What's Everyone Reading At The Moment?

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arabic clans - the misjudged danger
born in lebanon he came to germany in the 70s on a stipend. was a social worker and helped civil war refugees in berlin for 17 years and thus was able to observe the rise of arabic clans over the years and studied them as part of his islamic and migration research. seems to be highly knowledgeable and is able to differentiate appropriately. he criticizes the merkel government for not dealing with clan crime properly. he coined the term of "beutegesellschaft" (maybe: prey society)
 
About halfway though Washington DC by Vidal, Pate 218, and it’s I think the best thing I’ve read this year. It’s my first by him and I’m very happy to see not only the history and how people, the fictional characters, reflect/represent the various moods and perspectives of the time towards politics and America in general including the generational shift but also that the characters have personal plot lines. The book is more than just a history lesson. If the plot was entirely made up I think it wouldn’t make much of a difference. Don’t know if it’ll be this year but I’m planning to read Hollywood next. He and Franzen will be two new authors that I visit again in 2020
 
About to finish dc, fifty or so pages to go, and I loved it so much. The complex structure of the novel and the way so much seemed to happen off the page between chapters. It’s all tension and build up and then post explanation of the event and it’s fallout ( there are of course a few exceptions ). I had the thought it might be fun to read the Washingtonians and Washington DC back to back as time wise they seem to call to each other. Washington DC is constantly talking about the passing of the old dc found in James novel. On another note I couldn’t help the idea that, especially at this moment in time, this would make a fantastic television show by Netflix amazon or hbo. Part house of cards political combat and schemes part succession with its wealth and media influence as well as part Dallas with its melodrama divorces incest family feuds that sometimes end in shots fired and involuntary psychiatric commitment. Like the wire it’d be a show about a city
 
The Founder of America’s Earliest Lesbian Bar Was Deported for Obscenity
Eve Adams was eventually murdered at Auschwitz.
BY REINA GATTUSOSEPTEMBER 03, 2019

The Founder of America's Earliest Lesbian Bar Was Deported for Obscenity
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An illustration of Eve, on the right. SARAH LEE GRILLO
In This Story

DESTINATION GUIDE
New York City

IT TOOK OFFICER MARGARET LEONARD three tries to get her hands on Eve Adams’ book of lesbian short stories. We don’t know what, exactly, the New York Police Department officer experienced when she first slunk undercover into Eve Adams’ Tearoom at 129 MacDougal Street. But it’s easy to imagine a group of artists gathered under gleaming electric lights on a hot June night, reciting poetry or discussing the latest performances in the Provincetown Playhouse next door. Leonard’s mission was simple: to “catch” Adams “in the act” of lesbianism, either by eliciting a romantic move or by finding evidence of obscenity. Lesbian Love, a book of short stories Adams had self-published and distributed among friends, was just the evidence Leonard needed to have the tearoom proprietor arrested.

Established in 1925, Eve Adams’ Tearoom, also known as Eve’s Hangout, was one of the hottest nightlife spots in New York City’s flapper-era West Village. While the establishment is often remembered as a speakeasy, Barbara Kahn, who has done extensive research on Adams and wrote three plays about her life, says the lack of police allegations of alcohol possession suggest that it really did serve tea. But more was on tap at Eve’s Hangout than just after-theater beverages. A magnet for the The Village’s diversity, the tearoom was an open space for Jewish and immigrant intellectuals, who weren’t always welcome in the xenophobic cultural life of the time. Above all, it was a safe space for women, who frequently could not venture into restaurants without a male guardian, and particularly for lesbians. The tearoom’s ethos was summed up in a sign that greeted visitors: “Men are admitted but not welcome.”

