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later:b
___
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i never forget the chapter of ulysses
called circe's episode
this is the best antinationalist text
i've ever read
At 08:51 pm -0400 12/9/00, meryl wrote:
Wait a minute now! I've read both Finnegan's Wake and Ulysses. In fact
I've read Ulysses several times, it's one of my top 5 favorite books.
the great great great English visual/sound
poet/perfomer/publisher/essayist/historian
Bob Cobbing
in conversation said he thought
the two greatest sound poetry texts of the 20th century are
FINNEGAN'S WAKE
and Jack Kerouac's
Arrived today
Wonderful
And strange
Thank you
But from whence do they come?
Just read what Derrida writes about Finnegans Wake.
You'll like it
--- NeaL Johnson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
Greetings!!
A while back I decided I wanted the following text
on my gravestone:
He read Finnegans Wake twice.
Actually now it is around three times. And yes,
Roger, every
Hi, Neal
He read Finnegans Wake twice.
Actually now it is around three times. And yes, Roger, every single
word.
Well, I love Finnegan's Wake
but have found it daunting.
I've dipped into it countless times
but never read it right through
I got my Grandma to buy it for me when I was
in my
Josh,
I'd LOVE to see an original definition of conceptual art.
Send it to me!
BTW I'm reading Lawrence Durell's The Black Book now. Can I participate
in yr Durell project?
Reed
Josh Ronsen wrote:
Howdy y'all,
I was at the library this evening, just browsing (I love browsing through the
as i recall--isn't there a volume in the series DOCUMENTS OF 20TH
CENTURY ART
devoted to interviews, statements etc of Duchamp?
--dbc
the day has arrived!
tom and wendy grothus came to visit and we did an i-zone event which i will
send to sol as soon as i get to a scanner. nice to meet an actual fluxster!
and kikusan got in on the act too.
bye, carol :)
--
carol starr
taos, new mexico, usa
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
I read those books from Sterne, the Journey, and of course Tristram Shandy,
which I remind as a most delightful book, with amazing litterary and poetic
inventions, and a remarkable sense of humor. Moreover, it is one of the
first novel to play with the categories of the representation of time and
I was once again thinking of which Duchamp biography to read (any
suggestions?
I would say Calvin Tomkins or Pierre Cabanne.
You can also try to find the "Interviews with Marcel Duchamp" of¨Pierre
Cabanne (I d'on't if it has been translated from french -original title is
Entretiens avec
Yahoo! Thanks for this P.K.
RA
Patricia Harris Deane wrote:
- Original Message -
From: "Patricia Harris Deane" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, September 13, 2000 10:17 AM
Subject: [Fwd: stamp exhibition]
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Media:
...where I was a Flower of the mountain yes when I put the rose in my hair
like the Andalusian girls used or shall I wear a red yes and how he kissed
me under the Moorish wall and I thought well as well him as another and then
I asked him with my eyes to ask again yes and then he asked me would I
Sterne at the Lord Chamber in which he denounces the starvation in Ireland
by proposing various way of cooking babies to fight the lack of food.
Isnt this by Swift ?
Who is much faster and much more readable IMHO.
here's what i have on duchamp:
'marcel duchamp' by octavio paz ISBN 0-86579-016-7
'dialogues with marcel duchamp' by pierre cabanne SNB 670-01907-0
'marcel duchamp in perspective' edited by joseph masbeck ISBN 0-13-556308-9
'the bride and the bachelors' by calvin tomkins SNB 670-00248-8
'duchamp:
Wasn't "A Modest Proposal" by Jonathan Swift?
BadgerGirl
I might suggest also the lecture of "a Modest Proposal", an actual speech of
Sterne at the Lord Chamber in which he denounces the starvation in Ireland
by proposing various way of cooking babies to fight the lack of food.
"narvis ...pez" wrote:
i never forget the chapter of ulysses
called circe's episode
this is the best antinationalist text
i've ever read
At 08:51 pm -0400 12/9/00, meryl wrote:
Wait a minute now! I've read both Finnegan's Wake and Ulysses. In fact
I've read Ulysses several times,
Bertrand et Claudia CLAVEZ wrote:
I might suggest also the lecture of "a Modest Proposal", an actual speech of
Sterne at the Lord Chamber in which he denounces the starvation in Ireland by
proposing various way of cooking babies to fight the lack of food.
That's actually not Sterne, that's
I've said it before, and I'll say it, again: Firesign Theatre is way too
clever to ever be discussed on FLUXLIST.
http://www.firesigntheatre.com/
...where I was a Flower of the mountain yes when I put the rose in my hair
like the Andalusian girls used or shall I wear a red yes and how he
Reed Altemus wrote:
Josh,
I'd LOVE to see an original definition of conceptual art.
Send it to me!
Sorry, the mysterious Kraagink (sounds like a title to a Xenakis piece, n'est-pas?)
won the index card. Maybe he/she will be kind enough to share it with the list when
they get it (or maybe, in
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