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#Anthony Friedlander
junnahphoto101 · 2 months
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ICP Exhibition - 3/24/24
 
The International Center of Photography has a variety of photographs from political views,  historical fashion, to contemporary, and mysterious. There were more than three hundred pictures with different sizes and ways of installation. Every photo had a brief description walking you through the photograph and its meaning and even some of the techniques used. The description also states the photographer (if known) and the year they were born and or deceased, the title of the photo (if known), the year taken or printed, the location of the photograph (if known), and at times, the thoughts of the photographer. They also list how ICP obtained the photograph, whether through purchase, donations, etc.. The atmosphere was quiet, people were taking their time reading descriptions of photos and discussing them through whispers. The lights on the third floor were dim, there were spotlights on the walls, where the photos were displayed.The third floor also held older pictures going back to the 1848, historic pictures, they were mainly black and white photos. The second floor was bright, the lights were on, and most of the pictures were colored. The second floor also held more contemporary, and fashionable photos, as well as hipsters photographs. The newer photos were displayed on the second floor, they were mainly from the 1980's on.
It was so hard to pick only two pictures, but after going through the list a few times, I decided to pick two that are somehow modern. The first photo of my choice was by Ming Smith, born in Detroit in 1947. The photo is called Womb, it was taken in 1992 and printed in 2023. Pigment print was used and it was purchased by funds provided by the acquisition committee of ICP 1/18/2023. Womb is a double exposure photograph. This means the negative in the cameras was exposed twice, where two different pictures are printed on top of each other. The photo is unique when seeing, you can observe the pyramids right away and two young boys in front of them, when you tilt your head to the right you can see a portrait of one of the boys horizontally across the photograph of the pyramids. 
“While Smith has employed a wide range of styles and techniques throughout her career, this work typifies her experimental approach, using intuition and chance to imbue her images with a dreamy, often otherworldly impression. Smith, who made photographs at an early age with her father's Brownie camera, began her professional career as a model. After being photographed by Anthony Barboza, she met other members of the Kamoinge Workshop-a collective of Black photographers founded in 1963 in New York City-and began to forge her own career as an artist. In 1975, a few months after ICP opened to the public, Smith, alongside other members of the Kamoinge group, were exhibited”.
The second photo of my choice was by Carrie Mae Weems, born in Portland, Oregon in 1953. The photo is called Mirror, Mirror and was taken in 1987, and Gelatin silver print was used. ICP obtained the photo as a gift from Julie Ault in 2001. The photograph reads “”LOOKING INTO THE MIRROR, THE BLACK WOMAN ASKED, "MIRROR, MIRROR ON THE WALL, WHO'S THE FINEST OF THEM ALL?" THE MIRROR SAYS, "SNOW WHITE, YOU BLACK BITCH, AND DON'T YOU FORGET IT!!!"”. I sensed the picture having  a dark humor that actually reminded me of Deborah Willis’s article about some blacks believing that whites are more beautiful than blacks. 
The list of photographers is long, in addition of the previous two, so I selected some just as examples:
Mickalene Thamas
A.K Burns
Harold Eugene Edgerton
Carol Summers
Lee Friedlander
Lucas Samaras
Charles E. Stacy
Florence Henri
Custav Klutsis
Lotte Jacobi
Julia Pirotte
Ilse Bing
Nasa
Cornell Capa
Jacob Riis
Daivd Seidner
These photographers are from all over the world.
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tctmp · 11 months
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A Gift Wrapped Christmas: Directed by Lee Friedlander. With Meredith Hagner, Travis Milne, Anna Van Hooft, Anthony Bolognese. A personal shopper with a sunny disposition makes it her Christmas mission to melt the heart of her newest client - a workaholic widower and single parent.
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ib2se · 1 year
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MusicMonday 🎶 B:sides ~ Train 2 Chill
💿 All Albums from Chant Records 💿
1. [5:14]
East of the River, co directed by Daphna Mor & Nina Stern – Cveta Moma Ubava Performed by: Daphna Mor: Recorders Nina Stern; Recorders Tamer Pinarbasi: Qanun Jesse Kotanksy: Violin Shane Shanahan: Percussion Composed by Traditional Macedonian Arranged by Daphna Mor and Nina Stern Produced by Daphna Mor and Nina Stern Engineered by Aaron Nevezie Recorded at Bunker Studios. Brooklyn
2. [4:21]
The Lie Detectors (Eyal Maoz & Asaf Sirkis Duet) – Rice Performed by: Eyal Maoz – guitar Asaf Sirkis – drums Composed by Eyal Maoz Arranged by Eyal Maoz and Asaf Sirkis Produced by Eyal Maoz and Asaf Sirkis
3. [5:31]
Nonoko Yoshida & Kim Yooi – Blood Orange Performed by: Nonoko Yoshida 吉田野乃子 (alto sax, udu)
Composed by Nonoko Yoshida Arranged by Nonoko Yoshida Produced by Nonoko Yoshida Engineered by Yoshihiro Tsukahara Recorded at Studio Riccio (Sapporo – recorded and mixed on September 8th, 2017)
4. [5:33]
Eyal Talmudi – Train to Chill Performed by Eyal Talmudi, Beno Hendler Composed by Eyal Talmudi Arranged by Eyal Talmudi Produced by Eyal Talmudi Engineered by Eyal Talmudi Recorded at The Ashtray Studios Peace to all
5. [7:20]
Gregor Frei ASMIN – Franklin’s Son Performed by: Gregor Frei – tenor sax Ran Wehrli – alto sax Dave Gisler – guitar Pascal Ujak – bass Maxime Paratte – drums Composed by Gregor Frei Arranged by Gregor Frei Produced by Gregor Frei Engineered by Will-y Strehler Recorded at St. Leonard’s Church Recorded in the ruin of the St. Leonard’s Church in St. Gallen. The church was burned out about one year before the recordings.
6. [1:11]
Hu: Vibrational (Adam Rudolph) – HAKUNA Performed by ADAM RUDOLPH Composed by ADAM RUDOLPH Arranged by ADAM RUDOLPH Produced by ADAM RUDOLPH & CARLOS NINO Engineered by BRYAN CARLSTROM Recorded at CLEAR LAKE STUDIOS This track is from UNIVERSAL MOTHER CD Full CD download available here: Bandcamp.com
7. [5:55]
Ouzo Bazooka (Ira Raviv, Adam Scheflan, Dani Ever-Hadani, Uri Brauner Kinrot) – TURKUM Performed by: DRUMS – IRA RAVIV BASS – ADAM SCHEFLAN KEYBOARD – DANI EVER-HADANI GUITAR – URI BRAUNER KINROT Composed by URI BRAUNER KINROT Arranged by OUZO BAZOOKA Produced by URI BRAUNER KINROT Engineered by URI BRAUNER KINROT Recorded at Track is from the album ‘SONGS FROM 1001 NIGHTS’ (STOLEN BODY RECORDS)
8. [9:10]
Kevin Norton’s Breakfast of Champignon(s) – “Deep Tanks” Performed by Helen Yee- violin; Julia Simoniello- electric guitar; Angelica Sanchez- piano; Noah Berman- electric guitar; Steve LaSpina- bass; Kevin Norton- drums, vibraphone & percussion. Composed by Kevin Norton – published by Enduring Heart (ASCAP) Produced by Kevin Norton Engineered by Scott Friedlander Recorded live at The Stone (NYC), July 18, 2017 as part of the Stone Residencies: Kevin Norton “Deep Tanks” is one of 12 songs from the song-cycle, Staten Island: All that is solid melts into air – the premier performance of the song-cycle (slightly different instrumentation and personnel) from Roulette (NYC) is available on Bandcamp.com.
9. [5:27]
Past the Mark (Vince Pastano & Marc Urselli) – Tortellini Blues Performed by Vince Pastano & Marc Urselli Composed by Vince Pastano & Marc Urselli Arranged by Vince Pastano & Marc Urselli Produced by Marc Urselli Engineered by Marc Urselli Recorded at EastSide Sound from the CD: “Hakhel Tribulation” available on Nu Jazz Europe records NuJazzEurope.eu
10. [4:49]
Rafi Malkiel Ensemble – Danza Magica Performed by Rafi Malkiel – Euphonium Anthony Carrillo – Bongo, Timbas, Bells, Chekere, Maracas Dave Hertzberg – Upright Bass Henry Cole – Drums Set Jack Glottman – Piano Anat Cohen – Clarinet Chris Karlic – Tenor Saxophone Itai Kriss – Flute, Vocals Steve Gluzband – Trumpet Gili Sharett – Bassoon Ronald Polo – Tambora, Snare Drum Morris Canyate – Alegre, Platillos Sergio Borrero – Llamador, Maraca Composed by Rafi Malkiel Arranged by Rafi Malkiel Produced by Rafi Malkiel & Pablo Mayor Engineered by Recorded by Randy Crafton at on July 28-29 2006 Mixed and Mastered by Ilya Eli Lishinsky at Artsonic Studios Recorded at Kaleidoscope Studios 1 jingle incl tune from Kmag #107 af Loopmasters Samples & 2 jingles from B:sides on Spotify
  Veckans BibelVers: “Look at the birds of the air; they do not sow or reap or store away in barns, and yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not much more valuable than they? Can any one of you by worrying add a single hour to your life?” ~ Matthew 6:26-27🎧
Drink Espresso - God bless U! /MrZ :)
🎧 #Spotify #LennArrrt
#Playlist 📰 #ib2 http://ib2.se/BsidesTrain2chill.htm
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gregwdbk · 6 years
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Playlist for December 21, 2017
Lisa/Liza - Wander Listen/purchase Big Nick - Everybody Listen/purchase shya - Food Poisoning Listen/purchase Henoheno - Peas & Carrots Listen/purchase Shelf Life - Sinking Just Right Listen/purchase (Sandy) Alex G - Poison Root Listen/purchase Daniel Johnston - Held The Hand Listen/purchase The Sugarcubes - Birthday Listen/purchase Norman Taylor & Blue Soul - Soultrippin’ Listen/purchase Cuddle Magic - Handwrit Listen/purchase Ultravox - Vienna Listen/purchase Tori Amos - Father Lucifer Listen/purchase Television - Marquee Moon Listen/purchase Xenia Rubinos - Lonely Lover Listen/purchase Ani DiFranco - Company Listen/purchase Hovvdy - Cranberry Listen/purchase Kanye West - Real Friends Listen/purchase Anthony Friedlander - Action Hero Listen/purchase Moses Sumney - Plastic Listen/purchase Pet - Got No Time Listen/purchase
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zodiactypology · 2 years
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Popular Comedians of Each Zodiac Sign
Aries - Chris Delia, Conan O’Brien, Aries Spears, Keegan-Michael Key, Eric Andre, Eddie Murphy, David Letterman
Taurus - Bob Saget, Jerry Seinfeld, George Carlin, Kenan Thompson, Michael Che, Stephen Colbert, Jay Leno
Gemini - Bill Burr, Russell Brand, Amy Schumer, Steven Brody Stevens, Brian Regan, Mike Birbiglia, Bill Hader, Kyle Dunnigan
Cancer - Jim Gaffigan, Kevin Hart, Will Ferrell, Ricky Gervais, Colin Jost, Fortune Feimster, Godfrey, Sebastian Maniscalco, Larry David
Leo - Joe Rogan, Steve Martin, Bo Burnham, Gary Owen
Virgo - Dave Chappelle, Louis C.K., Bobby Lee, Mark Normand, Adam Sandler, Whitney Cummings, Maria Bamford, John Mulaney, Jeff Ross, Kat Williams, Amy Poehler, Jimmy Fallon
Libra - Andrew Santino, Marc Maron, Nick Swardson, Sacha Baron Cohen, Norm Macdonald, Bernie Mac
Scorpio - Jimmy Kimmel, Pete Davidson, Kevin Nealon, Tracy Morgan
Sagittarius - Sarah Silverman, Patrice Oneal, Richard Pryor, Tiffany Haddish
Capricorn - Jim Carrey, Steve Harvey, Anthony Jeselnik, Dave Attell
Aquarius - Patton Oswalt, Bryan Callen, Chris Rock, Hannibal Burress, Jim Jefferies, Ellen DeGeneres, Trevor Noah, Ari Shaffir
Pisces - Theo Von, Iliza Schlesinger, Aziz Ansari, Mitch Hedberg, Jordan Peele, Chelsea Handler, Judah Friedlander
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perennialessays · 3 years
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Literature and Philosophy
MA IN LITERARY STUDIES
 Literature and Philosophy (EN71021A): Course Outline Spring 2019
Tutor: Julia Ng
Teaching Mode: 2-hour seminar
Seminar Wednesday 9-11
St James Hatcham G02
NB: Please acquire a print copy of Walter Benjamin’s Origin of German Tragic Drama, trans. J. Osborne (Verso, 1998/2009), as we will be studying this text in its entirety. Other materials for this course will be posted to the course’s learn.gold page.
