Besides purchasing books at the beginning of each semester, this listing and summarizing process on the other side of classwork is perhaps my favorite part of being a student. I don't even feel bad if I end up being self-congratulatory, because I love books. So if anyone ever looks at these lists and thinks I'm one of those twisted, cocky, malignant bookworks, well, you're right. But I'll lend you some of my books, if you ask nicely.
This past semester was almost certainly the busiest of my academic career thus far. After a relaxed summer of half-hearted reading endeavours, I was amazed at how much reading can occur once you have 5 or 6 professors making all sorts of unreasonable demands on your time and eyesight. If I could read as much during breaks as I do during peak levels of activity during the semester, I would be able to polish off my "Read Before Dying" list in no time. Just for the record, I've listed below all the books I've engaged with in the past 3.5 months, including those books which I didn't quite finish but spent some serious time with nonetheless but not including articles, handouts, course reading packets, online selections, or books from which I read minor excerpts.
And how about some subject categories, eh?
Mr. William Shakespeare:
Much Ado About Nothing
Othello
As You Like It
The Tempest
Henry 5
King Lear
The Merchant of Venice
Measure For Measure
Gabriel Egan - Green Shakespeare: From Ecopolitics to Ecocriticism
James Shapiro - 1599: A Year in the Life of William Shakespeare
Literature:
Lisa Russ Spaar - Satin Cash
The Norton Anthology of Interviews
Nicole Krauss - The History of Love
Seamus Heaney (translator) - Beowulf
J.R.R. Tolkien (translator) - Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, Pearl, Sir Orfeo
Bede - Ecclesiastical History of the English People
Sir John Mandeville - The Travels of Sir John Mandeville
The Old English Elegies
Medieval English Verse
Norton Anthology Of Literature: The Middle Ages
Julian of Norwich - Revelations of Divine Love
Jennifer Neville - Representations of the Natural World in Old English Poetry
Clare A. Lees and Gillian R. Overing (editors) - A Place to Believe In: Locating Medieval Landscapes
Philosophy:
James K.A. Smith - The Fall of Interpretation
Saint Augustine - De Doctrina (Teaching Christianity)
Martin Heidegger - Being and Time (I'll be able to officially add this to the list after my Contemporary Continental class this spring)
Jacques Derrida - Speech and Phenomena
Roger Poole - Kierkegaard: The Indirect Communication
*
Karl Marx and Frederich Engels - The Communist Manifesto
Karl Marx - Writings of the Young Marx on Philosophy and Society
Karl Marx - Capital
Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri - Empire
Hernando de Soto - The Mystery of Capital
*
Descartes - Meditations on First Philosophy
G.W. Leibniz - Discourse on Metaphysics
David Hume - An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding
Thomas Reid - Inquiry and Essays
Immanuel Kant - Prolegomena to Any Future Metaphysics
Peter Singer - A Very Short Introduction: Hegel
Søren Kierkegaard - Philosophical Fragments
Karl Marx (and Frederich Engels) - The German Ideology
Frederick Nietzsche - Twilight of the Idols
Recent Titles
Recent Titles
12.23.2008
Fall 2009
posted by
Ryan Weberling
at
10:08 AM
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comments
Summer 2008
This past summer didn't work out incredibly well for my lofty reading ambitions. My intermittent work on the farm and for Jamie got me going with some horticulture and some reading in contemporary philosophy of religion (of the continental variety), but I chose to spend most of my time between these projects with cooking and a little travel.
- top 5 + 1:
Jorge Luis Borges - Labriynths: Selected Stories and Other Writings (5 stars)
Eileen Weppner - The International Grandmothers' Cookbook (Favorite Recipes Of Grandmothers From Around The World) (5 stars)
James Tate - The Ghost Soldiers (4 stars)
Wendell Berry - Life is Beautiful (4 stars)
Kevin Huizenga - Curses (4 stars)
Elizabeth Wilson - Bohemians: The Glorious Outcasts (4 stars)
- assorted other titles:
J.D. Salinger - Franny and Zooey (4 stars)
Rolf Potts - Vagabonding (4 stars)
James Shapiro - 1599: A Year in the Life of William Shakespeare (3 stars)
John D. Caputo - On Religion (3 stars)
Jonathon D. Culler - A Very Short Introduction: Literary Theory (3 stars)
Douglas Coupland - Girlfriend in a Coma (2 stars)
Marcus A. Webb - The Herb and Spice Companion: An A to Z Guide (2 stars)
posted by
Ryan Weberling
at
9:43 AM
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2.26.2008
Late Fees?
