Saturday, 20 September 2014

Douglas Adams


My initial thoughts were that Douglas Adams was that he was very interesting and quite funny.

http://www.ted.com/talks/douglas_adams_parrots_the_universe_and_everything

I watched Douglas Adams speaking on Ted Talks, he spoke about his trip to the Galapagos islands where he came into contact with various people, endangered species and venomous snakes. He goes on to address environmental issues which leaves a startling effect. What he says is very interesting.

I feel that Douglas Adams is interesting to listen to but I don't find his humour that funny. I can see why so many people love listening to him and reading his books however I struggle to enjoy listening to him live and it's put me off him a bit.

Richard Sennett

Sennett explored how individuals and groups make social and cultural sense of material facts - about the cities in which they live and about the labour they do. He focuses on how people can become competent interpreters of their own experience, despite the obstacles society may put in their way.

Working precisely to high standards provided the Japanese during these years a sense of mutual and self-respect
The new economy has broken two traditional forms of rewarding work. Prosperous companies are intended, traditionally, to reward employees who work hard, at all levels. In these new economy firms, however, the wealth share of middle-level employees has stagnated over the past generation, even as the wealth of those at the top has ballooned. One measure is that in 1974 the chief executive officer of a large American corporation earned about thirty times as much as a median-level employee, whereas in 2004 the CEO earned 350 to 400 times as much. In these thirty years, real-dollar earnings at the median point have risen only 4 percent.
In today’s globalized marketplace, middle-level skilled workers risk the prospect of losing employment to a peer in India or China who has the same skills but works for lower pay; job loss is no longer merely a working-class problem.

In music this is the so-called Isaac Stern rule, the great violinist declaring that the better your technique, the longer you can rehearse without becoming bored.
About repetition and practice Piano observes, ‘‘This is very typical of the craftsman’s approach. You think and you do at the same time. You draw and you make. Drawing . . . is revisited. You do it, you redo it, and you redo it again.’’

Sennett alters one's view of craftsmanship by finding so much meaning in the detail. The grip on the pencil, the pressure on the chisel: he persuades us that these things have real significance. The Craftsman is one of a trilogy, with volumes to come on ritual and craft, and craft and the environment.

skilled confidence
+
skilled cooperation
=
craftsmanship

“It is often doing something wrong that is the most stimulating.”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LH1aX_6-xkY

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http://www.theguardian.com/books/2008/feb/09/society
http://www.theguardian.com/books/2008/feb/02/featuresreviews.guardianreview14

Richard Sennett brings lots of issues to light that I can relate to and I feel that I can understand him more than other authors that I have looked at. Craft is something that I have always been interested in, my perfectionist nature, although very annoying, connects with what is being addressed in this book. I feel that The Craftsman will become increasingly relevant to todays society. This is because of the rise in machined and mass produced products; many products can lack craftsmanship and the level of quality that you can only get through human interaction.

I have recently started making my own leather wallets and card holders from scratch. I can understand why Sennett sees the value in pouring over something yourself and taking ownership over a process.

Toni Morrison

“She is the voice in consciousness of America who provokes us to become better, to look at the horrors of our past so that we might have a better future.”

'I want to feel what I feel. Even if it's not happiness'

"The idea for a novel about a black girl made to feel so ugly by the culture around her that she prays for blue eyes, came out of an encounter Morrison had as a child. A fellow classmate confided to her the same dream of blue eyes, which, even as a 12-year-old, struck Morrison as grotesquely self-loathing. She remembered it. "I wanted to know how she got to that place.""

http://www.theguardian.com/books/2012/apr/13/toni-morrison-home-son-love# A super interview with Toni Morrison where she expands on being a single mother, the death of her son and love. 

I really like Toni Morrison's books and the topics that she tackles in her work. I do not feel as though I am going to choose her for this brief however, as I do not feel as though I can comment on the subjects that she deals with. I do not feel as though I have enough life experience or wisdom to try and eventually illustrate something of such weight. Death of a son, growing up in a world rife with racism (and being directly affected by it) is something that I can only try to understand.

Tuesday, 9 September 2014

Summer Brief- Initial Response

Summer Brief 
My initial response to this brief was that it was going to be difficult. I am not someone generally reads for pleasure so a brief that requires reading seems daunting. 

The people that I have heard of prior to this are Agatha Christie, Lewis Carrol, Naomi Klein, George Orwell and William Shakespeare. However, Shakespeare is probably the only person where I have read their work. I am not going to choose any of these writers as I 

After having a quick research into 

Italo Calvino           Lewis Carrol        Terry Pratchett        Douglas Adams         Guy Browning
Agatha Christie      Alan Moore          Aldus Huxley           Edgar Alan Poe          William Shakespeare  

Niel Gaiman           Lin Yutang           NaomiKlein              Susan Sonntag          Haruki Murakami

Toni Morrison        Wole Soyanki       Richard Sennet       George Orwell            William Burrows