Senin, 30 Januari 2017

Breaking Eggs & Rules with Nicole Walker

Since Nicole's beat for this column, aside from eggs, is breaking the rules, in which she asks other cool kids about how they break the rules, and since she has a new book, Egg, coming out from Object Lessons (Bloomsbury) in March, I thought I'd, uh, like, break the rules and grill her instead. (Also really trying to avoid kitcheny puns.) (Also: can you grill eggs? I am guessing not.) --Ander

*

Ander Monson: Like with your Micrograms, the one New Michigan Press published last year, this is a small book in size, if not ambition. Is the appeal of little essays and that of little books like that of little eggs? Or eggs? I'm wondering how this strand of your work feels against the longer form stuff (long essays, memoir, etc) you do. (Or if this is kind of the fork of your work that your poetry used to occupy?)

Nicole Walker:


On Tiny Things: An Essay


I do think the mini essays began with the microcosm project and the tiny essays from that project that became Micrograms. Those essays were pointedly small, little bits of evidence that the tiny makes an impact on the large. The tiny essays interrupt the longer ways, causing trouble. I'd say the mini-essays are trouble makers. Not really occupying the space of poetry, since my poems start from a different place, but little irreverent bubbles that pop in the slow heave of the longer essays. In writing Egg, that idea metastasized. Matryoshka dolls became an organizing principle. One idea inside the other.

Ander: I think I mentioned to you in an email that one of the things I really like about this work (and your work in general) is the sense of movement, by which I mean the velocity of sideways (or as Athena calls it, "sideward," since "forward" and "backward") movement. That's usually thought of, I guess, as associative or lyric, that flicking from one gear to another. I mean, you can look at most of the essays and just find a paragraph like on 13:
When Rebecca paints, she paints with oil, not egg tempera. She paints in her studio, while in her kitchen she makes a lemon cake into which she has folded four binding eggs. She plans to share the cake. She takes the cake to the gallery owner. The gallery owner offers the prospective buyer a piece of cake. Rebecca doesn’t tell her about her eggs, the number of them or how many she has cracked. She doesn’t mention her kids. No one needs an artist who also has a brood. It’s no one’s business what we do with our eggs; that’s why their shells are opaque. No one is allowed to look in. No one’s looking back. But everyone is thinking, inside, inside, inside. That’s where the art lives. There’s a whole lot of potential in that egg. Everyone wants to hold it. Everyone loves the beginning of something even if they don’t know where the beginning will go. Eggs are the beginning because they are air and because they are glue, which is how we’ve kept it together, off and on, for so long. Alternating currents. Silence and speech. Uterus full and uterus empty. Potential potential potential. Chicken.
and we're just flying from one thing to another. We're shifting grammatically, in location, in subject, from narrative to associative to expository to metaphorical then just back to the stinger of "Chicken." I mean to say you do a lot of work in a small--egglike, perhaps--space. I'm not sure if there's a question buried in this comment except to ask you to talk a bit about how you think of your essays as moving things.

Nicole:
On Speed


These Object Lessons titles are so diverse: Hood, Driver's License, Tree, Earth. Earth! How are you going to fit a book about Earth in 130 pages? This is why I feel like Object Lessons is a great form for me. I love the constriction--like iambic pentameter but used like Gerard Manley Hopkins. A kind of sprung Object. I couldn't fit all there was to say about egg but I could take a number of themes about egg and try to tie them together. That theming and tying happens pretty fast, like threads of egg in egg drop soup. You want them to come together but to retain some of their individual strands. Right temperature and whisking are required.

Ander: Seems to me that this book expands the palette of the series quite a bit. In its methodologies, for sure. How did you understand the assignment of the Object Lessons series and this book's role within it? I'm wondering what kind of permission that gave you (or how you wrote against how you thought of how the books in the series work)?

Nicole:

On Trying To Be Someone Else and Failing


I like to break the rules. At some point even, I was mad at the rules. How was I supposed to write the history of the egg from the beginning of time, which is how I understood the project at first. The first OL I read, Golf Ball, really did go into the deep history of golf. I'm not a historian! I'm like an egg-drop-soup-making-interrupter. After banging my head against the wall for some reasonable amount of time, I realized I could only write the Egg book I could write. The cool thing about the OL series is that they have literature scholars, artists, and regular writers writing these. The idea behind the OL series is that who holds the object shapes it. I got the egg. I tried not to break it.

Ander: Can we discuss frittatas? I've never understood why anyone would knowingly make or eat a frittata when you could have an omelet. I've sent back "omelets" that I've ordered that showed up as frittatas because frittatas always seemed to me like half-assed omelets. They lack the apparent care and contrast between wrapper and wrapped, and that pleasing feeling of secret reveal that you get with an omelet when you get inside. Instead they just become a jumble, which seems somehow to me graceless. (Though I admit I am an enthusiast for hashes, which I recognize might seem counterintuitive, but then as you know my tastes in food are not always all that consistent.) You, though, who should know better (and possibly do), seem to prefer the frittata to the omelet, or at least you write more about cooking them. So: why frittatas? Is the benefit of the frittata just convenience, that you can feed a group much more easily or quickly with the frittata? That it's less fussy? That it wears its chaos better? But then what about constraint? Are we still talking about egg dishes or the book?