“It was probably a joke,” says Kahn of the sign. After all, male cultural figures frequented the tea room. Still, Eve’s Hangout was undoubtedly a safe space for queer women, and hosted after-hours, locked-doors meetings, where women-loving women could share their experiences without fear of censorship or discrimination. Ironic or not, the sign reflects Eve’s Hangout’s historical significance. Despite the tea room’s popularity, the story of its proprietor was lost to the public for decades. But amid current efforts to retrace LGBTQ cultural history, researchers such as Barbara Kahn are restoring Adam’s tearoom to its place of honor as one of the first lesbian establishments in the United States.

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Eve Adams with her siblings in 1925. COURTESY OF BARBARA KAHN
Tea and poetry kept the Hangout going, but Eve Adams was its soul. Described by commentators as “the queen of the third sex” for her masculine appearance (language commonly used at the time), Adams was popular among the bohemian literary figures of 1920s New York. Born Chawa Czlotcheber (sometimes spelled Zlocsewer, Zlotchever, or Kotchever) to a Jewish family in Mlawa, Poland, Adams immigrated to the United States as a young woman in 1912, and spent several years traveling before settling in Manhattan’s Washington Square. At some point, she Anglicized her first name to “Eve” and took “Adams” as her chosen last name. The name, writes George Chauncey in his history of gay New York culture, was “an androgynous pseudonym whose biblical origins her Protestant persecutors might well have found blasphemous.”

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Adams was just one of many 1920s New York artists and writers who lived political and sexual lives that went against the mold. Eve counted many of these figures among her friends: author Henry Miller, whose work was frequently banned and to whom she loaned money when his wealthy mistress couldn’t front his bills; Anaïs Nin, whose crystal-sharp stories are full of lesbian tension; Emma Goldman, the New York labor activist whose practice of free love was as famous as her anarchism. While Adams, likely due to her sexuality and immigration status, lacks the fame of these companions, she and her tearoom were popular among this elite cultural crowd.

Like all women ahead of their time, Eve Adams also made enemies. Chief among them: Bobby Edwards. A writer for the Greenwich Village Quill, where he covered society life, Edwards didn’t like the increasing gay and immigrant presence in the village. “He was an all-purpose bigot,” says Kahn. He wasn’t the only one. “There were tour buses that would go down to the Village to see all these terrible places: all these bohemians, all these ‘perverts,’” Kahn says.

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The building that once held Eve’s Tearoom is now an Italian restaurant. REINA GATTUSO
While Bobby Edwards covered events at Eve’s Hangout, he spared no kindness for Adams herself. “Eve’s Hangout,” he wrote in a June 1926 guide to Village clubs, “Where ladies prefer each other. Not very healthy for she-adolescents, nor comfortable for he-men.” This animosity is why, when police raided Eve’s Hangout in 1926, word on the cobblestoned Village Streets was that Edwards had something to do with it.

At the time, police raids targeting local speakeasies were common. In Adams’ case, however, the NYPD’s tactic was decidedly personal. After spotting the undercover cop at Eve’s Hangout, on June 11, 1926, Eve Adams finally asked Margaret Leonard to the theater. Later, Leonard alleged that Adams took her dancing, held her too close, and “had her hand on my bosom” in the cab. Worse, said Leonard, Adams had invited her up to her bedroom and ostensibly threw her onto a bed and, according to a police report, “attempted to commit the crime of conenlinguism.” At this point, Leonard left the scene and phoned the police station. She had slipped out with what seemed, to the morality police of New York City, a Sapphic smoking gun: a copy of Lesbian Love, a collection of short stories that Adams had printed in a small run. (Several copies of the book exist today, though they’re privately owned; Kahn says one went missing, possibly purloined, from the Yale library a couple years ago.)

Cops arrested Adams at her Hangout that night. She was charged with obscenity and disorderly conduct, and sent to a New York workhouse for six months. An uncle in Hartford offered to post $1,000 bail, but the City of New York wouldn’t take it. Instead, immigration and police authorities pursued “evidence” of Adams’ sexual orientation, including a letter from Adams’ neighbor, Jay Fitzpatrick, alleging she regularly brought young women to her apartment for sex. “I know personally of decent girls who have been corrupted by this woman,” Fitzgerald wrote.

