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Monthly Archives: October 2006

Chris Thile at Calvin

October 29, 2006 by james | No Comments | Filed in Music

Last night saw us heading to another show at Calvin. This time it was Chris Thile (of Nickel Creek) and How To Grow A Band. I’d been a little disappointed when we saw Nickel Creek a few months back. My response may have been as much a reaction to the remarkably hyped-up crowd as to the band’s performance, but they struck me as being a little over-confident and the show didn’t quite live up to the hype many in its audience were feeling.

Thile’s set was considerably less hyped, and generally enjoyable. The word was that he was returning to his bluegrass roots, but his set maintained enough of the pop stylings he’s better known for that it wouldn’t really qualify as bluegrass. But he had assembled a fine band, and wisely gave each of them space to bring their own songs and style. He was at his best when covering other peoples’ songs—he’s a much better performer than he is writer—and the surprising decision to close with Radiohead’s “Morning Bell” was remarkably successful.

A video of his performance of Gillian Welch’s “Back In Time” is here.

Detholz at Calvin

October 28, 2006 by james | No Comments | Filed in Music

Detholz played at Calvin last night. It was probably the most enjoyable show I’ve been to there so far this academic year.

Rather than talk about it, I’m just going to point to some videos Kari recorded and that I posted on youtube here and here.

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An endorsement

October 27, 2006 by james | 2 Comments | Filed in Campaigning, Current affairs

With elections coming up in just a couple of weeks the local paper is full of letters endorsing or attacking candidates, and we decided to join the fray with an endorsement of David LaGrand for the State Senate.

For those who don’t know David, he’s probably best known around Grand Rapids for his role in the founding of Four Friends Coffee Shop and more recently Wealthy Street Bakery. There’s a tight word limit on letters to the paper and so there’s not much detail, but if you’re interested you can find out more on his website.


David LaGrand’s commitment to the City of Grand Rapids and the people of the 29th district is second to none. He is without a doubt the right man to represent the district in the State Senate.

We’ve been deeply impressed not only with his long term commitment to the City through the businesses he has started and his work as an attorney, but particularly with his efforts to reach out to the whole community—including those traditionally ignored when canvassing—with his campaign. That commitment means his policies on education funding, growing the job market, and bringing tax income back into Grand Rapids have stood the test of constituent scrutiny. He will fight to fully restore revenue sharing so we can open our city swimming pools and achieve appropriate fire and police staffing levels to protect our neighborhoods.

His business and legal background give him the skills necessary to help Michigan grow, rebalancing its tax base, supporting the city and the environment, and adapting as the global economy changes. His commitment to the people of the district mean that his decisions and actions will be grounded in the needs of the working people in his district.

Kari and James Stewart


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Technicalities

October 27, 2006 by james | No Comments | Filed in Life

A few people emailed me over the past few weeks to say that comments weren’t working on this site. To be honest I’ve been enjoying the absence of spam that that brought, but the time came and the comments should now be fixed. So feel free to post away, or not, as you see fit.

I’ve also moved my news feeds to a new (to me) service called feedburner that lets me keep better track of how many people are reading them, and possibly add other services in time. If you currently subscribe your newsreader _should_ pick up the change, but if not, or if you want to subscribe for the first time the URL you want is http://www.feedburner.com/jystewart/anthropic

Half Nelson

October 23, 2006 by james | No Comments | Filed in Film

It’s been a slow few months for films at UICA, but the schedule seems to be picking up and we made our first visit in a while to see Half Nelson, a film I’d been looking forward to since reading about it in Andrew O’Hehir’s compelling but all too often frustrating (given how few of the films he mentions make it here) column for Salon, Beyond The Multiplex.

As O’Hehir makes clear, this is most definitely not another “inspirational-teacher flick” in the vein of To Sir With Love. As befits a film with quite this much indie-cred, its tale is far more ambiguous. Ryan Gosling’s teacher certainly has his moments of inspirational teaching (and his decision to teach history to these disenfranchised minority kids through Marxist influenced dialectics is a daring decision in an America that has yet to get past the Red Scare) but his life is anything but inspiring.

Meanwhile Anthony Mackie’s Frank, a notorious criminal looking out for one of Gosling’s students in gratitude for her incarcerated brother having taken the rap for him, is a similarly complex character and it’s hard to come to a judgement about his role in her life. We’ve spent a lot of time lately watching HBO’s The Wire and this film plays well as a companion to that show, digging into the complex social structures that have been built around the drugs trade in many otherwise impoverished communities.

The middle acts of the film have a few moments where the pace could have picked up, but Half Nelson deserves the praise it’s receiving.

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Marie Antoinette

October 22, 2006 by james | No Comments | Filed in Film

Having very much enjoyed The Virgin Suicides and loved Lost In Translation, I tried to ignore the negative buzz around Sofia Coppola’s Marie Antoinette. It may have been booed in Cannes, but it wasn’t too hard to believe that those reports were overplayed and that some of the response had come from French critics who shared their nation’s resentment towards that most controversial of queens.

