Wednesday, October 22, 2008

More Ways than One to be Buried

Over at Adrian McKinty's always excellent The Psychopathology of Everyday Life blog (http://adrianmckinty.blogspot.com/), they, or I suppose I should say we, have been discussing the recent exhumation of the bones of Garcia Lorca from the mass grave in which he was buried with many more of his compatriots.

It's interesting in this connection that I have just read recently of another Spanish literary light of that era in the latest issue of Tin House, which has the theme of "The Political Future". (Great issue, by the way--full of essays and reflections from all the current literati you'd care to read.) Mark Statman writes of the erasure of the work of poet Jose Maria Hinojosa, a member of the Franco faction who was murdered in prison only days after Lorca himself was killed. Statman himself finds himself at odds with Hinojosa's politics, but is disturbed that the literary work of this man, which was not political, has vanished from our view. You can read his full if brief essay on the subject here:

http://tinhouse.com/mag/issue_current/current_lostfound.htm

It's not so easy, see?

Sunday, October 5, 2008

Try to Remember the Kind of September...Because it's Already October

Wouldn't it be funny if this blog itself became a victim of my own lapse of memory? It seems to be headed in that direction lately, anyway. I wonder if anyone has done any research on forgetting the existence of one's own blog? Because you know there have to be a million of them mouldering away untended out there...

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

Memory and Addiction

Who said a lapse of memory always has to be a bad thing? Certainly not me, and even more so after reading this entry from the newly launched Very Short List's science blog:

http://www.veryshortlist.com/science/daily.cfm/review/590/Other_print_publication/addiction-and-memory/?tp

(Sorry, I tried to add that as an actual link you could press, but it came up invisible on the preview)


Basically, a recent study showed that after rats had become addicted to cocaine and then forced into withdrawal, all the rats pushed the lever to get more cocaine (though there was no longer any there) but rats who had been given a memory inhibitor soon stopped, while those not dosed with it persisted in trying the lever for several days. Although the researchers theorize that because they had lost their memory of their addiction, they lost the craving for cocaine. I'm wondering if they didn't just forget what the lever was for. But all I read was the blog--I didn't go on to read the paper, which Very Short List happily provides.

I'm not totally sure if this information, which in some ways seems self-evident, or something you might be able to deduce from your own experience of various cravings, is really worth causing the addiction, withdrawal and readdiction of innocent lab rats, but it's still interesting to add good effects of a lapse of memory to this blog when I find them.

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

I'm still trying to formulate what I think this blog is about, but here is an example of it, even if I'm less than articulate about why that is so. This link from the excellent and always thought-provoking TomDispatch.com is composed of a better essay than I could possibly write about the way the anthrax attacks of 2001 leapt into a terrified public's consciousness, vanished from view, had a brief blip of attention when the supposed perpetrator committed suicide before being tried, and now, what with the Olympics, Hurricane Gustav and two political conventions intervening, has slipped from view again. Here's the link:


http://www.tomdispatch.com/post/174966/six_questions_about_the_anthrax_case

Particularly interesting to me is the point made by Tom that the FBI has apparently fixated on the lone terrorist theory without somehow being able to give credence to the idea that more than one person may have been involved. Don't these guys ever read mystery novels? Or even bad Cold War thrillers?

Anyway, from the point of view of this blog, I'm probably most interested in how I, as a member of the fairly educated public, can be roused and lulled, roused and lulled again on a subject like this one. As this essay makes clear, the implications of homegrown and distributed anthrax are actually terrifying. But it's as though we can't really be bothered to think about that until something else happens. Is it just that there is now so much that is really beyond our control that we can't think about such things and go on with our daily lives? Or are we actually being manipulated toward and away from such subjects in a more purposeful way? I'm not a conspiracy theorist--just wondering.

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

Preamble

We all forget things from time to time, right? Oh, just little things mostly, like where we left something, or someone's name. However, in this age of information overload, I'm finding we increasingly forget the big things too. I just watched a Newhour report on Katrina, for example. Although many things are coming back in New Orleans, there are still many things that are not, these three years later.

Three years is a very short time in the aftermath of a major disaster. I should know. I lived through the Loma Prieta earthquake of 1989 and worked at a downtown business before and after, even though the downtown had been pretty much destroyed and was even cordoned off for a long time. It takes a long time to rebuild. Many things happen to the citizenry of a community in that time. People leave, make new decisions about their lives and so on.

New Orleans lost their criminal record department to the flood waters. The office is still being run on card tables, the Newshour revealed. That's not a scandal or anything, but it does show where things stand, in a major U.S. city, three years out. In Santa Cruz, the bookstore I worked in, and still work in, operated out of a giant tent for several years, as did many businesses that hoped to keep downtown alive. Not everybody made it.

Anyway, I'm realizing how quickly situations like Myanmar's tidal catastrophe or China's recent earthquake are usurped by current news. I'm not intending this blog to be doleful, I'm just hoping it will be a place to remember things that register as big events in people's lives, long after the media blitz has come and gone. Feel free to post or email if any of this strikes a chord, and I will try to give you a forum here.