In today’s Zippy, Zippy is doing his Zippercizes, thinking about different things, one by one. No. 3: “Then think about th‘ Amazonian flannel moth, which bears an uncanny resemblance to Donald Trump‘s hair.”
Yes, it does.
Related reading
All OCA Zippy posts (Pinboard)
Roger Ebert on Donald Trump
Sunday, July 5, 2015
The Amazonian Donald moth
By Michael Leddy at 9:42 AM comments: 0
Saturday, July 4, 2015
The Fourth
[“Washington, D.C. Government charwoman.” Photograph by Gordon Parks. August 1942. From the Library of Congress Flickr pages.]
The woman’s name: Ella Watson. The inspiration: American Gothic. You can read more about Ella Watson and Gordon Parks at the Library of Congress website.
By Michael Leddy at 9:24 AM comments: 2
Friday, July 3, 2015
Sad candy
[Sad.]
Having worked in the lower depths of retail while in college, I remain alert, always, to the feeling of utter loneliness in retail spaces — the sorry aisles and corners where no one shops. Spend enough Saturday nights straightening merchandise in an empty store and you’ll become alert to that loneliness too, especially if it’s 1975 and there’s Muzak on the PA system.
When I saw this candy machine in a fading mall, it brought back all that retail woe.
[I couldn’t, though, have posted a semi-decent photograph without SKRWT.]
By Michael Leddy at 9:24 AM comments: 3
SKRWT
SKRWT is an easy-to-use app to fix lens distortion and other problems in iOS photographs. Moblivious has a detailed guide. I like the app’s hashtag: #allhailsymmetry.
SKRWT is the best $1.99 I’ve spent in a long time.
By Michael Leddy at 9:18 AM comments: 0
Thursday, July 2, 2015
EDC
A few days of reading Everyday Carry, and I felt too ill-equipped to leave the house. The things people find necessary! Where do they think they’re going?
No harpoons though. Not yet.
[A harpoon is Queequeg’s everyday carry, even to the breakfast table. Me: keys, phone, wallet.]
By Michael Leddy at 4:19 PM comments: 4
“A certain semi-visible steam”
The sperm whale’s spout: what’s it all about?
Herman Melville, Moby-Dick (1851).
Here is one of the more remarkable passages for thinking about Ishmael. “Composing a little treatise on Eternity,” as the air above his head worms and undulates: who is this narrator?
Also from Moby-Dick
“Nothing exists in itself” : Nantucket ≠ Illinois : Quoggy : “Round the world!” : Gam : On “true method”
[Elaine and I finished a first reading of Moby-Dick last night. Next stop: Willa Cather, A Lost Lady.]
By Michael Leddy at 9:18 AM comments: 2
A word from the Danish
“The way I define it to Americans is Thanksgiving. You’re together with family and friends, you’re eating delicious food, there’s tradition associated with it. It’s kind of an emotional happiness, an emotional coziness”: it’s the Danish word hygge.
By Michael Leddy at 9:09 AM comments: 0
Alex Katz, focusing
“When I’m painting, I could be painting in Grand Central Station. I’m really focused on what I’m doing”: “Alex Katz on His Painting January 3 ” (Vogue).
A related post
Alex Katz, painter, eater (American cheese on white!)
By Michael Leddy at 9:05 AM comments: 0
Wednesday, July 1, 2015
Positive anymore
Slate recently reported on the Yale Grammatical Diversity Project. Looking at Yale’s map of American language use, I got excited about positive anymore, which is very much a part of east-central Illinois language use (and something I’ve been planning to post about for several weeks). I don’t use positive anymore, but I like hearing it, because it requires me to translate, ever so slightly, what’s being said into familiar terms:
Anymore I do my own oil changes = Now I do my own oil changes.I’m still a stranger in a strange land, amid the alien corn.
The kids are a priority anymore = The kids are a priority now.
Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary of English Usage (1989) has a good commentary on positive anymore:
This usage is dialectal. It has been discovered anew almost every year since 1931 and has been abundantly documented. The Dictionary of American Regional English reports it to be widespread in all dialect areas of the U.S. except New England. It appears to have been of Midland origin — the states where it is most common appear to be Kentucky, West Virginia, Indiana, and Oklahoma — and has spread considerably to such other states as New York, New Jersey, Iowa, Minnesota, California, and Oregon. It is still predominantly a spoken feature, although [ . . . ] it does appear in fiction and occasionally in journalistic sources. Both the older American Dialect Dictionary and the new DARE note that it is used by persons of all educational levels; it is not substandard, and it is not a feature of speech that is considered indicative of social standing.Anymore I don’t need to think about anymore — just listen for it.
Bryant 1962 conjectures that the positive anymore may have come to the U.S. with Scotch-Irish immigrants in the 18th century. There is an any more listed in the English Dialect Dictionary that occurs in both positive and negative contexts, but its meaning is different from that of the American usage. D. H. Lawrence, however, did put it into the mouth of the character named Rupert Birkin in his novel Women in Love, published in 1920:“Quite absurd,” he said. “Suffering bores me, any more.”And P. W. Joyce, in English As We Speak It in Ireland (1910), notes the existence of a positive use of any more in the West and Northwest of Ireland. It is also used in Canada. Modern Canadian English Usage (1974) reports 8 or 9 percent of its respondents using the positive anymore with the highest incidences found in Ontario and Newfoundland.
Although many who encounter the usage for the first time think it is new, it is not: the earliest attestation cited in the DARE is dated 1859.
Reader, do you say or hear positive anymore?
By Michael Leddy at 8:30 AM comments: 1
Dowdy Name loves Dowdy Name
[Henry, July 1, 2015.]
Vic? Damone, Morrow, Tayback. I knew a Vic in high school, a friend’s sister’s boyfriend, a few years older than us. He owned a car and smoked Viceroys, long before they became a bargain brand. It occurs to me only now that perhaps he liked them because of the Vic.
Muriel? Rukeyser and Spark. And cigars, of course. And a Tom Waits song: “Muriel, I see you on a Saturday night, in a penny arcade with your hair tied back.” I’ve never met a Muriel.
Henry and Henrietta are pretty dowdy names too.
Related reading
All OCA “dowdy world” posts (Pinboard)
All OCA Henry posts (Pinboard)
By Michael Leddy at 7:08 AM comments: 3