Monthly Archives: November 2024

‘A Wall to Lean on & Get Your Fiend On’

I’ve been reading old nursery rhymes I was exposed to in tinyhood by a teenaged aunt and twenty-year-old mother. They must have enthralled me as I lay me down to sleep in the pre-reason season; they still do. Why? Obscenely … Continue reading

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‘I Aimed for English Renderings That Could Stand on Their Own’

It’s a handsome volume* with gloriously voweled Arabic texts opposite English versions by James E. Montgomery, Sir Thomas Adams’s Professor of Arabic at the University of Cambridge and Fellow of Trinity Hall. The poems are by, and attributed to, Abū … Continue reading

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Homelessness in the Homeland: The Nursery View

There was an old womanLived under a hill;And if she’s not gone,She lives there still. (From In the Nursery of My Book House, ed. by Olive Beaupré Miller, 1937) (c) 2024 JMN — EthicalDative. All rights reserved

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The Philosopher Writes His Mind, Then Says, ‘Read It.’

Persons who explain philosophy say “as it were” and “if you will” a lot. I’m none the wiser how it were, and no, I won’t.  Persons who explain poetry don’t. God writes the universe, then says, “Read it. As it … Continue reading

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Where Dems Fell Foul of the Electorate, On Charcoal, and Living in the Moment

“We were never anywhere other than where we were.” (Ben Tarnoff) Now and then I let the me called self remain unsure of something when I know full well I could resolve doubt with a peek at the internet known … Continue reading

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Thinking About Translation While Reading the Quran

Nabokov and Borges differed over how translation should be done, the former favoring literalness (“The clumsiest literal translation is a thousand times more useful than the prettiest paraphrase”), the latter transformation (“Translation is… a more advanced stage of writing”). I … Continue reading

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Did Adam and Eve Have Navels?

“If all men are born free, how is it that women are born slaves?” (Mary Astell (1666-1731) The question of Adam’s and Eve’s navels has been discussed by theologians. It’s interesting, some have thought, for how it bears on the … Continue reading

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‘Enough of This Tomfoolery!’ (God)

“The Dallas-Fort Worth region is home to more than 6,500 houses of worship, the highest concentration in the top 10 largest urban regions in the country, according to the 2020 U.S. religion census. Four of the 20 largest churches in … Continue reading

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Pour Me a Draft of Heartsick with a Shot of Hope

“For every Karen we lose, there’s a Julio and a Jamal ready to sign up for the MAGA movement.”  (Representative Matt Gaetz of Florida) I knew an English professor who remarked during the season of final exams that it was … Continue reading

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Dietrich Bonhoeffer: The ‘Death of God’

I’m working my way through the archive of the BBC4 In Our Times religion podcast as a means of taking distance from the moment. As it happens, history crowds the moment. An episode from 2018 recounts that 3 weeks before … Continue reading

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