The White Peril 白禍

28 June 2005

抜ける釘は打ち直す!
I saw Susanna had done this the other day, went and took the survey, and copied the button into a post; and then the kettle started whistling and I didn't post it. Anyway, if you haven't encountered it elsewhere, this MIT survey asks questions about blogging and blog reading in some interesting ways:


Take the MIT Weblog Survey



The title, BTW, is a version of the famous Japanese proverb usually translated as "The nail that sticks out gets pounded down," which seemed appropriate for a post that jokingly refers to the bell curve.
Posted by Sean on 2005-06-28 17:47:23 | 0 Comments | 0 Trackbacks >>>>>>> Categories: misc

27 June 2005

Blasted with both barrels
Apparently, the du Toits looked across their dining room table at each other this past week and said: "You know, darling, people are really stupid sometimes. More Yorkshire pudding?" "They certainly are. Wish they'd knock it off. And no thanks, I'm full." Their posts come at it from different angles, but they're essentially on the same topic: critical thinking.

By that I mean the good kind: questioning and investigating not only the information presented to you but also your own assumptions. It's necessary to specify that, because what's often referred to as "critical thinking" nowadays seems to consist of little more than the ability to write a five-paragraph essay that's consistent within its own hermetically-sealed logical framework. (I'm hardly the first person to say this, but that's my main gripe with many libertarians: their arguments have the internal purity of rock crystal but are useless for a country of 300 million strong-minded people who all have to live with each other.) Anyway, good reads both.
Posted by Sean on 2005-06-27 04:42:30 | 5 Comments | 1 Trackbacks >>>>>>> Categories: misc

24 June 2005

Coming around again
For those who, like me, check every now and then but haven't checked in the last week or so, Alice and Connie are both back blogging. Cool!
Posted by Sean on 2005-06-24 05:56:41 | 0 Comments | 0 Trackbacks >>>>>>> Categories: misc

18 June 2005

Book stick II
Okay, third time's the charm. Tom, Joel, and Susanna have all passed me that book thing again. I got it from Dean a while ago, so I'll post an updated version of my original response:

How many books you own

On which land mass? If you count the books I have here, the ones I have at my parents' house, the ones that are still in the apartment in New York with my old roommate, and the ones that are still at his parents' house (yes, I plan to recollect them all eventually), uh, I'm going to say 1000. Of course, I pitilessly throw away books I think suck (Tokyo-sized apartment, kids).

Last book you bought

Reading Lolita in Tehran by Azar Nafisi (Ordered with a bunch of others from Amazon, of course; some day when I'm up to it we'll talk about how much Kinokuniya or Tower or Book 1st shakes you down for imported books.)

Last book you read

The Division of Labour in Society by Emile Durkheim (No, I haven't gotten around to reading it before. I should have stuck with French after high school, because the translation is pretty turgid; but anything that dense I would have had to read again, anyway, so it's going to end up being the next book I read, too.)

Five books that mean a lot to you

  • 恍惚の人、有吉佐和子作 (kokotsu no hito, ariyoshi sawako saku: "The Ecstatic Ones by Sawako Ariyoshi," translated pretty effectively as The Twilight Years)

    This was the first novel I read all the way through in Japanese. It was first published serially in the early 1970s. It follows a housewife with a part-time job as she copes with the death of her mother-in-law and the realization that her widowed father-in-law is senile. It was written at a time of great transition in Japanese society, and Ariyoshi was very prescient about which issues would prove to be the thorniest as the Japanese household (the center of any society) evolved. It starts to lose focus and emotional charge toward the end, but the final scene is still devastating. I reread it every year.

  • A History of Civilizations by Fernand Braudel

    I'm terrible at keeping historical dates straight or, conversely, at reading what was going on in some corner of the world in 1350 and being able to recall what was happening at the same time elsewhere. Braudel's book was written for high school students, but it was written for perceptive, industrious high school students to use as a basis on which to build further knowledge about specific historical facts. Some of his predictions (the book was written in the 60s) are outdated, but overall you get a real feel for the overarching development of social and political structures over time.


  • The Complete Poems of Emily Dickinson

    Dickinson is the greatest American poet, and I will not deign to entertain counterarguments from supporters of that insufferable Whitman guy.


  • 新古今和歌集 (shinkokinwakashu), the third of the great anthologies of Heian poetry

    The earlier 古今和歌集 (kokinwakashu: "Collected Poems Old and New") is usually regarded as the best of the three great anthologies, but, perhaps because of the way I was taught them, I like the third one the best. That's especially true of the inclusions by the Priest Saigyo and the Princess Shokushi.


  • Miss Pym Disposes by Josephine Tey

    I think you have to be a certain kind of person to have your world reordered by this book, so I'm not sure how much universal value as art it has. Officially, it's a mystery, but there's less interest in the whodunnit aspect than in why protagonist Miss Pym thinks and acts as she does. It's a really acute study of the unconscious factors that often impinge when we think we're making clear-eyed ethical judgments: favoring people who are attractive and well-spoken, lazily drawing conclusions from circumstantial evidence, clinging to assumptions we're comfortable with even after it's obvious we should be questioning them.
Posted by Sean on 2005-06-18 03:54:22 | 2 Comments | 0 Trackbacks >>>>>>> Categories: misc