Steve Mentz

THE BOOKFISH

THALASSOLOGY, SHAKESPEARE, AND SWIMMING

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A Brown Style

December 30, 2010 by Steve Mentz Leave a Comment

With MLA pushed back into January, and the green vistas of spring-term leave looming, I’ve had a little time to read books that have been lying around for a while.  Starting with a Christmas gift from my Marin in-laws of a few winters ago, Richard Rodriguez’s memoir and meditation Brown (2002).

It’s an engaging story about California, Stanford, and racial & cultural mixing — “Brown bleeds through the straight line, unstaunchable,” he writes on the first page.  But what intrigues me about the book is its experimental, allusive, free-wheeling style.  He’s a memoirist, not a researcher, though there are lots of facts to be gleaned, but he’s happy to skip logical steps and make elliptical moves.  He circles around his chosen topics, so that racial mixing rubs up against the idea of California, Mexico merges with the American West, San Francisco with the Pacific.

The dilemma of California remains as Edmund Wilson described it.  We have built right up to the edge of the sea.  It is also that the soil and the air promote contesting legends.  The earth in California is finite, animate, unreliable — the earth quakes, burns, slides into the sea.  But the air is temperate — light and vast — a stepping-off place, and we have only recently discovered how.

It reminds me that the best thing about writing is that you can invent for yourself the best ways to do it.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

The Girl Child

December 29, 2010 by Steve Mentz Leave a Comment

A strong La Nina in the Pacific in December 2010 may mean good fishing for Peru in the New Year.   Also flooding in Asia and the Land of Oz.  “The ocean rules the weather.”

Filed Under: Blue Humanities

From coral ashes…

December 27, 2010 by Steve Mentz Leave a Comment

The Phoenix Islands in the South Pacific are utterly isolated, unsettled, and only recently studied.  When scientists arrived there around the turn of the millennium, they were amazed to find a nearly intact & undamaged coral reef system.  At the time, the Micronesian nation of  Kiribati, which controls the territory, leased the reef and islands to Japanese fishermen, but some clever fund-raising and negotiating ended up declaring the entire area (roughly the size of California) a World Heritage Site and off-limits to fishing.

Despite that, the coral was nearly wiped out by the hotter-than-usual El Nino of 2002-03, which raised the ocean temp by nearly a full degree Centigrade for six months. 

The great news — really the best oceanic news I’ve heard in some time — is that the coral has come back.  Usually dead coral gets smothered by green algae, but the Phoenix islands’ dense population of Pacific steelhead parrot fish ate the new algae, enabling new pink coralline to form a substrate for coral regeneration.

It’s all about the fish…

Filed Under: Blue Humanities

Winter Storm

December 27, 2010 by Steve Mentz Leave a Comment

Nothing is quite as much fun as running on the beach in the dark in the middle of a massive blizzard.  With Alinor, Olivia, Maury, & Shanti.

And here are some of our footprints (me & the dog) —

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Lunar Eclipse

December 21, 2010 by Steve Mentz Leave a Comment

Made it out of bed last night at 1:45 am to see a moon that looked suspiciously like the Apple logo with a bite taken out of the upper left hand side.  Product placement?  Or first solstice eclipse since 1638?

Earlier in the night, after our carol-singing party had disbanded around 9 pm, we saw an even better lunar vision: the full moon blazing, surrounded by a perfectly circular ring of clouds.  The larger circle was about 5 times as big as the moon itself.  No clouds inside the circle, but a wispy gray circle that seemed to hold the high clouds in the rest of the sky at bay.

Strange and beautiful things.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Are you not my mother?: Taymor’s Tempest

December 15, 2010 by Steve Mentz 4 Comments

I’d heard about it already, so I took my grad students to Taymor’s Tempest last night with low expectations.  Lots of overly sweet stuff was already baked into the cake — the Harry Potter sound-and-light show, the distracting CGI versions of Ariel, the utter failure of the universal geometry she subbed in for the masque.  Plus I’ve never seen a really good Miranda, & I wonder if that version of innocence simply isn’t playable today.  Felicity Jones did not change my mind.

The good things were also mostly expected — the clowns were great fun, esp Alfred Molina’s drunken sea chantey, Russell Brand’s Trinculo was manic, and the island set was stunning.  I’m somewhat on the fence about Djimon Hounsou’s Caliban.  Cvered in earth & moonshine, he was visually overdone, but he projected real energy & physical charisma.  The conspiracy scene was impressively dramatic.  I liked watching the sailors go overboard in the shipwreck scene.

But what I didn’t expect was seeing Helen Mirren, a wonderful actor, fail so miserably.

It’s a play about power, & she didn’t project it.  She had the wand, raised the storm, drew the flaming circle, stage-managed the lovers, bossed around the spirit, but she didn’t wield power.  It’s pedantic to carp overmuch about cuts — any film has to cut some of Shakespeare’s language — but when she faced off with Caliban at the end, it seemed meaningful that he did not speak h is final line about needing to “seek for grace.”  He just turned his back on her and left.   She had nothing he wanted.

It doesn’t make sense that Prospera should be weak because she’s a woman, though Taymor’s film seems, according to her interviews anyway, to be bound up in cultural fantasies about motherhood.  But mothers, as Shakespeare certainly knew, are plenty authoritative and plenty scary: remember Gertrude and Volumnia.  Taymor ‘s film defanged her magician, minimizing her political delinquency in Milan and downplaying her aggression toward Ferdinand & her other dependents.  The camera also shot Mirren mostly from above, making her seem frail.  (Caliban, by contrast, was shot mostly from below.)

I like the idea of a female Prospero.  But I’ve never seen a version of The Tempest before where the bits without the wizard were always best.

Filed Under: Blue Humanities, E. 110 Fall 2010, The Tempest

Russell Brand backstory

December 15, 2010 by Steve Mentz Leave a Comment

Here’s a pretty amazing riff by Russell Brand about Trinculo’s backstory.  More about Taymor’s Tempest soon.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Aroma Espresso at 7, Tempest at 7:45

December 13, 2010 by Steve Mentz 3 Comments

English 110-ers —

Here’s tomorrow’s line up:

The Aroma Espresso Bar at 145 Greene St at 7 for the pre-game.

The Angelika Film Center at18 West Houston at 7:45 for the main event.

Papers are due by email (mentzs@stjohns.edu) by 5 pm.  Please give me a mailing address so that I can send these back to you with comments and grades early next week.

Looking forward to Tempestuous travels as we wend our ways to Soho…

Filed Under: Uncategorized

A transparent crab

December 10, 2010 by Steve Mentz 3 Comments

Here’s the website for anyone else who likes this image.

Filed Under: Blue Humanities

Tuesday in Soho

December 8, 2010 by Steve Mentz 4 Comments

To English 110-ers

As we almost figured out yesterday, our final meeting next week will take place at the Angelika Film Center at 18 West Houston Street in Manhattan, at the 7:45 pm showing of Taymor’s Tempest.  Tickets are available online if you want to get them that way.  $13 for adults plus whatever fees the web shakes out of you. 

The best subway stop is probably the F at Broadway-Lafayette, if you’re coming from STJ.

Since our class officially starts at 6:55, that gives us time for a pre-film chat over coffee.  Two possible suggestions —

Aroma Espresso Bar at 145 Greene St

Fanelli Cafe at 94 Prince St

Please indicate preferences, and negotiate carpools and other logistics, in comments.  I’ll be driving over from campus in the afternoon, but then I’ll head straight north to CT after the show, so I’m perhaps not an ideal ride.

Filed Under: E. 110 Fall 2010

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About Steve

Steve Mentz
Professor of English
St. John’s University
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