Alan Jacobs


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Trimming the abelia this morning, I remembered my old handmind in Covidtide post.

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Classical education vs. the factories of unreason.

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This Ted Gioia piece echoes something I’ve been saying for years: see this tag on my blog.

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After what felt like a very long Lent, I almost achieved liftoff this morning when we got to the Gloria of Mozart’s Spatzenmesse. So gorgeously festive.

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Jane Goodall on her 90th birthday: “When I look back over my life, I mean, my goodness, the coincidences that led me to the path where I am now were quite clearly points where I could have said yes or no. It depends whether you think there’s just this life or something beyond, I happen to think there’s something beyond. I feel I was born with a mission. Right now, that mission is to give people hope. So when I get exhausted, I look up there and say: ‘You put me in this position, you bloody well help me get through the evening.'”

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Angus is so happy when his people come home.

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An Easter present for me — author’s (or rather editor’s) copy. So beautifully made. The people at PUP are genuine masters of their crafts.

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Some appropriate Good Friday reading, I think: the third and fourth parts of my conversation with Phil Christman.

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Here’s the second installment of my conversation with Phil Christman about Auden.

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An astonishing carving that may stay in the U.K. — but the art’s the thing, this day, this week.

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I talked with Phil Christman about Auden and especially The Shield of Achilles: here’s the first installment of that conversation.

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Over at my Buy Me a Coffee page, I wrote about what I’ll be up to for the next few years.

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Last post before returning to Lenten silence: I’m really honored to have a place in the new edition of my buddy Austin Kleon’s newsletter. Never thought of myself as someone who could generate text for posters, but maybe that’s my new thing!

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I have learned so, SO much about movies from David Bordwell, and am genuinely grieved to learn of his death. R.I.P. The tribute from Damien Chazelle quoted in that post is especially telling.

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A brief hello before resuming my Lenten silence.

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Gonna be largely offline for the rest of February — see y’all in March!

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Lawrence Keaty, from Taipei (2020)

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When Brad East asks his students what, when they visit a church, they expect to see, one of them said: “Lights.” I.e., a tech-church show.

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Kinda thinking that this wireless diagnostics report that’s been running on my Mac for 10 hours is unlikely to finish. (All of a sudden my Mac, and only my Mac, has stopped connecting to my home network. What joy.)

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Arthur Aghajanian: “The statues of Armenia’s cultural giants embody a distinctive form of heroism characterized by creative acts as forms of rebellion. This suggests another, better way: not dominance but imagination. Thus, its men of stone and bronze highlight the sociopolitical and spiritual dimensions of the creative act. At its best, a Christian vision might imagine statues of prominent Americans the same way. Commemorating not just achievement, but also creative resistance to systems of power.”