A couple of days ago, I launched a Facebook page for Richard Powers fans. Please stop by and sign on, and start a discussion!
Update as of February 24, 2009: The original page was incorrectly set up to make it look like Powers himself was posting and reading. I've corrected that, but unfortunately, if you signed up for the first page, I had to delete you. Please visit the new page via the link from the title of this post and sign on again! My apologies, and many thanks. --editor
Monday, November 10, 2008
Friday, November 7, 2008
Obama and Powers
A fun blog post on Nick's Cafe Canadien comparing Time of Our Singing with Obama's candidacy:
Nick, in turn, points to an interview with Douglas Hofstadter, author of Godel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Band, in which he draws a similar line:
I thought of a book on Tuesday night: the Richard Powers novel The Time of Our Singing, published in 2003. In a roundabout way, it is about Barack Obama.
Nick, in turn, points to an interview with Douglas Hofstadter, author of Godel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Band, in which he draws a similar line:
One last thing — I think we have to slowly stop talking about people as “black” and “white” as if this were a black-and-white (no pun intended) distinction. Barack Obama is a perfect example. Why is he any more black than he is white? It’s just a convention. When you see him in that photo sitting between his mother’s parents when he was a student at Columbia, you can see that he has as much whiteness in him as he has blackness. The “venerable” old tradition, or convention, of labeling a person “black” if they have even the slightest trace of African “blood” in them is an absurdity that comes straight out of slavery, and we should just drop it. Why is Tiger Woods called “black” rather than “Thai”? We have a lot of collective growing-up to do in our society in this regard. A very powerful book I read in which this idea was a central theme was Richard Powers’ novel “The Time of Our Singing”.
Monday, November 3, 2008
Ninth Letter's Powers Videos Available
All five Ninth Letter video interpretations of Powers's work are available on their webiste. Thanks to Ninth Letter editor Jodee Stanley for getting in touch to let me know.
1. Issue 10: Time of Our Singing
2. Issue 16: Plowing the Dark
3. Issue 18: The Echo Maker
4. Issue 21: The Gold Bug Variations
5. Issue 24: Galatea 2.2
I'll get these listed in the formal bibliography soon.
1. Issue 10: Time of Our Singing
2. Issue 16: Plowing the Dark
3. Issue 18: The Echo Maker
4. Issue 21: The Gold Bug Variations
5. Issue 24: Galatea 2.2
I'll get these listed in the formal bibliography soon.
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