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    May 11

    the charming 1984 George Orwell

    George Orwell
    a myth
    我忘了当初为什么看动物庄园和1984,但是我看了,之后我觉得
    太牛逼了
    "It was a bright cold day in April, and the clocks were striking thirteen."

    a rly well-written review on Orwell and 1984 from Guardian
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2009/may/10/1984-george-orwell

    The masterpiece that killed George Orwell

    In 1946 Observer editor David Astor lent George Orwell a remote Scottish farmhouse in which to write his new book, Nineteen Eighty-Four. It became one of the most significant novels of the 20th century. Here, Robert McCrum tells the compelling story of Orwell's torturous stay on the island where the author, close to death and beset by creative demons, was engaged in a feverish race to finish the book

    George Orwell

    George Orwell. Photograph: Public Domain

    "It was a bright cold day in April, and the clocks were striking thirteen."

    Sixty years after the publication of Orwell's masterpiece, Nineteen Eighty-Four, that crystal first line sounds as natural and compelling as ever. But when you see the original manuscript, you find something else: not so much the ringing clarity, more the obsessive rewriting, in different inks, that betrays the extraordinary turmoil behind its composition.

    Probably the definitive novel of the 20th century, a story that remains eternally fresh and contemporary, and whose terms such as "Big Brother", "doublethink" and "newspeak" have become part of everyday currency, Nineteen Eighty-Four has been translated into more than 65 languages and sold millions of copies worldwide, giving George Orwell a unique place in world literature.

    "Orwellian" is now a universal shorthand for anything repressive or totalitarian, and the story of Winston Smith, an everyman for his times, continues to resonate for readers whose fears for the future are very different from those of an English writer in the mid-1940s.

    The circumstances surrounding the writing of Nineteen Eighty-Four make a haunting narrative that helps to explain the bleakness of Orwell's dystopia. Here was an English writer, desperately sick, grappling alone with the demons of his imagination in a bleak Scottish outpost in the desolate aftermath of the second world war. The idea for Nineteen Eighty-Four, alternatively, "The Last Man in Europe", had been incubating in Orwell's mind since the Spanish civil war. His novel, which owes something to Yevgeny Zamyatin's dystopian fiction We, probably began to acquire a definitive shape during 1943-44, around the time he and his wife, Eileen adopted their only son, Richard. Orwell himself claimed that he was partly inspired by the meeting of the Allied leaders at the Tehran Conference of 1944. Isaac Deutscher, an Observer colleague, reported that Orwell was "convinced that Stalin, Churchill and Roosevelt consciously plotted to divide the world" at Tehran.

    Orwell had worked for David Astor's Observer since 1942, first as a book reviewer and later as a correspondent. The editor professed great admiration for Orwell's "absolute straightforwardness, his honesty and his decency", and would be his patron throughout the 1940s. The closeness of their friendship is crucial to the story of Nineteen Eighty-Four.

    Orwell's creative life had already benefited from his association with the Observer in the writing of Animal Farm. As the war drew to a close, the fruitful interaction of fiction and Sunday journalism would contribute to the much darker and more complex novel he had in mind after that celebrated "fairy tale". It's clear from his Observer book reviews, for example, that he was fascinated by the relationship between morality and language.

    There were other influences at work. Soon after Richard was adopted, Orwell's flat was wrecked by a doodlebug. The atmosphere of random terror in the everyday life of wartime London became integral to the mood of the novel-in-progress. Worse was to follow. In March 1945, while on assignment for the Observer in Europe, Orwell received the news that his wife, Eileen, had died under anaesthesia during a routine operation.

    Suddenly he was a widower and a single parent, eking out a threadbare life in his Islington lodgings, and working incessantly to dam the flood of remorse and grief at his wife's premature death. In 1945, for instanc e, he wrote almost 110,000 words for various publications, including 15 book reviews for the Observer.

    Now Astor stepped in. His family owned an estate on the remote Scottish island of Jura, next to Islay. There was a house, Barnhill, seven miles outside Ardlussa at the remote northern tip of this rocky finger of heather in the Inner Hebrides. Initially, Astor offered it to Orwell for a holiday. Speaking to the Observer last week, Richard Blair says he believes, from family legend, that Astor was taken aback by the enthusiasm of Orwell's response.

    In May 1946 Orwell, still picking up the shattered pieces of his life, took the train for the long and arduous journey to Jura. He told his friend Arthur Koestler that it was "almost like stocking up ship for an arctic voyage".

    It was a risky move; Orwell was not in good health. The winter of 1946-47 was one of the coldest of the century. Postwar Britain was bleaker even than wartime, and he had always suffered from a bad chest. At least, cut off from the irritations of literary London, he was free to grapple unencumbered with the new novel. "Smothered under journalism," as he put it, he told one friend, "I have become more and more like a sucked orange."

    Ironically, part of Orwell's difficulties derived from the success of Animal Farm. After years of neglect and indifference the world was waking up to his genius. "Everyone keeps coming at me," he complained to Koestler, "wanting me to lecture, to write commissioned booklets, to join this and that, etc - you don't know how I pine to be free of it all and have time to think again."

    On Jura he would be liberated from these distractions but the promise of creative freedom on an island in the Hebrides came with its own price. Years before, in the essay "Why I Write", he had described the struggle to complete a book: "Writing a book is a horrible, exhausting struggle, like a long bout of some painful illness. One would never undertake such a thing if one were not driven by some demon whom one can neither resist or [sic] understand. For all one knows that demon is the same instinct that makes a baby squall for attention. And yet it is also true that one can write nothing readable unless one constantly struggles to efface one's personality." Then that famous Orwellian coda. "Good prose is like a window pane."

