Wednesday Literary Perambulations: World History in Quick Bites

gombrich

This charming little book chronicles the beginnings of man from Pre-history (once again, another work that begins in the cave!) to WWI (frankly, just reading the prehistory chapter and the WWI chapter back to back and skipping the rest of time you have to ask yourself, have we really progressed at all?)   The author, E.H. Gombrich, a Viennese cultural historian who lived mainly in London is most famous for his art history text book, The Story of Art (also worth owning as a reference).  However, his tiny little history summary is a gem – and easily read in bits and bites.  The woodblock illustrations add to the charm.  Available only in German during the 20th century-(Gombrich wrote the original in 1936) – he self-translated the work into English in his later years, working on it until his death, at which point his research assistant took over and brought it to fruition.  It was published in the US in paperback  by Yale University Press posthumously (2008).

It is a perfect bedside book to read “in”  — ours lives on our bathroom reading shelf and teens and adults enjoy browsing through its chapters none of which are more than 11 or 12 pages long.

Art Thursdays: Modernized Art

Last week we played, “pick a piece of art that most represents your ideal vacation” on this page.  This week? What if an artist you like were painting today.  Maybe it is a political piece, like Delacroix’s huge 1830 Liberty  (capturing that year’s uprising against the king).  Today, he might have painted the woman who scaled the flagpole on the South Carolina state house grounds and removed the confederate flag.

liberty delacroix

Someone has already made a famous spoof of Vermeer’s Girl with the Pearl Earring:

girl with a digital camera

I rather enjoyed this wonderful pop art spoof of Warhol’s Soup Cans – modernized for the vegan world.  What’s your favorite painting that could be updated to reflect current times?  This is a fun game to play (with or without kids) at an art museum.

warhol

Campbells_Soup_Cans_MOMA

Literary Perambulations: The Ransom of Red Chief by O. Henry

Porter as a young man.
Porter as a young man.

Of all the short stories I was ever assigned, The Ransom of Red Chief is by far the most humorous, entertaining, and memorable.  The story was written by O. Henry – a pseudonym for William Sydney Porter, a Southerner born during the Civil war who moved to Texas and had a very colorful life.  A performer and humor writer of great regard, O. Henry may have honed his knowledge of the kidnappers in this story during his 3 year stint in an Ohio federal penitentiary.  He had landed there, after being caught as a fugitive, accused of bank fraud and embezzlement (several articles on his life insist he was SLOPPY but not a criminal.)  This marvelous story has a wonderful twist as do many O. Henry stories.  I’d say read “in” it but at about 16 pages,  it is a short read and well worth the effort.  Children of all ages will love hearing it read out loud.  Happy summer reading…

MY Freedom of Speech, It’s All About Exercising The Right, Now Isn’t It…

I have a slightly different take on Confederate flag flying at the South Carolina capitol. When our kids play football against a team called, “The Rebels,” in Walpole, MA, an abutter to the high school fields (and “proud” graduate) insists on flying a confederate flag. Unlike in South Carolina, where the flag is flown officially, this one is private.  Despite the school and town’s hopes and requests that the property owner remove this flag (read this article about the Walpole rebel flag for the history of why a northern town chose the “rebel” mascot in the first place), he adamantly exercise his freedom of speech muscle and to this day refuses.

Walpole MA Lax game, photo credit: Boston Globe
Walpole MA Lax game, photo credit: Boston Globe

The first time I saw the flag, I was both horrified and astonished. Frankly, I think I was doubly horrified because of my southern roots – having a proud southern heritage but never having lived there makes one even more off-kilter when faced with the Confederate flag – you just don’t have a lot of practice at what to say, but you feel a way greater need to say something than someone who has no ties below the Mason-Dixon line.

