I See a Voice: Election Hangover Edition
November 07, 2012
A weekly series that explores a featured theme — this month, it's fire — by pairing classic quotations with urgent images. What recent news items inspired these textual/visual sets? Leave your guesses in the comments; we'll reveal the answers same time next week. Read More
MishMash: White Privilege
November 06, 2012

Hipster-ish white guy and girl walking down 24th Street near Potrero, late on a warm Sunday night. The guy is drinking a bottle of beer, not brown-bagged.

SHE: Dude, did you bring your beer? Put that away.

HE: What?

SHE: Or, like, hide it or something. Don't be all waving it around. ....

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Cheap Wine, Plastic Chairs: Junot Díaz at Book Court
November 06, 2012
A weekly series that celebrates everyone's favorite part of the author reading: the Q&A. The same clangers are always asked, but a good writer can provide the most generic question with a stimulating answer. This week, Junot Díaz tackles that tried-and-true Q&A imponderable, the creative writing MFA. Read More
(I Still Want to Go to) Chelsea
November 06, 2012
I'm writing this from Austin, TX, land of abundant utilities, Internet, and hot and cold water. But the distance hasn't mellowed my heartbreak at the stories of Sandy's wrath. Images of storm-flooded galleries half an avenue from my former West Chelsea apartment, where I spent my last five years in New York, make it all seem very close to home. Read More
Headline v Headline: Let's Vote

Tomorrow, voters will turn out to elect the next president of the United States — and, if we're listening to reports from Italy and Egypt and South Park, there's plenty of reason to do so.

The New York Times says voting matters: a single state’s electoral votes can have massive repercussions.

Italy's Corriere della Sera says voting matters: with so many factions campaigning, the losers have "enormous potential power of blackmail."

Al-Jazeera says voting matters: Egyptian voters unseated Hosni Mubarak and ushered in a new government — "uneasy as it may be."

Back in the USA, South Park questions just how much voting matters, courtesy of P. Diddy's mantra: “Vote or Die.”

Image: tumblr.com/tagged/vote-or-die

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Disusage: What's a Disaster?

Disusage presents the contradictions and foibles of usage manuals, style guides, and the quirky folks who love them. This week: the celestial and earthly roots of “disaster.”

disaster. n. s. [desastre, French]
1. The blast or stroke of an unfavourable planet.
           “Stars shone with trains of fire, dews of blood fall;
           Disasters veil’d the sun; and the moist star
           Upon whose influence Neptune’s empire Stands
            Was sick almost to doomsday with eclipse.” Shakesp. Hamlet.
2. Misfortune; grief; mishap; misery; calamity.
           “This day black omens threat the brightest fair,
           That e’er deserv’d a watchful spirit’s care,
           Some dire disaster, or by force or flight;
           But what, or where, the fates have wrapt in night.” Pope
—from Samuel Johnson’s A Dictionary of the English Language, 1755

disaster. (?), n. [F. désastre; pref. dés- (L. dis-) + astre star, fr. L. astrum; a word of astrological origin.]
1. An unpropitious or baleful aspect of a planet or star; malevolent influence of a heavenly body; hence, an ill portent. [Obs.] “Disasters in the sun.” Shak.
2. An adverse or unfortunate event, esp. a sudden and extraordinary misfortune; a calamity; a serious mishap. “But noble souls, through dust and heat, Rise from disaster and defeat The stronger.” Longfellow.
—from Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, 1913

“Disaster: something wrong with the stars.”
—from “English: An Ode,” by Robert Hass.

“In every phase and aspect of a disaster — causes, vulnerability, preparedness, results and response, and reconstruction — the contours of disaster and the difference between who lives and who dies is to a greater or lesser extent a social calculus.”
—from “There's No Such Thing as Natural Disaster,” by Neil Smith.

Have an aspect of usage you want examined? Email me.

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