【Gary Eberhart Archives】
2025-06-27 05:05:43
435 views
192 comments
Say It with Shoes,Gary Eberhart Archives and Other News
On the Shelf

A mark of distinction, and maybe also love.
- If you’re having trouble focusing, and meditation hasn’t helped, and Adderall hasn’t helped, and whispering “focus, focus, focusssss…” to yourself hasn’t helped, you might try standing in the nude before a group of strangers. It worked for Tom McCarthy, who enjoyed its literary benefits above all else: “Every morning, I’d turn up, strip off, and stand on a small podium while they drew me. If it was a sculpture class, the podium would turn, like a lazy Susan, as the students’ clay figures rotated atop their easels … Nothing I’ve ever done, before or since, has afforded me such a state of concentration—intense, extended, charged. I would run whole passages of text—Baudelaire, Rilke, Ponge, whomever I’d been reading, even my own small works in progress—through my head, forward, backward, taking apart each image, amplifying each meter and sub-rhythm in the loaded silence. I probably learned more about literature in the six months I spent on the podium than in the three previous years of study.”
- Advice for young lovers: treat your amour to a fine, sturdy pair of brogues. Nothing says “I love you” like English footwear. When Marina Warner’s mother moved to England, she’d never left Italy before, and her husband-to-be knew what must be done. Warner writes, “My forty-two-year-old father took her—perhaps as a present for her twenty-third birthday—to be fitted for a pair of shoes at Peal & Co, a family firm famous for its clientele: Humphrey Bogart! Marlene Dietrich! Fred Astaire! The Duke of Windsor and Mrs. Simpson! Each customer was measured, and the findings entered in a series of ledgers known as the ‘Feet Books’; the bespoke shoemakers then modeled wooden lasts to be used to make the shoes; these effigies were labeled with the client’s personal number—my mother’s was 289643—to be kept in the firm’s store for use when the next pair was ordered. The Peal dynasty of cobblers—which stretched back at least to 1791 or even, some claimed, to 1565, and showed at both the Great Exhibition of 1851 and the Festival of Britain a century later—only stopped making shoes in 1965.”
- The original Magnificent Sevenfilm came out in 1960, and, as all blockbusters must, it reflected the politics of its day, suggesting a scenario for U.S. greatness. Now the remake is here, offering a political vision of its own: “For the cultural historian Richard Slotkin, who has written extensively on the frontier myth in American consciousness, the 1960 The Magnificent Sevenwas not only popular but ‘surprisingly prophetic.’ Kennedy’s vision of the New Frontier extended to the third world … The new Magnificent Sevencould be described as an Obama western. The protagonist-savior may be the movie’s lone African American character (although the historical West had many black cowboys), but he is not entirely unique. Three of the remaining Seven belong to minorities—Asian, Mexican and Comanche. The Magnificent Sevencould also be considered a Bernie Sanders western, suggesting that disenfranchised white Americans make common cause with minorities to overthrow the privileged 1 percent.”
- Sarah Gerard wanted to live without violence, so she became a vegan—a choice that served to enable her eating disorders and complicate her approach to food: “My definition of ‘better’ continues to shift. Today, I try to be healthier, kinder—but this wasn’t always the case. Or rather, my idea of what constitutes health once included, for example, a three-hundred-calorie-a-day diet. Being kinder has not always included being kinder to myself, even as it included being kind to animals. At times, being kind to animals has only applied to animals I knew personally. And being kind to myself has at different times meant eating an entire pint of ice cream or eating a kale salad.”
- We in America love to blame the French for deconstructionism—passing the buck is a surefire way to assuage guilt. But look in the mirror, America. Deconstructionism is your own postmodern monster. Gregory Jones-Katz writes, “Viewing deconstruction as a foreign mode of interpretation obscures the fertile soil in which it took root and flourished in the United States. Central to the story of deconstruction, but often neglected, are the various American contexts that cultivated and disseminated deconstructive undertakings. Even though the image—to some, the bogeyman—of the European theorist persists, the truth is that deconstructive literary theory was largely an indigenous creation. This change of perspective throws new light on the scapegoating of French Theory for the decline of the humanities. As it turns out, what began as a rarified method of reading literature practiced in seminar rooms and lecture halls has permeated many arenas of American life, including quite a few far beyond the academy.”
Search
Categories
Latest Posts
3 tips for creating viral content from the creators who get it done
2025-06-27 04:06The Green and the Gold by Helen Longstreth
2025-06-27 03:58Trump's EPA nominee spars with Bernie Sanders over climate change
2025-06-27 03:11Announcing Our Summer Issue by Emily Stokes
2025-06-27 03:02Get a free soundbar when you buy a 34
2025-06-27 02:50Popular Posts
3 tips for creating viral content from the creators who get it done
2025-06-27 05:02NYT's The Mini crossword answers for January 29
2025-06-27 04:14Wordle today: The answer and hints for January 30
2025-06-27 04:13Hauntingly beautiful images emerge from deadly ice storms
2025-06-27 04:12Swole Jeff Bezos joins Instagram to tease his new ROCKET FACTORY
2025-06-27 02:35Featured Posts
Clean energy projects soared in 2016 as solar and wind got cheaper
2025-06-27 04:22Wordle today: The answer and hints for January 30
2025-06-27 03:17On Mary Wollstonecraft by Joanna Biggs
2025-06-27 02:55AI models don’t understand Gen Alpha slang
2025-06-27 02:38Popular Articles
Touring Logitech's Audio HQ
2025-06-27 05:02Get JLab Go Air Sport headphones for under $20
2025-06-27 04:506 easy ways to be more sustainable (that you still refuse to do)
2025-06-27 03:46Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest updates.
Comments (5669)
Dream Information Network
Best external hard drive deal:WD 5TB Elements for $114.99
2025-06-27 04:30Openness Information Network
An Egyptian Vase by Jago Rackham
2025-06-27 03:56Pursuit Information Network
The Action of Love: A Conversation with Charif Shanahan by Morgan Parker
2025-06-27 03:27Creation Information Network
Fucked for Life: Bladee’s Paintings by Elena Saavedra Buckley
2025-06-27 03:19Wisdom Information Network
Miami Heat vs. Golden State Warriors 2025 livestream: Watch NBA online
2025-06-27 02:49