman and Eliot and everyone in between, but I believe that the best way for the majority of people to encounter poetry for the first time is through contemporary work. Continue reading 

Most Anticipated Books of 2011

7 Jan

A few days ago, my library got a request from the local paper for a list of our most-anticipated must-reads that will hit the shelves in 2011.  What a great idea!  It was pretty fun browsing the interwebs to put together my little list; unanimously, people are very excited about a) David Foster Wallace’s posthumous novel, The Pale King, and b) Rummy’s memoirs.  The spoils of my search were too good not to share with you here.

Fiction:

When the Killing's Done When the Killing’s Done, by T.C. Boyle 

In his thirteenth novel, T.C. Boyle turns his attention to the Channel Islands off the coast of Santa Barbara and the practice of killing non-native fauna in an effort to protect the original ecosystem.

Project X, by Jeffrey Deaver 

American thriller writer Deaver – creator of the quadriplegic detective Lincoln Rhyme – follows in the footsteps of Sebastian Faulks to give us his take on James Bond, in this officially sanctioned new story, currently known as Project X. Deaver is giving little away about the plot, but we do know that he’s bringing Ian Fleming’s creation into the 21st century: 007′s more xenophobic, sexist attitudes will be getting a makeover.

All the Time in the World All the Time in the World, by E.L. Doctorow 

When a new story collection arrives from an elder master, one is eager to know the balance of “new” versus “selected,” who has done the selecting, and by what criteria. But Random House has revealed little as of yet. We do know that six of the stories have never before appeared in book form; the title story appeared in the winter ’09 issue of the Kenyon Review.

The Lake of Dreams The Lake of Dreams, by Kim Edwards 

The author of The Memory Keeper’s Daughter is back with her second novel, the story of Lucy Jarrett and her discovery of a hidden past in the Finger Lakes area of upstate New York.

Destiny and Desire Destiny and Desire, by Carlos Fuentes 

He may not have won the Nobel last year, but this new novel makes clear that Fuentes is one of the boldest writers today. The personal and political become dangerously intertwined in this tale of a decapitated head that washes ashore but goes on to recount the life of its former owner and his friend who was close to the president.

Continue reading 

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