Nicole:

On Frittatas

One of the first things I cooked for Erik when we first started dating was a frittata. Or a fake frittata in that I used leftover pasta, like broccoli and sausage linguini, added a couple of eggs, added the mixture to a pan, flipped it (tricky!) and then took it with us camping. Erik sat at the picnic table, the one time in our relationship where we had a picnic table while camping, and took a bite and asked, "where is the sauce?"
     The next frittata of our relationship was in Venice Beach at a restaurant where they roasted fifteen kinds of vegetables, including your most favorite mushrooms. They cooked the veggies with eggs in the pan. Flipped it (tricky!) and served it. Erik shared it with me. Never once did he suggest it needed sauce.
     The most recent frittata I made I just whisked up some eggs and cooked them too fast in a pan. I flipped the egg mixture. It wasn't tricky because the eggs had dried out over the too-high heat. The texture was more shell than albumen and yolk. I should have found some sauce. Erik would have used ketchup.

Ander: I'm going out of order now, but it doesn't feel right to just interject new questions in among the old. I hear what you're saying about constraint, though. One thing I really like about this book is how relatively uncooked-seeming some of the parts of it are, not normally an aspiration for the book, but you include big chunks of people's stories—Margot's and Tanya's, just to name a couple obvious ones—as quotations. In this way a lot of the people in your life show up here in the book in citation or in narrative (I see I make a brief appearance too). I recognize lots of stories in here that I've heard in various conversations with you before, which is a cool insider effect for me personally and I'm sure many other people in your life. Is there something in your approach to nonfiction--or just to Egg--or to eggs or cooking that for you is essentially collaborative or social?

Nicole:

On Using People's Stories Verbatim in a Book You're Supposedly Writing

I had three reasons why I wanted to use other people's stories in the book. 1) The eggs are a metaphor for story and internationality. Eggs are glue. Stories are glue. Eggs are international. Stories are international. 2) I only know so much about eggs. I wanted to know what other people knew about them. How they figured culturally in their lives. How eggs described their families. Once I got those stories, I wondered why would I change them. They're little gifts, perfectly packaged already: like eggs. And 3) This book is about friendship and how you make it, lose it, if you're lucky, get it back. I thought that the stories people shared with me solidified, like a wood-smoked-veggie frittata, our friendship. Oh, and 4, if I can have a fourth reason, sometimes, I get tired of hearing myself make eggy metaphors and looking for cliches that feature the breakiness of eggs.

Ander: I should also admit here that though you've instructed me many times how not to ruin scrambled eggs by cooking them too quickly over too-hot heat, I don't think I've ever once had the patience to do it that way, so I feel like I'm missing out on something for sure. What's wrong with me? I did, however, internalize and now use a little lesson that Heather Price-Wright gave me from her dad about making omelets, how you don't actually need to use milk in the mix, how actually a couple tablespoons or two of water, mixed vigorously, actually does better. I'm not sure it actually does better for me but I no longer use milk making omelets. God damn these questions are getting me hungry.

Nicole:

On What Should We Eat for Lunch

Last night, after we bought a new car, which I regret (only because I hate buying anything, except groceries), we came home from our friends' house. Erik cleaned out the garage to make room for the new car, which I regret buying (because it barely fits in the garage. Truck.) and I prepared the batter for a Dutch Baby (4 eggs, 1.5 cups flour, 1.5 cups milk, pinch of sugar, splash of vanilla, tiny bit of salt) which I would make in the morning for the two kids extra we had since apparently on the  Saturday after regretful purchases, one hosts a sleepovers. I thought I'd read in some cookbook that making the batter the night before would lead to better babies but maybe that was crepes because the Dutch Baby didn't puff as it was supposed to. Flat as a pancake, it came out of the cast iron pan. We ate it with lemon and powdered sugar and my daughter Zoe said it was delicious anyway. "It tastes like lemon squares," she said.  But now I'm out of eggs and there are still 4 kids here, 1 garage-cleaning husband, and me to feed lunch. I think I'll make quesadillas.

Thanks for breaking the rules, Ander Monson. I hope you also noticed that never once did I use the word "Eggcellent" or "Eggstatic" or "Eggsquisite" in the book. I'm grateful too for your restraint.

*

Nicole Walker is a professional eggcentric, eggsayist, and eggalitarian. She's a reggular columnist on this site and a mustache aficionado. She's 93 letters deep in her Letters to Arizona Governor Doug Ducey series. You can read em at her blog or in Ducey's official mail.

Share:

CPE writing correction: Essay


Hi Gustavo,

I'm sending you my first essay I wrote for Part 1 of the writing test. This must be the hardest part of the exam since I have no reliable way of knowing just how good my writing is and what grade it will merit. So any feedback will be greatly appreciated! Thanks!