    From the spring of 1947 to his death in 1950 Orwell would re-enact every aspect of this struggle in the most painful way imaginable. Privately, perhaps, he relished the overlap between theory and practice. He had always thrived on self-inflicted adversity.

    At first, after "a quite unendurable winter", he revelled in the isolation and wild beauty of Jura. "I am struggling with this book," he wrote to his agent, "which I may finish by the end of the year - at any rate I shall have broken the back by then so long as I keep well and keep off journalistic work until the autumn."

    Barnhill, overlooking the sea at the top of a potholed track, was not large, with four small bedrooms above a spacious kitchen. Life was simple, even primitive. There was no electricity. Orwell used Calor gas to cook and to heat water. Storm lanterns burned paraffin. In the evenings he also burned peat. He was still chain-smoking black shag tobacco in roll-up cigarettes: the fug in the house was cosy but not healthy. A battery radio was the only connection with the outside world.

    Orwell, a gentle, unworldly sort of man, arrived with just a camp bed, a table, a couple of chairs and a few pots and pans. It was a spartan existence but supplied the conditions under which he liked to work. He is remembered here as a spectre in the mist, a gaunt figure in oilskins.

    The locals knew him by his real name of Eric Blair, a tall, cadaverous, sad-looking man worrying about how he would cope on his own. The solution, when he was joined by baby Richard and his nanny, was to recruit his highly competent sister, Avril. Richard Blair remembers that his father "could not have done it without Avril. She was an excellent cook, and very practical. None of the accounts of my father's time on Jura recognise how essential she was."

    Once his new regime was settled, Orwell could finally make a start on the book. At the end of May 1947 he told his publisher, Fred Warburg: "I think I must have written nearly a third of the rough draft. I have not got as far as I had hoped to do by this time because I really have been in most wretched health this year ever since about January (my chest as usual) and can't quite shake it off."

    Mindful of his publisher's impatience for the new novel, Orwell added: "Of course the rough draft is always a ghastly mess bearing little relation to the finished result, but all the same it is the main part of the job." Still, he pressed on, and at the end of July was predicting a completed "rough draft" by October. After that, he said, he would need another six months to polish up the text for publication. But then, disaster.

    Part of the pleasure of life on Jura was that he and his young son could enjoy the outdoor life together, go fishing, explore the island, and potter about in boats. In August, during a spell of lovely summer weather, Orwell, Avril, Richard and some friends, returning from a hike up the coast in a small motor boat, were nearly drowned in the infamous Corryvreckan whirlpool.

    Richard Blair remembers being "bloody cold" in the freezing water, and Orwell, whose constant coughing worried his friends, did his lungs no favours. Within two months he was seriously ill. Typically, his account to David Astor of this narrow escape was laconic, even nonchalant.

    The long struggle with "The Last Man in Europe" continued. In late October 1947, oppressed with "wretched health", Orwell recognised that his novel was still "a most dreadful mess and about two-thirds of it will have to be retyped entirely".

    He was working at a feverish pace. Visitors to Barnhill recall the sound of his typewriter pounding away upstairs in his bedroom. Then, in November, tended by the faithful Avril, he collapsed with "inflammation of the lungs" and told Koestler that he was "very ill in bed". Just before Christmas, in a letter to an Observer colleague, he broke the news he had always dreaded. Finally he had been diagnosed with TB.

    A few days later, writing to Astor from Hairmyres hospital, East Kilbride, Lanarkshire, he admitted: "I still feel deadly sick," and conceded that, when illness struck after the Corryvreckan whirlpool incident, "like a fool I decided not to go to a doctor - I wanted to get on with the book I was writing." In 1947 there was no cure for TB - doctors prescribed fresh air and a regular diet - but there was a new, experimental drug on the market, streptomycin. Astor arranged for a shipment to Hairmyres from the US.

    Richard Blair believes that his father was given excessive doses of the new wonder drug. The side effects were horrific (throat ulcers, blisters in the mouth, hair loss, peeling skin and the disintegration of toe and fingernails) but in March 1948, after a three-month course, the TB symptoms had disappeared. "It's all over now, and evidently the drug has done its stuff," Orwell told his publisher. "It's rather like sinking the ship to get rid of the rats, but worth it if it works."

    As he prepared to leave hospital Orwell received the letter from his publisher which, in hindsight, would be another nail in his coffin. "It really is rather important," wrote Warburg to his star author, "from the point of view of your literary career to get it [the new novel] by the end of the year and indeed earlier if possible."

    Just when he should have been convalescing Orwell was back at Barnhill, deep into the revision of his manuscript, promising Warburg to deliver it in "early December", and coping with "filthy weather" on autumnal Jura. Early in October he confided to Astor: "I have got so used to writing in bed that I think I prefer it, though of course it's awkward to type there. I am just struggling with the last stages of this bloody book [which is] about the possible state of affairs if the atomic war isn't conclusive."

    This is one of Orwell's exceedingly rare references to the theme of his book. He believed, as many writers do, that it was bad luck to discuss work-in-progress. Later, to Anthony Powell, he described it as "a Utopia written in the form of a novel". The typing of the fair copy of "The Last Man in Europe" became another dimension of Orwell's battle with his book. The more he revised his "unbelievably bad" manuscript the more it became a document only he could read and interpret. It was, he told his agent, "extremely long, even 125,000 words". With characteristic candour, he noted: "I am not pleased with the book but I am not absolutely dissatisfied... I think it is a good idea but the execution would have been better if I had not written it under the influence of TB."

