Banville, The Sea

Thanks to my colleague Joanne Buckley who buys hardcover novels, I just finished John Banville’s The Sea along with some of the others Booker nominees like Kazuo Ishiguro’s Never Let Me Go and Ian McEwan’s Saturday. Reviewers like Michiko Kakutani in A Wordy Widower With a Past – New York Times are dissappointed in the choice of The Sea for the Booker prize over the other candidates and I think they are wrong.

Never Let Me Go is a light, though well written, work of “speculative fiction” (which is what Atwood wants to call “science fiction” with pretentions to high literature. The premise is not original, but the unfolding of the lives of the children cloned for organ donation is elusively written. At the end of the day it is neither particularly interesting speculation or convincing human drama.

Saturday is gripping in the beginning, but then languishes. I found myself jumping to the end. McEwan is again trying to write a literary thriller and he doesn’t quite have it. Give me Le CarrÈ’s pacing over McEwan.

The Sea on the other hand has the carefully crafted prose of Ishiguro hauntingly tripped-up by deliberate undigestible images and words. Banville is trying to go beyond smooth poetic prose by inserting disturbing anachronisms and physically repugnant images. For those of us tired of stylistics there is much to think about in The Sea.

Further, Banville succeeds at revealing precisely that polished, culture conscious, and uninspired academic who woud value crafted prose. The narrator Max is dealing with the failure of all his poise to make meaningful relationships in the face of death. Without being banal, Banville plots an educated man’s reflections simultaneously on when he came of age with his coming to terms with failed age. These reflections combine the petulant pedantry that comes with failure with a remained nose for the smell of others. A novel that will leave you flat and depressed for a weekend, but won’t leave you.

Buckets of Grewal: Again


In June I blogged a friend’s blog called Buckets of Grewal which is about the Grewal affair. (See the original post here, and at the The HUMlab blog). I note today that the Buckets blog has now surpassed Gurmant Grewal’s site, if you google “Grewal”, but not his wife Nina’s site. Also, this only works on the google.ca site.

Buckets says, “A rose between two thorns.” Or is it a bucket between two gruels.

A National Dialogue on Higher Education

The Canadian Federation for the Humanities and Social Sciences is sponsoring a National Dialogue on Higher Education in November in Ottawa.
How is it a dialogue? They have an online forum and at the conference there will be “Table Talk” sessions at meals. There has also been a lot of discussion behind the scenes between the organizations sponsoring this. I can’t help feeling, however, that some of this is about promoting higher education outside the academy.
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Stanford Podcasting and iTunes

Stanford iTunes is a site that will launch your iTunes so that it sees podcasts from Stanford University organized as a podcast “store”. In effect Apple gave Stanford a section of the iTunes store with its own graphics, “What’s New” section and subsections. Very interesting way to promote academic content (and the university) by being able to manage ones own area. I wonder how it works under the hood, and if Apple will let anyone create an iTunes site? From the FAQ I note that the tunes are not kept on the Apple iTunes site, but on Stanford’s server, and that therefore searching iTunes won’t work. This is thanks Peter Sutherland.

Wikipedia quality issues

From HUMANIST an article in The Register on Wikipedia founder admits to serious quality problems. The article is by Andrew Orlowski (18th of October, 2005) and looks at the problem of quality (where many entries are terrible) and how (if at all) the wikipedia could rectify the situation. In particular the article discusses the way the wikipedia has become a “religious crusade” so that criticism is flamed.

I must admit that most of the stuff I have looked up was pretty good. Hmmm, I wonder if I am looking for a particular subset of things or have a low threshold for quality.
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Canadian pioneers and education

IT Business has an article by Shane Schick on Canadian computing pioneers have issues with IT education (10/19/05). The article reports on IBM’s Centers for Advanced Studies: CASCON – CASCON 2005 conference where they brought together Canadian pioneers (those who got their Ph.D. before 1973 and spent time doing computing at Canadian universities.)

A short list of the pioneers that were featured is here.
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High Performance Computing

What is high performance computing?

On Wednesday I was at a meeting to discuss the National Platforms program which is part of the new CFI programs. Here are the details or the proposed program:

National Platforms Fund (NPF)

The National Platforms Fund provides generic research infrastructure, resources, services, and facilities that serve the needs of many research subjects and disciplines, and that require periodic reinvestments because of the nature of the technologies. The Fund is established to deal first with High Performance Computing, but may be applicable in other cases.

Working with the HPC folks raises interesting questions about what HPC is and whether it has applications in the Humanities.
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ATLAS.ti

ATLAS.ti! is a “Knowledge Workbench” for the qualitative analysis of texts, images, audio and video. It looks like a PC program that lets you annotate large quantities of materials for interpretation, coding, and clustering.

I saw this years ago, but it has matured and now handles multimedia. I should add that it is for sale, not free, though they have a trial version.
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