Best Regards,
George 

P.S. Pay no heed to the title, it was a joke between me and my teacher :)

 Oxford's Proficiency Masterclass Oxford's Proficiency Masterclass



Burn the zoos! Hang the keepers!
(unabridged version. also the only one)


Does conservation justify incarceration? That is a dilemma zoo opponents raise. Crammed zoo enclosures, they say, are hardly appropriate for wild animals which regularly exhibit physical and mental discomfort in captivity. On the other hand, those in defense of zoos insist that they are instrumental in keeping animal extinction at bay.

Our understanding of animals has come a long way from perceiving them as mindless automations. Today, we are well aware of the fact that their inner world is every bit as sophisticated as even our own. Can we then in good conscience continue to deprive them of their freedom, knowing full well the anguish this entails?


And while the notion that Zoos offer opportunities for scientific research holds some credence, its relevance is best taken with a grain of salt. For one can raise a serious objection to such a research and purely on scientific grounds too: animals exposed to adverse psychological conditions are bound to display pathological behavior and thus any observation will have questionable scientific merit. Add to all of this the fact that a positive link between zoos and education is yet to be established, and you’ll see that the case for zoos is looking rather flimsy.

Modern-day technology can certainly rise to any challenge of observing animals in the wild, and if the funds currently used to run zoos are spent on dismantling black markets and other anti-poaching efforts then there would be no need for zoos. The animals would again be safe in their indigenous environments.

There is no disagreement that a lot of animal species are nearing the brink of extinction as a direct consequence of human activity, and so the responsibility for action lies with us. However, the delicate nature of animals behooves us to seek more humane alternatives to zoos.



Submitted by: George R
Words: 311

Feedback:
Dear George, I read it twice and I find nothing to correct. Seems very well written to me. 
Let´s challenge our readers to maybe find something to correct/improve. Congrats.


Share:

Writing correction Report for CAE exam

Dear CPESamplewritings, 
please read my Report and give me some feedback.

Regards
Rita Cotrim

Task
You belong to an international film club and have been asked to write a report for the club members including information about the main events held over the last twelve months, the present plans for activities in the coming years and a summary of the current financial position of the club in respect of money received and payments made.


Title? (Feedback: write a title)

Introduction

The aim of this report is to outline the activities we made over the last year and to present our fellow club members our future prospects. (Info about finances is missing, see task)

Main events held last year

First of all, monthly film sessions were organised throughout the year. These sessions were very successful among our club members and got recognised by a cinema magazine.
Furthermore, last year was our 20th anniversary, therefore we were kindly sponsored by DigitalFilms to create a campaign to promote their new film and to celebrate our anniversary. 

Besides this event, a Christmas party was organised and it was a very happy day, where members exchanged gifts and shared a beautiful dinner. (try to use more advanced vocabulary)


Future plans

After gathering all the club’s staff, we came up with new activities for the coming year, such as monthly excursions to a different film club, a film festival and the possibility of opening a new club. (paragraph too short compared with the others)

Finances

It is safe to say that the past year was by far our best year financially. As a result of signing a new contract, the club was able to raise funds from a cinematic association. Moreover, we got 200 new subscriptions and 3 articles in 3 different magazines.
Because the club made a lot of profit, all the debts were safely paid. (check grammar)

Conclusion

At the moment, our club is standing in a great position and we have very rosy prospects. If you would like to contribute to the club’s development, please write your idea to our mail service.
Words: 260


Share:

Jumat, 27 Januari 2017

CPE writing correction Exam 2017

Hello Gustavo,

I would be very grateful if you could correct some of my writings and show me the failures. 


Many thanks.
Riman Ellis


Task:

Read the two texts below.
Write an essay summarising and evaluating the key points from both texts. Use your own words throughout as far as possible and include your own ideas in your answers.
The Financial Costs of Stress
Research carried out by the Health and Safety Council estimates that stress and mental illness continues to be neglected by many businesses, both small and large. And the economic impact of this is huge, costing employers around £26bn a year. Stress at work can lead to a lack of concentration, fatigue and low motivation, all of which will cost the company in terms of low productivity, customer satisfaction and the very reputation of the company itself. Employers are being urged to become more "emotionally intelligent" and to improve the way they deal with stress and mental illness.

Speak up about Stress
Many people find it difficult to talk about their feelings, particularly if we're feeling weak or vulnerable. However, when suffering from stress it’s vital you seek help. It's important to feel you can talk honestly with a close friend, a loved one, a work colleague or doctor about what’s going on. Stress is easily diagnosed and there is plenty you can do to successfully treat and manage stress. One of the most effective of these is to share your feelings with those you trust. Remember that accepting help and support is not a sign of weakness. Close relationships are vital to helping you get through this tough time


Essay on Stress at work


Suffering from stress not only impacts employee's physical and emotional health, but it also interferes with their work performance and productivity. This essay deals with the topic of stress at work and how to reduce it.


The first text raises the issue of how stress at work can affect the society on an economical level, and that if businesses, be them small or large, continue to turn a blind eye to this problem, the situation will only aggravate. It also states that employers must take serious action to help employees suffering from stress to overcome their problems by helping them become more emotionally intelligent. 

The second text focuses on how important it is for the individual to share their feelings with those close to them. It also suggests that talking openly about one's emotions and addressing all problems instead of avoiding them can help people keep any distressful feelings in check, therefore becoming more emotionally balanced. The text recommends getting professional help when going through difficult times.