    And he was still undecided about the title: "I am inclined to call it NINETEEN EIGHTY-FOUR or THE LAST MAN IN EUROPE," he wrote, "but I might just possibly think of something else in the next week or two." By the end of October Orwell believed he was done. Now he just needed a stenographer to help make sense of it all.

    It was a desperate race against time. Orwell's health was deteriorating, the "unbelievably bad" manuscript needed retyping, and the December deadline was looming. Warburg promised to help, and so did Orwell's agent. At cross-purposes over possible typists, they somehow contrived to make a bad situation infinitely worse. Orwell, feeling beyond help, followed his ex-public schoolboy's instincts: he would go it alone.

    By mid-November, too weak to walk, he retired to bed to tackle "the grisly job" of typing the book on his "decrepit typewriter" by himself. Sustained by endless roll-ups, pots of coffee, strong tea and the warmth of his paraffin heater, with gales buffeting Barnhill, night and day, he struggled on. By 30 November 1948 it was virtually done.

    Now Orwell, the old campaigner, protested to his agent that "it really wasn't worth all this fuss. It's merely that, as it tires me to sit upright for any length of time, I can't type very neatly and can't do many pages a day." Besides, he added, it was "wonderful" what mistakes a professional typist could make, and "in this book there is the difficulty that it contains a lot of neologisms".

    The typescript of George Orwell's latest novel reached London in mid December, as promised. Warburg recognised its qualities at once ("amongst the most terrifying books I have ever read") and so did his colleagues. An in-house memo noted "if we can't sell 15 to 20 thousand copies we ought to be shot".

    By now Orwell had left Jura and checked into a TB sanitorium high in the Cotswolds. "I ought to have done this two months ago," he told Astor, "but I wanted to get that bloody book finished." Once again Astor stepped in to monitor his friend's treatment but Orwell's specialist was privately pessimistic.

    As word of Nineteen Eighty-Four began to circulate, Astor's journalistic instincts kicked in and he began to plan an Observer Profile, a significant accolade but an idea that Orwell contemplated "with a certain alarm". As spring came he was "having haemoptyses" (spitting blood) and "feeling ghastly most of the time" but was able to involve himself in the pre-publication rituals of the novel, registering "quite good notices" with satisfaction. He joked to Astor that it wouldn't surprise him "if you had to change that profile into an obituary".

    Nineteen Eighty-Four was published on 8 June 1949 (five days later in the US) and was almost universally recognised as a masterpiece, even by Winston Churchill, who told his doctor that he had read it twice. Orwell's health continued to decline. In October 1949, in his room at University College hospital, he married Sonia Brownell, with David Astor as best man. It was a fleeting moment of happiness; he lingered into the new year of 1950. In the small hours of 21 January he suffered a massive haemorrhage in hospital and died alone.

    The news was broadcast on the BBC the next morning. Avril Blair and her nephew, still up on Jura, heard the report on the little battery radio in Barnhill. Richard Blair does not recall whether the day was bright or cold but remembers the shock of the news: his father was dead, aged 46.

    David Astor arranged for Orwell's burial in the churchyard at Sutton Courtenay, Oxfordshire. He lies there now, as Eric Blair, between HH Asquith and a local family of Gypsies.

    Why '1984'?

    Orwell's title remains a mystery. Some say he was alluding to the centenary of the Fabian Society, founded in 1884. Others suggest a nod to Jack London's novel The Iron Heel (in which a political movement comes to power in 1984), or perhaps to one of his favourite writer GK Chesterton's story, "The Napoleon of Notting Hill", which is set in 1984.

    In his edition of the Collected Works (20 volumes), Peter Davison notes that Orwell's American publisher claimed that the title derived from reversing the date, 1948, though there's no documentary evidence for this. Davison also argues that the date 1984 is linked to the year of Richard Blair's birth, 1944, and notes that in the manuscript of the novel, the narrative occurs, successively, in 1980, 1982 and finally, 1984. There's no mystery about the decision to abandon "The Last Man in Europe". Orwell himself was always unsure of it. It was his publisher, Fred Warburg who suggested that Nineteen Eighty-Four was a more commercial title.

    Freedom of speech: How '1984' has entrusted our culture

    The effect of Nineteen Eighty-Four on our cultural and linguistic landscape has not been limited to either the film adaptation starring John Hurt and Richard Burton, with its Nazi-esque rallies and chilling soundtrack, nor the earlier one with Michael Redgrave and Edmond O'Brien.

    It is likely, however, that many people watching the Big Brother series on television (in the UK, let alone in Angola, Oman or Sweden, or any of the other countries whose TV networks broadcast programmes in the same format) have no idea where the title comes from or that Big Brother himself, whose role in the reality show is mostly to keep the peace between scrapping, swearing contestants like a wise uncle, is not so benign in his original incarnation.

    Apart from pop-culture renditions of some of the novel's themes, aspects of its language have been leapt upon by libertarians to describe the curtailment of freedom in the real world by politicians and officials - alarmingly, nowhere and never more often than in contemporary Britain.

    Orwellian

    George owes his own adjective to this book alone and his idea that wellbeing is crushed by restrictive, authoritarian and untruthful government.

    Big Brother (is watching you)

    A term in common usage for a scarily omniscient ruler long before the worldwide smash-hit reality-TV show was even a twinkle in its producers' eyes. The irony of societal hounding of Big Brother contestants would not have been lost on George Orwell.

    Room 101

    Some hotels have refused to call a guest bedroom number 101 - rather like those tower blocks that don't have a 13th floor - thanks to the ingenious Orwellian concept of a room that contains whatever its occupant finds most impossible to endure. Like Big Brother, this has spawned a modern TV show: in this case, celebrities are invited to name the people or objects they hate most in the world.