In my years as a football mom, I have been up close and personal with that flag for 9 years as a visitor to those fields. What I will say is that that flag has sparked some of the most frank, deep, and caring conversations I have ever had about race – and many were had within mixed-race groups. The best conversations have come when I have served as a “security” person at youth playoff games (just in case you are wondering, I guarded a portable field heater – even though I’m sure y’all thought they made me into a bouncer what with my whole new fitness thing 🙂 ). The ability to ask an African-American mom what she thought about the flag and share how it upset me and how I had told my kids about how upset I was – that experience was true bonding and led to wonderful, frank, extended talk about way more than race. During one of these discussions, I was able to recruit a fellow mom for an insurance position I had (I’m a headhunter in insurance and public health for those who don’t know). If that flag hadn’t been flying, I wouldn’t have ever bothered to introduce myself or find out what that mom did for work. And I’ve seen a lot of other Wellesley parents do this too – that’s the plus to it being SO egregious, you just CAN’T sit there in silence – it triggers a bravery in you that wouldn’t happen if it wasn’t smacking you in the face.

The person in Walpole thinks their flag is a symbol of THEIR freedom of speech. But, you know what? My rebel yell is just as loud as his (probably louder)! I’m using my free speech to march on up to people I don’t know and say, “Hi – I’m Julia – that flag makes me really uncomfortable, as does even saying this, but I just wanted to say hello and welcome and let you know that I’m truly sorry about how it may be making you feel. I also want you to know I’ve told my kids about what that flag means, so that when I’m dead and gone, they will tell their kids and grandkids, and we will all work towards taking the wind out of that flag’s sails…”

Until that flag in South Carolina does come down – and I am hopeful that with open, frank posts like the ones I’ve been reading this week it will – it should become the symbol of OUR freedom of speech. Because in many countries around the world, if a governmental entity put up a flag we didn’t like, we wouldn’t be free to comment.  We just have to make OUR free speech heard clearly and voice our thoughts OUT LOUD and OFTEN, because if OUR free speech remains only in our houses or in our heads, it is NOT going to move that flag off the South Carolina capitol building in our lifetimes. So, go on up to strangers and have a conversation about that flag whenever you can -your freedom of speech is at least as valuable as that of the flags’ owners.  EXERCISING your right is of course the whole POINT of freedom of speech in the first place, now isn’t it.  So, Just Do It!

Food Friday: Cooking – The Ultimate STEAM project

Science Technology Engineering Art and Math – I’ve lucked out – my eldest, who wrapped up school yesterday, loves to cook.  Day 1 of No camp summer he has established as Pork Products Day and is busy crafting ribs, chops and tenderloin with a Gordon Ramsay Pork Ribs Recipe.  With Ramsay being British, the recipe was all in metric adding an extra math challenge with the conversions.

Prep (tech and math)
Prep (tech and math)

I began my cooking career at about this age – I remember making the Blue New York Times Cookbook graham cracker hazelnut chocolate cake over and over till I perfected it.   Somehow I wanted to whip out a one draft wonder for most of my academic assignments, but I was willing to spend hours remaking a cake till it was absolutely perfect – same is true with my son’s rib-prep.

Cooking Phase - art, engineering, tech
Cooking Phase – art, engineering, tech

And finally, finished product – with YouTube and the Food Channel, presentation has become a much bigger thing than it was when I was starting out as a food hobbyist.  A long time was spent plating this dish – definitely heavy on the art and engineering.  Voila and Bon Appetite!

Final Presentation
Final Presentation

The Internet’s Too Ugly, Mom

moonstone

Many of you have enjoyed my youngest child’s pronouncements throughout the years.  We call them Tedisms. Recently, he has been lobbying to go back to a rocks and gems shop in Southern New Hampshire right when school gets out.  He and I share a geological bond.  His goal this year is to add to his moonstone collection – his favorite gem.  These opalescent orbs (see photo above) radiate light from some unknown source and they are quite mesmerizing.  Recently, I have become quite partial to shiva lingam stones (see photo below) from India. Sacred in Hindu culture where the rock is seen as the embodiment of the energy of the God Shiva, these bead-like 1″-2″ river rocks have an earthy weightiness and an appealing, smooth, rotational surface that encourages meditative manipulation. Shiva lingams are not as eye-catching as moonstones, although their desert roan and russet tones have a Southwestern appeal; but they are equally if not more tactile.