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Adams in 1941, just two years before her arrest and death. COURTESY OF BARBARA KAHN
In a twist of fate, Adams crossed paths with another notable woman in jail, Mae West. The famous writer had been sentenced to 10 days imprisonment for the alleged obscenity of her acclaimed Broadway play, Sex. While West dined with the wardens and was quickly released, Adams was deported to Poland in 1927. For Kahn, the reason for the difference in treatment was clear: The United States government had no sympathy for an immigrant, Jewish lesbian. “I love this country with my whole heart and soul, and I have made application for my final papers. I want to become a citizen,” Adams said in a deposition. “If I am deported, my life is ruined.”

As with many immigrants who fled persecution, the facts of Adams’ life sometimes fall out of focus. Look Adams up online, and you’ll find a dust storm of apocrypha about the era after her deportation. Some say Adams opened another tea room in Paris and studied at the Sorbonne. Some say she went to Spain in the 1930s to join the struggle against Franco or to report on the Spanish Civil War. Kahn, who has tracked down her deportation records and found mentions of her in the letters of Paris-based cultural figures, says there’s no evidence she ever went to Spain. Instead, it seems this story has origins in Adams’ family, some of whom said that she had left the U.S. voluntarily to fight fascism.

What we know for sure is that, by the early 1930s, Eve Adams had saved up enough money to move from Poland to Paris. At first, life in the romantic, lamplit city was as electric as it had been in 1920s New York. Adams remained part of a circle of bohemian artists, and made a living selling English literature to tourists and expats. She had sold avant garde literature from her New York tearoom, and in Paris—in homage to the censorship that had cost her a home in the United States—she specialized in the banned. In letters between her and Henry Miller, there are mentions of her selling his book Tropic of Cancer, and complaints from Adams that people couldn’t get enough of Lady Chatterley’s Lover. (D.H. Lawrence was a notable homophobe.)

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In a deposition, Adams stated, “I love this country with my whole heart and soul … I want to become a citizen.” SARAH LEE GRILLO
But the antisemitism and homophobia that had already uprooted Adams found her again. In 1940, the Nazis marched into Paris. Like many Parisian Jews, Adams fled to southern France. She desperately sought help from friends and foreign governments, but with only an expired Polish passport and a discontinued American citizenship application, she had no luck. Some of her family members in Poland had already been displaced or murdered by Nazis.

Adams was in Nice when Nazi officer Alois Brunner assumed control of the territory in 1943. She was rounded up alongside hundreds of other Jews. Allied pressure was building; by August 1944, thousands of Allied soldiers would land on beaches in southern France. But by then, many of Nice’s Jewish residents had already been captured. After her deportation, Adams was held briefly at a transit camp in France before being sent onward. Like other immigrants and refugees to whom the United States denied residence, in 1943, just two years before the camp was liberated, Eve Adams, the beloved proprietor of one of the world’s first lesbian restaurants, was murdered at Auschwitz.

Gastro Obscura covers the world’s most wondrous food and drink.
 
A band from Maida Vale will prevail in Eskilstuna:

the-boys-har-tre-av-origina

The Boys have three of the original members remaining in the band, Kent Norberg and Chips Kiesbye from Swedish Sator are participating in the concert in Eskilstuna.

Punk legends visit Eskilstuna Ölkultur
MUSIC The Boys was part of the British punk wave in the 1970s and toured with The Ramones.


Catarina Nitz

11:45 | 2019-09-11
On Friday, September 13, the band will be visiting Ölkultur in Eskilstuna.

The Boys' story is loaded with legends from the vital and revolutionary punk that flourished in particular London and New York in 1975-1979. When The Boys made their first gig at a pub in Islington in 1976, for example, Joe Strummer and Mick Jones from The Clash and Billy Idol were in the audience.