  Week 1, Wednesday 16
th
January – Introduction; “intention” in Brentano and Husserl
Introductory discussion
Franz Brentano, “The Distinction between Mental and Physical Phenomena,” in Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint [1874], trans. A. C. Rancurello, D. B. Terrell and L. L. McAlister (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1995), Bk. 2, chap. 1, pp. 59-77.
Edmund Husserl, “Philosophy as a Rigorous Science," in Phenomenology and the Crisis of Philosophy, trans. Quentin Lauer (Harper & Row, 1965), section on “Naturalistic Philosophy,” pp. 79-122.
 Week 2, Wednesday 23th January – Husserl
Edmund Husserl, “Philosophy as a Rigorous Science," in Phenomenology and the Crisis of Philosophy, trans. Quentin Lauer (Harper & Row, 1965), excerpt from “Historicism and Weltanschauung Philosophy,” pp. 122-129.
Edmund Husserl, Ideas Pertaining to a Pure Phenomenology and to a Phenomenological Philosophy, I, trans. F. Kersten (Martinus Nijhoff, 1983), §§87-90, 93-95.
 Week 3, Wednesday 30th January – Benjamin
Benjamin, OGT, “Epistemo-Critical Prologue”
 References
Plato, Symposium
Scheler, “On the Tragic”
 Wek 4, Wednesday 6th February – Benjamin
Benjamin, OGT, “Trauerspiel and Tragedy,“ I
 References
Schmitt, Political Theology
Gryphius, Leo Armenius
Calderon, Life is a Dream
 Week 5, Wednesday 13th February – Benjamin
Benjamin, OGT, “Trauerspiel and Tragedy,“ II
 References
Nietzsche, The Birth of Tragedy
Lukács, Soul and Forms
Rosenzweig, The Star of Redemption
Scheler, “On the Tragic”
Benjamin, “Fate and Character”; “Toward the Critique of Violence”
 Week 6, Wednesday 20th February
Tutorial Week – No seminar
 Week 7, Wednesday 27th February – Benjamin
Benjamin, OGT, “Trauerspiel and Tragedy,“ III; „Allegory and Trauerspiel,“ I
 References
Shakespeare, Hamlet
Panofsky and Saxl on Dürer’s Melancholia I
Giehlow on Melancholia I; The Humanist Interpretation of Hieroglyphs
Warburg
Freud, “Mourning and Melancholia”
 Week 8, Wednesday 6th March – Benjamin
Benjamin, OGT, “Allegory and Trauerspiel,“ II and III
 References
Benjamin, “On Language as Such and on the Language of Man”; “The Role of Language in Trauerspiel and Tragedy”; “Trauerspiel and Tragedy”
Gryphius, Leo Armenius
 Week 9, Wednesday 13th March – Adorno
Adorno, “The Actuality of Philosophy” (May 2, 1931), in Telos 31 (1977), 120-133.
Adorno, “The Idea of Natural History” (1932), in Telos 60 (1984), 111-124.
 Week 10, Wednesday 20th March – Adorno
Adorno, “III.2 World Spirit and Natural History,” in Negative Dialectics, trans. E.B. Ashton, Continuum, 1973, pp. 300-360.
 Week 11, Wednesday 27th March – Conclusion
General discussion
 Preparatory Reading
Gryphius, Leo Armenius
Calderon, Life Is A Dream
Shakespeare, Hamlet
Hofmannsthal, The Tower
 Further Reading
 Benjamin
On Language as Such and on the Language of Man (1916)
The Role of Language in Trauerspiel and Tragedy (1916)
Trauerspiel and Tragedy (1916)
Fate and Character (1919)
Toward the Critique of Violence (1921)
Calderon's El mayor monstrue, los celos and Hebbel's Herodus and Mariamne (1923)
 General
Adorno, Theodor. "Portrait of Walter Benjamin," in: Prisms. Trans. Samuel and Shierry Weber. MIT Press, 1981.
Adorno, Theodor. Against Epistemology: A Metacritique. Trans. Willis Domingo. Oxford: Blackwell, 1982.
Adorno, Theodor, and Walter Benjamin. The Complete Correspondence, 1928-1940. Ed. Henri Lonitz. Trans. Nicholas Walker. Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP, 1999.
Agamben, Giorgio. Homo Sacer: Sovereign Power and Bare Life, Stanford UP, 1998.
Cascardi, Anthony J. "Comedia and Trauerspiel: On Benjamin and Calderón." Comparative Drama 16:1 (1982), 1-11.
Cobb-Stevens, Richard. “Husserl on Eidetic Intuition and Historical Interpretation,” American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 66 (1992): 261–75.
Comay, Rebecca. "Mourning Work and Play," in Research in Phenomenology 23 (1993), pp. 105-130.
Drummond, John. “Husserl on the Ways to the Performance of the Reduction,” Man and World 8 (1975): 47–69.
Drummond, John. “The Structure of Intentionality,” in The New Husserl, ed. D. Welton (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2003), 65–92.
Derrida, Jacques. "Force of Law."
Fenves, Peter. "Marx, Mourning, Messianity," in: Hent de Vries/Samuel Weber (Hg.): Violence, Identity and Self-Determination, Stanford, 1997, 253–270.
Fenves, Peter. "Tragedy and Prophecy in Benjamin’s 'Origin of the German Mourning Play,'" in: Arresting Language. From Leibniz to Benjamin, Stanford UP, 2001, 227–248.
Foster, Roger. Adorno: The Recovery of Experience. SUNY Press, 2007.
Freud, Sigmund. "Mourning and Melancholia," The Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud, XIV. The Hogarth Press, 1957, pp. 237-258.
Friedlander, Eli. "On the Musical Gathering of Echoes of the Voice: Walter Benjamin on Opera and the Trauerspiel." The Opera Quarterly, vol. 21 no. 4 (2005), pp. 631-646.
Geulen, Eva. The End of Art : Readings in a Rumor after Hegel. Stanford University Press, 2006.
Giehlow, Karl, and Robin Raybould. The Humanist Interpretation of Hieroglyphs in the Allegorical Studies of the Renaissance with a Focus on the Triumphal Arch of Maximilian I. Brill, 2015.
Hamacher, Werner. "Guilt History."  
Hanssen, Beatrice. Walter Benjamin's Other History : of Stones, Animals, Human Beings, and Angels. University of California Press, 1998.
Hanssen, Beatrice. "Philosophy at Its Origin: Walter Benjamin’s Prologue to the 'Ursprung des deutschen Trauerspiels,'" in: Modern Language Notes 110 (1995), 809–833.
Haverkampf, Hans-Erhard. Benjamin in Frankfurt : Die Zentralen Jahre 1922-1932. Societäts-Verlag, 2016.
Helmling, Steven. "Constellation and Critique: Adorno's Constellation, Benjamin's Dialectical Image." Postmodern Culture 14:1 (2003).
Johnson, Barbara, The Wake of Deconstruction, Cambridge, Mass, 1994.
Johnson, Christopher D. “Configuring the Baroque: Warburg and Benjamin.” Culture, Theory and Critique, vol. 57, no. 2, 2016, pp. 142–165.
Kantorowicz, Ernst H. The King's Two Bodies : a Study in Mediaeval Political Theology. Princeton University Press, 1997.
Klibansky, Raymond; Panofsky, Erwin; Saxl, Fritz. Saturn and Melancholy : Studies in the History of Natural Philosophy, Religion, and Art. Basic Books, 1964.
Lacan, Jacques. "Desire and the Interpretation of Desire in Hamlet," in: Shoshana Felman (ed.): Literature and Psychoanalysis. The Question of Reading: Otherwise, Baltimore, 1982, 11–52.
Lindner, Burkhardt. "Habilitationsakte Benjamin. Über ein 'akademisches Trauerspiel' und über ein Vorkapitel der "Frankfurter Schule" (Horkheimer, Adorno)/"Walter Benjamins's attempt of a Habilitation. On an 'academic Trauerspiel' and on other preliminaries of the "Frankfurter Schule" (Horkheimer, Adorno)." In: Zeitschrift für Literaturwissenschaft und Linguistik 14.53 (1984): 147-166.
Lukács, György. Soul and Form. MIT Press, 1978.
Lukács, György. Theory of the Novel.
Marin, Louis. Food for Thought. Johns Hopkins University Press, 1997.
McFarland, James. “Presentation.” Constellation: Friedrich Nietzsche and Walter Benjamin in the Now-Time of History. Fordham University Press, 2012, pp. 67-102 (Chapter 2).
McLaughlin, Kevin. "Benjamin's Barbarism." The Germanic Review: Literture, Culture, Theory, 81:1 (2006), 4-20.
Menke, Christoph, and James. Phillips. Tragic Play : Irony and Theater from Sophocles to Beckett. Columbia University Press, 2009.
Merback, Mitchell B. Perfection's Therapy : an Essay on Albrecht Dürer's Melencolia I. Zone Books, 2017.
Miller, J. Hillis. »The Two Allegories«, in: Morton Bloomfield (ed.): Allegory, Myth and Symbol, Cambridge, 1981, 355–370.