shiva lingnam

Each summer, he and I pick a date and drive the hour and a half to the Southern New Hampshire town of Milford for gems and barbeque.  Gems and barbeque — quite the contrast (although I did spend much of my twenties line dancing the Texas two step in the basement of a second rate Lexington Avenue hotel at a place called Denim and Diamonds, so I guess there is a somewhat Proustian precedent for this combo).  Our “rock shop,” The Quartz Source, is located in a rambling cape-style house situated on a sleepy major road.  There is never much traffic; however the traffic there is often consists of a rumble of trucks, making the site far less appealing as a residence than it once was.  Out back, the shop also sells granite and other stone for landscaping, grave markers and monuments – all laid out neatly in an extended exterior garage and garden complex.  The setting is charming, despite the periodic shrieking truck.  They sell all kinds of rocks, fossils, crystals, gems and garden statuary, large and small.  The customers are mostly fairy seeking pagans with beat up Hondas and VW bugs displaying unicorns, rainbows and peace sign stickers.  Mixed in with these visitors are usually a handful of leathered New Hampshire contractor types whose practical rigs sport Harley Davidson and NRA stickers.  These gruff men, intent on acquiring  stone by the ton, keep their respectful distance from the flowing dress and Jesus sandals crowd. But, periodically they do nod a John Deere-capped head in the ethereals’ direction. I have seen them stop to hold the door for the (mostly women) visitors as they depart with their tiny black velvet drawstring bags filled with magical purchases, a collection of treasures gracing their often henna-etched hands.

Only 3 miles down the road, our barbeque joint stands in distinct contrast to the land of gems, crystals and rocks.  An enterprising couple from the south has returned for the past 10+ years to set up their custom made portable pit barbeque trailer where they deliver the smoky taste of the true South to passers by and workers from the local businesses.  Their trailer is a gem.  We happened upon it during a drive home from summer camp one year and have returned on an annual pilgrimage ever since.  Each year we hold our breath with anticipation hoping they have made it back up North for another season.  Through the screened door looms a giant covered charcoal pit, black iron with a small smokestack generating the most delectable of grilled meat scents.  This compact mobile rib and chicken shop, designed especially for them by a craftsman in Alabama, delivers the ultimate in Southern barbeque right in the New Hampshire foothills – the improbability of the whole scene enhances the experience ten-fold.

This year when my son broached the subject of our trip, I was not quite feeling up to committing to a date what with all the year-end wrap up activities and other June shenanigans.  Instead, I tried to persuade him to obtain this year’s end of school gems via the The Quartz Source’s extensive website.  Without missing a beat, he delivered a resounding, “No,” encased in a profound and memorable statement, “I can’t do that, Mom, the internet is just too ugly.”  Teasing out his meaning with a few additional questions, it became clear that by “ugly,” he meant flat, monochrome and non-tactile.  Why would you look to words and photos for pleasure when you could have the real thing?

He had lodged onto something critical.  In fact, he’d lodged onto THE thing that distinguishes summer (and many weekends.) To a kid, the school year is a timeline of learning that concentrates itself on the flat, two-dimensional world of reading, writing and arithmetic.  Now in school’s defense, you the student are supposed to enliven this two-dimensionality with the additional dimensions of your creativity and imagination.  But, we all know that our creativity and imagination clings to certain subjects while going totally limp for others.  In summer however, the flat world of academic learning gives way to a giant, lush, three-dimensional experience of the world.  We don’t read about rocks or New Hampshire or the Appalachian tradition of barbeque, we dive right in and experience it.  Ultimately, he is right — visiting our rock store just could not be supplanted by a mere online shopping experience, no matter how elaborate or informative their website is.

So, our trip is now planned and this, my-Monday-before-school-is-out blog post, is an affirming act of transition. We are officially moving out of the second and into the third dimension — the summer dimension – of learning and fun.