A couple of days after arriving at York, I went with Brad and John to the public library. The only necessity of our trip was to procure a library card for local discounts and such, but of course we also managed to pick up a truckload of books. Now, I'm pretty proud that I've managed to actually finish more than half of them, and have spent a little time with each and ever one. That's pretty good for me. But, the due date is already past and thus I am forced to return them before I would like. Here's a record of their life with me, though, before they're returned to the shelves. Who knows if anyone else will spend time with them or love them ever again?
C.K. Stead - "The New Poetic"
- an analysis of British poetry from early Yeats through the Georgians and War Poets up to Eliot's "Four Quartets," this influential book/essay uses a very potent model for tracking the relationships between poet, audience, and subject matter and ends up arriving at the central discussion of what poetry is and does
Czeslaw Milosz - "Facing the River"
- I finally found an actual collection of Milosz's poems and was greatly rewarded; I would highly recommend this dark but fertile revelation of Milosz's mind and life, one of his last
Billy Collins - "Nine Horses" and "Taking Off Emily Dickinson's Clothes"
- more clever, quirky, occasionally moving, but above all casual poetry from this laid-back master of easy-going poems
Samuel Beckett - "For To End Yet Again and Other Fizzles"
- inciting mind/word-play akin to James Joyce; an intriguing experimental form (or poetry?) but not sustainable beyond the few pages of each individual fizzle
Seamus Heaney - "District and Circle"
- I enjoyed his direct engagement with other writers and his impressive lexicon--an expansive mix of local-feeling Anglo-Saxon words littered like rocks or peat amongst international landscape of bamboo and Italian architecture--but overall, I had trouble engaging the poems
Ezra Pound - "Poems selected by Thom Gunn"
- I read Gunn's brief introduction and a few excerpts--I'm still not sure what I think of Pound, beyond the obligatory nod for his midwifery role in Modernist poetry
Luigi Pirandello - "Collected Plays"
- again, the introduction was informative, but I didn't have time to actually read any of the actual plays
Deitrich Bonhoffer - "Ethics"
- I glanced over the section on Vocation and on Government, only to be slightly disappointed. maybe someday I'll be able to engage the whole book, since he himself considered it such an important undertaking
posted by
Ryan Weberling
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6:36 PM
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labels: British literature, contemporary, criticism, drama, poetry
2.24.2008
a diverse, manic array
Well, I have just returned from that most dangerous of places, the library. I only intended to do some homework there for a few hours, but I was soon lured into its dark recesses in search of incredibly interesting books that I can check out but will never have the time to read. Tonight, I returned with 11 such masterpieces, as follows:
- "Joan Miro: Selected Paintings" - Smithsonian Institution (this one is mostly legit, as I'm supposed to write a poem about a piece of art for my creative writing class)
- "Leisure and Culture" - Chris Rojek (completely unnecessary, but how could I resist a chapter entitled "The Abnormal Forms of Leisure"?)
- "The Philosophy of Sustainable Design" - Jason F. McLennan (I'm hoping this will be one of those books that has an introduction or first chapter that explains all the issues and thus allow me to feel intelligent about something of which I know nothing)
- "Dwellings: The House across the World" - Paul Oliver (there are a lot more possibilities than just the suburbs)
- "Diagrams: A Visual Survey of Graphs, Maps, Charts, and Diagrams for the Graphic Designer" - Arthur Lockwood (these are bizarre, hilarious, interesting, profound, quirky, etc. etc.; there are so many ways to convey information and to tell stories)
four books in preparation for the independent publishing house John and I are going to start while in York, don't you know it:
- "Simple Printmaking with Childern" - Daniels/Turner (okay, starting off modestly)
- "Exploring Printmaking for Young People" - Daniels/Turner (working our way up)
- "Hand Printmaking" - Hargreaves
- "The Alternative Printing Handbook" - Chris Treweek and Jonathan Zeitlyn with the Islington Bus Co.
I guess I'd better get reading...
posted by
Ryan Weberling
at
1:59 PM
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labels: art, class-related, culture, lifestyle, project-related
2.11.2008
Tanka, Renga, Jesei
Last week, I did some reading online on the Japanese poetic forms/traditions of Renga (collaborative poems) and Jesei (death poems). Then, in my Creative Writing lecture that same week, we had an unannounced special presentation by someone who works here at YSJ and who writes (see below) and is involved with Tanka (Japanese for "short poem") poetry. It was an interesting and inspiring introduction to Tanka poetry and has in the week or so since kept up my interest in learning about this 1300-year-old tradition. I hope to be able to experiment some myself with these forms for my class's final portfolio project.