Mininger, J. D., and Jason Michael Peck. German Aesthetics : Fundamental Concepts from Baumgarten to Adorno. Bloomsbury, Bloomsbury Academic, 2016.
Nägele, Rainer. Theater, Theory, and Speculation: Walter Benjamin and the Scenes of Modernity, Baltimore, 1991.
Newman, Jane O. Benjamin's Library: modernity, nation, and the Baroque. Cornell UP, 2011.
Newman, Jane O. "Tragedy and 'Trauerspiel' for the (Post-)Westphalian Age." In: Renaissance Drama 40 (2012), pp. 197-208.
Newman, Jane. “Enchantment in Times of War: Aby Warburg, Walter Benjamin, and the Secularization Thesis.” Representations, vol. 105, no. 105, 2009, pp. 133-0_4.
Nietzsche, The Birth of Tragedy
Pensky, Max. Melancholy Dialectics: Walter Benjamin and the Play of Mourning. U Mass Press, 1993.
Plato, Symposium.
Rosenzweig, Franz, and Barbara Ellen Galli. The Star of Redemption. University of Wisconsin Press, 2005.
Scheler, Max. "On the Tragic." CrossCurrents 4.2 (1954), 178-191.
Schmitt, Carl, et al. Hamlet or Hecuba : the Intrusion of the Time into the Play. Telos Press, 2009.
Schmitt, Carl. Political Theology : Four Chapters on the Concept of Sovereignty. University of Chicago Press, 2005.
Szondi, Peter. An Essay on the Tragic. Stanford University Press, 2002.
Weber, Samuel. Benjamin's -Abilities. Harvard University Press, 2008.
Willard, Dallas. “The Paradox of Logical Psychologism: Husserl’s Way Out,” American Philosophical Quarterly 9 (1972): 94–100.
Woodfield, Richard (ed.) Art history as cultural history: Warburg's projects. G+B Arts International, 2000.
 Learning Outcomes
 -       You will have a grasp of the place of literature in the modern Continental philosophy tradition.
-       You will have a good understanding of how this tradition challenges and transforms Classical philosophical conceptions of literature.
-       You will be able to expound and analyse the textual and conceptual styles of the three key thinkers on the course.
-       You will have a sound grasp of the literature of and on both the broad relationship between literature and philosophy, and the three specific thinkers addressed on the module.
-       You will be able to use the ideas and texts explored in the module to inform your readings in literary and cultural texts.
 Assessment Criteria
 -       Students should show a clear command of traditional conceptions of the literary in the history of philosophy, and of how the modern Continental tradition challenges these.
-       Students should show a detailed critical knowledge of at least one of the module’s key thinkers’ ideas.
-       Students should show a knowledge and capacity to use a good range of secondary literature on both general issues in the field and on the specific thinkers and texts they address.
-       Students should be able to read the relevant texts from both literary critical and conceptual perspectives.
-       Students should show an awareness of the relevance of the issues and texts studied on the course to contemporary debates in literary theory.
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miamiartdistrict · 4 years
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KAMROOZ ARAM
on the ancient arts of Iran
Achaemenid (Iran, Susa). Bricks with a palmette motif, ca. 6th–4th century B.C. Ceramic, glaze. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Rogers Fund, 1948 (48.98.20a–c)
The Artist Project
Vito Acconci on Gerrit Rietveld's Zig Zag Stoel
Ann Agee on the Villeroy Harlequin Family
Diana Al-Hadid on the cubiculum from the villa of P. Fannius Synistor at Boscoreale
Ghada Amer on an Iranian tile panel, Garden Gathering
Kamrooz Aram on the ancient arts of Iran
Cory Arcangel on the harpsichord
John Baldessari on Philip Guston's Stationary Figure
Barry X Ball on an Egyptian fragment of a queen’s face
Ali Banisadr on Hieronymus Bosch's The Adoration of the Magi
Dia Batal on a Syrian tile panel with calligraphic inscription
Zoe Beloff on Édouard Manet's Civil War (Guerre Civile)
Dawoud Bey on Roy DeCarava
Nayland Blake on boli
Barbara Bloom on Vilhelm Hammershøi's Moonlight, Strandgade 30
Andrea Bowers on Howardena Pindell
Mark Bradford on Clyfford Still
Cecily Brown on medieval sculptures of the Madonna and Child
Luis Camnitzer on Giovanni Battista Piranesi's etchings
Nick Cave on Kuba cloths
Alejandro Cesarco on Gallery 907
Enrique Chagoya on Goya's Los Caprichos
Roz Chast on Italian Renaissance painting
Willie Cole on Ci Wara sculpture
George Condo on Claude Monet's The Path through the Irises
Petah Coyne on a Japanese outer robe with Mount Hōrai
Njideka Akunyili CROSBY on Georges Seurat's Embroidery; The Artist's Mother
John Currin on Ludovico Carracci's The Lamentation
Moyra Davey on a rosary terminal bead with lovers and Death's head
Edmund de Waal on an ewer in the shape of a Tibetan monk's cap
Thomas Demand on the Gubbio studiolo
Jacob El Hanani on the Mishneh Torah, by Master of the Barbo Missal
Teresita Fernández on Precolumbian gold
Spencer Finch on William Michael Harnett's The Artist's Letter Rack
Eric Fischl on Max Beckmann's Beginning
Roland Flexner on Jacques de Gheyn II's Vanitas Still Life
Walton Ford on Jan van Eyck and workshop's The Last Judgment
Natalie Frank on Käthe Kollwitz
LaToya Ruby FRAZIER on Gordon Parks's Red Jackson
Suzan Frecon on Duccio di Buoninsegna's Madonna and Child
Adam Fuss on a marble grave stele of a little girl
Maureen Gallace on Paul Cézanne's still life paintings with apples
Jeffrey Gibson on Vanuatu slit gongs
Nan Goldin on Julia Margaret Cameron
Wenda Gu on Robert Motherwell's Lyric Suite
Ann Hamilton on a Bamana marionette
Jane Hammond on snapshots and vernacular photography
Zarina Hashmi on Arabic calligraphy
Sheila Hicks on The Organ of Mary, a prayer book by Ethiopian scribe Baselyos
Rashid Johnson on Robert Frank
Y.Z. Kami on Egyptian mummy portraits
Deborah Kass on Athenian vases
Nina Katchadourian on Early Netherlandish portraiture
Alex Katz on Franz Kline's Black, White, and Gray
Jeff Koons on Roman sculpture
An-My Lê on Eugène Atget's Cuisine
Il Lee on Rembrandt van Rijn's portraits
Lee Mingwei on Chinese ceremonial robes
Lee Ufan on the Moon Jar
Glenn Ligon on The Great Bieri
Lin Tianmiao on Alex Katz's Black and Brown Blouse
Kalup Linzy on Édouard Manet
Robert Longo on Jackson Pollock's Autumn Rhythm (Number 30)
Nicola López on works on paper
Nalini Malani on Hanuman Bearing the Mountaintop with Medicinal Herbs
Kerry James MARSHALL on Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres's Odalisque in Grisaille
Josiah McElheny on Horace Pippin
Laura McPhee on Pieter Bruegel the Elder's The Harvesters
Josephine Meckseper on George Tooker's Government Bureau
Julie Mehretu on Velázquez's Juan de Pareja
Alexander Melamid on Ernest Meissonier's 1807, Friedland
Mariko Mori on Botticelli's The Annunciation
Vik Muniz on The Henry R. Luce Center for the Study of American Art
Wangechi Mutu on Egon Schiele
James Nares on Chinese calligraphy
Catherine Opie on the Louis XIV bedroom
Cornelia Parker on Robert Capa's The Falling Soldier
Izhar Patkin on Shiva as Lord of Dance
Sheila Pepe on European armor
Raymond Pettibon on Joseph Mallord William Turner
Sopheap Pich on Vincent van Gogh's drawings
Robert Polidori on Jules Bastien-Lepage's Joan of Arc
Rona Pondick on Egyptian sculpture fragments
Liliana Porter on Jacometto's Portrait of a Young Man
Wilfredo Prieto on Auguste Rodin's sculptures
Rashid Rana on Umberto Boccioni's Unique Forms of Continuity in Space
Krishna Reddy on Henry Moore
Matthew Ritchie on The Triumph of Fame over Death
Dorothea Rockburne on an ancient Near Eastern head of a ruler
Alexis Rockman on Martin Johnson Heade's Hummingbird and Passionflowers
Annabeth Rosen on ceramic deer figurines
Martha Rosler on The Met Cloisters
Tom Sachs on the Shaker Retiring Room
David Salle on Marsden Hartley
Carolee Schneemann on Cycladic female figures
Dana Schutz on Balthus's The Mountain
Arlene Shechet on a bronze statuette of a veiled and masked dancer
James Siena on the Buddha of Medicine Bhaishajyaguru
Katrín Sigurdardóttir on the Hôtel de Cabris, Grasse
Shahzia Sikander on Persian miniature painting
Joan Snyder on Florine Stettheimer's Cathedrals paintings
Pat Steir on the Kongo Power Figure
Thomas Struth on Chinese Buddhist sculpture
Hiroshi Sugimoto on Bamboo in the Four Seasons, attributed to Tosa Mitsunobu
Eve Sussman on William Eggleston
Swoon on Honoré Daumier's The Third-Class Carriage
Sarah Sze on the Tomb of Perneb
Paul Tazewell on Anthony van Dyck's portraits
Wayne Thiebaud on Rosa Bonheur's The Horse Fair
Hank Willis THOMAS on a daguerreotype button
Mickalene Thomas on Seydou Keïta
Fred Tomaselli on Guru Dragpo
Jacques Villeglé on Georges Braque and Pablo Picasso
Mary Weatherford on Goya's Manuel Osorio Manrique de Zuñiga
William Wegman on Walker Evans's postcard collection
Kehinde Wiley on John Singer Sargent
Betty Woodman on a Minoan terracotta larnax
Xu Bing on Jean-François Millet's Haystacks: Autumn
Dustin Yellin on ancient Near Eastern cylinder seals
Lisa Yuskavage on Édouard Vuillard's The Green Interior
Zhang Xiaogang on El Greco's The Vision of Saint John
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cscclibrary · 4 years
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[Color photograph: Lighting candles in remembrance at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Washington DC, during Days of Remembrance, 2014. Image via the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum.]
January 27th is International Holocaust Remembrance Day.  The 20th century has been called “the century of genocide,” but for many, it is specifically the Holocaust--the persecution, imprisonment, and mass-murder of Jews, Romani, sexual minorities, and people with mental, intellectual, and physical disabilities--that first comes to mind when they hear that word.  For the average American, certainly, the Holocaust is the touchstone by which genocide is understood.  Three-quarters of a century later, it lingers in our collective consciousness.  We return to it in film, fiction, scholarship, and personal reflection. Most of us ask ourselves: how could such a thing happen?  Why did people allow it to occur? Can it happen again?