It is absolutely beneficial for employers to create a calm and trustworthy atmosphere for those who work for them. It is also a good idea to foster friendships between colleagues, as having someone to talk to can lessen the negative effects of stress. At the end, companies who take care of their employees tend to be the most successful ones. 



Submitted by Riman Ellis
Words: 235

Feedback comment:  Is the writing too short? Please check task again. As far as I know, students normally write between 280- 340 words for CPE 
Share:

Rabu, 25 Januari 2017

Ander Monson on David LeGault, Obsession, and The Bad Idea Essay

Well damn, I see it's Wednesday night and the post we had queued up for this week has not yet appeared. Will emailed to say he was working on it, whatever it is. I could probably head over to the Essay Daily folder and check the calendar to see what it is, and if I could be helpful, but I'm choosing not to, instead am going to fill this gap, this little silence with an essay. That comes out of reading a couple books at once and thinking about a project I'm working on called March Fadness.

I've been reading two forthcoming books at the moment, kind of switching back and forth between them, which is a habit that I'm never sure is healthy or productive or idiosyncratic or just wackadoo, scattered, and lame-o. One's Yiyun Li's Dear Friend, From My Life I Write to You in Your Life—named after the title essay, originally published in A Public Space, that later appeared in Best American Essays. It's a great essay, one of the ones that's stuck with me most in the last few years, and you should read it. The other is David LeGault's One Million Maniacs: Beanie Babies, Killer Cars, and the Power of Collectibles (to which: preorder this bad boy now; it's great). Reading it I've been thinking of writing to David—he's a former student of mine and a very fine essayist. He's also an Upper Michigander which doesn't hurt, and he lives out of the country doing something I don't understand.

I've been reading his book since the publisher (a guy I was introduced to as someone who graduated a ways back from U Arizona's MFA program which I'm directing now, though after trading a couple emails it turns out that he didn't actually graduate but did have a lot of cocktails with Joy Williams, who was teaching here at the time, which he estimates probably amounted to the same education) sent it my way for a blurb. So I've been thinking about the book, which I read a few years ago in draft form but which is way better now (nice work, David, making this thing really come together: it does). And what to say about it, whether to go descriptive and save the publisher some jacket copy or go hysterically positive (never a bad idea) or grandstand (usually a bad idea) and carve out whatever aesthetic space I feel like I occupy along with the book. Don't worry, I'm trying real hard not to do the latter. But I found myself thinking a lot about the book. I ended up teaching it in my nonfiction workshop this semester, and it comes right out of a grad seminar I taught in the fall on The Collection as a literary thing).

LeGault's book is an exercise in obsession. It's also about obsession, and is alternately hyper perceptive and pleasingly dorky about its subject matter. By subject matter I mean its obvious subject matter, being obsessions with: used 10,000 Maniacs CDs (in his role as used CD buyer for Half Price Books in Minneapolis, at some point he decides to accumulate 100 copies of their CDs, hence the title), Beanie Babies and their weird economy, with silence and snow and love and children's game shows and famous screams, with distance running and books and killer cars, with latrinalia (bathroom graffiti), and what we call a culture and its many opportunities for individuation and accumulation that it offers. But I mean also the subject matter of the self, not just the instrument of memoir (to cite Patricia Hampl) but here also (how could it not be with such glittery accumulations?) its subject. The subject of any collection worth its salt must be—eventually—its collector. That is its motivating force and its primary energy, especially the more esoteric it becomes.

Collecting, as any even half-assed collector will tell you, becomes quickly a very powerful compulsion, almost erotic in its pursuit and payoff as a collection builds and crests and nears completion. (And completion, for the collection, is simultaneously its natural end and its own extinction: one does not really desire completion in this sense, but of course all of our energies are angled toward it.)

Anyhow, LeGault's is a really good book, and one that any obsessives (and what are essayists if not born obsessives) might want to check out. It comes out from Outpost 19 next fall. I'm definitely going to finish a blurb for it, something that I could probably have used the time I'm putting into this essay into instead. But I'm here talking to you about it instead. I guess I kind of feel like reaching out to you to tell you about it and my experience reading it, and the pleasure it gave me—that instead of writing what amounts to a kind of marketing copy (or at least a nice set for the book to spike home), or doing a favor for a friend and someone whose work and self I admire—instead of that I'd rather write to you about that book. (You may perhaps sense in the idea something of that Yiyun Li book too: while this is being written in just one sitting I'm not a fool; lots of energies are coursing through my thinking about these books.)

