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Monthly Archives: August 2024
‘I Handed This…Singular Life Over’: Kate Asche’s ‘[Untitled]’
The words of Kate Asche’s poem “[Untitled]” (Poetry, May 2024) enact a sac-like image on the page. Leapfrog the spaces between them and they (the words) hang together as if magnetized, flowing into shattering assertions. A life is lost in … Continue reading
A Good Speech Is a Feat of Crowd Control
Booing is the most boring crowd noise there is, even when the crowd thinks its noise supports the speaker. The second-most boring crowd noise is chanting, even when the crowd thinks its noise supports the speaker. An effervescing horde of … Continue reading
Crying for No Obvious Reason
“This is a brutal, tough business.” (Bill Clinton, speaking to the convention) Former President Clinton is right, of course. The sword of Damocles haunts this assembly. I wonder if weeping is a kind of emotional breaking of sweat that cleanses … Continue reading
Ciceronian Suasion: ‘Memorable in a Matter of Minutes’
May we be guided by hope, joy and a fierce moral imagination.(Rabbi Sharon Brous) Anyone who watches Buttigieg on Fox News knows he can boil things down with terrific lines, and it’s being memorable in a matter of minutes that … Continue reading
Of Note at the Convention: A Freer Shade of Free
It did my hurt Texas heart a world of good to see Jason Isbell turn up and sing a good song in a classic tux and without a 50-gallon hat on his head. He was, after all, indoors. (I never … Continue reading
Calling All Cat Ladies
What My Cat Teaches Me Crouch.ThenPounce. InThatOrder. (c) 2024 JMN — EthicalDative. All rights reserved
A Carton of French Fries Walks Into a Bar
This is the latest specimen in The New Yorker’s cartoon caption contest that has run for centuries. I’ve never come close to inventing a caption for an entry in this feature, but it fascinates me for what it often shows … Continue reading
‘I Said Hello. Then You Said You Said Hello’
I’m guessing you think there’s a typo in my heading. I know! The use of repetition in “The Renaissance,” a poem by Trey Moody (Poetry, May 2024), was a hook for me. The thirteen-line poem starts here: I said hello. … Continue reading
‘Just About Everyone Needed Therapy’
“Gathering, touching, connecting — these are Tosquelles’s methods.” This article highlights an exhibition at the American Folk Art Museum in Manhattan that will end on August 18, 2024: Francesc Tosquelles: Avant-Garde Psychiatry and the Birth of Art Brut. The Catalan … Continue reading
On Rhyme and a Little Bit of Rhythm
Reading current poems, I notice how rhyme seems mostly a thing of the past. Occasional rhyme and near rhyme can land felicitously nowadays, but when deployed lockstep it’s often noisy and distracting. To some degree the same is true with … Continue reading →