Archive for October, 2011

Babble On: The Origins of Language?

Posted in Books, Clips, Science on October 31, 2011 by frankbures

Once upon a time, humans could not hold conversations or sing songs together. Now we chatter incessantly, not only with speech but also through text messages, tweets and status updates. How we transformed into the highly social species we are today remains the subject of many theories.

Two competing hypotheses center on whether our capacity for language is an innate skill that grew stronger through natural selection or whether we lacked any such ability and instead trained our brains to collect new information using objects and sounds in our environment. In his new book Harnessed, Mark Changizi stakes out the middle ground: cultural—not natural—selection explains our language ability.

Read the rest here.

The Mind’s Eye: Poetry in Motion

Posted in America, Art, Books, Video on October 27, 2011 by frankbures

If you think poetry is boring or difficult or a waste of time, then you probably weren’t at the premiere of MotionPoems at the Open Book Center in Minneapolis. The brainchild of poet Todd Boss and graphic designer Angella Kassube, MotionPoems take poems from the Best American Poetry, among other places, and hands them over to visual artists who make short films out of them. The result is a powerful and evocative elaboration on the original work.  Brilliant stuff:

The Last Gunfight, or the O.K. Corral Revisited

Posted in America, Books, Clips on October 27, 2011 by frankbures

The infamous afternoon showdown – with Wyatt Earp, two of his brothers, and Doc Holliday on one side and the Clanton gang on the other – is often shorthand for a confrontation between lawmen and bandits, justice and crime, good and evil, and for the moment the West was finally won

The truth, as Guinn points out in his book, The Last Gunfight, is more complex. Earp, often portrayed as a straight-shooting crimefighter, was a more ambiguous character: socially ambitious, status-hungry, and sometimes self-mythologizing – a man who needed a high-profile arrest or capture to help him win the upcoming election for sheriff of Cochise County.

Read the review here.

Jaguar: Kigeugeu

Posted in Africa, Arts in Africa, Music, Video on October 17, 2011 by frankbures

Just back from East Africa, where I heard this song on a bus. It’s been in my head ever since.

Hey Australia: Thanks for the Bedbugs!

Posted in Asia, Books, Clips, Travel on October 2, 2011 by frankbures

Long before bedbugs had become the plague du jour, my wife and I set off for New Zealand.

The year was 2000, and we arrived in April to pick apples for a couple of months before buying a barely running car to get us around. We slept in hostels, which had comment books filled with advice about where to stay – and where not to. Many of the entries mentioned bedbugs, which we assumed must be a creature native to New Zealand.

“Whatever you do, don’t stay at … (unless you want to be eaten alive by bedbugs – 122 bites to be precise),” warned one entry. By then, we had already stayed there and had each gotten a few bites, but we hadn’t thought much about it.

I didn’t know it then, but we were close to – in fact, right across the Tasman Sea from – the launching pad for an imminent worldwide explosion of bedbugs.

Read the rest here.

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