Anyhow, I want to talk a bit about the essay "On Excess," from One Million Maniacs. It belongs to a subgenre of essay I'm rather fond of called the Bad Idea Essay (which I think I think I just made up or maybe just forgot its referent and thought myself original: back-pat/laceration?). It begins (and here you can get the immediate sense of how it fits into the subgenre):
I attempt to eat a three-and-a-half pound, seven-patty cheeseburger
Great. This is totally a bad idea. But we want immediately to see where it goes. (Thus conflict's built into the Bad Idea Essay.) Crucially, though, it continues
so that it can be named in my honor. 
and here we've doubled up our subjects: task and honor, and how often these things go together in our lives and stories. How much of what we think of as masculinity is tied up in the stupid seeming unseparatability of these things at times? The essay, as my students pointed out, traffics in vulnerability and the occasional bout of self-laceration as LeGault recounts a time when he ate a giant bucket of movie theatre popcorn and came home to eat a meal his wife had made from scratch without telling her, choosing to choke it down rather than admit his failings: "I'm a fatass, and even worse, a liar." The wife, Michelle, is also present for the massive-burger-eating challenge, adding more stakes to an already high-stakes event. Self-image and how his own wife sees him (or how he fears his wife sees him) are now also on the table along with the 7 patties and the buns.

I'm reminded in the Bad Ideaness of this essay of a story my friend Sean (also, perhaps unsurprisingly, also a marathoner, as obsessives often are if they discover that kind of outlet for their energies) told me about going to his parents' cabin somewhere in rural Tennessee and getting there before they did and deciding to just take one of everything in their medicine cabinet. Now that's a god damn bad idea, I think. And a great idea for an essay. We do not want to be Friend Sean, but we do want to see What Happens to Friend Sean. We want to read about the sort of person Friend Sean Must Be To Do Something So Dumb / Great. Already we are interested in the outcome of his Bad Idea. The great thing about a bad idea is that it sets a bar that the essay must clear to be successful: one must transcend the badness of the idea to get to Something Good for it to work.

Of course this is a mandate for all essays and all pieces of written art. But if you start with a Good Idea it's easy to forget what you have to transcend to really make it go. Sometimes a Good Idea is so self-obviously good that it's actually pretty hard to make the essay good, or live up to the idea. In a Bad Idea essay one's job is to live it down. Or transform it. That's always what we're after: transformation. Swerve. Some movement, even if it's a sexy little wiggle as it tries to work its way into a too-tight dress and doesn't make it all the way and splits its seams and becomes something else, the collision of two things: ambition and transcendence.

I don't want to spoil the essay. I will spoil Friend Sean's essay, which is Unwritten because the outcome of the experiment resulted—simply—in diarrhea—which continues to be one of the few words I cannot spell on the first try. I don't want to say there's not a good essay to be written out of or about bouts of diarrhea (perhaps Michael Ives' "Excerpted from The Dark Burthen" in that special Seneca Review anthology might qualify—and you already know whether you'll go seek that out or not from my description of it), but there aren't probably very many. Maybe Sean will write that essay someday. But he didn't. And at any rate, David LeGault has written his Bad Idea essay (perhaps one could describe most of the essays in the book as Bad Idea essays now that I think about it, and I can feel my blurb writing itself), and finished it. Of course this is also a guy who ran a marathon with me--Grandma's in Duluth, MN, the first one I ran--and it turns out, he told me only later: he didn't train for it. That took most of the edge off my pride in beating his ass at said marathon. So you get the idea. LeGault is kind of a Bad Idea aficionado, but he's an essayist who's figured out how to follow a Bad Idea long enough until it becomes Kind of a Great Idea, Really. You should try it yourself and see where it will take you.

I was planning on writing more about Yiyun Li here, whose essay—and book—invites the kind of writing to I'm doing here (sort of) to David and to you, but I'll put that off for another time: a little later this spring I'll check back with you on that. That's also a book you should preorder now. In the meantime, Dear David, I'm writing here because your book told me or revealed or maybe just flat-out resonated something about my life, which felt good. I hope this kind of resonance is what in part this space is about. It's what our first anthology is about, most definitely. That too you may want to check out in 6 weeks.

And I was meaning to talk more about March Fadness, the sequel to last year's March Sadness, about which I wrote a bit here last spring. All I can say is that you should give this year's tournament/festival of essays and one-hit-wonder songs a read. Start with Brandon Alva's essay, "The Hammer People Need Towels," which went up today as a kind of prelude to the tournament (which begins in earnest 3/1; play-in games begin 2/1). I'm pretty sure March Fadness and Sadness qualify as Bad Idea essay collections on their own, or maybe just machines for memory, but we'll have to see.

These are pretty dark times. Read books for light. Start with these.

*

Ander Monson is one of the caretakers of this site. Rock and roll.
Share:

Senin, 23 Januari 2017

Top 5 Advantages of the Tulane Honors Program

Tulane's Honors Program is innovative and flexible. Today, I am turning the blog over to Charlotte Maheu Vail, PhD, the Associate Director of the Tulane Honors Program to tell you about the top 5 advantages of the Honors program! While you're at it, check out the brand new Honors Program video below.



*          *          *

How do you define an intellectual life? It’s a question we think about in the Honors Program all the time. We think about it in the work we do with students, faculty, and other colleagues at Tulane. It’s a question that you can answer now, next year, after your graduate, and one that you should continue to ask of yourself and others in your studies, in your work, and for the rest of your life. Through our program, we provide opportunities to help you answer that question in a variety of ways, and we expect that through the Tulane Honors experience, your answer will continuouslyevolve.

It is my pleasure to tell you about the top five advantages of the Tulane Honors Program (with some help from current Honors students as well!).