    Thought Police

    An accusation often levelled at the current government by those who like it least is that they are trying to tell us what we can and cannot think is right and wrong. People who believe that there are correct ways to think find themselves named after Orwell's enforcement brigade.

    Thoughtcrime

    See "Thought Police" above. The act or fact of transgressing enforced wisdom.

    Newspeak

    For Orwell, freedom of expression was not just about freedom of thought but also linguistic freedom. This term, denoting the narrow and diminishing official vocabulary, has been used ever since to denote jargon currently in vogue with those in power.

    Doublethink

    Hypocrisy, but with a twist. Rather than choosing to disregard a contradiction in your opinion, if you are doublethinking, you are deliberately forgetting that the contradiction is there. This subtlety is mostly overlooked by people using the accusation of "doublethink" when trying to accuse an adversary of being hypocritical - but it is a very popular word with people who like a good debate along with their pints in the pub. Oliver Marre


    May 09

    quote of the day



    "The 21st century has seen so many examples of 'the unthinkable', from the twin-tower attacks to the recent financial meltdown, that the unthinkable is now routine and thus thinkable...thanks to the growing integration of the global economy, war was going out of fashion."

    -- Future Shock (May 7th 2009 From The Economist print edition)


    May 07

    Why Zaha Hadid has such a perennial popularity??

    Past works of Zaha Hadid to exhibit in Italy

    06
    May 2009
    By Sebastian J — Filed under: News , , ,

    Our friends from Minimalismi shared with us this info. This October, Zaha Hadid will exhibit her best works in an exhibition at the Salone of the Palazzo della Ragione in the Italian city of Padova.

    The Palazzo has presented itself as a vigorous design challenge for Zaha Hadid due to the historical quality of the space. The aim has been both to respect the spatial / contextual characteristics and to intervene in the space at the same time. The undulating blocks, whose forms are defined by the rules of breaking and continuity, generate 6 distinct islands within themselves. Each of these islands define the Conceptual Morphologies of the ZHA exhibition concept, namely: (1) Lines/Bundles/Networks, (2) Waves/Shells/Cocoons, (3) Aggregations/Clusters/Jigsaws, (4) Fields, (5)Landscape & Topography, and (6) Parametricism.

    More images after the break.



    May 06

    i love paper architects!!!!!

    Crane Rooms / Aristide Antonas

    http://www.archdaily.com/21226/crane-rooms-aristide-antonas/#comment-28985
    05
    May 2009

    Simple concrete foundations and elementary water pools are proposed by Aristide Antonas in collaboration with Katerina Koutsogianni, to be installed in non hospitable beaches or arid hills nearby the sea.

    The room units form independent cells, they can be covered by tissues during the day; they provide a quality connection to the Internet. The private or public character of each room is regulated by the chosen high of every unit. The high control system is located inside every room. Platforms go up and down following the will of every provisional inhabitant. A bigger screen, related to the bed, serves as a home cinema structure; a small office, a wardrobe and a shower are placed in the same moving platform. A common underground kitchen serves the needs of all the complex; a reverse osmosis desalination plant provides drinkable water to the invisible kitchen and to the units (the water pipes follow the length of the crane).

    An identical design for “crane rooms” can be undertaken within a system of moving vehicles in order to form a dispersed, moving “crane room hotel”. Rooms moving up and down provide summer shelters with changing views.




    May 05

    Barbie Shanghai Store / Slade Architecture 上海

    上海的各位同志,你们去了么?这个super pink...
    http://www.archdaily.com/21065/barbie-shanghai-store-slade-architecture/
    the pictures are so-well taken, i feel like it's on the 5th ave...


    April 30

    'Swine flu' or '猪流感'? 'Pg flu' 还是 '豕流感'?

    头一次在BBC radio fm 88.9 里面听到报道swine flu的时候,我天真的听成了'swan flu'。心想,阿,天鹅感冒了。过了几天之后,渐渐在MSN的名字上看到了诸如'pig flu'和‘猪流感’的字样,我又一次天真地想,阿,原来猪也感冒了,真巧!直到两天前收到朋友和NUS非常serious的warning email时,我恍然大悟——哦!不是天鹅流感,原来一直都是猪流感!

    File:Pig USDA01c0116.jpg File:Cygnus olor 2 (Marek Szczepanek).jpg

    swine这个词儿的确是少见,我把它听错了估计还是情有可原,根据美国韦氏大辞典:
    swine \ˈswīn\ 12世纪之前即有,单复同,源于古英语swīn,和古德语中的swīn同义,拉丁语写作sus
    字典里面定义如下,简单来说就是身体健壮,腿儿短,什么都吃的一种哺乳动物,而且这种动物一般有一身的刚毛,鼻子的前半部分格外灵活。(我觉得大概是一种野猪吧)
    (1: any of various stout-bodied short-legged omnivorous artiodactyl mammals (family Suidae) with a thick bristly skin and a long flexible snout ; especially : a domesticated one descended from the wild boar2: a contemptible person)
    pig \ˈpig\ 起源于13世纪,中世纪英语pigge,没有拉丁名儿
    主要来说就是那种家养的但是还没性成熟的swine(野猪?),其他的都是一些引申义
    (1 a: a young domesticated swine not yet sexually mature ; broadly : a wild or domestic swine b: an animal related to or resembling the pig2 a: pork b: the dressed carcass of a young swine weighing less than 130 pounds (60 kilograms) c: pigskin3: a dirty, gluttonous, or repulsive person4: a crude casting of metal (as iron)5slang : an immoral woman6slang usually disparaging : police officer)