The film’s scenes are as luscious as was to be expected, the choice and use of music impeccable, the performances are strong, and the timing gives a good sense of the emotional ups and downs we are led to believe Marie Antoinette was experiencing as she negotiated life in the last days of the French court. But overall, it felt like a film of ‘moments’. There are many good pieces but they didn’t come together to form a compelling movie.

A.O. Scott’s review in the New York Times is one of the better ones out there. Where too many reviews focus on the reception at Cannes, or choose between the style or substance of the film, his review covers both and makes me want even more to have liked the whole. Certainly the film is an interesting exercise in empathy, a great portrait of Versailles (that made me want to revisit the palace’s grounds), and possibly a clever work of social criticism.

I just wish it had lived up to its trailer.

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Human campaign calls?

October 18, 2006 by james | No Comments | Filed in Current affairs

Today we got our first political phone call of this election cycle. It was a pre-recorded message from some fear-mongering group posing as some sort of ‘family defense’ group (I didn’t catch their actual name) complaining about Michigan Governor Jennifer Granholm‘s policies on policing. Apparently she’s not strong enough to defend the poor scared suburban middle classes. Or something like that.

But politics I vehemently disagree with aside, I was struck by the didactic tone of the message. I’m used to the pre-recorded messages at least making some attempt to engage the listener, usually by starting with a greeting. This one launched into a tirade without any introduction whatsoever. I couldn’t help but feel like the person scripting it wasn’t used to real human interaction.

Coupland writes for TV?

October 16, 2006 by james | No Comments | Filed in Art

There’s always some trepidation when a favourite artist moves into a new medium. Just as many great music video directors have made dreadful movies and songwriters aren’t necessarily the best poets, not all novelists do a great job of writing for the big screen.

But I have such faith in Douglas Coupland, that there’s nothing but enthusiasm in my response to the news that he’s shopping a TV series, Extinction Event:

a new science fiction series described as being in the vein of Doctor Who, Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Lost. The pilot has been written and production is moving ahead now.

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Wilco in Lansing

October 10, 2006 by james | No Comments | Filed in Music

Last time we saw Wilco play—two years ago on the A Ghost Is Born tour—it wasn’t until the third encore that they seemed ready to relax. Having performed a remarkable, polished set and two exceedingly strong follow ups, they were called out by the fans one last time and loosened up for a rendition of The Late Greats. Friday night’s set in Lansing was an altogether different affair.

This time around it seemed that the band had hit the road not to showcase a new album but to have some fun. Their entrance and the first two songs was almost jaunty, and they played around with some arrangements including a guitar solo early on that could have become painfully self-indulgent in the hands of a lesser player than Nels Cline. Jeff Tweedy was unusually quiet on stage, a fact that he acknowledged during one of his rare comments, but he assured us that he was having a great time.

It’s far too common that people make predictions about a band’s new material based on the live sets they were playing in the run-up to the release of a new album; predictions that subsequently turn out to be entirely wrong. Wilco helped offset that by not playing much new material, simply indicating that, on the strength of their performance, the album will be well worth waiting for.

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Vocational education

October 5, 2006 by james | No Comments | Filed in Current affairs, Science

The news of the potential closure of my old department has led me to wondering what the future is for a subject like physics, which in turn had me thinking about its past.

While many have been worrying lately about declining interest in a number of ‘core’ academic subjects, such as physics, it is easy to forget that the subject only came into existence as a distinct discipline within the past two centuries. Many of the great heroes of physics–people like Kepler, Galileo, and Newton–would never have considered themselves physicists, probably leaning toward the term ‘natural philosophers.’ Maxwell‘s contributions to the discipline were immense, but he’s also notable for being one of the earlier practitioners to go by the name ‘physicist’.

In her final book, Dark Age Ahead Jane Jacobs argued forcefully against the move within higher education from broad, high quality education toward ‘credentialing.’ She’s far from alone in that concern, and it’s well founded. A solid grounding in the history and traditions of a discipline are as important a part of a full education as specific skills, and are necessary if we are to move forward wisely. If the decline of a subject like physics is the result of a push towards a form of vocational study that is focussed on credentials, then it is a bad thing.

Many physics departments emphasise in their promotional materials how much society needs the skills that are found within physics. And it’s true. Most of the technological innovations we enjoy day-to-day have come to us filtered through the work of other disciplines, but their underpinnings come from physics. We so desperately need new forms of energy production, and the ideas for that are likely to come from physics. Often ‘pure’ research, free of strong practical concerns, can yield the most useful knowledge for practical progress.

But the importance of physics research and of an education connected with an historical tradition should not shield us from the fact that the labels we now assign, and the distinctions we currently make are not absolutes. The form of education and the lines between disciplines will inevitably shift in the future just as they have in the past. What is vital is that we pay attention throughout those changes and keep the emphasis on education over credentialing.

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