1. Residential Learning Communities. 
Students who want the most out of their Honors experience, live in Wall Residential Learning Community (first year) and Weatherhead Residential Learning Community (second year). Residential Learning Communities are distinguished from other residential halls at Tulane by having faculty members-in-residence that also live in the building and are responsible for fostering an intellectual community among the residents of the Residential Learning Community.

Wall has “Societies” students join such as “Running with Science,” “Gray Matter,” “US Politics,” and “World Cultures” just to name a few. Wall Societies build community among Honors students while creating the opportunity for informal interactions between faculty members and students with the support a resident advisors (RA). Weatherhead continues that intellectual community established in Wall with faculty-led “roundtables” and student-led panels. Jake, a junior in Political Economy and an RA in Weatherhead, says, “There is special academic programming that is different from programming in other residence halls because it is focused on academics and learning. Weatherhead combines the social aspect of other residence halls, with the intellectual aspects of a high-achieving academic environment, which is really rewarding.”

2. Multidisciplinary Courses.
The Honors Program offers a range of multidisciplinary courses exclusively for Honors students, called “colloquium." These course enable Honors students to explore many areas of interest through classroom discussions that carry on in Residential Learning Communities. Elizabeth, a first-year Honors student who lives in Wall, describes that connection: “I really like how I see the members of my colloquium, ‘Globalization and Urbanization Challenges’, and how we carry on our classroom conversations throughout the week in Wall.” Other seminars such as “How Should One Live?”, “The Future of Health Care: Hope or Hype?”, and “Aesthetics and Style” challenge students in new ways and enhance a scholarly community of students in a small classroom setting.

3. Research Opportunities. 
From the Honors Summer Research Program to the senior Honors Thesis, Honors students engage in scholarship with faculty. Parker, a junior in mathematics and computer science, explains what he learned while working on his project in the Honors Research Program: “One cool part about my work is that to alter an algorithm, one must have new mathematical insights. There is a beautiful balance between finding new ideas and applying them cleverly to optimize their utility.” Of course, Parker’s comment could be applied to any discipline.

As the culminating achievement of an Honors student’s undergraduate career, the Honors thesis involves substantial independent research under the direction of a professor. The thesis demonstrates the student’s capacity for quality research and provides concrete evidence of mastery of the material and insights in a field. Maeve, a senior in Creative Writing and Gender & Sexuality Studies, explains, “The thesis process is important because of its concentrated focus. Not only did I gain invaluable knowledge in my disciplines, but writing my thesis forced me to consider the intricacies of my academic pursuit. It compelled me to closely examine what interested me, what I wanted to learn from my inquiries, and what components are integral to my studies now and in the future.”

4. Faculty Mentoring.
Through all of these experiences—colloquium courses, Wall Societies, Weatherhead Roundtables, research opportunities, and advising for nationally competitive scholarships—we rely on the expertise and insights of faculty members who provide mentoring to Honors students at various points during their academic careers. Derek, a graduate of the Biomedical Engineering Program, describes his mentor as someone who “shared his research experiences, helped him search for graduate programs, and gave him advice on all aspects of life.” The Honors Program creates situations where students work with faculty both in and outside of the classroom, that benefit and help refine Honors student's career goals and aspirations

5. Nationally Competitive Scholarships.
The Honors Program provides many opportunities for intellectual engagement at Tulane University, but advising for nationally competitive scholarships is one of the main areas where we challenge students to strive for their full potential. One of the ways in which the Honors Program encourages intellectual autonomy and individual passion is through advising for nationally competitive scholarships, such as the Fulbright Program, Goldwater Program, Marshall Scholarship, Truman Scholarship, and the Rhodes Scholarship, to name a few. Honors students receive special advising from the Honors program about prestigious scholarships, professional preparation, and other post-graduate opportunities. We encourage students to explore these opportunities and consider new experiences (with funding) for graduate study, research, studying abroad, and language acquisition that help foster an intellectual life.

Learn more at our website and we hope to see you during a visit in the spring!

Charlotte Maheu Vail, PhD, Associate Director of the Tulane Honors Program
Share:

Selasa, 17 Januari 2017

Where Are They Now?

Over the past few years, I have been running a blog series about some of our young alumni and what they are up to. I thought it might be neat to revisit some of these alumni to see where they are now. I grabbed one from each of my five previous posts. Let's re-meet them!

Ali on the campaign trail 
We met Ali Vitai in the Newsies blog back when she was the multimedia editor at MSNBC. Today, well, things have kind of taken off. In 2015, Ali was selected to cover a long-shot Republican presidential candidate by the name of Donald J. Trump. And we all know how that turned out. Ali covered the entirety of the Trump campaign, spending a year and a half on the road as an embedded reporter for NBC News. Throughout her time on the trail she reported for NBC's and MSNBC's digital platforms and frequently appeared on TV giving the latest updates from the ground. After Trump's historic victory, Ali has continued covering his transition into office. Here's a great interview with her about what it has been like covering Trump over the past year and a half.