    再来看看我们博大精深的中文,根据新华字典online
     zhū 哺乳动物,肉可食,鬃可制刷,皮可制革,粪是很好的肥料。猪,豕而三毛丛居者。从豕,者声。——《说文》。按,豕子也。
     shǐ (象形。甲骨文字形,象猪形,长吻,大腹,四蹄,有尾。本义:猪)同本义豕,彘也

    看起来对于美国人来说pig这个词儿更亲近点儿,家养的猪嘛,主要是用来吃得。而swine呢,就是在大自然里面儿跑来跑去的。对于一个把英语作为第二语言的我来说,也许管它叫swine flu而不是pig flu听起来更正经、官话一点儿。当然也有可能第一次流感爆发时,发现病源在野猪身上而不是猪圈里(据wiki,这个流感是1918年'Spanish flu'西班牙流感H1N1的变种)。而对于中国人来说,猪和豕指的大概是同一种家养的猪,意思上没什么差异,只是一个现代,一个古语。而在野外乱跑的猪,我们没有专门儿的可以和猪对应的单音节字儿(至少我是想不出来),形容词加个名词——就是它了-'野猪'。把swine flu翻译成'猪流感',对于中文来说,大概是唯一的选择了。好歹咱不能管它叫'豕流感',一来大家不熟悉这个字儿,二来说起来也不好听,上不了新闻联播。那'野猪流感'?就更不对劲儿了。将就了,我们就"预防猪流感",但还是别扭,和英文的swine flu感觉就差着什么东西。

    想把英文完完整整的翻译成中文是不大可能的,音节上对称了,意思上就不对了,意思上差不多了,但又不怎么实用。引申义也差得多,猪这个字儿总是给我一种消极的感觉(脏,蠢,从小到大,无一例外,笨的人总是当之无愧有猪的称号,当然除了奥维尔的拿破仑例外),'猪流感'仿佛暗指这是个愚蠢的东西。我们就拿'禽流感'和'猪流感'做一下对比,不得不承认有感情色彩的差异。另一方面,swine flu这个词儿我前两天才听说,用BBC非常标准的英式发音念出来(这个发音还被我误和天鹅搭上了关系)。我来不及给这个生词加上其他引申含义,虽然翻译过来也是猪,但那些中文的'猪'的消极含义很早以前就都被我完全转嫁到了英文的'pig'上面,这个新词儿太无辜了,想着想着就变成了technical term了。

    好吧,胡扯到现在,想说的也就是其实每个词儿不仅有它表面的意思,例如swine, pig都是指四只小短腿的猪,它还有引申含义,比如猪是蠢,狗是忠,对于不同的人来说,同一个词儿也有不同的引申含义,可能对于在美国熟悉swine不过的人来说,它指的就是乱跑的野猪,但是对于听着BBC的我,它莫名其妙的和天鹅挂上了钩(所以我怎么都nega不了这个词儿)。最后,还是让我胡扯吧,有空看Derrida和Roland Barths, Post-modern / structure rocks!


    April 28

    things i do when i am doing serious master thesis writings

    1. feeling sick and couldn't start, try to find any single other thing i can do to avoid open the doc files
    2. read Stanely Fish, my favorite op-ed writer on NYT, talking abt academy and neo-liberalism, anyways, he's got real opinions
    3. Check on Maureed Dowd (hope it's not typo), i like her but she's too writer
    4. read Paul Krugman, gosh, he kicks ass, i admire his super Cartesian, Crystal clear way of writing, always make abstract things easy to understand, get to the point, no shi* around the bushes
    5. thinking about Lilian.......use her to encourage myself...keeps on writing D!!
      'you shd giv urself more time on writings, u shd find someone to edit ur things'
    6. read Virginia Woolf
      she's damn good, damn damn good
      her prose, sentences, words, compositions, syntax
      i cannot image anyone could write English in such a seductive, attractive, amusingly surprisingly beatiful way
    7. trying to read Foucault (bcoz he kicks ass too), but never can finish one single page at a time (bcoz he likes bluffing.....also it's translated, so it's better to blame the translator) feel so sorry i cannot read French
    8. read Freakonomics
      it's short, it's funny, it's got interesting new ideas, simplify and contribute to sth new
    9. get a pen, a paper, use my hand to write
      and never look at those notes again
    10. talking to myself 'WRITE WRITE WRITE!!!!'
    11. writing email to URA - they always got my answers in just 3 days, brutal efficiency of Singapore
    12. writing to friends asking for help
    13. writing to NUSLib for purchasing book, journals, whatever
    14. image someone as my reader
    15. image i'm writing a story, not a thesis
    16. 'it's stupid, i'm not writing anything new, i'm just doing documentaries, and i am stupid' this is shit!
    17. ....and i'll watch Grey's Anatomy, bcoz it's simple, it got nothing but narrations (storylines), it imporves my American english while keeps my brain totally empty / dead. it's the pure entertainment.(i dont watch Boston Legal because it keeps my brain on, thinking abt big issues....)
    18. blame myself
    19. DAMON U SHD WRITE NOW ALTHOUGH IT'S TOTALLY SHIT....