Most of us learned about the Holocaust and the events surrounding it only briefly, perhaps in a high school history class. Today we’re presenting a variety of sources that can help readers gain a fuller understanding of how the Holocaust, and other genocides, came to be.
Never Again, Again, Again...: Genocide: Armenia, The Holocaust, Cambodia, Rwanda, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Darfur, by Lane H. Montgomery .  Request via OhioLINK. Photographs and text discussing some of the primary genocides of the 20th-21st centuries, many of which are rarely addressed in American K-12 history classes. [Note: There are many books available that discuss these genocides, as well as previous genocides, in greater detail.  Although they are too numerous to list here, you are welcome to contact our reference librarians if you’d like help researching any of these topics in greater depth.]
The Routledge History of Genocide; Cathie Carmichael and Richard C. Maguire, editors.  Request via OhioLINK. A worldwide history of genocide from the Iron Age to the recent past.
Colonialism and Genocide; A. Dirk Moses and Dan Stone, editors.  Request via OhioLINK.  Addresses the links between European colonialism and genocide.
Redefining Genocide: Settler Colonialism, Social Death and Ecocide, by Damien Short.  Request via OhioLINK.  Proposes expanding our understanding of genocide to include systematic methods of population destruction that are less obvious, and more insidious, than mass murder.
Confronting Humanity at Its Worst: Social Psychological Perspectives on Genocide; Leonard S. Newman, editor. E-book.  “Explores the psychological and emotional predispositions for extreme intergroup violence, the genocidal mindset, and the roles of obedience and social influence.” --from publisher
Economic Aspects of Genocides, Other Mass Atrocities, and Their Preventions; Charles H. Anderton and Jurgen Brauer, editors.  E-book.  “Demonstrates theoretically, empirically, and with case study evidence how microeconomic incentives (e.g., looting opportunities, survival motivations) and macroeconomic environments (e.g., low growth, negative economic shocks) can dramatically affect genocide risk and prevention.” --from publisher
The Origins of Nazi Genocide: From Euthanasia to the Final Solution, by Henry Friedlander.  E-book.  Examines the often-overlooked Nazi atrocities towards disabled people, and how the segregation and mass murder of disabled people normalized such policies towards ethnic minorities in Nazi Germany.
Forgotten Crimes: The Holocaust and People with Disabilities, by Suzanne E. Evans.  Request via OhioLINK.  Explores the Nazi atrocities towards disabled people; interviews with disabled Holocaust survivors.
Deaf People in Hitler's Europe; Donna F. Ryan and John S. Schuchman, editors.  CS Library 3rd floor, 940.5318 D2786. 
Women in the Holocaust: A Feminist History, by Zoë Waxman.  E-book.  Focuses on gender roles and the narratives of women during the Holocaust.
The Holocaust in Romania: The Destruction of Jews and Gypsies Under the Antonescu Regime, 1940-1944, by Radu Ioanid.  CS Library 3rd floor, 940.5318 I641h. Details anti-Semitic and anti-Romani violence in Romania during World War II.
Antisemitism Before and Since the Holocaust: Altered Contexts and Recent Perspectives; Anthony McElligott, Jeffrey Herf, editors.  E-book.  Discusses the contemporary conspiracy theories of Holocaust denialism and their cultural/political roots.
The Holocaust: A German Historian Examines the Genocide, by Wolfgang Benz. CS Library 3rd floor, 940.5318 B479h.  Details the gradual process by which anti-Semitism became normalized as a political policy in Nazi Germany, culminating in mass murder.
The Nazi Conscience, by Claudia Koonz.  Request via OhioLINK.  Explores the systematic process by which ordinary Germans were carefully inculcated with nationalist, white-supremacist ideals, culminating in the normalization of violence towards certain populations.
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The 2019 Silver Garbage Award Nominations
The reboot of Magnum P.I. leads all programs with 12 nominations, including Worst Drama Series, Worst New Series of the Year, Worst Remake or Spin-Off, and Worst Actor in a Drama Series.  The cancelled Showtime comedy SMILF leads all comedies with 11 nominations, including Worst Comedy Series and Actress for Frankie Shaw, whose allegations of misconduct on the set led to the show’s demise in March after its second season. Shaw has five of the nominations for SMILF, as she was also Executive Producer, and a writer and director of SMILF. 
Not far behind are the sixth and final film of the Sharknado series and the failed revival of 1990s sitcom Murphy Brown, which both netted ten nominations each.  
Among the acting nominees for the Silver Garbage Awards, which celebrates the worst of the past television season include R. Kelly, Lori Loughlin, and Felicity Huffman, who all have made headlines in recent months for their respective legal issues.  Even former White House Press Secretary Anthony Scaramucci is nominated for Worst Special Class Supporting Actor for his week long stint last Winter on Celebrity Big Brother.
The winners will be posted on Saturday September 21, the eve of the 71st Annual Primetime Emmy Awards telecast on Fox.
 WORST NEW SERIES: The Alec Baldwin Show (ABC) Camping (HBO) Magnum P.I. (CBS) Million Dollar Mile (CBS) The Rookie (ABC) The Village (NBC)
 WORST COMEDY SERIES: Abby’s (NBC) Camping (HBO) Fam (CBS) Murphy Brown (CBS) SMILF (Showtime) Splitting Up Together (ABC)
WORST DRAMA SERIES: I’m Dying Up Here (Showtime) Lethal Weapon (Fox) Magnum P.I. (CBS) The Rookie (ABC) Shades of Blue (NBC) The Village (NBC)
 WORST SPECIAL CLASS PROGRAM: The Bad Seed (Lifetime) The Bobby Brown Story (BET) CBS News Presents The Gayle King Interview With R. Kelly (CBS) The Last Sharknado: It’s About Time (SyFy) Megyn Kelly Today (NBC) RENT Live (Fox)
 WORST REALITY PROGRAM: Jersey Shore: Family Vacation (MTV) Leah Remini: Scientology and the Aftermath (A&E) Made in Staten Island (MTV) Million Dollar Mile (CBS) Real Housewives of New York City (Bravo) Who Is America? (Showtime)
 WORST ACTOR IN A COMEDY SERIES: Tone Bell - Fam (CBS) Sacha Baron Cohen - Who Is America? (Showtime) Oliver Hudson - Splitting Up Together (ABC) Ashton Kutcher - The Ranch (Netflix) Dax Shepard - Bless This Mess (ABC) Damon Wayans Jr. - Happy Together (CBS)
 WORST ACTOR IN A DRAMA SERIES: Nathan Fillion - The Rookie (ABC) Rob Lowe - Code Black (CBS) Jay Rodriguez - Magnum P.I. (CBS) Seann William Scott - Lethal Weapon (Fox) Damon Wayans Sr. - Lethal Weapon (Fox) Michael Weatherly - Bull (CBS)
WORST SPECIAL CLASS LEAD ACTOR: Alec Baldwin - The Alec Baldwin Show (ABC) Pauly D - A Double Shot of Love & Jersey Shore: Family Vacation (both MTV) R. Kelly - CBS News Presents The Gayle King Interview With R. Kelly (CBS) Rob Lowe - The Bad Seed (Lifetime) Woody McClain - The Bobby Brown Story (BET) Ian Ziering - The Last Sharknado: It’s About Time (SyFy)
 WORST ACTRESS IN A COMEDY SERIES: Candice Bergen - Murphy Brown (CBS) Nina Dobrev - Fam (CBS) Jenna Fischer - Splitting Up Together (ABC) Jennifer Garner - Camping (HBO) Natalie Morales - Abby’s (NBC) Frankie Shaw - SMILF (Showtime) WORST ACTRESS IN A DRAMA SERIES: Jessica Alba - L.A.’s Finest (Spectrum) Jennifer Carpenter - The Enemy Within (NBC) Marcia Gay Harden - Code Black (CBS) Jennifer Lopez - Shades of Blue (NBC) Michaela McManus - The Village (NBC) Robin Tunney - The Fix (ABC)
WORST SPECIAL CLASS LEAD ACTRESS: Julie Chen-Moonves - Big Brother, Celebrity Big Brother, and The Talk (CBS) Megyn Kelly - Megyn Kelly Today (NBC) Aubrey Peeples - Death of a Cheerleader (Lifetime) Nicole ‘Snooki’ Polizzi - Jersey Shore: Family Vacation (MTV) Tara Reid - The Last Sharknado: It’s About Time (SyFy) Leah Remini - Leah Remini: Scientology and the Aftermath (A&E)
 WORST SUPPORTING ACTOR IN A COMEDY SERIES: Nik Dodani - Murphy Brown (CBS) Brad Garrett - Single Parents (ABC) Miguel Gomez - SMILF (Showtime) Felix Mallard - Happy Together (CBS) Jake McDorman - Murphy Brown (CBS) Brian Stokes Mitchell - Fam (CBS)
 WORST SUPPORTING ACTOR IN A DRAMA SERIES: Scott Cohen - The Fix (ABC) Frankie Faison - The Village (NBC) Brad Garrett - I’m Dying Up Here (Showtime) Zachary Knighton - Magnum P.I. (CBS) Kevin Rahm - Lethal Weapon (Fox) Jussie Smollett - Empire (Fox)
 WORST SPECIAL CLASS SUPPORTING ACTOR: Lorne Cardinal - The Bad Seed (Lifetime) Tate Donovan - Love You To Death (Lifetime) Judah Friedlander - The Last Sharknado: It’s Time (SyFy) Matt Lauer - Leaving Neverland (HBO) Anthony Scaramucci - Celebrity Big Brother (CBS) The Situation - Jersey Shore: Family Vacation (MTV)
 WORST SUPPORTING ACTRESS IN A COMEDY SERIES: Tyne Daly - Murphy Brown (CBS) Faith Ford - Murphy Brown (CBS) Juliette Lewis - Camping (HBO) Lori Loughlin - Fuller House (Netflix) Rosie O’Donnell - SMILF (Showtime) Samara Weaving - SMILF (Showtime)
 WORST SUPPORTING ACTRESS IN A DRAMA SERIES: Drea deMatteo - Shades of Blue (NBC) Ari Graynor - I’m Dying Up Here (Showtime) Amy Hill - Magnum P.I. (CBS)