Dan and Lewis Del Mar on Conan last week 
Daniel Miller was in The Industry blog, and things have blown up for him since we last talked. I caught up with Dan last week to see how his music career has developed. He told me, "About three years ago my best friend and I moved to New York and formed a new group called Lewis Del Mar. A year and a half ago we signed to Columbia Records via Startime International. This last year I traveled all over the U.S. and Europe, and performed over 100 concerts in 7 different countries. We were billed on ten major festivals including Lollapalooza in Chicago and Outsidelands in San Francisco. I performed on television twice: Conan and James Corden. We released our self-recorded/produced debut album this past October, and went on our first headline tour in which most of the dates sold out. I was interviewed for NPR regarding an in-depth look at one of the songs on the record and its relation to my family's Nicaraguan heritage. And our album went to No. 1 in Bulgaria lol." 

So yeah, you could say things are going pretty well. Dan even told me he'll have some shows here in NOLA soon. I'll be checking them out at Hangout Fest this summer and you should too!

Ashley out front of the new store (photo Tim Black)
Ashley Porter was on our Fashionistas blog and, one brand new store in the French Quarter later, and her jewelry line has become a mainstay of many celebrities. Her store opened just a few months ago on Toulouse Street in the Quarter. "Since the story was covered the brand has really taken off." Ashley recently told me,  "We've had tons of celebrities become fans of the line, everyone from Taylor Swift, Gigi Hadid, Jessica Alba, Jennifer Lawrence, Sean White...We also have been published in Southern Living, W Mag. Elle Japan. Aside from the new store, most recent and exciting is the debut of my first collection in Fine Jewelry. The collection is inspired by the Crescent City and our place in the universe. My goal in the next three years is to bring more jewelry infrastructure to the city by building a casting house and becoming vertically integrated." 

Joe and Brendan at the Chapter Spot HQ 
We first met Joe McMenemon and Brendan Finke in the start up blog. In case you forgot, they are the founders of ChapterSpot. Since we last talked, ChapterSpot has become much more than a start up. Joe and Brendan founded their company with the goal of making it easier for large membership organizations to manage and to scale their complex business processes. Now, ChapterSpot has grown to support some of the world's largest non-profit organizations. Joe and Brendan have been recognized as the top 100 most influential and active people in tech and entrepreneurship in Louisiana. With an eye on the future, ChapterSpot is building new technology in the quickly advancing fields of data science and artificial intelligence. The company is growing quickly and hiring many Tulane grads as they expand. They currently have over 8,000 organizations as clients! 

Brennan at his store
Brennan Foxman was just getting the idea of his restaurant going when we featured him on the Foodies blog a few years back. His restaurant, Wokworks, has been open for almost four years now, amassing a cult like following, several local awards, and a sizable new investment. Brennan says, "We are excited to grow our brand into several more stores in the coming year, hopefully adding to our family in Philadelphia before expanding to other cities. Who knows where we may end up! #bringwoktotulane"  Anyone in Philly should be sure to check out his shop on Chestnut Street!

Who would have known I could have launched the careers of these five (well, six) young Tulane alumni! I am sure they credit much of their success to this blog. ;-)


T Swift sportin' a Porter Lyons ring

Lewis Del Mar (photo: Billboard)

Another celebrity wearing a Porter Lyons necklace. A.k.a. my mom. 

Wokworks in Philly. (photo: Yelp)


Inside of Porter Lyons in the Quarter 
Share:

Senin, 16 Januari 2017

In conversation with Albert Goldbarth, via many postcards



You'll find a longer preamble to this back & forth in the post just previous, but the quick low-down:

Last summer, when we heard about Albert Goldbarth's new collection—The Adventures of Form and Content—dropping this month, right now in fact, we knew Essay Daily had to commemorate the event, but how? An interview was suggested, and though Goldbarth famously doesn't do interviews, we settled on a compromise: fans would send questions via postcard, and he would reply as he saw fit. And here we are. 

We received a bunch of postcards from all over, some signed, many anonymous, and—due to the constraints of time and temperament—winnowed the lot down to just a handful, which were forwarded on. The replies arrived in a High Priority USPS envelope just last week.

So here it is, Essay Daily's all-inclusive, snail mail, six-months-in-the-making conversation with Albert Goldbarth, cobbled together, a bit frayed 'round the seams, but altogether not too shabby for a Monday morning:



















Somewhat embarrassing here, but rather than Postcard it up, I just included a couple questions of my own in my last letter to Goldbarth:
Were you ever tempted to pull a Nicholson Baker and call Griffin a novel? And, are there any contemporary essayists you'd like to see get more attention? 
Despite my not quite playing my own game, he was good enough reply.






Craig Reinbold edited, with Ander, How We Speak to One Another: An Essay Daily Reader (Coffee House Press, 2017). He also curates this site's Int'l Essayist series.

As for Albert Goldbarth,



Share:

Preamble to a coversation with Albert Goldbarth


Maybe it was this line that did it (?): 
“Earlier, I said, ‘in a trough between crests’—sea imagery. I mean in part that dark, as it grows deeper, takes the world away, and a sleepless body will float all night in horrible separation from what it knows and where it’s nurtured. Freedom is sweet; but nobody wants to be flotsam.” 

or this one: 
“But all that’s the future. Life is never the past, the present, or the future. Life is moments the size of the Thailand bumblebee bat that weighs less than a penny.” 