    写不完了

    写不完了。。。
    写不完了。。。
    写不完了。。。
    写不完了。。。
    写不完了。。。
    写不完了。。。

    今儿真热

    Shisha at Kampong Glam


    April 15

    POKE GSD http://klaustoon.wordpress.com/

    it's tooooooooooooooo funny!!!!!! and irresistable!!! i loooove it!!
    everyone! u shd definitely check this out!sarcastic and so archi haha, the arrogant Koolhaas~
    http://klaustoon.wordpress.com/
    http://klaustoon.files.wordpress.com/2009/04/pkoolhaas-ecological-1-11.jpg?w=1250
    http://klaustoon.files.wordpress.com/2009/04/pkoolhaas-ecological-1-11.jpg?w=1250
    April 06

    oasis看的我好激动。。。。

    感觉仿佛自己年轻了10岁回到了高中年代一样。。。。。跟着身边儿明显是高中的孩子一起蹦得的high了一个半小时。虽然singapore indoor stadium的效果差的无法形容 anyways.....我们的位置简直是好的不得了!!



    可以拍得到这样近的照片儿 this is the clearest shot~
    anyways,仍然是激动地不行啊
    说的俗点儿,这个memories阿都涌上来了,以前听他们红色的双张live,被我快听滥了的definitely maybe
    结果他们superova的时候我差点儿哭出来,liam从头到尾一个动作。。。。neol好多了。。。。

    i really like the color of their concert and the shaky pics i took
    i like the simple stage with only lights color changing

    i feel happy
    is happy this simple becoz it reminds u of some kind memories? why does memory so important for us? what kinda person are we? which temporal dimension r we living in: past, now, futures? to put it specifically are we: nostalgia, cie la vie (living for the moment), always struggling for some future goals (like reading the book only want to see the ending?)

    anyways, Oasis tks
    lt, tks for accompany me~~


    April 03

    quote from archidaily, education i a cave

    Education in a cave

    02
    Apr 2009
    By Sebastian J — Filed under: Educational , News , ,

    With the right equipment, you can build a school anywhere. If you don’t think so, ask the children that goes every day to Mid-Cave Primary School. Built in 1984, this school sits in one of three caves inside a mountain.

    Nowadays, it accomodates 186 students with a teaching force of 8 staff. Of course, this may not be the right conditions for a child to go to school, but personally, I think it’s better for a child to go and learn in a cave, rather that don’t go to school at all.

    Seen at Chinese Lives. More images after the break.





    March 26

    just for fun: A guide to G20 protests in London

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/blog/2009/mar/23/online-guide-to-g20-protests
    from Guardian

    A guide to G20 protests in London

    Numerous groups are using the web to rally supporters to demonstrate at next week's summit

    The G20 summit in London next week will be the target of widespread protests, many of which are being organised online. City workers have been warned that they might be targeted and police are preparing a massive security operation. But who are the protesters and what are they planning?

    G20 Meltdown

    An alliance of anti-capitalist groups organising a carnival, headed by "Four Horsefolk of the Apocalypse", which will converge in front of the Bank of England on 1 April.

    The organisers' aims are set on their website: "G20 Meltdown calls for the G20 ministers to own up to their mistakes and admit that their global dominance – the dominance of finance capitalism – is the problem, not the solution to the current economic, ecological and political meltdown."

    Meltdown's Facebook group has more details of marches from four London underground stations.

    Organisers hope a videoclip on YouTube will help rally protesters to the event.

    There also regular updates on Twitter at G20Meltdown. General G20 chatter on Twitter can be found by searching for #G20 or #G20rally

    Anarchists

    Anarchy.net has called on its followers to join in "fucking up the summit and other adventures". It is planning action in London on 1 April and at the site of the summit at the ExCel centre in Docklands on 2 April. "Join thousands of disgruntled, angry, pissed off people on the streets of the financial district. As the bankers continue to cream off billions of pounds of our money let's put the call out – reclaim the money, storm the banks and send them packing," reads its website.

    The latest issue of the anarchist magazine Class War depicts the former RBS boss Fred Goodwin in a guillotine under the headline "Ready to Riot". The Whitechapel Anarchist Group has more details about how word has been spreading about the protests.

    Climate Camp

    The group, which organised previous protests at Heathrow airport, will march on the European Climate Exchange on Bishopgate at 12.30pm on 1 April.

    Climate Camp is planning to "swoop in from different directions and under different means to all arrive within a minute or two of each other. We therefore advise that people meet up with their mates early, and somewhere within easy reach of the Climate Exchange. Then, at the appropriate moment, leave quickly, and timed to arrive at exactly 12:30. You may even want to practice beforehand."

    It has Twitter updates at ClimateCampLdn

    Government of the Dead

    The group describes itself as "a varied bunch of radicals, drawn together by the fickle hand of fate and a joyful determination to build a better world for humanity, our biosphere and all the descendants thereof than the train wreck bequeathed to us by the decadent, decomposing corpse of capitalism". It is urging supporters to take to the streets on 1 April and the next day for "the trial and execution by beheading of capitalism featuring the final repentance of the accused for crimes against the planet".

    Stop the War Coalition

    The anti-war campaign is focusing on Barack Obama's first presidential visit to Britain to call on the US and UK to withdraw troops from Iraq and Afghanistan. It is meeting outside the US embassy in Grosvenor Square on 1 April and outside the ExCel centre on 2 April.

    Put People First

    This TUC-backed march in London on Saturday (March 28) starts at Victoria embankment and ends in Hyde Park. "Put People First is a coalition of development charities, trade unions, faith groups, environmentalists and other organisations, formed in response to call for a fair, sustainable route out of recession," says the website.

    It has a Facebook group and Twitter updates at putpeoplefirst.

    Alternative G20 Summit

    A few hundred paces from the ExCel summit, an alternative "teach-in" will be held at the University of East London. It is aimed at "everyone who thinks that the bankers and politicians in their pay have been making a mess of things and need to be sacked and replaced".