Lori Loughlin - When Calls The Heart (Hallmark Channel) Keesha Sharp - Lethal Weapon (Fox) Perdita Weeks - Magnum P.I. (CBS)
WORST SPECIAL CLASS SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Cara Buono - The Bad Seed (Lifetime) Gabrielle Dennis - The Bobby Brown Story (Lifetime) Donshea Hopkins - The Bobby Brown Story (Lifetime) Felicity Huffman - When They See Us (Netflix) Dina Lohan - Celebrity Big Brother (CBS) Tori Spelling - The Last Sharknado: It’s Time (SyFy)
 WORST REBOOT/SPIN-OFF: Camping (HBO) - Americanized Re-Boot of 2016 Britcom “Camping” The Conners (ABC) - Spin-Off of 1990s Series, “Roseanne” A Double Shot of Love (MTV) - Re-Boot of “A Double Shot of Love with Tia Tequila” The Last Sharknado: It’s Time (SyFy) - Sixth and FINAL Movie of the Sharknado Series Magnum P.I. (CBS) - Re-boot of the 1980s Action Series Murphy Brown (CBS) - Revival of the 1990s Sitcom
 WORST GUEST PERFORMER IN A COMEDY SERIES: Kevin Bacon - SMILF (Showtime) Laura Benanti (as Melania Trump) - The Late Show with Stephen Colbert (CBS) Connie Britton - SMILF (Showtime) Matt Damon (as Brett Kavanaugh) - Saturday Night Live (NBC) Ken Jeong - The Kids Are Alright (ABC) Ali Larter - Splitting Up Together (ABC) Damon Wayans Sr. - Happy Together (CBS)
WORST GUEST PERFORMER IN A DRAMA SERIES: Chris Diamantapoulos - The Twilight Zone (CBS All-Access) Lars Mikkelsen - House of Cards (Netflix) Elisabeth Rohm - Magnum P.I. (CBS) Rebecca Romjin - Star Trek: Discovery (CBS All-Access) Bob Saget - The Good Cop (Netflix) Ben Vereen - Magnum P.I. (CBS)
 WORST PERFORMANCE BY A CAST IN TELEVISION: Camping (HBO) Jersey Shore: Family Vacation (MTV) The Last Sharknado: It’s Time (SyFy) Magnum P.I. (CBS) SMILF (Showtime) Splitting Up Together (ABC)
 WORST WRITING IN A COMEDY SERIES: Abby’s (NBC) Camping (HBO) Happy Together (CBS) Murphy Brown (CBS) SMILF (Showtime) Splitting Up Together (ABC)
WORST DIRECTING IN A COMEDY SERIES: Abby’s (NBC) Camping (HBO) Happy Together (CBS) Murphy Brown (CBS) SMILF (Showtime) Splitting Up Together (ABC)
WORST WRITING IN A DRAMA SERIES: The Enemy Within (NBC) I’m Dying Up Here (Showtime) Magnum P.I. (CBS) NCIS: Los Angeles (CBS) The Rookie (ABC) The Village (NBC)
WORST DIRECTING IN A DRAMA SERIES: Hawaii Five-0 (CBS) Lethal Weapon (Fox) Magnum P.I. (CBS) The Rookie (ABC) Shades of Blue (NBC) The Village (NBC)
WORST SPECIAL CLASS WRITING: The Bobby Brown Story (BET) Death of a Cheerleader (Lifetime) Kim Possible (Disney) Love You To Death (Lifetime) The Last Sharknado: It’s Time (Lifetime) Victoria Gotti: My Father’s Daughter (Lifetime)
WORST SPECIAL CLASS DIRECTING: The Bad Seed (Lifetime) The Bobby Brown Story (BET) Death of a Cheerleader (Lifetime) Kim Possible (Disney) The Last Sharknado: It’s Time (SyFy) The Super Bowl LIII Halftime Show (CBS)
WORST SCREEN DUO:
Rob Lowe and either McKenna Grace (The Bad Seed, Lifetime) or Marcia Gay Harden (Code Black, CBS) R. Kelly & Gayle King (CBS News Presents the Gayle King Interview with R. Kelly, CBS) Any two housemates (Jersey Shore: Family Vacation, MTV) Candice Bergen & Jake McDorman (Murphy Brown, CBS) Frankie Shaw and Rosie O’Donnell (SMILF, Showtime) Jenna Fischer & Oliver Hudson (Splitting Up Together, ABC)
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uneminuteparseconde · 5 years
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Des concerts à Paris et alentour
Mai 13. Foals – Bataclan 14. Romain Berteau + Claus & Clausen + Borja Flames + Ambeyance (fest. Switch) – théâtre de Vanves 14. Erikm & Anthony Pateras + Dieb13 & Burkhard Stangl – Instants chavirés (Montreuil) 14. Ramona Cordova + Charlène Darling – Mains d'oeuvre (Saint-Ouen) 16. Saudaá Group + Orgue-Paysage – Fondation Cartier 16. Voiski + Myako & Basses Terres + Marylou (RA Paris) – Silencio 16. Franck Vigroux & Antoine Schmitt : "Chronostasis" + Quatuor Impact & Giani Caserotto + Open Women Orchestra (fest. Switch) – théâtre de Vanves 17. Crave + Zaltan & PAM + Full Circle + Low Jack + Oko dj + Clara3000 (RA Paris) – Dizonord (gratuit) 17. Ujjaya + Archétype – Salle Icare|Médiathèque (Vélizy-Villacoublay) (gratuit sur résa) 17. Philip Glass : Études pour piano – Salle Pierre-Boulez|Philharmonie 17. Jacco Gardner + Chris Cohen + Eerie Wanda + Tonn3rr3 + Discovery Zone (Le Beau fest.) – Trabendo 17. Hen Ogledd + Faune – Instants chavirés (Montreuil) 17. Inigo Kennedy + Möd4rn + Stephanie Sykes – Rex Club 17. Polar Inertia + Dement3d + Ninos Do Brasil + Lokier + A strange Wedding + Full Circle – La Machine 17. Surgeon + S.Y.R.O.B + DJ Jee + Cénile Technorama – NF-34 18. Bruce Brubaker & Max Cooper : Glasstronica – Cité de la musique|Philharmonie 18. Eliane Radigue : musique (diff.) pour "Continuum" de Félicie d'Estienne d'Orves – Centre Pompidou 18. Planningtorock – Gaîté lyrique 18. Thurston Moore +  HAHA Sounds Collective + L'Éclair + Luis Ake + Domotic + Pantin Plage (dj) (Le Beau fest.) – Trabendo 18. Croatian Amor + Re:Ni + dj Sacom + Hanah (RA Paris) – Badaboum 18. Brandt Brauer Frick + Collectif sin ~ + Axel Rigaud (fest. Switch) – théâtre de Vanves 18. Orphx + Konkurs (Blush Response & Sarin) + Blush Response + O/H – tba 18. Function + dj Deep + Lewis Fautzi – Concrete 19. DJ Sundae + Crystallmess + Betty + Toma Kami (RA Paris) – Concrete (gratuit) 19. Julien Claus – Ancienne Brasserie Bouchoule (Montreuil) (gratuit) 19. Commando Koko + The Soft Rider + We Will Woo ! – L'International 22. Housewives – Supersonic (gratuit) 23. Lots in Kiev + Thot + Brusque – Petit Bain 23. 1919 + Guerre froide + Pest Modern + Warum Joe – Gibus 24. Beak> + TVAM – Gaîté lyrique 24. Shonen Knife – Petit Bain 24. Antichildleague + Corps + Geography of Hell – Les Voûtes 24. Othello Aubern + City Dragon + None + Graal – Espace B 24. Felix Kubin & Hubert Zemler + Phuong Dan + RVDS & Best Boy Electric + Ron Morelli – La Station 24. Codex Empire + Dimitri Rivière + Nari Fshr + Sina XX b2b Munsinger – Petit Bain 25. Sydney Valette + Blind Delon + Ruines – Supersonic (gratuit) 25. Xeno & Oaklander + Automelodi + Void Vision – Petit Bain 25. Rebekah + Schwefelgelb + JKS + Regal + Parfait – tba 26. Jérôme Poret – Ancienne Brasserie Bouchoule (Montreuil) (gratuit) 26. New Berlin + Euromilliard – Pointe Lafayette 27. Me Donner + Somaticae + Nani ∞ Guru – Espace B 27. USA Nails + Dead Arms + Cohaagen – ESS'Pace 28. Alice in Chains + Black Rebel Motorcycle Club – Olympia ||COMPLET|| 29. Flotation Toy Warning + Raoul Vignal – Petit Bain 29. Unit Moebius + Scorpion violente + Prettiest Eyes (fest. Ideal Trouble) – La Station 29. Pizza Noise Mafia + Laz (Air Lqd & Lost Sound Bytes) + Bear Bones, Lay Low + Summer Satana + Tav Exotic + La Souris & l'éléphant + DJ Athome (fest. Ideal Trouble) – Centre Wallonie-Bruxelles 29. Big Brave + My Disco + Tu brûles mon esprit – Instants chavirés (Montreuil) 30. Cuntre (Lionel Fernandez & Nicolas Mazet) + Couloir Gang (fest. Ideal Trouble) – Le Zorba 30. AnD (dj) + Dyen + Parfait [Blawan + ABSL : ANNULÉ] – NF-34 31. François Bonnet + Knud Viktor + Jim O'Rourke + Florian Hecker (fest. Akousma) – Studio 104|Maison de la Radio 31. De Ambassade + Beau Wanzer + Anna Funk Damage + Le Matin + Bernardino Feminielli + Unas + Fiesta en el vecchio (fest. Ideal Trouble) – La Station
Juin 01. Eryck Abecassis & Reinhold Friedl + Hilde Marie Holsen + Anthony Pateras + Lucy Railton (fest. Akousma) – Studio 104|Maison de la Radio 01. Millimetric + Phase fatale + Terence Fixmer + Dersee + Raffaele Attanasio + 14Anger + Arnaud Rebotini & David Caretta – Studio de Lendit (La Plaine-Saint-Denis) 01/02. Metronomy + Laurent Garnier + Ricardo Villalobos + Mr Oizo + Bonobo (dj) + Yves Tumor + Marie Davidson + Pond + Sleaford Mods... (fest. We Love Green) – Bois de Vincennes 02. Bernard Parmegiani + Jean Schwarz (fest. Akousma) – Studio 104|Maison de la Radio 02. Vanishing Twin + Eye (fest. Ideal Trouble) – Lafayette Anticipations 04. Kurt Liedwart + Billy Roisz + Julien Ottavi + Eryck Abecassis – Instants chavirés (Montreuil) 05. Shellac – La Maroquinerie 05. Institute + Last Night + The Cherry Bones – L'International 05. Otzeki – Safari Boat 06. Tim Hecker & Konoyo Ensemble + Mondkopf + Kelly Moran (Villette sonique fest.) – Cabaret sauvage 06. Umwelt + Falhaber + VII Circle – NF-34 07. Danny Brown (Villette sonique fest.) – Périphérique 07. Constant Mongrel + Computerstaat + Warm Swords – Espace B 07. Kuss + HDN – La Plage|Glazart 08. Julia Holter + Cate Le Bon (Villette sonique fest.) – Trabendo 08. Deena Abdelwahed + David August + Ross from Friends + Objekt (dj) + Apollo noir (dj) (Villette sonique fest.) – Grande Halle 08. Thurston Moore Group + Modern Men – La Maroquinerie 08. Nova Materia + Maria Violenza + Aïsha Devi + Belmont Witch + Black Midi + Coucou Chloé + Front de cadeaux + Juan Wauters + Krampf (dj) + Musique chienne + Nyoko Dokbaë + Novelist + Shanti Celeste + Szun Waves + Wiki (Villette sonique fest.) – parc de la Villette (gratuit) 09. Fontaines DC + Crack Cloud + Efrim Menuck + Bracco + Mdou Moctar + Corridor + The Messthetics + Warm Drag + Borja Flames + Myako + Zaltan & Oko + Tiger Tiger + Sinkane 09. Stereolab + Jonathan Bree + Anémone (Villette sonique fest.) – Grande Halle 12. The Soft Moon – Safari Boat 12. Rouge Gorge – L'International 12. Matmos + John Wiese – Instants chavirés (Montreuil) 13. Minuit Machine + Hørd + Marble Slave – Supersonic (gratuit) 13. Christian Death + Little Nemo – Gibus 13. Fat White Family – Élysée Montmartre 13. The Horrorist + Poison Point + Melania + Philipp Strobel – NF-34 14/15. Jessica 93 + Year of No Light + Hangman's Chair + JC Satan + Vox Low + White Heat (15 ans de New Noise) – Trabendo 15. Karen Gwyer + Gudrun Gut + Dorit Chrysler joue Laurie Spiegel – Gaîté lyrique 15. Ensemble Citrouille + Félicie Bazealire + Foxtrt + Delphine Dora + Manolito + Anna Serra + Sophie Agnet & Olivier Benoit + Trans Aéolian Transmission + Hippie Diktat (fest. Les Oreilles libres) – Théâtre Les Thénardiers (Montreuil) 16. Siglo XX + The Arch – La Maroquinerie 16. Plaid – Petit Bain 16. Vomir + Straub Mocky + Achille + Strie + LV2 + Trans Kabar + Club Sieste (fest. Les Oreilles libres) – Théâtre Les Thénardiers (Montreuil) 18. Simon Whetham + Estelle Schorpp – Instants chavirés (Montreuil) 19. Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks – La Gaîté lyrique 21. Anne Clark : perf. pour "Ocean 21" de Maggie Boggaart – Auditorium Saint-Germain 22. The Intelligence + Flatworms – La Maroquinerie 22. LA Witch – Black Star 23. La Pince + Leon + Howdoyoudance + Polar Polar Polar Polar – Cirque électrique 26. Magma – Salle Pierre-Boulez|Philharmonie 26. Cannibale – Safari Boat 26. Caterina Barbieri + SKY H1 – La Gaîté lyrique 26. Pigalle – La Maroquinerie 26. Daniel Menche + Point invisible + Tzii – Instants chavirés (Montreuil) 27. Plomb + Perm36 + Pour X raisons – Cirque électrique 28. To Live & Shave in LA + Carrageenan + TTTT – Instants chavirés (Montreuil) 28/29. Rammstein – La Défense Arena (Nanterre) ||COMPLET||
Juillet 02. Interpol – Olympia 04. Cat Power + H-Burns (fest. Days off) – Salle Pierre Boulez|Philharmonie 05. Klimperei, Sacha Czerwone, David Fenech, Denis Frajerman & Christophe Micusnule – Chair de poule (gratuit) 05. Pantha du Prince + Scratch Massive (fest. Days off) – Cité de la musique|Philharmonie 05. I Hate Models + Jardin + Mount Kimbie + Oktober Lieber + Rodhad + Mor Elian + Olivia... (The Peacock Society fest.) – Parc floral 05. The B-52's – Olympia 05/06. The Psychotics Monks + La Jungle + Yachtclub + Zombie Zombie + Frustration + Fleuves noirs + Bruit noir + Le Singe blanc + Le Sacre du tympan + Enablers + Os Noctambulos + The Scanners... (fest. La Ferme électrique) 06. Jonsi & Alex Somers jouent "Riceboy Sleeps" (fest. Days off) – Salle Pierre Boulez|Philharmonie 06. Helena Hauff b2b DJ Stingray + Jon Hopkins + Motor City Drum Ensemble + Len Faki + Robert Hood + Octavian + The Black Madonna + Clara! + Nicola Cruz... (The Peacock Society fest.) – Parc floral 07. Jonsi, Alex Somers & Paul Corley : "Liminal Soundbath" (fest. Days off) – Cité de la musique|Philharmonie 07. Ministry – La Machine 07/08. Thom Yorke (fest. Days off) – Salle Pierre Boulez|Philharmonie 08. Gossip – Salle Pleyel 08. Melvins – La Plage|Glazart 11. Full of Hell + The Body + Pilori – Gibus 11. Masada + Sylvie Courvoisier & Mark Feldman + Mary Halvorson quartet + Craig Taborn + Trigger + Erik Friedlander & Mike Nicolas + John Medeski trio + Nova quartet + Gyan Riley & Julian Lage + Brian Marsella trio + Ikue Mori + Kris Davis + Peter Evans + Asmodeus : John Zorn's Marathon Bagatelles – Salle Pleyel 11. Flamingods + Warmduscher + Triptides (Garage MU fest.) – La Station 12. Tomaga + Утро + Tôle froide + Society of Silence + Sharif Lafrey + Elzo (dj) (Garage MU fest.) – La Station 11>13. Kraftwerk (fest. Days off) – Philharmonie 13. The Will Gregory Moog Ensemble (fest. Days off) – Le Studio|Philharmonie 13. Chloé & Vassilena Serafimova : "Sequenza" + Apparat (fest. Days off) – Cité de la musique|Philharmonie 13. La Récré (Garage MU fest.) – canal de l'Ourcq 13. Metz + Bo Ningen + Ashinoa + Die Ufer + Panstarrs (Garage MU fest.) – La Station 17. Grand Blanc – Safari Boat 18. Neurosis + Yob – Bataclan
Août 18. The Driver – But Mortemart|Bois de Boulogne 23>25. The Cure + Aphex Twin... (fest. Rock en scène) – parc de Saint-Cloud 26/27. Patti Smith – Olympia ||COMPLET|| 28. Arnaud Rebotini – Safari Boat
Septembre 05. Oh Sees – Bataclan 12. Blawan – NF-34 14. Clan of Xymox + Plomb – Gibus 14. Danny Elfman & le Grand Orchestre d'Ile-de-France : cinéconcert sur "Alice au Pays des merveilles" de Tim Burton – Salle Pierre Boulez|Philharmonie 20. Spiral Stairs + Canshaker Pi – Olympic café 23>25. John Cale – Cité de la musique|Philharmonie
Octobre 05. Nuit de l'orgue avec des œuvres d'Éliane Radigue, Arvo Pärt, Olivier Messiaen, Phillip Glass, Nico Muhly, Jonathan Fitoussi... (Nuit blanche) – Salle Pierre Boulez|Philharmonie (gratuit) 06. Daughters – La Maroquinerie 08. Sleep – Bataclan 09/10. Ty Segall & Freedom Band – La Cigale 11. New Order – Grand Rex 14. King Gizzard & Tle Lizard Wizard – Olympia 17. Puppetmastaz – Trabendo 18. Dream Syndicate – Petit Bain 19. Sisters of Mercy – Bataclan 19. Pixies – Olympia
Novembre 08. Bedroom Community – Cité de la musique|Philharmonie 08. Boy Harscher – Trabendo 10. Amiina : cinéconcert sur "Fantomas" de Louis Feuillade – Le Studio|Philharmonie 10. Ôlafur Atnald + Hugar – Salle Pierre Boulez|Philharmonie 17. Nitzer Ebb – La Machine 24. The Young Gods + Les Tétines noires – La Machine 26. Wardruna – Olympia
Décembre 06. Phillip Glass Ensemble : cinéconcert sur "Koyaanisqatsi" de Godfrey Reggio – Salle Pierre Boulez|Philharmonie 07. Phillip Glass Ensemble : cinéconcert sur "Powaqqatsi" de Godfrey Reggio – Salle Pierre Boulez|Philharmonie 08. Phillip Glass Ensemble : cinéconcert sur "Naqoyqatsi" de Godfrey Reggio – Salle Pierre Boulez|Philharmonie
2020
Janvier 04. Rokia Traoré + Ballaké Cissoko & Vincent Segal – Salle Pierre Boulez|Philharmonie
Février 16. Orchestral Manoeuvre in the Dark – La Cigale
Mars 07. Ensemble intercontemporain joue Steve Reich : cinéconcert sur un film de Gerhard Richter – Salle Pierre Boulez|Philharmonie 20. Ensemble Dedalus joue "Occam Ocean" d'Éliane Radigue – Le Studio|Philharmonie 21/22. Laurie Anderson : "The Art of Falling" – Cité de la musique|Philharmonie
Mai 08. Max Richter : "Infra" + Jlin + Ian William Craig – Cité de la musique|Philharmonie 09. Max Richter : "Voices" – Salle Pierre Boulez|Philharmonie 10. Max Richter : "Recomposed" & "Three Worlds" – Salle Pierre Boulez|Philharmonie 24. Damon Albarn – Salle Pierre Boulez|Philharmonie
en gras : les derniers ajouts / in bold: the last news
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dustedmagazine · 5 years
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Joe Morris / Do Yeon Kim — Macrocosm (Glacial Erratic)
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Morris photo by Scott Friedlander
Macrocosm by Joe Morris and Do Yeon Kim
It’s tempting to listen to an improvised duo reductively, since doing so allows the listener a relatively obvious way to comprehend what’s happening. There’s the personal history of each player, and the history of their instruments. There’s the agreed-upon and discovered traditions (or lack thereof) invoked by both the players and instrumental combinations. And there’s the influence of situation.  
In this case you have veteran American multi-instrumentalist Joe Morris wielding an acoustic guitar. In addition to playing jazz-rooted and free improvisation with the likes of Mary Halvorson, Gerald Cleaver and Anthony Braxton, Morris also teaches at the New England Conservatory. Do Yeon Kim is that institution’s first enrolled gayageum player. Her instrument (sometimes also called a kayagum) is a Korean zither related to the Chinese ghuzeng and the Japanese Koto that can be heard in both classical and folk music. Kim may be the first musician to bring her instrument to the NEC, but she’s by no means the first to improvise with it. It is one of the key instruments used in sanjo, a musical style that dates from the 19th century.
Sanjo involves improvisational development of melodies and tempos; to hear how it sounded during the early years of sound recording, check out the LP Scattered Melodies. To these ears, there are clear roles. The gayageum articulates tunes and spaces, while the accompanying percussionist adds emphasis and regulates tension. Freed from tradition’s prescriptions, Kim not only plucks stark, fragmented tunes. She also exploits the zither’s potential to generate rich, writhing thickets of sound. 
The improvisations on Macrocosm involve a moment-to-moment negotiation of responsibility reminiscent of the free approaches first associated with English players like Derek Bailey, Evan Parker and John Stevens. Morris’ crab-walking progressions, sudden string-snaps, and occasional forays into unconventional techniques all betray his deep acquaintance with that music. Kim may not have as many decades of practice and study on her side, but she displays an intuitive grasp of one of that music’s existential dilemmas; do you create a dialogue via attentive response, or do you go your own way and trust that the combination of what each player does will create an instant form that is worth the sonic and temporal space it takes up?  