In the rearview mirror you can probably say that The Boys guitarist and singer, Matt Dangerfield, by building a studio in an unused coal cellar adjacent to his apartment in Maida Vale, came to have a huge impact on the development of British punk.

The Boys debuted live in 1976 and released their first album in 1977. According to history, The Boys was the first punk band to get a record deal to make an album, since The Sex had the Pistols kicked out by their record label.

There, the biggest icons, Sex Pistols, The Clash, The Damned and of course The Boys, should have made their first recordings.

Rocco Gustafsson is one of the organizers of the concert in Eskilstuna. He tells The Boys to play their own hits, some covers and talk about their punk story between the songs.

Original members Matt Dangerfield, Casino Steel and Honest John Plain as well as Kent Norberg and Chips Kiesbye will participate in the concert.

FACTS
The Boys
Formed in 1975-76 in London.

The debut album "The Boys" came in 1977, and both the LPs and singles "I don´t care" and "First time" climbed the charts. The Boys disbanded in 1982 and reunited in 1999.

Tickets for the show in Eskilstuna are available at Tickster.com
 
This weekend Johan is in Madrid watching a bullfight.

JOHAN HAKELIUS
Nature is like a lifelong anonymous one-off
JOHAN HAKELIUS Published Sep 14, 2019 at 6:35 pm
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Elderberry. "I get extremely satisfied when I see a flutter, think 'flutter' and am right," writes Johan Hakelius.Photo: NINA BERGSTRÖM


The elderberry has received large bunches of berries. It makes me extremely satisfied, for the simple reason that I know that it is precisely the elder that has received its berries.

This is a chronicle. Analysis and positions are the writer's.

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JOHAN HAKELIUS
READ MORE: chronicles by
Johan Hakelius

We live in a woodland, a field biologist's base camp, and if you have a slightly chilly relationship with nature, you are often reminded of that. It has been a while since the last, but at least a couple of times a year the jeremiad usually shows up in the form of a transmitter, or an interview, or a radio feature: it is a pity for all "nature analphabet".

So sad they must have, all these people who can't "read" nature. Those who cannot distinguish a waffle from a roses rose, or a spine from a runner.

The beauty of nature is that you can benefit from the unread.
Or, for that matter, a vulture from a runner. Imagine living in an environment that is as alien as it was on another planet.

So it usually sounds.

And I usually think so quietly that the beauty of nature is that you can benefit from the unread. It is like a lifelong anonymous one-off: no names are required to handle the essentials.

Books and all other text-based human culture, on the other hand, are not only dependent on literacy, but also on a lack of intelligence. So think of all these poor people for whom an ordinary book is like an incomprehensible alien instrument. What joy can they have of literature, other than as an addict?

But of course it is a ridiculous opposite relationship and whatever it is, I am immensely satisfied when I see a elder, think 'elder' and am right.

If one now accepts the transferred meaning of the illiterate, one would think that over the years his literacy has steadily increased. First text, then maybe nature, then maybe some other big topic where the initiates put names on one and the other to separate them.

But it is rather the opposite.

I see more good drama on film than ever, but I can't separate Ryan Gosling from Jake Gyllenhaal.
The music used to be like literature to me. I could read every base course and know its history and significance. The same was true of everything that came with it, from the fishtail park to the daffodils in the back pocket. But slowly, music has become like nature to me: some occasional readable debris in a blurred sea.

I see more good drama on film than ever, but I can't separate Ryan Gosling from Jake Gyllenhaal. Or Bradley Cooper from a waffle.

That is how it is: one does not become more and more literate over the years, but increasingly illiterate in area by area. Soon, only the books are left.

But sometimes you still want to try.

I will never go out into the woods with a flora to try to translate the language of nature into my own, but this weekend I thought of trying to read a bullfight at Las Ventas in Madrid. It was 45 years since I last saw one. Then I was six, or so, and neither as muddy nor as far-sighted as I am now.

