(Untitled)

Feb 12, 2009 14:06

From Steven Hyden's review of the DVD of "College," from The Onion AV Club (http://www.avclub.com/articles/college,23660/Read more... )

Leave a comment

Comments 8

grosely_clerx February 12 2009, 19:30:58 UTC
Stan Uncapher may as well have written this review; that's how I choose to read it.

But Zac, is there any personal epoch you share nostalgia for alongside the rest of humanity, though? And what conversation are you being made to take part in at gunpoint?

Reply

zdover February 13 2009, 23:55:20 UTC
The conversation is something like "the history of thought". Anyone who knows me could probably guess that I'm just irritated because I feel that I'm expected to treat postmodernism as though it's explanatory of something.

I think I might not be smart enough to go to grad school. Or... something. I think it might be the case that I've got a big problem.

Reply

circumgoy February 16 2009, 03:33:54 UTC
I think I might not be smart enough to go to grad school.

I think it's more likely you just don't want to do what it takes to stay in grad school to go to grad school.

Reply

circumgoy February 16 2009, 04:21:40 UTC
Here's part of a paragraph I wrote on nostalgia a few years back:
For many of the writers of this generation,1 the desire to revisit the pre-passé era becomes such a strong one that it manifests itself literarily. The same could likely be said for most generations. The passé often goes hand-in-hand with adulthood, so the tendency is to concentrate on the era before adulthood. This, in turn, leads to a nostalgic reexamining of the past. How far back this examination may go is dependent upon the person, naturally, but a truly embraceable nostalgia presupposes a fully fleshed consciousness, which disallows much of early childhood. An examination of one's childhood would not be nostalgic undertaking so much as it would be an exhumation of what one remembers what passed for wonderment. The child’s inchoate brain (typically) does not disabuse the child of magical notions, and it is not tasked to call upon logic or deal with libido. This narrows the opening of the nostalgia window to little more than a sliver of a life. What is left ( ... )

Reply


acidmarionette February 13 2009, 02:23:00 UTC
I think I always look back on "the bad times" as good, like I pretend I was happy when I actually wasn't. I think it's just the nostalgia that deludes me into thinking I was happy.

I can already tell I'll look back on college as a happy time, by virtue of the fact that it'll be in the past by then.

Reply


heraclitus February 14 2009, 18:24:57 UTC
Whip_lash has really softened over the years.

Reply

zdover February 14 2009, 18:54:46 UTC
Wow.

I really don't understand people who are apologists for inherited wealth.

Reply

zassenhaus February 16 2009, 18:31:13 UTC
then you need to read vickah's and get up on inherited wealth.

Reply


Leave a comment

Up