Anyways, right after class, I went over to the library and checked out a few anthologies: one of specifically modern Tanka poetry, one a collection of the more popular Haiku form, and one more historically-focused anthology by Penguin Books. I would especially recommend the first of these, "Modern Japanese Tanka" edited and translated by Makoto Ueda, especially its easy-to-read and highly-informative Introduction. More enjoyable than these anthologies, though, was "The Floating Bridge," the new collection of Tanka poems published by the instructor that presented to my class last week, Hisashi Nakamura. Its a relatively quick read, as the book is a standard 70ish-page collection and each only contains one 31-syllable poem. However, as is appropriate to the highly-concentrated meditative quality of Tanka, a lot more time could be spent engaging with each poem. One thing I found especially interesting about Mr. Nakamura's work is the way that the traditional and ancient poetic sensibility of Tanka, which fundamentally involves what the Japanese call "mono no aware," or a sort of melancholy awareness to the fleeting nature of life and reality that celebrates this transience as uniquely beautiful, interacts with the Western/European and modern world in which the actual poems are located. The presence of strange landscapes (such as the Yorkshire Moors) or at times the choice of a certain striking word represent the intriguing disparity which I see at work in these poems, as in the following poem:
Hanging from the bows
Of an old rusty vessel
Tied to the pier,
The black shadow of a cross
falls on the neon red sea.
I've since talked a little more to Mr. Nakamura (he very kindly gave me a free copy of his book) in order to write a short piece on it and Tanka poetry in general, perhaps for "Chimes" or something like that. It was very encouraging to discover this unique resource and opportunity amidst the new, sometimes stifled-seeming academic atmosphere here at YSJ. I would point anyone that might be interested in Tanka poetry to the homepage of the society Mr. Nakamura heads up: Anglo-Japanese Tanka Society.
posted by
Ryan Weberling
at
11:13 AM
1 comments
labels: class-related, contemporary, poetry, project-related
6.10.2007
Summer 2007 Reading List
Robert Inchausti - "Subervsive Orthodoxy"
J.D. Salinger - "Nine Stories"
Wendell Berry - "Sabbaths"
James Tate - "Collected Poems", "The Lost Pilot", "Absences", "The Oblivion Ha-Ha", "Memoir of the Hawk", "Shroud of the Gnome"
Mary Oliver - "New and Selected Poems"
Gabriel Garcia Marquez - "One Hundred Years of Solitude"
Soren Kierkegaard - "The Sickness Unto Death", "Fear and Trembling"
Jean-Paul Sartre - "No Exit and Three Other Plays"
Frederick Buechner - "The Alphabet of Grace", "The Sacred Journey: A Memoir of Early Days"
Annie Dillard - "The Writing Life", "Pilgrim at Tinker Creek"
Italo Calvino - "The Baron in the Trees"
Kurt Vonnegut - "Slapstick"
Art Spiegelman - "Maus I & II"
Franz Kafka - "The Metamorphosis and other Stories"
Malcom X, George Breitman - "Malcom X Speaks"
Rose Levy Beranbaum - "The Bread Bible"
1.23.2007
My Reading List for Interim 2007
So I skipped interim to play music and see some more of the midwest with my friends--part of my justification for such a move was that I could use the extra time (before and after the trip) to read and write. The writing is still in progress (that is, I've almost decided to begin something). The reading looks a bit like this:
Interim 2007 Reading List
- “Real Sex: The Truth About Chastity” by Lauren Winner
- “Who’s Afraid of Postmodernism? Taking Derrida, Lyotard, and Foucalt to
Church” by James K. A. Smith
- “Body Piercing Saved My Life: The Phenomenon of Christian Rock” by
Andrew Beaujon
- “Life Between Buildings: Using Public Space” by Jan Gehl
- “Incense: Rituals, Mystery, Lore” by Gina Hyams and Susie Gushner
- “Questions About Angels: Selected Poems” by Billy Collins
- “Hey Nostradamus!” by Douglas Coupland
- “The Sacred Journey: A Memoir of Early Days” by Frederick Buechner
- “The Doors of Perception” by Aldous Huxley
- "The Edible Garden" by Hazel White, Janet H. Sanchez, and Sunset Books
- “Everyday Apocalypse: The Sacred Revealed in Radiohead, The Simpsons, and other Pop Culture Icons" by David Dark
- "Equus" by Peter Shaffer
- and, as usual, short stories by Flannery O'Connor