At any given moment the answer might lay at a different point on the spectrum, and both Kim and Morris travel it with lightning fingering and split-second decisions about the values of contrast and complementarity. So while one can glean a lot by listening analytically, the album title’s prescription is at least as valid. The universe contains many people and worlds, and so does this music made by two people who, as the saying goes, contain multitudes. So let go, fall in, and see where the winds of sound, reaction, and intuition take you.  
Bill Meyer
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artbookdap · 2 years
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Thanks @baltimorephotospace for these photos of ‘Autophoto Cars & Photography, 1900 to Now.’ #Repost・・・Now in stock! Autophoto explores photography's longstanding and generative relationship to the automobile. Since its invention, the automobile has reshaped our landscape, extended our geographic horizons and radically altered our conception of space and time, influencing the practice of photographers worldwide. The book shows how the car provided photographers with new subject matter and a new way of exploring the world. It brings together 500 works made by 100 historical and contemporary artists from around the world, including Robert Adams, Brassaï, Edward Burtynsky, Langdon Clay, John Divola, Robert Doisneau, William Eggleston, Elliott Erwitt, Walker Evans, Robert Frank, Lee Friedlander, Anthony Hernandez, Yasuhiro Ishimoto, Jacques Henri Lartigue, Joel Meyerowitz, Daido Moriyama, Catherine Opie, Martin Parr, Rosângela Rennó, Ed Ruscha, Hans-Christian Schink, Malick Sidibé, Stephen Shore and Henry Wessel. Capturing formal qualities such as the geometric design of roadways or reflections in a rear view mirror, these photographers invite us to look at the world of the automobile in a new way. Autophoto also includes other projects, such as a series of car models that cast a fresh eye on the history of automobile design, created specifically for the Fondation Cartier show by French artist Alain Bublex, plus a comparative history of automobile design and photography, essays by scholars and quotes by participating artists. @atelier_exb @fondationcartier https://www.instagram.com/p/Cdbhd5bJe0Z/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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techcrunchappcom · 4 years
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New Post has been published on https://techcrunchapp.com/the-latest-china-toughens-travel-rules-for-xinjiang-capital-national-news/
The Latest: China toughens travel rules for Xinjiang capital | National News
A government employee disinfects a public school as a measure against the spread of the new coronavirus, in the Taguatinga neighborhood of Brasilia, Brazil, Tuesday, July 28, 2020. The local government has began preparing for the safe reopening of schools in mid-August, as restrictions related to the COVID-19 lockdown are eased.
A sign hangs outside Bruno’s Tavern in New Orleans on Tuesday, July 14, 2020. Bruno’s is one of many bars around the city that shut down under new restrictions the state announced over the weekend to fight the spread of coronavirus. Bars in New Orleans had been allowed to open, with limited capacity, a month earlier when the number of hospitalizations from the virus in Louisiana was in decline.
Aziah Sajerstein, who works as a volunteer at the Cat Cafe South Beach, wears a protective face mask and gloves as she sanitizes touch points during the coronavirus pandemic, Wednesday, July 29, 2020, in Miami Beach, Fla. The cafe offers a place for cat lovers to spend time with cats, which are also available for adoption. The business, independently owned by Celyta Jackson, will be closing at the end of the week as the tourism sector in Miami-Dade County is suffering due to the pandemic.
GermBlast employee Jade Davis fumigates disinfectant onto student lockers at Bowie Middle School in Odessa, Texas on Tuesday, July 28, 2020. The cleaning crew that Davis is part of is one of many measures to be implemented to help ensure the safety of students and school staff from COVID-19 in the case of an in-person return to school in Odessa.
Volunteer Rachel Friedland prepares to load food in a car at a kosher food drive-thru distribution site, Wednesday, July 29, 2020, at the Greater Miami Jewish Federation building in Miami.
Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards holds up his own mask, taken off while he was speaking, to remind Louisiana residents that a highly effective thing within their power to do to prevent the spread of COVID-19 is to simply wear a mask, Tuesday, July 28, 2020, at a press conference update on the state’s COVID-19 situation at the Governor’s Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness in Baton Rouge, La.
Passengers arrive at Heathrow Airport, in London, Sunday July 26, 2020. The British government has announced 14-day quarantine restrictions from Sunday, for people arriving into England from certain countries including Spain, after Covid-19 second wave fears saw the European country struck off the UK’s safe list.
Silva Cossa, the caretaker, looks up as he ties ribbons onto the fence to represents a South African who has died from Covid-19, at St James Presbyterian church in Bedford Gardens, Johannesburg, South Africa, Wednesday, July 29, 2020.
Volunteer Malka Rodrig unpacks meals at a kosher food drive-thru distribution site, Wednesday, July 29, 2020, at the Greater Miami Jewish Federation building in Miami.
A funeral home worker wearing a full protective gear to protect himself from the spread of the new coronavirus waits to enter La Verbena cemetery in Guatemala City, Tuesday, July 28, 2020.
FILE – In this Tuesday, July 28, 2020 file photo, Britain’s Prime Minister Boris Johnson speaks to local people at the Canal Side Heritage Centre in Beeston near Nottingham, England. Johnson is looking for a spokesperson with broadcasting experience— and a thick skin — to become the government’s face at televised media briefings. The government placed a job ad Wednesday, July 29 on the governing Conservative Party’s website seeking applicants with news judgment, the ability to remain calm under pressure and “excellent risk management and crisis communications skills.”
A man sunbathes at a park in Hong Kong Thursday, July 30, 2020. As of Wednesday, Hong Kong reported over 3,000 coronavirus infections, with dozens of deaths. Businesses such as bars, karaoke bars and amusement parks remain temporarily closed.
A new work of art entitled ‘The End’ by artist Heather Phillipson newly unveiled on the fourth plinth in Trafalgar Square in London, Thursday, July 30, 2020. Described as representing “exuberance and unease” and a “monument to hubris and impending collapse”, The End, by British artist Heather Phillipson, will stay in place until spring 2022.
People riding the subway wear face masks to protect against the spread of the coronavirus in Taipei, Taiwan, Thursday, July 30, 2020.
A medical staff takes a sample for a voluntary coronavirus disease test (COVID-19) at the new corona test station at the ‘Hochfelln’ service station on the A8 motorway between Salzburg and Munich near Bergen, Germany, Thursday, July 30, 2020.
Dr. Deborah Birx, U.S. Global Aids Coordinator & U. S. Special Representative for Global Health Diplomacy, left, speaks with Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam, right, and a roundtable of community and state health officials inside the Patrick Henry Building in Richmond, Va. Tuesday, July 28, 2020.
FILE – In this June 26, 2020, file photo Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Dr. Anthony Fauci, center, speaks as Vice President Mike Pence, right, and Dr. Deborah Birx, White House coronavirus response coordinator, left, listen during a news conference with members of the Coronavirus task force at the Department of Health and Human Services in Washington. Fauci has warned that the United States could soon see 100,000 infections per day. “We haven’t even begun to see the end of it yet,” Fauci said during a talk hosted by Stanford University’s School of Medicine.
Employees disinfect a closed mall in Mumbai, Thursday, July 30, 2020. Malls and market complexes will reopen on Aug. 5. However theaters, food courts and gyms will remain closed.
Employees disinfect a closed mall in Mumbai, Thursday, July 30, 2020. Malls and market complexes will reopen on Aug. 5. However theaters, food courts and gyms will remain closed.
Dr. Yomaris Pena, of SOMOS Community Care in New York, disinfects chairs at the new COVID-19 testing site at Pinellas Community Church on Wednesday, July 29, 2020, in St. Petersburg, Fla. A new free testing site opened Wednesday in south St. Petersburg with the help of New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo. Cuomo sent 7,500 tests to seed the site at the church. Tests are by appointment only, but don’t require symptoms or exposure. And since appointments are required, the testing site doesn’t require those seeking a test to wait in line or come in a vehicle.
Wearing masks to curb the spread of the new coronavirus, Brazil’s President Jair Bolsonaro and his wife Michelle Bolsonaro, arrive to attend the launching of a rights guarantee program for rural women, at the Planalto Presidential Palace in Brasilia, Brazil, Wednesday, July 29, 2020.
People wearing face masks line up to have their coronavirus rapid tests as they hope to use the government’s transportation assistance program to return to their outlying provinces on Tuesday, July 28, 2020 at a stadium in Manila, Philippines. Hundreds of people who were stuck in the capital due to travel restrictions during the lockdown stayed at a crowded stadium as they wait for free rides back to their provinces.
An Indian worker crosses a street holding a shovel during monsoon rains in Prayagraj, in the northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, Wednesday, July 29, 2020.
A man carries milk vessels and rides a bike in the monsoon rains in Prayagraj, in the northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, Wednesday, July 29, 2020.
Women wearing face masks wait to join a parade in Bali, Indonesia, on Thursday, July 30, 2020. Indonesia’s resort island of Bali will reopen for domestic tourists on Friday after months of virus lockdown.
A woman wearing a face mask carries an offering to local deities on her head during a parade in Bali, Indonesia on Thursday, July 30, 2020. Indonesia’s resort island of Bali will reopen for domestic tourists on Friday after months of virus lockdown.
Residents sit spaced apart to practice social distancing as a precaution against the new coronavirus outbreak as they access free wifi on their mobile phones at Jatirahayu village office in Bekasi on the outskirts of Jakarta, Indonesia, Wednesday, July 29, 2020.
Indonesian students wear face masks to help curb the spread of the new coronavirus as they access free wifi on their mobile phones at Jatirahayu village office in Bekasi on the outskirts of Jakarta, Indonesia, Wednesday, July 29, 2020.
In this July 29, 2020 photo made available by the Monroe County Sherif’ss Office, Fla., shows Yohana Anahi Gonzalez. Gonzalez and her partner Jose Antonio Freire Interian, both COVID positive, were arrested, Thursday, July 29, 2020, in the Florida Keys after authorities said they violated quarantine rules. The rare arrests underscore the fervent national debate over how to enforce rules on masks and self-quarantines.
FILE – In this Dec. 13, 2019, file photo, Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine speaks about his plans for the coming year during an interview at the Governor’s Residence in Columbus, Ohio. Ohio’s Republican governor was hailed as prophetic for his decisive steps to shut down schools and stop the state’s presidential primary election early during the coronavirus outbreak. Since then, he’s found navigating a path out of the state’s pandemic shutdown to be a bumpy one.
District of Columbia Mayor Muriel Bowser speaks during an announcement that District of Columbia public schools will be all virtual through Nov. 6, during a news conference, Thursday, July 30, 2020, in Washington.
Rob Glassman, general manager of the Over the Top rental linens company, protests in support of the live events industry receiving federal aid outside of the office of Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., during the coronavirus pandemic, Thursday, July 30, 2020, in Miami. Many small businesses in the events industry have been shut down since March due to the pandemic.