    It too has a Facebook group with details of the speakers including Tony Benn, Caroline Lucas and Ken Livingstone.

    Other online groups and websites planning to take part in various protests include: Billy Bragg Fans at the G20 Meltdown; the Laboratory of Insurrectionary Imagination; the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament; Rising Tide, which is organising a Fossil Fools Day; Reclaiming Spaces; and the Socialist Workers' party.


    March 24

    New Orleans's materplan online, TATA, nano

    New orlean's master plan
    http://www.nolamasterplan.org/documentsandrresources.asp#C8
    for god's sake, can u be more understandable and easier!! anyways, if anyone wanna check it out, it's online

    another piece of new today is "Nano, the world's cheapest car is set out on sale"
    http://www.economist.com/business/displayStory.cfm?story_id=13354060&source=features_box3
    it's simply h-o-r-r-i-a-b-l-e. let along it's a copy of my beloved "smart", how much traffic will it contribute to the already-jammed-to-death India traffic. if everyone from mid-class family own a nano, (tks god, only less than 10% indi population is profiled as mid-class),how stuck the city will be

    something from AMNP
    http://architecture.myninjaplease.com/?p=4365
    still building in NY

    one_york_dusk.jpg

    TEN Arquitectos has announced five new commercial and residential buildings [3 shown] planned for New York City - showing that there may be hope for some construction projects going forward after all. In particular Clinton Park [below] looks kind of interesting - reminds me of something you’d see from BIG.

    March 18

    A New Paris, as Dreamed by Planners

    http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/17/arts/design/17paris.html?ref=design\

    Atelier Christian de Portzamparc
    The architect Christian de Portzamparc has proposed a new elevated maglev train that would run above the Paris périphérique

    PARIS — Hand it to the French. Who else would pick an economic collapse as a time to unveil one of the most audacious urban plans in recent memory?

    The architect Richard Rogers proposes burying the main train tracks underground, with a vast system of public parks draped over them, connecting to poor and middle-class neighborhoods.

    Yet the 10 proposals for a new master plan for metropolitan Paris, which were unveiled last week, may just be the kind of brazen idealism the world needs right now.

    The results of a nine-month study commissioned by President Nicolas Sarkozy, the proposals aim to transform Paris and its surrounding suburbs into the first sustainable “post-Kyoto city,” a reference to the treaty on climate change, with an expanded Métro system and sprawling new parks.

    The government has yet to say how it would raise the money to build this new city. And Mr. Sarkozy’s opponents, who have sometimes dismissed him as “President Bling-Bling,” have questioned whether this is anything more than an elaborate publicity stunt.

    But even if none of the proposals are ever built, they show a daring that has not been seen in a Western city for decades. The teams range in experience from well-established international stars like Richard Rogers and Christian de Portzamparc to French architects who are just beginning their careers. All forsook flashy imagery for a deep analysis of the city’s diverse communities and the fraying tissue that binds them together. At the very least, the results should force a radical reappraisal of Paris’s identity. The enchanted city most of us know through holidays and films is a compact metropolis of roughly two million people that lies within the périphérique, the elevated freeway that encircles the old city. Its pretty medieval streets and broad boulevards are held up as a model of the ideal city.

    But for decades the vast majority of Parisians have lived in the generic apartment blocks and squalid housing projects that make up most of the suburbs. These include the poor immigrant neighborhoods that erupted in violence in 2005.

    The aim of the study was twofold: to create a plan for a greener, more sustainable city, and to break down the isolation between the outlying neighborhoods and the historic center. The most thought-provoking designs operate on multiple levels, reaching beyond the issue of sustainability to address deeply entrenched social ills.

    Among the most audacious is Mr. de Portzamparc’s plan, which proposes demolishing both the Gare du Nord and the Gare de l’Est and replacing them with a single massive European train station just outside the city center. The station would link to the Eurostar train lines to London and Brussels, as well as to a new elevated maglev train that would run above the périphérique. It would also anchor a towering new global business district, a rival to La Défense.

    Mr. Rogers’s plan is equally ambitious. Noting that the tracks that connect to the city’s main train stations cut Paris into wedges, like slices of a pie, he proposes burying them all underground. A vast system of public parks would be draped over these new underground tracks, connecting poor and middle-class neighborhoods. A new Métro line would ring the outer city; more trains would tie the system back to the historic center.

    Other plans are more poetic. Jean Nouvel proposes creating a green belt that would circle the entire city. All future construction would be concentrated inside this belt, adding density to what are now sprawling, isolated communities. New towers would punctuate some of the outlying boulevards, adding visual markers where there are none. The outer ring would become a sort of 620-mile-long community garden, with residents tending their plots along an endless string of parks and fields. The idea is to give a powerful identity to the most anonymous parts of the city.

    And then there are the usual provocateurs. Djamel Klouche, at 42 the youngest of the participants, has proposed transforming the space underneath the Louvre pyramid into a bustling Métro hub, making one of Paris’s greatest cultural monuments the main entry point to the city center for its immigrant masses. The Paris-based Roland Castro suggests moving existing monuments, including the Élysée Palace, to the city’s grittiest outlying neighborhoods.

    Yet all of the projects recognize the strong link between urban policy and social equality. In tying environmental concerns to issues of identity, they suggest ways to begin reversing the growing social divisions that mark the contemporary city. If they inspire a broader global debate on these tensions, they will already have accomplished something of significant value.