I have no idea if the bleeding or myopia will win. The human ritual in its three colorful acts, or the bull's relentless resistance? Maybe neither. Some languages remain incomprehensible no matter what your efforts are. Or, suffering and ritual are merely meaning-bearing together, as vowels and consonants.

"Bullfighting is not a sport, but a tragedy," Hemingway wrote from Spain to Toronto Star Weekly almost 100 years ago. I guess that's what I hope for. Sport has always been like old Greek to me.
 
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I know reading these essays will cost me enormously in a lot of senses, but writing them must have been for her a million times more difficult. Besides, I feel this is the perfect time for reading this book. Memory... that forgotten thing...

"Few thinkers have tackled the political horrors and complexities of this century with the insight and passionate intellectual integrity of Hannah Arendt. A philosophic champion of human freedom, she was among the first to draw the now-evident parallel between Nazism and Bolshevism and to identify totalitarianism as a threat inherent to the modern world. Jerome Kohn, Arendt's longtime assistant, has compiled, edited, and annotated her manuscripts for publication, beginning with some of her earliest published work and including essays on Augustine, Rilke, Kierkegaard, and figures of the nineteenth-century "Berlin Salon"; the loyalties of immigrant groups within the United States; the unification or "federation" of Europe; "the German problem"; religion, politics, and intellectual life; the dangers of isolation and careerism in American society; the logical consequences of "scientific" theories of Nature and History; the terror that was the organizing principle of both the Nazi and the Communist states. Two seminal essays have never before been published in complete form: On the Nature of Totalitarianism: An Essay in Understanding (1953) and Concern with Politics in Recent European Philosophical Thought (1954)" (Goodreads.com)
 
Almost done dangling man and it didn’t disappoint. I can sorta see why he’s not appealing to today’s generation despite being such an awarded author. There’s no drama or thrill element that’s not about interior self reflection.

“Who can be the earnest huntsman of himself when he knows he is in turn a quarry?”
 
Another great passage from bellow

“You can divorce your wife and abandon your child, but what can you do with yourself? You can’t banish the world by decree if it’s in you.”
 

That’s banishing yourself from the world not forcing the world away from you. In the context of the conversation that’s probably important. That was a line from a diary entry/chapter etc titled an hour with the spirit of alternatives. It’s literally a conversation between himself and the spirit of alternatives. Reads very Goethe/Faust like. Anyway this novel ties in nicely with Vidal’s dc as they both take place or in dcs case party takes place in that post ww2 period when americas intellectuals were kinda in a flux and at a crossroads. The radicalism of the communist labor movement kinda littered out like with the fading of the new deal and ww2 had changed many attitudes. Many of them did feel like they were left culturally dangling and out of place and that the way they lived before had to be adjusted for the world now. His is a crisis of the spirit identity and what it means to be a good man and where the good mans place fits in the ever changing present
 
That’s banishing yourself from the world not forcing the world away from you. In the context of the conversation that’s probably important. That was a line from a diary entry/chapter etc titled an hour with the spirit of alternatives. It’s literally a conversation between himself and the spirit of alternatives. Reads very Goethe/Faust like. Anyway this novel ties in nicely with Vidal’s dc as they both take place or in dcs case party takes place in that post ww2 period when americas intellectuals were kinda in a flux and at a crossroads. The radicalism of the communist labor movement kinda littered out like with the fading of the new deal and ww2 had changed many attitudes. Many of them did feel like they were left culturally dangling and out of place and that the way they lived before had to be adjusted for the world now. His is a crisis of the spirit identity and what it means to be a good man and where the good mans place fits in the ever changing present
When you die the world and all the problems disappear with it.

The quote is stupid at best as is you. We remove ourselves from this world when we die.

Suicide is freedom from everything which is why so many prefer it.
 
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books wit no pitchers but not much more just fuck off literary ponces long live books more to life than books nerds n squares obscurer and obscurer shakespeare is smart
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