Probably it was this: 
“At the foveal pit in the eye in the back of the eye in the back of the pineal gland, everybody Quixotes.” 

Everybody Quixotes. Of course they do. But few better than Albert Goldbarth. 

It's a rare thing to read a writer and think, truly, Whoa, to dig a book from the pile so unlike all the others—but it happens, occasionally, this unearthing of some rare and mysterious thing unlike any other thing and the decision there and then to tie your heart's strings to it. So it is to fall in love, and so, years ago, I fell in love with Goldbarth's collection Many Circles, or I fell in love with Goldbarth himself, as it's hard to figure where persona/person end/come together. Then I fell in with many of his other books. I'm probably not alone. 

When the news hit us that Goldbarth would be dropping a new collection this January—The Adventures of Form and Content—we knew Essay Daily had to commemorate the event, but how? An interview was suggested, but Goldbarth doesn't do interviews, except this one, in which he says he'll never do another interview. I felt like a schlubb even asking, but it was easy enough, actually: Goldbarth really doesn’t dig interviews, but our appreciation of his work is as genuine as it gets, and he gets this, I think, and anyway I suspect it’s not interviews he hates so much as the regurgitation of his work for the sake of some bored-to-tears blather, the post-reading Q&A, talk for talk’s sake, the mindless mastication of his poems and essays until the nice raspberry flavor has been leeched and you’re left chewing day-old gum. Nobody likes day-old gum. 

The back-and-forth, the repartee, I daresay, he quite enjoys. And so here we are. 

The genesis of our participatory conversation with Albert Goldbarth is below. Questions and replies are in the next post. Enjoy. 


Thanks, Albert.


***

September 10, 2016

Hi Mr. Goldbarth,

Craig Reinbold here, once more, c/o Essay Daily. We've corresponded a few times regarding the Daily's forthcoming anthology, of with you are a part, but I'm writing today with a different project in mind. Jeff Shotts at Graywolf recently got in touch with Ander and I (Ander being the chief around here) to see if we'd be interested in doing something to commemorate the release of your new book, The Adventures of Form and Content, this upcoming January.

The first, obvious thought was to see if you'd be up for an interview—though Shotts warned of your antipathy towards interviews, and he directed me to an anti-sort-of-interview you did for an interview website, during which you let fly, "for that matter, kill your interview website, and launch a new one devoted to reprinting the work of unjustly neglected poets of the past, or unjustly neglected poems by living poets: give work that's passing into obscurity a new hold on life: let poems of merit speak for themselves (not serve as an excuse for webchatter), and allow fresh light to strike masterful writing that's headed otherwise into the darkness." Well, shit. Well, actually that's more or less what we do at Essay Daily, featuring writing and conversation by and about essayists living and dead, so maybe we're not totally missing your mark.

Give work that's passing into obscurity a new hold on life. Fucking a.

Anyway, maybe you'd be up for some sort of interview, or at least a pre-interview parley? And to be honest, when I say interview, I mean conversation. For me, your essays do stand on their own, and I'm not excited about digging into or tearing them apart looking for something beyond the absolute thrill and sense of playfulness and wonder I get from reading them. If anything I'm a sucker for the essayist himself, which may not be any better, I suppose, but do you know what I mean? In so much as the essay is a brain on a page trying to get at the heart of something (a thought/question/obsession), we read essays because we're interested in/fascinated by that particular pulsing brain. E.g. Can you tell me what exactly you're trying to say with your use of white space in... I hear you read science fiction? Have you read any Liu Cixin? Any thoughts? What'd you think of The Martian? I’m less interested in picking your brain than in just hanging out a bit, here, in letters.

If you're up for it, maybe we could converse, like this, a bit, and I'd scan these letters and put them online via Essay Daily, and that might be a good time? I've also thought it might be fun to collect questions (or comments, or whatever) from writers at large, all over who knows where, via postcard, and then forward these postcards to you and you could respond or not and we could pair your response or non-response for fans to check out. It'd be fun to bring in other brains, I think.

An idea, maybe a little wobbly, out there for your consideration. Any thoughts, about any of this?

I'll wind down here, and await whatever response you might have.

But quick: in response to your give work that's passing into obscurity a new hold on life comment, I'd like to share a poem by Julie Marie Wade, a Daily contributor. I don't really know if this poem is passing into obscurity or not, but maybe that's not important? She ended an essay with it a few years ago, and it's stuck with me, and I'd love to share it with you:

Grammar
For my mother

Here, on the Atlantic, sunrise
 
the reversed syntax of my Seattle youth:

I marvel, still young, at what
it means to have been
 younger;

to see at last the
 parent
in
 parenthesis;

to read—for the first time—
whole chapters of my life

as an aside.


Thanks,


Craig



Share:

Popular Posts

Recent Posts

Unordered List

Text Widget

Pages

Categories

Text Widget

Copyright © essaypremium | Powered by Blogger Design by PWT | Blogger Theme by NewBloggerThemes.com | Free Blogger Templates