In this July 29, 2020 photo made available by the Monroe County Sherif’ss Office, Fla., shows Jose Antonio Freire Interian. Interian and his partner Yohana Anahi Gonzalez, both COVID positive, were arrested, Thursday, July 29, 2020, in the Florida Keys after authorities said they violated quarantine rules. The rare arrests underscore the fervent national debate over how to enforce rules on masks and self-quarantines.
A couple of tourists, one wearing a mask, walk towards the fountains in Trafalgar Square in Trafalgar Square in London, Thursday, July 30, 2020.
A sign is posted on a pole along the main street to encourage visitors and residents to wear face coverings while walking around Monday, July 27, 2020, in the mountain tourist town of Georgetown, Colo.
President Donald Trump speaks during a news conference at the White House, Thursday, July 30, 2020, in Washington.
A woman in a face mask speaks on the phone on a sidewalk during the coronavirus pandemic in downtown Ottawa, Ontario, Friday, July 24, 2020.
FILE – In this March 31, 2020, file photo, a sign applauding health care workers is displayed outside the University of Oklahoma Medical Center in Oklahoma City. The head of coronavirus response at the university medical center says an increase in the number of younger Oklahomans dying as a result of the illness caused by the virus has become a worry. Dr. Dale Bratzler said Friday, July 24, 2020, that even though most deaths remain in the 65 and older age group, the increase in deaths among those 36-49 years old shows it can kill younger people as well.
Des Moines Area Quilters Guild member Deanna Wilson, of West Des Moines, Iowa, chooses a face mask kit that once completed will be distributed to Des Moines Public Schools students, Thursday, July 30, 2020, in Des Moines, Iowa.
Visitors to Karmel Plaza wear face masks as they gather Wednesday, July 22, 2020 in Minneapolis. Gov. Tim Walz issued a statewide mandate Wednesday requiring Minnesotans to wear masks in indoor public spaces.
Jean White and her great-grandson Mason Shumpert, 7, of Tupelo, wear their masks as they shop the vegetable aisle at Todd’s in Tupelo on Friday, July 24, 2020 as the coronavirus earns attention in Northeast Mississippi.
A street barber wearing a face mask to protect against the coronavirus attends to his customer near a banner on the pandemic which reads “Discover early” in Beijing, Thursday, July 30, 2020. China is stepping up testing for COVID-19 in an attempt to get a handle on new outbreaks that have defied the country’s considerable success in containing the coronavirus that was first detected in the central city of Wuhan late last year.
Residents at a Uniting Gen Regen AOD residential facility try on new masks in Melbourne, Thursday, July 30, 2020. Australia’s coronavirus hot spot, Victoria state, will make wearing masks compulsory after reporting a record more than 700 new cases on Thursday, mostly among the vulnerable residents of aged care homes.
A fan wearing a face masks to help protect against the spread of the new coronavirus cheers during the KBO league game between Doosan Bears and LG Twins in Seoul, South Korea, Sunday, July 27, 2020. Masked fans hopped, sang and shouted cheering slogans in baseball stadiums in South Korea on Sunday as authorities began bringing back spectators in professional sports games amid the coronavirus pandemic.
BEIJING — China is tightening travel restrictions in the capital of the Xinjiang region amid a COVID-19 outbreak in the northwestern city.
People arriving in Urumqi from regions considered to have high infection risk must undergo a two-week quarantine. Others arriving from less risky areas most show proof of good health. Locals “in principle” must stay in the city or show proof of health to be allowed to leave.
Hong Kong, meanwhile, continues to see a third wave of infections, with almost 150 new cases reported Friday to bring its total to 3,151 cases and 25 deaths.
Despite that, authorities issued an order Thursday allowing restaurants to operate under limited hours and with limited capacity. But businesses such as bars, karaoke bars and amusement parks still must remain closed.
HERE’S WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT THE VIRUS OUTBREAK:
— Florida tallies another record high daily deaths
— India says herd immunity won’t work, need vaccine
— Health officials Birx, Fauci recommend face shields, masks
— Deaths are mounting rapidly in the U.S., and cases are rising in close to 30 states in all. The outbreak’s center of gravity seems to be shift from the Sun Belt toward the Midwest.
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gregwdbk · 6 years
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Playlist for January 25, 2018
Snail Mail - Stick Listen/purchase Emily Yacina - Flower Listen/purchase Lisa/Liza - Lady Day on the Radio Listen/purchase Anthony Friedlander - Action Hero Moses Sumney - Plastic Listen/purchase Ani DiFranco - 4th of July Listen/purchase Wizard Apprentice - A Debt Listen/purchase Pet - Got No Time Listen/purchase Shelf Life - Speed Trap Listen/purchase Hovvdy - Petal Listen/purchase Porches - House Listen/purchase Drake - Jungle Listen/purchase Lido Pimienta - La Capacidad Listen/purchase Jay Som - Baybee Listen/purchase Xenia Rubinos - Mexican Chef Listen/purchase
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gayhardmens82 · 4 years
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Jeffrey Lloyd gets a raw cop peewee from Thomas Friedl Lawndale
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uglyducklingpresse · 7 years
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17 Years of 6x6 Poets
#1. Edmund Berrigan, Filip Marinovich, Sheila E. Murphy, Julien Poirier, Lev Rubinstein (tr. Matvei Yankelevich), Kathrine Sowerby   #2. John M. Bennett, Joel Dailey, Arkadii Dragomoshchenko (tr. Evgeny Pavlov with Benjamin Friedlander), Michael Ford, R. Cole Heinowitz, Genya Turovskaya   #3. John Coletti, Nathaniel Farrell, Eugene Ostashevsky, Elizabeth Reddin, Cedar Sigo, Samantha Visdaate   #4. Brandon Downing, W.B. Keckler, Anna Moschovakis, Dmitri Prigov (tr. Christopher Mattison), Aaron Tieger, Sam Truitt   #5. Micah Ballard, Mariana Ruiz Firmat, Frank Lima, Beth Murray, Philip Nikolayev, Keith Waldrop   #6. Carlos Blackburn, Joe Elliot, Arielle Greenberg, Mark Lamoreux, Alicia Rabins, Lewis Warsh   #7.David Cameron, Steve Dalachinsky, Joanna Fuhrman, Jason Lynn, Tomaž Šalamun (tr. Joshua Beckman), Jacqueline Waters   #8. Nicole Andonov, Jenna Cardinale, Arielle Guy, Yuko Otomo, Guillermo Juan Parra, Karen Weiser   #9. Jon Cone, Phil Cordelli, Dorothea Lasky, Julie Ritter, Laura Sims, Erica Weitzman   #10. Ilya Bernstein, Geoffrey Detrani, Paul Killebrew, Laura Solomon, Viktor Vida (tr. Ana Božičević), Dana Ward   #11. Sue Carnahan, C.S. Carrier, Christina Clark, a collaboration by Aaron McNally and Friedrich Kerksiek, Rick Snyder, James Wagner   #12. Guy R. Beining, Jibade-Khalil Huffman, Sawako Nakayasu, Cynthia Nelson, John Surowiecki, Novica Tadić (tr. Maja Teref & Steven Teref)   #13. Matthew Gavin Frank, George Kalamaras, Ann Lauterbach, Matthew Rohrer, Evan Willner, Lynn Xu   #14. Corina Copp, Randall Leigh Kaplan, Douglas Rothschild, Fred Schmalz, Lori Shine, Prabhakar Vasan   #15. Lawrence Giffin, David Goldstein, Anne Heide, Will Hubbard, Mikhail Lermontov (tr. Jerome Rothenberg and Milos Sovak), Emma Rossi   #16. Heather Christle, Amanda Deutch, Ossian Foley, John High, Anthony Madrid, Gretchen Primack   #17. James Copeland, Lucy Ives, Megan Kaminski, Mary Millsap, Zachary Schomburg & Mathias Svalina, Kevin Varrone   #18. Guy Bennett, Rebecca Guyon, Paul Hoover, Srečko Kosovel (tr. Ana Jelnikar and Barbara Siegel Carlson), Deborah Wardlaw Pattillo, Maureen Thorson   #19. Emily Carr, Julia Cohen, Natalie Lyalin, Lee Norton, Dan Rosenberg, G.C. Waldrep   #20. Emily Anicich, Billy Cancel, Michael Nicoloff, Frances Richard, Elizabeth Robinson, M. A. Vizsolyi   #21. Michael Barron, Julie Carr, Marosa di Giorgio (tr. Jeannine Marie Pitas), Farid Matuk, Amanda Nadelberg, Sara Wintz   #22. Lily Brown, George Eklund, Chris Hosea, Aaron McCollough, Ryan Murphy, Jennifer Nelson   #23. Miloš Djurdjević (tr. Tomislav Kuzmanović), James Hart III, Geoffrey Hilsabeck, Noelle Kocot, Aeron Kopriva, Maged Zaher   #24. Bill Cassidy, Helen Dimos, Pär Hansson (tr. Jennifer Hayashida & Tim Dinan), Aaron Kunin, Kyle Schlesinger, Rebecca Wolff   #25. Sherman Alexie, Noah Eli Gordon, Marina Kaganova, Karen Lepri, Fani Papageorgiou, Roger Williams   #26. Abraham Adams, Dot Devota, William Minor, Levi Rubeck, Martha Ronk, Steve Muhs   #27. Eric Amling, Antonio Gamoneda (tr. Sara Gilmore), Gracie Leavitt. Thibault Raoult, Marthe Reed, Judah Rubin   #28. Jon Curley, Katie Fowley, Dmitry Golynko, Dan Ivec, Alejandra Pizarnik (tr. Yvette Siegert), Matt Reeck   #29. Stephanie Anderson, Kate Colby, Steffi Drewes, Hugo Margenat (tr. by Vero González), Masin Persina, Adam Tobin   #30. Jon Boisvert, Ana Martins Marques (tr. Elisa Wouk Almino), Jeffrey Joe Nelson, Denise Newman, Anzhelina Polonskaya (tr. Andrew Wachtel), Hirato Renkichi (tr. Sho Sugita)   #31. Shane Anderson, Lewis Freedman, francine j harris, Carl Schlachte, Stacy Szymaszek, Sarah Anne Wallen   #32. James D. Fuson, Lyn Hejinian, Barbara Henning, Tony Iantosca, Uroš Kotlajić (tr. Ainsley Morse), Morgan Parker   #33. Amanda Berenguer (tr. Gillian Brassil & Alex Verdolini), Jeremy Hoevenaar, Krystal Languell, Holly Melgard, Marc Paltrineri, Cat Tyc   #34. Alex Cuff, Kristen Gallagher, s. howe, Aisha Sasha John, Claudia La Rocco, Grzegorz Wróblewski (tr. Piotr Gwiazda)   #35. Ted Dodson, Judith Goldman, Anna Gurton-Wachter, Kim Hunter, Katy Lederer, Bridget Talone   #36. Anselm Berrigan, Chia-Lun Chang, Cheryl Clarke, Lisa Fishman, Vasilisk Gnedov (tr. Emilia Loseva & Danny Winkler), Sarah Wang.
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