    March 15

    i like paper architects

    http://www.maynardarchitects.com/Site/houses/Pages/CV08.html#9
    cite
    CV08  the suburb eating robot

    http://www.maynardarchitects.com/Site/houses/Pages/CV08_files/Media/cv08/cv08.jpg?disposition=download http://www.maynardarchitects.com/Site/houses/Pages/CV08_files/Media/Picture%201/Picture%201.jpg?disposition=downloadhttp://www.maynardarchitects.com/Site/houses/Pages/CV08_files/Media/Picture%202/Picture%202.jpg?disposition=downloadhttp://www.maynardarchitects.com/Site/houses/Pages/CV08_files/Media/Picture%203/Picture%203.jpg?disposition=download http://www.maynardarchitects.com/Site/houses/Pages/CV08_files/Media/Picture%204/Picture%204.jpg?disposition=downloadhttp://www.maynardarchitects.com/Site/houses/Pages/CV08_files/Media/Picture%205/Picture%205.jpg?disposition=downloadhttp://www.maynardarchitects.com/Site/houses/Pages/CV08_files/Media/Picture%206/Picture%206.jpg?disposition=download http://www.maynardarchitects.com/Site/houses/Pages/CV08_files/Media/Picture%208/Picture%208.jpg?disposition=download http://www.maynardarchitects.com/Site/houses/Pages/CV08_files/Media/Picture%209/Picture%209.jpg?disposition=download
    http://www.maynardarchitects.com/Site/houses/Pages/CV08_files/Media/Picture%2010/Picture%2010.jpg?disposition=download http://www.maynardarchitects.com/Site/houses/Pages/CV08_files/Media/Picture%2011/Picture%2011.jpg?disposition=download http://www.maynardarchitects.com/Site/houses/Pages/CV08_files/Media/Picture%2012/Picture%2012.jpg?disposition=download http://www.maynardarchitects.com/Site/houses/Pages/CV08_files/Media/Picture%207/Picture%207.jpg?disposition=downloadhttp://www.maynardarchitects.com/Site/houses/Pages/CV08_files/Media/Picture%2014/Picture%2014.jpg?disposition=downloadhttp://www.maynardarchitects.com/Site/houses/Pages/CV08_files/Media/Picture%2015/Picture%2015.jpg?disposition=downloadhttp://www.maynardarchitects.com/Site/houses/Pages/CV08_files/Media/Picture%2013/Picture%2013.jpg?disposition=download
    http://www.maynardarchitects.com/Site/houses/Pages/CV08_files/Media/d/d.jpg?disposition=downloadhttp://www.maynardarchitects.com/Site/houses/Pages/CV08_files/Media/1a/1a.jpg?disposition=downloadhttp://www.maynardarchitects.com/Site/houses/Pages/CV08_files/Media/plan%201/plan%201.jpg?disposition=download


    February 17

    Affluenza

    cited from Oliver James, Affluenza 2007 p.13

    r u suffering from Affluenza? the Virus in ppl who strongly favor - money, processions, physical and social appearances, and fame....'to have or to be'

    "being" is an active, vital, internal state in which we are able to see what is really around us, to engage with the world without feeling a need to dominate or destroy it. when being, a person does not preconceive their experiences. thsi is evident in small children before they have becoming infected by Having. Infants may observe a ball rolling a hundred times but still remain fascinated because they r 'really' seeing the ball roll, observing its rotations, variations in direction, different on each occasion and fresh to the infant eye. if sensation is merely confirming prior expectations, as is the case when the stultified Having mode guides our perception, we r liable to become rapidly bored. we might be hyperactively busy in our day-to-day lives, but inactive in our apprehension, like hypnotised zombies. someone who has been hypnotised may have their eyes open, and speak and move about, but they r merely the vessel of the hypnotist's volition, not their own. likewise, a person with a compulsive obsession to touch the floor one hundred times in a strict ritual before leaving the house is busy bee....in Having mode, ppl r as much in the grip of external forces as the hypnotised or the compulsively obsessed. Fromm dubbed such 'Having' people 'Marketing Characters'. They experience themselves as a commodity, with their value dependent on success, saleability, the approval of others. F2f or telephone selling have become a perennial of the American WAy...study show tt they regard themselves as objects in a 'personality market'. Career success depends largely on how well persons sell themselves, how nice a 'package' they r, whether they r cheerful, sound, aggressive, relaible, or ambitious....

    'Having' intellectualises and distances one from oneself and from others. Intimacy is destroyed if u regard another person as an object to be manipulated to serve ur end...in choosing frds or lovers u r swayed by their supposed value in the personality market, by looks or wealth or charisma, rather than by love. this leaves u feeling lonely and craving emotional contact, vulnerable to depression......

    to fill the emptiness and loneliness....we resort to the consumption tt is essential for econmioc growth and profits.the more anxious or depressed we r, the more we must consume, and the more we consume, the more disturbed we become....
    February 08

    Frost/Nixon shd won the awards

    frost/nixon shd won the awards
    although i didnt catch Milk
    much more intellectual


    "u know the first and greatest sin or deception of television is it simplified, it diminishes great, complex ideas, trenches of times, whole careear become reduced to a sinlge snapshot. or said first i cound't understand why Bob Selnick was quite as euphoric as he was after the interviews or why Jone Brit felt moved strip naked and rushed into the ocean to celebrate, but tt's b4 i finally understood the reductive pwoer of the close-up bcoz David had succeed in the final day in getting to a fleeting moment with no investigator journalist, no state prosecutor no judiciary committee, or political enemy had mamanged to get, Richard Nixon's face, swollen and ravaged by loneliness self-loathing and defeat, the rest of the project and its failing would not...totally cease to exist"